TY - CHAP A2 - Moogk, Edward B. AB - An interview with Emile Berliner, which originally appeared in the Canadian Music Trades Journal (Sept. 1918). In it, Berliner talks about the gramophone and the article also quotes from Berliner in 1888 in which he made predictions for how the gramophone might be used. AU - [Berliner, Emile] CY - Ottawa KW - +future and science fiction +sound recording sound recording, and gramophone Berliner, Emile future phonograph gramophone future, and gramophone LB - 4010 PB - National Library of Canada PY - 1975 RP - Canadian Music Trades Journal (Sept. 1918) SP - 380-82 ST - An Interview with the Inventor of the Gramophone T2 - Roll Back the Years: History of Canadian Recorded Sound and Its Legacy: Genesis to 1930 TI - An Interview with the Inventor of the Gramophone ID - 1789 ER - TY - CHAP AB - In this volume, Motion Picture Association of America president Jack Valenti explains the new rating system that went into effect in November, 1968. The essence of the new system was “voluntarism,” according Valenti, who defined this term as follows: “a voluntary willingness by film creators and managers to temper freedom with responsibility, a voluntary willingness by the public to be discerning movie-goers and by parents to know what’s playing in the theatres in order to guide the attendance of their children.” The organization created to rate films was initially called the Code and Rating Administration (CARA) and was established by NATO, the MPAA, and the International Film Importers and Distributors Association (IFIDA). This work has much other information about the working of the motion picture and television industries. AU - [Valenti, Jack] Motion Picture Association of America CY - New York ET - 51st KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations Valenti, Jack References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda advertising NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture MPAA, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and origin Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and appeals process voluntarism MPAA, and voluntarism public relations public relations, and rating system (U. S.) public relations, and MPAA MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and MPAA MPAA, and international markets statistics reference works LB - 26470 PB - Film and Television Daily PY - 1969 SP - 616-25 ST - Motion Picture Association of America: 1968 -- A Year of New Developments T2 - The 1969 Film Daily Year Book of Motion Pictures TI - Motion Picture Association of America: 1968 -- A Year of New Developments ID - 1226 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This piece, written by the editor and staff of Science, seeks to set the microelectronic revolution into historical perspective. AU - Abelson, Philip H. and Allen L. Hammond CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers communication revolution +computers and the Internet electronic media communication revolution electronics revolution, and history of microelectronics LB - 2750 PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 16-28 ST - The Electronics Revolution T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - The Electronics Revolution ID - 1667 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ithiel de Sola Pool, ed. AB - The author examines the relation between telephones and modern cities. He notes that the dreams of utopians in the late 19th century have been realized in that the "telephone has conquered distance as no other technology has." AU - Abler, Ronald CY - Cambridge, MA KW - utopianism geography +telephones urban studies space (spatial) telephones, and distance telephones, and urban life utopia, and telephones LB - 10290 PB - MIT Press PY - 1977 SP - 318-41 ST - The Telephone and the Evolution of the American Metropolitan System T2 - The Social Impact of the Telephone TI - The Telephone and the Evolution of the American Metropolitan System ID - 2394 ER - TY - CHAP AB - This report briefly details how unions were using mass media in the early 1980s, arguing that the “use of media by labor unions is undergoing a revolution.” One union official estimated at labor organizations were spending between $10 million and $15 million annually on media, and that advertising and public affairs offerings by labor organizations may have been more extensive at that time than ever before. Unions such as the Teamsters, the SEIU and UFCW, for example, were using film and videos for organizing. A 40-minute UFCW organizing film, The Road to Dignity, was also being marketed through direct mail to 25,000 high school teachers for use in vocational education and social studies classes. AFSCME, according to the authors, built a network-quality radio and television studio to produce public affairs programs and to conduct teleconferences that can be sent via satellite to television and radio stations around the country. In 1983 and 1984, the AFL-CIO’s Labor Institute of Public Affairs produced America Works, an 18-part series of half-hour programs shown on commercial and public television stations. In late 1984, LIPA launched the “Campaign for America’s Future,” a radio and television advertising effort kicked off with a nationwide teleconference with labor leaders and news reporters. The AFL-CIO, according to the authors, purchased ad time in 24 markets on 70 television stations and local labor bodies purchased 4,200 radio spots as part of the coordinated campaign. The UAW used broadcast advertising during 1984 to communicate for public support during labor negotiations with Ford. These communications were designed to meet key goals: improving union leaders’ communications with other union officials and members; providing better news media access to labor leaders; expanding communications with lawmakers, interest groups and opinion leaders; gaining public support for bargaining positions; and improving the public perception of labor. --Phil Glende AU - Affairs, Bureau of National CY - Washington, DC KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations propaganda advertising satellites Glende, Phil labor +television +radio +aeronautics and space communication labor, and television television, and labor radio, and labor labor, and radio satellites, and labor labor, and satellites public relations advertising labor, and public relations public relations, and labor advertising, and labor labor, and advertising labor, and public television labor, and film LB - 1080 N1 - See also: office PB - Bureau of National Affairs PY - 1985 SP - 80-87 ST - Adopting Media Techniques T2 - Unions Today: New Tactics to Tackle Tough Times TI - Adopting Media Techniques ID - 196 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - Agre begins by asking if the Internet is a "friend of democracy?" (61) He goes on to write that "by providing a general mechanism for moving digital information and a general platform for constructing digital information utilities, the Internet provides new opportunities for the design of institutional mechanisms; it opens a vast new design space both for technology in the narrow sense and for the institutionalized social relationships within which the Internet is embedded. The Internet also necessitates a renegotiation of institutional rules in a more urgent way by destabilizing the balance of forces to which any successful negotiation gives form; by lending itself to the amplication of some forces and not others, the Internet undermines many of the institutionalized accommodations through which stakeholder groups with distinct interests and powers have gotten along." (63) Barber uses the work of John R. Commons as a context. Barber believes the "central question of democracy in its newly wired manifestation" is "what is the proper relationship between collective cognition among communities of shared interest and the actual formal mechanisms of the state?" (65) The volume in which Agre's essay appears is part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectivs on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organzied by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." (ix-x) AU - Agre, Philip E. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers computers democracy democracy, and new media Commons, John computers and the Internet democracy, and computers computers, and democracy Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet critics digital media democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy Internet LB - 34170 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 61-67 ST - Growing a Democratic Culture: John Commons on the Wiring of Civil Society T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - Growing a Democratic Culture: John Commons on the Wiring of Civil Society ID - 3055 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Allan M. Din, ed. AB - This paper grew out of a 1986 workshop sponsored by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. This paper gives an overview of the DARPA's strategic computing initiative, based on the original 1983 document outlining the program as well as a subsequent planning document. The original "Strategic Computing" document of October 28, 1983, notes that changes in artificial intelligence, computer science, and microelectronics present "possibilities" that are "quite startling, and suggest that new generation computing could fundamentally change the nature of future conflicts. "In contrast with previous computers, the new generation will exhibit human-life, 'intelligent' capabilities for planning and reasoning. The computers will also have capabilities that enable direct, natural interactions with their users and their environment as, for example, vision and speech. "... Our citizens will have machines that are 'capable associates', which can greatly augment each person's ability to perform tasks that require specialized expertise." (90) AU - Akersten, S. Ingvar CY - New York KW - R & D computers computers Soviet Union simulations strategic defense initiative (SDI) Reagan administration nationalism microprocessing Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) computers and the Internet artificial intelligence and biotechnology artificial intelligence strategic computing initiative aeronautics and space communication Reagan administration, and artificial intelligence Reagan, Ronald Reagan, Ronald, and computers military communication nationalism, and communication computers, and artifical intelligence military communication, and artificial intelligence nationalism, and computers DARPA Japan computers, and chips research and development USSR microelectronics microprocessors personal computers computers, personal war war, and artificial intelligence computers, and war war, and computers SDI Reagan administration, and SDA satellites computers, and simulations simulations, and computers non-USA LB - 33780 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1987 SP - 87-99 ST - The Strategic Computing Program T2 - Arms and Artificial Intelligence: Weapon and Arms Control Applications of Advanced Computing TI - The Strategic Computing Program ID - 3016 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ithiel de Sola Pool, ed. AB - France was leery to embrace the modern technology of the telephone as it threatened the government’s control of communication. Allali writes “A world of sequestered communication was fashioned where the fundamental orientation was to seek isolation, to escape as much as possible the dangerous pulsations of the social body. In the ten- year confrontation between the visual and electric telegraphs, conflicts emerged which would reappear at the birth of the telephone. Technical innovation in communication runs counter to already recognized and accepted technologies. To break through with its own new form and constraints, it must enlist the support of social forces which it, in turn, confirms and strengthens." (100-01) --Catharine Gartelos AU - Allali, Jacques Stourdze CY - Cambridge, MA KW - nationalism non-USA +telephones France France, and telephones telephones, and France telephones, and resistance to Gartelos, Catharine +telegraph +nationalism and communication nationalism, and telephones telephones, and nationalism nationalism, and telegraph LB - 1730 PB - MIT Press PY - 1977 SP - 97-111 ST - The Birth of the Telephone and Economic Crisis T2 - The Social Impact of the Telephone TI - The Birth of the Telephone and Economic Crisis ID - 261 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Farber, Stephen AB - This is a previously unpublished list of guidelines for the new rating system adopted in November, 1968. It reveals that in the beginning the rating system was to be guided by an abbreviated form of the Production Code on sex, crime, violence, language, and treatment of animals. AU - America, Motion Picture Association of CY - Washington, D. C. KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation self-regulation reports, MPAA Production Code Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) values religion law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification reports reports, CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) CARA CARA, and Production Code (motion pictures) CARA, and origins of rating system (U. S.), and origins of rating system (U. S.), and Production Code (motion pictures) classification, and Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code, and rating system (U. S.) LB - 20270 PB - Public Affairs Press PY - 1972 SP - 112-15 (Appendix I) ST - Official Code Objectives T2 - The Movie Rating Game TI - Official Code Objectives ID - 846 ER - TY - CHAP AU - America, Motion Picture Association of CY - New York ET - 51st KW - reference works Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA self-regulation reports, MPAA rating system (U. S.) (U.S.) CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) +motion pictures and popular culture MPAA, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and origin Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) (U. S.), and appeals process voluntarism MPAA, and voluntarism public relations public relations, and rating system (U. S.) public relations, and MPAA MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and MPAA MPAA, and international markets reference works CARA censorship and ratings motion pictures MPAA public relations Valenti, Jack rating system (U. S.), and origin LB - 29080 PB - Film and Television Daily PY - 1969 SP - 625-30 ST - The Motion Picture Code and Rating Program: A System of Self Regulation T2 - The 1969 Film Daily Year Book of Motion Pictures TI - The Motion Picture Code and Rating Program: A System of Self Regulation ID - 2687 ER - TY - CHAP AU - America, Motion Picture Association of CY - New York KW - reference works Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA self-regulation reports, MPAA rating system (U. S.) CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) motion pictures and popular culture MPAA, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and origin Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and appeals process voluntarism MPAA, and voluntarism public relations public relations, and rating system (U. S.) public relations, and MPAA MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and MPAA MPAA, and international markets reference works CARA censorship and ratings CARA, and appeals motion pictures MPAA public relations Valenti, Jack rating system (U. S.), and origin LB - 29090 PB - Film and Television Daily PY - 1969 SP - 630 ST - Code and Rating Appeals Board T2 - The 1969 Film Daily Year Book of Motion Pictures TI - Code and Rating Appeals Board ID - 2688 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This article looks at the experiences of those who have used word processors. It uses two case studies to explain how to handle this new technology, and it also is a guide to installing and operating world processors. It appeared originally in the British publication Data Processing (May 1978). AU - Analyzer, EDP CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers labor communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution archives office office, and information technology microelectronics libraries information technology libraries, and +information storage Information Age +computers and the Internet word processing information processing information storage microelectronics revolution information technology, and office office, and new media office, and microelectronics LB - 2920 PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 232-43 ST - The Experience of Word Processing T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - The Experience of Word Processing ID - 1684 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Schatz, Thomas AB - This chapter dealing with Hollywood and television during the 1940s, appears in Volume 6 of Scribner's History of American Cinema, Charles Harpole, ed. AU - Anderson, Christopher CY - New York KW - World War II television, and war war +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures +television motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures World War II, and television television, and World War II LB - 20290 PB - Charles Scribner's Sons PY - 1997 SP - 422-44 ST - Television and Hollywood in the 1940s T2 - Boom and Bust: The American Cinema in the 1940s TI - Television and Hollywood in the 1940s ID - 848 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Teresa De Lauretis and Stephen Heath, eds. AB - Andrew discusses the French effort to develop color films during the post-World War II era. The French resented the American attempt to dominate the French market through Technicolor. Alternatives included Agfacolor, but “at the close of the war Technicolor was able to dominate the market largely because Agfa fell with the Third Reich.... While France did indeed avoid an American takeover in color, adopting the Belgian Geva system after the failure of its two most promising indigenous methods, this should not be seen as the victory of vision and intelligence over crass American money.... The French situation did not fully deteriorate until 1956 when cinema admissions began dropping enormously due to the impact of television and other leisure time alternatives.” This paper, delivered at a conference at UW-Milwaukee in February, 1978, has good information about Germany and the development of color film (e.g., on Agfa scientists), and changes in Technicolor: “... a momentous change had occurred in the color world. Technicolor abandoned its cumbersome camera, and entered into a pact with the Eastman Kodak Company. From 1953 on, Technicolor would process only Eastman Color negative stock using its peerless imbibition process.” AU - Andrew, Dudley CY - New York KW - corporations corporations Eastman Kodak non-USA +motion pictures Germany +motion pictures color motion pictures, and color color, and film motion pictures, and France France, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor color, and Agfacolor Germany, and color film Eastman Kodak Company Eastman Color France Germany LB - 6100 PB - St. Martin's Press PY - 1980 SP - 61-75 ST - The Post-War Struggle for Colour T2 - The Cinema Apparatus TI - The Post-War Struggle for Colour ID - 1994 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This statement comes from a pamphlet entitled Office Technology: The Trade Union Response, issued in March, 1979 by the Association of Professional, Executive, Clerical and Computer Staff, a British office workers union. The pamphlet gives a good account of how word processing has influenced jobs -- their content, design, skills needed, and threats to health. It outlines union strategy in the event of likely unemployment. AU - APEX CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers labor communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution computers non-USA microelectronics Information Age +computers and the Internet automation microelectronics revolution Great Britain microelectronics revolution, and unemployment labor word processing information processing unions, and automation labor, and new media office, and computers computers, and labor labor, and computers labor, and word processing office LB - 3020 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 374-90 ST - A Trade Union Strategy for the New Technology T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - A Trade Union Strategy for the New Technology ID - 1694 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, eds. AB - The author says that "the sense of interactivity that dominates the digital media stretches as far back as we care to look into the roots of human creation." (217) Arata's essay is one of twenty-two chapters by different authors that attempt to improve our "understanding of emerging communication technologies." This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. AU - Arata, Luis O. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers computers and the Internet computers, and interactivity hypertext digital media computers LB - 34050 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 217-25 ST - Reflections on Interactivity T2 - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - Reflections on Interactivity ID - 3043 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ithiel de Sola Pool, ed. AB - This essay is based largely on published sources. The author writes that “Alexander Graham Bell gave up his idea of the telephone as a commercial medium of entertainment and enlightenment when he solved the problem of reciprocal communication over distances, but the concept developed just the same and in a number of ways. In many communities the first to transmit news were not professional reporters or broadcasters but the telephone operators themselves. It is likely that in the role of informal broadcasters, operators illustrated the possibilities of the telephone. By the time increased telephone traffic made it impossible for them to continue that service, it was relatively easy for the enterprising to see the direction that a new medium might take.” AU - Aronson, Sidney H. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - entertainment entertainment, home news and journalism news news and journalism home entertainment news and journalism home, and new media home home, and information technology information technology +telephones telephones, and news broadcasting information technology, and home Bell, Alexander Graham news, and telephones telephones, and news journalism, and telephones telephones, and journalism journalism LB - 10150 PB - MIT Press PY - 1977 SP - 15-39 ST - Bell's Electric Toy: What's the Use? The Sociology of Early Telephone Usage T2 - The Social Impact of the Telephone TI - Bell's Electric Toy: What's the Use? The Sociology of Early Telephone Usage ID - 2380 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - The author suggests ways in which microcomputers will be employed in office work. He is guardedly optimistic about this technology's impact on employment. Atkinson, at the time of this paper, was head of the Computers, Systems and Electronics Division of the Department of Industry, London, and had twenty years of experience using computers in government administration. This paper was delivered at a seminar near Nice, France in September, 1978. AU - Atkinson, W. Reay CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers nationalism labor computers non-USA office, and information technology information technology information processing Information Age +computers and the Internet +nationalism and communication Great Britain information processing, and Great Britain automation labor computers, and labor labor, and computers office, and computers office LB - 2990 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 345-52 ST - The Employment Consequences of Computers: A User View T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - The Employment Consequences of Computers: A User View ID - 1691 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ithiel de Sola Pool, ed AB - The authors argue that in France, where society was based on social hierarchy, the French did not embrace the telephone's person-to-person technology, and local authorities who were most interested in protecting their own power did little to promote the spread of telephony. “Can it be that the French State is only now discovering the sorry state of the telephone situation that it created by sacrificing telephone development for many decades on the alter of communication networks run by and for the local power holders? It probably means that the French State was willing to begin promoting the telephone only when industrial interests became prominent in economic and social relationships.” AU - Attali, Jacques and Yves Stourdze CY - Cambridge, MA KW - nationalism community democracy non-USA +telephones France, and telephones democracy and media +nationalism and communication France LB - 10180 PB - MIT Press PY - 1977 SP - 97-111 ST - The Birth of the Telephone and Economic Crisis: The Slow Death of Monologue in French Society T2 - The Social Impact of the Telephone TI - The Birth of the Telephone and Economic Crisis: The Slow Death of Monologue in French Society ID - 2383 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - As the use of robots increases, the authors (then at Carnegie-Mellon University) discuss the current uses of them and their future potential. The authors urge cooperation between unions, employers, and the government to lessen transition problems. This article first appeared in Technology Review (May-June 1982). AU - Ayres, Robert and Steve Miller CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers robotics labor information technology +computers and the Internet automation robots labor, and automation +artificial intelligence and biotechnology information technology, and industry labor labor, and artificial intelligence artificial intelligence, and labor LB - 3330 N1 - See also: office PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 273-83 ST - Industrial Robots on the Line T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Industrial Robots on the Line ID - 1724 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - H. E. Roys, ed. AB - This article is a historical survey of sound recording, and discusses such men as Edison, Berliner, Bell, and Tainter. It covers major developments in disc recording up to 1962. The work also has a useful list of references on this topic. The articles originally appeared in IRE Proceedings, 50 (May, 1962), 738-44 (copyrighted by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.). AU - Bachman, W. S., B.B. Bauer, and P. C. Goldmark CY - Stroudsburg, PA KW - CDs tape recording, magnetic magnetic recording tape recording sound recording materials materials tape recorders recording tape recording music phonograph sound, and music sound, and discs sound, and records sound, and history of phonograph Edison, Thomas Bell, Alexander Graham Berliner, Emile gramophone phonograph, and automobile (1955) sound, and high fidelity sound, and LP records sound dictating machines sound, and dictating machines sound, and books books, and sound recording bibliographies, and sound recording books bibliographies recording books, periodicals, newspapers LB - 5430 PB - Dowden, Hutchingon [sic] & Ross, Inc. PY - 1978 SP - 9-15 ST - Disk Recording and Reproduction T2 - Disc Recording and Reproduction TI - Disk Recording and Reproduction ID - 1928 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Bruce Guile, ed. AB - This volume is in the National Academy of Engineering's Series on Technology and Social Priorities. Bruce R. Guile is editor of this volume. Photocopy filed under "Guile, Bruce." AU - Baer, Walter S. CY - Washington, D.C. KW - entertainment entertainment, home home, and new media home home, and information technology information technology general studies information technology, and home home, and new media home entertainment LB - 10 PB - National Academy Press PY - 1985 SP - 123-53 ST - Information Technologies in the Home T2 - Information Technologies and Social Transformation TI - Information Technologies in the Home ID - 1397 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ian McNeil, ed. AB - An introduction to major developments. AU - Bagley, J. A. CY - London and New York KW - +aeronautics and space communication air travel satellites +transportation LB - 7530 PB - Routledge PY - 1990 SP - 609-47 ST - Aeronautics T2 - An Encyclopedia of the History of Technology TI - Aeronautics ID - 2123 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, eds. AB - Balides' "point is that an incorporative mode of worker subjectivity in post-Fordism finds a homologous logic in immersion in the virtual ornament. This mode of immersion characterizes both the representation of spectatorship in contemporary media and formal strategies drawing spectators into the diegetic worlds of 'movie ride' films. When these worlds are virtual are virtual, they suggest an investment not only in a synthetic reality but in an ephemeral spectacle." (328) Go figure. Balides' essay is one of twenty-two chapters by different authors that attempt to improve our "understanding of emerging communication technologies." This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. AU - Balides, Constance CY - Cambridge, MA KW - visual communication computers special effects, and digitization interactive media motion pictures digital media motion pictures, digital digital motion pictures media convergence interactivity motion pictures, and interactivity special effects motion pictures, and special effects special effects, digital Star Wars audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences motion pictures, and fans computer graphics special effects, and computers visual culture photography computers and the Internet computers, and special effects virtual reality digitization computers LB - 34090 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 315-36 ST - Immersion in the Virtual Ornament: Contemporary 'Movie Ride' Films T2 - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - Immersion in the Virtual Ornament: Contemporary 'Movie Ride' Films ID - 3047 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Nowell-Smith, Geoffrey A2 - Ricci, Steven AB - Balio notes that between 1950 and the 1960s, the number of movie houses that played "art films (defined as foreign-language films and English-language films produced abroad without American financing)" increased from about 100 to almost 700. After 1970, "the art film market functioned as a niche business.... During the consolidation of the American film industry in the 1990s, the art film market was taken over by the Hollywood majors who either created classics divisions or acquired the leading independent art film distributors. Although such moves were reminiscent of the companies' behaviour during the 1960s, the renewed interest in speciality film in the 1990s did not spur the new Hollywood to invest in indigenous foreign film production. Like the 1960s, however, Hollywood absorbed promising foreign film-makers, thereby depriving 'other national cinemas of their major talents and thus reducing competition for its own products.'" The book in which this essays appear is part of the series UCLA Film and Television Archive Studies in History, Criticism and Theory. AU - Balio, Tino CY - London KW - audiences Hollywood foreign films law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures art theaters motion pictures, and foreign films foreign films, and U. S. theaters theaters, and foreign films Europe, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Europe Hollywood, and foreign films censorship, and foreign films Europe LB - 21090 PB - BFI Publishing [British Film Institute] PY - 1998 SP - 63-73 ST - The art film market in the new Hollywood T2 - Hollywood and Europe: Economics, Culture, National Identity: 1945-95 TI - The art film market in the new Hollywood ID - 910 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - The use of such new information technology as personal computers and distributed processing have made computer crime much easier for all levels of workers. The exact extent of such crime (in 1982) is hard to estimate precisely, but quick action is needed to prevent further losses. At the time of this piece, the author was an assistant professor at Babson College in Wellesley, MA. This article first appeared in Technology Review (April 1982). AU - Ball, Leslie D. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers +computers and the Internet computers, personal computers +computers and the Internet computers and society computers, and crime crime, and computers personal computers, and crime computers, personal computers crime personal computers LB - 3540 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 533-45 ST - Computer Crime T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Computer Crime ID - 1744 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Everett M. Rogers and Francis Balle, eds. AB - According to Balle, the “central issue of mass communication policy throughout the world has been the freedom of expression. On one hand, communicators should have complete independence to write and say what they wish, without having to consider what the State wishes. In reality, the State often constrains such complete freedom of expression, so as to ensure that the mass media act in a way that is socially responsible. In this chapter, the historical background of the freedom of expression is traced, both in America and Europe, leading up to the current concern with the new media (that represent the Communication Revolution).” New communication technologies “represent a basic change in who can communicate with whom (and what content is transmitted),” and therefore “force a basic reexamination of the conditions for the freedom of expression.” This work is Volume 2 in the Paris-Stanford Series, edited by Everett M. Rogers and Francis Balle. AU - Balle, Francis CY - Norwood, NJ KW - communication revolution freedom law censorship and ratings non-USA general studies communication revolution freedom of expression Europe, and censorship censorship Europe censorship, and new media communication revolution, and censorship LB - 30 PB - Ablex Publishing Corp. PY - 1985 SP - 80-91 ST - The Communication Revolution and Freedom of Expression Redefined SV - 2 T2 - The Media Revolution in America and in Western Europe: Volume II in the Paris-Stanford Series T3 - Paris-Stanford Series TI - The Communication Revolution and Freedom of Expression Redefined ID - 1399 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Manuel Castells, ed. AU - Baran, Barbara CY - Beverly Hills, CA KW - women, and new media labor office, and information technology information technology general studies women automation labor insurance industry women labor, and new media labor, and women women, and new media women office LB - 2140 N1 - See also: office PB - Sage Publications PY - 1985 SP - 143-71 ST - Office Automation and Women’s Work: The Technological Transformation of the Insurance Industry T2 - High Technology, Space, and Society TI - Office Automation and Women’s Work: The Technological Transformation of the Insurance Industry ID - 1610 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - Barber offers four caveats in this essay: 1) He is not a technological determinist. 2) People often overestimate how much of "new technology" is actually new. 3) "We need to remind ourselves that spectrum abundance (the multiplication of conduits and outlets) is not the same thing as pluralism of content, programming, and software. When we distinguish content from the conduits that convey it, the consequences of monopolistic ownership patterns become much more obvious. For as the ownership of content programming, production, and software grows more centralized, the multiplication of outlets and conduits becomes less meaningful." (34) 4) Barber discusses the "generational fallacy, which is at play in the history of technology generally. Those who create and first use new technologies take for granted the values and frameworks of previous eras and previous technologies and assume that new generations will have those same values and frameworks. Wrapped in the cocoon of presentness, they forget that for a new generation introduced to th world only via the new technologies, the values and frameworks that conditioned and tempered tose who invented the technologies will be absent. For the second generation of users, this can be corrupting in ways invisible to the pioneers and inventors." (35) The volume in which Barber's chapter appears is part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectives on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organized by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." (ix-x) AU - Barber, Benjamin R. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - technology present mindedness democracy freedom technological determinism critics, and new media history and new media capitalism democracy, and new media presentism critics history technology and society LB - 34150 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 33-47 ST - Which Technology and Which Democracy? T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - Which Technology and Which Democracy? ID - 3053 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Günter Friedrichs and Adam Schaff, eds. AB - The author, who was a former Director of Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, Hampshire England, looks at possible applications of microelectronics to warfare. He discusses strategic submarine-launched ballistic missiles, anti-submarine warfare, cruise missiles, the automated battlefield including sensors, electronic warfare, global military communication, deterrence, and more. AU - Barnaby, Frank CY - Oxford, Eng. KW - R & D nationalism sensors research and development war communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution war non-USA rocketry microelectronics +military communication +nationalism and communication global communication microelectronics revolution rocketry, and microelectronics miniaturization microelectronics, and military military communication, and microelectronics sensors, and military microelectronics, and rocketry LB - 4380 PB - Pergamon Press PY - 1982 SP - 243-72 ST - Microelectronics in War T2 - Microelectronics and Society: For Better or for Worse: A Report to the Club of Rome TI - Microelectronics in War ID - 1826 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Philip Rosen, ed. AB - Part of the 1980s French invasion of deconstructionists and post-structuralists, this short essay is, typical of the genre, all but incomprehensible. It addresses squarely the impact of technology upon the ideological content of movies, but in a less than enlightening manner. It seems to be a strange hybrid of Marxism, and its notion that the dominant bourgeois ideology inevitably determines the content of so major a form of mass communication as the movies, with postmodernism and its sense that meaning is determined entirely by the individual observer. The mobility of the camera and the ability of the film maker to position it so many different ways makes film an unusually good medium in which to explore the postmodern sensibilities, Baudry seems to be saying. A short reflective exercise in theory, this essay makes reference only to secondary sources. --Gordon Jackson French film theorist Jean-Louis Baudry here concerns himself with how one might account for ideology in the cinema. Drawing on a model of ideology developed by French philosopher Louis Althusser, in which the term 'ideology' refers to a compelling force that places individuals (or 'subjects') into a predefined set of relationships with one another to give one social group power over another, Baudry tries to account for how film technology has developed historically to place the film viewer into a specific relationship with the image that supports the dominant order. This essay also draws freely from the psychoanalytic studies of Jacques Lacan, especially his research of the 'mirror stage,' in which infants begin to see themselves as distinct entities within a larger world (Baudry will claim in this essay that film viewing reproduces certain conditions of the mirror stage). Overall, this work attempts to give a historical account of film technology that explains how film might be said to advance ideology. --Matt Lavine AU - Baudry, Jean-Louis CY - New York KW - communism Marx, Karl theory values postmodernism motion pictures Marxism ideology Jackson, Gordon +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and ideology ideology, and motion pictures values, and motion pictures values motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and bias values, and technology postmodernism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and postmodernism Marxism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Marxism motion pictures, and theory theory, and motion pictures values Lavine, Matt motion pictures, and ideology Lacan, Jacques Althusser, Louis motion pictures, and technology LB - 1500 PB - Columbia University Press PY - 1986 SP - 286-98 ST - Ideological Effects of the Basic Cinematic Apparatus T2 - Narrative, Apparatus, Ideology: A Film Theory Reader TI - Ideological Effects of the Basic Cinematic Apparatus ID - 238 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Martin Bauer, ed. AB - This introductory essay sets out the issues to be considered in this work. The focus, as the title suggests, is on three base technologies in the post-1945 era: nuclear power, information technology, and biotechnology. Here Bauer points to similarities in the development of these three technologies, and the forms that resistance to each has taken. AU - Bauer, Martin CY - New York KW - technology computers USSR interactivity modernism modernity modernism communication revolution genetics community democracy non-USA values semiconductors progress Luddism Information Age Industrial Revolution +artificial intelligence and biotechnology biotechnology information age, and resistance to technology, and resistance to Luddism Great Britain Japan Australia Switzerland Soviet Union, and Chernobyl Germany Europe France, resistance to technology semiconductors, and France interactive media biotechnology, and regulation (1970-86) Industrial Revolution, and Great Britain progress, and history of Luddism, and Great Britain genetic engineering communication revolution values, and biotechnology values, and information technology values, and nuclear energy Ford, Henry technology and society culture, and resistance to technology democracy and media modernity Soviet Union culture Japan France semiconductors, and Japan critics +computers and the Internet biotechnology, and regulation LB - 4290 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1995 SP - 1-41 ST - Resistance to new technology and its effects on nuclear power, information technology and biotechnology T2 - Resistance to new technology: nuclear power, information technology and biotechnology TI - Resistance to new technology and its effects on nuclear power, information technology and biotechnology ID - 1817 ER - TY - CHAP AB - This statement by two members of the Meese Commission disagreed with the conclusions of the majority. Becker, a behavior scientists, and Levine, a journalist, while noting the arrival of new media that easily delivered pornography to a wide public, nevertheless questioned whether researchers had established a causal link between watching pornography and violent acts. They also questioned the way in which the Commision defined pornography and categorized different types of pornography. AU - Becker, Judith AU - Levine, Ellen CY - Nashville, TN KW - entertainment computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) surveillance post office government hearings entertainment, home magnetic recording photography women, and new media social science research values privacy archives primary sources sexuality home entertainment government magnetic tape First Amendment media effects crime color freedom values religion censorship and ratings law cable home home, and new media home Meese Commission reports primary sources hearings pornography reports reports, Messe Commission +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography law, and pornography pornography, and law pornography, and new media home entertainment revolution pornography, and home home, and pornography +television +postal service television, and cable cable television, and pornography +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and television television, and satellites +computers computers, and pornography pornography, and computers VCRs VCRs, and pornography pornography, and VCRs magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines +photography and visual communication photography, and pornography pornography, and photography color, and pornography pornography, and color media effects media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects pornography, defined children media effects, and children children, and pornography pornography, and children women women, and pornography pornography, and women religion, and pornography pornography, and religion personal computers personal computers, and pornography primary sources primary sources, Maryland primary sources, College Park primary sources, Meese Commission media effects, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research First Amendment, and Meese Commission First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and legal pornography, and First Amendment pornography, and opponents pornography, and harmful effects crime, and pornography pornography, and crime privacy, and pornography pornography, and privacy Meese Commission, and critics +computers and the Internet magazines satellites children, and media LB - 23010 PB - Rutledge Hill Press PY - 1986 SP - 540-46 ST - Statement of Dr. Judith Becker and Ellen Levine T2 - Final Report of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Statement of Dr. Judith Becker and Ellen Levine ID - 1026 ER - TY - CHAP AB - Here three women members of the Meese Commission conclude on the basis of the evidence they have seen "that those who exploit women's vulnerability in the production or consumption of pornography are inflicting harm that profoundly violates the rights of women, damages the integrity of the American family and threatens the quality of life for all men and women." AU - Becker, Judith AU - Levine, Ellen AU - Tilton-Durfee, Deanne CY - Nashville, TN KW - entertainment computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) surveillance post office government hearings entertainment, home magnetic recording photography women, and new media social science research values privacy archives primary sources sexuality home entertainment government magnetic tape First Amendment media effects crime color freedom values religion censorship and ratings law cable home home, and new media home Meese Commission reports primary sources hearings pornography reports reports, Messe Commission +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography law, and pornography pornography, and law pornography, and new media home entertainment revolution pornography, and home home, and pornography +television +postal service television, and cable cable television, and pornography +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and television television, and satellites +computers computers, and pornography pornography, and computers VCRs VCRs, and pornography pornography, and VCRs magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines +photography and visual communication photography, and pornography pornography, and photography color, and pornography pornography, and color media effects media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects pornography, defined children media effects, and children children, and pornography pornography, and children women women, and pornography pornography, and women religion, and pornography pornography, and religion personal computers personal computers, and pornography primary sources primary sources, Maryland primary sources, College Park primary sources, Meese Commission media effects, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research First Amendment, and Meese Commission First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and legal pornography, and First Amendment pornography, and opponents pornography, and harmful effects crime, and pornography pornography, and crime privacy, and pornography pornography, and privacy Meese Commission, and critics +computers and the Internet magazines satellites children, and media LB - 23000 PB - Rutledge Hill Press PY - 1986 SP - 540 ST - Statement of Judith Becker, Ellen Levine and Deanne Tilton-Durfee T2 - Final Report of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Statement of Judith Becker, Ellen Levine and Deanne Tilton-Durfee ID - 1025 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Beerbohm, Max AB - This essay, or better broadcast, was originally delivered on Sunday, October 8, 1945. Beerbohm says that “Actors and actresses were certainly regarded with far greater interest than they are nowadays. The outstanding ones inspired something deeper than interest. It was with excitement, with wonder and with reverence, with something akin even to hysteria, that they were gazed upon. Some of the younger of you listeners would, no doubt, interrupt me if they could at this point by asking, “But surely you don’t mean, do you, that our parents and grandparents were affected by them as we are by cinema stars?’ I would assure you that 52/53 those idols were even more ardently worshipped than are yours. Yours after all, are but images of idols, mere shadows of glory. Those others were their own selves, creatures of flesh and blood, there before your eyes. They were performing in our presence. And of our presence they were aware. Even we, in all our humility, acted as stimulants to them. The magnetism diffused by them across the footlights was in some degree our own doing. You, on the other hand, having nothing to do with the performances of which you witness the result. These performances or rather these innumerable rehearsals took place in some faraway gaunt studio in Hollywood or elsewhere, months ago. Those moving shadows will be making identically the same movements at the next performance or rather at the next record; and in the inflexions of those voice enlarged and preserved for you there by machinery not one cadence will be altered. Thus the theatre has certain advantages over the cinema, and in virtue of them will continue to survive. But the thrill of it is not quite what it was in my young days.” (52-53) Beerbohm noted that anti-theatrical bias existed. "In those piping days of yore, there was in playgoing a spice of adventure, of audacity. The theatre was frowned on by quite a large part of the community. The Nonconformist Churches were, without exception, dead against it. Ministers of even the Church of England were very dubious about it and never attended it. Players were no longer regarded in the eighteen-eighties and 'nineties as rouges and vagabonds, but the old Puritan prejudice against them still flourished." (53) He notes that his brother Herbert Beerbohm Tree had been a well-known actor and only when he became a manager in 1887 did his status rise. "An actor-manager could be mentioned quite frankly, and even with awe." (54) Beerbohm made a perceptive observation about the difference in reading a book and watching a play. "Indeed, I have a sort of feeling that one can appreciate ideas, is more susceptible to them and better able to grapple with them, when they are set forth in a book that one is reading by one's own fireside than when they are mooted to an auditorium. One can pause, can linger.... I have a notion that the drama is, after all, essentially a vehicle for action (for drama, as the Greeks quite frankly called it), is essentially, or at least mainly, a think to cause the excitement of pity and awe, or of terror, or of laughter, rather than to stimulate one's ratiocinative faculties. The theatre, I would say, is a place for thrills. You may, of course, be thrilled at your fireside by a book of philosophy or of history. You are still more likely to be so by a fine work of fiction. But the characters in a novel are not there before your very eyes, saying and doing things in your very presence. The novelist's power to startle you, or to hold you in breathless suspense, is a slight one in comparison with the dramatist's. All ... my memories of the theatre are memories of stark 'situations' -- the 59/60 appearance of the Ghost on the battlements at Elsinore; or the knocking at the gate while Duncan is murdered, and the repetition of that knocking...." (59-60) AU - Beerbohm, Max CY - London KW - theater children critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater motion pictures Great Britain, and motion pictures Great Britain, and audiences audiences Great Britain non-USA non-USA, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences theater and stage motion pictures, and theater theater, and motion pictures movie stars actors, and status of motion pictures, and movie stars theater and stage, and stars children and media media effects children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sociology media effects, and children children, and media effects motion pictures, and children quotations quotations, and status of actors audiences, and actors audiences, and movie stars motion pictures, and art quotations, movies as shadows ref, secondary images vs. words words vs. images quotations, and images vs. words quotations, and stage vs. words ref, book acting actors theater LB - 38640 PB - Heinemann PY - 1946 SP - 52-60 ST - Playgoing T2 - Mainly on the Air TI - Playgoing ID - 3963 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Beerbohm, Max AB - In this chapter, Max Beerbohm discusses actors. The actor, "having to devote all his time to the development of his emotions, is the least logical creature in the world, and the least likely to be comforted by nice distinction. He cannot detach himself, as you detach him, from his work. ... So far as he is concerned -- and I am here concerned for him and his feelings -- 'in criticising his work, you criticse, also, him.' Wonder not at his sensitiveness!" (30) Beerhohm comments on the actor and fame. "As a matter of act, actors are no more desirous of irrelevant fame than are any other artists. It is the public which wishes quite naturally, to know all about them. The journalists, quite naturally, seek to gratify the public." (31) The author notes that the way actors perform has much to do with the how they are received by the public. "At first, the actor was but an inanimate medium, a masked convention.... But, as time went on, the Athenians began to listen not merely to the words, but also to the manner of their recital. One actor was preferred to another by reason of his ampler gesture or his more significant appeal. We know that, in the decadence, he overshadowed the dramatist, and had plays 'written round' him, quite in the modern way...." (32) In a time before actors had become immortalized on film, Beerhohm comments on the nature of the actor's fame. "The actor's art is evanescent, and he must needs, therefore, be rather hectic in his desire for fame. Good books and good pictures are monuments, which, once made, are always there and may take fresh garlands; but the actor's finest impersonation, repeated night after night, is a thing of no substance, exists not but from his lips, perishes with him. Other artists can afford to wait. It is not only that they, as men who work not in the actual presence of the public, value praise less highly; it is also that their art will endure. For them the immediate verdict is not irrevocable. Time turns their rude public into a polite posterity. But it is 'now or never' with the actor. One know knows how the gayest assemblage of youth may be chilled by a reference to Macready or Edmund Kean. Theatrical reminiscences is the most awful weapon in the armoury of old age.... it is curiously exasperating to hear about a great actor whom we have 33/34 not seen. So far from honouring, we abominate, his memory. Actors are like pet-birds. When a pet-bird dies, there may be, for those who knew it in the day of its song and it ruffling plumage, some poor comfort in the sight of its stuffed body. For others, there is only a sense of depression. The most unsuccessful 'super' on the stage may always console himself with the thought that he is, as least, a cut above David Garrick." (33-34) Beerbohm says that "Their art dies with them, but I think that in the immediateness, the directness of their fame, they are supremely recompensed." (34) "Even the writings of William Shakespeare will perish in the next ice-age. The whole history of this world is but as a moment in eternity, and happy is that man whose fame is the accompaniment of his own life. Such a man is the actor. Do not grudge him his honours. Do not blame him for his love of them. Ponder my formula, 'and, look you! mock him not!'" (35) AU - Beerbohm, Max CY - New York KW - theater stage journalism fame celebrity critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater ref, secondary celebrity culture theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures celebrity, and actors actors, and celebrity fame, and actors actors, and fame actors acting actors, and fame before movies quotations quotations, and actors fame actors, and status of news and journalism actors, and journalists journalism, and actors personality actors, and personality personality, and actors ref, book motion pictures LB - 38700 PB - John Lane Company PY - 1899 SP - 29-35 ST - Actors T2 - More TI - Actors ID - 3969 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - Bell questions the abilities of computers and raises several ethical issues regarding their use. Of particular interest is Bell’s section on “Intellectual foundations of the revolution in communications,” in which he discusses Harold Innis and Claude Shannon’s theories. See Joe Weizenbaum’s rejoinder and Bell’s response (pp. 571-74) in ibid. This essay originally appeared in Michael L. Dertouzos and Joel Moses, eds., The Computer Age: A Twenty-Year View (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 1979). AU - Bell, Daniel CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers information theory nationalism values preservation communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution history, and new media community democracy communication revolution, and second industrial revolution history values microelectronics human nature history +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology democracy and media values, and computers postindustrial society Weizenbaum, Joseph Innis, Harold Shannon, Claude microelectronics revolution second industrial revolution history, break with human nature, and computers communication revolution, and intellectual foundations information age +nationalism and communication critics communication revolution LB - 3140 PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 500-49, 571-74 ST - The Social Framework of the Information Society T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - The Social Framework of the Information Society ID - 1706 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Lisa Gitelman and Geoffey B. Pingree, eds. AB - In the early ninteenth century, Americans "anxious about accurate representation seized upon a new mechnical invention -- the physiognotrace -- as the answer to their concerns. The physiognotrace was a drawing machine.... Literally used, as the name suggests, to trace an individual's physiognomy, the physiognotrace produced four identical, miniature silhouettes or profiles. The device and the images it yielded were praised in the descriptive terms of actual representation, a period rhetoric that optimistically imagined political representation to be direct, particular, and true." The invention "equipped any willing citizen to enact a fantasy of Jeffersonian political subjectivity." (31) Blake's essay appears in a volume that is part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. This volume offers a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. These ten essays examine media that were new in the eighteenth, nineteenth, and early twentieth centuries. The expore "momemts of transition when each new medium was not yet fully defined, its significance in flux...." They attempt to put these media into their "specific material and historical environment" and explain the "ways in which habits and structures of communication are naturalized or normalized." (viii) AU - Bellion, Wendy CY - Cambridge, MA KW - nationalism presidents and new media Jefferson, Thomas physiognotrace nationalism and communication LB - 34360 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 31-59 ST - Heads of States: Profiles and Politics in Jeffersonian America T2 - New Media, 1740-1915 TI - Heads of States: Profiles and Politics in Jeffersonian America ID - 3074 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Anne G. Keatley, ed. AB - Bement's essay notes that materials science in 1985 was in "transition" (111) and that this field and engineering were "burgeoning -- so much so, that it is difficult to distinguish between future developments and near-term applications." (113) Bement the importance of research and development in the area of materials and the importance that this field has to foreign relations. AU - Bement, Arden L., Jr. CY - Washington, D. C. KW - technology R & D computers computers technology and society materials, and silicon Reagan administration Reagan, Ronald nationalism nationalism and communication artificial intelligence and biotechnology capitalism research and development computers, and nationalism nationalism, and computers materials nationalism, and materials materials, and nationalism foreign relations, and technology technology, and foreign relations computers, and software computers, and hardware space shuttle silicon semiconductors presidents and new media Reagan, Ronald, and technology Reagan administration, and technology Reagan administration, and foreign relations foreign relations, and Reagan administration computers and the Internet Reagan administration space communication aeronautics and space communication LB - 33190 PB - National Academy Press PY - 1985 SP - 110-64 ST - Materials Sector Profile T2 - Technological Frontiers and Foreign Relations TI - Materials Sector Profile ID - 2959 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Jennings, Marcus Bullock and Michael W. AB - Walter Benjamin discusses children and color during the period around 1914-15. AU - Benjamin, Walter CY - Cambridge, MA KW - children ref, secondary color Benjamin, Walter color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color children and media color, and children children, and color media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children Benjamin, Walter, and color children LB - 15290 PB - Belknap Press of Harvard University Press PY - 1996 SP - 50-51 ST - A Child’s View of Color T2 - Walter Benjamin: Selected Writings. Volume I: 1913-1926 TI - A Child’s View of Color ID - 3685 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Moogk, Edward B. AB - Berliner talks about the origins of the phonograph in a paper read before the Franklin Institute of Philadelphia, May 21, 1913. AU - Berliner, Emile CY - Ottawa KW - +sound recording sound recording, and phonograph Berliner, Emile Edison, Thomas phonograph gramophone LB - 4000 PB - National Library of Canada PY - 1975 RP - (May 21 (1913)) SP - 375-79 ST - The Development of the Talking Machine T2 - Roll Back the Years: History of Canadian Recorded Sound and Its Legacy: Genesis to 1930 TI - The Development of the Talking Machine ID - 1788 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This paper gives an overview of the diffusion of microelectronics in industry. While microelectronics bring advantages in terms of flexibility, cost, size, and reliability, there are also complex social factors to be weighed. These include relationships between labor and management, and the fear of unemployment. AU - Bessant, John, Ernest Braun, and Russell Moseley CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution +future and science fiction non-USA microelectronics information technology +computers and the Internet automation microelectronics revolution labor microelectronics, and industry control revolution information technology, and industry information technology, and labor capitalism future Great Britain +artificial intelligence and biotechnology labor, and new media LB - 2900 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 198-218 ST - Microelectronics in Manufacturing Industry: The Rate of Diffusion T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - Microelectronics in Manufacturing Industry: The Rate of Diffusion ID - 1682 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Cook, David A. AB - This chapter in Volume 9 of Scribner's History of the American Cinema Series, edited by Charles Harpole, discuss avant garde and underground films during the 1970s. Many of these works used 16mm and 8mm cameras. AU - Blaetz, Robin CY - New York KW - underground cinema underground media underground films +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and history of motion pictures, and avant-garde films underground films, and motion pictures 16mm 16mm, and avant-garde films 8mm 8mm, and avant-garde films LB - 18560 PB - Charles Scribner's Sons PY - 2000 SP - 453-87 ST - Avant-Garde Cinema of the Seventies T2 - Lost Illusions: American Cinema in the Shadow of Watergate and Vietnam, 1970-1979 TI - Avant-Garde Cinema of the Seventies ID - 748 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Pingree, Lisa Gitelman and Geoffrey B. AB - The author notes that "3-D viewing technology has a very long history." On 3-D device was manufactured in England durng the 1740s. "Between the mid-1740s and the mid-1750s, zograscopes and zograscope prints appeared regularly in English magazine copy and newspaper advertisements, as did hundreds of different engraved, hand-colored images designed for use with the device. Curiously, almost every one of the know engravings from that period has the same subject. Zograscope prints depict the manmade environment, particularly urban topography." (1) The author asks why this was so and why other scenery set in nature were not used. Blake's essay appears in a volume that is part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. This volume offers a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. These ten essays examine media that were new in the eighteenth, nineteenth, and early twentieth centuries. The expore "momemts of transition when each new medium was not yet fully defined, its significance in flux...." They attempt to put these media into their "specific material and historical environment" and explain the "ways in which habits and structures of communication are naturalized or normalized." (viii) AU - Blake, Erin C. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - Great Britain non-USA zograscopes virtual reality camera obscura 3-D cameras LB - 34350 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 1-29 ST - Zograscopes, Virtual Reality, and the Mapping of Polite Society in Eighteenth-Century England T2 - New Media, 1740-1915 TI - Zograscopes, Virtual Reality, and the Mapping of Polite Society in Eighteenth-Century England ID - 3073 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - eds., Lynn Spigel and Michael Curtin AB - Boddy writes that Senator Thomas J. Dodd’s intermittent public hearings between 1961 and 1964 produced no new legislation or reform of regulations but “the thousands of pages of testimony and exhibits, including material generated by the unprecedented subpoena of hundreds of confidential business documents, provide a valuable portrait of the commercial television industry and its contested place in American life.” This piece is based on published sources and the published hearings, although apparently not on archival research in Dodd’s papers or related collections. The author concludes that “Dodd’s investigation marks an instance of the tendency of large television institutions to create what John Hartley calls paedocratic regimes, where the presence of children in the television audience is construed to rule all judgments of programmers and regulators.... Whether permissive or censorious, ... discourses construed the television audience as irresponsible and fundamentally childlike.” AU - Boddy, William CY - New York and London KW - entertainment government hearings entertainment, home media effects media violence home entertainment government law censorship and ratings law censorship and ratings censorship home, and new media home home, and information technology information technology +television regulation television, and regulation Dodd, Thomas J. children, and media television, and children information technology, and home children television, and censorship censorship, and television children, and television violence violence, and television television, and violence hearings hearings, and Sen. Dodd hearings, and TV violence LB - 6590 PB - Routledge PY - 1997 SP - 161-83 ST - Senator Dodd Goes to Hollywood: Investigating Video Violence T2 - The Revolution Wasn’t Televised: Sixties Television and Social Conflict TI - Senator Dodd Goes to Hollywood: Investigating Video Violence ID - 440 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, eds. AB - This essay examines "the introduction of a new consumer product in the U. S., the digital 'personal video recorder' or PVR in the late 1990s." Boddy's essay is one of twenty-two chapters by different authors that attempt to improve our "understanding of emerging communication technologies." This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. AU - Boddy, William CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) television VCRs computers and the Internet screens digital media video recorders, digital VCRs, and digitization audiences advertising and public relations advertising, and new media future and science fiction future, and advertising advertising, and future VCRs, and advertising advertising, and VCRs television VCRs, and television television, and VCRs VCRs, and digital media personal video recorder digital media, and personal video recorder advertising future video recording LB - 34030 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 191-200 ST - Redefining the Home Screen: Technological Convergence as Trauma and Business Plan T2 - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - Redefining the Home Screen: Technological Convergence as Trauma and Business Plan ID - 3041 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - At the time of the paper, Boden was a professor pf Philosophy and Psychology at the University of Sussex, England. Here she provides a review of scholarship on the ethical and social issues raised by artificial intelligence. Microelectronics is likely to make intelligent machines much more widespread, which poses a threat to our concept of self. This piece appeared first in The Radio and Electronic Engineer, Vol. 47, No. 8/9 (Aug./Sept. 1977), and is based on chapter 15 in Boden's book Artificial Intelligence and Natural Man (Hassocks, Sussex: Harvester Press, 1977). AU - Boden, Margaret A. CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers values communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution communication revolution, and second industrial revolution values microelectronics human nature +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology values, and computers values, and artificial intelligence human nature, and artificial intelligence microelectronics revolution microelectronics revolution, and artificial intelligence communication revolution second industrial revolution LB - 3090 PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 439-52 ST - The Social Implications of Intelligent Machines T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - The Social Implications of Intelligent Machines ID - 1701 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - Boden offers a sober reflection on research in artificial intelligence, looking at medical diagnosis systems, and legal advice and education in finance. She takes exception to sensationalistic claims for artificial intelligence. This paper was first published in Futures (Feb. 1984). AU - Boden, Margaret A. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers +future and science fiction information technology +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology future information technology, and medicine information technology, and finance artificial intelligence, and medicine artificial intelligence, and education artificial intelligence, and law LB - 3230 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 95-103 ST - The Social Impact of Thinking Machines T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - The Social Impact of Thinking Machines ID - 1715 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ithiel de Sola Pool, ed. AB - The author notes that unlike many other inventions that require some expertise in their use lest they be dangerous, the telephone is different. Its "uniquely phenomenal growth and pervasiveness in our lives can in large measure be ascribed to its ease and safety of use." AU - Boettinger, Henry M. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - entertainment entertainment, home home entertainment community democracy home, and new media home home, and information technology information technology +telephones information technology, and home democracy and media home, and telephones LB - 10210 PB - MIT Press PY - 1977 SP - 200-07 ST - Our Sixth-and-a-Half Sense T2 - The Social Impact of the Telephone TI - Our Sixth-and-a-Half Sense ID - 2386 ER - TY - CHAP A3 - Irving Kristol, et al. AB - Boorstin delivered this address in October, 1973 as part of the Distinguished Lecture Series on the Bicentennial, sponsored by the American Enterprise Institute. This, the ninth volume in a series, was edited by Irving Kristol, et al. “A hallmark of the great technological changes is that they tend not to be reversible,” he said. “What is most significant ... about technology in modern times (the eras of most of the widely advertised ‘revolutions’) is not so much any particular change, but rather the dramatic and newly explosive phenomenon of change itself. And American history, more perhaps than that of any other modern nation, has been marked by changes in the human condition -- by novel political arrangements, novel products, novel forms of manufacturing, distribution, and consumption, novel ways of transporting and communicating. To understand ourselves and our nation, then, we must grasp these processes of change and reflect on our peculiarly American ways of viewing these processes.” AU - Boorstin, Daniel J. CY - Washington, D.C.: KW - preservation communication revolution history, and new media community democracy history general studies democracy and media history, idea of change, and America communication revolution critics change American Enterprise Institute LB - 110 PB - American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research PY - 1975 SP - 161-80 ST - Political Revolutions and Revolutions in Science and Technology T2 - America’s Continuing Revolution TI - Political Revolutions and Revolutions in Science and Technology VL - 9 ID - 1407 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Balio, Tino AB - This chapter appears in Volume 5 of Scribner's History of the American Cinema, Charles Harpole, editor. Much of the material for this chapter comes from trade publications. A more extended discussion of the chapter's theme is found in David Bordwell, Janet Staiger, and Kristin Thompson, The Classical Hollywood Cinema: Film Style and Mode of Production to 1960 (New York: Columbia University Press, 1985), chapters 19-23, and 27-29. AU - Bordwell, David and Kristin Thompson CY - New York KW - +motion pictures +motion pictures motion pictures, and technology motion pictures, and classical style Hollywood Hollywood, and classical system motion pictures, and new technology LB - 9540 PB - Charles Scribner's Sons PY - 1993 SP - 109-41 ST - Technological Change and Classical Film Style T2 - Grand Design: Hollywood as a Modern Business Enterprise, 1930-1939 TI - Technological Change and Classical Film Style ID - 2321 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Raymond Fielding, ed. AB - This article originally appeared in Journal of the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers, 54 (Sept. 1955). AU - Bowen, Edward G. CY - Berkeley KW - +motion pictures +motion pictures motion pictures, and origins Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures LB - 6600 PB - University of California Press PY - 1967 SP - 90-96 ST - Thomas Alva Edison’s Early Motion Picture Experiments T2 - A Technological History of Motion Pictures and Television TI - Thomas Alva Edison’s Early Motion Picture Experiments ID - 2038 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - This essay was written four years prior to the 2000 U. S. presidential election. Bowie speculates about the consequences new media's impact on politics and culture. He argues that the 2004 election was (would be) a crisis for democracy and lead to fundamental changes in pinion . The public would call for major changes in the political system. The volume in which Bowie's chapter appears ispart of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectivs on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organzied by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." AU - Bowie, Nolan A. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers computers virtual reality Internet community future democracy, and future future, and democracy future and science fiction presidents and new media democracy democracy, and new media computers and the Internet democracy, and computers computers, and democracy Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet critics digital media democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy capitalism gatekeeping community, and democracy democracy, and virtual communities virtual communities cyberspace cyberspace, and democracy democracy, and cyberspace metaphors capitalism capitalism, and digital media digital media, and capitalism Internet, and capitalism capitalism, and Internet LB - 34230 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 143-67 ST - Voting, Campaigns, and Elections in the Future: Looking Back from 2008 T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - Voting, Campaigns, and Elections in the Future: Looking Back from 2008 ID - 3061 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - New information technology may eventually create new jobs but it will be a while before the losses in traditional industries are offset by gains. This is from a British-backed study, Monitoring New Technology and Employment (Sheffield, Eng.: Manpower Services Commission, 1983). AU - Brady, Tim and Sonia Liff CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers labor +computers and the Internet automation, and Great Britain labor, and automation automation Great Britain labor, and new media labor non-USA LB - 3440 N1 - See also: office PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 381-89 ST - Job Losses Now, Maybe Some Later T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Job Losses Now, Maybe Some Later ID - 1734 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Bill Nichols, ed. AB - Branigan examines how four scholars have dealt with the historical question of why color film stock, which has been available since the early 1900s, but has only been in use widely since the late 1930s, was introduced into Hollywood moviemaking. In each case, he points out, the conclusions reached by the scholar conducting the study have been largely determined by the way in which the question has been asked. --Matt Lavine This article was reprinted from Film Reader 4 (Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 1979), 16-34. AU - Branigan, Edward CY - Berkeley KW - cinema motion pictures celluloid motion pictures Lavine, Matt color color, and motion pictures film, and color film materials LB - 11170 PB - University of California Press PY - 1985 SP - 121-43 ST - Color and Cinema: Problems in the Writing of History T2 - Movies and Methods: Volume II TI - Color and Cinema: Problems in the Writing of History VL - 2 ID - 2478 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - An account of development from the invention of the transistor in late 1947 to the microprocessor in 1971. AU - Braun, Ernest CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers microprocessing transistors, and integrated circuits communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution microprocessors microelectronics +computers and the Internet microprocessors transistors integrated circuits microelectronics revolution microprocessors, and history of materials LB - 2800 PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 72-82 ST - From Transistor to Microprocessor T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - From Transistor to Microprocessor ID - 1672 ER - TY - CHAP A3 - Everett M. Rogers and Francis Balle, eds. AB - Although written before the appearance of the Internet, this piece describes a system of communication not unlike the Internet. “A basic shift in the locus of power is occurring in society, as the new communication technologies are empowering the audience with an active control over the flows of information. This shift is a Communication Revolution. The old media of mass communication, like television, radio, and print, are means by which a relatively few creative individuals prepare and transmit various kinds of expensive messages to a large audience through a relatively few scarce channels. These old technologies will continue, but are increasingly being supplemented with a set of new communication technologies that center around the semiconductor chip, which provides a communication system with low-cost, high-speed memory. As a result, the new technologies have a higher degree of interactivity, the ability to engage in an ‘conversation’ with a human participant who is using the technology. An example is the newer cable television systems, especially their interactive channels through which individuals can make information requests, go ‘teleshopping’, etc. Such a television of abundance (a) carries the idea of paying for information (which runs counter to the prevailing custom of the past), and (b) raises policy issues concerning privacy.” This is the second volume in the Paris-Stanford Series, edited by Everett M. Rogers and Francis Balle. AU - Breitrose, Henry CY - Norwood, NJ KW - computers surveillance interactivity values law, and privacy law print communication revolution materials materials community democracy computers +computers and the Internet communication revolution, and second industrial revolution values religion general studies Internet communication revolution television radio print culture semiconductors chips, computer interactive media television, and cable privacy teleshopping computer chips second industrial revolution media convergence interactive media +television cable television, and cable democracy and media LB - 140 PB - Ablex Publishing Corporation PY - 1985 SP - 68-79 ST - The New Communication Technologies and the New Distribution of Roles SV - 2 T2 - The Media Revolution in America and in Western Europe: Volume II in the Paris-Stanford Series T3 - Paris-Stanford Series TI - The New Communication Technologies and the New Distribution of Roles ID - 1410 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ithiel de Sola Pool, ed. AB - Briggs notes that many first thought of the telephone as a medium to broadcast entertainment. “Once it became possible to transmit sound along telephone wires in both directions–a very early achievement of 1876 itself–it might have seemed inevitable that the telephone would establish itself mainly as an instrument of person-to-person or organization-to-organization communication rather than broadcast communication. Yet....it continued to be publicized as a device to transmit music and news as much as or more than speech.” --SV Briggs uses the phrase pleasure telephone to explore one of its uses as it was disseminated across the globe - for entertainment. To understand this use, we must understand the complexity of communication at the time. Briggs writes: “The newspapers and periodicals that prophesied what the future of communications would be like were themselves a part of the same complex within which electronic communications were changing. ‘We take it that everything which can knit a community together,’ one of the new specialized periodicals put in 1884, ‘and which can cause a rapid interchange of sentiment and ideas, annihilate, isolation, and prejudices of the greatest happiness to the greatest number,’ ... To consider the history of the ‘pleasure telephone,’ therefore, we must first study it in the light of a longer history of communications and then relate it to a cluster of other inventions patented during the last quarter of the nineteenth century." --Catharine Gartelos AU - Briggs, Asa CY - Cambridge, MA KW - entertainment entertainment, home journalism home entertainment news and journalism home, and new media home home, and information technology news information technology +telephones news, and telephones telephones, and news broadcasting information technology, and home telephones, and entertainment Gartelos, Catharine LB - 10160 PB - MIT Press PY - 1977 SP - 40-65 ST - The Pleasure Telephone: A Chapter in the Prehistory of the Media T2 - The Social Impact of the Telephone TI - The Pleasure Telephone: A Chapter in the Prehistory of the Media ID - 2381 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ithiel de Sola Pool, ed. AB - The author examines how the telephone has appeared in literature. Such authors as James Joyce, Marcel Proust, Carl Sandburg, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Robert Frost, Dorothy Parker, J. D. Salinger, and several more are surveyed. AU - Brooks, John CY - Cambridge, MA KW - non-USA values +telephones telephones, and literature Sandburg, Carl, and telephones Fitzgerald, F. Scott, and telephones Proust, Marcel, and telephones values, and telephones Frost, Robert, and telephones Parker, Dorothy, and telephones Salinger, J. D, and telephones Sandburg, Carl, and telephones Proust, Marcel LB - 10230 PB - MIT Press PY - 1977 SP - 208-24 ST - The First and Only Century of Telephone Literature T2 - The Social Impact of the Telephone TI - The First and Only Century of Telephone Literature ID - 2388 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - The author maintains that one cannot predict what influence new information technology will have on the quality of work simply from the technology's technical features. This work appeared earlier in the European Management Journal, Vol 1, (No. 2, 1982). A fuller version of this research is in David A. Buchanan and David Boddy, Organisations in the Computer Age (Aldershot, Eng.: Gower Press, 1983). AU - Buchanan, David A. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers non-USA labor +computers and the Internet automation Great Britain labor, and automation labor, and new media LB - 3490 N1 - See also: office PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 454-65 ST - Using the New Technology T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Using the New Technology ID - 1739 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ian McNeil, ed. AB - This survey deals with such themes as water and power supplies, waste disposal, roads and postal services, and telegraph and telephone services. AU - Buchanan, R. A. CY - London and New York KW - post office References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps +electricity +telegraph reference works +telephones +postal service +transportation public utilities waste disposal water power networks LB - 4880 PB - Routledge PY - 1990 SP - 949-66 ST - Public Utilities T2 - An Encyclopedia of the History of Technology TI - Public Utilities ID - 1875 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Anne G. Keatley, ed. AB - Bucy covers, among other topics, developments relating to software and artificial intelligence. Bucy notes that "although the potential applications of AI are numerous and exciting, much work remains to be done in refining the generic rules of logic (i.e., how the human mind learns and reasons) and in transferring this knowledge to the computer system for each field of application." (56) AU - Bucy, J. Fred CY - Washington, D. C. KW - technology R & D computers computers technology and society materials, and silicon Reagan administration Reagan, Ronald nationalism nationalism and communication artificial intelligence and biotechnology capitalism research and development computers, and nationalism nationalism, and computers materials nationalism, and materials materials, and nationalism foreign relations, and technology technology, and foreign relations computers, and software computers, and hardware space shuttle silicon semiconductors presidents and new media Reagan, Ronald, and technology Reagan administration, and technology Reagan administration, and foreign relations foreign relations, and Reagan administration computers and the Internet Reagan administration space communication aeronautics and space communication LB - 33200 PB - National Academy Press PY - 1985 SP - 46-78 ST - Computer Sector Profile T2 - Technological Frontiers and Foreign Relations TI - Computer Sector Profile ID - 2960 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Martin Bauer, ed. AB - This piece surveys efforts to regulate biotechnology in Japan, Europe, and the United States. The author concludes that the "attempt to cope with anxiety over technology has ... not been merely a retarding force, rather it has helped to steer, to power and even, at first, to constitute its development." AU - Bud, Robert CY - New York KW - technology nationalism censorship and ratings genetics community democracy law non-USA values regulation +artificial intelligence and biotechnology regulation, and biotechnology Japan Europe +nationalism and communication values, and biotechnology genetic engineering technology and society democracy and media critics LB - 4320 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1995 SP - 293-309 ST - In the engine of industry: regulators of biotechnology, 1970-86 T2 - Resistance to new technology: nuclear power, information technology and biotechnology TI - In the engine of industry: regulators of biotechnology, 1970-86 ID - 1820 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Bailyn, Bernard and John B. Hench, eds. AB - Buel writes that the “breakdown of effective control over the press in America owed something to the demand for printed matter and the increase in printers; it owed more to the geographic diffuseness of American society. Though England had her provincial presses, most publishers, up through the seventeenth century, were in London and therefore the more easily controlled. The colonies lacked both an obvious center for the trade and a common legal system, so that people wishing to publish matter that might offend the authorities in one place could usually find a neighboring jurisdiction which took a more tolerant attitude.” AU - Buel, Richard CY - Worcester, MA KW - nationalism freedom law censorship and ratings +books, periodicals, newspapers freedom of the press censorship, and press First Amendment prior restraint censorship +nationalism and communication LB - 9600 PB - American Antiquarian Society PY - 1980 SP - 59-97 ST - Freedom of the Press in Revolutionary America: The Evolution of Libertarianism, 1760-1820 T2 - The Press and the American Revolution TI - Freedom of the Press in Revolutionary America: The Evolution of Libertarianism, 1760-1820 ID - 2327 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Stephen H. Cutliffe and Terry S. Reynolds, eds. AB - Burke argues that the steam engine changed attitudes toward government regulation. “The introduction of steam power was transforming American culture, and while Thoreau despised the belching locomotives that fouled his nest at Walden, the majority of Americans were delighted with the improved modes of transportation and the other benefits accompanying the expanding use of steam. However, while Americans rejoiced over this awesome power that was harnessed in the service of man, tragic events that were apparently concomitant to its use alarmed them -- the growing frequency of disastrous boiler explosions, primarily in marine service. At the time, there was not even a governmental agency that could institute a proper investigation of the accidents. Legal definitions of the responsibility or negligence of manufacturers or owners of potentially dangerous equipment were in an embryonic state. The belief existed that the enlightened self-interest of an entrepreneur sufficed to guarantee the public safety. This theory militated against the enactment of any legislation restricting the actions of the manufacturers or users of steam equipment.” AU - Burke, John G. CY - Chicago KW - nationalism law regulation +nationalism and communication engines, steam +railroads transportation, and steam regulation, and federal government +transportation engines steam power censorship and ratings LB - 2080 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1997 SP - 105-27 ST - Bursting Boilers and the Federal Power T2 - Technology & American HistoryA Historical Anthology from Technology & Culture TI - Bursting Boilers and the Federal Power ID - 1604 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - Burnham, a journalist then with the New York Times, argued that "cheap computing power makes it possible to keep masses of 'transactional information' -- records of phone calls, credit card payments, and so on -- in huge data bases and to transmit it across the country at low cost. The danger... is that these new computer networks increase the power of big organizations over the individual -- and they are wide open to abuse." This piece is the third chapter in the author's book The Rise of the Computer State (New York: Random House, 1983). AU - Burnham, David CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers nationalism corporations corporations, multinational values law, and privacy law archives community democracy non-USA values +telephones surveillance political economy multinational corporations +computers and the Internet computers, and society values, and computers privacy computers, and data bases multinational corporations, and data bases democracy and media surveillance, and data bases +nationalism and communication telephones, and computer data bases critics computers +information storage information storage, and computers LB - 3550 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 546-60 ST - Data Protection T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Data Protection ID - 1745 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This piece discusses new technology available in 1977 that would enable office manager to improve efficiency. While there may be dramatic changes in store, many problems also have to be worked out. This piece, who at the time was a research for international consultant Arthur D. Little, Inc., first appeared in Datamation (April 1977). AU - Burns, J. Christopher CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers labor communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution office, and information technology microelectronics information technology +computers and the Internet automation microelectronics revolution microelectronics, and office, and new media labor, and new media labor labor, and computers office LB - 2910 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 220-31 ST - The Automatic Office T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - The Automatic Office ID - 1683 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - Science writer Bylinsky argues that “the strategic importance of the semiconductor industry can hardly be overestimated, so the arrival of new material for making chips will have major implications for manufacturer nations and user nations. The synthetic compound gallium arsenide is being used increasingly in certain types of chips and chip applications,” although critics are skeptical about its future application for chips. The growth of optoelectronics, though, is giving a significant boost to this material. This piece appeared originally in Fortune (June 24, 1985). AU - Bylinsky, Gene CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers materials, and silicon nationalism values materials materials computers values religion materials general studies +computers and the Internet materials revolution optoelectronics electronic media, and optoelectronics chips, computer, gallium arsenide gallium arsenide +nationalism and communication chips, computer computer chips electronic media silicon materials LB - 2660 PB - MIT Press PY - 1988 SP - 193-202 ST - What’s Sexier and Speedier Than Silicon? T2 - The Materials Revolution: Superconductors, New Materials, and the Japanese Challenge TI - What’s Sexier and Speedier Than Silicon? ID - 1658 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro AB - This piece was the first full-length feature on the microelectronics revolution to appear in a nonspecialist publication. “In its impact, the microcomputer promises to rival its illustrious predecessors, the vacuum tube, the transistor, and the integrated-circuit logic chip," Bylinsky writes. The discussion by Everett Rogers and Judith K. Larsen in their book Silicon Valley Fever’s (1984)on the revolutionary impact of the microprocessor (invented in 1971) draws on this article. Bylinsky’s article first appeared in Fortune (Nov. 1975). AU - Bylinsky, Gene CY - Cambridge, MA; and Oxford, Eng. KW - computers microprocessing transistors, and integrated circuits values communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution materials materials computers communication revolution, and second industrial revolution values religion microelectronics +computers and the Internet communication revolution microprocessors microelectronics vacuum tubes transistors integrated circuits second industrial revolution microelectronics revolution electronic media chips, computer computer chips LB - 2740 PB - MIT Press; and Blackwell Publisher PY - 1980 SP - 3-15 ST - Here Comes the Second Computer Revolution T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - Here Comes the Second Computer Revolution ID - 1666 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - The authors argue that the next stage in automating factors is FMS, or flexible manufacturing systems. This development moves society in the direction of a workerless factory, something the Japanese appear to have the lead in. This piece appeared first in Fortune (Feb. 21, 1983). AU - Bylinsky, Gene with Alicia Hills Moore CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers nationalism non-USA labor +computers and the Internet computers and society Japan +nationalism and communication automation labor, and automation +artificial intelligence and biotechnology computers labor labor, and computers LB - 3340 N1 - See also: office PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 284-94 ST - Flexible Manufacturing Systems T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Flexible Manufacturing Systems ID - 1725 ER - TY - CHAP AB - The authors evaluate the effectiveness of rating systems in light of a study done at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. AU - Cantor, Joanne AU - Harrison, Kristen AU - Krcmar, Marina CY - Studio City, CA KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Cantor, Joanne National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Surgeon General social science research NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA motion pictures media effects media violence censorship and ratings children +television +motion pictures and popular culture media effects television, and violence motion pictures, and violence media effects, and violence social science research, and violence Surgeon General's Report (1972) Donnerstein, Edward Cantor, Joanne, reports MPAA ratings, and television MPAA ratings, and critics television, and rating system (U. S.) children, and media censorship and ratings LB - 26900 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Mediascope, Inc. SP - 41-47 ST - Ratings and Advisories for Television Programming: University of Wisconsin, Madison Study T2 - National Television Violence Study: Executive Summary, 1994-1995 TI - Ratings and Advisories for Television Programming: University of Wisconsin, Madison Study ID - 1249 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Innis, Harold A. AB - In this Introduction to this new edition of Harold A. Innis's book, Carey sets the Canadian political economist's work into historical context. He discusses Innis's participation in a "Values Discussion Group" in 1949 with other University of Toronto faculty that included Marshall McLuhan. With regard to the idea of monopoly of knowledge, a theme in Innis's work, Carey writes: "those in political power exercised a monopoly of knowledge over the public domain. They were exclusively present-minded, seeking the satisfaction of their own interests, driven by shortsighted hatred and desires for revenge that they systematically implanted and exploited in public discourse. Power was indifferent to the long run and the larger interests of humankind. The voice of the scholar was silenced or, even worse, co-opted by power into a tool of the state. This monopoly of knowledge was founded on the media of print and broadcast, which reinforced the tendency to live exclusively in the present, in a world defined by the news cycle: the day or increasingly the hour or quarter-hour. We are kept waiting for the news as a substitute for participation in politics. The temporarl horizon collapsed into the present, and forethought, planning for the future, thinking in terms of posterity, became obsolete." (xv) AU - Carey, James W. CY - Lanham, MD KW - nationalism time and timekeeping writing time history and new media preservation power history information storage history, and new media non-USA history Innis, Harold McLuhan, Marshall political economy present mindedness history, break with communication, and empire nationalism and communication Innis, Harold, and nationalism nationalism, and Harold Innis time space (spatial) power, and temporal bias power, and spactial bias alphabet, and technology writing, and technology alphabet history, and present mindedness Wiener, Norbert military communication news and journalism Great Britain Canada LB - 34580 PB - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. PY - 2004 SP - vii-xx ST - Introduction to the Rowman & Littlefield Edition T2 - Changing Concepts of Time TI - Introduction to the Rowman & Littlefield Edition ID - 3097 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Roger Horowitz and Arwen Mohnun, eds. AB - This chapter, based on a paper presented at an April, 1994, conference on gender and technology at the Hagley Library in Wilmington, Delaware, seeks to outline advertising strategies employed by RCA and other radio manufactures as they marketed radio receivers for the home market in the 1920s and early 1930s. Carlat argues that gender played a deciding factor in both the physical appearance of radio hardware and in the appeals evident in advertisements from the period. Radio in the 1920s underwent a “transition from male toy to a component of domestic space,” which required the “recasting of radio hardware as a feminine object and listening as a feminine activity.” Part of this transition involve repositioning the radio as an elegant and practical piece of home furnishing, rather than an ugly and erratic contraption that men and boys tinkered with in basements and garages. New radio sets on the market in the 1920s were artfully designed to reflect contemporary styles and were engineered to be as simple to use as turning a single knob, which reflects in many ways the image of the female consumer as motivated by form over function and unable to grasp the workings of anything complicated or mechanical. As Carlat observes, ads for radios in the 1930s were pitched to the more affluent consumer, who was both more likely to be able to afford the “new luxury” and also served as trend-setters in many communities. Perhaps more interesting is Carlat’s claim that radio advertisements were directed at both men and women. Due to the relatively high cost, the purchase of a radio set was seen as a man’s decision, something the woman would not be willing to purchase on her own. Therefore radio ads had to appeal to women in the sense that they created demand among those who controlled the domestic space and also to the men who controlled the household finances. This is described as “cultivating female users as a route to the wallets of male purchasers.” The chapter is based largely on magazine advertisements as primary sources and a smattering of the secondary literature on radio and advertising history. Much of this material was taken from Carlat’s PhD dissertation on classical music and radio during the 1920s and 1930s. -- Rob Rabe AU - Carlat, Louis CY - Charlottesville KW - Rabe, Rob advertising and public relations radio advertising, and radio radio, and advertising women women, and radio radio, and women home and new media radio, and home home, and radio advertising home LB - 28910 PB - University of Virginia Press PY - 1998 ST - 'A Cleanser for the Mind': Marketing Radio Receivers for the American Home, 1922-1932 T2 - His and Hers: Gender, Consumption, and Technology TI - 'A Cleanser for the Mind': Marketing Radio Receivers for the American Home, 1922-1932 ID - 2668 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - John H. Dessauer and Harold E. Clark, eds. AB - Carlson was the primary inventor of electrostatic recording. His essay deals in a straightforward manner with the scientific developments over time. Pages 41-49 concern “Recent Developments, 1950-1962.” Carlson provides an interesting look at how this process was viewed just as it was beginning to gain widespread use. AU - Carlson, Chester F. CY - London and New York KW - +duplicating technologies +duplicating technologies photocopying electrostatic recording Carlson, Chester photocopying, and history of LB - 5630 PB - Focal Press PY - 1965 SP - 15-49 ST - History of Electrostatic Recording T2 - Xerography and Related Processes TI - History of Electrostatic Recording ID - 1948 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Manuel Castells, ed. AB - Castells wrote in 1985 that “we are in the middle of a major technological revolution that is transforming our ways of producing, consuming, organizing, living, and dying. Cities and regions are also changing under the impact of new technologies.” Two features characterized this technological innovation. One was that “the object of technological discoveries, as well of their applications, is information.” The second feature concerned “the fact that the outcome is process-oriented, rather than product-oriented.” Castells went on to argue that the “most important global process conditioning the relationship between new technologies and spatial dynamics is the economic restructuring that U.S. capitalism is currently undergoing, superseding the structural crisis of the 1970s.” (italics in original text) AU - Castells, Manuel CY - Beverly Hills, CA KW - computers nationalism labor communication revolution consumerism communication revolution, and second industrial revolution geography office, and information technology information technology Information Age +nationalism and communication general studies space (spatial) capitalism communication revolution second industrial revolution information processing urban studies consumers capitalism labor urban studies office, and new media +computers and the Internet office LB - 2090 N1 - See also: office PB - Sage Publications PY - 1985 SP - 11-40 ST - High Technology, Economic Restructuring, and the Urban-Regional Process in the United States T2 - High Technology, Space, and Society TI - High Technology, Economic Restructuring, and the Urban-Regional Process in the United States ID - 1605 ER - TY - CHAP AU - Cate, Phillip Dennis CY - New York KW - posters, late 19th century photography non-USA posters +photography and visual communication posters, and France (late 19th century) posters, and history of color, and French posters (late 19th century) color posters, and France France LB - 1470 PB - Metropolitan Museum of Art; Distributed by Harry N. Abrams, Inc. PY - 1987 SP - 57-69 (text); 70-96 (posters) ST - The French Poster, 1868-1900 T2 - American Art Posters of the 1890s TI - The French Poster, 1868-1900 ID - 1543 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Frederic Cople Jaher, ed. AB - Cawelti argues that world fairs bring together into one setting many innovations and achievement and give insight into how Americans viewed “the unity of their culture.” (319) He examines world fairs held in Philadelphia (1876) and Chicago (1893, 1933-34) and argues that these exhibitions reflect changing political and cultural values. “American culture defined itself in traditional political terms in 1976,” he writes, “in terms of leadership of a special business-artistic elite in 1893, and as a system of corporate institutions in 1933.” (320) The discussion of the Century of Progress in Chicago in 1933-34 is interesting. Such people as film censorship Joseph Breen and future U.S. president Ronald Reagan attended this world’s fair. The author writes that “in 1933, planning meant not only a conscious rejection of the past, but an acceptance of the impermanence and fluidity of the present. The exposition’s designers tried to create a flexible, dynamic, and technologically advanced environment that was capable of continuous change and motion and therefore responsive to the modern imperative of continuous scientific progress and technological development. The future had become the locus of value.” (357) AU - Cawelti, John G. CY - New York KW - technology nationalism progress preservation history, and new media history World Fairs Industrial Revolution values, and Industrial Revolution Industrial Revolution, and values +nationalism and communication nationalism, and World Fairs Century of Progress (1933-34) progress, and technology technology and society values, and progress values, and technology history, break with history, and world's fairs values LB - 2160 PB - Free Press PY - 1968 SP - 317-63 ST - America on Display: The World's Fairs of 1876, 1893, 1933 T2 - The Age of Industrialism in America: Essays on Social Structure and Cultural Values TI - America on Display: The World's Fairs of 1876, 1893, 1933 ID - 304 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - Offices need to communicate with other offices and sources of information; they are not isolated. The "information revolution" brought innovation in computing, electronics, and telecommunications converge. Cawkell gives a "comprehensive review of the technological forces and social factors shaping the new electronic office information systems," and discusses electronic mail, teleconferencing, and Prestel. It calls for a new type of "sociotechnologists." Some sociologists should be "able to master the technology, and some engineers who are prepared to study the social issues and politics," he writes. This piece originally appeared in Wireless World in 1978, in the July and August issues. AU - Cawkell, A. E. CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers microprocessing email labor communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution materials office paper office, and information technology microprocessors microelectronics media information technology Information Age +computers and the Internet information technology, and office microelectronics revolution information processing paperless revolution media convergence telecommunications teleconferencing Prestel electronic mail communication revolution automation capitalism microprocessors, and office electronic media office, and new media paper, and office media convergence materials LB - 2930 PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 244-74 ST - Forces Controlling the Paperless Revolution T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - Forces Controlling the Paperless Revolution ID - 1685 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Joseph J. Corn, ed. AB - Ceruzzi wrote in 1986 that "there are perhaps half a million large computers in use in America today, 7 or 8 million personal computers, 5 million programmable calculators, and millions of dedicated microprocessors built into other machines of every description. "The changes these machines are bringing to society are profound, if not revolutionary. And, like many previous revolutions, the computer revolution is happening very quickly. The computer as defined today did not exist in 1950. Before World War II, the word computer meant a human being who worked at a desk with a calculating machine, or something built by a physics professor to solve a particular problem,...." AU - Ceruzzi, Paul CY - Cambridge, MA KW - technology computers +future and science fiction community democracy computers +computers and the Internet future technology and society democracy and media future, and computers computers, and future computers, personal computers, and revolution LB - 7760 PB - MIT Press PY - 1986 SP - 188-201 ST - An Unforeseen Revolution: Computers and Expectations, 1935-1985 T2 - Imagining Tomorrow: History, Technology, and the American Future TI - An Unforeseen Revolution: Computers and Expectations, 1935-1985 ID - 2145 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Pool, Ithiel de Sola, ed. AB - Cherry considers how inventions such as the telephone produce change. He wrote that there are rare occasions "in history when, through some remarkable human insight, discovery, creative work, or invention, human life and social institutions take a great leap.” Inventions such as the telephone are not in themselves revolutionary, nor do they cause revolutions. "Their powers for change lie in the hands of those who have the imagination and insight to see that the new invention has offered them new liberties of action, that old constraints have been removed, that their political will, or their sheer greed, are no longer frustrated, and that they can act in new ways.” The author drew parallels between the early use of the telephone and the computer. Both were at first seen as "adult toys." He noted, though, that person-to-person communication which the telephone enhanced was important to democracy. AU - Cherry, Colin CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers communication revolution inventions innovation community democracy +telephones communication revolution telephones, and change +computers and the Internet democracy and media inventions, and unintended consequences LB - 10190 PB - MIT Press PY - 1977 SP - 112-26 ST - The Telephone System: Creator of Mobility and Social Change T2 - The Social Impact of the Telephone TI - The Telephone System: Creator of Mobility and Social Change ID - 2384 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - New information technology is rapidly changing jobs in banking, health care, and retailing. This piece was presented to the annual meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, at the University of Sussex, England, in August, 1983, and appeared in the conference's proceedings New Technology and The Future of Work and Skills (London: Frances Pinter, 1984). AU - Child, John, Ray Loveridge, Janet Harvey, and Anne Spencer CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers non-USA information technology +computers and the Internet Great Britain information technology,and capitalism information technology, and health care labor automation capitalism LB - 3470 N1 - See also: office PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 419-38 ST - The Quality of Employment in Services T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - The Quality of Employment in Services ID - 1737 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - The authors, who at the time were at MIT, argue that “materials science sets limits to the rate of economic growth but that advanced materials have the potential to solve basic problems such as the finiteness of nature resources.” Computers can make complicated decisions about which materials and production processes should be used, but using advanced materials may pose hazards to the environment and to health. This article originally appears in Scientific American, Vol. 255, no. 4 (Oct. 1986). AU - Clark, Joel P. and Merton C. Flemings CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers materials computers non-USA materials information technology +computers and the Internet general studies materials revolution information technology, and health information technology, and environment Japan computers, fifth generation Japan, and supercomputers LB - 2640 PB - MIT Press PY - 1988 SP - 163-78 ST - Advanced Materials and the Economy T2 - The Materials Revolution: Superconductors, New Materials, and the Japanese Challenge TI - Advanced Materials and the Economy ID - 1476 ER - TY - CHAP AB - Clark provides examples of the use of computer technology, especially, e-mail for union activity. He noted that the United Food and Commercial Workers used e-mail in 1997 to establish communication between workers trying to organize at a Borders bookstore in West Des Moines, Iowa, and workers who successfully organized a store in Chicago. The same union used e-mail in another organizing campaign in Manhattan and set up an Internet web site on how to organize. The International Association of Machinists also used e-mail and a web site to communicate during a United Airlines organizing campaign in 1998. “An increasing number of unions are mounting ‘cybercampaigns’ to get information out about, and mobilize support for, their disputes with employers.” He noted that the International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine, and General Workers used a cybercampaign in a dispute with General Tire, a multinational company based in Germany. --Phil Glende AU - Clark, Paul F. CY - Ithaca, NY KW - computers email electronic mail computers non-USA Glende, Phil labor +computers and the Internet labor, and computers computers, and labor electronic mail, and labor labor, and electronic mail labor, and Germany electronic media LB - 1060 N1 - See also: office PB - ILR Press PY - 2000 SP - 119-22 T2 - Building More Effective Unions ID - 194 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - UNESCO AB - This essay was prepared in 1965, on the twentieth anniversary of Clarke’s “Extra-terrestrial Relays” article (May, 1945). Here Clarke predicts that “low-powered orbital shuttle vehicles” will be available by 1975 to service communication satellites. He also accepts the view that satellites will help lead to a world community. “‘Comsats’ will end ages of isolation, making us all members of a single family, teaching us to read and speak, however imperfectly, a single language,” he says. Clarke sees the communication satellites as perhaps more of a new historical development than Wilbur Schramm, who also has an article in this volume. No group will “be more than a few milliseconds from any other. The social consequences of this, for good or evil, may be as great as those brought about by the printing press or the internal combustion engine.” He predicts much letter writing, “teaching English on a global basis," that we shall argue less and sleep less, and that the city will decline. “The traditional role of the city as a meeting-place is coming to an end; Megapolis may soon go the way of the dinosaurs in now resembles in so many respects.” This volume was produced by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). AU - Clarke, Arthur C. CY - Paris KW - nationalism space (spatial) and communication aeronautics and space communication United Nations communication revolution +future and science fiction non-USA +television space communication +aeronautics and space (spatial) communication satellites space shuttle global communication satellite television television, and satellites global village +nationalism and communication urban studies space (spatial) communication revolution future UNESCO future, and space (spatial) exploration satellites, and global village urban studies satellites, and cities rocketry LB - 7580 PB - Place de Fontenoy PY - 1968 SP - 30-38 ST - Prediction, realization and forecast T2 - Communication in the Space Age: The use of satellites by the mass media TI - Prediction, realization and forecast ID - 2127 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester,  ed. AB - The potential shortage of critical materials (e.g., because of disruptions in politically unstable countries) will not shut down American industries and will, in fact, serve as a catalyst to find completely new materials. Ceramics and plastics, the authors believe, have especially promising potential. This piece appeared first in Technology Review (Aug.-Sept., 1985). AU - Clarke, Joel P., and Frank R. Field III with John V. Busch, Thomas B. King, Barbara Poggiali, and Elaine P. Rothman CY - Cambridge, MA KW - nationalism communication revolution materials communication revolution, and second industrial revolution materials +nationalism and communication materials revolution ceramics plastics second industrial revolution communication revolution LB - 8720 PB - MIT Press PY - 1988 SP - 273-86 ST - How Critical Are Critical Materials? T2 - The Materials Revolution: Superconductors, New Materials, and the Japanese Challenge TI - How Critical Are Critical Materials? ID - 2241 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Bruce Guile, ed. AB - Cleveland examines five hierarchies and how new information technologies may weaken them. These hierarchies include power grounded in control, influence dependent on secrecy, class requiring ownership, privilege gained by early access, and politics grounded in geography. He concludes that the “informatization of society will force dramatic changes in some long-standing hierarchic forms of social organization.” AU - Cleveland, Harlan CY - Washington, D.C. KW - nationalism power community democracy non-USA general studies global communication +nationalism and communication control revolution secrecy class politics geography hierarchy democracy and media nationalism, and new media power, and new media LB - 270 PB - National Academy Press PY - 1985 SP - 55-80 ST - The Twilight of Hierarchy: Speculations on the Global Information Society T2 - Information Technologies and Social Transformation TI - The Twilight of Hierarchy: Speculations on the Global Information Society ID - 1423 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - J. B. S. Hardman and Maurice F. Neufeld, eds. AB - Cole argues that union leaders must work to generate favorable news coverage on the radio and in print. “If we are going to get our story to our neighbors outside the labor movement, we must aim at the newspapers and the magazines they read and the radio stations they listen to.” Cole, editor of the weekly publication of the International Association of Machinists, noted that labor unions could not afford to compete with management interests through advertising. Union officials must work to “aim our story at the news and feature columns and the special events broadcasts.” Good public relations, he argued, requires labor unions to have good contacts with newspaper and radio reporters. “A union’s chance for favorable publicity can be improved by personal contact between union officers and the editor.” He urged union public relations officials to work to get positive stories about labor into the paper and on the radio. “As many union leaders have learned, it isn’t only what you do that counts, but what people think you’re doing.” -- Phil Glende AU - Cole, Gordon H. CY - Englewood Cliffs, NJ; Westport, CT KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising Glende, Phil labor public relations labor, and public relations public relations, and labor labor, and radio +radio radio, and labor labor, and print media LB - 1020 N1 - See also: office PB - Prentice Hall; Greenwood Press PY - 1970 SP - 205-08 ST - The Union's Public Relations T2 - The House of Labor: Internal Operations of American Unions TI - The Union's Public Relations ID - 190 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Snow, C. P. AB - Collini devotes a few pages to “the micro-electronic revolution” which has taken place since Snow wrote and lectured. Snow’s lectures originally were published in 1959, and has been reprinted several times. AU - Collini, Stefan CY - Cambridge, Eng. KW - science general studies science and society microelectronics Snow, C. P. LB - 280 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1993 SP - vii-lxxi ST - Introduction T2 - The Two Cultures TI - Introduction ID - 1424 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Nichols, Bill, ed. AB - Comolli, a Marxist film theorist and historian, focuses on how film style and technology create and sustain relationships between individual works and society that reflect capitalist ideology. Comolli draws on Louis Althusser's ideas about the nature of ideology. In this essay, Comolli considers how one particular aspect of style, depth of field (the extent to which a filmed image conveys a sense of three-dimensional depth, often by keeping several planes within the image in focus at the same time) has developed throughout history to articulate and reinforce a capitalist worldview. After briefly discussing how film scholar have defined ideology in the cinema, Comolli moves to a historical account of the invention of cinema. He argues that the birth of cinema can be linked to economics more than pure scientific inquiry. Hence, film ideology is largely a matter of the capitalist principles in accordance with which the medium was invented. --Matt Lavine AU - Comolli, Jean-Louis CY - Berkeley KW - Marx, Karl Marxism ideology communism capitalism +motion pictures +motion pictures Lavine, Matt motion pictures, and ideology motion pictures, and capitalism ideology, and motion pictures capitalism, and motion pictures Althusser, Louis motion pictures, and origins capitalism communism, and motion pictures marxism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and marxism motion pictures, and communism LB - 11200 PB - University of California Press PY - 1985 SP - 40-57 ST - Technique and Ideology: Camera, Perspective, Depth of Field T2 - Movies and Methods: Volume II TI - Technique and Ideology: Camera, Perspective, Depth of Field VL - 2 ID - 2481 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Benjamin M. Compaine, ed. AB - This piece originally appeared in Daedalus. Compaine argues that it is likely that "society is on the verge of a new step in the evolution of its concept of literacy. Early indicators of the change are the 7 million people [as of 1984] in the work force who use video display screens attached to computers for reading and interacting with information; the rapid proliferation and use of video games at home and in arcades, and the growing application of personal computers at home and in the schools; and the trend of higher costs for paper and physical delivery contrasted to growing availability and lower costs for electronic delivery of information. Thus the skills required to store, retrieve, and manipulate information using a computer are becoming increasingly requisite proficiencies to be added to the existing bundle of skills we call literacy." AU - Compaine, Benjamin CY - Cambridge, MA KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home seeing at a distance preservation labor postmodernism modernism new way of seeing communication revolution home entertainment history, and new media community democracy history home, and new media home office computers, personal computers paper office, and information technology home, and information technology new way of seeing, and computers literacy information technology Information Age history +computers and the Internet new way of seeing, and computers computers, personal personal computers video games communication revolution literacy, new literacy, and computers information technology, and home information technology, and office paper, and higher cost of information processing democracy and media history, break with literacy computers, and literacy home, and video games office, and new media paper home, and new media materials LB - 4750 PB - Ballinger Publishing Company PY - 1984 SP - 329-42 ST - The New Literacy: Or How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love Pac-Man T2 - Understanding New Media: Trends and Issues in Electronic Distribution of Information TI - The New Literacy: Or How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love Pac-Man ID - 1862 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Benjamin M. Compaine, ed. AB - This piece originally appeared in An Information Agenda for the 1980s (pp. 67-89), published by the American Library Association in 1981. According to Compaine, "It describes the need for each of the traditional pieces of this business to refine its role in view of fundamental policy questions raised, including: Who will pay? Who will have access? Who will profit? How will conflicts be resolved?" AU - Compaine, Benjamin M. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers archives community democracy libraries information technology libraries, and information storage +information storage information storage Information Age +computers and the Internet +information storage American Library Association libraries information processing information technology, and business information technology, and knowledge democracy and media LB - 4760 PB - Ballinger Publishing Company PY - 1984 ST - Shifting Boundaries in the Information Marketplace T2 - Understanding New Media: Trends and Issues in Electronic Distribution of Information TI - Shifting Boundaries in the Information Marketplace ID - 1863 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tino Balio, ed. AB - In this chapter, Conant re-examines the 1948 Paramount case in which the U. S. Supreme Court required studios to divest themselves of their large theater chains. This case helped to weakend the industry's system of self-regulation as exercised through the Production Code Administration. AU - Conant, Michael CY - Madison KW - United States v. Paramount Pictures (1948) Paramount Pictures context +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and antitrust motion pictures, and business context, and antitrust motion pictures, and studio system Paramount Pictures case (1948) motion pictures LB - 20480 PB - University of Wisconsin Press PY - 1976 SP - 537-73 ST - The Paramount Decrees Reconsidered T2 - The American Film Industry (Revised Edition) TI - The Paramount Decrees Reconsidered ID - 861 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Stephen H. Cutliffe and Terry S. Reynolds, eds. AU - Cooper, Gail CY - Chicago KW - technology materials home, and new media home home, and information technology networks +motion pictures information technology +electricity air conditioning networks, electrical technology and society motion pictures, and theaters engineering, electrical information technology, and home engineering materials LB - 4900 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1997 SP - 239-69 ST - Custom Design, Engineering Guarantees, and Unpatentable Data: The Air Conditioning Industry, 1902-1935 T2 - Technology & American History: A Historical Anthology from Technology & Culture TI - Custom Design, Engineering Guarantees, and Unpatentable Data: The Air Conditioning Industry, 1902-1935 ID - 1877 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Anne G. Keatley, ed. AB - Among the "key technological developments" (230) Richard N. Cooper and Ann L. Hollick consider are energy, new materials, computers, telecommunications, aviation and aerospace, and biotechnology. They attempt to assess the likely future political, social, and economic implications of these technologies, and their significance of national policy. The authors cite four secondary sources in their bibliography. AU - Cooper, Richard N. AU - Hollick, Ann L. CY - Washington, D. C. KW - technology R & D computers computers technology and society materials, and silicon Reagan administration Reagan, Ronald Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism nationalism and communication artificial intelligence and biotechnology capitalism research and development computers, and nationalism nationalism, and computers materials nationalism, and materials materials, and nationalism foreign relations, and technology technology, and foreign relations aeronautics and space communication OTA satellites biotechnology telephones telephones, and foreign relations telephones, and nationalism nationalism, and telephones transistors digital media digital media, and foreign relations computers, and software computers, and hardware space shuttle silicon semiconductors presidents and new media Reagan, Ronald, and technology Reagan administration, and technology Reagan administration, and foreign relations foreign relations, and Reagan administration Cold War Cold War, and technology computers and the Internet Reagan administration space communication war LB - 33240 PB - National Academy Press PY - 1985 SP - 227-65 ST - International Relations in a Technologically Advanced Future T2 - Technological Frontiers and Foreign Relations TI - International Relations in a Technologically Advanced Future ID - 2964 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - ed., Robert Brent Toplin AB - Courtwright, a historian of violence, compared director Oliver Stone and his movie Natural Born Killers (1994) to a baseball batter who had just “beaned some kids in the cheap seats” with a “low,” hard, line drive. This essay also discusses the film and copycat killers. AU - Courtwright, David T. CY - Lawrence, KS KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Natural Born Killers motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures nudity, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising language motion pictures, and language nudity CARA, and nudity motion pictures, and nudity Stone, Oliver public relations, and Oliver Stone Stone, Oliver, and public relations media effects media effects, and violence +television television, and violence LB - 26370 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - University Press of Kansas PY - 2000 SP - 188-201 ST - Way Cooler Than Manson: Natural Born Killers T2 - Oliver Stone's USA: Film, History, and Controversy TI - Way Cooler Than Manson: Natural Born Killers ID - 1220 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Stephen H. Cutliffe and Terry S. Reynolds, eds. AU - Cowan, Ruth Schwartz CY - Chicago KW - technology entertainment entertainment, home home entertainment home, and new media home values home, and information technology networks information technology +electricity information technology, and home networks, electrical Industrial Revolution technology and society values, and technology home, and new media LB - 4920 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1997 SP - 321-43 ST - The 'Industrial Revolution' in the Home: Household Technology and Social Change in the 20th Century T2 - Technology & American History: A Historical Anthology from Technology & Culture TI - The 'Industrial Revolution' in the Home: Household Technology and Social Change in the 20th Century ID - 1879 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Lisa Gitelman and Geoffrey B. Pingree, eds. AB - "Originally fashioned to teach the London poor, [Joseph] Lancaster's 'monitorial' system was widely adopted for missionary projects, particularly those of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. And in 1821 the Bureau of Indian Affairs, then a branch of the war department, promoted it for teaching American Indians," Crain writes. (61-62) Crain's essay appears in a volume that is part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. This volume offers a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. These ten essays examine media that were new in the eighteenth, nineteenth, and early twentieth centuries. The expore "momemts of transition when each new medium was not yet fully defined, its significance in flux...." They attempt to put these media into their "specific material and historical environment" and explain the "ways in which habits and structures of communication are naturalized or normalized." (viii) AU - Crain, Patricia CY - Cambridge, MA KW - children native Americans telegraph telegraph, optical optical telegraph education education, and native Americans education, and optical teleegraph telegraph, and education education, and telegraph children, and native Americans children, and media LB - 34370 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 61-89 ST - Children of Media, Children as Media: Optical Telegraphs, Indian Pupils, and Joseph Lancaster's System for Cultural Replication T2 - New Media, 1740-1915 TI - Children of Media, Children as Media: Optical Telegraphs, Indian Pupils, and Joseph Lancaster's System for Cultural Replication ID - 3075 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, eds. AB - Crane writes that "as a specialist in classical Greek literature and especially as a classicist at a university [Tufts University] largely dominated by engineers, MD-Ph.D.s, social scientists and 'humanists' deeply suspicious of the label 'humanism' and of all traditional culture, I understand the position of marginalized intellectual all too well, but I am, in many ways, more interested in the general public than I am in my professional colleagues." (118) Later he says that "as a humanist, I see little to lose from electronic media. ...Artificial dichotomies between paper and electronic media only distract us from the question of who does what." (136) Crane's essay is one of twenty-two chapters by different authors that attempt to improve our "understanding of emerging communication technologies." This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. AU - Crane, Gregory CY - Cambridge, MA KW - information processing books, periodicals, newspapers information storage information retrieval books, history of history and new media audiences books history Information Age LB - 34000 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 117-36 ST - Historical Perspectives on the Book and Information Technology T2 - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - Historical Perspectives on the Book and Information Technology ID - 3038 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Leo Charney and Vanessa R. Schwartz, eds. AB - Crary's essay is part of a collection that attempts to show cinema’s connection to modern life. “It may be unnecessary to emphasize that when I use the word ‘modernization’ I mean a process completely detached from any notions of progress or development, one which is instead a ceaseless and self-perpetuating creation of new needs, new production, and new consumption.” Elsewhere Crary writes that “Even before the actual invention of cinema in the 1890s, though, it is clear that the conditions of human perception were being reassembled into new components.” AU - Crary, Jonathan CY - Berkeley KW - photography seeing at a distance postmodernism modernism modernity new way of seeing motion pictures new way of seeing, and motion pictures modernity photography and visual communication motion pictures, and modernity motion pictures, and new way of seeing modernism, and motion pictures modernity ref, secondary ref, book LB - 1520 PB - University of California Press PY - 1995 SP - 46-71 ST - Unbinding Vision: Manet and the Attentive Observer in the Late Nineteenth Century T2 - Cinema and the Invention of Modern Life TI - Unbinding Vision: Manet and the Attentive Observer in the Late Nineteenth Century ID - 3686 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Jowett, Garth S. A2 - Jarvie, Ian C. A2 - Fuller, Kathryn H. AB - This unpublished study of movie theaters and the community was original to have been part of the Payne Fund Studies. It is published here in a volume devoted to the theme of movies, children, and the Payne Fund Studies. The editors of this work attempt to rehabilitate the Studies which were the target of a major effort to discredit them by the Hays Office during the 1930s. The Payne Fund Studies were also strongly criticized by such intellectuals as Mortimer Adler in Art and Prudence (1937). Here Cressey gives a fascinating picture of the role that movie theaters had come to occupy in the community. AU - Cressey, Paul G. CY - New York KW - audiences theaters community censorship and ratings children +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and theaters Payne Fund Studies, and Paul Cressey Payne Fund Studies media effects theaters, and the community motion pictures, and social science +motion pictures community, and movie theaters audiences children, and media LB - 12700 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1996 RP - (1933?) SP - 133-216 ST - The Community -- A Social Setting for the Motion Picture T2 - Children and the Movies: Media Influence and the Payne Fund Controversy TI - The Community -- A Social Setting for the Motion Picture ID - 448 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, eds. AB - "The subject of this essay," the author says, "is fiction writing on the Internet, specifically, the erotica written by women in the context of fan culture..... I examine the way in which women are using the paradox of cyberspace -- personal privacy in a public forum -- to explore feelings and ideas that were considered risky or inappropriate for women in the past. I will suggest that the protection and freedom of cyberspace is enabling these writers to defy many of the social taboos that have inhibited self-exploration and self-expression before the emergence of the Internet." (261) Cumberland's essay is one of twenty-two chapters by different authors that attempt to improve our "understanding of emerging communication technologies." This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. AU - Cumberland, Sharon CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers surveillance women computers and the Internet sexuality women, and sexuality pornography cyberspace audiences audiences, and Internet audiences, and women women, and audiences censorship and ratings freedom computers, and erotica values women, and values values, and women women, and erotica women, and pornography pornography, and women privacy Internet, and privacy privacy, and Internet Internet computers LB - 34070 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 261-79 ST - Private Uses of Cyberspace: Women, Desire, and Fan Culture T2 - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - Private Uses of Cyberspace: Women, Desire, and Fan Culture ID - 3045 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Lynn Spigel and Michael Curtin, eds. AB - This work deals with the possibilities of satellite television envisioned by the Kennedy administration after the 1962 launching of Telstar. The author has done research in the Kennedy Presidential Library. Curtain says that this new communication technology is striking in part because of “its profoundly contradictory nature. Global television seemed to offer the prospect of enhancing both global community and superpower struggle. The new medium was characterized as a technology that would encourage mutual understanding, but also as a means of strategic persuasion. It was envisioned as a collective undertaking that would lead to a free exchange of ideas, and yet it was also a technology developed with proprietary corporate interests in mind. In these contradictions, we find important links between television policy and the foreign policy of the New Frontier. For the discourse that emerged with the new technology did not simply produce statements about the national agenda for television, the land of the vast wasteland, it also generated discussions about forging a Free World alliance under the leadership of the United States.” AU - Curtain, Michael CY - New York and London KW - R & D entertainment nationalism imperialism entertainment, home presidents, and new media research and development war Kennedy administration home entertainment war non-USA home, and new media home satellites home, and information technology information technology +nationalism and communication +aeronautics and space communication global communication satellites, and television Telstar television, and satellites +television information technology, and home +military communication Kennedy administration, and satellite television cultural imperialism, and satellite television cultural imperialism culture Kennedy, John F. home, and new media satellites global communication global communication, and satellites satellites, and global communication nationalism, and satellites LB - 2150 PB - Routledge PY - 1997 SP - 245-62 ST - Dynasty in Drag: Imagining Global TV T2 - The Revolution Wasn’t Televised: Sixties Television and Social Conflict TI - Dynasty in Drag: Imagining Global TV ID - 1611 ER - TY - CHAP AB - Diane D. Cusack was a member of the Meese Commission during 1985-86. President Ronald Reagan had appointed the Commission to study pornography and to make recommendations for regulating it. Cusack had served on the City Council of Scottsdale, AZ, and was convinced that pornography, if left unchecked, would “undermine our social fabric.” She favored vigorous prosecution of pornographers. AU - Cusack, Diane D. CY - Nashville, TN KW - entertainment computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) post office government hearings entertainment, home magnetic recording photography women, and new media social science research values archives primary sources sexuality home entertainment government magnetic tape First Amendment +computers and the Internet color freedom values religion censorship and ratings law cable home home, and new media home Meese Commission reports primary sources hearings pornography reports reports, Messe Commission +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography law, and pornography pornography, and law pornography, and new media home entertainment revolution pornography, and home home, and pornography +television +postal service television, and cable cable television, and pornography +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and television television, and satellites +computers computers, and pornography pornography, and computers VCRs VCRs, and pornography pornography, and VCRs magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines +photography and visual communication photography, and pornography pornography, and photography color, and pornography pornography, and color media effects media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects, pornography, defined children media effects, and children children, and pornography pornography, and children women women, and pornography pornography, and women religion, and pornography pornography, and religion personal computers personal computers, and pornography primary sources primary sources, Maryland primary sources, College Park primary sources, Meese Commission media effects, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research First Amendment, and Meese Commission First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and legal pornography, and First Amendment pornography, and opponents magazines satellites children, and media LB - 22920 PB - Rutledge Hill Press PY - 1986 SP - 486-87 ST - Statement of Diane D. Cusack T2 - Final Report of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Statement of Diane D. Cusack ID - 1017 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Allan M. Din, ed. AB - This paper grew out of a 1986 workshop sponsored by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. The abstract for Dale's piece describes it as follows: "The research area of artificial intelligence is described in terms of its programming languages, like Lisp and Prolog, and of various techniques, such as search and knowledge representation. A number of application areas are discussed with particular mention of some important expert-system techniques and their practical relevance." AU - Dale, Robert CY - New York KW - R & D computers computers Soviet Union simulations strategic defense initiative (SDI) Reagan administration nationalism microprocessing Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) computers and the Internet artificial intelligence and biotechnology artificial intelligence strategic computing initiative aeronautics and space communication Reagan administration, and artificial intelligence Reagan, Ronald Reagan, Ronald, and computers military communication nationalism, and communication computers, and artifical intelligence military communication, and artificial intelligence nationalism, and computers DARPA Japan computers, and chips research and development USSR microelectronics microprocessors personal computers computers, personal war war, and artificial intelligence computers, and war war, and computers SDI Reagan administration, and SDA satellites computers, and simulations simulations, and computers non-USA LB - 33770 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1987 SP - 33-46 ST - An Introduction to Artificial Intelligence T2 - Arms and Intelligence: Weapon and Arms Control Applications of Advanced Computing TI - An Introduction to Artificial Intelligence ID - 3015 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - Davies, at the time of this piece, was Chief Scientist and Engineer at the Department of Industry, London. He raises questions about the impact of the microprocessor on employment. This piece originally appeared in Chartered Mechanical Engineer (June 1978). AU - Davies, Duncan S. CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution computers non-USA microelectronics information technology +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology automation information technology, and industry microelectronics revolution microelectronics revolution, and unemployment labor Great Britain computers, and unemployment labor labor, and computers LB - 2980 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 334-44 ST - The Computer Revolution, Industry and People T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - The Computer Revolution, Industry and People ID - 1690 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - The author writes that "during the transition to democracy after 1990, South Africa faced the pressing question of how to transform" te South African Broadcasting Corpration, "this organ of racist ideology into a forum for the advancement of national unity and equality." (225) The volume in which Dawson's chapter appears ispart of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectivs on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organzied by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." AU - Dawson, Ashley CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers computers virtual reality nationalism Internet global communication community news and journalism non-USA nationalism and communication democracy democracy, and new media computers and the Internet democracy, and computers computers, and democracy Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet critics digital media democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy capitalism gatekeeping community, and democracy democracy, and virtual communities virtual communities cyberspace cyberspace, and democracy democracy, and cyberspace metaphors capitalism capitalism, and digital media digital media, and capitalism Internet, and capitalism capitalism, and Internet globalization South Africa race, and South Africa South Africa, and race news and journalism censorship and ratings news, and censorship news, and South Africa South Africa, and news freedom nationalism and communication nationalism, and South Africa news race LB - 34270 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 225-44 ST - Documenting Democratization: New Media Practices in Post-Apartheid South Africa T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - Documenting Democratization: New Media Practices in Post-Apartheid South Africa ID - 3065 ER - TY - CHAP A3 - McNeil, Ian AB - An introduction to this area. Ian McNeil is the Encyclpaedia's editor. AU - Day, Lance CY - London and New York KW - print non-USA general studies printing writing language visual communication LB - 360 PB - Routledge PY - 1990 SP - 665-85 ST - Language, Writing, Printing and Graphic Arts T2 - An Encyclopaedia of the History of Technology TI - Language, Writing, Printing and Graphic Arts ID - 1432 ER - TY - CHAP AB - De Forest, who invented the vacuum tube, here observes that some have compared the electron tube’s impact on civilization to that of the discovery of the wheel and early use of fire. While De Forest does not go that far, he does say that “the 3-electrode tube and its descendants have made possible in spreading over the entire face of the globe an invisible network of international, inter-continental, telephonic communication, whereby the ancient barriers of unlike languages no longer persist. Coupled with this all important development comes now radio’s sister development, television, linking distant sight with the voice.” Interestingly, De Forest notes that 1957 may be the year that the first man-made satellite will be put into orbit. However, he says, “to place a man in a multi-stage rocket and project him into the controlling gravitational field of the moon, where the passenger can make scientific observation, perhaps land alive, and then return to earth -- all that constitutes a wild dream worthy of Jules Verne.” Only a dozen years later, of course, that became a reality. AU - De Forest, Lee CY - Washington, D.C. KW - materials materials +future and science fiction non-USA space communication general studies vacuum tubes +telephones global communication +radio +television space travel rocketry future +aeronautics and space communication vacuum tubes, and 3-electrode tube television, and vacuum tubes LB - 370 PB - Public Affairs Press PY - 1957 SP - 113-15 ST - Our Changing Communications T2 - New Frontiers of Knowledge: A Symposium by Distinguished Writers, Notable Scholars & Public Figures TI - Our Changing Communications ID - 1433 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This piece appeared first in Programmed Learning and Educational Technology (Nov. 1981). The author, then a professor of Education and Futures Research at the University Houston, analyzes the changes, intended and unintended, brought by computer technology. AU - Dede, Christopher CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers information technology +computers and the Internet computers and society information technology, and education education, and computers computers education computers, and education computers, and unintended consequences LB - 3300 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 242-57 ST - Educational and Social Implications T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Educational and Social Implications ID - 1721 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This article examines what happens when a factory converts to microcomputer-controlled production. It helped productivity but had a large impact on management, maintenance works, and the employment of assembly-line workers who were not unionized and who were unskilled. AU - Dickson, Keith CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers +future and science fiction labor information technology +computers and the Internet labor, and automation automation, and microcomputers future control revolution information technology, and labor information technology, and industry capitalism +artificial intelligence and biotechnology automation labor capitalism, and computers labor, and computers LB - 2890 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 174-83 ST - Petfoods by Computer: A Case Study of Automation T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - Petfoods by Computer: A Case Study of Automation ID - 1681 ER - TY - CHAP AB - Park Elliott Dietz, an M.D. and Ph.D., was a member of the Meese Commission in 1985-86. He taught courses at the University of Virginia on Law and Psychiatry, and Crimes of Violence, and had published research in the Journal of Forensic Sciences about sexual sadism in detective magazines, a theme he traced back to the 17th century. Dietz thought most forms of pornography were “immoral” and corrupted the family and society’s moral fabric. But he stopped short of supporting a Commission resolution that called the family society’s most important unit because he believed that the government should not try to dictate ideal living arrangements. Attached to this Statement is Dietz's article on "Detective Magazines: Pornography for the Sexual Sadists?" (Jan. 1986). AU - Dietz, Park Elliott CY - Nashville, TN KW - entertainment computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) post office government hearings entertainment, home magnetic recording photography women, and new media social science research values archives primary sources sexuality news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers home entertainment government magnetic tape First Amendment media effects crime +computers and the Internet color freedom values religion censorship and ratings law cable home home, and new media home Meese Commission reports primary sources hearings pornography reports reports, Messe Commission +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography law, and pornography pornography, and law pornography, and new media home entertainment revolution pornography, and home home, and pornography +television +postal service television, and cable cable television, and pornography +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and television television, and satellites +computers computers, and pornography pornography, and computers VCRs VCRs, and pornography pornography, and VCRs magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines +photography and visual communication photography, and pornography pornography, and photography color, and pornography pornography, and color media effects media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects, pornography, defined children media effects, and children children, and pornography pornography, and children women women, and pornography pornography, and women religion, and pornography pornography, and religion personal computers personal computers, and pornography primary sources primary sources, Maryland primary sources, College Park primary sources, Meese Commission media effects, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research First Amendment, and Meese Commission First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and legal pornography, and First Amendment pornography, and opponents pornography, and harmful effects crime, and pornography pornography, and crime magazines critics satellites children, and media LB - 22930 PB - Rutledge Hill Press PY - 1986 SP - 487-92 ST - Statement of Park Elliott Dietz, M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. T2 - Final Report of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Statement of Park Elliott Dietz, M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. ID - 1018 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Allan M. Din, ed. AB - This opening chapter offers an overview of artificial intelligence. "Most of this technology is new and many of its consequences, either beneficial or ptentially dangerous, still await detailed assessment," Nin says. Nin discusses the connection with the civilian sector and the weapon applications. He then covers computer hardware and software, and expert systems and AI. Nin notes that in 1986 that computer research was progressing much faster in the United States and NATO countries than in the USSR and Warsaw Pact nations. Advanced microelectronics accounted for this trend. In discussing weapon projects, Nin notes with the Strategic Computing Initiative, which in 1983 was to have a budget of $600 million, there were hopes that AI "could completely change many concepts of land warfare and the army force structure." (15) Nin also discusses AI relationship to the strategic defense initiative, weapons verification, and modeling and simulation programs. Nin's 72 endnotes give readers a good introduction to other published literature that existed in 1987 on artificial intelligence. AU - Din, Allan M. CY - New York KW - R & D computers computers Soviet Union simulations strategic defense initiative (SDI) Reagan administration nationalism microprocessing Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) computers and the Internet artificial intelligence and biotechnology artificial intelligence strategic computing initiative aeronautics and space communication Reagan administration, and artificial intelligence Reagan, Ronald Reagan, Ronald, and computers military communication nationalism, and communication computers, and artifical intelligence military communication, and artificial intelligence nationalism, and computers DARPA Japan computers, and chips research and development USSR microelectronics microprocessors personal computers computers, personal war war, and artificial intelligence computers, and war war, and computers SDI Reagan administration, and SDA satellites computers, and simulations simulations, and computers non-USA LB - 33760 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1987 SP - 3-29 ST - The Prospects for Artificial Intelligence in Weapon and Arms Control Applications T2 - Arms and Artificial Intelligence: Weapon and Arms Control Applications of Advanced Computing TI - The Prospects for Artificial Intelligence in Weapon and Arms Control Applications ID - 3014 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Nancy Signorielli and Michael Morgan, eds. AB - This piece contains useful information of VCR use from the 1960s through 1980s. The author seeks to answer the question whether VCR use, like television viewing, "tends to cultivate mainstream perspectives." The author does not define "mainstream." The study is based on two sets of interviews with VCR owners in the greater Boston area--one yielded a "total of more than 50 viewer profiles," the other of more than 500 people "interviewed through a random digital telephone survey, stratified by exchange." This is a rather thin piece, although the bibliography is of some value. AU - Dobrow, Julia R. CY - Newbury Park KW - entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) entertainment, home magnetic recording materials materials magnetic tape home, and new media home values home, and information technology information technology +television television, and video recorders VCRs values, and VCRs information technology, and home television, and VCRs home, and VCRs home entertainment LB - 6720 PB - Sage Publications PY - 1990 SP - 71-83 ST - Patterns of Viewing and VCR Use: Implications for Cultivation Analysis T2 - Cultivation Analysis: New Directions in Media Effects Research TI - Patterns of Viewing and VCR Use: Implications for Cultivation Analysis ID - 2050 ER - TY - CHAP AB - James C. Dobson, who held a Ph.D. in child development, was a member of the Meese Commission in 1985-86. He was a licensed psychologist and family counselor, and president of Focus on the Family, a California-based organization that produced a syndicated radio program. Dobson had written several books including Dare to Discipline (1970) and Hide or Seek (1979), the latter about self-respect in children. A devout Christian, he considered pornography harmful in many ways and felt that it threatened the “future of the family itself.” AU - Dobson, James CY - Nashville, TN KW - entertainment computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) post office government hearings entertainment, home magnetic recording photography women, and new media social science research values archives primary sources sexuality home entertainment government magnetic tape First Amendment media effects crime color freedom values religion censorship and ratings law cable home home, and new media home Meese Commission reports primary sources hearings pornography reports reports, Messe Commission +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography law, and pornography pornography, and law pornography, and new media home entertainment revolution pornography, and home home, and pornography +television +postal service television, and cable cable television, and pornography +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and television television, and satellites +computers computers, and pornography pornography, and computers VCRs VCRs, and pornography pornography, and VCRs magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines +photography and visual communication photography, and pornography pornography, and photography color, and pornography pornography, and color media effects media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects, pornography, defined children media effects, and children children, and pornography pornography, and children women women, and pornography pornography, and women religion, and pornography pornography, and religion personal computers personal computers, and pornography primary sources primary sources, Maryland primary sources, College Park primary sources, Meese Commission media effects, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research First Amendment, and Meese Commission First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and legal pornography, and First Amendment pornography, and opponents pornography, and harmful effects crime, and pornography pornography, and crime critics computers and the Internet magazines satellites children, and media LB - 22940 PB - Rutledge Hill Press PY - 1986 SP - 504-09 ST - Personal Comments by Commissioner James Dobson T2 - Final Report of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Personal Comments by Commissioner James Dobson ID - 1019 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Schatz, Thomas AB - This chapter is in Volume 6 in the History of American Cinema series, Charles Harpole, ed. Doherty discusses documentary films and also newsreels during the 1940s. In addition, he considers World War II and the use of 16mm cameras. AU - Doherty, Thomas CY - New York KW - newsreels journalism news and journalism war motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and newsreels 16mm 16mm, and newsreels 16mm, and World War II World War II World War II, and 16mm film World War II, and newsreels news, and 16mm film television television, and newsreels newsreels, and television news LB - 20280 PB - Charles Scribner's Sons PY - 1977 SP - 397-421 ST - Documenting the 1940s T2 - Boom and Bust: The American Cinema in the 1940s TI - Documenting the 1940s ID - 847 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Joseph J. Corn, ed. AB - Many predictions about radio at the turn-of-the-century did not come true, Douglas says. "They had been based on a misunderstanding of how the invention worked, and they assumed that radio, by itself, could change the world. Yet even dreams that do not come true can have an effect. By encouraging and romanticizing the amateurs' hobby, these visions fostered experimentation among members of a subculture who had neither a corporate nor a political agenda. The predictions also articulated and reinforced the belief that this technology could and should be accessible to the greatest number of Americans." AU - Douglas, Susan J. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - entertainment entertainment, home home entertainment +future and science fiction community democracy non-USA home, and new media home values radio home, and information technology information technology +radio radio, and amateur operators future democracy and media capitalism, and radio values, and amateur radio information technology, and home global communication +aeronautics and space communication Marconi, Guglielmo wireless communication wireless telegraphy capitalism future, and radio democracy and media democracy, and radio radio, and democracy LB - 6460 PB - MIT Press PY - 1986 SP - 35-57 ST - Amateur Operators and American Broadcasting: Shaping the Future of Radio T2 - Imagining Tomorrow: History, Technology, and the American Future TI - Amateur Operators and American Broadcasting: Shaping the Future of Radio ID - 2029 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - Drexler contends that “the old style of technology is bulk technology, where we handle atoms in unruly herds. Nanotechnology, on the other hand, will allow us to handle individual atoms and molecules, so we can build up complex structures one atom at a time. Nanotechnology... will completely transform information technology, biotechnology, and materials science, enabling us to build self-replicating engines of abundance, engines of healing, and engines of destruction.” This piece first appeared in Whole Earth Review, No. 54 (Spring, 1987). Tom Forester, the book’s editor, acknowledges that this essay approaches science fiction. AU - Drexler, K. Eric CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers science materials +future and science fiction computers materials general studies miniaturization nanotechnology biotechnology materials revolution future science fiction +artificial intelligence and biotechnology +computers and the Internet computers, and nanotechnology LB - 420 PB - MIT Press PY - 1988 SP - 361-73 ST - The Coming Era of Nanotechnology T2 - The Materials Revolution: Superconductors, New Materials, and the Japanese Challenge TI - The Coming Era of Nanotechnology ID - 1438 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Jacobs, Lewis AB - The author, a Danish film director, notes that color film during the 1960s could not capture all the complexity of color in real life. "The tiny color differences, the semi-tones, all those nuances the eye receives without discrimination, are missing in color films. To demand that color in color films should be natural is to misunderstand all that is involved. Indeed, the spectator can have a much greater aesthetic experience because color in film differs from that in nature." (198) Dreyer's article originally appeared in Films in Review (April, 1955). AU - Dreyer, Carl CY - New York KW - technology corporations corporations motion pictures color cameras motion pictures, and cameras motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures photography technology and society materials materials cinema motion pictures celluloid non-USA motion pictures and popular culture photography and visual communication cameras, and motion pictures film Technicolor Eastman Kodak Cinemascope celluloid technology, and motion pictures motion pictures, and technology color, and Eastman Kodak color, and Technicolor technological determinism media literacy motion pictures, and media literacy media literacy, and motion pictures LB - 36670 PB - Farrar, Straus & Giroux PY - 1970 SP - 197-200 ST - Color and Color Films T2 - The Movies As Medium TI - Color and Color Films ID - 3300 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - Earl examines the potential impact of microelectronics on employment. The new technology should make possible greater employee participation, smaller units, and improved information flows. Earl was a Fellow at the Oxford Centre for Management Studies, Oxford, England, and this piece appeared earlier in Management Today (Dec. 1978). AU - Earl, Michael J. CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution non-USA microelectronics labor +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology automation control revolution microelectronics revolution labor, and automation Great Britain microelectronics revolution, and unemployment labor labor, and new media labor, and microelectronics LB - 3000 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 356-66 ST - What Micros Mean for Managers T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - What Micros Mean for Managers ID - 1692 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Chris Hables Gray, ed. AB - C. Wilson Markle, an engineer at Image Transform in Los Angeles, first created color imaging in 1971. This article looks at the controversy over colorization of black and white movies. At the time this article appeared (1996), Ted Turner had colorized only 270 videotapes. This piece has a useful four-page bibliography on this topic. It also has a list of the first 100 “national treasures,” films that cannot be “materially altered” (including colorization) without adding a label saying that the changes have been made without the permission of the principal creators of the movies. Another appendix contains copyright information on the 270 colorized videotapes registered through the end of 1993. Appendix 3 gives the number of copyrighted colorized videotapes each year between 1985 and 1993. There is also a list of the number of colorized videotapes films that were shown on television between 1985 and 1993. AU - Edgerton, Gary CY - Malabar, FL KW - magnetic recording photography motion pictures materials materials videotape magnetic tape television, and color +motion pictures and popular culture +photography and visual communication digital media color, and digital imaging motion pictures, and colorization (1985-93) Turner, Ted, and colorization video tapes, colorized (list) television, and colorized videotapes shown color +television motion pictures, and digitization motion pictures, and color Turner, Ted digitization LB - 1540 PB - Krieger Publishing Company PY - 1996 SP - 5-32 ST - Digital Color Imaging and the Colorization Controversy: Culture, Technology, and the Popular as Lightning Rod T2 - Technohistory: Using the History of American Technology in Interdisciplinary Research TI - Digital Color Imaging and the Colorization Controversy: Culture, Technology, and the Popular as Lightning Rod ID - 1550 ER - TY - CHAP AB - In Canada, American movies and television programs dominated the market – more than 90 percent of the films for which Canadian paid rental fees came from the United States. In 1977, Ontario’s Commission on Violence in the Communications Industry concluded that the “great weight of research into the effects of violent media contents indicates potential harm to society.” In Volume 1, this Report concluded that Canadians – including children – were watching increasing amounts of American-made TV which had “much higher levels of violence” than programs produced in Canada or elsewhere, and television’s “escalation of violence” was “drawing other sections of the media along like the tail of a comet.” This essay appears in Volume 7 of the Royal Commission's Report. It discusses economic factors in television and movie violence and their relationship to new technologies. AU - Edmunds, Hugh H. and John Strick CN - See filed under Report of the Royal Commission... Volume 7. CY - Toronto, Ontario KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) magnetic recording television, and media effects syntheses (of research) Surgeon General social science research fiber optics optical fibers news and journalism news media effects media violence media effects news and journalism satellites materials video games VCRs magnetic tape materials fiber optics censorship and ratings children news and journalism non-USA Canada +television violence television, and violence violence, and television violence, and social science research social science research, and violence children, and media +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures Surgeon General's Report (1972) violence children, and TV violence media effects, and television violence, and syntheses syntheses media effects, and violence violence, and media effects reports social science research, and TV violence television, and social science television, and violence violence, and television media effects, and television children, and media children, and TV violence social science research, synthesis (violence) Canada, and media violence reports journalism, and Canada journalism journalism, and violence news, and Canada news, and violence bibliographies, annotated bibliographies, and journalism and violence journalism, and violence (bibliography) video games, and Canada video games, and violence violence, and video games cable, and Canada VCRs, and Canada optical fibers, and Canada satellites, and Canada +aeronautics and space communication violence, and new media +bibliographies cable LB - 2790 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Royal Commission on Violence in the Communications Industry SP - 71-184 ST - Economic Determinants of Violence in Television and Motion Pictures and the Implications of Newer Technologies T2 - Report of The Royal Commission on Violence in the Communications Industry: Volume 7: The Media Industries: From Here to Where? TI - Economic Determinants of Violence in Television and Motion Pictures and the Implications of Newer Technologies ID - 367 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Bill Nichols, ed. AU - Edward, Buscombe CY - Berkeley KW - Marked ref, secondary color color, and sound LB - 41150 PB - University of California Press PY - 1985 SP - 83-92 ST - Sound and Color T2 - Movies and Methods: Volume II: An Anthology TI - Sound and Color ID - 4214 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - America, Film Council of AB - This essays deals with the theatrical uses of 16mm film and appears in a collection devoted to examining the different facets of this medium. Hollywood resisted using 16mm film and it had an association with "amateurism." But during and after World War II, many more people used 16mm cameras for a wide range of purposes. AU - Ellis, Jack C. CY - Des Plaines, IL KW - libraries nationalism Film Council of America magnetic recording World War II values preservation media effects materials materials magnetic tape cinema motion pictures celluloid film education community democracy values religion war 16mm government history +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and 16mm film 16mm film magnetic tape recording magnetic tape recording, video values, and society democracy, and media education, and 16mm film religion, and 16mm film 16mm film, and education 16mm film, and religion +nationalism and communication government, and 16mm film public libraries, and 16mm film 16mm film, and public libraries 16mm film, as paperback books +television television, and 16mm film history, and new media history, and 16mm film values, and 16mm film +sound recording sound recording, and magnetic tape World War II, and 16mm film 16mm film, and World War II 16mm film, and museums media effects, and 16mm films Film Council of America, values libraries +information storage LB - 18100 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Film Council of America (Evanston, IL) PY - 1954 SP - 176-82 ST - Theatrical Film on 16mm T2 - Sixty Years of 16mm Film, 1923-1983: A Symposium TI - Theatrical Film on 16mm ID - 719 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Everett M. Rogers and Francis Balle, eds. AB - Ellul considered nine “preconceived ideas” that intellectuals and most media professionals accept. A severe critic of new media, he argued that they create an information overload that often makes society and its citizens dysfunctional. Ellul had grave reservations about the optimistic claims often promoted by computer-based information systems. Arguing from a humanistic perspective, he believed that the nature of human relationships could not be effectively transmitted through mass media. Thus, an essential element in communication was missing. The world could not become a global village nor could it be one through the new media. Instead, Ellul saw a wedge being driven ever more deeply between the “information-aristocrats and their plebeian masses.” This piece might be read in conjunction with such other thoughtful critics of new media as Langdon Winner (see his chapter “Mythinformation” in The Whale and the Reactor) and William J. Donnelly (The Confetti Generation). AU - Ellul, Jacques CY - Norwood, NJ KW - computers advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations propaganda advertising values communication revolution community democracy Information Age general studies democracy and media myth computers computers, and humanistic perspective information processing information v. knowledge information age communication revolution critics +computers and the Internet computers, and public relations public relations, and new media advertising, and new media advertising public relations democracy, and new media values values, and new media LB - 480 PB - Ablex Publishing Corp. PY - 1985 SP - 95-107 ST - Preconceived Ideas About Mediated Information SV - 2 T2 - The Media Revolution in America and in Western Europe: Volume II in the Paris-Stanford Series T3 - Paris-Stanford Series TI - Preconceived Ideas About Mediated Information ID - 1444 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, eds. AB - The author begins by writing that "the late D. F. McKenzie ... defined bibiography [in 1985] as 'the discipline that studies texts as recorded forms, and the processes of their transmission, including their production and reception.' He went on to define texts to include 'verbal, visual, oral, and numeric data, in the form of maps, prints, and music, of archives of recoorded sound, of films, videos, and an computer-stored information, everything in fact from epigrapy to te latest forms of discography. There is no evading the challenge which those new forms have created.' This essay will discuss the ways in which bibliography and its sibling discipline, the history of the book -- the study of the physical, technological, economic, and cultural conditions of reading, authorship, and publishing -- have in many respects evaded the very challenges for the discipline that McKenziee raised over sixteen years ago." (95) Erickson's essay is one of twenty-two chapters by different authors that attempt to improve our "understanding of emerging communication technologies." This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. AU - Erickson, Paul CY - Cambridge, MA KW - books, periodicals, newspapers print culture print v. nonprint digital media books, electronic books, and new media bibliographies books, history of bibliography, as a discipline printing audiences audiences, and books books print LB - 33990 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 95-116 ST - Help or Hindrance? The History of the Book and Electronic Media T2 - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - Help or Hindrance? The History of the Book and Electronic Media ID - 3037 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - When this piece appeared in Scientific American (Sept. 1982), the world of commerce was much more automated than the manufacture of goods. The electronics revolution was already changing banking and transportation, what with credit cards and electronic airline reservations. Ernst, notes though, that this transformation has not been without problems. AU - Ernst, Martin L. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers information technology +computers and the Internet +transportation +aeronautics and space communication electronics revolution air travel, and electronics revolution finance, and electronics revolution information technology, and finance capitalism, and electronics revolution automation air travel capitalism electronic media finance labor LB - 3380 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 336-49 ST - Electronics in Commerce T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Electronics in Commerce ID - 1729 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - Etzioni asks "whether communities and democracy can thrive in the new world in cyberspace." This question requires consideration of whether or not "there can be virtual communities" and second "can these -- and other (including offline) communities -- govern themselves in a democratic way by drawing on new developments in cyberspace?" (85) The volume in which Etzioni's chapter appears ispart of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectivs on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organzied by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." AU - Etzioni, Amitai CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers computers virtual reality community democracy democracy, and new media computers and the Internet democracy, and computers computers, and democracy Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet critics digital media democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy capitalism gatekeeping community, and democracy democracy, and virtual communities virtual communities cyberspace cyberspace, and democracy democracy, and cyberspace Internet LB - 34190 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 85-100 ST - Are Virtual and Democratic Communities Feasible? T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - Are Virtual and Democratic Communities Feasible? ID - 3057 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - Such "process industries" as pulp paper, chemical, and food have been growth industries in recent years, the author notes, and have also been on the cutting edge of new developments in automation, particularly "new control technology." Evans, then a professor of Chemical Engineering at MIT, discusses "how the revolutionary advances in electronics will greatly accelerate evolutionary change in industrial process control." This piece appeared first in Science magazine (March 18, 1977). AU - Evans, Lawrence B. CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers microprocessing communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution microprocessors microelectronics +computers and the Internet control revolution microelectronics revolution microprocessors, and industry automation +artificial intelligence and biotechnology microprocessors capitalism, and microprocessors labor labor, and microprocessors capitalism LB - 2850 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 138-51 ST - Industrial Uses of the Microprocessor T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - Industrial Uses of the Microprocessor ID - 1677 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This article details Japan's effort to create artificial intelligence, setting out its weaknesses and strengths. This is an excerpt from the authors' book, The Fifth Generation: Artificial Intelligence and Japan's Computer Challenge to the World (Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley, 1983). This piece was originally published in High Technology (June 1983). At the time of this piece, Feigenbaum was a professor of Computer Science at Stanford, and McCorduck was a journalist. AU - Feigenbaum, Edward and Pamela McCorduck CY - Cambridge, MA KW - R & D computers nationalism presidents, and new media research and development war +future and science fiction war non-USA computers +military communication Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration Japan +computers and the Internet +nationalism and communication +artificial intelligence and biotechnology Japan Japan, and artificial intelligence strategic computing initiative Reagan administration, and computers supercomputers future Japan, and supercomputers LB - 3200 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 71-83 ST - Land of the Rising Fifth Generation T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Land of the Rising Fifth Generation ID - 1712 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - The author argued that Japan had caught up with the United States in computer software and surpassed the U. S. in certain key areas of hardware. The author at the time of this article was with IBM. He maintained that Japan rivaled America ink chip production because the American microelectronics industry was hindered by an outdated structure. This piece first appeared in Technology Review (Aug. - Sept., 1983). AU - Ferguson, Charles H. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers nationalism corporations corporations labor communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution materials materials computers non-USA office office, and new media office microelectronics +computers and the Internet microelectronics revolution chips, computer Japan +nationalism and communication infrastructure IBM computers, and software computer chips nationalism, and computers Japan, and supercomputers LB - 3170 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 45-55 ST - Chips: The US versus Japan T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Chips: The US versus Japan ID - 1709 ER - TY - CHAP AB - Finlay notes that book and magazine publishers readily accepted the poster style during the 1890s and this helps to explains the prevalence of book and magazine posters during this decade. But color printing and photomechanical reproductive techniques may have been even more important in the spread of posters. Magazines as well as paper and clothbound books reflected the poster style. “To understand the poster’s rise and fall in popularity requires some knowledge of how book and magazine posters were distributed and collected, a phenomenon that has never been adequately studied,” the author says. AU - Finlay, Nancy CY - New York KW - photography print printing news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines posters +photography and visual communication posters, and United States (1890s) color, and posters color color, and printing printing, and color +duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and posters books, and posters magazines, and posters +books, periodicals, newspapers books LB - 1550 PB - Metropolitan Museum of Art; Distributed by Harry N. Abrams, Inc. PY - 1987 SP - 45-55 ST - American Posters and Publishing in the 1890s T2 - American Art Posters of the 1890s TI - American Posters and Publishing in the 1890s ID - 1551 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Manuel Castells, ed. AB - Fischer attempted to “describe ... the sorry state of the sociology of technology -- examine its decline, theoretical confusion, and empirical vacuum -- and argue for new efforts to understand how technology influences social life.” Drawing on his research on the social impact of telephones and automobiles, he is concerned with how such technologies affect “daily personal and social life rather than with large economic and institutional domains and with changes across one or two generations rather than across epochs of history.” AU - Fischer, Claude S. CY - Beverly Hills, CA KW - technology nationalism labor home, and new media home office office, and new media office, and information technology home, and information technology information technology general studies nationalism and communication telephones transportation automobiles technology, and sociology of information technology, and home information technology, and office technology and society home office sociology, and technology office, and new media sociology LB - 2100 PB - Sage Publications PY - 1985 SP - 284-300 ST - Studying Technology and Social Life T2 - High Technology, Space, and Society TI - Studying Technology and Social Life ID - 1606 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Stephen H. Cutliffe and Terry S. Reynolds, eds. AU - Fischer, Claude S. CY - Chicago KW - technology entertainment entertainment, home labor home entertainment home, and new media home values office, and information technology home, and information technology networks information technology +telephones technology and society values, and telephones networks, and telephones information technology, and home information technology, and office anthology office LB - 5340 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1997 SP - 271-300 ST - ‘Touch Someone’: The Telephone Industry Discovers Sociability T2 - Technology & American History: A Historical Anthology from Technology & Culture TI - ‘Touch Someone’: The Telephone Industry Discovers Sociability ID - 1919 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - This work contains a useful bibliography on materials science, superconductors, new materials such as ceramics, optical fibers, plastics, cements, superglues, alloys, and semiconductors. It also has works on computers and telecommunications, aerospace, energy, transport and manufacturing, medicine, space processing of materials, and future applications of various materials. AU - Forester, Tom CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers superconductivity nationalism supercomputers fiber optics communication revolution materials +future and science fiction fiber optics communication revolution, and second industrial revolution non-USA space communication materials information technology +bibliographies +aeronautics and space communication +nationalism and communication superconductors plastics optical fibers cement alloys semiconductors second industrial revolution communication revolution +computers and the Internet telecommunications information technology, and medicine space communication, and materials processing future nanotechnology materials revolution general studies materials revolution, bibliography Japan Japan, and supercomputers supercomputers, bibliography future, and materials revolution satellites LB - 2730 PB - MIT Press PY - 1988 SP - 375-86 ST - [Bibliography: Materials Revolution] T2 - The Materials Revolution: Superconductors, New Materials, and the Japanese Challenge TI - [Bibliography: Materials Revolution] ID - 1665 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This collection of previously published essays has bibliographies at the end of each section pulling together literature (as of 1980) on microelectronics, microprocessors, computers and their social impact, the influence of the microelectronics revolution on industry, employment, the office and industrial relations, town planning, politics, and artificial intelligence. AU - Forester, Tom CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers microprocessing labor community democracy office, and information technology microprocessors microelectronics information technology +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology microelectronics +bibliographies microelectronics, and bibliography microprocessors, and bibliography computers and social impact, bibliography artificial intelligence, bibliography industry automation labor urban studies democracy and media computers office, and new media labor, and new media office LB - 2780 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Publishers; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 62-64, 103-04, 159-61, 219, 288-89, 353-55, 414-15, 497-99, 575-76 ST - [Bibliography: Microelectronics Revolution] T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - [Bibliography: Microelectronics Revolution] ID - 1670 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - The author visited Santa Clara valley, or Silicon Valley, in June, 1978, and wrote this account of life there. AU - Forester, Tom CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers materials, and silicon microprocessing materials silicon communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution microelectronics +computers and the Internet Silicon Valley +artificial intelligence and biotechnology microelectronics revolution microprocessors capitalism LB - 2790 PB - Basil Blackwell Publishers; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 65-71 ST - The Microelectronics Industry: The Jelly Bean People of Silicon Valley T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - The Microelectronics Industry: The Jelly Bean People of Silicon Valley ID - 1671 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - Forester's work not only assembles papers and articles on the information technology revolution, but it also has a "Guide to Further Reading" at the end of each section. These guides pull together some of the best literature (as of 1985) on the topic of this anthology. AU - Forester, Tom CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) magnetic recording women, and new media values labor communication revolution home, and new media materials materials magnetic tape community democracy non-USA women videotex VCRs values telecommunications radio radio, and bibliography computers and the Internet computers, personal computers office, and information technology information technology +bibliographies information technology revolution, and bibliography +artificial intelligence and biotechnology artificial intelligence, bibliography telecommunications, and bibliography cable, bibliography videotex, bibliography radio, cellular, bibliography information technology, and home, bibliography information technology, and education, bibliography information technology, and industry, bibliography information technology, and office, bibliography information technology, and finance, bibliography information technology, and health, bibliography automation, bibliography women, and automation (bibliography) information technology, and labor, bibliography democracy and media, bibliography global communication, and bibliography communication revolution, and history of (bibliography) values, and information technology (bibliography) VCRs, and bibliography personal computers, and bibliography automation bibliographies, and information technology bibliographies, and artificial intelligence cable communication revolution democracy and media global communication information technology, and office personal computers computers, personal values, and information technology office home LB - 3180 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 56-59, 104-05, 162-66, 216-17, 258-59, 295-97, 334-35, 372-73, 417-18, 466-67, 528-29, 569-70, 617-19, 663-64 ST - [Bibliography: Information Technology Revolution] T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - [Bibliography: Information Technology Revolution] ID - 1710 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - When this piece appeared in the Harvard Business Review (Jan. - Feb. 1984), both authors were at the Human Resources Policy Institute at Boston University. Their article is based on case studies of companies that have moved to use robots. "Managers who successfully introduce robots carefully select their sites, move slowly, retrain displaced workers, and educate and keep informed both line managers and the unions." AU - Foulkes, Fred K. and Jeffrey L. Hirsch CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers robotics information technology +computers and the Internet labor automation information technology, and industry robots +artificial intelligence and biotechnology labor, and new media labor, and artificial intelligence labor, and automation LB - 3500 N1 - See also: office PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 468-79 ST - Management and Labor: the Organization of Work T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Management and Labor: the Organization of Work ID - 1740 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, eds. AB - The author notes that "the modern state created powerful apparati, purposefully devised to provide mass, uniform, transparent and ostensibly authorless fact, befitting 'the age of information;' for instance, the national census." He explains that "rather than offer a master narrative on ascendance of the state through the dispensation of knowledge, in what follows I will demonstrate the inevitable dissonance and cracks in the informative performances of the state in the context of my particular historical episode -- mid-nineteenth century production of reports and other documents by the federal government. Two arguments are central to my analysis. Without neglecting [Geoffrey] Nunberg's important insights, I will argue first that the material facets of state publications -- the physical properties that rendered them books and artifacts -- often eclipsed any information purpose, or at least never ceased calling attention to themselves; and second, that the making of government documents actually aggrandized rather than diminished individual authors and authorship." Frankel's essay is one of twenty-two chapters by different authors that attempt to improve our "understanding of emerging communication technologies." This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. AU - Frankel, Oz CY - Cambridge, MA KW - nationalism books, periodicals, newspapers nationalism and communication print cutlure printing, and government nationalism, and government printing print LB - 34010 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 137-62 ST - Potholes on the Information Superhighway: Congress as a Publisher in Nineteenth-Century America T2 - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - Potholes on the Information Superhighway: Congress as a Publisher in Nineteenth-Century America ID - 3039 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - H. E. Roys, ed. AB - This article is reprinted from the Society of Motion Pictures Engineers Journal, 18 (Feb. 1932), 141-52. It discusses progress recently made in mechanical records of sound cut on wax disks. Laboratory experiments note marked increases in volume, frequency range, and faithfulness to the original sound that is being recorded. AU - Frederick, H. A. CY - Stroudsburg, PA KW - +sound recording sound recording, and wax disks sound recording, and improvements (1932) LB - 5460 PB - Dowden, Hutchingon [sic] & Ross, Inc. PY - 1978 SP - 38-49 ST - Vertical Sound Records: Recent Fundamental Advances in Mechanical Records on ‘Wax’ T2 - Disc Recording and Reproduction TI - Vertical Sound Records: Recent Fundamental Advances in Mechanical Records on ‘Wax’ ID - 1931 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This essay examines microelectronics technology and unemployment. The author contends that Great Britain has failed to appreciate the significance of the microelectronics revolution, and has failed to keep pace with other nations. The author, at the time, was head of the Science Policy Research Unit at Sussex University, and this paper was the foundation of a lecture given at the University of London in May, 1978. AU - Freeman, Chris CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution non-USA microelectronics information technology Great Britain +computers and the Internet microelectronics revolution Great Britain, and microelectronics labor information technology, and industry capitalism microelectronics revolution, and unemployment automation labor, and microelectronics Great Britain LB - 2960 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 308-17 ST - Unemployment and Government T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - Unemployment and Government ID - 1688 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - The author maintains that the "depression of the 1980s is part of a long-term cycle first identified by Kondratiev. Information technology will provide the engine of renewed economic growth, but new post-Keynesian policies are also needed to help get us out of the mess." At the time of this paper, Freeman was with the Science Policy Research Unit at Sussex University in England. This piece was part of his address to the annual meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science in August, 1983, and was first published in the Symposium's proceedings, New Technology and the Future of Work and Skills (London: Frances Pinter, 1984). AU - Freeman, Chris CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers nationalism communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution +future and science fiction non-USA microelectronics information technology +computers and the Internet +nationalism and communication capitalism, and microelectronics revolution microelectronics revolution Great Britain capitalism, restructuring of Kondratieff, Nikolai Kondratieff cycles information technology, and industry communication revolution future capitalism LB - 3600 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 602-16 ST - Long Waves of Economic Development T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Long Waves of Economic Development ID - 1750 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, eds. AB - The author notes that "as the twentieth century ended, new systems of circulation and transmission began to replace the projection screen, and to link the screens of the computer and television with the dialogic interactivity of the telephone. This paper -- part of a larger project called The Virtual Window: A Cultural History of Windows and Screens -- is, in many ways, both a pre-quel and sequel to my book Window Shopping. It means to expand an account of the emergence of a mobilized and virtual visuality backward, in a thicker history of the framed visuality of the window, and forward, to the window's ever more virtual functions. Along the way, we will reconsider a history of what used to be called 'spectatorship': because, I will argue, the very term 'spectatorship' has lost its theoretical pinions, as screens have changed,as has our relation to them." (338) Friedberg's essay is one of twenty-two chapters by different authors that attempt to improve our "understanding of emerging communication technologies." This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. AU - Friedberg, Anne CY - Cambridge, MA KW - visual communication computers interactive media computers and the Internet screens computers, and screens screen, and computers virtual reality television interactivity media convergence audiences computers, and audiences television, and audiences television, and computers computers, and television digital media screens, as windows telephones visual culture computers LB - 34100 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 337-53 ST - The Virtual Window T2 - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - The Virtual Window ID - 3048 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Pornography, Commission on Obscenity and AB - This essay, which appears in the fifth volume in the Report of the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography, discusses how federal agencies have regulated pornography. AU - Friedman, Jane CY - Washington, D. C. KW - Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) social science research values sexuality values media effects values community law censorship and ratings censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and foreign censorship, and foreign obscenity pornography, and antisocial behavior media effects, and pornography pornography, and effects community standards, and pornography pornography, and community standards censorship, and citizen action groups pornography, and citizen action groups citizen action groups, and pornography citizen action groups, and censorship censorship, and antiporn groups pornography, and Post Office +postal service Post Office, and pornography pornography, and Customs Bureau pornography, and federal control post office LB - 19380 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - U. S. Government Printing Office SP - 15-34 ST - Regulation of Obscenity by Federal Agencies SV - 5 T2 - Technical Report of The Commission on Obscenity and Pornography: Volume V: Societal Control Mechanisms TI - Regulation of Obscenity by Federal Agencies ID - 776 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Anne G. Keatley, ed. AB - Frieman observes that "the world today [1985] is entering the second decade of a new energy regime following the Arab oil embargo of 1973 and the economic shock of the oil price explosion." (185) Frieman sees energy policy closely bound up with energy technology, but concludes that "energy planning has fallen into disrepute, and much of the apparatus for examining these issues is being dismantled. The base of support for R & D in energy-related technology has also been whittled away. The world survived the major economic dislocation of the energy-related shocks of the 1970s, but perhaps not as well as some would like to believe." (190) AU - Frieman, Edward A. CY - Washington, D. C. KW - R & D nationalism energy nationalism and communication military communication research and development LB - 33230 PB - National Academy Press PY - 1985 SP - 165-90 ST - The Energy Sector T2 - Technological Frontiers and Foreign Relations TI - The Energy Sector ID - 2963 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Fry, Roger AB - This essay, which appeared originally in 1909 in the New Quarterly, begins by taking a common definition of painting which said "The art of painting ... is the art of imitating solid object upon a flat surface by means of pigments," and then asks "It that all?" (16) Fry says that humans have "the peculiar faculty of calling up again" in their minds "the echo of past experiences" and "of going over it again, "'in 17/18 imagination' as we say." Human being have, "therefore, the possibility of a double life; one the actual life, the other the imaginative life." (17-18) Fry says that "the graphic arts are the expression of the imaginative life rather than a copy of actual life might be guessed from observing children." (20) Fry considers photography and cinema. "We can get a curious side glimpse of the nature of this imaginative life from the cinematograph. This resembles actual life in almost every respect, except that what the psychologists call the cognitive part of our reaction to sensations, that is to say, the appropriate resultant action is cut off." (18) We may be able to see the runaway horse and cart more clearly than in the heat and heightened emotions of the actual event, but our response to this event when seen in a moving picture or a photograph is less strong. Fry says that "with regard to the visions of the cinematograph, one notices that whatever emotions are aroused by them, though they are likely to be weaker than those of ordinary life, are presented more clearly to the consciousness. If the scene present be one of an accident, our pity and horror, though weak, since we know that no one is really hurt, are felt quite purely, since they cannot, as they would in life pass at once into actions of assistance." (19) Later he says the following about the impact of the graphic arts: "But it is different, I think, with the emotional aspect. We have admitted that the emotions of the imaginative are generally weaker than those of actual life. The picture of a saint being slowly flayed alive, revolting as it is, will not produce the same physical sensations of sickening disgust that a modern man would feel if he could assist at the actual event; but they have a compensating clearness of presentment to the consciousness. The more poignant emotions of actual life have, I think, as kind of numbing effect analogous to the paralysing influence of fear in some animals; but even if this experience be not generally admitted, all will admit that the need for responsive action hurries us along and prevents us from ever realising fully what the emotion is that we feel, from co-ordinating it perfectly with other states. In short, the motives we actually 26/27 experience are too close to us to enable us to feel them clearly. They are in a sense unintelligible. In the imaginative life, on the contrary, we can both feel the emotion and watch it. When we are really moved at the theatre we are always both on the stage and in the auditorium." (26-27) Fry comments on the relationship between the life of the imagination and morality. "What then is the justification for this life of the imagination which all human beings live more or less fully? To the pure moralist, who accepts nothing but ethical values, in order to be justified, it must be shown not only not to hinder but actually to forward right action, otherwise it is not only useless but, since it absorbs our energies, positively harmful. To such a one two views are possible, one the Puritanical view at its narrowest, which regards the life of the imagination as no better or worse than a life of sensual pleasure, and therefore entirely reprehensible The other view is to argue that the imaginative life does subserve morality. And this is inevitably the view taken by moralists like Ruskin, to whom the imaginative life leads to some very hard special pleading, even to a self-deception which is in itself morally undesirable." (21) Fry says that "Morality, then, appreciates emotion by the standard of resultant action. Art appreciates emotion in and for itself." (27) Fry argues that "Art ... is ... the chief organ of the imaginative life; it is by art that it is stimulated and controlled within us, and, as we have seen, the imaginative life is distinguished by the greater clearness of it perception, and the greater purity and freedom of its emotion." (24) In discussing the ways in which the artists influences our emotion, Fry comments briefly on the significance of light and color. "The Fourth element is that of light and shade. Our feelings toward the same object become totally different according as we see it strongly illuminated against a black background or dark against light. "A fifth element is that of colour. That this has a direct emotional effect is evident from such words as gay, dull, melancholy in relation to colour." (34) Later he says of color: "Colour is the only one of our elements which is not of critical or universal importance to life, and its emotional effect is neither so deep nor so clearly determined as the others...." (35) With regard to art exactly reflecting Nature, Fry concludes by saying: "We may, then, dispense once and for all with the idea of likeness to Nature, of correctness or incorrectness as a test, and consider only whether the emotional elements inherent in natural form are adequately discovered, unless, indeed, the emotional idea depends at any point upon likeness, or completeness of representation." (38) The book in which this essay appears, contains several other pieces written by Fry prior to 1924. AU - Fry, Roger CY - New York KW - psychology history censorship censorship ref, secondary photography photography and visual communication motion pictures history and new media photography, and history history, and photography motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures media effects media effects, and photography photography, and media effects motion pictures, and media effects media effects, and motion pictures photography, and psychology motion pictures, and psychology psychology, and motion pictures psychology, and photography emotion, and photography photography, and emotion emotion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and emotion values values, and photography values, and imagination values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values censorship and ratings censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and photography photography, and censorship quotations quotations, and art and imagination color color, and emotion emotion, and color lighting, and emotion emotion, and lighting censorship ref, book emotion lighting LB - 39450 PB - Brentano's ST - An Essay on Aesthetics T2 - Vision and Design TI - An Essay on Aesthetics ID - 4043 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Renate Mayntz and Thomas Hughes, eds. AB - Galambos has three goals. One is to discover how technology and politics shaped the American telephone system. A second objective is to ascertain to what extent the telephone system “became a technological system or systems which acquired the type of socio-economic momentum that Thomas P. hugees found in electrical power systems.” Finally, he tries to explain the strategies of the state and others who used the telephone in a way that will further comparative analysis of this technology. AU - Galambos, Louis CY - Boulder, CO KW - technology nationalism labor office office, and new media office +telephones +nationalism and communication technical systems networks technology and society infrastructure nationalism, and telephones telephones, and nationalism LB - 2310 PB - Westview Press PY - 1988 SP - 135-53 ST - Looking for the Boundaries of Technological Determinism: A Brief History of the U.S. Telephone System T2 - The Development of Large Technical Systems TI - Looking for the Boundaries of Technological Determinism: A Brief History of the U.S. Telephone System ID - 1624 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This piece originally appeared in the British alternative technology magazine Undercurrents (No. 27, 1978). The editor of the volume (Forester) says the authors represent a "romantic" school, "yet they say the romantics of the radical technology movement have concentrated too much on windmills and solar panels and have ignored other technologies with an equally liberating potential -- like microelectronics. The new telecommunication technology, they argue, makes possible a decentralized, self-managed anarchist utopia." AU - Garrett, John and Geoff Wright CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers nationalism communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution +future and science fiction non-USA microelectronics +computers and the Internet computers and society utopianism future microelectronics revolution microelectronics revolution, and decentralization +nationalism and communication Great Britain Luddism microelectronics revolution, and government computers miniaturization nationalism, and microelectronics LB - 3130 PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 488-96 ST - Micro is Beautiful T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - Micro is Beautiful ID - 1705 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Lisa Gitelman and Geoffrey B. Pingree, eds. AB - The author writes that "as literary critics have long noted, authors inevitably leave a surplus of meaning, sometimes obvious as ambiguity, which readers maneuver within, or scoop up, glean, and reuse. And just as authors cannot nail meaning to a fixed spot, neither can they or their publishers control the circulation and ordering or reordering of meaning. Even when copyright locks down the right to reproduce texts, readers have the option of moving those old texts to new contexts, creating a new tier of private circulation: clipping texts our of newspapers, pasting them into scrapbooks, or today onto Web pages, and circulating this new compiled version. Nineteenth-century scrapbook makers were part of an elaborate circuit of recirculation, one that trespassed or found easements across the enclosure of authorship and publication." (208) Garvey's essay appears in a volume that is part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. This volume offers a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. These ten essays examine media that were new in the eighteenth, nineteenth, and early twentieth centuries. They explore "moments of transition when each new medium was not yet fully defined, its significance in flux...." They attempt to put these media into their "specific material and historical environment" and explain the "ways in which habits and structures of communication are naturalized or normalized." (viii) AU - Garvey, Ellen Gruber CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers books, periodicals, newspapers audiences reading print culture print culture, and scrapbooks newspapers, and reading reading, and newspapers reading, and scrapbooks audiences, and scrapbooks copyright copyright, and scrapbooks Internet, and scrapbooks computers and the Internet newspapers Internet news print news and journalism LB - 34430 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 207-27 ST - Scissorizing and Scrapbooks: Nineteenth-Century Reading, Remaking, and Recirculating T2 - New Media, 1740-1915 TI - Scissorizing and Scrapbooks: Nineteenth-Century Reading, Remaking, and Recirculating ID - 3081 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Earl Kemp, ed. AB - The legalization of pornography in Denmark, Gilmore predicted, spelled “the doom of a multi-million dollar industry.” This short piece appeared in an unauthorized version -- with pictures -- of the 1970 Report of President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. AU - Gilmore, Donald H. CY - San Diego, CA KW - illustrations sexuality motion pictures mass media media effects crime pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and supporters pornography, and crime crime, and pornography reports illustrations reports, unauthorized LB - 22340 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Greenleaf Classics, Inc. PY - 1970 SP - 8-9 ST - Preface T2 - Illustrated Presidential Report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography TI - Preface ID - 962 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, eds. AB - Gitelman beings this piece by writing that "the production/ consumption dichotomy" that is often central to historical interpretations of new media and technology "harbors a particular determinism: within it lurks a tendency to use technology as a sufficient explanation of social and cultural change. It uts production first and has helped orient the history of technology away from the experience of any but white, middle-class men; rendering a history, according to one observer, in which 'inventing the telephone is manly; talking on it is womanly.' An unreflected reliance of the same dichotomy" has influenced much writing about the phonograph. Gitelman concludes that "Phonographs only 'worked' when they got women's voices right, just as home phonographs only 'worked' according to the ways they interlocked with existing tensions surrounding music and home, with ongoing constructions of shopping as something women do, and with the ways in which users of all sorts wanted, heard, and played recorded sounds." (75) Gitelman's essay is one of twenty-two chapters by different authors that attempt to improve our "understanding of emerging communication technologies." This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. AU - Gitelman, Lisa CY - Cambridge, MA KW - sound recording phonograph women women, and new media telephones history and new media Berliner, Emile advertising and public relations phonograph, and advertising advertising, and phonograph home and new media phonograph, and home home, and phonograph phonographs, and women women, and phonographs advertising history home LB - 33970 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 61-79 ST - How Users Define New Media: A History of the Amusement Phonograph T2 - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - How Users Define New Media: A History of the Amusement Phonograph ID - 3035 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Lisa Gitelman and Geoffrey B. Pingree, eds. AB - Gitelman examines the meaning of tinfoil records that accompanied early phonographs. "Aided by the surrounding publicity, tinfoil records offered a profound and self-conscious experience of what 'speaking' on paper might mean" in the late nineteenth century. (158) "Recorded sound eventually prospered, of course, but the newspapers of 1878 remain the best record of its public introduction. Into the circulation of the newsprint and the circuits of the American lyceum entered the touring phonograph exhibitors. With their own modest circuits of mail, of revenue, and of foil they immodestly boosted the phonograph in public, promoting it to, as well as via, newly recordable Americans." (170) Gitelman's essay appears in a volume that is part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. This volume offers a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. These ten essays examine media that were new in the eighteenth, nineteenth, and early twentieth centuries. They explore "moments of transition when each new medium was not yet fully defined, its significance in flux...." They attempt to put these media into their "specific material and historical environment" and explain the "ways in which habits and structures of communication are naturalized or normalized." (viii) AU - Gitelman, Lisa CY - Cambridge, MA KW - sound recording print culture sound recording, and print media print, and sound recording phonograph Edison, Thomas phonograph, and Thomas Edison Edison, Thomas, and phonograph newspapers, and phonograph phonograph, and newspapers books, periodicals, newspapers home and new media advertising and public relations phonograph, and home home, and phonograph advertising, and phonograph phonograph, and advertising advertising newspapers home news print news and journalism LB - 34410 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 157-73 ST - Souvenir Foils: On the Status of Print at the Origin of Recorded Sound T2 - New Media, 1740-1915 TI - Souvenir Foils: On the Status of Print at the Origin of Recorded Sound ID - 3079 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This article contends that the "office is the primary locus of information-handling, the activity that is coming to dominate the US economy." The author, then a consultant for Arthur D. Little, Inc., discusses the evolution of the office through its pre-industrial and industrial periods. The new information technology, he argues, can improve job satisfaction, replace paperwork, increase productivity, and better consumer service. This piece appeared first in Scientific American (Sept. 1982). AU - Giuliano, Vincent E. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers labor future and science fiction capitalism office, and information technology information technology Information Age Industrial Revolution computers and the Internet computers and society information age office, history of information processing future computers office, and new media capitalism, and new media labor labor, and new media office LB - 3350 N1 - See also: office PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 298-311 ST - The Mechanization of Office Work T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - The Mechanization of Office Work ID - 1726 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - A new generation of computer-literate children has been created by the information technology revolution. Critics divide over whether this development is good or bad. Golden considers why children gravitate to computers so readily and what is happening in American schools. This piece appeared first in Time (May 3, 1982). AU - Golden, Frederic CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers education censorship and ratings information technology +computers and the Internet information technology, and education children,and media children, and computers children education, and new media LB - 3290 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 218-28 ST - Here Come the Microkids T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Here Come the Microkids ID - 1720 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Vincent Mosco and Janet Wasko, eds. AB - Goldhaber notes that the creation and dissemination of information is becoming increasingly important in the economy, and he argues that new technologies to handle this information are creating new opportunities for working class organization. “New possibilities of intercommunication and of consciousness may in turn lead to significant new forms of working-class organization.” Specifically, Goldhaber argues that e-mail and other sophisticated new communication technologies give white collar workers the tools and the power to communicate about workplace issues. Goldhaber argues that the increased ability to amass and use information in business has created a need for a growing number of white collar workers who share a common experience, similar to the experience shared by industrial workers. “Every industrialized country now has millions of information workers, including clerical workers, programmers, technologists, scientists, analysts, and managers. Relatively few are organized into unions, in part because their close involvement with management prevents them from being seen, even by themselves, as wage workers.” But the common elements of information management jobs “will mean that many workers will come to share a set of experiences.” Because of the ability to intercommunicate, using the information network, “common experience may lead to a unified and powerful class.” --Phil Glende AU - Goldhaber, Michael CY - Norwood, NJ KW - email electronic mail Glende, Phil labor labor, and new media labor, and electronic media electronic mail, and labor labor, and electronic mail electronic media LB - 1120 N1 - See also: office PB - Ablex Publishing PY - 1983 SP - 211-43 ST - Microelectronic Networks: A New Workers' Culture in Formation T2 - The Critical Communications Review, Vol. I: Labor, the Working Class, and the Media TI - Microelectronic Networks: A New Workers' Culture in Formation ID - 200 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This piece is a condensed version of the script of BBC 2 Television's documentary "Now the Chips are Down." It first appeared in print form in The Listener (April 6, 1978). AU - Goldwyn, Ed CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers microprocessing transistors, and integrated circuits values communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution materials materials computers values religion microelectronics +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology microprocessors microelectronics revolution transistors Bell Laboratories integrated circuits communication revolution chips, computer computer chips LB - 2950 PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 297-307 ST - Now the Chips are Down T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - Now the Chips are Down ID - 1687 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tino Balio, ed. AB - Gomery describes the introduction of widely available sound in U.S. motion pictures during a relatively short period late in the 1920s and early in the 1930s. He describes this introduction in three phases: invention, innovation and diffusion. While sound for film had been under experimentation for some time, it required two industry powerhouses, RCA and AT&T, to develop the technology, and two movie studios, Fox and Warner Brothers, to spur its universal development. Once introduced, other producers and exhibitors rushed to follow the lead. --Phil Glende AU - Gomery, Douglas CY - Madison KW - corporations corporations corporations inventions innovation +motion pictures +motion pictures +sound recording Glende, Phil motion pictures, and sound technology AT & T RCA inventions, and diffusion LB - 9780 PB - University of Wisconsin Press PY - 1985 SP - 229-51 ST - The Coming of Sound: Technological Change in the American Film Industry T2 - The American Film Industry TI - The Coming of Sound: Technological Change in the American Film Industry ID - 2345 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Good, Irving John, Alan James Mayne, and John Maynard Smith, eds. AB - Of work on artificial intelligence, Good wrote in 1962: "It is true that the programs so far have not produced much really original 'thought', but the work is being greatly accelerated both by improvements in computers, and in programming techniques, especially the latter. The elementary instructions in these programs are being built up into larger and more intuitively appealing units, and they enable the human to communicate with the machine with greater and greater flexibility. Programs can be quickly modified, in minutes rather than weeks, and consequently the work on artificial intelligence can be expected to expand exponentially during say the next eight years. The variety of applications will likewise increase rapidly and it is not easy to see where the saturation point will be." Arthur C. Clarke cited Good's work in a 1967 Playboy article on artificial intelligence. AU - Good, I. J. CY - New York KW - computers values +future and science fiction +artificial intelligence and biotechnology +computers and the Internet progress future artificial intelligence, and 1960s Clarke, Arthur C. artificial intelligence future, and artificial intelligence LB - 4720 PB - Basic Books, Inc. PY - 1962 SP - 192-98 ST - The Social Implications of Artificial Intelligence T2 - The Scientist Speculates: An Anthology of Partly-Baked Ideas TI - The Social Implications of Artificial Intelligence ID - 1859 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Toulet, Emmanuelle AB - Novelist Maksim Gorky’s observation on seeing his first Lumière movie July 4, 1896: “Last evening, I was in the Kingdom of the Shadows. “If one could only convey the strangeness of this world. A world without color and sound. Everything here -- the earth, water, and air, the trees, the people -- everything is made of a monotone gray. Gray rays of sunlight in a gray sky, gray eyes in a gray face, leaves as gray as cinder. Not life, but the shadow of life. Not life’s movement, but a sort of mute specter. “Here I must try to explain myself before the reader thinks I have gone mad or become too indulgent toward symbolism. I was at Aumont’s Cinématographe, the moving pictures. This spectacle creates an impression so complex that I doubt I am able to describe all its nuances. I will however try to convey the essentials. “When the lights are extinguished in the hall where we are to be shown the Lumière brothers’ invention, a great gray image, the shadow of a poor engraving, suddenly appears on the screen; it is A Paris Street. Examining it, one sees carriages, buildings, people, all immobile, and you predict that the spectacle will have nothing new: views of Paris, who has not seen them so many times? And suddenly, with a curious click on the screen, the image is 132/133 brought to life. The carriages that were in the background of the image come right toward you. Somewhere in the distance people appear, and the closer they get, the more they grow. In the foreground children play with a dog, bicyclists turn and pedestrians seek to cross the street. It all moves, breathes with life, and suddenly, having reached the edge of the screen, disappears one knows not where. “This is all strangely silent. Everything takes place without your hearing the noise of the wheels, the sound of footsteps or of speech. Not a sound, not a single note of the complex symphony which always accompanies the movement of a crowd. Without noise, the foliage, gray as cinder, is agitated by the wind and the gray silhouettes of people condemned to a perpetual silence, cruelly punished by the privation of all the colors of life these silhouettes glide in silence over the gray ground. “Their movements are full of vital energy and so rapid that you scarcely see them, but their smiles have nothing of life in them. You see their facial muscles contract but their laugh cannot be heard. A life is born before you, a life deprived of sound and the specter of color a gray and noiseless life a wan and cut-rate life. “It is terrible to see, this movement of shadows, nothing but shadows, the specters, these phantoms; you think of the legends in which some evil genius causes an entire town to be seized by a perpetual sleep and you think you have seen some Merlin work his sorcery in front of your eyes. He has bewitched the whole street, compressed the high buildings; from roof to foundations, they are squeezed into a space that seems to be only a meter wide; the people were shrunk proportionally at the same time as their ability to speak was stolen, and as the earth and the sky were plundered of their colored pigment and draped in the same gray monotone. “This grotesque creation is presented to us in a sort of niche at the back of a restaurant. Suddenly, you hear something click; everything disappears, and a train occupies the screen. It heads straight for us watch out! You could say that it wants to bear down into the dark where we are, to make of us an unspeakable heap of torn flesh and broken bones, and reduce to dust this hall and the whole edifice filled with wine, music, women, and vice. “But no! It is only a cortege of shadows.” Maksim Gorky Nijegorodskilistok 4 July 1896 Source: Maksim Gorky, Nijegorodskilistok, July 4, 1896, reprinted in Emmanuelle Toulet, Birth of the Motion Picture (New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1995) (translated from the French by Susan Emanuel, Cinématographie, invention du siècle (Paris: Ed. Gallimard, 1988), 132-33. At publication Emmanuelle Toulet was curator in the Department of Entertainment Arts at the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris. AU - Gorky, Maksim CY - New York KW - theater stage history photography ref, secondary motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and history history, and photography Gorky, Maksim, and silent film ref, book Gorky, Maksim quotations quotations, and Maksim Gorky color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sound recording color, and Maksim Gorky Gorky, Maksim, and color LB - 41480 PB - Harry N. Abrams, Inc. PY - 1988 SP - 132-33 ST - [Kingdom of the Shadows] T2 - Birth of the Motion Picture (ranslated from the French by Susan Emanuel) TI - [Kingdom of the Shadows] ID - 4247 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ithiel de Sola Pool, ed. AB - This essay examines the telephone and its relation to the design of the modern city. AU - Gottmann, Jean CY - Cambridge, MA KW - +telephones urban studies space (spatial) telephones, and urban design geography LB - 10280 PB - MIT Press PY - 1977 SP - 303-17 ST - Megalopolis and Antipolis: The Telephone and the Structure of the City T2 - The Social Impact of the Telephone TI - Megalopolis and Antipolis: The Telephone and the Structure of the City ID - 2393 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - Ceramics are lightweight and strong materials that can boost efficient in many electronic and mechanical devices from computer chips to diesel engines. But they have disadvantages -- they are brittle and prone to sudden failures. This piece originally appeared in High Technology Magazine (Dec. 1983). AU - Graff, Gordon CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers materials computers materials +computers and the Internet general studies materials revolution electronic media ceramics engines, diesel chips, computer general studies chips, computer computer chips engines LB - 2650 PB - MIT Press PY - 1988 SP - 179-92 ST - Ceramics Take on Tough Tasks T2 - The Materials Revolution: Superconductors, New Materials, and the Japanese Challenge TI - Ceramics Take on Tough Tasks ID - 1657 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - According to Graff, “A new generation of tough and durable plastics is being rapidly adopted by makers of cars, computers, and food packaging. New composites created by mixing and matching existing polymers like nylon and polyester -- or combining them with ceramics, glass, or carbon fibers -- can be made stronger, lighter, and tougher than steel. The boom in optical storage discs such as CD-ROMs is boosting demand for the polycarbonate plastic from which they are made. But plastics still have to overcome prejudice and an image of cheapness....” This article originally appeared in High Technology Magazine (Oct. 1986). AU - Graff, Gordon CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers archives materials computers materials libraries libraries, and information storage information storage information storage general studies materials revolution +computers and the Internet +transportation automobiles plastics chips, computer polymers CD-ROMs discs, computer computers, discs information storage, and computer discs chips, computer computer chips +information storage discs, optical storage optical storage discs LB - 2670 PB - MIT Press PY - 1988 SP - 203-13 ST - High-Performance Plastics T2 - The Materials Revolution: Superconductors, New Materials, and the Japanese Challenge TI - High-Performance Plastics ID - 1659 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Everett M. Rogers and Francis Balle, eds. AB - This essay provides a glimpse into the media environment of the typical American family during the 1980s, and into such television-related technologies as interactive cable, optical fiber, satellites, videocassette/disc units, and electronic text. This work is Volume 3 in the Paris-Stanford Series. AU - Greenberg, Bradley S. CY - Norwood, NJ KW - entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) interactivity entertainment, home magnetic recording video cassettes fiber optics materials videotape magnetic tape materials fiber optics home, and new media home home, and information technology information technology general studies information technology and home cable interactive media optical fibers satellites VCRs video cassettes video discs electronic media home, and new media home, and VCRs home entertainment +aeronautics and space communication LB - 580 PB - Ablex Publishing Corp. PY - 1985 SP - 43-67 ST - Mass Media in the United States in the 1980s T2 - The Media Revolution in America and in Western Europe: Volume II in the Paris-Stanford Series TI - Mass Media in the United States in the 1980s ID - 1454 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - In 1981, Japan began a major research and development initiative in new materials, which they believed would be on the same level as biotechnology and microelectronics. At the time of this article, the author maintained that “Japan already dominates world production of carbon-fiber-reinforced plastics and holds a commanding position in high-performance engineering plastics, polymer membrane materials, and amorphous alloys.” Gregory also argued that Japan was also ready “to take the lead in perhaps the single most important area of new materials technology -- fine ceramics,” thus reducing that nation’s need to import basic materials. The United States, he believed, had squandered its opportunities and Japan would be the “world’s greatest economic power in the last decade of the twentieth century.” This article originally appeared in The International Journal of Materials and Product Technology, Vol. 2 (no. 1, 1987). AU - Gregory, Gene CY - Cambridge, MA KW - R & D computers nationalism +military communication materials +future and science fiction non-USA research and development materials +computers and the Internet materials revolution Japan ceramics plastics alloys +nationalism and communication research and development, and Japan Japan, and research and development nationalism, and materials revolution Japan, and materials revolution future, and Japan future LB - 2620 PB - MIT Press PY - 1988 SP - 119-40 ST - New Materials Technology in Japan T2 - The Materials Revolution: Superconductors, New Materials, and the Japanese Challenge TI - New Materials Technology in Japan ID - 1655 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, eds. AB - The article notes that "since the mid-1980s, electronic media have assumed an ever-greater presence in museums of science, technology, natural history, and art." (375) The presence of digital media have "provoked a sustained and sharp debate within museum circles." (376) Griffiths's essay is one of twenty-two chapters by different authors that attempt to improve our "understanding of emerging communication technologies." This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. AU - Griffiths, Alison CY - Cambridge, MA KW - history and new media digital media digital media, and museum museums, and digital media museums, and electronic media history museums LB - 34120 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 375-89 ST - Media Technology and Museum Display: A Century of Accommodation and Conflict T2 - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - Media Technology and Museum Display: A Century of Accommodation and Conflict ID - 3050 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ian McNeil, ed. AB - This piece provides a useful overview. AU - Griffiths, John CY - London and New York KW - R & D USSR science research and development war +future and science fiction war non-USA space communication reconnaissance +aeronautics and space communication satellites Space Shuttle Sputnik Cold War Soviet Union reconnaissance, satellite satellites, and reconnaissance rocketry space travel science fiction future +military communication LB - 7620 PB - Routledge PY - 1990 SP - 648-62 ST - Spaceflight T2 - An Encyclopedia of the History of Technology TI - Spaceflight ID - 2131 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - John A. Tennant, ed. AB - The author maintains that "An illustrated article will always have a preference, not only that the picture adds to the attractiveness of the article and to the publication, but the mission of the illustration is explanatory as well. It often tells much in little. Seeing is believing and feeling, and feeling represents the naked truth which is demonstrated in the proof of the fact by the truthful photograph." (137) AU - Gross, J. Ellsworth CY - New York KW - journalism magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines cameras cameras, and availability cameras, portable cameras, and journalism books, periodicals, newspapers ref, book LB - 16320 PB - Tennant and Ward PY - 1907 SP - 137-39 ST - Illustrating a Story T2 - The American Annual of Photography: 1908 TI - Illustrating a Story VL - 22 ID - 3785 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - “A revolution has begun in the technology of transmitting information,” this article begins. “The rebel force is optical fiber -- a thread of purest glass, five-thousandths of an inch in diameter, about the size of a human hair -- through which laser light of high purity and intensity can be transmitted.” We have only just started to tap the full potential of this technology. “Many now think that the development of so-called ‘photonics’ will inevitably lead to fully fledged optical computing, in which light pulses replace electrons as the basic method of transmitting information. The photonics revolution has been made possible by the development of optical fibers.... This new material is already transforming telecommunications and data networks, vastly increasing our capacity to move digitized information around.” The authors at the time of this article were employed by Corning Glass. This piece originally appeared in Technology Review (May-June 1983). AU - Gunderson, Les C. And Donald B. Keck CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers second industrial revolution communication revolution history and new media preservation) optical fibers fiber optics microelectronics revolution history information storage history, and new media materials film cinema motion pictures celluloid computers communication revolution, and second industrial revolution history telecommunications materials information technology Information age history general studies +computers and the Internet optical fibers materials revolution photonics information processing optical fibers telecommunications, and optical fibers computers, and optical fibers Corning Glass Company digital media, and optical fibers history, break with information technology, and optical fibers digital media digitization microelectronics LB - 2680 PB - MIT Press PY - 1988 SP - 214-29 ST - Optical Fibers: Where Light Outperforms Electrons T2 - The Materials Revolution: Superconductors, New Materials, and the Japanese Challenge TI - Optical Fibers: Where Light Outperforms Electrons ID - 1660 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, eds. AB - Gunning writes that the "introduction of new technology in the modern era employs a number of rhetorical tropes and discursive practices that constitute our richest source for excavating what the newness of technology entailed." (39) He goes on to say that "every new technology has a utopian dimension that imagines a future radically transformed by the implications of the device or practice. The sinking of technology into a reified second nature indicates the relative failure of this transformation, its fitting back into the established grooves of power and exploitation. Herein lies the imortance of the cultural archeology of technology, the grasping again of the newness of old technologies." (56) Gunning's essay is one of twenty-two chapters by different authors that attempt to improve our "understanding of emerging communication technologies." This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. AU - Gunning, Tom CY - Cambridge, MA KW - modernity novelty metaphors sound recording duplicating technologies typewriters motion pictures gramophone phonograph history and new media history modernism LB - 33960 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 39-60 ST - Re-Newing Old Technologies: Astonishment, Second Nature, and the Uncanny in Technology from the Previous Turn-of-the-Century T2 - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - Re-Newing Old Technologies: Astonishment, Second Nature, and the Uncanny in Technology from the Previous Turn-of-the-Century ID - 3034 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Manuel Castells, ed. AB - Hall examines the problems associated with deindustrialization in Great Britain. Research on this topic reveals, he maintains, that “the new high technology industries are growing up in regions and in places very different from those in which the older industries are declining. "Britain’s declining basic industries -- coal, shipbuilding, heavy engineering, textiles -- are strongly concentrated in the regions in which they were originally established in the nineteenth century: Central Scotland around Glasgow, Northeast England around Newcastle upon Tyne and Sunderland, the Northwest around Liverpool and Manchester, and South Wales focused on Sawnsea and Cardiff.... “The new high technology growth, in contrast, has been limited to a few areas outside these major industrial regions, notably, the belt along the M4 motorway from London to Bristol and the region around Cambridge, which Britain’s regional policy makers, located in the Department of Trade and Industry, have traditionally considered to be zones of restraint.” AU - Hall, Peter CY - Beverly Hills, CA KW - technology nationalism communication revolution communication revolution, and second industrial revolution non-USA general studies +nationalism and communication space (spatial) Great Britain communication revolution, and Great Britain second industrial revolution urban studies geography, and communication communication revolution geography space (spatial) geography technology and society LB - 2110 PB - Sage Publications PY - 1985 SP - 41-52 ST - Technology, Space, and Society in Contemporary Britain T2 - High Technology, Space, and Society TI - Technology, Space, and Society in Contemporary Britain ID - 1607 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - Halton attempts to explain how computing works. He discusses the significance of information processing and then the workings (both hardware and software) of the microcomputer. He was once a professor of Computing Science at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. This piece was taken from a series of articles that appeared between April, 1982 and April, 1983 in the Wisconsin Medical Journal. AU - Halton, John CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers communication revolution archives libraries libraries, and information storage Information Age +computers and the Internet microcomputers information processing +information storage computers, and programming computers, and society communication revolution computers, and software computers LB - 3150 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 3-26 ST - The Anatomy of Computing T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - The Anatomy of Computing ID - 1707 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Raymond Fielding, ed. AB - This article, which is reprinted in Fielding's book, explains that Cooper Hewitt mercury lamps installed at Biograph as early as 1905. “In the earlier serious attempts to set lighting the cameraman worked with old-type, street-lighting carbon arcs and banks of Cooper-Hewitt mercury tubes placed directly overhead and at angles in an attempt to obtain a flat, diffused light all over the set. Cooper-Hewitt mercury lamps were installed in the Biograph Studios, New York, as early as 1905. Overall exposure requirements, lack of adequate equipment and economics made anything but flat lighting difficult, if not impossible to attain. “It was known by the cameramen that added interest, improved perspective, increased illusion of depth and much greater dramatic effect would be obtained if they could skillfully utilize powerful light sources that would give them the effect of a one-source lighting such as could be obtained from the sun under ideal conditions, but the industry had not yet attained the position where such specialized equipment could be properly designed and made. “The time finally arrived when the public had accepted the silent pictures and fortunes were being made in production. This brought competition, which in turn opened the door for the cameraman to take some chances, to try anything he could get his hands on, to use his creative ability without fear of sudden replacement by a penny-wise management. In 1912, white flame carbon arcs replaced the low-intensity enclosed arcs at Biograph. “One of the cameraman’s first demands was for a controllable light source that would give him twice the power and twice the penetration capacity of anything he had. His only source of equipment was to follow precedent and adapt from other field as had been done with the street-lighting carbon arcs and the Cooper-Hewitt mercury banks. “Carbon-arc floodlamps, better adapted to floor light than the other equipment, were obtained from the graphic-arts and still-photographic fields….” (p. 121) Handley originally presented this work as a paper on May 4, 1954, at the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers convention in Washington, D. C. AU - Handley, Charles W. CY - Berkeley KW - theater stage fame fame celebrity celebrity culture words vs. images actors acting ref, secondary motion pictures motion pictures, and technology motion pictures motion pictures, and studio lighting modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures images vs. words motion pictures, and new art form electricity lighting mercury vapor electric light lighting, and Cooper Hewitt lighting, and mercury vapor motion pictures, and lighting motion pictures, and Cooper Hewitt lighting acting, and lighting lighting, and acting motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and celebrity motion pictures, and fame fame, and motion pictures celebrity, and motion pictures celebrity culture lighting, and flame carbon arcs Hewitt, Peter Cooper ref, book LB - 15420 PB - University of California Press PY - 1967 SP - 120-24 ST - History of Motion Picture Studio Lighting T2 - A Technological History of Motion Pictures and Television: An Anthology from the Pages of the Journal of the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers TI - History of Motion Picture Studio Lighting ID - 3701 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Anne G. Keatley, ed. AB - Hardy writes that many describe biotechnology as "an infant to be king technology," and view it "as the next major technological opportunity." (191) He discusses new developments in biotechnology and related ethical concerns. He considers the impact on health care products and on agriculture. He emphasize the importance of developing world leadership in this area and it potential impact on international relations. Goverment support for research and development in this area will be important. This essay is based on published sources. AU - Hardy, Ralph W. F. CY - Washington, D. C. KW - R & D Reagan administration Reagan, Ronald nationalism values values, and biotechnology nationalism and communication artificial intelligence and biotechnology capitalism research and development biotechnology Reagan, Ronald, and technology Reagan administration, and technology Reagan administration, and foreign relations foreign relations, and Reagan administration Cold War Cold War, and technology Reagan administration war LB - 33220 PB - National Academy Press PY - 1985 SP - 191-226 ST - Biotechnology: Status, Forecast, and Issues T2 - Technological Frontiers and Foreign Relations TI - Biotechnology: Status, Forecast, and Issues ID - 2962 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - The British Socialist Workers Union called for full-scale opposition to microelectronic technology. This an excerpt from their pamphlet, New Technology and the Struggle for Socialism (1979). It give activists detailed steps to block new technology. AU - Harman, Chris CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution non-USA microelectronics labor +computers and the Internet automation Great Britain Luddism socialism microelectronics revolution labor, and socialism microelectronics revolution, and unemployment critics labor labor, and new media labor, and microelectronics LB - 3030 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 391-407 ST - How to Fight the New Technology T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - How to Fight the New Technology ID - 1695 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - Harper writes that "online journalism stands to alter dramatically the traditional role of the reporter and editor. First, online journalism places far more power in the hands of the user, allowing the user to challenge the traditional role of the publication as the gatekeeper of news and information.... Second, online journalism opens up new ways of strorytelling, primarily through the technical components of the new medium.... Third, online journalism can provide outlets for nontraditional means of transmitting news and information." (272) The author concludes that "a variety of defining moments lies ahead for online journalism." (279) The volume in which Harper's chapter appears ispart of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectivs on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organzied by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." AU - Harper, Christopher CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers computers virtual reality present mindedness nationalism Internet global communication community news and journalism nationalism and communication democracy democracy, and new media computers and the Internet democracy, and computers computers, and democracy Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet critics digital media democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy capitalism gatekeeping community, and democracy democracy, and virtual communities virtual communities cyberspace cyberspace, and democracy democracy, and cyberspace metaphors capitalism capitalism, and digital media digital media, and capitalism Internet, and capitalism capitalism, and Internet globalization censorship and ratings news, and censorship news, and time time and timekeeping time, and news television television, and news history and new media presentism nationalism and communication journalism, and nationalism nationalism, and journalism news, and television nationalism, and digital media digital media, and journalism journalism, and digital media gatekeeping history journalism news LB - 34290 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 271-80 ST - Journalism in a Digital Age T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - Journalism in a Digital Age ID - 3067 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - "The conjunction of time and journalism was thought to be significant to national identity," the author writes. "The 'frequency' of new is thus a weighty matter." (248) He goes on to say that over its long history, American "journalism has shown a consistent tendency to drift upward in frequency." (251) He discusses the frequency with with different types of news appear. These range from a second or less to magazines that appear weekly or quarterly, to academic writing that has a longer time frame. Hartley concludes: "In public address, speed is of the essence. Frequency (rather than ostensible content) may be a major determinant of what a give piece of writing means. Over the longue durée of history, public communication has exploited differences in frequency to articulate different types of meaning. Apparently revolutionary periods may be explicable by reference to changes in communicative speed and also by investigating changes in the balance between temporal and spatial coordinates of national and personal identity. To understnad what is happening to journalism in the current era of change from spatial (national) to temporal (network) communication, the frequency of public writing is a crucial but somewhat neglected component. It determines what kind of public is called into being for given communicative forms and therefore has a direct bearing on the development of democracy. Changes to technologies of the public have historically tended to increase speed or frequency of communication; democracy itself may be migrating from space-based technologies to faster, time-based ones." (268) The volume in which Hartley's chapter appears ispart of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectivs on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organzied by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." AU - Hartley, John CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers computers virtual reality present mindedness nationalism Internet global communication community news and journalism nationalism and communication democracy democracy, and new media computers and the Internet democracy, and computers computers, and democracy Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet critics digital media democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy capitalism gatekeeping community, and democracy democracy, and virtual communities virtual communities cyberspace cyberspace, and democracy democracy, and cyberspace metaphors capitalism capitalism, and digital media digital media, and capitalism Internet, and capitalism capitalism, and Internet globalization censorship and ratings news, and censorship news, and time time and timekeeping time, and news television television, and news history and new media presentism nationalism and communication journalism, and nationalism nationalism, and journalism news, and television nationalism, and time-based media nationalism, and spatially based media nationalism, and digital media history journalism news LB - 34280 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 247-69 ST - The Frequencies of Public Writing: Tomb, Tome, and Time as Technologies of the Public T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - The Frequencies of Public Writing: Tomb, Tome, and Time as Technologies of the Public ID - 3066 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Thomas K. McCraw, ed. AB - This insightful essay places Hollywood's efforts at self-regulation into the context of other similar efforts by such businesses as aviation and lumber. AU - Hawley, Ellis CY - Cambridge, MA KW - context law law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and self-regulation context, and self-regulation regulation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and regulation censorship, and motion pictures censorship, and self-regulation associationalism, Hooverian regulation LB - 13340 PB - Harvard University Press, distributed by PY - 1981 SP - 95-123 ST - Three Faces of Hooverian Associationalism: Lumber, Aviation, and Movies, 1921-1930 T2 - Regulation in Perspective: Historical Essays TI - Three Faces of Hooverian Associationalism: Lumber, Aviation, and Movies, 1921-1930 ID - 506 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - J. G. S. Hardman and Maurice F. Neufeld, eds. AB - At the dawn of the television age, Hedges, a longtime labor activist and former research director for the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, argued that there was still hope for the century-old labor press. Hedges asserted that labor publications remained necessary to the labor movement to overcome the influence of the daily mainstream press. “Labor unions should seek new editorial talent, raise up great editors, give recognition to the services that they perform for the movement and the community.” He noted that readership of the 650 weekly and 250 monthly labor publications in 1950 was estimated at about 20 million. He argued “labor editors should recognize that there is an increasingly broad readership potential outside the unions. Such circulation should be encouraged as a means of extending the understanding of labor’s problems and points of view.” --Phil Glende AU - Hedges, Marion H. CY - Englewood Cliffs, NJ; Westport, CT KW - journalism news and journalism Glende, Phil labor newspapers labor, and newspapers newspapers, and labor news, and labor labor, and news news LB - 1010 N1 - See also: office PB - Prentice Hall; Greenwood Press PY - 1951 ST - Why a Labor Press? T2 - The House of Labor: Internal Operations of American Unions TI - Why a Labor Press? ID - 189 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Merritt Roe Smith and Leo Marx, eds. AB - This piece first appeared in Technology and Culture, 8 (July 1967), 335-45. Of the writers in this anthology, Heilbroner perhaps is closest to be a technological determinist, although in this essay he embraces technological determinism only with qualification that are carefully worded. Here the author tries to explain "the extent to which technology determines 'the nature of the socioeconomic order.'" He sees "technology as a strong 'mediating factor' rather than as the determining influence on history...." He expands on this point an a follow-up essay entitled "Technological Determinism Revisited" that follows in this anthology (pp. 67-78). AU - Heilbroner, Robert L. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - technology values preservation history, and new media history technology and society technological determinism progress history, and technological determinism LB - 4680 PB - MIT Press PY - 1994 SP - 53-65 ST - Do Machines Make History? T2 - Does Technology Drive History? The Dilemma of Technological Determinism TI - Do Machines Make History? ID - 1855 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Michael Kammen, ed. AB - Hertzberg commented on the post-World War II baby boomers, the "now" generation as she called them, and speculated on why they seemed uninterested in history. Part of the explanation was television and advertising which focused attention intensely on the present. "Following World War II, the 'now' model emerged. Its growth was due partially to affluence because only an affluent society could afford to delay the entrance of large numbers of persons into the labor market or to underemploy them, and to support the widespread experimentation and the variety of institutions, many of them temporary, in which nowness found its home; partially to the rapid pace of change, so rapid that traditional social institutions had great difficulty in adjusting to it; and partially to television, with its intense focus on the new and its sudden temporal reversibilities. Adolescents and youth, whose numbers increased as a result of the post-World War II baby boom, were the groups most affected." (493) Hertzberg, born in 1918, was then a professor of history and education at the Teachers College of Columbia University. AU - Hertzberg, Hazel Whitman CY - Ithaca KW - present mindedness television television, and history history, and break with advertising, and history history, and advertising time presentism history, and presentism history, as linear children and media history and new media media effects media effects, and television advertising children history advertising and public relations time and timekeeping LB - 19480 PB - Cornell University Press PY - 1980 SP - 474-504 ST - The Teaching of History T2 - The Past Before Us: Contemporary Historical Writing in the United States TI - The Teaching of History ID - 2889 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Beck, Bob AB - Dr. Henry Hill's erotic psychedelic art was used in Roger Corman's movie The Trip (1967) to intensify the nude love-making scenes between actors Peter Fonda and Susan Strasberg. In this essay, Hill "color interacts deeply and emotionally," especially on schizophrenics. In general, Hill believed that "dynamic, ever-changing color is more than beautiful and stirring. It can be psychological dynamite." Robert Beck also believed that light and color could be used to influence audiences subliminally and by-pass people's internal censors. Beck helped create the special effects on The Trip, about the experience of taking LSD. AU - Hill, Henry CY - Los Angeles KW - censorship motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and drugs motion pictures, and drugs censorship and ratings special effects cameras cameras, and motion pictures motion pictures, and cameras lighting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and lighting color lighting color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and LSD sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures Corman, Roger Beck, Robert, and special effects special effects, and Robert Beck color, and censorship censorship, and color censorship, and lighting lighting, and censorship censorship LB - 32330 PB - Pericles Press PY - 1966 SP - 18-20 ST - Color Game Traps T2 - Color Games: Light Show Manual TI - Color Game Traps ID - 2895 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Stephen H. Cutliffe and Terry S. Reynolds, eds. AB - The authors observe that “electric utility executives and several business analysts claim that the American electric utility system began to change in the 1970s. They argue that the system, which binds together massive turbines, transmission lines, nuclear reactors, human decision makers, millions of customers, and countless other components, has somehow been transformed, even though its physical nature remains much the same.” While Hirsh and Serchuk acknowledge that major changes were underway and that permanent restructuring had occurred, they see these changes up though the early 1990s as largely “conservative..., intended to maintain vital aspects of the current system, rather than as a radical deconstruction of the way the nation supplies, distributes, and consumes electricity.” AU - Hirsh, Richard F. and Adam H. Serchuk CY - Chicago KW - technology preservation history, and new media history networks history +electricity public utilities networks, electrical technology and society history, break with electricity, and history of LB - 4940 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1997 SP - 413-44 ST - Momentum Shifts in the American Electric Utility System: Catastrophic Change -- or No Change at All? T2 - Technology & American History: A Historical Anthology from Technology & Culture TI - Momentum Shifts in the American Electric Utility System: Catastrophic Change -- or No Change at All? ID - 1881 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Joel A. Tarr, ed. AB - The authors note that the Atlantic cable "was important in defusing crisis situations. It was often used to dispel rumors, defuse potentially dangerous situations, and control the execution of policy overseas. Nevertheless, rapid communications promoted almost continuous crisis situations at the seats of government by virtue of capability to communicate as events developed. "The most accurate forecasts were made by the seasoned British diplomats, who were well aware of how foreign policy evolved..... "The least accurate forecasts were made in the U.S. Congress and at the celebrations of the cable's success...." This essay came out of a conference held at Seven Springs Moutain Resort, Champion, PA, Dec. 1-4, 1976. AU - Hitchcock, Henry H. and Thomas F. Jaras CY - San Francisco KW - technology R & D nationalism time and timekeeping time technology and society research and development war journalism +future and science fiction news and journalism war non-USA news +telegraph +military communication +nationalism and communication cable, transatlantic cable, and diplomacy time news, and transatlantic cable cable, as cause of crisis reporting news, and crisis reporting future technology assessment forecasting Great Britain cable news, and telegraph cable, Atlantic LB - 3840 PB - San Francisco Press, Inc. PY - 1977 SP - 107-30 ST - The Impact of the Atlantic Cable on Diplomacy: Implications for Forecasting T2 - Retrospective Technology Assessment -- 1976 TI - The Impact of the Atlantic Cable on Diplomacy: Implications for Forecasting ID - 1772 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Philip Nobile, ed. AB - The historian E. J. Hobsbawm argued that there was “no good grounds” for the belief that “permissiveness in public sexual or other personal behavior” led to “social-revolutionary movements,” or that “a narrow sexual morality” was “an essential bulwark of the capitalist system.”This essay appeared at about the same time that the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography made recommendations that pornography was not necessarily harmful and that legal restrictions on it should be loosened. Hobsbawm's essay first appeared in the British publication, New Society, a weekly review of social sciences. AU - Hobsbawm, E. J. CY - New York KW - presidents and new media sexuality Hobsbawm, Eric pornography President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) Hobsbawm, E. J., and pornography LB - 26750 PB - Random House PY - 1970 SP - 36-40 ST - Revolution is Puritan T2 - The New Eroticism: Theories, Vogues and Canons TI - Revolution is Puritan ID - 1237 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Chris Hables Gray, ed. AU - Hochfelder, David CY - Malabar, FL KW - print nonprint media nonprint culture print culture +electricity language print media v. electronic media LB - 4950 PB - Krieger Publishing Company PY - 1996 SP - 119-39 ST - Electrical Communication, Language, and Self T2 - Technohistory: Using the History of American Technology in Interdisciplinary Research TI - Electrical Communication, Language, and Self ID - 1882 ER - TY - CHAP AB - In Canada, American movies and television programs dominated the market – more than 90 percent of the films for which Canadian paid rental fees came from the United States. In 1977, Ontario’s Commission on Violence in the Communications Industry concluded that the “great weight of research into the effects of violent media contents indicates potential harm to society.” In Volume 1, this Report concluded that Canadians – including children – were watching increasing amounts of American-made TV which had “much higher levels of violence” than programs produced in Canada or elsewhere, and television’s “escalation of violence” was “drawing other sections of the media along like the tail of a comet.” This essay appears in Volume 7 of the Royal Commission's Report. It discusses the British North America Act and legal restrictions on mass media. AU - Hogg, Peter W. CY - Toronto, Ontario KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) microprocessing magnetic recording television, and media effects syntheses (of research) Surgeon General social science research fiber optics optical fibers news and journalism news microprocessors media effects media violence media effects news and journalism satellites materials video games VCRs magnetic tape materials +future and science fiction fiber optics censorship and ratings children law news and journalism non-USA Canada +television violence television, and violence violence, and television violence, and social science research social science research, and violence children, and media +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures Surgeon General's Report (1972) violence children, and TV violence media effects, and television violence, and syntheses syntheses media effects, and violence violence, and media effects reports social science research, and TV violence television, and social science television, and violence violence, and television media effects, and television children, and media children, and TV violence social science research, synthesis (violence) Canada, and media violence reports journalism, and Canada journalism journalism, and violence news, and Canada news, and violence bibliographies, annotated bibliographies, and journalism and violence journalism, and violence (bibliography) video games, and Canada video games, and violence violence, and video games cable, and Canada VCRs, and Canada optical fibers, and Canada satellites, and Canada +aeronautics and space communication violence, and new media future, and Canada future, and new media microprocessors, and violence law, and Canada law, and media violence law, and new media British North America Act future +bibliographies cable LB - 2810 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Royal Commission on Violence in the Communications Industry SP - 299-325 ST - Constitutional Jurisdiction Over Violence in the Mass Media Industries T2 - Report of The Royal Commission on Violence in the Communications Industry: Volume 7: The Media Industries: From Here to Where? TI - Constitutional Jurisdiction Over Violence in the Mass Media Industries ID - 369 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - Hondros, who at the time of this article was director of the Joint Research Center of the Patten Establishment in the Netherlands, stresses the important role that materials play in technological innovation. They are precursors to innovations expected in the not-too-distant future. The authors notes that governments are becoming increasingly aware of the importance of materials. Hondros assesses the world’s reserves of essential industrial materials and is cautiously optimistic as he advocates increased conservation, recycling, reclamation endeavors. This article originally appeared in The International Journal of Materials and Product Technology, Vol. 1 (no. 1, 1986). AU - Hondros, E. D. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - R & D computers +military communication materials +future and science fiction research and development materials +computers and the Internet materials revolution research and development, and government support natural resources, and conservation future, and materials future LB - 2610 PB - MIT Press PY - 1988 SP - 61-84 ST - Materials, Year 2000 T2 - The Materials Revolution: Superconductors, New Materials, and the Japanese Challenge TI - Materials, Year 2000 ID - 1654 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Joseph J. Corn, ed. AB - This essay discusses General Electric, Westinghouse, and electricity. Horrigan notes that during the years covered in this essay, the term "home of tomorrow" attracted serious interest at world's fairs, in advertising and magazines, and led to numerous predictions about homes of the future. AU - Horrigan, Brian CY - Cambridge, MA KW - technology home entertainment corporations corporations corporations entertainment, home home entertainment +future and science fiction home, and new media home home, and information technology networks information technology +electricity General Electric Company Westinghouse Corporation networks, electrical future information technology, and home technology and society home, and electricity future, and home LB - 4960 PB - MIT Press PY - 1986 SP - 137-63 ST - The Home of Tomorrow, 1927-1945 T2 - Imagining Tomorrow: History, Technology, and the American Future TI - The Home of Tomorrow, 1927-1945 ID - 1883 ER - TY - CHAP AB - The 1970 Report of the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography argued that repeated exposure to pornography led to satiation or to declining interest in erotic materials. Critics charged that this conclusion rested on slim evidence. This study in the Report, for example, used fewer than three dozen college-age males. AU - Howard, James L. AU - Reifler, Clifford B. AU - Liptzin, Myron B. CY - Washington, D. C. KW - sexuality motion pictures mass media pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography LB - 22720 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - U. S. Government Printing Office PY - 1970 SP - 97-132 ST - Effects of Exposure to Pornography T2 - Technical Report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography TI - Effects of Exposure to Pornography VL - 8 ID - 997 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - At the time of this article, computers were already widely used in factories and in the coming decade, the author predicts their use will be even more widespread. The author gives an account of problems involved in automation, and of CNC, CAD, and CAM. When this appeared, the author worked for Westinghouse Electric. This piece was first published in Science magazine (Feb. 12, 1982). AU - Hudson, C. A. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers corporations corporations corporations labor information technology +computers and the Internet automation information technology, and industry labor, and automation Westinghouse Corporation +artificial intelligence and biotechnology labor labor, and new media LB - 3320 N1 - See also: office PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 260-72 ST - Computers and Manufacturing T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Computers and Manufacturing ID - 1723 ER - TY - CHAP AB - Henry E. Hudson chaired the Meese Commission that studied and made recommendation on pornography in 1985-1986. Hudson was a Republican in his late 30s was an attorney who had successfully prosecuted pornography in Arlington County, Virginia. President Ronald Reagan lauded his work at a meeting with leaders of Morality in Media in March, 1983, and later nominated him to be U. S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia. Hudson’s main interest on the Commission lay in developing legal strategies to proscribe pornography. He doubted the ability of social science research to measure fully the effects of pornography. AU - Hudson, Henry E. CY - Nashville, TN KW - entertainment computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) post office government hearings entertainment, home magnetic recording photography women, and new media social science research values archives primary sources sexuality home entertainment government magnetic tape First Amendment computers and the Internet color freedom values religion censorship and ratings law cable home home, and new media home Meese Commission reports primary sources hearings pornography reports reports, Messe Commission motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography law, and pornography pornography, and law pornography, and new media home entertainment revolution pornography, and home home, and pornography television postal service television, and cable cable television, and pornography +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and television television, and satellites computers computers, and pornography pornography, and computers VCRs VCRs, and pornography pornography, and VCRs magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines +photography and visual communication photography, and pornography pornography, and photography color, and pornography pornography, and color media effects media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects, pornography, defined children media effects, and children children, and pornography pornography, and children women women, and pornography pornography, and women religion, and pornography pornography, and religion personal computers personal computers, and pornography primary sources primary sources, Maryland primary sources, College Park primary sources, Meese Commission media effects, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research First Amendment, and Meese Commission First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and legal pornography, and First Amendment pornography, and opponents critics magazines satellites children, and media LB - 22910 PB - Rutledge Hill Press PY - 1986 SP - 484-86 ST - Statement of Henry E. Hudson, Chairman T2 - Final Report of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Statement of Henry E. Hudson, Chairman ID - 1016 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ralph Negrine, ed. AB - Hudson surveys the development of satellites from the creation of NASA in 1958 through the early post-Challenger explosion (early 1986). She discusses satellites and cable TV programming, news gathering, teleconferencing, radio broadcasting, voice and data services, and direct broadcasting satellites. She concludes by speculating on the future and notes while the role of satellites will undoubtedly continue to change, "communication satellites will remain an important element in U.S. telecommunications of the foreseeable future...." AU - Hudson, Heather E. CY - New York and London KW - National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) nationalism journalism +future and science fiction news and journalism non-USA +television satellites +nationalism and communication telecommunications global communication +aeronautics and space communication nationalism, and satellites NASA satellites, and television television, and satellites +radio radio, and satellites future, and satellites satellites, and news gathering news, and satellites satellites, and telecoferencing satellites, and cable TV cable television, and satellites future news cable LB - 6940 PB - Routledge PY - 1988 SP - 216-33 ST - Satellite Broadcasting in the United States T2 - Satellite Broadcasting: The Politics and Implications of the New Media TI - Satellite Broadcasting in the United States ID - 2065 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - "The purpose of this chapter is to explore the particular changes of hypertext theories to narrative forms and practices of journalism by examining the interactions of news readers and hypertexts. Specifically, it reports the findings of a qualitatitve study of online news users who read both an original news story that appeared on the Los Angeles Times Web site and a redesigned, hypertext version of the same material." (281) The volume in which the chapter by Huesca and Dervin appears ispart of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectivs on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organzied by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." AU - Huesca, Robert AU - Dervin, Brenda CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers computers virtual reality present mindedness nationalism Internet global communication community news and journalism nationalism and communication democracy democracy, and new media computers and the Internet democracy, and computers computers, and democracy Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet critics digital media democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy capitalism gatekeeping community, and democracy democracy, and virtual communities virtual communities cyberspace cyberspace, and democracy democracy, and cyberspace metaphors capitalism capitalism, and digital media digital media, and capitalism Internet, and capitalism capitalism, and Internet globalization censorship and ratings news, and censorship news, and time time and timekeeping time, and news television television, and news history and new media presentism nationalism and communication journalism, and nationalism nationalism, and journalism news, and television nationalism, and digital media digital media, and journalism journalism, and digital media gatekeeping hypertext hypertext, and journalism journalism, and hypertext history journalism news LB - 34300 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 281-307 ST - Hypertext and Journalism: Audiences Respond to Competing News Narratives T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - Hypertext and Journalism: Audiences Respond to Competing News Narratives ID - 3068 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - “Cellular radio now makes it possible to use public telephones on the move. Soon high-quality, hand-held mobile phones will be widely available for use in taxis, trains, buses, planes, and private cars," Huff predicts. "Industries like construction and fast-food will greatly benefit.” This piece appeared originally in Technology Review (Nov.-Dec., 1983). See also the article in this anthology, “Will mobile telephones move?” by Ithiel de Sola Pool (pp. 144-46). AU - Huff, Duane L. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - telephones cell phones networks +telephones telephones, cellular cellular telephones Pool, Ithiel de Sola networks, and telephones telephones, and transportation LB - 5350 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 137-46 ST - The Magic of Cellular Radio T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - The Magic of Cellular Radio ID - 1920 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Merritt Roe Smith and Leo Marx, eds. AB - Hughes develops the idea of "technological momentum," and argues that "younger developing systems tend to be more open to sociocultural influences while older, more mature systems prove to be more independent of outside influences and therefore more deterministic in nature." He sees "technological momentum" a more useful concept than "technological determinism or social constructivisim." AU - Hughes, Thomas P. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - technology values preservation history, and new media history technology and society history, and technological determinism technological momentum progress technological determinism LB - 4690 PB - MIT Press PY - 1994 SP - 101-13 ST - Technological Momentum T2 - Does Technology Drive History? The Dilemma of Technological Determinism TI - Technological Momentum ID - 1856 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - Hume writes that "in a media culture dominated by journalists, some are doing important and courageous work, such as the international reporting from Bosnia during the ethnic cleansing of 1993-1996. The uses of faxes, videocassettes, and the Internet help keep outlawed democracy movements alive in repressive countries like China. "But in the United States, the world's most important incubator for democracy, these tools are largely squandered. It is the message, not the medium, which is the problem. If the content is wrong, it is wrong in all its media forms. All the gorgeous streaming video and razzle-dazzle delivery systems won't make it any better for our civic culture. America's media-driven culture is saturated with entertainment, much of it violent. We've cleaned up the air but toxified the airwaves. A mounting body of scholarship demonstrates the deleterious impact of this material is having on children and on democracy in general." (331) The volume in which Hume's chapter appears is part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectives on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organizied by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." AU - Hume, Ellen CY - Cambridge, MA KW - entertainment, and journalism computers computers children virtual reality present mindedness nationalism Internet global communication community news and journalism nationalism and communication democracy democracy, and new media computers and the Internet democracy, and computers computers, and democracy Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet critics digital media democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy capitalism gatekeeping community, and democracy democracy, and virtual communities virtual communities cyberspace cyberspace, and democracy democracy, and cyberspace metaphors capitalism capitalism, and digital media digital media, and capitalism Internet, and capitalism capitalism, and Internet globalization censorship and ratings news, and censorship news, and time time and timekeeping time, and news television television, and news history and new media presentism nationalism and communication journalism, and nationalism nationalism, and journalism news, and television nationalism, and digital media digital media, and journalism journalism, and digital media gatekeeping news, and entertainment entertainment, and news entertainment, and journalism journalism, and entertainment media effects television, and media effects media effects, and news media effects, and television children children, and media effects media effects, and children entertainment history journalism news children, and media LB - 34320 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 331-64 ST - Resource Journalism: A Model for New Media T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - Resource Journalism: A Model for New Media ID - 3070 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - Hurwitz writes that "the heroic landscape of cyberspace as an electronic frontier or commons should be repainted as an area contested by state and society or perhaps as a shopping mall where politics does not matter until one's credit care is rejected. Cyberspace does, however, resemble a frontier in one important respect: It lacks a tradition of governance that can be generalized to the world beyond it." (110) The volume in which Hurwitz's chapter appears ispart of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectivs on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organzied by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." AU - Hurwitz, Roger CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers computers virtual reality community democracy democracy, and new media computers and the Internet democracy, and computers computers, and democracy Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet critics digital media democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy capitalism gatekeeping community, and democracy democracy, and virtual communities virtual communities cyberspace cyberspace, and democracy democracy, and cyberspace metaphors Internet, as frontier Internet LB - 34200 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 101-12 ST - Who Needs Politics? Who Needs People? The Ironies of Democracy in Cyberspace T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - Who Needs Politics? Who Needs People? The Ironies of Democracy in Cyberspace ID - 3058 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Kurt Nassau, ed. AB - This essay notes that color is important in creating a sexual environment for many animals, including man. Hutchings devotes attention to melanin skin pigmentation (241-43). He notes that "areas of sexual interest are accentuated by higher concentrations of melanin. When looking at an object, our eyes do not remain on one fixed area but tend to scan over the surface. When we look at a face we seek to communicate and gain information; that is, we look more at the eyes and mouth, those parts which contain higher melanin concentrations. We assist nature in emphasizing particular regions of sexual interest. For example, the larger fleshier lips of the female are further accentuated by the use of lipstick. The routine has been practiced for at least 4000 years. From time to time in different cultures, emphasis has been placed on different features as releasers of sexual interest. An example is the evolution of protruding buttocks among the Hottentot and Bushmen females." (242-43) AU - Hutchings, John B. CY - Amsterdam KW -, color color, and science color, and reproduction color, and art color, and sexuality sexuality, and color sexuality color, and sexual desire LB - 32530 PB - Elsevier PY - 1998 SP - 221-46 ST - Color in Plants, Animals and Man T2 - Color for Science, Art and Technology TI - Color in Plants, Animals and Man ID - 2912 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Günter Friedrichs and Adam Schaff, eds. AB - Here is an accessible and reasonably brief history of the development of microelectronics starting with vacuum tubes, through the transistor, integrated circuit, and microprocessor. The author relates developments to information and society. AU - Ide, Thomas Ranald CY - Oxford, Eng. KW - computers microprocessing transistors, and integrated circuits fiber optics communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution archives materials materials fiber optics communication revolution, and second industrial revolution satellites computers and the Internet computers, personal computers microelectronics libraries information technology libraries, and information storage Information Age +computers and the Internet +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and microelectronics microelectronics, and history of optical fibers microprocessors computers, micro transistors integrated circuits vacuum tubes information storage information processing second industrial revolution information technology, and finance computers, personal personal computers microelectronics revolution Club of Rome communication revolution LB - 4390 PB - Pergamon Press PY - 1982 SP - 37-88 ST - The Technology T2 - Microelectronics and Society: For Better or for Worse: A Report to the Club of Rome TI - The Technology ID - 1827 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This piece first appeared in May, 1983 in Popular Computing. The author notes that while word processing has gained acceptance in the office, that video conferencing and electronic mail have not. Immel calls for a reexamination of the idea of office "productivity." AU - Immel, A. Richard CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers email labor office, and information technology information technology Information Age +computers and the Internet electronic mail video conferencing word processing information processing information technology, and office electronic media office, and automation office, and computers office LB - 3360 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 312-21 ST - The Automated Office: Myth Versus Reality T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - The Automated Office: Myth Versus Reality ID - 1727 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - J. B. S. Hardman and Maurice F. Neufeld, eds. AB - Jackman, director the film division of the United Auto Workers, details the number of labor films available in 1950 and lists the UAW equipment available for showing films. He noted that about 30 16mm sound films had been produced by various U.S. labor unions. Those films, and hundreds of others that were of interest to labor, were available from film libraries, including four big libraries operated by unions: the UAW-CIO Film Library, the CIO Film Division, the ILGWU Film Library, and the Amalgamated Clothing-Textile Workers Film Library. The UAW library had 650 prints of 400 titles. Local UWA unions owned 195 sound projectors and about 375 locals used films regularly for meetings, classes and other occasions, according to Jackman. The UAW also distributed films to schools, churches, public libraries and community groups. “The importance of showing films with a labor message outside our unions can hardly be overestimated. Many local unions are called upon to bring their projectors and films to the rescue of a community program.” During World War II, Jackman noted, the UAW worked with the 16mm National Advisory Committee and more than 15 million people saw films presented under the auspices of the UAW. He noted that 450 prints of the cartoon Brotherhood of Man had been sold to film libraries, schools and other places. The UAW was also working in 1950 on Workers’ Security Through Collective Bargaining, a report on collective bargaining demands prepared using a new “automatic sound filmstrip” medium. --Phil Glende AU - Jackman, Herbert B. CY - Englewood Cliffs, NJ; Westport, CT KW - motion pictures Glende, Phil labor labor, and 16mm film 16mm film, and labor +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and labor labor labor, and motion pictures labor, and education films (1950) labor, and United Auto Workers United Auto Workers, and education films (1950) 16mm 16mm film LB - 1030 N1 - See also: office PB - Prentice Hall; Greenwood Press PY - 1970 SP - 471-73 ST - The Union Educational Film T2 - The House of Labor: Internal Operations of American Unions TI - The Union Educational Film ID - 191 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Jacobs, Lewis AB - In this essay, Jacobs argues that "color stirs the mind and feelings and amplifies responses that would be toned down or be nonexistent without color." (189) He notes that "recent color films, styled from the painter's palette, emphasize the sensual qualities of color to serve the foundation of film." (193) Jacobs discusses work by such film makers as Fellini and Antonioni. Lewis concludes by saying that "when made relevant to the picture's subject, color offers an immediate resonance that vivifies mood, delineates character, enhances meaning." (196) AU - Jacobs, Lewis CY - New York KW - technology corporations corporations motion pictures color cameras motion pictures, and cameras motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures photography technology and society materials materials cinema motion pictures celluloid non-USA motion pictures and popular culture photography and visual communication cameras, and motion pictures film Technicolor Eastman Kodak Cinemascope celluloid technology, and motion pictures motion pictures, and technology color, and Eastman Kodak color, and Technicolor technological determinism media literacy motion pictures, and media literacy media literacy, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects media effects, and color sexuality, and color film color, and sexuality sexuality LB - 36650 PB - Farrar, Straus & Giroux PY - 1970 SP - 189-96 ST - The Mobility of Color T2 - The Movies As Medium TI - The Mobility of Color ID - 3298 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - The author writes that "although race had entered the lexicon of cyberanalysts, much of the focus has been on the domestic politics of race within North America, the creation of virtual identity communities, or the activities of racist organizations on the Internet. Although these analyses offer valuable counterpoints to the dominance of white masculinity as the lingua franca of cyberdiscourse, they fall short of an analysis that links race practices in cyberspace to the wider race issues of globalization. This chapter then seeks to locate race in cyberspace within a global political economy of new media...." (203) The volume in which Jakubowicz's chapter appears ispart of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectivs on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organzied by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." AU - Jakubowicz, Andrew CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers computers virtual reality nationalism Internet global communication community news and journalism non-USA nationalism and communication democracy democracy, and new media computers and the Internet democracy, and computers computers, and democracy Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet critics digital media democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy capitalism gatekeeping community, and democracy democracy, and virtual communities virtual communities cyberspace cyberspace, and democracy democracy, and cyberspace metaphors capitalism capitalism, and digital media digital media, and capitalism Internet, and capitalism capitalism, and Internet globalization race race, and new media ethnicity ethnicity, and new media cyberspace cyberspace, and race race, and cyberspace political economy race, and Internet Internet, and race globalization, and race race, and globalization LB - 34260 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 203-24 ST - Ethnic Diversity, 'Race,' and the Cultural Political Economy of Cyberspace T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - Ethnic Diversity, 'Race,' and the Cultural Political Economy of Cyberspace ID - 3064 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - A statement by a British Cabinet minister saying that it is not automation that risks jobs but the failure to automate that puts them at risk. This statement appeared first in New Scientist (Feb. 24, 1983). Jenkins was then Secretary of State for Industry. AU - Jenkin, Patrick CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers non-USA labor +computers and the Internet computers and society automation Great Britain labor, and automation computers LB - 3430 N1 - See also: office PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 377-89 ST - Automation is Good for Us T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Automation is Good for Us ID - 1733 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Raymond Fielding, ed. AB - This piece first appeared in Transactions in the Society of Motion Picture Engineers, 13 (Oct. 1920). AU - Jenkins, Charles Francis CY - Berkeley KW - television, and history of +motion pictures +motion pictures motion pictures, and origins +television television, and origins LB - 6950 PB - University of California Press PY - 1967 SP - 1-4 ST - History of Motion Pictures T2 - A Technological History of Motion Pictures and Television TI - History of Motion Pictures ID - 2066 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, eds. AB - Jenkin's perspective views "media fans as active participants within the current media revolution and their cultural products as an important aspect of the digital cinema movement. If many advocates of digital cinema have sought to democratize the means of cultural production, to foster grassroots creativity by opening up the tools of media production and distribution to a broader segment of the general public, then the rapid proliferation of fan-produced Star Wars films may represent a significant early success story for that movement.... "In this essay, I will explore how and why Star Wars became, according to Jason Wishnow, a 'catalyst' for amateur digital filmmakingand what this case study suggests about the future directions popular culture may take." (282-3) Jenkin's essay is one of twenty-two chapters by different authors that attempt to improve our "understanding of emerging communication technologies." This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. AU - Jenkins, Henry CY - Cambridge, MA KW - special effects, and digitization interactive media motion pictures digital media motion pictures, digital digital motion pictures media convergence interactivity motion pictures, and interactivity special effects motion pictures, and special effects special effects, digital Star Wars audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences motion pictures, and fans audiences digitization LB - 34080 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 281-312 ST - Quentin Tarantino's Star Wars? Digital Cinema, Media Convergence, and Participatory Culture T2 - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - Quentin Tarantino's Star Wars? Digital Cinema, Media Convergence, and Participatory Culture ID - 3046 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Thorburn, Henry Jenkins and David AB - The authors write that at "its most excessive, the rhetoric of the digital revolution envisioned a total displacement of centralized broadcast media by a trackless web of participatory channels. Netcitizens spoke of the major networks, for example, as dinosaurs slinking off to the tar pits as they confronted the realities of the new economy. The decline of the dot-coms makes clear, however, that such predictions were premature. The power of movies and television to speak to a vast public is immensely greater than the diffused reach of the new media, through which many messages can be circulated but few can ensure a hearing. This dramatic reversal of economic fortunes suggests that similar arguments for the decline of powerful governmental institutions in the face of cyber-democracy may be equally premature and simple-minded." (12-13) This volume in which this essay appears is part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, and it tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectivs on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organzied by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." (ix-x) AU - Jenkins, Henry AU - Thorburn, David CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers computers democracy democracy, and new media digital media computers and the Internet values computers, and democracy Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet democracy, and computers Internet LB - 34130 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 1-17 ST - Introduction: The Digital Revolution, the Informed Citizen, and the Culture of Democracy T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - Introduction: The Digital Revolution, the Informed Citizen, and the Culture of Democracy ID - 3051 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Stephen H. Cutliffe and Terry S. Reynolds, eds. AB - Jenkins notes that until the 1870s, the process of taking photographs was so complex that "only professional photographers and a very few avid amateurs chose to pursue the practice." Jenkins discusses George Eastman and changes in photography from dry plates to the system of role film. "During the decade 1879-89," he writes, "photography passed through two significant revolutions: the introduction of gelatin emulsions and the creation of mass amateur photography." AU - Jenkins, Reese V. CY - Chicago KW - photography preservation communication revolution history, and new media community democracy history +photography and visual communication photography, amateur democracy and media communication revolution Eastman, George history, and media photography, and portable (late 19th century) photography, and 19th century cameras cameras, and portable (19th century) photography, and gelatin emulsions photography, and roll film photography, and dry plate LB - 1640 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1997 SP - 197-215 ST - Technology and the Market: George Eastman and the Origins of Mass Amateur Photography T2 - Technology & American History: A Historical Anthology from Technology & Culture TI - Technology and the Market: George Eastman and the Origins of Mass Amateur Photography ID - 1560 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Renate Mayntz and Thomas P. Hughes, eds. AB - This essay as well as the collection in which it is published relates to such other large themes as electricity, transportation (railroads), telephones, and aeronautics. AU - Joerges, Bernward CY - Bolder, CO and Frankfurt am Main KW - labor networks office office, and new media office general studies +electricity technical systems infrastructure networks, and large systems LB - 690 PB - Westview Press and Campus Verlag PY - 1988 SP - 5-36 ST - Large Technical Systems: Concepts and Issues T2 - The Development of Large Technical Systems TI - Large Technical Systems: Concepts and Issues ID - 1465 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Claudia Carlen, ed. AB - Pope John Paul II notes "the progress of science and technology can produce not only new material goods but also a wider sharing of knowledge. The extraordinary progress made in the field of information and data processing, for instance, will increase man's creative capacity and provide access to the intellectual and cultural riches of other peoples. New communication techniques will encourage greater participation in events and a wider exchange of ideas." (287) AU - John Paul II, Pope CY - Releigh, NC KW - technology values Christianity technology and society science values Third World non-USA values critics Catholic Church, and new media Third World, and new media Third World, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and technology technology, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and science science, and Catholic Church Catholic Church LB - 28390 PB - McGrath Publishing Company PY - 1981 SP - 287 ST - Dives in Misericordia: Encyclical of Pope John Paul II on the Mercy of God, November 30, 1980 T2 - The Papal Encyclicals, 1958-1981 TI - Dives in Misericordia: Encyclical of Pope John Paul II on the Mercy of God, November 30, 1980 ID - 477 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - J. Michael Miller, ed. and intro. AB - Pope John Paul II says that "with the new prospects opened by scientific and technological progress there arise new forms of attacks on the dignity of the human being." He condemns a "new cultural climate" which endorses abortion in the name of individual freedom. (794) With regard to the mass media, he says that "aside from intentions, which can be varied and perhaps can seem convincing at times, especially if presented in the name of solidarity, we are in fact faced by an objective 'conspiracy against life,' involving even international institutions engaged in encouraging and carrying out actual campaigns to make contraception, sterilization, and abortion widely available. Nor can it be denied that the mass media are often implicated in this conspiracy, by lending credit to that culture which presents recourse to contraception, sterilization, abortion and even euthanasia as a mark of progress and a victory of freedom, while depicting as enemies of freedom and progress those positions which are unreservedly pro-life." (806) The Pope speaks of a struggle between the "culture of life" and the "culture of death" (810) and urges those working in the mass media to encourage "a new culture of life" (883) that reestablishes the vital link between freedom and life. (884, 887) See also the editor's (J. Michael Miller) Introduction to this encyclical (772-89). AU - John Paul II, Pope CY - Huntington, IN KW - technology values Christianity technology and society progress archives primary sources cyberspace culture freedom values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church Catholic Church non-USA primary sources papal encyclicals Pope John Paul II Pope John Paul II, and 1995 encyclical Pope John Paul II, and Evangelium Vitae Catholic Church, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholic Church motion pictures, and censorship Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures television, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and television +radio radio, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and radio culture of death, and Pope John Paul II Catholic Church, and modern media Catholic Church, and culture of death critics values progress, and Catholic Church progress, and technology technology, and progress abortion, and freedom freedom, and abortion abortion LB - 20710 PB - Our Sunday Visitor, Inc. PY - 1996 SP - 792-892 ST - Encyclical Letter Evangelium Vitae Addressed by the Supreme Pontiff John Paul II to the Bishops, Priests, and Deacons, Men and Women Religious, Lay Faithful, and All People of Good Will on the Value and Inviolability of Human Life, March 25, 1995 T2 - The Encyclicals of John Paul II TI - Encyclical Letter Evangelium Vitae Addressed by the Supreme Pontiff John Paul II to the Bishops, Priests, and Deacons, Men and Women Religious, Lay Faithful, and All People of Good Will on the Value and Inviolability of Human Life, March 25, 1995 ID - 873 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - J. Michael Miller, ed. and intro. AB - Speaking of developing nations, Pope John Paul II says that in "social communications, which, being run by centers mostly in the northern hemisphere, do not always give due consideration to the priorities and problems of such countries or respect their cultural make-up. They frequently impose a distorted vision of life and of man, and thus fail to respond to the demands of true development." AU - John Paul II, Pope CY - Huntington, IN KW - imperialism values Christianity values archives primary sources Third World values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church non-USA primary sources papal encyclicals Pope John Paul II Pope John Paul II, and 1987 encyclical Pope John Paul II, and Sollicitudo Rei Socialis Catholic Church, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholic Church motion pictures, and censorship Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures television, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and television +radio radio, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and radio Catholic Church, and modern media Third World, and new media critics cultural imperialism values, and Third World values Catholic Church LB - 20720 PB - Our Sunday Visitor, Inc. PY - 1996 SP - 443 ST - Encyclical Letter Sollcitudo Rei Socialis of the Supreme Pontiff John Paul II for the Twentieth Anniversary of Populorum Progressio, Dec. 30, 1987 [publ. Feb. 19, 1988] T2 - The Encyclicals of John Paul II TI - Encyclical Letter Sollcitudo Rei Socialis of the Supreme Pontiff John Paul II for the Twentieth Anniversary of Populorum Progressio, Dec. 30, 1987 [publ. Feb. 19, 1988] ID - 874 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - J. Michael Miller, ed. and intro. AB - In this encyclical, Pope John Paul II says that "since the very evangelization of modern culture depends to a great extent on the influence of the media, it is not enugh to use the media simply to spread the Christian message and the Church's authentic teaching. It is also necessary to integrate that message into the 'new culture' created by modern communications. This is a complex issue, since the 'new culture' originates not just from whatever content is eventually expressed, but from the very fact that there exist new ways of communicating, with new languages, new techniques and a new psychology. Pope Paul VI said that 'the split between the Gospel and culture is undoubtedly the tragedy of our time,' and the field of communications fully confirms this judgment." AU - John Paul II, Pope CY - Huntington, IN KW - values Christianity values archives primary sources values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church non-USA primary sources papal encyclicals Pope John Paul II Pope John Paul II, and 1990 encyclical Pope John Paul II, and Redemptoris Missio Catholic Church, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholic Church motion pictures, and censorship Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures television, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and television +radio radio, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and radio Catholic Church, and modern media communication, and new culture values, and new culture critics values Catholic Church LB - 20750 PB - Our Sunday Visitor, Inc. PY - 1996 SP - 525-27 ST - Encyclical Letter Redemptoris Missio of the Supreme Pontiff John Paul II on the Permanent Validity of the Church's Missionary Mandate [Dec. 7, 1990] TI - Encyclical Letter Redemptoris Missio of the Supreme Pontiff John Paul II on the Permanent Validity of the Church's Missionary Mandate [Dec. 7, 1990] ID - 877 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - J. Michael Miller, ed. and intro. AB - John Paul II here speaks of obstacles to freedom and personal growth: "A person who is concerned solely or primarily with possessing and enjoying, who is no longer able to control his instincts and passions, or to subordinate them by obedience to the truth, cannot be free...." While "the ownership of things may become an occasion of personal growth," the Pope says, this "growth can be hindered as a result of manipulation by the means of mass communication, which impose fashions and trends of opinion through carefully orchestrated repetition, without its being possible to subject to critical scrutiny the premises on which these fashions and trends are based." AU - John Paul II, Pope CY - Huntington, IN KW - values Christianity advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations values media effects values Catholic Church values critics Catholic Church, and new media advertising, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and advertising values, and advertising religion, and new media media effects, and Catholic Church advertising religion LB - 28400 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Our Sunday Visitor, Inc. PY - 1996 SP - 631 ST - Encyclical Letter Centesimum Annus: Addressed by the Supreme Pontiff John Paul II To His Venerable Brothers in the Episcopate, the Priests and Deacons, Familes of Men and Women Religious, All the Christian Faithful, and to All Men and Women of Good Will on the Hundredth Anniversary of Rerum Novarum [May, 1991] T2 - The Encyclicals of John Paul II TI - Encyclical Letter Centesimum Annus: Addressed by the Supreme Pontiff John Paul II To His Venerable Brothers in the Episcopate, the Priests and Deacons, Familes of Men and Women Religious, All the Christian Faithful, and to All Men and Women of Good Will on the Hundredth Anniversary of Rerum Novarum [May, 1991] ID - 1378 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Claudia Carlen, ed. AB - Pope John XXIII turning new media toward wholesome ends. "We must fight immoral and false literature with literature that is wholesome and sincere. Radio broadcasts, motion pictures, and television shows which make error and vice attractive must be opposed by shows which defend truth and strive to preserve the integrity and safety of morals. Thus these new arts, which can work much evil, will be turned to the well-being and benefit of men, and at the same time will supply worthwhile recreation. Health will come from a source which has often produced only devastating sickness." AU - John XXIII, Pope CY - Raleigh, N. C. KW - values Christianity values archives primary sources values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church non-USA primary sources papal encyclicals Pope John XXIII Pope John XXIII, and 1959 encyclical Pope John XXIII, and Ad Petri Cathedram Catholic Church, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholic Church motion pictures, and censorship Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures television, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and television +radio radio, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and radio Catholic Church, and modern media Catholic Church, and new media values critics Catholic Church LB - 20760 PB - McGrath Publishing Company PY - 1981 SP - 5-20 ST - Ad Petri Cathedram: Encyclical of Pope John XXIII on Truth, Unity and Peace, in a Spirit of Charity, June 29, 1959 T2 - The Papal Encyclicals, 1958-1981 TI - Ad Petri Cathedram: Encyclical of Pope John XXIII on Truth, Unity and Peace, in a Spirit of Charity, June 29, 1959 VL - 5 ID - 878 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Jacobs, Lewis AB - The author notes that during the 1960s, "many" movie makers -- not just "some" -- tried to use color in motion pictures. "Instead of balking at this heightened awareness of colors, many viewers reveled in it for its own sake. And if theater managers are to be believed, a majority of moviegoers in America today [1966] look upon color as a decorative wrapping that adds pleasure to an film." (221) The author comments on how black-and-white film had come to represent the past while color "has more immediacy." (232) This article originally appeared in Film Quarterly (Fall, 1966). AU - Johnson, William CY - New York KW - technology corporations corporations motion pictures color cameras motion pictures, and cameras motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures photography technology and society materials materials cinema motion pictures celluloid non-USA motion pictures and popular culture photography and visual communication cameras, and motion pictures film Technicolor Eastman Kodak Cinemascope celluloid technology, and motion pictures motion pictures, and technology color, and Eastman Kodak color, and Technicolor technological determinism media literacy motion pictures, and media literacy media literacy, and motion pictures history and new media history, and color film history, and black-and-white film history LB - 36660 PB - Farrar, Straus & Giroux PY - 1970 SP - 210-42 ST - Coming to Terms with Color T2 - The Movies As Medium TI - Coming to Terms with Color ID - 3299 ER - TY - CHAP AB - This report on the impact of erotica was part of the work of the 1970 President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. Alfred Kinsey and his associates during the 1950s noted that people often reacted differently according to the medium (e.g., text, still pictures, moving pictures) through which they received erotic stimuli. Some years later, the 1970 Report pointed to research that showed erotic films tended to produce more sexual arousal among viewers than photographs or written text. AU - Johnson, Weldon T. AU - Kupperstein, Lenore R. AU - W. Cody Wilson, et al. CY - Washington, D.C. KW - eroticism social science research values sexuality values media effects crime law censorship and ratings censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography +motion pictures motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and foreign censorship, and foreign obscenity media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects eroticism, and media effects media effects, and eroticism pornography, and supporters, +bibliographies bibliographies, and pornography (effects) bibliographies, annotated, and pornography (effects) crime, and pornography pornography, and crime media effects bibliographies LB - 23020 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - U. S. Government Printing Office PY - 1970 SP - 139-263 ST - The Impact of Erotica: Report of the Effects Panel to the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography T2 - Report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography TI - The Impact of Erotica: Report of the Effects Panel to the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography ID - 1027 ER - TY - CHAP AB - In early 1958, President Dwight Eisenhower asked Eric Johnston to organize a bipartisan conference of opinion leaders. The goal was "to inform a large spectrum of citizen opinion leaders about the value of American aid to foreign countries with the expectation “that they would then carry the message to an every large circle of U. S. citizensAmong those who attended were Eisenhower, Richard Nixon, Harry Truman, Adlai Stevenson, Lyndon Johnson, and John Foster Dulles. In his remarks, Johnston called the conference "the beginning, only a beginning. It is a moment in which we might plant seeds. The seeds, if we wish to plant them, will need our devoted care and cultivation in the days, the months, and the years ahead." AU - Johnston, Eric CY - Washington, D. C. KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) addresses, Eric Johnston archives addresses speeches motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and education education education, and motion pictures MPAA MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric, and capitalism capitalism, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and anticommunism motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad capitalism freedom LB - 36120 N1 - ProCite field[8]: Committee for International Economic Growth PB - Committee for International Economic Growth PY - 1958 SP - 20-21 ST - Opening Remarks, Feb. 25, 1958, T2 - Foreign Aspects of U. S. National Security: Conference Report and Proceedings TI - Opening Remarks, Feb. 25, 1958, ID - 3113 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Francis G. Couvares, ed. AB - This essay is based largely on published court decisions, newspaper accounts (e.g., the New York Times), and secondary sources. It is most interesting in discussing the movie industry’s slow start in challenging the 1915 Mutual case. Indeed, during the Miracle case, “Burstyn had received no real support from the American film industry. Instead, the industry threw its weight behind the Gelling case, a similar censorship appeal which involved the movies produced in Hollywood -- Pinky....” Jowett does note that Eric Johnston was much more aggressive than Will Hays had been in challenging legal censorship. The Court did not foreclose further censorship of obscene pictures in the Miracle case. Jowett cites Richard Corliss’s article that this case was “the first great defeat for Catholic motion picture pressure and perhaps the beginning of a ‘new’ legion [of Decency]....” This article is also interesting in discussing the fact that the U.S. Supreme Court heard six licensing cases in the nine years after the Miracle case. Each one further eroded the power of censors. “It was not until 1961 that the fundamental constitutional question of the permissibility of local censorship of motion pictures finally reached the Supreme Court in the case of Times Film Corp. v. Chicago.” “The very threat of television was ... a major impetus in the drive to ‘modernize’ the Production Code” during the 1950s and 1960s. The Code was dead by 1966 and the new rating systems was adopted on Nov. 1, 1968. “The way was open for greater specialization of movies for people of all ages, but in a desperate bid to recover some of the tremendous financial losses the movie studios had sustained, much of this freedom was squandered on cheap sexual exploitation and gratuitous violence.” AU - Jowett, Garth CY - Washington, D. C. KW - self-regulation Production Code PCA Burstyn v. Wilson Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) freedom law values religion law censorship and ratings values television Production Code (1930) motion pictures First Amendment motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship First Amendment, and motion pictures Production Code Administration (PCA) Burstyn, Joseph Miracle case Times Film Corp. v. Chicago (1961) television, and film censorship values, and motion pictures Mutual case (1915) motion pictures, and rating system (1968) censorship motion pictures, and regulation regulation regulation, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric, and censorship Hays, Will H., and censorship television television, and Production Code (motion pictures) Hays, Will H. Johnston, Eric LB - 6270 PB - Smithsonian Institution Press PY - 1996 SP - 258-76 ST - ‘A Significant Medium for the Communication of Ideas’: The Miracle Decision and the Decline of Motion Picture Censorship, 1952-1968 T2 - Movie Censorship and American Culture TI - ‘A Significant Medium for the Communication of Ideas’: The Miracle Decision and the Decline of Motion Picture Censorship, 1952-1968 ID - 2010 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Raymond Williams, ed. AB - Jowett surveys the use of visual images in communication from their use on coins in pre-Christian Rome, through early printed illustrations in the fifteenth century, through photography in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. He also examines motion pictures and television, “the massive medium.” In this clearly written and informative essay, Jowett discusses such improvements in television technology as better cameras and the use of color. AU - Jowett, Garth S. CY - London KW - illustrations photography print television +motion pictures popular culture +photography and visual communication cameras cameras, and television printing illustrations printing, and woodcuts daguerreotype color color, and television television, and color television, and cameras LB - 11670 PB - Thames and Hudson PY - 1981 SP - 184-98 ST - Extended Images T2 - Contact: Human Communication and Its History TI - Extended Images ID - 2518 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, eds. AB - Joyce discusses interactive fiction in this essays. It is one of twenty-two chapters by different authors that attempt to improve our "understanding of emerging communication technologies." This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. AU - Joyce, Michael CY - Cambridge, MA KW - interactive media books, periodicals, newspapers digital media books, digital interactivity future and science fiction future, and digital media books future LB - 34060 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 227-38 ST - Forms of Future T2 - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - Forms of Future ID - 3044 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - Cable TV, according to the authors, was in the midst of bringing important changes in the way Americans received entertainment and information. A fully-fledged cable network could revolutionize the way we work and conduct our affairs. Kahn and Ernst discuss the "cable revolution" up to 1983 and developments in this American industry. This piece originally appeared in Technology Review (Jan. 1983). AU - Kahn, Robert D. and Martin L. Ernst CY - Cambridge, MA KW - entertainment entertainment, home communication revolution communication revolution home entertainment community democracy home, and new media home home, and information technology information technology information processing Information Age +television television, and cable cable television information technology, and home information revolution democracy and media cable home, and cable television LB - 7010 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 147-54 ST - The Impact of Cable T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - The Impact of Cable ID - 2072 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Raymond Fielding, ed. AB - This piece is a reprint of a paper presented by Herbert T. Kalmus of the Technicolor Motion Picture Corporation at a Fall, 1938 meeting in Detroit, MI. AU - Kalmus, H. T. CY - Berkeley KW - Marked ref, secondary Technicolor color, and Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert color LB - 41130 PB - University of California Press PY - 1967 SP - 52-59 ST - Technicolor: Adventures in Cinemaland T2 - A Technological History of Motion Pictures and Television TI - Technicolor: Adventures in Cinemaland ID - 4212 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Stephen Watts, ed. AB - In this chapter, Natalie Kalmus makes many of the same points she argued in her 1935 article "Color Consciousness." She does go further in explaining some of the technical problems associated with filming outdoors, for example, for the film The Trail of the Lonesome Pine as compared to shooting color films at the studio. (126-27) Again, Kalmus insists that color usage must follow the rules of Nature. "In the study of colour appreciation we have two classes of objects. On the one hand, we have Nature, with its flowers, skies, trees, etc.; on the other hand, we have man-made objects of all kinds, including artists' pictures. In the first class, the colour is already created, and it remains for us only to enjoy and appreciate. In the second class we can exercise a certain amount of selectivity. Because of the general lack of colour knowledge, that selectivity is not always tempted with wisdom. If the colour schemes of natural objects were used as guides, less flagrant mistakes in colour would occur. The use of black and white, however, to the complete exclusion of all colour, is decidedly not in keeping with Nature's rules. (117) "Natural colours and lights do not tax the eye nearly as much as man-made colours and artificial lights. Even when Nature indulges in a riot of beautiful colours, there are subtle harmonies which justify those colours. These harmonies are often overlooked by the casual observer. The most brilliant flower has leaves and stem of just the right ue to accompany or complement its gay colour." (117) Kalmus argued that "A superabundance of colour is unnatural, and has a most unpleasant effect not only upon the eye itself, but upon the mind as well. On the other hand, the complete absence of colour is unnatural. The mind strives to supply the missing chromatic sensations...." (118) Kalmus commented on the psychological impact of color. "From a broader point of view," she said, "the psychology of colour is of immense value to a director. His prime motive is to direct and control the thoughts and emotions of his audience. The director strives to indicate a fuller significance than is specifically shown by the action and dialogue... We have found that by the understanding use of colour we can subtly convey dramatic moods and impressions to the audience, making them more receptive to whatever emotion effect the scenes, action, and dialogue may convey." (120) As in her article "Color Consciousness," Kalmus is certain about what colors convey. "The usual reaction of a colour upon a normal person has been definitely determined," she said. (120) [my emphasis] She then rehashed her view about "warm" and "cool" colors made in her 1935 article. (120-21) Kalmus also reiterated her account of how for each film a color chart was prepared and the great detail with which each scene was treated. As earlier, she said color were selected to adhere "to literary laws and story values." (121) [my emphasis] In considering the use of color, she explained that the "synthesis of all these factors entails many conferences with directors, art directors, writers, cameramen, designers, and others." (123) As in her 1935 article, she said that "We must constantly practice colour restraint." (123) [my emphasis] Color was also used to enhance personality. "We plan the colours of the actor's costumes with especial care. Whenever possible, we prefer to clothe the actor in colours that build up his or her screen personality." (121) Kalmus discussed the way color photography at Technicolor is made and its impact on the viewer. "The first fundamental fact of all motion picture photography is physiological." (124) AU - Kalmus, Natalie M. CY - London KW - Kalmus, Herbert censorship censorship Marked motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Technicolor, and Natalie Kalmus Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color censorship, and Natalie Kalmus ref, secondary color, and primitives color, and cinematographers color, and novelty color, and music Kalmus, Natalie, and color music color, and sound films sound recording sound recording, and color ref, secondary color, and Nature color, and personality personality, and color personality LB - 41270 PB - Arthur Barket Ltd. PY - 1938 SP - 116-27 ST - Colour T2 - Behind the Screen: How Films Are Made TI - Colour ID - 4226 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Susan Mossman, ed. AB - Morris Kaufman’s “Other Technologies and Plastics” is richly illustrated with color photographs. He discusses plastics use in radio with such innovations as the phenolic plug and circuit board, as well as the Ekco radio cabinet. He also offers brief observations about celluloid’s significance in motion pictures and plastics important to the transmission of electricity. Kaufman, who died in 1988, also wrote The First Century of Plastics (1963). AU - Kaufman, Morris CY - London and Washington, D. C. KW - technology illustrations photography public address systems loudspeakers non-USA +photography and visual communication +radio radio, and plastics loudspeakers, and plastic illustrations +electricity electricity, and plastics plastics, and electricity technology and society Great Britain Great Britain, and celluloid Great Britain, and plastics plastics materials LB - 12360 PB - Leicester University Press PY - 1997 SP - 148-59 ST - Other Technologies and Plastics T2 - Early Plastics: Perspectives, 1850-1950 TI - Other Technologies and Plastics ID - 2583 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - America, Film Council of AB - The author discusses the use of 16mm cameras in World War II and after. He notes that this format was long associated with "amateurism." AU - Keehn, Neal CY - Des Plaines, IL KW - libraries nationalism Film Council of America magnetic recording World War II values preservation media effects materials materials magnetic tape cinema motion pictures celluloid film education community democracy values religion war 16mm government history +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and 16mm film 16mm film magnetic tape recording magnetic tape recording, video values, and society democracy, and media education, and 16mm film religion, and 16mm film 16mm film, and education 16mm film, and religion +nationalism and communication government, and 16mm film public libraries, and 16mm film 16mm film, and public libraries 16mm film, as paperback books +television television, and 16mm film history, and new media history, and 16mm film values, and 16mm film +sound recording sound recording, and magnetic tape World War II, and 16mm film 16mm film, and World War II 16mm film, and museums media effects, and 16mm films Film Council of America, values LB - 18070 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Film Council of America (Evanston, IL) PY - 1954 SP - 24-36 ST - Production T2 - Sixty Years of 16mm Film, 1923-1983: A Symposium TI - Production ID - 716 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ithiel de Sola Pool, ed. AB - Keller says that even though the telephone is so central to our lives, its impact on society has been little studied. "In fact," she says, "few of the machines that have transformed modern life -- the elevator, the motor car -- have been adequately studied for future record." Her essay tries to show how telecommunications have assisted in creating links among people, and "what these links imply about the nature of modern communities." She predicts a coming information society, a "second industrial revolution." “Even more dramatic projected developments in science and society will transform life as we know it today. They also will help usher in the ‘second industrial revolution,’ the electronic society, or the automated world. This society of tomorrow, according to many serious observers, will be a society of communications, moving information and images as we now move people and goods.” AU - Keller, Suzanne CY - Cambridge, MA KW - communication revolution community communication revolution, and second industrial revolution values information processing Information Age +telephones values, and telephones telephones, and community information age second industrial revolution community, and telephones telecommunications communication revolution democracy LB - 10270 PB - MIT Press PY - 1977 SP - 281-98 ST - The Telephone in New (and Old) Communities T2 - The Social Impact of the Telephone TI - The Telephone in New (and Old) Communities ID - 2392 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - H.E. Roys, ed. AB - Kellogg developed the electromagnetic pickup which "opened the door for further improvements: an all electrical reproducing system, allowing for greater output, electrical compensation, and control of the volume. The electrodynamic speaker, a co-invention with Chester W. Rice, permitted a further extension of the low frequency range and, since a horn was not needed, simplified the design of the cabinet." This piece appeared originally in the American Institute of Electrical Engineers Transactions, 46 (1927), 903-11. AU - Kellogg, Edward W. CY - Stroudsburg, PA KW - +sound recording +sound recording +electricity electricity, and sound recording sound recording, and electromagnetic pickup sound recording, and electricity phonograph sound recording, and records LB - 5490 PB - Dowden, Hutchingon [sic] & Ross, Inc. PY - 1978 SP - 29-37 ST - Electrical Reproduction from Phonograph Records T2 - Disc Recording and Reproduction TI - Electrical Reproduction from Phonograph Records ID - 1934 ER - TY - CHAP AB - See also David W. Kiehl, “A Catalogue of American Art Posters of the 1890s in the Metropolitan Museum of Art,” ibid., 97-193. AU - Kiehl, David W. CY - New York KW - photography posters +photography and visual communication posters, and United States (1890s) color, and posters (1890s) color color, and posters posters, and color LB - 1660 PB - Metropolitan Museum of Art; Distributed by Harry N. Abrams, Inc. PY - 1987 SP - 11-20 (text); 21-44 (posters) ST - American Art Posters of the 1890s T2 - American Art Posters of the 1890s TI - American Art Posters of the 1890s ID - 1562 ER - TY - CHAP AU - Kiehl, David W. CY - New York KW - photography posters +photography and visual communication +bibliographies posters, and United States (1890s) museums color, and posters (1890s) color color, and posters LB - 1670 PB - Metropolitan Museum of Art; Distributed by Harry N. Abrams, Inc. PY - 1987 SP - 97-193 ST - A Catalogue of American Art Posters of the 1890s in the Metropolitan Museum of Art T2 - American Art Posters of the 1890s TI - A Catalogue of American Art Posters of the 1890s in the Metropolitan Museum of Art ID - 1563 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Joseph J. Corn, ed AB - Kihlstedt studied the iconography of two American world’s fairs -- the Century of Progress Exposition of 1933-34, held in Chicago, and the New York World’s Fair of 1939-40 -- and demonstrated how these exhibition “projected utopian images.” AU - Kihlstedt, Folke, T. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - photography iconography +future and science fiction World Fairs +photography and visual communication utopianism World Fairs, and Century of Progress (1933-34) World Fairs, and New York (1939-40) future iconography, and World Fairs utopias, and World Fairs World Fairs, and utopias LB - 1680 PB - MIT Press PY - 1986 SP - 97-118 ST - Utopia Realized: The World’s Fair of the 1930s T2 - Imagining Tomorrow: History, Technology, and the American Future TI - Utopia Realized: The World’s Fair of the 1930s ID - 1564 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Günter Friedrichs and Adam Schaff, eds. AB - This anthology assesses the significance of microelectronics. Observing that the National Academy of Sciences in the United States has compared the arrival of modern electronics to a "second industrial revolution" of perhaps greater import than the first industrial revolution, King says that the authors of this volume ask if such statements are exaggerated. They conclude that they are not. "We are inclined to accept that the impact of the integrated circuit is revolutionary. No other single invention or discovery since the steam engine has had a broad impact on all the sectors of the economy. Even the availability of electric power merely gave a further, if powerful, impulse to the process of mechanisation initiated by steam power.... the first Industrial Revolution enormously enhanced the puny muscular power of man and animals in production; the second will similarly extend human mental capacity to a degree which we can hardly envisage now." A primary concern of this book is how the microelectronics revolution will affect the Third World, which has been unable to take advantage of many benefits coming from the first industrial revolution. Another question involves whether industrialized society can assimilate these impending changes or will they hasten the breakdown of society. Microelectronics could lead to unemployment as well as create a better society for workers. AU - King, Alexander CY - Oxford, Eng. KW - R & D computers nationalism microprocessing transistors, and integrated circuits labor research and development war communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution archives Third World communication revolution, and second industrial revolution war non-USA office, and information technology microelectronics libraries labor information technology libraries, and information storage Information Age +computers and the Internet microelectronics revolution Third World, and microelectronics second industrial revolution Industrial Revolution +military communication information processing automation labor, and microelectronics microprocessors integrated circuits transistors miniaturization +information storage +nationalism and communication microelectronics, and history of Club of Rome communication revolution materials office LB - 4400 N1 - See also: office PB - Pergamon Press PY - 1982 SP - 1-36 ST - Introduction: A New Industrial Revolution or Just Another Technology? T2 - Microelectronics and Society: For Better or for Worse: A Report to the Club of Rome TI - Introduction: A New Industrial Revolution or Just Another Technology? ID - 1828 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - This work predicted a ten-fold growth in the market for high-technology ceramics in the coming decade, and “that user needs will continue to drive the development of new, improved devices like sensors, insulators, cutting tools, and optical systems” used by a large number of industries. The author argues that nations that fall behind in the use of high-tech ceramics will fall behind in many other areas. This piece first appeared in High-Technology Ceramics, Past, Present, and Future (Volume 3, published by the American Ceramic Society. AU - Kingery, W. David CY - Cambridge, MA KW - nationalism materials +future and science fiction materials +nationalism and communication materials revolution ceramics future nationalism, and materials nationalism, and ceramics LB - 2710 PB - MIT Press PY - 1988 SP - 315-28 ST - Looking to the Future of Ceramics T2 - The Materials Revolution: Superconductors, New Materials, and the Japanese Challenge TI - Looking to the Future of Ceramics ID - 1663 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Mark R. Levy, ed. AB - This article has a short history of the VCR as well as a short “Chronology of Events” back to 1927. AU - Kloppenstein, Bruce C. CY - Newbury Park, CA KW - reference works entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) entertainment, home magnetic recording References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps home entertainment materials materials magnetic tape home, and new media home values home, and information technology information technology +television information technology, and home values, and VCRs VCRs television, and VCRs VCRs, and history VCRs home, and VCRs +timelines timelines, and VCRs LB - 7040 PB - Sage Publications PY - 1989 SP - 21-39 ST - The Diffusion of the VCR in the United States T2 - The VCR Age: Home Video and Mass Communication TI - The Diffusion of the VCR in the United States ID - 2075 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Mayer, Michael F. AB - Many of those who attended foreign films in the United States during the 1950s and early 1960s were highly educated and articulate. Many were also young. A large percentage of those who watched movies in art theaters were under 30. The “outstanding fact” about European cinema, wrote film critic Arthur Knight in 1965, and we might add, what attracted many young intellectuals to it, was “its readiness to permit experimentation both in themes and techniques.” (vii) Knight goes to write that "curiously, although European pictures are seldom made for a mass audience (not in the Hollywood sense, at any rate), their influence upon American production has been enormous. And beneficial." (viii) AU - Knight, Arthur CY - New York KW - motion pictures censorship and ratings motion pictures, and Europe foreign films motion pictures, and foreign film LB - 31860 PB - Arco PY - 1965 SP - vii-viii ST - Introduction T2 - Foreign Films on American Screens TI - Introduction ID - 2865 ER - TY - CHAP AB - This essays deals with the "shift in medical futurism in the year surrounding the discovery of x rays in 1895." Before this time, medicine had focused on preventing illness. After 1895, many people hoped that the x-ray machine "might transcend traditional healing powers and that solutions to disease and death were as close as the nearest patent office." The author provides an interesting discussion of how x rays entered into the public's imagination through the press, novels, and short stories. AU - Knight, Nancy CY - Cambridge, MA KW - photography news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines +future and science fiction information technology +photography and visual communication information technology, and medicine X-rays future future, and medicine magazines, and technology future, and x-rays LB - 1700 N1 - ProCite field[8]: Joseph J. Corn, ed. PB - MIT Press PY - 1986 SP - 10-34 ST - ‘The New Light’: X Rays and Medical Futurism T2 - Imagining Tomorrow: History, Technology, and the American Future TI - ‘The New Light’: X Rays and Medical Futurism ID - 1566 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Jasia Reichardt, ed. AB - This piece notes that the first computer movies produced at Bell Labs appeared in 1963. AU - Knowlton, Kenneth C. CY - New York KW - computers corporations corporations , motion pictures computers and the Internet computers, and animated films motion pictures, and computers (1960s) computers, and motion pictures (1960s) motion pictures, and animated films Bell Laboratories Bell Laboratories, and computer movies computers LB - 32690 PB - Frederick A. Praeger PY - 1969 ST - Computer-Animated Movies T2 - Cybernetic Serendipity: The Computer and the Arts TI - Computer-Animated Movies ID - 2871 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Robert Allen, ed. AB - Kozloff writes that "we must not underestimate the importance of narrative theory as a critical vantage point, because American television is as saturated in narrative as a sponge in a swimming pool. Most television shows ... are narrative texts.” AU - Kozloff, Sarah CY - Chapel Hill KW - values +television television, and narrative values, and television television, and values LB - 9890 PB - University of North Carolina Press PY - 1992 SP - 68-91 ST - Narrative Theory and Television T2 - Channels of Discourse Reassembled TI - Narrative Theory and Television ID - 2356 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Bruce Guile, ed. AB - Kranzberg believed in 1984 that the Information Age had “revolutionized the technical elements of industrial society,” The “internationalization of production” had already assumed “revolutionary dimensions.” He criticized writers such as Alvin Toffler who seemed to assume that new technologies replaced older technology quickly and completely. While old technology would remain for quite some time, and while new technology would arrive in an evolutionary fashion, the long-term impact of these changes would be revolutionary. AU - Kranzberg, Melvin CY - Washington, D.C. KW - technology communication revolution general studies capitalism communication revolution information age communication revolution, and industry Toffler, Alvin technology and society LB - 770 PB - National Academy Press PY - 1985 SP - 35-54 ST - The Information Age: Evolution or Revolution? T2 - Information Technologies and Social Transformation TI - The Information Age: Evolution or Revolution? ID - 1473 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - The authors provide a chronology that includes the Stone, Bronze, and Iron Ages through Roman times, which was “famous for cement,” and the Middle Ages, which gave us gunpowder and printing. The story follows developments to World War II. This article originally appeared in Morris Cohen, ed., “Materials and Engineering: Its Evolution, Practice and Prospects,” a special issue of Materials Science and Engineering, vol. 37, no. 1 (Jan. 1979). AU - Kranzberg, Melvin and Cyril Stanley Smith CY - Cambridge, MA KW - technology print materials war materials general studies technology and society materials revolution Stone Age Bronze Age Iron Age cement gunpowder printing World War II engineering, and materials engineering LB - 760 PB - MIT Pres PY - 1988 SP - 85-118 ST - Materials in History and Society T2 - The Materials Revolution: Superconductors, New Materials, and the Japanese Challenge TI - Materials in History and Society ID - 1472 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Renate Mayntz and Thomas P. Hughes, eds. AB - La Porte writes that the “United States air traffic system (USATS) providing both air navigation and traffic separation became a nationwide governmental service in 1936 after two decades of expanding private and public activity. Within fifty years, this system has grown into an extraordinary matrix of 600 airports and 300,000 miles of airways in continuous flux and motion as millions of people and mountains of freight (and air mail) are shepherded throughout the U.S. It has been a remarkable development of a very large-scale, publicly owned technical system with quite different properties than the other systems discussed in this book [railroads, electricity, telephones, videotex]. It is at once, more far-flung and complex, and less integrated and dependent upon technologies as a means of coordination. It has a different relationship to the national state....” AU - La Porte, Todd CY - Bolder, CO; and Frankfurt am Main KW - post office nationalism technical systems labor office office, and new media office transportation nationalism and communication +aeronautics and space communication transportation, and air travel technical systems, large-scale air traffic system (US), USATS postal service air travel infrastructure nationalism, and air travel air power LB - 2280 PB - Westview Press; and Campus Verlag PY - 1988 SP - 215-44 ST - The United States Air Traffic System: Increasing Reliability in the Midst of Rapid Growth T2 - The Development of Large Technical Systems TI - The United States Air Traffic System: Increasing Reliability in the Midst of Rapid Growth ID - 1621 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - The authors try to place the materials revolution into historical and world perspective. They “identify a ‘cycle’ of demand for materials and argue that economic growth is no longer accompanied by increased consumption of basic materials. Indeed, we are moving from an Age of Materials to an Age of Information, this fundamental and perhaps irreversible shift being brought about by materials substitution, design changes, saturated markets, and a shift to high-tech goods with a low materials content." At the time of this article, Larson and Williams were at Princeton’s Center for Energy and Environmental Studies, while Ross was a the Argonne National Laboratory and the University of Michigan. Their article first appeared in Scientific American (June 1986). Critiques of their position can be found in the October, 1986 issue of Scientific American. AU - Larson, Eric D., Marc H. Ross, and Robert H. Williams CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers preservation communication revolution history, and new media materials communication revolution, and second industrial revolution history materials history +computers and the Internet materials revolution information age second industrial revolution communication revolution Industrial Revolution general studies capitalism history, break with LB - 2630 PB - MIT Press PY - 1988 SP - 141-59 ST - Beyond the Era of Materials T2 - The Materials Revolution: Superconductors, New Materials, and the Japanese Challenge TI - Beyond the Era of Materials ID - 1656 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Chris Hables Gray, ed. AB - This essay explores "the role of analogy in space policy in the 1950s and the 1990s." It examines the part played by ideas about adventure and discovery during the 1950s, as well as popular beliefs about space travel. The author notes that "the decade following World War II brought a sea change in perceptions, as most American went from skepticism about the probilities of space flight to an acceptance of it as a near-term reality." Launius discusses how consideration of foreign policy and national security influenced the debate during the 1950s. During the 1990s, the debate over space policy reflected the declining influence of the frontier metaphor in public dicussions. There was a widening gap between popular beliefs about space flight and reality. National security and foreign policy are again related to the debate. He argues that by the 1990s, the "gap between reality and popular ideas of space flight" was so great "that a new campaign will be required to link the two once again." AU - Launius, Roger D. CY - Malabar, FL KW - R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) preservation research and development war history, and new media war history +aeronautics and space communication satellites NASA +military communication military, and satellites history, and analogies Sputnik analogies, historical LB - 6030 PB - Krieger Publishing Company PY - 1996 SP - 215-32 ST - NASA Retrospect and Prospect: Space Policy in the 1950s and the 1990s T2 - Technohistory: Using the History of American Technology in Interdisciplinary Research TI - NASA Retrospect and Prospect: Space Policy in the 1950s and the 1990s ID - 1987 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This study of the cereal and snacks industry in northwest England points to the problems facing trade unions as they try to resist technological change. This paper was presented to the annual meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science at the University of Sussex, England in August, 1983, and it was first published in the Symposium's proceedings, New Technology and the Future of Work (London: Frances Pinter, 1984). AU - Leach, Bernard and John Shutt CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers non-USA information technology +computers and the Internet automation information technology, and industry labor Great Britain labor, and new media Great Britain, and labor critics LB - 3510 N1 - See also: office PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 480-95 ST - Chips and Crisps: Labor Faces a Crunch T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Chips and Crisps: Labor Faces a Crunch ID - 1741 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Levin, G. Roy AB - Documentary filmmaker Richard Leacock gave this interview at his home in Cambridge, MA, Aug. 13, 1970. Preceeding it is a condensed version of "Dogma of One Film-Maker" that Leacock wrote for the screening of his films at MIT in 1969. In it, he says that "with the advent of sound, far from being freed, we were paralyzed by the complexity and size of equipment. We still went out to the real world and proceeded to destroy, by our own impact, the very thing we wen to record." (195-6) AU - Leacock, Richard CY - Garden City, N. Y. KW - underground cinema motion pictures 16mm sound recording motion pictures, and 16mm Leacock, Richard underground media underground films motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and history of motion pictures, and avant-garde films underground films, and motion pictures 16mm 16mm, and avant-garde films documentaries motion pictures, and documentaries television videotape magnetic recording magnetic recording, and documentaries cinéma vérité cameras cameras, 16mm 16mm cameras documentary films, and 16mm motion pictures, and 16mm motion pictures, and documentaries lighting lighting, and 16mm cameras lighting, and portable cameras sound recording sound recording, and 16mm cameras 16mm cameras, and sound recording news and journalism television television, and 16mm cameras television news, and 16mm cameras photography and visual communication Great Britain France Belgium non-USA non-USA, and documentary filmmaking Great Britain, and documentary filmmaking France, and documentary filmmaking Belgium, and documentary filmmaking videofreex television, and videotape videotape, and television television, and videofreex sound recording, and 16mm 16mm, and sound recording 8mm sound recording, and 8mm 8mm, and sound recording photography magnetic tape magnetic recording LB - 34680 PB - Doubleday & Company, Inc. PY - 1971 SP - 195-221 ST - [Interview, Aug. 13, 1970] T2 - Documentary Explorations: 15 Interviews with Film-Makers TI - [Interview, Aug. 13, 1970] ID - 3106 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Richard Wightman Fox and T.J.Jackson Lears, eds. AB - Lears writes that “‘On or about December 1910,’ Virginia Woolf once said, ‘human character changed.’ This hyperbole contains a kernel of truth....The older culture was suited to a production-oriented society of small entrepreneurs; the newer culture epitomized a consumption-oriented society dominated by bureaucratic corporations.” “The shift toward sensational tactics for attracting attention was accelerated by a broader movement from print to visual modes of expression. Technical advances in photography, film, and printing promoted a proliferation of images and made an exclusively verbal medium seem dull by comparison....Advertising was part of a new visual environment, where innumerable images jostled for the attention of a mass audience.” AU - Lears, T. J. Jackson CY - New York KW - photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations modernism modernity communication revolution values modernity communication revolution general studies +photography and visual communication advertising capitalism, and culture values, and advertising values, and capitalism Industrial Revolution modernism +motion pictures +books, periodicals, newspapers consumerism general studies color capitalism advertising, and visual communication LB - 9970 PB - Pantheon Books PY - 1983 SP - 3-38 ST - From Salvation to Self-Realization T2 - Culture of Consumption: Critical Essays in American History, 1880-1980 TI - From Salvation to Self-Realization ID - 2362 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - The author, who at the time was a independent planning consultant based in Paris, suggests here that microelectronics could make possible decentralization of social activity and help to “mop up regional unemployment and greatly improve accessibility to education. It could also lead to dramatic reduction in travel time and transport costs and reduce the pressures on cities.” This paper originally appeared in Impact of Science on Society, Vol. 27 (No. 2, 1977). AU - Lefèvre, Bruno CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers nationalism time and timekeeping time communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution communication revolution, and second industrial revolution geography microelectronics +computers and the Internet space (spatial) time +transportation microelectronics revolution urban studies microelectronics revolution, and town planning +nationalism and communication microelectronics revolution, and government communication revolution second industrial revolution microelectronics revolution, and decentralization LB - 3120 PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 473-87 ST - The Impact of Microelectronics on Town Planning T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - The Impact of Microelectronics on Town Planning ID - 1704 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - This article, written by a journalist, first appeared in Time (May 11, 1987). The editor of this volume, Tom Forester, called it “the best popular account ... of the search for superconductivity....” Recent breakthroughs had occurred in this field in late 1985, but had not been picked up by the press until a meeting at the New York Hilton in March, 1987. AU - Lemonick, Michael D., with Thomas McCarroll, J. Madeleine Nash, and Dennis Wyss CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers superconductivity nationalism corporations corporations corporations materials non-USA materials +computers and the Internet superconductors Bell Laboratories Japan IBM materials revolution Japan, and superconductors +nationalism and communication nationalism, and superconductors LB - 2600 PB - MIT Press PY - 1988 SP - 35-39 ST - Superconductors! The Startling Breakthrough That Could Change Our World T2 - The Materials Revolution: Superconductors, New Materials, and the Japanese Challenge TI - Superconductors! The Startling Breakthrough That Could Change Our World ID - 1653 ER - TY - CHAP AB - The author selected "a single issue of each [Underground Press Syndicate] periodical from every second month in the period from September 1967 to August 1968." (90) "Despite implicit and explicit acceptance of unconventional sexual practices and standards, there was also some emphasis on the negative aspects of sexual intercourse (such as venereal disease) and upon the availability of medical services for sex-related health problems" in these underground publications. "Several sex-related articles in the underground papers involved erotic art and literature, particularly movies, books, and plays in which sex played a dominant role...." (95) AU - Levin, Jack CY - Washington, D. C. KW - underground films pornography motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Commission on Obscenity and Pornography motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and history of sex nudity motion pictures, and nudity censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and underground newspapers newspapers underground newspapers, and motion pictures pornography, and underground films pornography, and underground newspapers underground press, and underground cinema underground cinema, and underground press Underground Press Syndicate news underground media censorship news and journalism underground cinema underground newspapers underground press LB - 31780 PB - U. S. Government Printing Office PY - 1972 SP - 89-97 ST - Sex-Related Themes in The Underground Press T2 - Technical Report of The Commission on Obscenity and Pornography: Volume IX: The Consumer and the Community TI - Sex-Related Themes in The Underground Press VL - 9 ID - 2863 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Carroll W. Pursell, Jr., ed. AU - Lewis, W. David CY - Cambridge, MA KW - public address systems public address systems loudspeakers +sound recording microphones Jensen, Peter public address systems loudspeakers LB - 5250 PB - MIT Press PY - 1981 SP - 000-00 ST - Peter L. Jensen and the Amplication of Sound T2 - Technology in America: A History of Individuals and Ideas TI - Peter L. Jensen and the Amplication of Sound ID - 1912 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Libby, C. Earl, ed. (prepared under the direction of the Joint Textbook Committee of the Paper Industry) AB - This straight-forward account offers a clear introduction into the history of paper and pulp. It is one of sixteen essays in a volume devoted to the science and technology of pulp and paper, and it is the most historically oriented piece in this collection. AU - Libby, C. E. CY - New York KW - materials paper materials papermaking paper, and wood pulp LB - 28290 PB - McGraw-Hill Book Company PY - 1962 SP - 1-19 ST - History of Pulp and Paper T2 - Pulp and Paper: Science and Technology: Volume I: Pulp TI - History of Pulp and Paper ID - 907 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This paper originally appeared in IEEE Transactions On Communications, Vol. COM-23, No. 10 (Oct. 1975). The editor of this volume considered it "one of the earliest -- and still one of the most valuable -- discussions of the political implications of developments in microelectronics-based information technology....." As with most new inventions, Lowi demonstrates that improvements in information technology are double-edged. "Either the new telecommunications systems will spread information more widely and thus enhance the power of the individual, or they will greatly increase man's susceptibility to manipulation. It is up to us," he says. Decision must be made about government secrecy, centralizing the state's power, and personal privacy. At the time of this piece, the author was professor of American Institutions as Cornell University. He notes "that technological change -- 'The Xerox and magnetic tape explosion' -- figured prominently in the Pentagon Papers and Watergate scandals. Heaven knows what microelectronics might bright." AU - Lowi, Theodore J. CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers tape recording, magnetic nationalism tape recording recording law, and privacy law communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution community democracy freedom xerography recording, and magnetic tape recorders sound recording, and magnetic sound recording surveillance duplicating technologies microelectronics computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology nationalism and communication photocopying magnetic tape recording sound recording, and magnetic democracy and media microelectronics revolution microelectronics revolution, and government secrecy privacy surveillance civil liberties, and microelectronic revolution Xerox revolution Pentagon Papers, and photocopying Watergate, and tape recording photocopying, and Pentagon Papers civil liberties Watergate nationalism, and new media nationalism, and microelectronics nationalism, and magnetic recording nationalism, and photocopying magnetic recording magnetic tape Xerox Corporation LB - 3110 PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 453-72 ST - The Political Impact of Information Technology T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - The Political Impact of Information Technology ID - 1703 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Raymond Fielding, ed. AB - This article appeared originally in Journal of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers, 27 (Dec. 1936). AU - Lumiere, Louis CY - Berkeley KW - Lumiére, Louis non-USA motion pictures motion pictures motion pictures, and origins LB - 7100 PB - University of California Press PY - 1967 SP - 49-51 ST - The Lumiere Cinematograph T2 - A Technological History of Motion Pictures and Television TI - The Lumiere Cinematograph ID - 2081 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Robert K. Baker and Sandra J. Ball, eds. AB - This essays notes that inn 1945, 93 percent of the 377 films released in the United States were produced in America. In 1967, American movies made up 39 percent of the 462 new feature films. This report appears in Volume 9 of Mass Media and Violence: A Report to the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence. AU - Lyle, Jack CY - [Washington, D. C.] KW - social science research media effects media violence non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and violence social science research, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures violence, and social science research National Commission on Causes and Prevention of Violence motion pictures, and foreign films foreign films motion pictures, and U.S. films made abroad media effects LB - 16500 PB - [U. S. Government Printing Office] PY - 1969 SP - 187-216 ST - Contemporary Functions of the Mass Media: Appendix II-B T2 - Mass Media and Violence: Vol. IX: A Report to the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence TI - Contemporary Functions of the Mass Media: Appendix II-B ID - 602 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Rubinstein, Eli A. A2 - Comstock, George A. A2 - John P. Murray, eds. AB - Lyle work was among the studies in this report from the Surgeon General that indicated that what children learned from television could be good or bad, and that the effects of this learning could be strongly influenced by parents. The studies showed that even though parents were uneasy about what their children learned from TV, they often failed to provide supervision for even the youngest child. The thrust of this research conducted in experimental settings confirmed that overt aggressiveness was more likely to follow exposure to violent programs than to nonviolent programs. AU - Lyle, Jack CY - Rockville, MD KW - television, and media effects Surgeon General social science research media effects media violence media effects censorship and ratings children +television violence television, and violence violence, and television violence, and social science research social science research, and violence children, and media +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures Surgeon General's Report (1972) television, and Surgeon General's Report (1972) violence children, and TV violence media effects, and television LB - 20050 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - National Institute of Mental Health SP - 1-32 ST - Television in Daily Life: Patterns of Use Overview SV - 4 T2 - Television and Social Behavior: Reports and Papers. Volume IV: Television in Day-to-Day Life: Patterns of Use: A Technical Report to the Surgeon General's Scientific Advisory Committee on Television and Social Behavior T3 - Television and Social Behavior: Reports and Papers TI - Television in Daily Life: Patterns of Use Overview ID - 829 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - The author argues that Japan will soon threaten seriously American global domination in microelectronics. This was the keynote address to the 1978 International Solid-State Circuits Conference in San Francisco. It originally appeared the Microelectronics Journal, Vol. 9 (No. 2, 1978). AU - Mackintosh, Ian M. CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers nationalism integrated circuits transistors communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution microelectronics non-USA +computers and the Internet Japan microelectronics revolution integrated circuits +nationalism and communication Japan, and microelectronics LB - 2810 PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 83-102 ST - Micros: The Coming World War T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - Micros: The Coming World War ID - 1673 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ithiel de Sola Pool, ed. AB - This essay looks at the role of women in the workforce needed for telephone service, as well as what the telephone meant to the lives of women. AU - Maddox, Brenda CY - Cambridge, MA KW - entertainment entertainment, home women, and new media labor home entertainment home, and new media home women office, and information technology home, and information technology information technology +telephones women, and telephones telephones, and women information technology, and home information technology, and office office, and telephones home, and telephones women, and telephones office LB - 10260 PB - MIT Press PY - 1977 SP - 262-80 ST - Women and the Switchboard T2 - The Social Impact of the Telephone TI - Women and the Switchboard ID - 2391 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - This piece is a transcript of a talk that Magaziner delivered May 8, 1998, at a time when he was Senior Advisor for Policy Development to President Bill Clinton. As the editors of the volume note, Magaziner's "report to the president in that year defined U. S. government strategy for promoting global commerce on the Internet and confirmed his role as the chief architect of digital policy in the Clinton White House." (113) The volume in which Magaziner's chapter appears ispart of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectivs on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organzied by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." AU - Magaziner, Ira CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers computers Clinton, Bill virtual reality Internet global communication community Clinton, William Jefferson presidents and new media Clinton, William Clinton, William, and Internet Clinton, William, and democracy democracy democracy, and new media computers and the Internet democracy, and computers computers, and democracy Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet critics digital media democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy capitalism gatekeeping community, and democracy democracy, and virtual communities virtual communities cyberspace cyberspace, and democracy democracy, and cyberspace metaphors capitalism capitalism, and digital media digital media, and capitalism Internet, and capitalism capitalism, and Internet globalization capitalism, and globalization Clinton administration, and Internet Clinton administration, and globalization Clinton administration, and capitalism Clinton Administration LB - 34210 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 113-31 ST - Democracy and Cyberspace: First Principles T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - Democracy and Cyberspace: First Principles ID - 3059 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - ed., Leonard Berkowitz AB - Malamuth and Donnerstein deal with the research on the effects of the aggressive forms of pornography that had appeared since the writing of the 1970 Report put out by the President Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. Because violent pornography was relatively rare before the late 1960s, the 1970 Report had made little assessment of its effects, but during the 1970s, aggression in sexually explicit movies and publications (both in hard-core and in such soft-core magazines as Playboy and Penthouse) increased dramatically. Malamuth and Donnerstein argued that in hard-core paperbacks, the depiction of rape doubled between 1968 and 1974. AU - Malamuth, Meil M. and Ed Donnerstein CY - New York KW - presidents and new media syntheses meta-analyses syntheses (of research) syntheses social science research sexuality motion pictures news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers media effects crime motion pictures and popular culture television pornography pornography, and harmful effects social science research, and pornography syntheses, and pornography research media effects media effects, and pornography aggression, and pornography pornography, and aggression crime, and pornography pornography, and crime pornography, and paperback books books, paperbacks, and pornography magazines pornography, and magazines Playboy Penthouse media effects, and Playboy media effects, and Penthouse President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970), and critics critics +books, periodicals, newspapers books President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) violence LB - 22730 PB - Academic Press PY - 1982 SP - 104-130 ST - The Effects of Aggressive-Pornographic Mass Media Stimuli T2 - Advances in Experimental Social Psychology TI - The Effects of Aggressive-Pornographic Mass Media Stimuli VL - 15 ID - 998 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - Even though microchip-based computers at the time of this article were then less than a decade old, the United States and Japan were in a race to build the next of "fifth" generation of computers -- so-called "supercomputers" that have "artificial intelligence." The authors say that whoever when this race will strengthen their control of the information revolution and enhance their geo-political power. AU - Marbach, William D., et al. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - R & D computers nationalism presidents, and new media values research and development war communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution materials materials +future and science fiction values religion war non-USA +military communication Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration microelectronics +computers and the Internet +nationalism and communication +artificial intelligence and biotechnology Japan supercomputers strategic computing initiative microcomputers microelectronics revolution chips, computer, micro computers, fifth generation computers and society Reagan administration, and computers future chips, computer computer chips computers nationalism, and artificial intelligence nationalism, and computers Japan, and fifth generation computers LB - 3190 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 60-70 ST - Artificial Intelligence and the Fifth Generation T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Artificial Intelligence and the Fifth Generation ID - 1711 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - The author poses questions regarding the so-called communication revolution. He tries to avoid unduely optimistic or pessimistic preconceptions as well as a superficial middle ground which says the information society has a capacity for good or evil. At the time, the author edited Future Survey, a monthly that abstracted material on topics related to the future. This article appeared first in World Future Society Bulletin (Sept.-Oct. 1983). AU - Marien, Michael CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution +future and science fiction microelectronics Information Age +computers and the Internet future communication revolution information age microelectronics revolution critics, information age information age, and critics of critics future, and new media LB - 3610 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 ST - Some Questions for the Information Society T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Some Questions for the Information Society ID - 1751 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Anne G. Keatley, ed. AB - Mark offers a historical survey of aviation and space exploration from before World War II military communication through the space shuttle. The essay is based on secondary sources. AU - Mark, Hans CY - Washington, D. C. KW - technology R & D computers technology and society Reagan administration Reagan, Ronald Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism nationalism and communication capitalism research and development computers, and nationalism nationalism, and computers materials nationalism, and materials materials, and nationalism foreign relations, and technology technology, and foreign relations aeronautics and space communication OTA satellites space shuttle presidents and new media Reagan, Ronald, and technology Reagan administration, and technology Reagan administration, and foreign relations foreign relations, and Reagan administration computers and the Internet Reagan administration space communication computers LB - 33210 PB - National Academy Press PY - 1985 SP - 79-109 ST - Aerospace T2 - Technological Frontiers and Foreign Relations TI - Aerospace ID - 2961 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Manuel Castells, ed. AB - The authors argue “that military spending in the United States has been a powerful industrial and regional policy that has profoundly affected the patterning of human settlements in the United States. Drawing high tech production toward the ‘defense perimeter,’ military procurement has spurned the industrially diverse manufacturing belt to create extensive, low-density, industrial park suburbs (Southwest Los Angeles, Silicon Valley, Dallas-Fort Worth’s ‘Silicon Prairie,’ and Anaheim) adjacent to, but with relatively few political or cultural links to, older metropolitan areas. It has also created a newer generation of medium-sized detached metropolitan areas where, in a reversal of twentieth century urbanization tendencies, the local economy is highly dependent on one or a few sectors and demonstrates few tendencies toward diversification. The resulting geopolitical map is one in which highly military-dependent, relatively homogeneous and conservative cultural enclaves are counterposed to the strong industrial working class and bourgeois traditions of our large, mature manufacturing belt cities.” The authors also maintain “not only that the image of high tech production has been laundered (i.e., that its military roots and sustenance have been obscured), but that our most economically troubled communities have little prospect of capturing a share of this type of economic growth.” AU - Markusen, Ann Roell and Robin Bloch CY - Beverly Hills, CA KW - technology R & D materials, and silicon nationalism materials silicon values research and development war communication revolution communication revolution, and second industrial revolution war values +nationalism and communication +military communication Silicon Valley Route 128 Silicon Prairie (Dallas) urban studies second industrial revolution values, and information technology microelectronics geography space (spatial) technology and society values, and military technology military-industrial complex space (spatial) nationalism, and new media military, and new media communication revolution LB - 2120 PB - Sage Publications PY - 1985 SP - 106-20 ST - Defensive Cities: Military Spending, High Technology, and Human Settlements T2 - High Technology, Space, and Society TI - Defensive Cities: Military Spending, High Technology, and Human Settlements ID - 1608 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - “The zero gravity of space makes possible the creation of special alloys, crystals, and perfect spheres that are literally out of this world. Chemical reactions and biological processes take on a different form and cheap solar energy is more abundant about the earth’s atmosphere. All this suggests that ‘space factories’ will soon get into orbit... and in the next century we will be buying goods stamped ‘Made in Space.’” The editor notes that the author of this piece, who is a journalist, wrote a similar article about space processing in 1978. This article originally appeared in The Space Business (London: Penguin Books, 1985), 130-37. AU - Marsh, Peter CY - Cambridge, MA KW - nationalism materials +future and science fiction space communication materials materials revolution +aeronautics and space communication space communication, and materials processing future +nationalism and communication nationalism, and materials satellites rocketry LB - 2720 PB - MIT Press PY - 1988 SP - 329-37 ST - Materials Processing in Space T2 - The Materials Revolution: Superconductors, New Materials, and the Japanese Challenge TI - Materials Processing in Space ID - 1664 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - New information technology will change dramatically how people shop and conduct their financial affairs. When this report appeared in 1982, there was much uncertainty about what would happen in banking and retailing and the authors attempt to explain the social implications of the new technology. AU - Marti, John and Anthony Zeilinger CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers capitalism information technology Information Age +computers and the Internet information technology, and finance information processing capitalism, and new media computers and society capitalism computers capitalism, and information technology LB - 3410 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 350-58 ST - New Technology in Banking and Shopping T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - New Technology in Banking and Shopping ID - 1731 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Raymond Williams, ed. AB - Martin surveys the history of printing from the introduction of paper into Spain and Italy by the Arabs in the 12th century, through craft printing before Gutenberg, through printing with movable metal type and the evolution of the book. He discusses the growth of the book trade as well as the rise of the newspaper and periodical press. The latter pages deal with the popular press of the late 19th and early 20 centuries, and the “image explosion.” He concludes by discussing the revolution in book publishing the 20th century and print culture in the age of electronic media. AU - Martin, Henri-Jean CY - London KW - photography print news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers news and journalism non-USA +books, periodicals, newspapers books newspapers magazines printing presses Gutenberg, Johann newspapers, and illustrations newspapers, and photography +photography and visual communication paper news materials LB - 11650 PB - Thames and Hudson PY - 1981 SP - 128-50 ST - Printing T2 - Contact: Human Communication and Its History TI - Printing ID - 2516 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Joseph J. Corn, ed. AB - "This chapter," Marvin writes, "is an attempt to reconstruct the forgotten dimension of the social history of electricity by tracing some early contributions that began with the telegraph, proceeded through the electronic mass media, and continues at the present moment in computing technology." Most of this work deals with the nineteenth century. AU - Marvin, Carolyn CY - Cambridge, MA KW - technology home entertainment computers entertainment, home advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations labor home entertainment +future and science fiction home, and new media home values office, and information technology home, and information technology networks lighting information technology +electricity future networks, electrical technology and society information technology, and home values, and electricity information technology, and office advertising, and electricity lighting, electrical advertising home, and electricity +computers and the Internet +television television, and electric light office LB - 5120 PB - MIT Press PY - 1986 SP - 202-17 ST - Dazzling the Multitude: Imagining the Electric Light as a Communications Medium T2 - Imagining Tomorrow: History, Technology, and the American Future TI - Dazzling the Multitude: Imagining the Electric Light as a Communications Medium ID - 1899 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Jean L. Marx, ed. AB - This essay provides an introduction to research concerning heredity and genetic manipulation. The author ends by noting concerns during the mid-1970s to suspend certain types of biotechnological research until international guidelines can be established. AU - Marx, Jean L. CY - New York KW - values genetics values +artificial intelligence and biotechnology biotechnology DNA genetic engineering heredity values, and biotechnology LB - 2550 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1989 SP - 1-14 ST - Heredity, Genes and DNA T2 - A Revolution in Biotechnology TI - Heredity, Genes and DNA ID - 1648 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Merritt Roe Smith and Leo Marx, eds. AB - Marx contends that the unbounded optimism and faith in progress that characterized American culture prior to World War II has now waned and has been replaced by "widespread social pessimism." A complex set of causes explains this change in attitude. "They are to be found in specific technological disasters (Chernobyl and Three Mile Island), in national traumas (the Vietnam War), and more generally in a loss of faith in technology as 'the driving force of progress.'" Marx tries to set these development into a historical context. He examines "the role of mechanical arts in the progressive world view" and shows how "'both the character and the representations of "technology" changed in the nineteenth century' from discrete, easily identifiable artifacts (such as steam engines) to abstract, scientific, and seemingly neutral systems of production and control. With its 'endless reification' in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the nearly refurbished concept of 'technology' became invested with a 'host of metaphysical properties and potencies' that invited a belief in it as an autonomous agent of social change. By mystifying technology and attributing to it powers that bordered on idolatry, mid-twentieth-century Americans set themselves up for a fall that prepared 'the way for an increasingly pessimistic sense of the technological determination of history.'" Marx argues "that postmodernist criticism, with its ratification of 'the idea of the domination of life by large technological systems,' perpetuates the credibility of technological determinism." AU - Marx, Leo CY - Cambridge, MA KW - technology nationalism values preservation history, and new media history technology and society progress history, and progress +nationalism and communication Industrial Revolution history, and technological determinism technological determinism postmodernism postmodernism, and technology postmodernism progress, and technology technology, and progress LB - 4710 PB - MIT Press PY - 1994 SP - 237-57 ST - The Idea of 'Technology' and Postmodern Pessimism T2 - Does Technology Drive History? The Dilemma of Technological Determinism TI - The Idea of 'Technology' and Postmodern Pessimism ID - 1858 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - The author argues that "the emerging information society will be completely different from industrial society," and that we can anticipate a "Computopia" on this planet, "if only we understand and direct the underlying social forces." Masuda authored the Japanese Plan for an Information Society: A National Goal Toward the Year 2000 which appeared as early as 1971. The author gives a glimpse into Japanese thinking about the future. This piece came from Masuda's book, The Information Society as Post-Industrial Society (Bethesda, MD: World Future Society, 1981, 1983). AU - Masuda, Yoneji CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers nationalism preservation communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution history, and new media +future and science fiction communication revolution, and second industrial revolution non-USA history microelectronics history +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology +nationalism and communication Japan future future, and Japan communication revolution microelectronics revolution history, break with second industrial revolution Industrial Revolution postindustrial society nationalism, and new media LB - 3620 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 620-34 ST - Computopia T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Computopia ID - 1752 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Jack D. Flam, trans. AB - “Beautiful blues, reds, yellows,” the artist Henri Matisse maintained, were “matter to stir the sensual depths of men.” AU - Matisse, Henri CY - London KW - photography painting law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures color motion pictures, and color censorship, and color color, and censorship Matisse, Henri, and color +photography and visual communication photography, and color painting, and color color, and painting LB - 17940 PB - Phaidon Press, Ltd. PY - 1973 SP - 74 ST - Statements to Tériade, 1936 [The Purity of Means] T2 - Matisse on Art TI - Statements to Tériade, 1936 [The Purity of Means] ID - 703 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Jack D. Flam, trans. AB - “Above all,” Henri Matisse said, color was “a means of liberation... the freeing of conventions, old methods being pushed aside by the contributions of the new generation.” AU - Matisse, Henri CY - London KW - photography painting law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures color motion pictures, and color censorship, and color color, and censorship Matisse, Henri, and color +photography and visual communication photography, and color painting, and color color, and painting LB - 17950 PB - Phaidon Press, Ltd. PY - 1973 SP - 100 ST - The Role and Modalities of Colour, 1945 T2 - Matisse on Art TI - The Role and Modalities of Colour, 1945 ID - 704 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - H. E. Roys, ed. AB - The authors made improvements in the development and design of the phonograph. "Analogous electrical filter circuit theory was applied to the mechanical design of the recorder and the acoustic reproducer, called the 'sound box.' The cabinet was designed to serve as a long folded horn of the logarithmic type. The result was a quality record and an all acoustic phonograph having an overall response range essentially flat from 100 to 5000 Hz, a vast improvement over earlier records and instruments." This piece appeared originally in the American Institute Electrical Engineering Transactions, 45 (1926), 334-46. AU - Maxfield, J. P. and H. C. Harrison CY - Stroudsburg, PA KW - +sound recording +sound recording +telephones phonograph sound recording, and records LB - 5530 PB - Dowden, Hutchingon [sic] & Ross, Inc. PY - 1978 SP - 16-28 ST - Methods of High Quality Recording and Reproducing of Music and Speech based on Telephone Research T2 - Disc Recording and Reproduction TI - Methods of High Quality Recording and Reproducing of Music and Speech based on Telephone Research ID - 1938 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - Mayer, a journalist, argues that “banks, retailers, and publishers have begun services that enable people to undertake financial transactions, purchase goods, and keep up with the news -- all without leaving their homes or talking to a human. But progress with the Videotext revolution will largely depend on whether businessmen can find ways of making money out of it....” This piece originally appeared in Fortune (Nov. 14, 1983). AU - Mayer, Martin CY - Cambridge, MA KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home magnetic recording journalism home entertainment materials materials magnetic tape news and journalism home, and new media home home, and information technology news information technology +computers and the Internet +television videotex information technology, and home news, and videotex home, and videotex LB - 7910 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 155-66 ST - The Videotex Revolution T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - The Videotex Revolution ID - 2160 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ithiel de Sola Pool, ed. AB - The author examines how telephone has altered our use of time. He is especially interested in its use in business. He quotes Charles Ramond's The Art of Using Science in Marketing (1974) that "the telephone has changed the behavior of Western man more than any technology in history." While this statement goes somewhat further than the author does, Mayer nevertheless sees the telephone's impact as tremendously significant. AU - Mayer, Martin CY - Cambridge, MA KW - time and timekeeping time labor timekeeping, and clocks office, and information technology information technology +telephones change, acceleration of information technology, and office time timekeeping capitalism, and telephones capitalism change office, and telephones telephones, and time office LB - 10240 PB - MIT Press PY - 1977 SP - 225-45 ST - The Telephone and the Uses of Time T2 - The Social Impact of the Telephone TI - The Telephone and the Uses of Time ID - 2389 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Bruce Guile, ed. AB - Mayo discusses information technologies and forces that operate as a "social gate" that are tremendously influential in "selecting the innovations that actually succeed." Technologies that survive the "gating forces" usually have "three types of impacts on the society they enter, depending heavily upon their character." The largest influence come from so-called "killer" innovations such as the engine and transistor (the former displacing animal power; the later the vacuum tube). Second, "new domain" technology may not completely replace older technology but "do open up entirely new areas of opportunity." Speech recognition programs are one example of this kind of innocation. Third, so-called "niche" technologies, such as broadcast television, may initially be mistaken for "killer technologies" but actually serve on a sector of society. Mayo discusses such things as the silicon integrated circuit, "the most powerful force in technology today," and photonics, "the key Information Age technology for transmitting large amouts of digital information." He also considers possible future innovations such as "integrated optics," which he believed was "a potential killer technology lurking at the gate." He then considers such "gating forces" as marketplace economics, the economics of research and development, the influence of regulation, and technical standards. Ernest S. Kuh, then a professor of electrical engineering at the University of Califonia, Berkeley, comments at the end of Mayo's essay. AU - Mayo, John S. CY - Washington, D.C. KW - R & D computers materials, and silicon integrated circuits transistors materials silicon +military communication communication revolution innovation digital media computers general studies information age communication revolution +computers and the Internet integrated circuits computers, and gating forces computers, and software digital media, and photonics photonics, and digital media digitization silicon circuits digital media, and integrated optics lasers research and development inventions LB - 940 PB - National Academy Press PY - 1985 SP - 7-34 ST - The Evolution of Information Technologies T2 - Information Technologies and Social Transformation TI - The Evolution of Information Technologies ID - 1490 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This work covers the development of the modern telephone network between 1876 and 1951 and gives "background to the new revolution in telecommunications. Mayo believes that microelectronics has made it possible to create "intelligent" digital networks which support many new services and has potential for even greater expansion. (Direct distance dialing was introduced in 1951.) Mayo at the time of this essay was executive vice-president with Bell Laboratories, New Jersey. The article originally appeared in Science, Feb. 12, 1982. AU - Mayo, John S. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - entertainment entertainment, home labor communication revolution home entertainment digitization home, and new media home values office, and information technology home, and information technology microelectronics information technology +telephones telecommunications communication revolution values, and telephones information technology, and home information technology, and office digital media digital media, and telephones telephones, digital telephones, and long distance microelectronics, and telephones office, and telephones home, and telephones office LB - 5380 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 106-19 ST - Evolution of the Intelligent Network T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Evolution of the Intelligent Network ID - 1923 ER - TY - CHAP AB - This introduction to and summary of the Meese Commission Report discusses ways in which technology by the mid-1980s had made pornography more available. McManus believed that the press had done a poor job of reporting the findings of this Commission. Members of the Meese Commission argued that there had been major changes in communication technology since the publication of the 1970 Report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (started during the Lyndon B. Johnson administration). These changes made pornography much more available in the home. (The Meese Commission also argued that pornography had become much more pervasive and violent.) Cable television and satellite broadcasts, not regulated by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), were broadcasting sexually explicit films. Many X-rated movie theaters were closing because video cassette recorders were becoming increasingly commonplace. By 1986, 38 percent of American homes had at least one VCR. Videos, McManus also noted, were cheaper to produce than films. Dial-A-Pron, a new form of pornography, had become available in large volume and was often accessible to children. AU - McManus, Michael J. CY - Nashville, TN KW - entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) corporations corporations entertainment, home magnetic recording advertising, and public relations presidents, and new media Reagan administration propaganda advertising values sexuality news and journalism home entertainment magnetic tape First Amendment regulation freedom censorship and ratings law censorship and ratings news and journalism home home, and new media home values +aeronautics and space communication satellites +telephones home, and information technology information technology +motion pictures +television values, and information technology values, and pornography information technology, and home telephones, and pornography VCRs Dial-a-Porn cameras, and pornography Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Meese Commission television, and cable cable, television television, and satellites and pornography pornography values, and technology censorship, and pornography freedom of expression information technology, and pornography FCC cable cameras censorship children, and media children television, and satellites home, and new media home, and pornography pornography, and home +television television, and pornography pornography, and television journalism, and pornography journalism, and inadequate reporting journalism, and critics public relations home entertainment revolution pornography, and home entertainment Gray & Company public relations, and Gray & Company First Amendment, and public relations public relations, and First Amendment First Amendment, and Gray & Company Reagan administration, and pornography, critics critics, and journalism journalism critics FCC LB - 2530 PB - Rutledge Hill Press PY - 1986 SP - ix-l ST - Introduction T2 - Final Report of the Attorney General’s Commission on Pornography TI - Introduction ID - 1646 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - At the time this article first appeared in Science (Feb. 12, 1982), microcomputers already were widely used in medicine -- for research, decision-making, and in private practice. The new information technology speeds diagnostic tests and lab analysis, and provides hope for the disable, blind, and deaf. The author at the time was a professor of electrical engineering at Stanford University. AU - Meindl, James D. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers medicine +future and science fiction computers microcomputers information technology +computers and the Internet information technology, and medicine future microcomputers, and medicine medicine, and new media medicine, and computers future, and medicine computers, and medicine LB - 3420 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 359-71 ST - Micros in Medicine T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Micros in Medicine ID - 1732 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Mekas, Jonas AB - Filmmaker Jonas Mekas wanted the underground press of the 1960s to give more space to underground cinema. AU - Mekas, Jonas CY - New York KW - pornography underground newspapers underground media underground press underground films news and journalism +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and underground newspapers newspapers underground newspapers, and motion pictures pornography, and underground films pornography, and underground newspapers underground press, and underground cinema underground films, and underground press underground cinema underground films news LB - 17650 PB - Macmillan Company PY - 1972 SP - 344 ST - Underground Press and Underground Cinema [May 7, 1969] T2 - Movie Journal: The Rise of the New American Cinema, 1959-1971 TI - Underground Press and Underground Cinema [May 7, 1969] ID - 684 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Mekas, Jonas AB - This essay is part of a collection by film maker Jonas Mekas. He wrote about the revolutionary potential of these media for The Village Voice. He estimated that there were eight million 16mm and 8mm cameras in the United States by late 1967, and almost all underground films were made in these formats. AU - Mekas, Jonas CY - New York KW - entertainment underground cinema pornography entertainment, home underground newspapers underground media underground press underground films news and journalism news news and journalism 8mm home, and new media home +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and underground newspapers newspapers underground newspapers, and motion pictures pornography, and underground films pornography, and underground newspapers 16mm film 8mm films underground films, and 8mm underground films, and 16mm news, and underground film home entertainment home, and new media home, and 8mm film 8mm film, and home motion pictures, and home underground films, and home home entertainment, and 8mm film motion pictures, and critics motion pictures, and reform home, and 8mm film home, and 16mm film 16mm LB - 18140 PB - Macmillan Company PY - 1972 SP - 300-01 ST - On 'Editing' as an Intuitive Process [Dec. 1967] T2 - Movie Journal: The Rise of the New American Cinema, 1959-1971 TI - On 'Editing' as an Intuitive Process [Dec. 1967] ID - 723 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Mekas, Jonas AB - Film maker Jonas Mekas wrote about the revolutionary potential of these media for The Village Voice. In 1964, he predicted that 16mm and 8mm would soon provide “private home cinema” and thus give avant-garde films an entrée into American living rooms. AU - Mekas, Jonas CY - New York KW - entertainment underground cinema pornography nationalism entertainment, home underground newspapers underground media underground press underground films journalism law censorship and ratings censorship news and journalism home, and new media home motion pictures motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and underground newspapers newspapers underground newspapers, and motion pictures pornography, and underground films pornography, and underground newspapers censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and morality +nationalism and communication 8mm 8mm film, and newsreels 16mm 16mm films, and newsreels news, and 8mm film news, and underground film home entertainment home, and new media home, and 8mm film 8mm film, and home motion pictures, and home underground films, and home home entertainment, and 8mm film motion pictures, and critics motion pictures, and reform home, and 8mm film home, and 16mm film news 16mm film LB - 18150 PB - Macmillan Company PY - 1972 SP - 132-36 ST - On Law, Morality, and Censorship [April 23, 1964] T2 - Movie Journal: The Rise of the New American Cinema, 1959-1971 TI - On Law, Morality, and Censorship [April 23, 1964] ID - 724 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Mekas, Jonas AB - By 1965, filmmaker Jonas Mekas wrote, private individuals were providing “a completely new market” for underground pictures. Almost all of those underground films were in either 16mm or 8mm format. AU - Mekas, Jonas CY - New York KW - home entertainment underground cinema pornography entertainment, home underground newspapers underground media underground press underground films new media home entertainment law censorship and ratings censorship news and journalism home, and new media home +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and underground newspapers newspapers underground newspapers, and motion pictures pornography, and underground films pornography, and underground newspapers censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and morality motion pictures, and home entertainment new media, and home underground films, and home home, and underground films home, and motion pictures home, and 8mm film home, and 16mm film news LB - 18160 PB - Macmillan Company PY - 1972 SP - 186-88 ST - On Fly-by-Night Fellows, or How the Underground Film Is Invading the Beautiful American Home [May 13, 1965] T2 - Movie Journal: The Rise of the New American Cinema, 1959-1971 TI - On Fly-by-Night Fellows, or How the Underground Film Is Invading the Beautiful American Home [May 13, 1965] ID - 725 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Mekas, Jonas AB - Film maker Jonas Mekas proposed using 8mm film to develop an alternative journalism that would expose American involvement in Vietnam, combat Southern racism, and unmask inhumane conditions in prisons and asylums. AU - Mekas, Jonas CY - New York KW - entertainment underground cinema pornography nationalism entertainment, home underground newspapers underground media underground press underground films news and journalism news news and journalism law censorship and ratings censorship news and journalism home, and new media home motion pictures motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and underground newspapers newspapers underground newspapers, and motion pictures pornography, and underground films pornography, and underground newspapers censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and morality +nationalism and communication 8mm 8mm film, and newsreels 16mm 16mm films, and newsreels news, and 8mm film news, and underground film home entertainment home, and new media home, and 8mm film 8mm film, and home motion pictures, and home underground films, and home home entertainment, and 8mm film journalism, and 8mm film journalism, and 16mm films home, and 8mm film home, and 16mm film journalism 16mm film LB - 18170 PB - Macmillan Company PY - 1972 SP - 235-36 ST - On Film Journalism and Newsreels [1966] T2 - Movie Journal: The Rise of the New American Cinema, 1959-1971 TI - On Film Journalism and Newsreels [1966] ID - 726 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Joel A. Tarr, ed. AB - The author concludes that "the values of retrospective technology assessments depends on four related factors: the extent to which 1) historical processes can be identified with or connected to policy decisions, 2) the processes in contrast to events are transferrable, 3) the experience in generalizable, and 4) parties at conflict can be identified and isomophic conflict situations can be modelled." This paper came from a conference held at Seven Spring Mountain Resort, Champion, PA, Dec. 1-4, 1976. AU - Menkes, Joshua CY - San Francisco KW - technology NSF preservation history, and new media history technology and society history, and technology assessment National Science Foundation (NSF) LB - 3900 PB - San Francisco Press, Inc. PY - 1977 SP - 321-24 ST - Is there a Future in History: The Applicability of Historical Analysis to Policy Research T2 - Retrospective Technology Assessment -- 1976 TI - Is there a Future in History: The Applicability of Historical Analysis to Policy Research ID - 1778 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Joel A. Tarr, ed. AB - This paper discusses the evolution of the airport. The author notes the growth in air travel following World War II. In 1950, it account for 2 percent of domestic travel. Twenty years later it accounted for 10 percent of the total, surpassed only by the automobile. The author considers problems and political responses to deal with the growth in airports, including federal and state intervention, and citizen participation. He focuses on three consequences of this growth-- financial problems caused by increasing costs of airport construction; economic incentives related to this growth; and inequalities that beset neighboring communities as a result of noise. This paper was part of a conference at Seven Springs Mountain Resort, Champion, PA, Dec. 1-4, 1976. AU - Milch, Jerome E. CY - San Francisco KW - war World War II +transportation +aeronautics and space communication air travel World War II, and air travel airports, and problems air travel LB - 3870 PB - San Francisco Press, Inc. PY - 1977 SP - 217-43 ST - Coping with Technological Change: Political Responses to the Evolution of the Airport T2 - Retrospective Technology Assessment -- 1976 TI - Coping with Technological Change: Political Responses to the Evolution of the Airport ID - 1775 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Joel A. Tarr, ed. AB - This piece tries to quantify what impact the space race has had on attitudes toward science and technology. It was part of a conference at Seven Springs Mountain Resort, Champion, PA, Dec. 1-4, 1976. AU - Miller, Jon D. CY - San Francisco KW - technology R & D USSR nationalism research and development war war non-USA values +aeronautics and space communication +military communication +nationalism and communication Soviet Union technology and society values, and science and technology Sputnik satellites values, and science values, and technology LB - 3890 PB - San Francisco Press, Inc. PY - 1977 SP - 265-90 ST - The Impact of Two Decades of Space Exploration on the Development of American Attitudes toward Science and Technology T2 - Retrospective Technology Assessment -- 1976 TI - The Impact of Two Decades of Space Exploration on the Development of American Attitudes toward Science and Technology ID - 1777 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, eds. AB - Mitchell discusses the advantages and disadvantages of online books, a virtual "City of Bits online." He regards "it as a kind of extended live performance in a vast virtual theater. Eventually, that performance will end. The site that remains will not instantly disappear, but will slowly fade away like an abandoned stage set -- as link-rot- sets in and as additions and updates are no longer made. As time goes by, there will be fewer and fewer visitors. "In the end, the City of Bits will be an electronic ruin. Like Troy, it will cease to function and to live -- becoming, instead, part of the archaeology of cyberspace." (215) Mitchell's essay is one of twenty-two chapters by different authors that attempt to improve our "understanding of emerging communication technologies." This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. AU - Mitchell, William J. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - books, periodicals, newspapers books digital media books, digital hypertext books, and hypertext audiences books, and audiences audiences, and books history and new media archives archives, and electronic books information storage archives, and electronic media digital media, and archives archives, and digital media information storage, and digital media history LB - 34040 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 203-15 ST - Homer to Home Page: Designing Digital Books T2 - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - Homer to Home Page: Designing Digital Books ID - 3042 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Everett M. Rogers and Arnold Picot, eds. AB - Mody points out the problem of applying “first world” communication solutions to “third world” countries. He argues that communication researchers often make the mistake of studying isolated “variables” and overlook the context within which the communication being studied is located. This leads to the erroneous assumption that many third world problems could be solved with western technologies (telephone, television, computers, etc.). --Mark Tremayne AU - Mody, Bella CY - Norwood, NJ KW - computers cultural imperialism Third World non-USA imperialism +telephones +television +computers and the Internet Third World, and new media imperialism, cultural global communication Tremayne, Mark LB - 10090 PB - Ablex Publishing Corp. PY - 1985 ST - First World Communication Technologies in Third World Contexts T2 - The Media Revolution in America and Western Europe TI - First World Communication Technologies in Third World Contexts ID - 2374 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Earl Kemp, ed. AB - Monroe thought it unlikely that in the United States a “vast ... untapped audience” was ready to buy pornography once legal restrictions were repealed. This short pieces appeared in an unauthorized version -- with pictures -- of the 1970 Report of President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. AU - Monroe, Eason CY - San Diego, CA KW - illustrations archives sexuality motion pictures mass media media effects crime pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and supporters pornography, and crime crime, and pornography reports illustrations reports, unauthorized LB - 22350 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Greenleaf Classics, Inc. PY - 1970 SP - 7-8 ST - Introduction T2 - Illustrated Presidential Report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography TI - Introduction ID - 963 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - John A. Tennant, ed. AB - This article explains that in 1910 "the two usual ways of sending photographs are by mail and by express. The common container called a 'Photo-Mailer' is absolutely useless as a safe means of transporting photographs by mail. I speak particularly of mounted prints. Many have been the nicely mounted pictures I have sent by photo-mailer to various parts of the country, only to have the editors write me: 'Photo received in a mutilated condition.'" (46) The author goes on to tell readers how to mail photographs to ensure their safety. AU - Montague, Jere CY - New York KW - journalism magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and transportation transportation, and photographs ref, book ref, secondary ref, secular transportation LB - 16340 PB - Tennant & Ward PY - 1910 SP - 46-48 ST - Transportation of Photographs T2 - The American Annual of Photography: 1910 TI - Transportation of Photographs VL - 24 ID - 3787 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This piece uses four case studies to show how new information technology can cut through traditional trade union organization and expose their weaknesses on several fronts. It helps to account for why British labor unions were slow to respond to the introduction of new technology and thus lost opportunities to influence developments. When this piece appeared, the authors were with the trade union-oriented Ruskin College at Oxford. An expanded version of their research appeared in European Pool of Studies Information Bulletin, No. 8 (Brussels: European Commission, 1982). AU - Moore, Roy and Hugo Levie CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers non-USA microelectronics labor information technology +computers and the Internet capitalism information technology, and industry labor capitalism, and microelectronics revolution Great Britain labor, and microlectronics revolution microelectronics revolution, and capitalism microelectronics revolution, and labor +artificial intelligence and biotechnology labor, and microelectronics labor, and new media Great Britain, and labor LB - 3530 N1 - See also: office PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 511-27 ST - New Technology and the Unions T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - New Technology and the Unions ID - 1743 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - The author says that "there is no question that the dominant communication technologies of the twentieth century have been the printing press, radio, television, and the telphone. All of us have been shaped by these technologies and by our use of them. They have been, in Ithiel Pool's phrase, 'technologies of freedom.'" (22) Yet Morrisett goes on to say that "with all their advantages, these technologies have also exercised a benevolent tyranny over us. They have favored passive reception of information and entertainment over thoughtful reaction, and the telephone has favored immediate response over considered and deliberative response." (25) The author concludes that "electronic information technology will be used for political purposes. Whether it is used for demogoguery or democracy, the choice is ours." (31) The volume in which this essay appears is part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, and it tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectivs on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organzied by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." (ix-x) AU - Morrisett, Lloyd CY - Cambridge, MA KW - technology computers books, periodicals, newspapers printing press radio television telephones democracy computers and the Internet freedom technology, and freedom values technology, and values education education, and new media democracy, and electronic media democracy, and digital media print technology and society LB - 34140 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 21-31 ST - Technologies of Freedom? T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - Technologies of Freedom? ID - 3052 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Judith Trojan and Nadine Covert, comp. AB - The author of this brief and uneven essay was then manager and director of special project for Macmillan Audio Brandon. He noted in 1977 that most of the people who worked in nontheatrical distribution of 16mm films were not "really professionals, nor even career people. Most of the jobs are low paying, so the bookers, who should be the real salesmen, are more often than not just clerical workers. Booking and shipping methods haven't really changed much over the past 50 years, though some hopeful signs have appeared recently. There is something basically wrong with the business from an economic standpoint, and it probably needs a whole new approach. Whatever the causes, the result is that the independent filmmaker who tries something different may well have a very difficult time getting his film distributed in an effective way unless he himself goes out and finds or creates the market -- something he shouldn't have to do." (18) The author also notes the impact of videotape and film piracy. "Film piracy is at its peak: not just the old technique of making illegal dupes -- that's relatively expensive. Videotaping is the new vogue and it's being done by leading universities and school systems in violation of the law on a wholesale basis. Loopholes in the existing copyright law are being used by a lot if distributors to avoid paying royalties. You should know what steps you can take to protect yourself." (19) This essay came from a February, 1976, conference on 16mm film sponsored by the Education Film Library Association and International Film Seminars. AU - Morrison, Willard CY - New York KW - libraries nationalism 16mm motion pictures motion pictures, and 16mm film 16mm film magnetic tape recording magnetic tape recording, video values, and society democracy, and media education, and 16mm film religion, and 16mm film 16mm film, and education 16mm film, and religion nationalism and communication government, and 16mm film public libraries, and 16mm film 16mm film, and public libraries television television, and 16mm film history, and new media history, and 16mm film values, and 16mm film sound recording sound recording, and magnetic tape libraries information storage education law copyright 16mm film, and copyright copyright, and 16mm film motion pictures, and piracy videotape, and film piracy 16mm film, and distribution 16mm film, and Education Film Library Association motion pictures, and independent filmmakers democracy history magnetic recording values videotape magnetic tape government government religion LB - 34600 PB - Educational Film Library Association, Inc. PY - 1977 SP - 11-19 ST - The 16mm Market and the Audience -- A Brief History T2 - 16mm Distribution TI - The 16mm Market and the Audience -- A Brief History ID - 3099 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Jo-Ann Mort, ed. AB - Mort describes new techniques and strategies used by the AFL-CIO in the mid-1990s to communicate with members, unorganized workers, the non-union public, opinion leaders and decision makers. Mort, a union public relations official, briefly outlines the origin of a new communication strategy adopted under the presidency of John Sweeney to improve the public image of labor. She noted, for example, that union leaders were receiving training in how to deal with the media, including coaching on how to handle television interviews. In addition, the AFL-CIO launched a new monthly magazine America@Work, “a magazine fashioned to look like a cross between Rolling Stone and Newsweek magazine Periscope front section.” The magazine was distributed to 60,000 to 75,000 union leaders, according to Mort. The old weekly publication AFL-CIO News, “a newspaper that read too often like a collection of press releases from the leadership,” was replaced by Work in Progress, distributed weekly by fax. The AFL-CIO’s World Wide Web site was also modernized as part of the communications overhaul, according to Mort. Users could download flyers, send e-mail and obtain fact sheets on specific union campaigns. --Phil Glende AU - Mort, Jo-Ann CY - London KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines Glende, Phil labor public relations labor, and public relations public relations, and labor +television labor, and television television, and labor magazines, and labor labor, and magazines LB - 1090 N1 - See also: office PB - Verso PY - 1998 SP - 43-54 ST - Finding a Voice: The AFL-CIO Communicates T2 - Not Your Father's Union Movement: Inside the AFL-CIO TI - Finding a Voice: The AFL-CIO Communicates ID - 197 ER - TY - CHAP AB - This was one of three studies that Donald L. Mosher, a professor of psychology at the University of Connecticut,contributed to the 1970 Reportof the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. He argued that there was inadequate data on the effects of pornography, and the lack of scientific consensus made it difficult to formulate a sound national policy. He later made this same point in testimony before the Meese Commission on September 11, 1985. AU - Mosher, Donald L. CY - Washington, D. C. KW - Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) women, and new media women social science research values sexuality values Meese Commission media effects media violence violence media effects law censorship and ratings censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and foreign censorship, and foreign obscenity pornography, and behavior media effects, and pornography pornography, and effects pornography, and violence violence, and pornography pornography, and social science women, and pornography pornography, and women Meese Commission, and critics LB - 26810 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - U. S. Government Printing Office PY - 1971 SP - 313-25 ST - Sex Callousness Toward Women T2 - Technical Report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography: Volume VIII: Erotica and Social Behavior T3 - Technical Report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography TI - Sex Callousness Toward Women ID - 1243 ER - TY - CHAP AB - This was one of three studies that Donald L. Mosher, a professor of psychology at the University of Connecticut,contributed to the 1970 Reportof the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. He argued that there was inadequate data on the effects of pornography, and the lack of scientific consensus made it difficult to formulate a sound national policy. He later made this same point in testimony before the Meese Commission on September 11, 1985. AU - Mosher, Donald L. CY - Washington, D. C. KW - Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) women, and new media women social science research values sexuality values Meese Commission media effects media violence violence media effects law censorship and ratings censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and foreign censorship, and foreign obscenity pornography, and behavior media effects, and pornography pornography, and effects pornography, and violence violence, and pornography pornography, and social science women, and pornography pornography, and women Meese Commission, and critics LB - 26820 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - U. S. Government Printing Office PY - 1971 SP - 255-312 ST - Psychological Reactions to Pornographic Films T2 - Technical Report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography: Volume VIII: Erotica and Social Behavior T3 - Technical Report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography TI - Psychological Reactions to Pornographic Films ID - 1244 ER - TY - CHAP AB - This was one of three studies that Donald L. Mosher, a professor of psychology at the University of Connecticut,contributed to the 1970 Reportof the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. In this piece, he and Harvey Katz examined photographic films and their connection to verbal aggression by men against women. In general, Mosher argued that there was inadequate data on the effects of pornography, and the lack of scientific consensus made it difficult to formulate a sound national policy. He later made this same point in testimony before the Meese Commission on September 11, 1985. AU - Mosher, Donald L. AU - Katz, Harvey CY - Washington, D. C. KW - Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) women, and new media women social science research values sexuality values Meese Commission media effects media violence violence media effects law censorship and ratings censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and foreign censorship, and foreign obscenity pornography, and behavior media effects, and pornography pornography, and effects pornography, and violence violence, and pornography pornography, and social science women, and pornography pornography, and women Meese Commission, and critics LB - 26800 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - U. S. Government Printing Office PY - 1971 SP - 357-79 ST - Pornographic Films, Male Verbal Aggression Against Women, and Guilt T2 - Technical Report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography: Volume VIII: Erotica and Social Behavior TI - Pornographic Films, Male Verbal Aggression Against Women, and Guilt VL - 8 ID - 1242 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Mossman, Susan AB - Susan Mossman’s chapter “Perspectives on the History and Technology of Plastics," provides a scientific overview of the development of plastics. She devotes pages to cellulose-based plastics such as Xylonite/Ivoride and Celluloid, and also cellulose acetate. She discusses John Wesley Hyatt’s work and early uses of celluloid. The chapter contains interesting advertisements and illustrations for celluloid toothbrushes and collars. There is also some discussion of celluloid’s use in film. At the time this volume appeared, Mossman was curator at the Science Museum in London. AU - Mossman, Susan CY - London and Washington, D.C. KW - photography materials materials non-USA +photography and visual communication plastics Hyatt, John Wesley celluloid Xylonite Great Britain Great Britain, and celluloid Great Britain, and plastics plastics LB - 12340 PB - Leicester University Press PY - 1997 SP - 15-71 ST - Perspectives on the History and Technology of Plastics T2 - Early Plastics: Perspectives, 1850-1950 TI - Perspectives on the History and Technology of Plastics ID - 2581 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ithiel de Sola Pool, ed. AB - The author notes that during the late nineteenth century, "the telephone altered communication costs for both individuals and firms, leading to locational changes." He asks: "What effect did widespread telephone service have on the decentralization of cities?" AU - Moyer, J. Alan CY - Cambridge, MA KW - +telephones urban studies telephones, and decentralization telephones, and suburbs telephones, and urban studies urban studies, and telephones cities LB - 10300 PB - MIT Press PY - 1977 SP - 342-69 ST - Urban Growth and the Development of the Telephone: Some Relationships at the Turn of the Century T2 - The Social Impact of the Telephone TI - Urban Growth and the Development of the Telephone: Some Relationships at the Turn of the Century ID - 2395 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Münsterberg, Hugo, Theodore Ribot, Pierre Janet, Joseph Jastrow, Bernard Hart, and Morton Prince AU - Münsterberg, Hugo CY - Boston KW - psychology Münsterberg, Hugo Munsterberg, Hugo ref, secondary Münsterberg, Hugo Münsterberg, Hugo, and psychology psychology, and Hugo Münsterberg Münsterberg, Hugo, and subconscious LB - 40800 PB - Richard G. Badger, the Gorham Press PY - 1910 SP - 16-32 ST - The Subconscious -- Part I T2 - Subconscious Phenomena TI - The Subconscious -- Part I ID - 4177 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, eds. AB - Murphy looks at how some people believed that the advent of sound recording during the late nineteenth century would spell the end of the printed book. Similar concerns emerged during the twentieth century as some feared that radio and television would "steal print media's thunder." (86) Murphy's essay is one of twenty-two chapters by different authors that attempt to improve our "understanding of emerging communication technologies." This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. AU - Murphy, Priscilla Coit CY - Cambridge, MA KW - books, periodicals, newspapers print culture books sound recording sound recording, and books books, and sound recording phonograph phonograph, and books books, and phonograph information storage libraries future and science fiction future, and books radio television books, and new media digital media future print LB - 33980 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 81-93 ST - Books Are Dead, Long Live Books T2 - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - Books Are Dead, Long Live Books ID - 3036 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Thomas Elsaesser, ed. AU - Musser, Charles CY - [London] KW - history motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity ref, secondary new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel ref, secondary education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures ref, book LB - 580 PB - BFI Publishing PY - 1990 SP - 123-32 ST - The Travel Genre in 1903-04: Moving Towards Fictional Narrative T2 - Early Cinema: Space, Frame, Narrative TI - The Travel Genre in 1903-04: Moving Towards Fictional Narrative ID - 3353 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, eds. AB - The author writes: "In the last two decades entertainment media and our leisure spaces have undergone dramatic transformations. The movement that describes these changes is ne concerned with the traversal of boundaries -- a traversal that shares a concern with the spectacular possibilities of entertainment forms. Effects such as the water display at the Bellagio, the animatronic Fall of Atlantis at Caesar's [in Las Vagas, NV], and the interior storm in the Desert Passage are constructed by effects crews that traditionally belonged to the relam of cinema. In the film The Matrix, film technology combines with computer technology in order to construct the highly kinetic effects that were integral to the film's success. The Jurassic Park films, Terminator films and the Spiderman comic books find new media environments in the theme park attractions Terminator 2: 3-D Battle Across Time, and The Amazing Adventures of Spiderman (all three at Universal Studios, Los Angeles and Orlando). Computer and console games like the Tomb Raider and Final Fantasy series cross their game borders by incorporating film styles, genres, and human-like forms into their digital spaces. In turn, these games are reborn as cinematic spectacles. Furthermore, these potent visual entertainment forms invade our cultural spaces, shaping and informing the structures of our cinema complexes, shopping malls, casino complexes, and museum and gallery spaces. We are living in a time when our entertainment spectacles insert themselves into our urbanscapes in spatially invasive ways." (356) Ndalianis's essay is one of twenty-two chapters by different authors that attempt to improve our "understanding of emerging communication technologies." This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. AU - Ndalianis, Angela CY - Cambridge, MA KW - visual communication computers special effects, and digitization visual culture motion pictures television media convergence digital media special effects computers, and the Internet special effects, digital Universal Studios leisure video games motion pictures, special effects special effects, and leisure spaces special effects, and urban life media environment entertainment, and media environment virtual reality spectacles amusement parks, and new media new media, and amusement parks amusement parks entertainment new media digitization Universal Pictures media LB - 34110 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 355-73 ST - Architectures of the Senses: Neo-Baroque Entertainment Spectacles T2 - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - Architectures of the Senses: Neo-Baroque Entertainment Spectacles ID - 3049 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - Neustadt, who advised President Jimmy Carter, offers an account of campaign with computers, noting that this technology can be used for good or bad purposes. This piece first appeared in Howard F. Didsbury, ed., Communications and the Future (Bethesda, MD: World Future Society, 1982). AU - Neustadt, Richard M. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers nationalism +future and science fiction community democracy +computers and the Internet computers, and society computers, and politics +nationalism and communication democracy and media future computers nationalism, and electronic media nationalism, and computers democracy, and computers LB - 3570 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 561-68 ST - Electronic Politics T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Electronic Politics ID - 1747 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - At the time this short piece appeared, the author was with Intel. He concisely summarizes the advantages of using microprocessors in products and predicts trends in their future applications. This piece originally appeared in Proceedings of the IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers) (June 1976). AU - Nichols, A. J. CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers microprocessing communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution +future and science fiction microprocessors microelectronics information technology +computers and the Internet microcomputers microprocessors microelectronics revolution Intel Corp. information technology, and consumers capitalism microprocessors, and industry future capitalism, and microprocessors future, and microprocessors Intel Corp. LB - 2830 PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 125-29 ST - An Overview of Microprocessor Applications T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - An Overview of Microprocessor Applications ID - 1675 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Vincent Mosco and Janet Wasko, eds. AB - Nielsen asserts that the history of unionism in the film industry has been largely ignored by scholars more interested famous individuals, corporate organization and film as art. Nielsen traced the history of unionism from the earliest days of silent film production and noted how unions changed with each major technological or organizational development. He noted, for example, that the International Association of Theatrical and Stage Employees, which was a major labor body throughout the history of the industry, evolved from Eastern protective associations originally created for touring company stagehands. By 1926, the IA and four other major unions, IBEW, the Carpenters, the Painters, and the Musicians reached an agreement with studios granting recognition to the unions. Nielsen noted that the introduction of sound temporarily depressed the need for extras, because sound recording techniques required production on a much smaller scale than used in silent films. Later, extras were selected for their specialized skills, such as singing, ethnic dialects and sound effects. Nielsen detailed the decline of the film industry with the introduction of television. Studio employment dropped from 24,000 to 10,000. But live television required large crews of trained stagehands, property workers, grips, gaffers and other specialists from the film industry. Nielsen concludes with a brief discussion of the importance of videotape in the future of unionism in the television and film industries. --Phil Glende AU - Nielsen, Michael CY - Norwood, NJ KW - motion pictures Hollywood Glende, Phil labor Hollywood, and labor +motion pictures and popular culture labor, and motion picture industry labor, and Hollywood LB - 1100 N1 - See also: office PB - Ablex Publishing PY - 1983 SP - 47-83 ST - Toward a Workers' History of the U.S. Film Industry T2 - The Crticial Communications Review, Vol. I: Labor, the Working Class, and the Media TI - Toward a Workers' History of the U.S. Film Industry ID - 198 ER - TY - CHAP AB - This paper grew out of a 1986 workshop sponsored by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. The abstract for this piece reads: "Many new developments in military technology are signalling increasing automation of tactical warfare, and artificial intelligence is becoming an important element in a number of planned weapon systems. A detailed analysis is given of the implications of these trends for dceision-making, command and control, and crisis stability in the context of new war-fighting doctrines in Europe." AU - Nikutta, Randolph CY - New York KW - R & D computers computers Soviet Union simulations strategic defense initiative (SDI) Reagan administration nationalism microprocessing Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) computers and the Internet artificial intelligence and biotechnology artificial intelligence strategic computing initiative aeronautics and space communication Reagan administration, and artificial intelligence Reagan, Ronald Reagan, Ronald, and computers military communication nationalism, and communication computers, and artifical intelligence military communication, and artificial intelligence nationalism, and computers DARPA Japan computers, and chips research and development USSR microelectronics microprocessors personal computers computers, personal war war, and artificial intelligence computers, and war war, and computers SDI Reagan administration, and SDA satellites computers, and simulations simulations, and computers non-USA LB - 33790 N1 - ProCite field[8]: Allan M. Nin, ed. PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1987 SP - 100-34 ST - Artificial Intelligence and the Automated Tactical Battlefield T2 - Arms and Artificial Intelligence: Weapon and Arms Control Applications of Advanced Computing TI - Artificial Intelligence and the Automated Tactical Battlefield ID - 3017 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This piece first appeared in Technology Review (April 1982). The author speculates that home computers might soon make long-distance commutes to the office obsolete. He sets out the advantages and disadvantages of telecommuting for employers and workers. The use of home computers is likely to increase and to have major effects on labor unions, businesses, transport systems, and the landscape. At the time of this piece, the author was with the Centre for Futures Research at the University of Southern California. AU - Niles, Jack CY - Cambridge, MA KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home time and timekeeping time labor communication revolution home entertainment home, and new media home office, and new media geography computers, personal computers office, and information technology home, and information technology labor information technology +computers and the Internet computers and society space (spatial) time personal computers computers, personal labor, and personal computers capitalism networks infrastructure urban studies +transportation transportation, and personal computers home information technology and communication revolution computers home, and computers labor home, and computers office LB - 3270 N1 - See also: office PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 202-08 ST - Teleworking from Home T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Teleworking from Home ID - 1718 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Robert W. Crandall and Kenneth Flamm, eds. AB - Noam discusses the emergence of a “second” electronics industry during and after World War II. The traditional network of post, telegraph, and telephone was split in the United States among three “near-monopolists: American Telephone and Telegraph, Western Union, and the U. S. Postal Service.” Other countries in Western Europe and Japan also gave these function state preferences and protection. Deregulation of AT&T in 1984 was meant “to give American industry a good ‘kick in the pants’ in order to get it to start a conquest of the rest of the world,” according the Le Monde. The crisis in these older communication industries was brought by the invention of the transistor in 1947 and by subsequent developments. During the next phase of microcomponents-- “integrated circuits-- different market structures evolved on the two sides of the Atlantic.” An “integrated circuit period lasted from 1959 until the 1971 beginning of a new stage -- large-scale integration (LSI) and microprocessors. Very large-scale integration (VLSI) began in the early 1980s.” AU - Noam, Eli M. CY - Washington, D.C. KW - corporations post office microprocessing transistors, and integrated circuits communication revolution war non-USA general studies telecommunications global communication communication revolution political economy capitalism World War II electronic media electronics, and second industry American Telephone and Telegraph Company ( see AT&T) Western Union +postal service Europe, Western Japan transistors microelectronics integrated circuits microprocessors integration, very large-scale (VLSI) integration, large-scale (LSI) telecommunications, international networks World War II Great Britain AT&T Europe +telephones +telegraph materials AT&T LB - 1000 PB - The Brookings Institution PY - 1989 SP - 257-97 ST - International Telecommunications in Transition T2 - Changing the Rules: Technological Change, International Competition, and Regulation in Communications TI - International Telecommunications in Transition ID - 1496 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - J. B. S. Hardman and Maurice F. Neufeld, eds. AB - Novik, a radio consultant for organized labor, details the efforts of ILGWU and the UAW to operate FM stations after World War II, and outlines an organizational structure and budget for an FM station in the late 1940s. Novik noted that there were five new FM outlets operated by labor organizations in late 1940s, three by the AFL-affiliated ILGWU: WFDR, New York; WVUN, Chattanooga; and KFMV, Los Angeles; and two by the CIO-affiliated UAW: WCUO, Cleveland; and WDET, Detroit. He noted that these stations, plus WCFM in Washington, D.C., and ILGWU’s KWIK-AM in Burbank, California, operated as a non-wired network, exchanging programs. For example: “During the organizing for the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions in London, WFDR in New York arranged with the British Broadcasting Corporation to receive a daily commentary from London and sent these programs, via tape recording, to the 5 other outlets.” Novik estimated that building and equipping an FM station in the late 1940s at $35,000 to $100,000, with an operating budget of about $78,000 annually. -- Phil Glende AU - Novik, Morris. CY - New York KW - labor office non-USA Glende, Phil +radio labor labor, and radio radio, and labor radio, FM labor, and FM radio Great Britain labor, and radio (GB) LB - 770 N1 - See also: office PB - Prentice Hall PY - 1951 SP - 327-32 ST - The Unions, Radio, and the Community T2 - The House of Labor: Internal Operations of American Unions TI - The Unions, Radio, and the Community ID - 165 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This piece is one of the best known statements on microelectronics from the founder of Intel, the manufacturer of microprocessors. Noyce’s graphs illustrating the basic ‘laws’ of microelectronics have been widely copied and quoted. This piece appeared originally in Scientific American, Vol. 237, No. 3 (Sept. 1977). AU - Noyce, Robert N. CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers microprocessing communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution communication revolution, and second industrial revolution microelectronics +computers and the Internet microelectronics revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution Intel Corp. microprocessors microelectronics, and basic laws of LB - 2760 PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 29-41 ST - Microelectronics T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - Microelectronics ID - 1668 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Frank Kessler and Nanna Verhoeff, eds. AB - This article uses movie reviews, articles, and advertising between 1910 and 1914 in the American and British motion picture trade press to examine how the United States and Great Britain reacted to Pathé color films, and also how Pathé changed its marketing strategy in these two countries. O'Brien uses The Moving Picture World in the U. S. and The Bioscope in Britain for much of his evidence. Following Richard Abel's work, O'Brien argues that around 1907 the idea "that film style might be understood in terms of national categories" (30) began to be reflected in the trade press. Pathé dominated the market for color films in both American and Great Britain, but Pathé's color-stenciling process was labor intensive (Pathé generally made color-stencil film only if it expected to release at least 200 copies of a movie, p. 34). Pathécolor also seemed to imitate nature in an artificial and less than realistic way. (33) "Shimmering on the image's photographic surface rather than appearing organic to the representation, applied colour seemed supplemental and decorative, as if brushed onto the movie image's photographic surface like a layer of paint." (32) In the United States, movie makers who wanted to compete with Pathé began emphasizing realism, especially in Western films, and began using orthochromatic film stock which had a "vastly improved tonal range" over older black-and-white film. "Sensitive to yellow, green, and ultramarine portions of the light spectrum rather than to blue alone, orthochromatic stock yielded a detailed, sculpted image noticeably superior to ordinary black and white. Orthochromatic stock made blond heroines looked [sic] light-haired rather than dark -- and open skies showed the shadings of clouds rather than appearing uniformly bleached and empty." (33) By late 1910, Moving Picture World urged "the universal adaptation of orthochormatic film within the American film industry...." (33) Around 1912, Pathé made "a radical change" in its U.S. marketing, rarely mentioning the Pathé name in advertising its color-stencil films. (34) World War I of course damaged Pathé's production. But by the early 1910, new photographic techniques also challenged Pathécolor. Notably, "early photographic colour processes -- such as ... Kinemacolor, which drew much interest in the English-language film press" of this time -- "offered the promise of a naturalism unavailable to applied colour of any sort, including Pathécolor." (33) AU - O'Brien, Charles CY - Eastleigh, UK KW - ref, secondary color motion pictures Pathé Pathécolor color, and Pathé motion pictures, and color color, and silent films color, and motion pictures non-USA Great Britain France France, and Pathé Great Britain, and Pathé Great Britain, and color films Great Britain, and color Great Britain, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Great Britain motion pictures, and France color, and bias against motion pictures, and orthochromatic film color, and orthochromatic film color, and black-and-white film nationalism and communication color, and nationalism nationalism, and color silent film advertising, and Pathé advertising, and color films color, and Kinemacolor Kinemacolor motion pictures, and Kinemacolor Kinemacolor, and Pathé Pathé, and Kinemacolor advertising advertising and public relations nationalism LB - 41190 PB - John Libbey Publishing PY - 2007 SP - 30-37 ST - Film colour and national cinema before WWI: Pathécolor in the United States and Great Britain T2 - Networks of Entertainment: Early Film Distribution, 1895-1915 TI - Film colour and national cinema before WWI: Pathécolor in the United States and Great Britain ID - 4218 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ian McNeil, ed. AB - This survey covers such themes as timekeeping, computing, the telegraph, telephone, gramophone, radio and radar, photography, facsimile and television, satellites, and information storage. AU - Ohlman, Herbert CY - London and New York KW - computers photography time and timekeeping archives timekeeping, and clocks recording libraries libraries, and information storage general studies timekeeping calculating machines +computers and the Internet telecommunications audiovisual technology telegraph +photography and visual communication facsimile gramophone radio satellites +information storage radar recording, and gramophone +duplicating technologies +aeronautics and space communication +sound recording LB - 1020 PB - Routledge PY - 1990 SP - 686-758 ST - Information: Timekeeping, Computing, Telecommunications and Audiovisual Technologies T2 - An Encyclopaedia of the History of Technology TI - Information: Timekeeping, Computing, Telecommunications and Audiovisual Technologies ID - 1498 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - An account written for laymen that tries to explain what chips are and how they are made, all this in an effort to access “the enormous significance of the microelectronics revolution.” The editor of this volume, Tom Forester, says that “although a little technical in places, it remains the clearest and most comprehensive description of chipmaking.” This piece originally appeared in Scientific American, Vol. 237, No. 3 (Sept. 1977). AU - Oldham, William G. CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers materials, and silicon silicon values communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution materials materials computers communication revolution, and second industrial revolution values religion microelectronics +computers and the Internet microelectronics revolution second industrial revolution computer chips, construction of communication revolution chips, computer computer chips silicon, and computer chips LB - 2770 PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 42-61 ST - The Fabrication of Microelectronic Circuits T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - The Fabrication of Microelectronic Circuits ID - 1669 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Allan M. Nin, ed. AB - This paper grew out of a 1986 workshop sponsored by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. The abstract for this piece reads: "The state of the art of computerized image processing is reviewed and the fundamental difficulties of scene analysis and description are pointed out. The role of recent artificial intelligence research in scene analysis and the image processing requirements for a satellite monitoring agency are discussed. It is concluded that many processing tasks can be carried out almost automatically, while the fanal image analysis adapted to verification still requires considerable contribution by trained photo-interpreters and domain experts." AU - Orhaug, Torleiv CY - New York KW - R & D computers computers Soviet Union simulations strategic defense initiative (SDI) Reagan administration surveillance nationalism microprocessing Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) computers and the Internet artificial intelligence and biotechnology artificial intelligence strategic computing initiative aeronautics and space communication Reagan administration, and artificial intelligence Reagan, Ronald Reagan, Ronald, and computers military communication nationalism, and communication computers, and artifical intelligence military communication, and artificial intelligence nationalism, and computers DARPA Japan computers, and chips research and development USSR microelectronics microprocessors personal computers computers, personal war war, and artificial intelligence computers, and war war, and computers SDI Reagan administration, and SDA satellites computers, and simulations simulations, and computers surveillance satellites, and surveillance surveillance, and satellites computers, and surveillance surveillance, and computers photography satellites, and photography photography, and satellites computers, and image processing non-USA privacy LB - 33800 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1987 SP - 165-78 ST - Computer Applications in Monitoring and Verification Technologies T2 - Weapon and Arms Control Applications of Advanced Computing TI - Computer Applications in Monitoring and Verification Technologies ID - 3018 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - O'Siadhail, Michael AB - A poem in which the author reflects on listening to the wireless. "Echo of echo.... Rumour of rumour. This feast at which I'm both host and guest." AU - O'Siadhail, Micheal [sic] CY - Newcastle upon Tyne NE99 ISN KW - audiences audiences, and radio +radio wireless communication poetry radio, and audiences LB - 4140 PB - Bloodaxe Books, Ltd. PY - 1995 SP - 65 ST - Wireless T2 - A Fragile City TI - Wireless ID - 1802 ER - TY - CHAP AB - In Canada, American movies and television programs dominated the market – more than 90 percent of the films for which Canadian paid rental fees came from the United States. In 1977, Ontario’s Commission on Violence in the Communications Industry concluded that the “great weight of research into the effects of violent media contents indicates potential harm to society.” In Volume 1, this Report concluded that Canadians – including children – were watching increasing amounts of American-made TV which had “much higher levels of violence” than programs produced in Canada or elsewhere, and television’s “escalation of violence” was “drawing other sections of the media along like the tail of a comet.” This essay appears in Volume 7 of the Royal Commission's Report. It discusses how news is defined, the role violence plays in news flow. AU - Osler, Andrew CY - Toronto, Ontario KW - television, and media effects syntheses (of research) Surgeon General social science research news and journalism news media effects media violence media effects news and journalism censorship and ratings children news and journalism non-USA Canada +television violence television, and violence violence, and television violence, and social science research social science research, and violence children, and media +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures Surgeon General's Report (1972) violence children, and TV violence media effects, and television violence, and syntheses syntheses media effects, and violence violence, and media effects reports social science research, and TV violence television, and social science television, and violence violence, and television media effects, and television children, and media children, and TV violence social science research, synthesis (violence) Canada, and media violence reports journalism, and Canada journalism journalism, and violence news, and Canada news, and violence LB - 2780 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality See filed under Report of The Royal Commission ... Volume 7 PB - Royal Commission on Violence in the Communications Industry SP - 47-70 ST - An Analysis of Some News-Flow Patterns and Influences in Ontario T2 - Report of The Royal Commission on Violence in the Communications Industry: Volume 7: The Media Industries: From Here to Where? TI - An Analysis of Some News-Flow Patterns and Influences in Ontario ID - 366 ER - TY - CHAP AB - In Canada, American movies and television programs dominated the market – more than 90 percent of the films for which Canadian paid rental fees came from the United States. In 1977, Ontario’s Commission on Violence in the Communications Industry concluded that the “great weight of research into the effects of violent media contents indicates potential harm to society.” In Volume 1, this Report concluded that Canadians – including children – were watching increasing amounts of American-made TV which had “much higher levels of violence” than programs produced in Canada or elsewhere, and television’s “escalation of violence” was “drawing other sections of the media along like the tail of a comet.” This essay appears in Volume 7 of the Royal Commission's Report. It discusses how news is defined, the role violence plays in news, ethical questions, and it makes recommendations. it also includes an annotated bibliography. AU - Osler, Andrew M. CY - Toronto, Ontario KW - television, and media effects syntheses (of research) Surgeon General social science research news and journalism news media effects media violence media effects news and journalism censorship and ratings children news and journalism non-USA Canada +television violence television, and violence violence, and television violence, and social science research social science research, and violence children, and media +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures Surgeon General's Report (1972) violence children, and TV violence media effects, and television violence, and syntheses syntheses media effects, and violence violence, and media effects reports social science research, and TV violence television, and social science television, and violence violence, and television media effects, and television children, and media children, and TV violence social science research, synthesis (violence) Canada, and media violence reports journalism, and Canada journalism journalism, and violence news, and Canada news, and violence bibliographies, annotated bibliographies, and journalism and violence journalism, and violence (bibliography) +bibliographies LB - 2770 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality See filed under Report of The Royal Commission ... Volume 7 PB - Royal Commission on Violence in the Communications Industry SP - 1-46 ST - A Descriptive Study of Perceptions and Attitudes Among Journalists in Ontario T2 - Report of The Royal Commission on Violence in the Communications Industry: Volume 7: The Media Industries: From Here to Where? TI - A Descriptive Study of Perceptions and Attitudes Among Journalists in Ontario ID - 365 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - Papert invented the computer language LOGO. A follower of Piaget, he was a professor of Mathmatics and Education at MIT when this piece appeared in his book, Mindstorms: Children, Computers and Powerful Ideas (1980). Papert argued that it is possible to designed computers in such a way that it would become a natural process to communicate with them. When children learn to use computers, it changes the way they learn other things. AU - Papert, Seymour CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers seeing at a distance postmodernism modernism censorship and ratings new way of seeing information technology +computers and the Internet children, and media children, and computers computers, and children new way of seeing, and children and computers information technology, and education information technology, and children children computers new way of seeing, and computers children LB - 3310 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 229-41 ST - Computers and Children T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Computers and Children ID - 1722 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Pearl, [David A2 - Bouthilet, Lorraine A2 - eds.], Joyce Lazar AB - This study, to which Pardes contributed the Foreword, synthesizes ten years of research since the appearance in 1972 of the Surgeon General's Advisory Committee on Television and Behavior's Report. Pardes writes that this report "addresses such issues as cognitive and emotional aspects of television viewing; television as it relates to socialization and viewers' conceptions of social reality; television's influences on physical and mental health; and television as an American institution." This study argues that with regard to television's relation to violence, "the evidence accumulated in the 1970s seems overwhelming that televised violence and aggression are positively correlated in children." For those who argue that TV violence provides a catharsis, this work concludes that "since practically all of the evidence points to an increase in aggressive behavior, rather than a decrease, the theory is contradicted by the data." AU - Pardes, Herbert CY - Washington, D.C. KW - television, and media effects syntheses (of research) Surgeon General social science research media effects media violence media effects censorship and ratings children +television violence television, and violence violence, and television violence, and social science research social science research, and violence children, and media motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures Surgeon General's Report (1972) television, and Surgeon General's Report (1972) violence children, and TV violence media effects, and television media effects, and TV violence (synthesis) syntheses National Institute of Health, and violence violence, and National Institute of Mental Health media effects, and violence violence, and media effects reports National Institute of Health LB - 21970 PB - U. S. Government Printing Office PY - 1982 ST - Foreword T2 - Television and Behavior: Ten Years of Scientific Progress and Implications for the Eighties. Volume I: Summary Report (2 volumes) TI - Foreword ID - 939 ER - TY - CHAP AB - This insightful report deals with the social implications of computers and telecommunication policy. The author speculates (this in 1975) that the economic crisis of the mid-1970s (stagflation) was “a symptom of a major social transition, not transitory economic dislocations," and that "Now we are undergoing a major historical upheaval.” Parker maintained that American society was “in the midst of a transition from an industrial society to an information society.” In “an information age unlimited economic growth is theoretically possible even though we reach a steady zero-growth state with respect to energy and materials.” This “transformation has profound implications for the quality and nature of human society. It promises major increases in the quality of human life, the productivity of industry (especially the service sector) and a redefinition of what constitutes the real GNP. Revolutionary impacts are likely on many areas of vital concern to governments, including: education, the transfer of funds, trade facilitation, consumer information, public administration, health services, transportation and culture.” The author devotes sections to each of these topics. “Indeed, within the financial and administrative areas the effects have already been significant even though they represent but the first ripples from the tidal wave of change that lies ahead.” This piece lists the number of people working in various information sector occupations. The author delibered this paper in Paris at a conference in Paris (?) in early February, 1975. AU - Parker, Edwin (with assistance of Marc Porat) CY - Paris KW - computers nationalism communication revolution consumerism communication revolution, and second industrial revolution information technology information technology general studies +nationalism and communication capitalism second industrial revolution microelectronics communication revolution Industrial Revolution information age information technology, and government information technology, and finance information technology, and trade information technology, and education education trade finance consumers information technology, and consumers information technology, and health information technology, and culture transportation computers telecommunications +computers and the Internet LB - 1060 PB - Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development PY - 1976 SP - 87-129 ST - 'Background Report,' OECO Informatics Studies T2 - OECO Informatics Studies, 11: Conference on Computer/Telecommunications Policy: Proceedings of the OECD Conference February 4-6, 1975 TI - 'Background Report,' OECO Informatics Studies ID - 1502 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Claudia Carlen, ed. AB - Pope Paul VI says that "everything ... in the modern means of social communication which arouses men's baser passions and encourages low moral standards, as well as every obscenity in the written word and every form of indecency on the stage and screen, should be condemned publicly and unanimously by all those who have at heart the advance of civilization and the safeguarding of the outstanding values of the human spirit. It is quite absurd to defend this kind of depravity in the name of art or culture." AU - Paul VI, Pope CY - Raleigh, N. C. KW - values Christianity values archives values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church non-USA primary sources papal encyclicals Pope Paul VI, and 1968 encyclical Pope Paul VI, and Humanae Vitae Catholic Church, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholic Church motion pictures, and censorship Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures television, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and television +radio radio, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and radio Catholic Church, and modern media values, and social communication critics values Catholic Church Pope Paul VI LB - 20740 PB - McGrath Publishing Company PY - 1981 SP - 223-36 ST - Humanae Vitae: Encyclical of Pope Paul VI on the Regulation of Birth, July 25, 1968 T2 - The Papal Encyclicals, 1958-1981 TI - Humanae Vitae: Encyclical of Pope Paul VI on the Regulation of Birth, July 25, 1968 VL - 5 ID - 876 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This piece appeared originally in Business Week (July 5, 1976), and argued that microprocessors would be incorporated increasingly into machines and products. It would provided these so-call "smart" machine with brainpower and at lower cost. The article is based on interviews with people who were doing research in new applications for computer chips. AU - Perlowski, A. A. CY - Oxford, Eng; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers microprocessing communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution materials +future and science fiction digitization computers microelectronics information technology +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology computer chips microprocessors microelectronics revolution electronic media information technology, and consumers digital media future computer chips materials LB - 2820 PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 105-24 ST - The 'Smart' Machine Revolution T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - The 'Smart' Machine Revolution ID - 1674 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Jean L. Marx, ed. AB - The author, writing in 1989, saw a "revolution in biotechnology ... rapidly spreading across the globe," with the major participants being the United States, Japan, and Western Europe. Several factors will determine how this competition will turn out: opportunities for private investment capital, the nature of academic research institutions, how well universities and industry cooperate, and government support. Much will depend on the climate created by governmental regulation. "An ideal regulatory strategy has to preserve the safety of mankind and the environment without hindering unduly the development of new products," Perpich writes. This article discusses Japanese, European, and American strategies to foster biotechnology. In the United States, the President's Commission on Industrial Competitiveness was created in 1983, composed mainly of CEO's from high tech companies, to advise both government and industry on governmental policies relating to international competition. The author discusses the 1985 Congressional Budget Office report, Federal Financial Support for High Technology Industries, and also the roles of the National Academy of Sciences, the Office of Science and Technology Policy, the National Institutes of Health, and several other U. S. government agencies. The author sees American leadership in biotechnology emerging from five elements. "These are: [1] a quarter century of strong federal support for research in basic biology; [2] a powerful research system in the universities that is driven by a catalytic blending of research and teaching; [3] the presence of clinicians in research laboratories who knew that a better understanding of gene regulation would have an enormous impact on the diagnosis and treatment of disease; [4] the scientific community' acceptance of its responsibility to alert the public to the potential risks of recombinant DNA technology and the need for appropriate oversight of the research by the NIH and its advisory groups; and [5] the ability to conduct biotechnology research without enormous financial resources." Perpich concludes that government support and investment in research and development in biotechnology is essential for future leadership in this field. "Government, university and industry, working in collaboration under enlightened public oversight, will develop a sound data base for risk assessment. As the data base grows, speedy and effective regulatory review of biotechnology products will permit the promise of industrial biotechnology to be realized internationally, to the benefit of the industrial world and of the less developed countries." AU - Perpich, Joseph G. CY - Cambridge, Eng. KW - R & D nationalism military-industrial complex presidents, and new media law non-USA values universities science research and development regulation Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration artificial intelligence and biotechnology nationalism and communication Japan Europe research and development, and government support Office of Science and Technology National Academy of Sciences National Institute of Health Reagan administration, and biotechnology values, and biotechnology regulation, and biotechnology DNA military-industrial-university complex university-industry complex scientific research, and government support scientific revolution, and biotechnology universities research and development regulation, and biotechnology nationalism, and biotechnology military communication LB - 4260 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1989 SP - 197-209 ST - Biotechnology, international competition and regulatory strategies T2 - A Revolution in Biotechnology TI - Biotechnology, international competition and regulatory strategies ID - 1814 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ithiel de Sola Pool, ed. AB - Perry argues that in Great Britain in a period before nationalization, the history of the telephone “serves as a reminder that inventions, like ideas, seldom encounter a neutral environment. Preexisting conditions, outlooks, and prejudices had more to do with the impact of the telephone than its intrinsic features.” --SV Perry explores the impact of the telephone Britain, a country that has little written attribution when to come to this issue, very unlike the United States. “In Britain, the telephone never became a symbol for a particular era. While in the early Victorian period if often called ‘The Age of the Railway,’ it would be a misnomer to label either the late Victorian years, or the Edwardian years ‘The Age of Telephone.’” The author explores “the failure of telephone development in Great Britain from its introduction in 1876 until the nationalization of the industry in 1912.” (69-70) --Catharine Gartelos AU - Perry, Charles R. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - technology non-USA Great Britain +telephones Great Britain, and telephones technology and society Gartelos, Catharine telephones, and resistance to LB - 10170 PB - MIT Press PY - 1977 SP - 69-96 ST - The British Experience 1876-1912: The Impact of the Telephone During the Years of Delay T2 - The Social Impact of the Telephone TI - The British Experience 1876-1912: The Impact of the Telephone During the Years of Delay ID - 2382 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - Microelectronics has opened a new era in warfare with the possibility of a new generation of "smart weapons" -- precision guided weapons that incorporate intelligence. At the time (1982), the United States was ahead in the technology while the Soviet Union, which was thought to lead in conventional weaponry, was desperately trying to keep up with the U.S. in microelectronics. At the time, both authors were at the Arms Control and Disarmament Program at Stanford University and their piece originally appeared in Technology Review (July 1982). AU - Perry, William J. and Cynthia A. Roberts CY - Cambridge, MA KW - R & D computers USSR presidents, and new media research and development war communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution war non-USA Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration microelectronics +computers and the Internet microelectronics revolution +military communication +artificial intelligence and biotechnology smart weapons Soviet Union, and microelectronic weapons Soviet Union, and collapse of Reagan administration, and microelectronics Reagan administration, and smart weapons Soviet Union military, and smart weapons LB - 3590 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 590-601 ST - 'Smart' Weapons T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - 'Smart' Weapons ID - 1749 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ithiel de Sola Pool, ed. AB - The author attempts to cover much ground in this essay, looking at the telephone's "novel nature, its exploitation, the influence of the telephone systems, and the impact of telephony in our individual lives." AU - Pierce, John R. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - entertainment entertainment, home home entertainment community democracy home, and new media home values home, and information technology information technology +telephones democracy and media information technology, and home values, and telephones home, and telephones LB - 10220 PB - MIT Press PY - 1977 SP - 159-95 ST - The Telephone and Society in the Past 100 Years T2 - The Social Impact of the Telephone TI - The Telephone and Society in the Past 100 Years ID - 2387 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Carlen, Claudie AB - Pope Pius XI’s 1936 encyclical on motion pictures, Vigilanti Cura, which set the tone for the Catholic response to movies during the next two decades. The Roman Catholic Church considered movie houses to be “like the school of life itself,” with far “greater influence in inciting men to virtue or vice than abstract reasoning.” Pope Pius XI warned of the moral damage that cinema could inflict. AU - Pius XI, Pope CY - Raleigh KW - values Christianity values archives motion pictures values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church non-USA primary sources papal encyclicals Pope Pius XI Pope Pius XI, and 1936 encyclical Vigilanti Cura, and Pope Pius XI (1936) Catholic Church, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholic Church motion pictures, and censorship Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity LB - 13040 PB - McGrath Publishing Company, a Consortium Book PY - 1981 SP - 517-23 ST - Vigilanti Cura, 1936 T2 - The Papal Encyclicals, 1903-1939 TI - Vigilanti Cura, 1936 VL - 3 ID - 479 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Claudia Carlen, ed. AB - This 1957 encyclical on radio, television, and motion pictures is more optimistic than Pope Pius XI's dire warning in his 1936 encyclical. In 1957, Pope Pius XII said described radio “as through secret windows opening on the world” made daily contact possible with other cultures. “On winged flight, swifter than sound waves,” it passed “with the speed of light over all frontiers.” But Pius XII noted television which had become a more pervasive presence in the lives of young people than cinema. “Everyone knows well that children can often avoid an epidemic so long as the disease is outside the home,” he said, “but cannot escape it when it lurks within the home itself. It is an evil thing to bring the sanctity of the home into danger.” Television invaded with the “poisoned air of those ‘materialistic’ doctrines which diffuse empty pleasures and desires of all kinds, just as was done over and over again in motion- picture theaters,” the Pope warned. At the same time, television was a form of entertainment that the entire family could enjoy in the home -- unlike movies in 1957. The Pope urged Christians parents to emphasize good entertainment. AU - Pius XII, Pope CY - Raleigh, N. C. KW - entertainment entertainment, home values Christianity television, and home values archives home entertainment values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church non-USA home, and new media home primary sources papal encyclicals Pope Pius XII Pope Pius XII, and 1957 encyclical Miranda Prorsus, and Pope Pius II (1957) Catholic Church, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholic Church motion pictures, and censorship Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures television, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and television +radio radio, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and radio home, and television critics values, and television television, and values radio, and values home, and radio values, and radio motion pictures, and values values, and motion pictures values LB - 17420 PB - McGrath Publishing Company PY - 1981 SP - 347-64 ST - Miranda Prorsus: Encyclical of Pope Pius XII on the Communications Field: Motion Pictures, Radio, Television, September 8, 1957 T2 - The Papal Encyclicals, 1939-1958 TI - Miranda Prorsus: Encyclical of Pope Pius XII on the Communications Field: Motion Pictures, Radio, Television, September 8, 1957 VL - 4 ID - 663 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - See also related article in this volume by Duane L. Huff, “The Magic of Cellular Radio.” AU - Pool, Ithiel de Sola CY - Cambridge, MA KW - telephones cell phones networks +telephones telephones, cellular cellular telephones Pool, Ithiel de Sola networks, and telephones telephones, and transportation LB - 5400 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 144-46 ST - Will mobile telephones move? T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Will mobile telephones move? ID - 1925 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ithiel de Sola Pool, ed. AB - The authors examine the years from 1876 until World War II in an effort to discover how people living in that period understood and forecast the telephone's social effects. It evaluates those forecasts that proved to be good as well as those that were not so good and attempts to explain the difference. The authors note that they were often surprised by their findings. For example, they write, “One of our working hypotheses as we began this study was that the automobile and the telephone–between them–were responsible for the vast growth of American suburbia and exurbia, and for the phenomenon of urban sprawl. There is some truth in that, but there is also truth to the reverse proposition that the telephone made possible the skyscraper and increased the congestion downtown.” AU - Pool, Ithiel de Sola, Craig Decker, Stephen Dizard, Kay Israel, Pamela Rubin, and Barry Weinstein CY - Cambridge, MA KW - urban studies +future and science fiction +telephones future future, and telephones telephones, and social effects urban studies, and telephones telephones, and demography geography space (spatial) LB - 10200 PB - MIT Press PY - 1977 SP - 127-57 ST - Foresight and Hindsight: The Case of the Telephone T2 - The Social Impact of the Telephone TI - Foresight and Hindsight: The Case of the Telephone ID - 2385 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Williams, Raymond, ed. AB - Pool surveys the history of recording and transmitting sound. He examines specifically the development of the phonograph, telephone, and radio. Each of these inventions originally were conceived as refinements of the telegraph. But while all three inventions were related in their origins, in many other ways they became “polar opposites” in their social importance. Radio became a mass medium, while the telephone was essentially a form of two-way communication. The telephone had a major impact on business and urban life. For example, Pool argues that the skyscraper “would not have been possible without the telephone.” Pool discusses radio and recorded entertainment, and devotes sections to “Propaganda radio: the totalitarian model,” and the “social effects of radio.” AU - Pool, Ithiel de Sola CY - London KW - public relations advertising non-USA radio sound recording phonograph telephones urban studies telegraph Edison, Thomas propaganda audiences audiences, and radio radio, and audiences radio, and propaganda propaganda, and radio radio, and Germany Germany advertising and public relations LB - 11660 PB - Thames and Hudson PY - 1981 SP - 170-82 ST - Extended Speech and Sounds T2 - Contact: Human Communication and Its History TI - Extended Speech and Sounds ID - 2517 ER - TY - CHAP AB - This essays discusses distribution and volume of sexually oriented materials through the 1960s. This multi-volume Report, begun in 1967 under the Lyndon Johnson administration, found that there were few or no harmful effects from pornography and recommended removing restrictions for adult consumers. Report, published in 1970, issued several significant, if controversial, findings. It concluded that long-term exposure (15 days or more) to erotic materials usually resulted in satiation characterized by a marked decline in sexual arousal and interest in such stimuli. One long-term result of loosening legal controls, therefore, would be to reduce interest in pornography. The 1970 Report said that exposure to pornography seemed to have little or any effect on established attitudes toward sexual morality or sexuality, and in young people it “had no impact upon moral character over and above that of a generally deviant background.” It concluded that being exposed to explicit sexual material played no “significant role” in causing “delinquent or criminal behavior among youth or adults.” The Report was attacked by the Richard Nixon administration and by conservatives. The Meese Commission, which was established during the second Ronald Reagan administration, argued that the 1970 Report had studied pornography before it had been spread by cable and satellite television, and by video cassette recorders and dial-a-porn telephone services. The Meese Commission said that since 1970, pornography had become much more violent and pervasive. AU - Pornography, Commission on Obscenity and CY - Washington, D. C. KW - Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) social science research values sexuality values media effects values community law censorship and ratings censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and volume of censorship, and foreign obscenity pornography, and 1960s media effects, and pornography pornography, and effects community standards, and pornography pornography, and community standards LB - 21220 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - U. S. Government Printing Office PY - 1970 SP - 7-21 ST - The Volume of Traffic and Patterns of Distribution of Sexually Oriented Materials T2 - Report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography TI - The Volume of Traffic and Patterns of Distribution of Sexually Oriented Materials ID - 923 ER - TY - CHAP AB - This essay concerns research on the effects of watching pornography and concludes that there are few harmful effects. It is part of a much larger study by the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. This multi-volume Report, begun in 1967 under the Lyndon Johnson administration, found that there were few or no harmful effects from pornography and recommended removing restrictions for adult consumers. Report, published in 1970, issued several significant, if controversial, findings. It concluded that long-term exposure (15 days or more) to erotic materials usually resulted in satiation characterized by a marked decline in sexual arousal and interest in such stimuli. One long-term result of loosening legal controls, therefore, would be to reduce interest in pornography. The 1970 Report said that exposure to pornography seemed to have little or any effect on established attitudes toward sexual morality or sexuality, and in young people it “had no impact upon moral character over and above that of a generally deviant background.” It concluded that being exposed to explicit sexual material played no “significant role” in causing “delinquent or criminal behavior among youth or adults.” The Report was attacked by the Richard Nixon administration and by conservatives. The Meese Commission, which was established during the second Ronald Reagan administration, argued that the 1970 Report had studied pornography before it had been spread by cable and satellite television, and by video cassette recorders and dial-a-porn telephone services. The Meese Commission said that since 1970, pornography had become much more violent and pervasive. AU - Pornography, Commission on Obscenity and CY - Washington, D.C. KW - archives primary sources sexuality motion pictures mass media pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography LB - 22270 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - U. S. Government Printing Office PY - 1970 SP - 23-27 ST - The Effects of Explicit Sexual Materials T2 - Report of The Commission on Obscenity and Pornography T3 - Report of The Commission on Obscenity and Pornography TI - The Effects of Explicit Sexual Materials ID - 955 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Baudrillard, Jean AB - This work assembles many of Baudrillard's writings between 1968 and 1985, published originally in French. Mark Poster's "Introduction" provides an informative overview of Baudrillard's work. Poster writes: "Baudrillard has developed a theory to make intelligible one of the fascinating and perplexing aspects of advanced industrial society: the proliferation of communications through the media. This new language practice differs from both face-to-face symbolic exchange and print. The new media employ the montage principle of film (unlike print) and time-space distancing (unlike face-to-face conversation) to structure a unique linguistic reality. Baudrillard theorizes from the vantage point of the new media to argue that a new culture has emerged, one that is impervious to the old forms of resistance and impenetrable by theories rooted in traditional metaphysical assumptions. Culture is now dominated by simulations, Baudrillard contends, objects and discourses that have no firm origin, no referent, no ground or foundation. In this sense, what Walter Benjamin wrote about 'the age of mechanical reproduction,' Baudrillard applies to all reaches of everyday life." See also Jean Baudrillard's Simulacra and Simulation (translated by Sheila Faria Glaser) (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1981, 1994). AU - Poster, Mark CY - Stanford, CA KW - technology advertising, and public relations seeing at a distance reality propaganda public relations preservation postmodernism modernism communication revolution history, and new media communication revolution, and second industrial revolution non-USA history values polling new way of seeing linguistics history general studies Enzensberger, Hans Benjamin, Walter McLuhan, Marshall advertising polling, and opinion values, and new media new way of seeing, and new media France, theory theory history, break with second industrial revolution communication revolution reality, and media technology and society linguistics, and media Baudrillard, Jean electronic media France LB - 4130 PB - Stanford University Press PY - 1988 SP - 1-9 ST - Introduction T2 - Jean Baudrillard: Selected Writings TI - Introduction ID - 1801 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - Powell considers the impact of the World Wide Web and other new media on international diplomacy and news reporting. The volume in which Powell's chapter appears ispart of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectivs on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organzied by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." AU - Powell, Adam Clayton III CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers computers virtual reality nationalism Internet global communication community news and journalism non-USA nationalism and communication democracy democracy, and new media computers and the Internet democracy, and computers computers, and democracy Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet critics digital media democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy capitalism gatekeeping community, and democracy democracy, and virtual communities virtual communities cyberspace cyberspace, and democracy democracy, and cyberspace metaphors capitalism capitalism, and digital media digital media, and capitalism Internet, and capitalism capitalism, and Internet globalization LB - 34240 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 171-77 ST - Democracy and New Media in Developing Nations: Opportunities and Challenges T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - Democracy and New Media in Developing Nations: Opportunities and Challenges ID - 3062 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Stephen Prince, ed. and intro. AB - Prince notes that as movies became noticeably more violent during the late 1960s and early 1970s, advances in special effects technology often helped to make the violence more realistic and sensational. Arthur Penn’s Bonnie and Clyde (1967), set in the 1930s, was about a gang of desperados led by Clyde Barrow and his girlfriend, Bonnie Parker, and starred Warren Beatty, Faye Dunaway, and Gene Hackman. In filming the brutal machine-gun ambush of Bonnie and Clyde by Texas rangers, Penn used multiple cameras and dozens of “squibs” (actually condoms containing fake blood hidden in the actors’ clothing and rigged to explode to simulate the impact of bullet), and then showed the massacre scene in slow-motion. In The Wild Bunch (1969), a hard-edged western about outlaws set in the early 1910s starring William Holden and Robert Ryan, Sam Peckinpah tried to push Penn’s techniques further. To stylize violence, Peckinpah used slow-motion and multi-camera montage, as well as telephoto lenses. Many people believed that The Wild Bunch marked a turning point with regard to violence in films. AU - Prince, Stephen CY - New Brunswick, N. J. KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) media research MPAA self-regulation Production Code women, and new media Valenti, Jack values Production Code (motion pictures) media effects media violence lenses values religion law censorship and ratings non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +television motion pictures motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures television, and violence violence, and television media effects values censorship motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures television, and censorship censorship, and television media research, and violence violence, and media research Valenti, Jack, and screen violence motion pictures, and slow motion motion pictures, and multicamera montage cameras, and telephoto lenses lenses, telephoto motion pictures, and squibs Peckinpah, Sam Penn, Arthur Kurosawa, Akira Production Code (motion pictures) motion pictures, and Production Code (motion pictures) women women, and screen violence violence, and cameras cameras violence LB - 19530 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Rutgers University Press PY - 2000 SP - 1-44 ST - Graphic Violence in the Cinema: Origins, Aesthetic Design, and Social Effects T2 - Screening Violence TI - Graphic Violence in the Cinema: Origins, Aesthetic Design, and Social Effects ID - 788 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Stephen Prince, ed. and intro. AB - To stylize violence in the movie The Wild Bunch (1969), Sam Peckinpah used slow-motion and multi-camera montage, as well as telephoto lenses. Many people believed that this movie marked a turning point with regard to violence in films. AU - Prince, Stephen CY - New Brunswick, N. J. KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) media research MPAA self-regulation Production Code women, and new media Valenti, Jack values Production Code (motion pictures) media effects media violence lenses values religion law censorship and ratings non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +television motion pictures motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures television, and violence violence, and television media effects values censorship motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures television, and censorship censorship, and television media research, and violence violence, and media research Valenti, Jack, and screen violence motion pictures, and slow motion motion pictures, and multicamera montage cameras, and telephoto lenses lenses, telephoto motion pictures, and squibs Peckinpah, Sam Penn, Arthur Kurosawa, Akira Production Code (motion pictures) motion pictures, and Production Code (motion pictures) women women, and screen violence violence cameras LB - 20410 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Rutgers University Press PY - 2000 SP - 175-201 ST - The Aesthetic of Slow-Motion Violence in the Films of Sam Peckinpah T2 - Screening Violence TI - The Aesthetic of Slow-Motion Violence in the Films of Sam Peckinpah ID - 857 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Chris Hables Gray, ed. AU - Pursell, Carroll CY - Malabar, FL KW - technology preservation history, and new media World Fairs history general studies technology and society history, and technology technology, and humanities Mumford, Lewis technology, defined World Fairs, and Century of Progress LB - 1090 PB - Krieger Publishing Company PY - 1996 SP - 1-4 ST - Introduction: Reclaiming Technology for the Humanities T2 - Technohistory: Using the History of American Technology in Interdisciplinary Research TI - Introduction: Reclaiming Technology for the Humanities ID - 1505 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Gallo, Max AB - Posters combine the image and word, and are capable of being duplicated an infinite number of times. “Mass production involved changing one’s attitude toward the value of the original print and even minimized the importance of differences between one copy and another,” Quintavalle writes. “Only later, with the advent of poster collectors, did a more traditional market for posters develop; first proofs then were treated much like paintings, engravings, lithographs, and silk-screen prints. But to understand poster art, we must consider its original function and examine the effect posters had on those for whom they were created.” AU - Quintavalle, Carlo Arturo CY - Feltham, Middlesex, England KW - Chicago, IL photography war non-USA World War II posters +photography and visual communication posters, and history of posters, and politics prints posters, and color lithographs painting capitalism, and art posters, and capitalism posters, and modern art Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri de Chéret, Jules posters, and France posters, and Europe posters, and Toulouse-Lautrec art nouveau, and posters posters, and art nouveau German expressionism, and posters posters, and German expressionism Bauhaus posters, and The Bauhaus World War II, and posters posters, and post-cubist posters, and post-World War II color capitalism art lithography color Germany LB - 1850 PB - Hamlyn PY - 1974 SP - 297-315 ST - The Development of Poster Art [trans. by Alfred and Bruni Mayor] T2 - The Poster in History TI - The Development of Poster Art [trans. by Alfred and Bruni Mayor] ID - 1581 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This paper argues that "information technology is changing the technological profile of manufacturing and the service industries. The main effect on the less developed countries will be to increase the obsolescence of their industries, services, and development strategies." At the time of this paper, Rada was with the International Management Institute in Geneva. This paper was delivered to an IFAC seminar in Vienna, Austria in March, 1983. AU - Rada, Juan CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers nationalism corporations corporations, multinational communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution Third World non-USA political economy microelectronics +computers and the Internet +nationalism and communication Third World, and new media capitalism multinational corporations microelectronics revolution LB - 3580 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 571-89 ST - Information Technology and the Third World T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Information Technology and the Third World ID - 1748 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Lisa Gitelman and Geoffrey B. Pengree, eds. AB - "This chapter dwells on events in the early 1890s, when the public identify of the phonograph was still protean," the author writes. (175) Playing recorded music was one of its function but it was perhaps best known as the "talking machine." Radick examines how evolutionist R. L. Garner used the phonograph to "aid in establishing Darwinian Theory." (176) Radick's essay appears in a volume that is part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. This volume offers a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. These ten essays examine media that were new in the eighteenth, nineteenth, and early twentieth centuries. They explore "moments of transition when each new medium was not yet fully defined, its significance in flux...." They attempt to put these media into their "specific material and historical environment" and explain the "ways in which habits and structures of communication are naturalized or normalized." (viii) AU - Radick, Gregory CY - Cambridge, MA KW - sound recording print culture sound recording, and print media print, and sound recording phonograph Edison, Thomas phonograph, and Thomas Edison Edison, Thomas, and phonograph newspapers, and phonograph phonograph, and newspapers books, periodicals, newspapers home and new media advertising and public relations phonograph, and home home, and phonograph advertising, and phonograph phonograph, and advertising values phonograph, and Darwinian evolution advertising newspapers home news print news and journalism LB - 34420 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 175-206 ST - R. L. Garner and the Rise of the Edison Phonograph in Evolutionary Philology T2 - New Media, 1740-1915 TI - R. L. Garner and the Rise of the Edison Phonograph in Evolutionary Philology ID - 3080 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Martin Bauer, ed. AB - This effort to revise the history of Luddism during the British Industrial Revolution raises the following question: "Psychologists tell us that the loss of one's work, in particular the loss of a trade or career, is a devastating psychological blow to the individual's self-esteem, exceeded only by the shock of bereavement. We might wonder why this blow should be deemed less severe for a craftsman in 1793 than for one in 1993." AU - Randall, Adrian CY - New York KW - technology modernism modernity modernism non-USA Luddism Industrial Revolution Great Britain Industrial Revolution Industrial Revolution, and Great Britain Luddism Luddism, and history of technology, and resistance to Luddism, and Great Britain technology and society culture, and resistance to technology modernity culture critics Great Britain LB - 4310 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1995 SP - 57-79 ST - Reinterpreting 'Luddism': Resistance to New Technology in the British Industrial Revolution T2 - Resistance to new technology: nuclear power, information technology and biotechnology TI - Reinterpreting 'Luddism': Resistance to New Technology in the British Industrial Revolution ID - 1819 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Pornography, Commission on Obscenity and AB - This essay, published with the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography's Report in 1970, gives one of the best accounts of the events leading up to the adoption of the movie rating system and then how the system operated during its first months. Randall notes the increase in violent movies during the late 1960s and calls from theater owners and others for come kind of classification system. This piece is also good on the original meaning of rating symbols -- X, for example, was for films with "adult" but not necessarily pornographic themes. Randall also discusses the Code and Rating Administration, established to apply the movie ratings, and the backgrounds of the first members of this agency. AU - Randall, Richard S. CY - Washington, D. C. KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) social science research censorship and ratings values sexuality values media effects values community law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and foreign censorship, and foreign obscenity pornography, and antisocial behavior media effects, and pornography pornography, and effects community standards, and pornography pornography, and community standards motion pictures, and classification classification, and history of classification, and motion pictures CARA, and classification classification, and CARA CARA LB - 19350 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - U. S. Government Printing Office SP - 219-92 ST - Classification by the Motion Picture Industry T2 - Technical Report of The Commission on Obscenity and Pornography: Volume V: Societal Control Mechanisms TI - Classification by the Motion Picture Industry ID - 773 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tino Balio, ed. AB - Richard Randall discusses movie censorship from the 1952 Burstyn v. Wilson case, which gave films protection under the First Amendment for the first time, to the appearance of the hard-core movie Deep Throat (1972), which was one of the first explicit movies to be shown in mainstream theaters. AU - Randall, Richard S. CY - Madison KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) social science research censorship and ratings values sexuality values media effects values community law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and foreign censorship, and foreign obscenity pornography, and antisocial behavior media effects, and pornography pornography, and effects community standards, and pornography pornography, and community standards motion pictures, and classification classification, and history of classification, and motion pictures CARA, and classification classification, and CARA CARA LB - 20470 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - University of Wisconsin Press PY - 1976 SP - 510-36 ST - Censorship: From The Miracle to Deep Throat T2 - The American Film Industry (Revised Edition) TI - Censorship: From The Miracle to Deep Throat ID - 832 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - UNESCO AB - Kay considers the technical means for transmitting the news in this interesting piece. Ray notes that there are four ways in which news is received: 1) as a printed message; 2) as signals to control typesetting machinery; 3) as a spoken message; and 4) as a facsimile. Ray considers two facilities for transmitting news recognized by the International Telecommunication Union: press telegrams and radio-communication services. He discusses equipment shortages and high-frequency radio circuits, noting that disturbances in the ionosphere may totally disrupt radio-communications. He provides an informative discussion of intercontinental telephone cables, and the effects of communication satellites on press messages. He points out that as of 1965, the effect of satellites on news transmission has not been as dramatic as the transatlantic and transpacific telephone cables, because the receiving stations for satellites were located in developed countries which already had well-developed terrestrial communications. Ray concludes by treating press broadcasts by satellite. Kay's essay appears in this volume, published by theUnited Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. AU - Ray, Ivor CY - Paris KW - nationalism United Nations journalism news and journalism non-USA telephones, international news +telephones telephones, and international cable +radio +aeronautics and space communication satellites +television telecommunications news, international news, and satellites +nationalism and communication facsimile International Telecommunication Union +duplicating technologies news, and telephone cables UNESCO LB - 7670 PB - Place de Fontenoy PY - 1968 SP - 51-57 ST - Telecommunication and the transmission of news T2 - Communication in the Space Age: The use of satellites by the mass media TI - Telecommunication and the transmission of news ID - 2136 ER - TY - CHAP AB - Read, an art critic, wrote in 1957 that the “changes during the first half of this century of ours have been bewildering, and if we go back another half-century we can say that within a hundred years -- a short time in the history of civilization -- there has occurred a revolution so fundamental that we must search many past centuries for a parallel. Possibly the only comparable change is the one that took place between the Old and the New Stone Age, when an organic animal art was replaced by an abstract geometrical art.” Read also said that some of the Impressionist painters “read scientific treatises on color harmony and tried to incorporate such scientific knowledge in their painting methods.” See this article filed under "De Forrest, Lee." AU - Read, Herbert CY - Washington, D.C. KW - photography preservation communication revolution history, and new media history history +photography and visual communication art history, break with painting color, and Impressionism color, and painting and science communication revolution art, abstract critics color LB - 1860 PB - Public Affairs Press PY - 1957 SP - 77-79 ST - New Realms of Art T2 - New Frontiers of Knowledge: A Symposium by Distinguished Writers, Notable Scholars & Public Figures TI - New Realms of Art ID - 1582 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Benjamine M. Compaine, ed. AB - Williams argues for the need to reexamine the Miami Herald and Red Lion cases, which are two legal decisions that form the foundation of contemporary case law relating to print and broadcast media. The printing press and the revolution that followed its invention helped to create the basis for the "press clause" of the First Amendment. The Gutenberg revolution is giving way, the author believes, to forms of mass communication that have different foundations. Lines are blurring between print and broadcast media, and with modern corporate communicators that are not usually considered part of the media business (e.g., large corporations that use of computerized mailing lists). AU - Read, William H. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers communication revolution journalism freedom law news and journalism newspapers news media information technology Information Age +computers and the Internet First Amendment media convergence information technology, and business communication revolution +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and electronic media information processing law, and new media First Amendment, and Miami Herald case First Amendment, and Red Lion case LB - 4740 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - Ballinger Publishing Company PY - 1984 SP - 299-318 ST - The First Amendment Meets the Second Revolution T2 - Understanding New Media: Trends and Issues in Electronic Distribution of Information TI - The First Amendment Meets the Second Revolution ID - 1861 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ithiel de Sola Pool, ed. AB - This essay reviews a substantial amount of British research on how telephone contact is different from more traditional face-to-face contact. First, the telephone transcends distance. Second, it can transmit only audio information. The work is accompanied with a three-age bibliography. AU - Reid, A. A. L. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - non-USA Great Britain +telephones Great Britain, and telephones bibliographies, and telephones +bibliographies LB - 10310 PB - MIT Press PY - 1977 SP - 386-414 ST - Comparing Telephone With Face-to-Face Contact T2 - The Social Impact of the Telephone TI - Comparing Telephone With Face-to-Face Contact ID - 2396 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AU - Renfro, William L. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home labor home entertainment home, and new media home office computers and the Internet computers, personal computers office, and information technology home, and information technology information technology +computers and the Internet information technology, and home information technology, and office personal computers computers, personal office, and new media home, and office home, and computers LB - 3280 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 209-15 ST - Second Thoughts on Moving the Office Home T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Second Thoughts on Moving the Office Home ID - 1719 ER - TY - CHAP AB - The Reverend Bruce Ritter, President and founder of Covenant House, an international child care agency that helped runaways and operated centers in the United States, Canada, and Guatemala, believed all forms of sexually explicit materials degraded the “very nature of human sexuality.” For Ritter, a member of the Meese Commission in 1985 and 1986, sexual privacy, no less than personal liberty, was a God-given right, fundamental to human dignity and citizenship; in his opinion, pornography’s invasion of this privacy was profoundly subversive. Ritter’s emphasis on privacy sadly assumed a new dimension a few years later when he was forced to leave Covenant House following a scandal that in involved charges that he had had homosexual relationships with some of the young men under his care. AU - Ritter, Bruce CY - Nashville, TN KW - entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) post office government hearings entertainment, home magnetic recording photography women, and new media social science research values archives sexuality home entertainment government magnetic tape First Amendment media effects crime color freedom values religion censorship and ratings law cable home home, and new media home Meese Commission reports primary sources hearings pornography reports reports, Messe Commission +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography law, and pornography pornography, and law pornography, and new media home entertainment revolution pornography, and home home, and pornography +television postal service television, and cable cable television, and pornography +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and television television, and satellites +computers computers, and pornography pornography, and computers VCRs VCRs, and pornography pornography, and VCRs magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines +photography and visual communication photography, and pornography pornography, and photography color, and pornography pornography, and color media effects media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects, pornography, defined children media effects, and children children, and pornography pornography, and children women women, and pornography pornography, and women religion, and pornography pornography, and religion personal computers personal computers, and pornography primary sources primary sources, Maryland primary sources, College Park primary sources, Meese Commission media effects, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research First Amendment, and Meese Commission First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and legal pornography, and First Amendment pornography, and opponents pornography, and harmful effects crime, and pornography pornography, and crime magazines satellites children, and media LB - 22950 PB - Rutledge Hill Press PY - 1986 SP - 509-17 ST - Statement of Father Bruce Ritter T2 - Final Report of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Statement of Father Bruce Ritter ID - 1020 ER - TY - CHAP AB - The Reverend Bruce Ritter, President and founder of Covenant House, an international child care agency that helped runaways and operated centers in the United States, Canada, and Guatemala, believed all forms of sexually explicit materials degraded the “very nature of human sexuality.” For Ritter, a member of the Meese Commission in 1985 and 1986, sexual privacy, no less than personal liberty, was a God-given right, fundamental to human dignity and citizenship; in his opinion, pornography’s invasion of this privacy was profoundly subversive. Ritter’s emphasis on privacy sadly assumed a new dimension a few years later when he was forced to leave Covenant House following a scandal that in involved charges that he had had homosexual relationships with some of the young men under his care. AU - Ritter, Bruce CY - Nashville, TN KW - entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) surveillance post office government hearings entertainment, home magnetic recording photography women, and new media social science research values privacy archives sexuality home entertainment government magnetic tape First Amendment media effects crime color freedom values religion censorship and ratings law cable home home, and new media home Meese Commission reports primary sources hearings pornography reports reports, Messe Commission +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography law, and pornography pornography, and law pornography, and new media home entertainment revolution pornography, and home home, and pornography +television +postal service television, and cable cable television, and pornography +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and television television, and satellites +computers computers, and pornography pornography, and computers VCRs VCRs, and pornography pornography, and VCRs magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines +photography and visual communication photography, and pornography pornography, and photography color, and pornography pornography, and color media effects media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects pornography, defined children media effects, and children children, and pornography pornography, and children women women, and pornography pornography, and women religion, and pornography pornography, and religion personal computers personal computers, and pornography primary sources primary sources, Maryland primary sources, College Park primary sources, Meese Commission media effects, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research First Amendment, and Meese Commission First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and legal pornography, and First Amendment pornography, and opponents pornography, and harmful effects crime, and pornography pornography, and crime privacy, and pornography pornography, and privacy magazines satellites children, and media LB - 22960 PB - Rutledge Hill Press PY - 1986 SP - 518-23 ST - Pornography and Privacy T2 - Final Report of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Pornography and Privacy ID - 1021 ER - TY - CHAP AB - The Reverend Bruce Ritter, President and founder of Covenant House, an international child care agency that helped runaways and operated centers in the United States, Canada, and Guatemala, believed all forms of sexually explicit materials degraded the “very nature of human sexuality.” For Ritter, a member of the Meese Commission in 1985 and 1986, sexual privacy, no less than personal liberty, was a God-given right, fundamental to human dignity and citizenship; in his opinion, pornography’s invasion of this privacy was profoundly subversive. Ritter’s emphasis on privacy sadly assumed a new dimension a few years later when he was forced to leave Covenant House following a scandal that in involved charges that he had had homosexual relationships with some of the young men under his care. AU - Ritter, Bruce CY - Nashville, TN KW - entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) surveillance post office government hearings entertainment, home magnetic recording photography women, and new media social science research values privacy archives sexuality home entertainment government magnetic tape First Amendment media effects crime color freedom values religion censorship and ratings law cable home home, and new media home Meese Commission reports primary sources hearings pornography reports reports, Messe Commission motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography law, and pornography pornography, and law pornography, and new media home entertainment revolution pornography, and home home, and pornography television postal service television, and cable cable television, and pornography +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and television television, and satellites computers computers, and pornography pornography, and computers VCRs VCRs, and pornography pornography, and VCRs magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and pornography pornography, and photography color, and pornography pornography, and color media effects media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects pornography, defined children media effects, and children children, and pornography pornography, and children women women, and pornography pornography, and women religion, and pornography pornography, and religion personal computers personal computers, and pornography primary sources primary sources, Maryland primary sources, College Park primary sources, Meese Commission media effects, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research First Amendment, and Meese Commission First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and legal pornography, and First Amendment pornography, and opponents pornography, and harmful effects crime, and pornography pornography, and crime privacy, and pornography pornography, and privacy magazines satellites children, and media LB - 22970 PB - Rutledge Hill Press PY - 1986 SP - 523-34 ST - Nonviolent Sexually Explicit Material and Sexual Violence T2 - Final Report of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Nonviolent Sexually Explicit Material and Sexual Violence ID - 1022 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - The author reviews from an American perspective what was known in 1977 about electronic media and unemployment. He was guardedly optimistic about the future. AU - Robinson, Arthur L. CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution microelectronics information technology +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology automation information technology, and industry microelectronics revolution microelectronics revolution, and unemployment electronic media labor labor, and microelectronics labor, and computers LB - 2970 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 318-33 ST - Electronics and Employment: Displacement Effects T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - Electronics and Employment: Displacement Effects ID - 1689 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Joel A. Tarr, ed. AB - This paper discusses efforts by electrical engineers to promote "superpower" beginning during World War I, measured against Thorstein Veblen's ideas about centralized national planning to direct technology. This paper was given at a conference at Seven Spring Mountain Resort, Champion, PA, Dec. 1-4, 1976. AU - Rockefeller, Terry Kay CY - San Francisco KW - technology nationalism technology and society +electricity +nationalism and communication Veblen, Thorstein engineering, electrical electricity, and national planning technology assessment engineering LB - 3860 PB - San Francisco Press, Inc. PY - 1977 SP - 191-216 ST - The Failure of Planning for Electrical Power Supply: The Case of the Electrical Engineers and 'Superpower,' 1915-1924 T2 - Retrospective Technology Assessment -- 1976 TI - The Failure of Planning for Electrical Power Supply: The Case of the Electrical Engineers and 'Superpower,' 1915-1924 ID - 1774 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Frank Kessler and Nanna Verhoeff, eds. AB - This essay discusses Heinrich Ernemann's home movie system, first introducedin Germany in 1903. The system used 17.5 mm film and Ernemann's small camera was called the Kino. The author uses catalogues to discuss the kinds of films that were available for home viewing. Between 1903 and 1908, about 300 films were offered under the following categories: humor, historical films, military films, technical films, sports, streets and cities, animals and ethnography, children's life, diverse, and magic. The author discusses the catalogues and the distribution strategies used for these home movies. AU - Roepke, Martina CY - Eastleigh, UK KW - magic home home home and new media home, and motion pictures motion pictures, and home censorship and ratings film film, and 17.5 mm home, and home movies non-USA Germany non-USA, and motion pictures non-USA, and home movies Germany, and home movies Germany, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Germany motion pictures, and magic magic, and motion pictures children and media children, and home movies children, and German home movies children motion pictures LB - 41770 PB - John Libbey Publishing PY - 2007 SP - 275-82 ST - Bringing movies into the home: distribution strategies for 17.5 mm film (1903-08) T2 - Networks of Entertainment: Early Film Distribution, 1895-1915 TI - Bringing movies into the home: distribution strategies for 17.5 mm film (1903-08) ID - 4275 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David D. Van Tassel and Michael G. Hall, eds. AB - Rosenberg argued that there are four interactions between science and social thought in the United States. "First, science lent American social thought a vocabulary and a supply of images. It served as a source of metaphor and, like figures borrowed from other areas, the similes of science variously suggested, explained, justified, even helped dictate social categories and values. But the role of science in social thought has been emotional as well as expository. This is the second relationship ... is, essentially, the changing position of science in the hierarchy of American values. As we shall see, one of the most important developments in the relationship between science and American social thought has been the increasing emotional relevance of science, its growing role as an absolute able to justify and motivate individual action.” Rosenberg saw “both of these relationships are pervasive, limited perhaps by class and region but otherwise widespread. Both are flexible as well, dependent for their particular configuration upon social needs and consequent intellectual and emotional manipulations. A third relationship between science and American society is much less familiar, but perhaps easier to describe in that it is more rigid and clearly structured. This is the role in social thought of the professional scientist’s values and attitudes. As is true in any work-defined reference group--and especially the professions--the scientist shares certain values and concepts with his disciplinary peers. These are different from those entertained by society at large, indeed sufficiently different and sufficiently concrete so as to have served as a uniquely creative force in the development of modern industrial society. A fourth and final relationship between science and American social thought can, in a sense, be seen as the converse of the third. That is, not the effect of the scientific community’s values in bringing an element of diversity and change to society, but that of society’s attitudes and demands on the scientist’s work and thought.” AU - Rosenberg, Charles E. CY - Homewood, IL KW - R & D science research and development science and society research and development, and government support scientific research LB - 10390 PB - Dorsey Press PY - 1966 SP - 136-62 ST - Science and American Social Thought T2 - Science and Society in the U.S TI - Science and American Social Thought ID - 2403 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - In contrast to the optimism of Yoneji Masuda (see ibid., 620-34), the authors here delved into the British Industrial Revolution from 1780 to 1830, and concluded that “we are not witnessing a social revolution of equivalent magnitude, because the new information technology is not yet bringing about a new way of living.” This essay was originally published in 1981. AU - Rosenbrock, Howard, et al. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - communication revolution community democracy communication revolution, and second industrial revolution non-USA Information Age Great Britain general studies communication revolution, and myth of myth Industrial Revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution Great Britain, and Industrial Revolution information age information age, and critics of critics, and information age democracy and media critics LB - 1150 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 635-47 ST - A New Industrial Revolution? T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - A New Industrial Revolution? ID - 1511 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Mick Eaton, ed. AB - New technology made possible the cinéma-vérité movement that sought to capture real life. Jean Rouch produced such films as The Manic Priests (Les Maitres Fous, 1955), about African religious practices; I, a Black (Moi, un Noir, 1958), about impoverished workers on the Ivory Coast; and Chronicle of a Summer (Chronique d’un Été, 1961). Rouch, who used a 16mm camera for his research in Niger, worked with French designer André Coutant to build a light-weight sound camera that fitted on one’s shoulder. AU - Rouch, Jean CY - London KW - 16mm +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and anthropology motion pictures, and 16mm film anthropology, and 16mm film 16mm film, and anthropology 16mm film LB - 18130 PB - British Film Institute PY - 1979 ST - The Camera and Man (Extract) T2 - Anthropology -- Reality -- Cinema: The Films of Jean Rouch TI - The Camera and Man (Extract) VL - 61-62 ID - 722 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Levin, G. Roy AB - French documentary filmmaker Jean Rouch discusses his work after World War II in Africa. He talks about the "essential revolution" (133) brought by 16mm cameras which were cheaper and more mobile. They gave filmmakers greater ability to capture real-life activities. AU - Rouch, Jean CY - Garden City, N. Y. KW - underground cinema Rouch, Jean 16mm motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and anthropology motion pictures, and 16mm film anthropology, and 16mm film 16mm film, and anthropology underground media underground films motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and history of motion pictures, and avant-garde films underground films, and motion pictures 16mm 16mm, and avant-garde films documentaries motion pictures, and documentaries television videotape magnetic recording magnetic recording, and documentaries cinéma vérité cameras cameras, 16mm 16mm cameras documentary films, and 16mm motion pictures, and 16mm motion pictures, and documentaries 16mm film LB - 34670 PB - Doubleday & Company, Inc. PY - 1971 SP - 131-45 ST - [Interview, Dec. 17, 1960] T2 - Documentary Explorations: 15 Interviews with Film-Makers TI - [Interview, Dec. 17, 1960] ID - 3105 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - At the time of this piece, the authors worked with RCA Laboratories. The article is somewhat technical and filled with jargon, but understandable with help of the Glossary at the end of this volume. AU - Russo, Paul M., Chih-Chung Wang, Philip K. Baltzer, and Joseph A. Weisbecker CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers microprocessing communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution computers microelectronics information technology +computers and the Internet microprocessors microelectronics revolution microcomputers information technology, and consumers computers, and microprocessors microprocessors, and consumers LB - 2840 PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 130-37 ST - Microprocessors in Consumer Products T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - Microprocessors in Consumer Products ID - 1676 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This 1978 article looks at an experimental "unmanned" parts factory for aircraft in St. Louis, Missouri, and "argues that the acceleration of developments in microelectronics means that the completely automated manufacturing plant may not now be far off." The author, then director of the National Space Institute in Washington, D.C., believed that Japan was in the lead in this area. This article first appeared in Control Engineering (April,,1978). AU - Ruzic, Neil P. CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers nationalism communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution non-USA microelectronics +computers and the Internet Japan automation labor +nationalism and communication +aeronautics and space communication microelectronics revolution +artificial intelligence and biotechnology labor, and microelectronics nationalism, and microelectronics Japan, and microelectronics LB - 2870 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 165-73 ST - The Automated Factory T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - The Automated Factory ID - 1679 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - The author wrote Research on Automation (1968). Here he introduces six essays on automation, divided among those who are pessimistic about the process and those who are guardedly optimist. He gives an overview of this debate. AU - Sadler, Philip CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers microprocessing labor communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution office, and information technology microprocessors microelectronics information technology +computers and the Internet labor automation, and microelectronics revolution microelectronics revolution industry microprocessors, and industry capitalism +artificial intelligence and biotechnology automation labor, and microelectronics office, and microelectronics office, and computers labor, and computers critics office LB - 2940 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 290-96 ST - Welcome Back to the 'Automation' Debate T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - Welcome Back to the 'Automation' Debate ID - 1686 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Renate Mayntz and Thomas P. Hughes, eds. AB - Salsbury writes that when railroads came on the American scene in the 1830s, they “represented a sharp break with the past.” They were much larger than previous enterprises, and unlike the canal and turnpike system, they were “integrated enterprises.” They “were the first large scale technical system which arose in America and as such they shaped the way Americans organized technology and had a profound impact on large scale business. In defining the way in which the United States responded to large-scale technical systems railroads may have their most significant contribution to America’s economic growth. This is a contribution that cannot be easily measured.” AU - Salsbury, Stephen CY - Bolder, CO; and Frankfurt am Main KW - nationalism technical systems preservation labor history, and new media history office office, and new media office history +transportation +nationalism and communication railroads technical systems, large-scale history, break with capitalism infrastructure nationalism, and railroads LB - 2320 PB - Westview Press; and Campus Verlag PY - 1988 SP - 37-68 ST - The Emergence of an Early Large-Scale Technical System: The American Railroad Network T2 - The Development of Large Technical Systems TI - The Emergence of an Early Large-Scale Technical System: The American Railroad Network ID - 1625 ER - TY - CHAP AB - This lengthy piece in the 1970 Report of the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography, has a great deal of information on erotica in motion pictures, magazines, and other media. Sampson apparently uses and accepts the Playboy series on "Sex in the Cinema" by Arthur Knight and Hollis Alpert. Pages 5-69 (Part I) deal with Motion Pictures; pages 177-203 (Part IV) deal with "'Under the Counter' or 'Hard-Core Pornography'." AU - Sampson, John J. CY - Washington, D. C. KW - audiences self-regulation Production Code motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) photography values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) sexuality pornography sexuality news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers values religion law censorship and ratings censorship government Commission on Obscenity and Pornography +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and history of sex nudity motion pictures, and nudity censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and exploitation circuit pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and history of theaters motion pictures, and porn theaters Production Code, and exploitation circuit government, and pornography, 16mm 16mm film, and pornography pornography, and l6mm film 8mm 8mm film, and pornography pornography, and 8mm film magazines magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines +photography and visual communication photography, and pornography pornography, and photography 16mm 16mm film LB - 16430 PB - U. S. Government Printing Office SP - 3-208 ST - Commercial Traffic in Sexually Oriented Materials: In the United States (1969-1970) T2 - Technical Report of The Commission on Obscenity and Pornography: Volume III TI - Commercial Traffic in Sexually Oriented Materials: In the United States (1969-1970) ID - 595 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Manuel Castells, ed. AB - Silicon Valley symbolizes both the explosion in microelectronics and the social problems caused by economic growth in this area. Is this type of development typical of the microelectronics industry, the author asked? She then attempts to answer the question in a comparative context. The first part of the chapter “is a detailed examination of the interactions between the evolution of the semiconductor industry and the development of the region and its urban geography. Parallels with the transformation of the Route 128 region in Massachusetts -- the East Coast counterpart of Silicon Valley -- are then highlighted in the second section. Not only did analogous circumstances condition the rapid postwar growth of these two regions, but their subsequent social and urban evolutions show striking similarities. The concluding section argues that the urban problems of Silicon Valley and Route 128 are rooted in the social structure generated by science-based industry.” Although duplication of these two regions is unlikely, the history of their development should help planners in other communities hoping to attract high-tech industries to anticipate future problems. AU - Saxenian, Annalee CY - Beverly Hills, CA KW - R & D nationalism labor research and development war communication revolution communication revolution, and second industrial revolution war office office, and information technology information technology +nationalism and communication +military communication urban studies information technology,and office space (spatial) microelectronics communication revolution second industrial revolution geography office, and new media semiconductors military-industrial complex LB - 2130 PB - Sage Publications PY - 1985 SP - 81-105 ST - Silicon Valley and Route 128: Regional Prototypes or Historic Exceptions? T2 - High Technology, Space, and Society TI - Silicon Valley and Route 128: Regional Prototypes or Historic Exceptions? ID - 1609 ER - TY - CHAP AB - A law professor at the University of Michigan, Schauer had written a book for legislators, judges, and prosecuting attorneys entitled The Law of Obscenity (1976). Although earlier in his career he had defended the producers of the movie Deep Throat, he was considered a middle-of-the-roader on the Meese Commission in 1985-86. He wrote the “Overview and Analysis” section of the Final Report. In this Statement, Schauer expressed the hope that the Commission's Final Report (1986) would “ be read rather than summarized, ... be thought about rather than used as rallying cry or flag of battle, and ... be as much the beginning of serious discussion and debate rather than the end of it.” AU - Schauer, Frederick CY - Nashville, TN KW - entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) surveillance post office government hearings entertainment, home magnetic recording photography women, and new media values social science research religion law, and privacy privacy primary sources sexuality home entertainment government magnetic tape First Amendment media effects crime color freedom values religion censorship and ratings law cable home home, and new media home Meese Commission reports primary sources hearings pornography reports reports, Messe Commission motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography law, and pornography pornography, and law pornography, and new media home entertainment revolution pornography, and home home, and pornography television +postal service television, and cable cable television, and pornography aeronautics and space communication satellites, and television television, and satellites computers computers, and pornography pornography, and computers VCRs VCRs, and pornography pornography, and VCRs magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and pornography pornography, and photography color, and pornography pornography, and color media effects media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects pornography, defined children media effects, and children children, and pornography pornography, and children women women, and pornography pornography, and women religion, and pornography pornography, and religion personal computers personal computers, and pornography primary sources primary sources, Maryland primary sources, College Park primary sources, Meese Commission media effects, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research First Amendment, and Meese Commission First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and legal pornography, and First Amendment pornography, and opponents pornography, and harmful effects crime, and pornography pornography, and crime privacy, and pornography pornography, and privacy magazines satellites children, and media LB - 22980 PB - Rutledge Hill Press PY - 1986 SP - 534-35 ST - Personal Statement of Commissioner Frederick Schauer T2 - Final Report of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Personal Statement of Commissioner Frederick Schauer ID - 1023 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Lisa Gitelman and Geoffrey B. Pingree, eds. AB - "During the middle decades of the nineteenth century," Schiavo writes, "the meaning of the stereoscope and stereo-viewing changed dramatically. Initially designed in 1838 to demonstrate a theory of vision, the stereoscope acquired new interpretations when it was commercialized during the 1850s and 1860s. Transforming the stereoscope into a popular amusement, photographers, retailers, and those in the optical trades not only promoted a vernacular form, the 'parlor stereoscope,' but also advanced a more positivist theory of vision that both relied upon and further reinforced the assumption that the subjects of sight were stable and that observation of those subjects led to accurate judgments. The masterful visual encounter attributed to the three-dimensional stereoscopic view, then, was not due to the medium's structure, but was rather the result of the inscription the instrument underwent as it became a consumer good." (113-14) Schiavo's essay appears in a volume that is part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. This volume offers a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. These ten essays examine media that were new in the eighteenth, nineteenth, and early twentieth centuries. The expore "momemts of transition when each new medium was not yet fully defined, its significance in flux...." They attempt to put these media into their "specific material and historical environment" and explain the "ways in which habits and structures of communication are naturalized or normalized." (viii) AU - Schiavo, Laura Burd CY - Cambridge, MA KW - visual communication photography stereoscope visual culture advertising and public relations advertising, and stereoscope stereoscope, and advertising 3-D home and new media capitalism advertising home LB - 34390 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 113-37 ST - Frm Phantom Image to Perfect Vision: Physiological Optics, Commercial Photography, and the Popularization of the Stereoscope T2 - New Media, 1740-1915 TI - Frm Phantom Image to Perfect Vision: Physiological Optics, Commercial Photography, and the Popularization of the Stereoscope ID - 3077 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - UNESCO AB - Schramm compares space communication to the automobile. It does not appear to be a fundamentally new form of communication like written language, the printing press, or the electronic computer. Rather, it expands and speeds up communication much the way the automobile speeded transportation and extended a means of travel to more people. He speculates about space broadcasting directly into the home , that people will be able to call directly to almost any place on earth, and that facsimile transmissions will make possible mail delivery virtually anywhere in a matter of minutes. He notes that computers have already been linked across the United States in transmitting data and that satellite communication is likely to make possible a “networks of computers to assemble and process worldwide information....” He also comments on the falling cost of satellites communication and the diminishing size of such technology. Schramm foresaw several possible social effects. They included: 1) a reorganization of the communication industry; 2) rapid communication being used more and more as a substitute for travel; 3) as communication became international, time difference would be more troubling (obviously he did anticipate the VCR); 4) the increased availability of information would put pressure on rapid decision making, which might be detrimental to diplomacy; 5) new kinds of organizations would be needed, and organizations would be able to extend their control over wider areas. Schramm believe satellite communication would centralize decision making, and that decision-making centers “would be highly dependent on the quality and quantity of communication to and from their control points, and vulnerable to any defection in the flow.” 6) People would have a generally higher level of knowledge that before space communication. 7) The nature of libraries would change. “They will become information centres, rather than the libraries we have traditionally know.” 8) The sense of remoteness and isolation will diminish. Schramm also anticipated a number of potential long-range problems. These included 1) the allocation of frequencies; 2) making equipment and standards compatible; 3) the effect on local broadcasting; 4) difficulties involving education and development, many of which would involve language differences. 5) Finally, Schramm warned about the possible effects of satellite broadcasting on national sovereignty. Here is argument is similar to more recent speculation about the impact of the Internet and other new media on nationalism. This piece appears in a volume published by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). AU - Schramm, Wilbur CY - Paris KW - entertainment computers nationalism entertainment, home journalism archives home entertainment news and journalism non-USA home, and new media home space communication geography networks libraries libraries, and information storage +aeronautics and space communication satellites Schramm, Wilbur space communication, and historical significance facsimile networks, and computers +computers and the Internet space communication, and travel +nationalism and communication +information storage space communication, and libraries space (spatial) home, and satellites news, and satellites nationalism, and satellites news rocketry LB - 7690 PB - Place de Fontenoy PY - 1968 SP - 11-29 ST - Some Possible Social Effects of Space Communication T2 - Communication in the Space Age: The use of satellites by the mass media TI - Some Possible Social Effects of Space Communication ID - 2138 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - James Curran and Michael Gurevitch, eds. AB - This essay considers the strengths and weaknesses of three qualitative approaches to research: political economy, media sociology, and cultural studies. AU - Schudson, Michael CY - London KW - journalism news and journalism news +books, periodicals, newspapers +television news, bias political economy cultural studies culture cultural imperialism LB - 10510 PB - Arnold PY - 1996 SP - 141-51 ST - The Sociology of News Production Revisited T2 - Mass Media and Society TI - The Sociology of News Production Revisited ID - 2415 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - Schudson writes that "my premise is that most popular accounts of how the digital media can enhance democracy are rooted in the same Progressive Era vision of citizenship that gave rise to te initiative and referendum, the direct election of senators, nonpartisan municipal elections, and the voter information guides that were first mandated in the 1910s and 1920s. The Progressive Era concept of democracy is centered on information. If information can be more complete, more widely disseminated, more easily tapped into by citizens at large, then democracy can flourish. This is all very well if information is at the heart of mass democracy. But it isn't. Whethere digital media will make democracy easieror harder to practice will depend on what visions and versions of democracy we have in mind. My fear is that our use of digital media may be imprisoned by a concept of democracy that is a century old and, even at its inception, was a narrow and partial understanding." (49) The volume in which Schudson's essay appears is part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectivs on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organzied by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." (ix-x) AU - Schudson, Michael CY - Cambridge, MA KW - information processing Information Age computers computers citizenship democracy freedom democracy, and new media critics digital media democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy citizenship, and new media information revolution information, and democracy democracy, and information Progressive Era, and information democracy, and Progressive Era Progressive Era, and democracy computers and the Internet computers, and democracy democracy, and computers Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet Internet LB - 34160 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 49-59 ST - Click Here for Democracy: A History and Critique of an Information-Based Model of Citizenship T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - Click Here for Democracy: A History and Critique of an Information-Based Model of Citizenship ID - 3054 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - Schuler notes that "cyberpundits, the digerati" expect that the Internet of the future will be "immensely democratic" and may even create a society were there is no need for government. He calls such speculation "dangerously simplistic. Certainly there is potential for wider democratic participation using the new medium. For the first time in human history, the possibility exists to establish a communication network that spans the globe, is affordable, and is open to all comers and points of view: in short, a democratic communication infrastructure. Unfortunately, the communication infrastructure of the future may turn out to be almost entirely broadcast, where the few (mostly governments and large corporations) will act as gatekeepers for the many, where elites can speak and the rest can only listen." (69) The volume in which Schuler's chapter appears is part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectives on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organized by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." AU - Schuler, Douglas CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers computers corporations global communication democracy democracy, and new media computers and the Internet democracy, and computers computers, and democracy Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet critics digital media democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy capitalism gatekeeping globalization media conglomerates Internet corporations media LB - 34180 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 69-84 ST - Reports of the Close Relationship between Democracy and the Internet May Have Been Exaggerated T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - Reports of the Close Relationship between Democracy and the Internet May Have Been Exaggerated ID - 3056 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Merritt Roe Smith and Leo Marx, eds. AB - Scranton argues against "deterministic master narratives and in favor of more variegated contextual accounts that recognize the complexity and indeterminacy of historical processes. He maintains that American political-economic hegemony and American history are currently in disarray. The former, governed by visions of infinite progress through technology, reached its apogee in the post-World War II period only to erode in the face of both increasing foreign competition and national traumas such as the Vietnam War. The latter, doubtless influenced by developments in the first arena, has resulted in the ghettoization of history as scholars with 'incommensurable approaches carve out fiefdoms in the imaginary terrain of subdisciplines.' As a way of reconfiguring the discipline," the author calls for historians to set "totalizing determinism aside" in favor of studying "local determinations" in which technology is viewed as part of a larger socio-economic process. Scranton's postmodernism contrasts with essays in the anthology by Thomas Hughes and Robert Heilbroner. AU - Scranton, Philip CY - Cambridge, MA KW - technology nationalism values preservation history, and new media progress history technology and society history, and technological determinism Hughes, Thomas Heilbroner, Robert progress +nationalism and communication history, and progress progress, and Vietnam postmodernism technological determinism LB - 4700 PB - MIT Press PY - 1994 SP - 143-68 ST - Determinism and Indeterminacy in the History of Technology T2 - Does Technology Drive History? The Dilemma of Technological Determinism TI - Determinism and Indeterminacy in the History of Technology ID - 1857 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Stephen H. Cutliffe and Terry S. Reynolds, eds. AU - Seely, Bruce CY - Chicago KW - R & D research and development war military communication war science general studies engineering research and development research and development, and universities scientific research and government support research and development, and government support military-university complex military-industrial complex LB - 1180 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1997 SP - 345-87 ST - Research, Engineering, and Science in American Engineering Colleges: 1900-1960 T2 - Technology & American History: A Historical Anthology from Technology & Culture TI - Research, Engineering, and Science in American Engineering Colleges: 1900-1960 ID - 1514 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Joseph J. Corn, ed. AB - Segal writes that “Technological utopianism derived from the belief in technology -- conceived as more than tools and machines alone -- as the means of achieving a ‘perfect’ society in the near future. Such a society, moreover, would not only be the culmination of the introduction of new tools and machines; it would also be modeled on those tools and machines in its institutions, values, and culture. “Between 1883 and 1933, twenty-five individuals published works envisioning the United States as a technological utopia. The visions differed only in minor details and may safely be treated as one collective vision, rather like a Weberian ideal type,” he concludes. This essay contains good references to utopian works between 1880 and 1930. AU - Segal, Howard P. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - technology technology and society values values +future and science fiction values utopianism general studies technology, and utopia future progress utopianism, and technological (1883-1933) values, and technology critics technological determinism LB - 1200 PB - MIT Press PY - 1986 SP - 119-36 ST - The Technological Utopians T2 - Imagining Tomorrow: History, Technology, and the American Future TI - The Technological Utopians ID - 1516 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - A harsh critic of microelectronic technology, the author predicted in this paper that "anyone over fifty years is unlikely ever to work again." Trade unions will oppose this new technology especially if the government's response to it is unsatisfactory. This paper was given at a conference in London in November 1978. The author at the time of this paper was Director of Research for the Association of Scientific, Technical and Managerial Staffs, a British white-collar union. AU - Sherman, Barry CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution non-USA microelectronics Great Britain +computers and the Internet labor automation microelectronics revolution microelectronics revolution and unemployment Great Britain, and microelectronics and unemployment labor, and microelectronics critics LB - 3010 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 367-72 ST - Unemployment and Technology: A Trade Union View T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - Unemployment and Technology: A Trade Union View ID - 1693 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - James W. Carey, ed. AU - Silverstone, Roger CY - Newbury Park, CA KW - television, and values preservation history, and new media values history +television television, and culture myth television, and myth history, and television values, and television LB - 7340 PB - Sage Publications PY - 1988 SP - 20-48 ST - Television Myth and Culture T2 - Media, Myths, and Narratives TI - Television Myth and Culture ID - 2104 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - Simon is optimistic about the impact of computers on society, and sees a leisure society emerging. Artificial intelligence superior to that of humans will do much of the work. This piece originally appeared in Science, Vol. 195 (March 1977). See Joe Weizenbaum's counter to Simon's position in ibid., and Datamation (Nov. 15, 1978). AU - Simon, Herbert A. CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution +future and science fiction community democracy communication revolution, and second industrial revolution microelectronics +computers and the Internet computers, and society future microelectronics revolution +artificial intelligence and biotechnology computers, and leisure postindustrial society second industrial revolution communication revolution automation Weizenbaum, Joseph Bell, Daniel democracy and media computers critics labor LB - 3050 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 419-33 ST - What Computers Mean for Man and Society T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - What Computers Mean for Man and Society ID - 1697 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Joel A. Tarr, ed. AB - This introductory statement came from a person then with the Office of Technology Assessment, which had been created only a few years earlier by Congress. This essay was part of a conference held at Seven Springs Moutain Resort, Champion, PA, Dec. 1-4, 1976. AU - Simone, Daniel De CY - San Francisco KW - technology Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) values technology and society OTA values, and technology LB - 3820 PB - San Francisco Press, Inc. PY - 1977 SP - 1-4 ST - Technology Assessment: Where We Have Been T2 - Retrospective Technology Assessment -- 1976 TI - Technology Assessment: Where We Have Been ID - 1770 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - America, Film Council of AB - This essay is part of a work that appeared in 1954 extolling the virtues of 16mm cameras and related equipment. AU - Simonson, Harry CY - Des Plaines, IL KW - libraries nationalism Film Council of America magnetic recording World War II values preservation media effects materials materials magnetic tape cinema motion pictures celluloid film education community democracy values religion war 16mm government history +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and 16mm film 16mm film magnetic tape recording magnetic tape recording, video values, and society democracy, and media education, and 16mm film religion, and 16mm film 16mm film, and education 16mm film, and religion +nationalism and communication government, and 16mm film public libraries, and 16mm film 16mm film, and public libraries 16mm film, as paperback books +television television, and 16mm film history, and new media history, and 16mm film values, and 16mm film +sound recording sound recording, and magnetic tape World War II, and 16mm film 16mm film, and World War II 16mm film, and museums media effects, and 16mm films Film Council of America, values materials LB - 18080 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Film Council of America (Evanston, IL) PY - 1954 SP - 20-24 ST - Equipment T2 - Sixty Years of 16mm Film, 1923-1983: A Symposium TI - Equipment ID - 717 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Joel A. Tarr, ed. AB - This paper concludes that "without a continuation of government efforts in satellite communications, little progress will be made in further space technology integration, thus leaving undeveloped many satellite applications of potential value to the public." This paper was given at a conference at Seven Springs Mountain Resort, Champion, PA, Dec. 1-4, 1976. AU - Smith, Delbert D. CY - San Francisco KW - R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) nationalism research and development war war World War II space communication satellites research and development +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and communication Clarke, Arthur C. Intelsat NASA space technology integration research and development, and government support World War II, and space program World War II, and research and development +military communication +nationalism and communication rocketry LB - 3850 PB - San Francisco Press, Inc. PY - 1977 SP - 131-48 ST - Communication Satellites from Vision to Reality T2 - Retrospective Technology Assessment -- 1976 TI - Communication Satellites from Vision to Reality ID - 1773 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Merritt Roe Smith and Leo Marx, eds. AB - Smith attempts to explain why Americans have fused their personal and national identities with technology. At some level, the idea that technology will inevitably bring social progress is a myth, yet at another level, "the idea of technology as progress gained widespread currency 'precisely because it could be depicted as carving an uncontested, inevitable path.'" Smith argues that public faith in technology is connected to how media represent it. He compares two "landscapes of progress," one a Currier & Ives lithograph from 1868 and another a Leydenfrost drawing that was reproduced in Popular Mechanics in 1952. The former depicted "technological progress as an open-ended source of economic growth and cultural integration; the latter emphasized "innovation, novelty, and power in an unimaginable future" best captured in the phrase "What will they think of next?" Yet as Popular Mechanics celebrated this view of progress, atomic energy cast a cloud over the future. AU - Smith, Michael L. CY - Cambridge, MA KW - technology atomic power nationalism photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations +future and science fiction technological determinism progress +photography and visual communication +nationalism and communication progress advertising, and progress progress advertising progress, and advertising progress, and artists progress, and technological determinism technological determinism, and progress future atomic energy, and progress technology and society atomic energy values, and technology nationalism, and technology progress, and technology values LB - 4670 PB - MIT Press PY - 1994 SP - 37-52 ST - Recourse of Empire: Landscapes of Progress in Technological America T2 - Does Technology Drive History? The Dilemma of Technological Determinism TI - Recourse of Empire: Landscapes of Progress in Technological America ID - 1854 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Merritt Roe Smith and Leo Marx, eds. AB - Smith shows how deeply technological determinism is embedded in American culture. Its roots go back at least to the 1780s, and it grew rapidly in strength during the nineteenth century as American industry expanded and the United States emerged as a world power. Smith sees advertisers, artists, historians, and even critics of modern technological society contributing to the belief that technology is a driving force shaping society. AU - Smith, Merritt Roe CY - Cambridge, MA KW - technology nationalism photography advertising, and public relations technology and society propaganda public relations values preservation history, and new media history +nationalism and communication advertising technological determinism technological determinism, and artists technological determinism, and historians history, and technological determinism progress critics critics, and technological determinism Industrial Revolution +photography and visual communication LB - 4660 PB - MIT Press PY - 1994 SP - 1-35 ST - Technological Determinism in American Culture T2 - Does Technology Drive History? The Dilemma of Technological Determinism TI - Technological Determinism in American Culture ID - 1853 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Jacobs, Lewis AB - This essay appeared in a work, published in 1970, that was a collection of essays by directors and other film makers discussing such topics as the use of cameras, color, and sound. Solomon writes in this piece that "what is happening is not merely a change in technique but an essential transformation in the approach to visual expression." (92) Solomon also maintains that the moving camera gives the audience an enhanced "sense of participation." (93) This piece first appeared in Film Heritage (Winter 1965-66). AU - Solomon, Stanley J. CY - New York KW - technology corporations corporations motion pictures color cameras motion pictures, and cameras motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures photography technology and society materials materials cinema motion pictures celluloid non-USA motion pictures and popular culture photography and visual communication cameras, and motion pictures film Technicolor Eastman Kodak Cinemascope celluloid technology, and motion pictures motion pictures, and technology color, and Eastman Kodak color, and Technicolor technological determinism media literacy motion pictures, and media literacy media literacy, and motion pictures LB - 36640 PB - Farra, Straus & Giroux PY - 1970 SP - 92-102 ST - Modern Uses of the Moving Camera T2 - The Movies As Medium TI - Modern Uses of the Moving Camera ID - 3297 ER - TY - CHAP AB - Stam's article begins with this assumption: “Let us take as our point of departure something so obvious that it is often taken for granted, but something which in reality should astonish us: the fact that television news is pleasurable. No matter ... how ‘badly’ the newscasters or their presentations might offend our individual sensitivities or ideological predilections, watching the news is pleasurable.” AU - Stam, Robert CY - Los Angeles KW - journalism news and journalism news +television news, and television television, and news critics audiences, and television television, and audiences audiences LB - 7380 PB - American Film Institute PY - 1983 ST - Television News and Its Spectator T2 - Regarding Television: Critical Approaches-- An Anthology TI - Television News and Its Spectator ID - 2108 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - This article deals with how high-tech fabrics are transforming the construction industry. Translucent Teflon-coated weaves of fiberglass strands, for example, are reviving the construction of durable tents. This author once edited Technology Illustrated. This piece appeared first in Technology Review (Jan. 1987). AU - Stewart, Doug CY - Cambridge, MA KW - materials materials materials revolution construction industry fiberglass LB - 2690 PB - MIT Press PY - 1988 SP - 230-37 ST - Skylines of Fabric T2 - The Materials Revolution: Superconductors, New Materials, and the Japanese Challenge TI - Skylines of Fabric ID - 1661 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Robert Brent Toplin, ed. AB - This book is devoted to assessing the motion pictures of Oliver Stone. Here Stone reponds to critics who say that he exploits violence and distorts history. AU - Stone, Oliver CY - Lawrence, KS KW - history Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality Nixon, Richard advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex presidents, and new media censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising preservation sexuality Nixon administration motion pictures media effects media violence history, and new media law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA CARA non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Natural Born Killers motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures nudity, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising language motion pictures, and language nudity CARA, and nudity motion pictures, and nudity Stone, Oliver public relations, and Oliver Stone Stone, Oliver, and public relations history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history history, and Oliver Stone Stone, Oliver, and history Stone, Oliver, and Salvador Stone, Oliver, and Born on the Fourth of July JFK (1991) Nixon (1995) Stone, Oliver, and JFK (1991) Stone, Oliver, and Nixon (1995) motion pictures, and Vietnam motion pictures, and John F. Kennedy motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and Richard Nixon (1995) Stone, Oliver, and Heaven and Earth Stone, Oliver, and Wall Street history LB - 26360 PB - University Press of Kansas PY - 2000 SP - 217-98 ST - Stone Responds: On Seven Films T2 - Oliver Stone's USA: Film, History, and Controversy TI - Stone Responds: On Seven Films ID - 1219 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Lynn Spigel and Michael Curtin, eds. AB - Streeter examines parallels between the discourse used in promoting cable during the late 1960s and early 1970s with contemporary talk of an information superhighway. He examines what he calls “‘the discourse of the new technologies,’ a pattern of talk common in the policymaking arena in the late 1960s and early 1970s and remarkably similar to much of the recent talk about the information superhighway. This discourse flowed from an odd alliance of groups: 1960s media activists, traditional liberal groups, industry lobbyists, and Republican technocrats all made their contributions. As a result, government television policy was subtle transformed, and beginning in 1970, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) reversed its attitude towards cable, turning the industry from a regulatory outcast into a protected element of the media system.” AU - Streeter, Thomas CY - New York and London KW - computers nationalism Federal Communications Commission (FCC) censorship and ratings Internet regulation community democracy Information age +television democracy and media cable television television, and cable metaphors information superhighway FCC networks +nationalism and communication cable nationalism, and cable television democracy, and cable television Internet, and cable television computers and the Internet LB - 7390 PB - Routledge PY - 1997 SP - 221-42 ST - Blue Skies and Strange Bedfellows: The Discourse of Cable Television T2 - The Revolution Wasn’t Televised: Sixties Television and Social Conflict TI - Blue Skies and Strange Bedfellows: The Discourse of Cable Television ID - 2109 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Lisa Gitelman and Geoffrey B. Pingree, eds. AB - Stubbs writes that "in order to gain perspective on what lies beneath contemporary dreams abut media technology, we might find instructive the case of an earlier communication technology, the telegraph. Although at first glance it does not appear to share many features with the internet, the telegraph did in fact raise remarkably similar issues regarding the status of the body and personal identity in relation to technology. A telegraph operator was a member of a community; as many as ten or twelve operators might work on the same telegraph circuit, rapidly transmitting and receiving messagees using Morse code. The wire was akin to a party line, as every message transmitted over the wire could be read by all the operators. On certain less-trafficked rural lines, in the intervals when no official telegraph messages were being sent, operators would routinely have personal conversations with each other over the wire. Gven the nature of the technology, it was impossible to know for certain from which station a given message originated. The operators on the line were supposed to identify themselves at the beginning of each message, but therre was no way to verify definitively the identity of a given sender. The result was a form of anonymity analogous to that enabled by the internet: On the telegraph circuit, it was theoretically possible to misrepresent oneself, to engage in a cover form of masquerade, trying on a new body and a new social identity." (92) Still, the author warns not to take the parallels between the telegraph and internet too far. Stubbs' essay appears in a volume that is part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. This volume offers a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. These ten essays examine media that were new in the eighteenth, nineteenth, and early twentieth centuries. The expore "momemts of transition when each new medium was not yet fully defined, its significance in flux...." They attempt to put these media into their "specific material and historical environment" and explain the "ways in which habits and structures of communication are naturalized or normalized." (viii) AU - Stubbs, Katherine CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers telegraph virtual reality telegraph, and virtual reality computers and the Internet Internet, and telegraph telegraph, and Internet women women, and telegraph telegraph, and women Internet LB - 34380 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 91-111 ST - Telegraphy's Corporeal Fictions T2 - New Media, 1740-1915 TI - Telegraphy's Corporeal Fictions ID - 3076 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Susan Mossman, ed. AB - Mark Suggitt’s chapter, “Living with Plastics.” has a brief mention of celluloid film and movies, as well as inexpensive Kodak cameras and celluloid roll film which by the late 1930s was “becoming the medium of modern memory.” Suggitt, a social historian, concentrates on Great Britain’s early celluloid industry. AU - Suggitt, Mark CY - London and Washington, D. C. KW - photography preservation history, and new media materials materials celluloid non-USA history +photography and visual communication history, and photography history, and celluloid history, and plastic photography, and history celluloid, and history plastics cameras cameras, Kodak cameras, and history of history, and cameras Great Britain Great Britain, and celluloid Great Britain, and plastics LB - 12350 PB - Leicester University Press PY - 1997 SP - 113-36 ST - Living with Plastics T2 - Early Plastics: Perspectives, 1850-1950 TI - Living with Plastics ID - 2582 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - The main source of resistance to new technology was not trade unions or the socialists, but rather uninformed and uncreative management. The primary reason that jobs were lost was the failure to embrace new techniques needed to keep up with international competition. AU - Swords-Isherwood, Nuala and Peter Senker CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution capitalism non-USA microelectronics +computers and the Internet microelectronics revolution Great Britain microelectronics revolution, and unemployment microelectronics revolution, and management labor Luddism control revolution labor, and microelectronics capitalism, and new media LB - 3040 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 408-13 ST - Management Resistance to the New Technology T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - Management Resistance to the New Technology ID - 1696 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Raymond Fielding, ed. AB - This piece appeared originally in Journal of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers, 21 (Sept. 1933). AU - Theisen, Earl CY - Berkeley KW - +motion pictures +television cartoons, animated cartoons, history of cartoons LB - 7440 PB - University of California Press PY - 1967 SP - 84-85 ST - The History of the Animated Cartoon T2 - A Technological History of Motion Pictures and Television TI - The History of the Animated Cartoon ID - 2114 ER - TY - CHAP AB - In Canada, American movies and television programs dominated the market – more than 90 percent of the films for which Canadian paid rental fees came from the United States. In 1977, Ontario’s Commission on Violence in the Communications Industry concluded that the “great weight of research into the effects of violent media contents indicates potential harm to society.” In Volume 1, this Report concluded that Canadians – including children – were watching increasing amounts of American-made TV which had “much higher levels of violence” than programs produced in Canada or elsewhere, and television’s “escalation of violence” was “drawing other sections of the media along like the tail of a comet.” This essay appears in Volume 7 of the Royal Commission's Report. It discusses future new media in Canada and violence. It says that the "technology that is likely to produce the most significant long-term social and economic impacts is the large-scale integration of semi-conductor circuits, espcially the inexpensive microprocessor chip. Dramatic cuts in both size and costs of very complex electrical circuitry have been achieved." AU - Thompson, Gordon B. CY - Toronto, Ontario KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) microprocessing magnetic recording television, and media effects syntheses (of research) Surgeon General social science research fiber optics optical fibers news and journalism news microprocessors media effects media violence media effects news and journalism satellites materials video games VCRs magnetic tape materials +future and science fiction fiber optics censorship and ratings children news and journalism non-USA Canada +television violence television, and violence violence, and television violence, and social science research social science research, and violence children, and media +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures Surgeon General's Report (1972) violence children, and TV violence media effects, and television violence, and syntheses syntheses media effects, and violence violence, and media effects reports social science research, and TV violence television, and social science television, and violence violence, and television media effects, and television children, and media children, and TV violence social science research, synthesis (violence) Canada, and media violence reports journalism, and Canada journalism journalism, and violence news, and Canada news, and violence bibliographies, annotated bibliographies, and journalism and violence journalism, and violence (bibliography) video games, and Canada video games, and violence violence, and video games cable, and Canada VCRs, and Canada optical fibers, and Canada satellites, and Canada +aeronautics and space communication violence, and new media future, and Canada future, and new media microprocessors, and violence future +bibliographies cable LB - 2800 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality See filed under Report of the Royal Commission ... Volume 7. PB - Royal Commission on Violence in the Communications Industry SP - 185-206 ST - Future Mass Media T2 - Report of The Royal Commission on Violence in the Communications Industry: Volume 7: The Media Industries: From Here to Where? TI - Future Mass Media ID - 368 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Teresa De Lauretis and Stephen Heath, eds. AB - In this paper, delivered in February, 1978 at a conference at UW-Milwaukee, Thompson says that it is hard to know when "critics, historians and audiences began to recognize animated cartoons as a distinct mode. By about 1913, these films started to show up fairly regularly on theatre programmes.” Pages 108-12 deal with “The Ideology of Hollywood Cel Animation.” Thompson concludes: “The fact that cel animation lends itself so readily to disruptive formal strategies suggests one reason why the conservative Hollywood ideology of cartoons developed as it did (making it difficult to break away from its system without going to an opposite extreme.) Since disruption unmotivated by narrative is unwelcome in the classical system, Hollywood needed to tame the technology. Trivialization provided the means. While the classical Hollywood system as a whole may have been a relatively limited definition of cinema, the animated films made within that system had even narrower boundaries.” AU - Thompson, Kristin CY - New York KW - +motion pictures motion pictures, and technology Hollywood +motion pictures cartoons, animated Hollywood, and classical system motion pictures, and technological innovations cartoons LB - 6390 PB - St. Martin's Press PY - 1980 SP - 106-20 ST - Implications of the Cel Animation Technique T2 - The Cinema Apparatus TI - Implications of the Cel Animation Technique ID - 2022 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, eds. AB - "This essay examines a hot news item in the nothern European press at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries. The story deals with the religious revival of a group of peasants from southern France, and throughout this discussion," Thorburn writes, "I will be interested less in the Camisards themselves, as these peasants came to be known, than in the experiences and arguments of the literate consumers of print media. The episode of the Camisards and the public controversy that followed offer an interesting lens through which to view media in transitions, and should inform any contemporary discussion of media change. The debates about the Camisards demonstrate the coexistence of older forms of oral culture and newer forms of printed discourse over two hundren and fifty years after the advent of the printing press. We do, nonetheless, see early political uses of print media at a time when such debates were technically illegal. And, in fact, the relative merits of print and oral culture were themselves the subject of the debates." (163) Thorburn's essay is one of twenty-two chapters by different authors that attempt to improve our "understanding of emerging communication technologies." This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. AU - Thorburn, Daniel CY - Cambridge, MA KW - books, periodicals, newspapers print culture pamphlets France non-USA France, and pamphlets pamphlets, and France printing France, and printing print culture oral culture print v. oral culture printing press audiences audiences, and pamphlets religion values printing press, and values values, and printing press religion, and printing press printing press, and religion oral communication print LB - 34020 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 163-89 ST - Prophetic Peasants and Bourgeois Pamphleteers: The Camisards Represented in Print, 1685-1710 T2 - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - Prophetic Peasants and Bourgeois Pamphleteers: The Camisards Represented in Print, 1685-1710 ID - 3040 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, eds. AB - Thorburn says that the "World Wide Web is more than technology, more than modems, bandwidth, computers. It is a thing made of language and of history, a Web of Metaphor. Many of these metaphors "are especially American and capitalist metaphors, carring an undersong of adventure, of risk and speed and danger, of entrepreneurs or Starfleet commanders or homesteaders braving the wilderness" and are unlike "the early popular Nintendo computer games, discussed in a 1995 essay by Henry Jenkins and Mary Fuller" whose "fugures implicitly celebrate motion, activity, acquisition, the conquest of space. Odd at first thought, but deeply instructive on reflection: that such swashbuckling metaphors should define the essentially sedentary exxperience of sitting at a computer terminal with mouse and keyboard at the ready." (19) This volume in which Thorburn's chapters appears is part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume offers a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. "The editors' introduction sketches an aesthetics of media transition, patterns of development and social dispersion that may operate across era, media forms, and cultures. Some of the essays that follow are case studies of such earliler technologies as the printed book, the phonograph, early cinema, and television, while other examine contemporary digital forms and explore something of their promise and strangeness. A final section probes aspects of visual culture in such environments as the evolving museum, movie spectaculars, and 'the virtual window.'" (ix-x) AU - Thorburn, David CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers computers virtual reality Internet global communication community democracy democracy, and new media computers and the Internet democracy, and computers computers, and democracy Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet critics digital media democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy capitalism gatekeeping community, and democracy democracy, and virtual communities virtual communities cyberspace cyberspace, and democracy democracy, and cyberspace metaphors capitalism capitalism, and digital media digital media, and capitalism Internet, and capitalism capitalism, and Internet globalization capitalism, and globalization video games LB - 34340 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 19-22 ST - Web of Paradox T2 - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - Web of Paradox ID - 3072 ER - TY - CHAP AB - Meese Commission member Deanne Tilton-Durfee, who began her career as a social worker in Los Angeles and was president of the California Consortium of Child Abuse Councils, was concerned about pornography’s effects on children. AU - Tilton-Durfee, Deanne CY - Nashville, TN KW - entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) surveillance post office government hearings entertainment, home magnetic recording photography women, and new media social science research values privacy archives sexuality home entertainment government magnetic tape First Amendment media effects crime color freedom values religion censorship and ratings law cable home home, and new media home Meese Commission reports primary sources hearings pornography reports reports, Messe Commission motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography law, and pornography pornography, and law pornography, and new media home entertainment revolution pornography, and home home, and pornography +television postal service television, and cable cable television, and pornography aeronautics and space communication satellites, and television television, and satellites computers computers, and pornography pornography, and computers VCRs VCRs, and pornography pornography, and VCRs magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and pornography pornography, and photography color, and pornography pornography, and color media effects media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects pornography, defined children media effects, and children children, and pornography pornography, and children women women, and pornography pornography, and women religion, and pornography pornography, and religion personal computers personal computers, and pornography primary sources primary sources, Maryland primary sources, College Park primary sources, Meese Commission media effects, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research First Amendment, and Meese Commission First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and legal pornography, and First Amendment pornography, and opponents pornography, and harmful effects crime, and pornography pornography, and crime privacy, and pornography pornography, and privacy Meese Commission, and critics magazines satellites children, and media LB - 22990 PB - Rutledge Hill Press PY - 1986 SP - 536-40 ST - Statement of Deanne Tilton-Durfee T2 - Final Report of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Statement of Deanne Tilton-Durfee ID - 1024 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - The increased use of personal computers came as a major surprise to many who followed the information technology revolution during the early 1980s. By 1983, it was possible to have powerful , low-cost computers in homes, schools, and offices. The authors consider the personal computer to be a building block in the creation of the information society. At the time this piece appeared in Technology Review (Jan. 1983), the authors were computers scientists with the Sloan School of Management at MIT. AU - Toong, Hoo-min and Amar Gupta CY - Cambridge, MA KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home labor communication revolution home entertainment education communication revolution, and second industrial revolution home, and new media home office office, and new media office computers and the Internet computers, personal computers office, and information technology home, and information technology information technology information processing Information Age +computers and the Internet personal computers computers, personal information technology, and home information technology, and education information technology, and office networks infrastructure second industrial revolution information age communication revolution office, and computers home, and computers education, and computers LB - 3240 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 169-81 ST - Personal Computers T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Personal Computers ID - 1716 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Martin Bauer, ed. AB - Touraine begins by saying that "it would be misleading to speak of an anti-scientific mood in public opinion today. Most people support advanced technology or scientific medicine, but it is true that criticism of economic modernization or hospital life is growing. Science is not widely criticized, but the idea of a scientific society is often rejected by science-educated people. We still believe in science, but no longer in progress." He then looks at why faith in progress has declined. He concludes that "If we try to maintain the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries' trust in a global progress, if we keep believing in a rationalized society, we can only accelerate the rupture between powerful systems and powerless actors which destroys the creative capacity of individuals and societies." AU - Touraine, Alain CY - New York KW - technology values preservation modernism modernity modernism history, and new media community democracy progress Information Age history progress history, and progress progress, and decline of +artificial intelligence and biotechnology biotechnology information age, and resistance to technology, and resistance to technology and society culture, and resistance to technology democracy and media modernity culture critics values, and technology progress, and technology technology, and progress values LB - 4300 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1995 SP - 45-55 ST - The Crisis of 'Progress' T2 - Resistance to new technology: nuclear power, information technology and biotechnology TI - The Crisis of 'Progress' ID - 1818 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Judith Trojan and Nadine Covert, comp. AB - This annotated bibliography, prepared in 1977, has more than 140 entries that deal with various aspects of 16mm filmmaking and distribution. AU - Trojan, Judith, comp. CY - New York KW - libraries nationalism 16mm motion pictures motion pictures, and 16mm film 16mm film magnetic tape recording magnetic tape recording, video values, and society democracy, and media education, and 16mm film religion, and 16mm film 16mm film, and education 16mm film, and religion nationalism and communication government, and 16mm film public libraries, and 16mm film 16mm film, and public libraries television television, and 16mm film history, and new media history, and 16mm film values, and 16mm film sound recording sound recording, and magnetic tape libraries information storage education law copyright 16mm film, and copyright copyright, and 16mm film motion pictures, and piracy videotape, and film piracy 16mm film, and distribution 16mm film, and Education Film Library Association motion pictures, and independent filmmakers bibliographies bibliographies, annotated bibliographies, and 16mm 16mm, and bibliographies democracy history magnetic recording values videotape magnetic tape government religion LB - 34620 PB - Educational Film Library Association, Inc. PY - 1977 SP - 137-48 ST - Selected Bibliography [16mm distribution] T2 - 16mm Distribution TI - Selected Bibliography [16mm distribution] ID - 3101 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This article, which looks at "first-generation computer hobbyists," maintains that "what people do with computers affects the way they see the world. Working with computers can also be a way of 'working through' powerful feelings in a completely safe and controllable microworld." The author at the time this piece in Social Studies of Science, Vol. 12 (1982), was a sociologist in the Science, Technology, and Society Program at MIT. The article is taken from her book The Second Self: Computers and the Human Spirit (1984). AU - Turkle, Sherry CY - Cambridge, MA KW - entertainment computers surveillance entertainment, home seeing at a distance values law, and privacy law postmodernism modernism new way of seeing home entertainment home, and new media home values privacy computers and the Internet computers, personal computers new way of seeing, and computers new way of seeing, and computers +computers and the Internet cyberspace personal computers computers, personal privacy, and computers new way of seeing, and personal computers values, and personal computers computers, and society computers home, and computers LB - 3250 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 182-201 ST - The Psychology of Personal Computers T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - The Psychology of Personal Computers ID - 1717 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Lisa Gitilman and Geoffrey B. Pingree, eds. AB - "Divine service," as journalists referred to the coming of the telephone, or "a sinful network," as Old Order Minnonite and Amish residents in Lancaster Country, PA, referred to it, "suggest that the meaning of telephony was disputed in the early years of the twentieth century," at least within that particular region of the United States. (139) Umble's essay appears in a volume that is part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. This volume offers a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. These ten essays examine media that were new in the eighteenth, nineteenth, and early twentieth centuries. The expore "momemts of transition when each new medium was not yet fully defined, its significance in flux...." They attempt to put these media into their "specific material and historical environment" and explain the "ways in which habits and structures of communication are naturalized or normalized." (viii) AU - Umble, Diane Zimmerman CY - Cambridge, MA KW - telephones values values, and telephones telephones, and values women women, and telephones telephones, and women LB - 34400 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 139-56 ST - Sinful Network or Divine Service: Competing Meanings of the Telephone in Amish Country T2 - New Media, 1740-1915 TI - Sinful Network or Divine Service: Competing Meanings of the Telephone in Amish Country ID - 3078 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, eds. AB - William Uricchio writes that the "comments that follow are built around two central points: the first concerns a very brief and somewhat biased history of how we got to the present point in writing media histories...; and the second concerns an even more biased set of thoughts on the current construction of media history," predominantly in "the Anglo-American world." (24) "The processes of digitization and convergence" have challenged "long-held certainties" and "de-centered... knowledge frameworks," the author says. "At this profoundly transitional moment in media development, the working agenda for historians can quite productively make use of those earlier transition moments when related forms of instability threw into question media ontologies (and with them, issues of epistemology, perception, and memory)." (35) Uricchio chapters is part of a 404-page book containing twenty-two chapters by different authors that attempt to improve our "understanding of emerging communication technologies." This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. AU - Uricchio, William CY - Cambridge, MA KW - visual communication computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) interactivity interactive media books, periodicals, newspapers digital media computers and the Internet motion pictures audiences motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, digital books, and digitization digitization television television, and books books, and television computers, and screens media convergence cyberspace information storage information storage, and digital media libraries, and digitization electricity printing printing, and digital media hypertext television, and hypertext hypertext, and television interactivity and media media interactivity museums, and new media photography television VCRs world wide web visual culture books, history of history and new media democracy books history libraries museums print Internet computers media LB - 33870 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 23-38 ST - Historicizing Media in Transition T2 - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - Historicizing Media in Transition ID - 3025 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Stephen Prince, ed. AB - Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, hear defends artistic freedom and the rights of filmmakers. There was “no way to have a flourishing creativity,” he said, “if you are going to put fetters on the creative man.” No one had the wisdom to tell the artist where to “draw the line.” Valenti made these remarks as Congress considered whether mass media was a cause of real violence in society. AU - Valenti, Jack CY - New Brunswick, N. J. KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack social science research censorship and ratings NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA media effects media violence government law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification violence Valenti, Jack, and violence Valenti, Jack, and Congress MPAA, and Jack Valenti +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and Congress classification, and Congress MPAA, and classification Valenti, Jack, and classification social science research motion pictures, and social science research Valenti, Jack, and social science research motion pictures, and effects media effects MPAA, and public relations hearings hearings, and movie violence +television television, and violence violence, and television Valenti, Jack, and television television, and Jack Valenti hearings, and Jack Valenti LB - 19730 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Rutgers University Press PY - 1968 SP - 62-75 ST - Statement before the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence, Dec. 19, 1968 T2 - Screening Violence TI - Statement before the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence, Dec. 19, 1968 ID - 805 ER - TY - CHAP AB - Valenti here defends acting as an honorable profession. There was, of course, a long-standing antitheatrical prejudice that still existed, although surely on the decline by the late 1960s. AU - Valenti, Jack CY - New York ET - 51st KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA motion pictures Valenti, Jack MPAA, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and MPAA motion pictures and popular culture antitheatrical prejudice, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and anti-theatrical prejudice anti-theatrical prejudice anti-theatrical bias LB - 26450 PB - Film and Television Daily PY - 1969 SP - 78 ST - A Badge of Honor T2 - The 1969 Film Daily Year Book of Motion Pictures TI - A Badge of Honor ID - 1225 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - Venegas considers the impact of the Internet and other new media on Fidel Castro's Cuba. The volume in which Venegas's chapter appears ispart of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectivs on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organzied by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." AU - Venegas, Cristina CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers computers virtual reality nationalism Internet global communication community news and journalism non-USA Cuba Internet, and Cuba Cuba, and Internet Castro, Fidel, and Internet nationalism and communication democracy democracy, and new media computers and the Internet democracy, and computers computers, and democracy Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet critics digital media democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy capitalism gatekeeping community, and democracy democracy, and virtual communities virtual communities cyberspace cyberspace, and democracy democracy, and cyberspace metaphors capitalism capitalism, and digital media digital media, and capitalism Internet, and capitalism capitalism, and Internet globalization radio propaganda radio, and propaganda propaganda, and radio propaganda, and Internet Internet, and propaganda Radio Marti LB - 34250 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 179-201 ST - Will the Internet Spoil Fidel Castro's Cuba T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - Will the Internet Spoil Fidel Castro's Cuba ID - 3063 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - "Early attempts to introduce computerized technology into the classroom met with little sucess, but the cheaper, and more reliable and more versatile microelectronic gadgetry stands a much better chance," although Venning says "it seems unlikely that many teachers will lose their jobs over it." This article appeared originally in The Times Educational Supplement (Oct. 20, 1978). AU - Venning, Philip CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution education microelectronics microcomputers +computers and the Internet microcomputers, and education microelectronics revolution microelectronics, and education automation, and education +artificial intelligence and biotechnology automation education, and computers education, and microelectronics labor LB - 2860 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 152-58 ST - Microcomputers in the Classroom T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - Microcomputers in the Classroom ID - 1678 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Leo Charney and Vanessa R. Schwartz, eds. AB - This stimulating essay is about the transformation of the visual landscape during the late nineteenth century. It also provides good context on motion picture advertising and why this phenomenon was so troubling to many people early in the twentieth century. Verhagen writes that “during the last quarter of the nineteenth century, ... color posters became an integral part of the Parisian environment. In the early 1870s, Cheret and the Choubrac brothers, Leon and Alfred, introduced technical improvements that reduced the costs of color lithography and made it doubly attractive as a means of promotion. The liberal laws of 1881 eased the state’s control of the media and so paved the way for a large increase in the production and dissemination of advertisements. In 1884 the city council announced that surfaces belonging to the municipality would be available for rent. Other surfaces were created. By the turn of the century, the boulevards were studded with Morris columns (circular pasting boards); and the trams that carried passengers out to far-flung areas of the city from 1874 also sported advertisements. By 1886 Cheret alone had created almost one thousand designs. With varying degrees of enthusiasm, journalists noted that posters were appearing everywhere, clamoring for attention and transforming the urban landscape with the jaunty images and glaring colors.” Posters used color and exploited sex. They were reminders “of the celebrations of carnival.” The movie industry quickly exploited posters. Verhagen’s says that “moralistic responses to the poster’s popularity echoed both early objections to the cinema and the generally fearful reactions to new forms of a consumer culture ‘whose market mechanisms threatened to wear away the foundations of which class society was built.’” AU - Verhagen, Marus CY - Berkeley KW - Chicago, IL sexuality photography advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sexuality seeing at a distance propaganda public relations values modernism modernism modernity freedom non-USA values posters new way of seeing +motion pictures new way of seeing, and motion pictures modernity lithography photography and visual communication +motion pictures modernism posters, and motion pictures posters, and Paris new way of seeing motion pictures, and new way of seeing advertising, and movie posters Chéret,Jules Choubrac, Leon and Alfred lithography, color color, and lithography urban studies values, and posters (19th century) values, and motion picture advertising color, and posters posters, as degenerate art freedom of expression, and posters (Paris) color advertising modernity posters, and France sexuality, and posters posters, and sexuality context context, late 19th color LB - 1980 PB - University of California Press PY - 1985 SP - 103-29 ST - The Poster in Fin-de-Siecle Paris: ‘That Mobile and Degenerate Art’ T2 - Cinema and the Invention of Modern Life TI - The Poster in Fin-de-Siecle Paris: ‘That Mobile and Degenerate Art’ ID - 1594 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Leo Charney and Vanessa R. Schwartz, eds. AB - This stimulating essay is about the transformation of the visual landscape during the late nineteenth century. It also provides good context on motion picture advertising and why this phenomenon was so troubling to many people early in the twentieth century. Verhagen writes that “during the last quarter of the nineteenth century, ... color posters became an integral part of the Parisian environment. In the early 1870s, Cheret and the Choubrac brothers, Leon and Alfred, introduced technical improvements that reduced the costs of color lithography and made it doubly attractive as a means of promotion. The liberal laws of 1881 eased the state’s control of the media and so paved the way for a large increase in the production and dissemination of advertisements. In 1884 the city council announced that surfaces belonging to the municipality would be available for rent. Other surfaces were created. By the turn of the century, the boulevards were studded with Morris columns (circular pasting boards); and the trams that carried passengers out to far-flung areas of the city from 1874 also sported advertisements. By 1886 Cheret alone had created almost one thousand designs. With varying degrees of enthusiasm, journalists noted that posters were appearing everywhere, clamoring for attention and transforming the urban landscape with the jaunty images and glaring colors.” Posters used color and exploited sex. They were reminders “of the celebrations of carnival.” The movie industry quickly exploited posters. Verhagen’s says that “moralistic responses to the poster’s popularity echoed both early objections to the cinema and the generally fearful reactions to new forms of a consumer culture ‘whose market mechanisms threatened to wear away the foundations of which class society was built.’” AU - Verhagen, Marcus CY - Berkeley KW - Chicago, IL sexuality photography advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sexuality seeing at a distance propaganda public relations values modernism modernism modernity freedom non-USA values posters new way of seeing +motion pictures new way of seeing, and motion pictures modernity lithography photography and visual communication +motion pictures modernism posters, and motion pictures posters, and Paris new way of seeing motion pictures, and new way of seeing advertising, and movie posters Chéret,Jules Choubrac, Leon and Alfred lithography, color color, and lithography urban studies values, and posters (19th century) values, and motion picture advertising color, and posters posters, as degenerate art freedom of expression, and posters (Paris) color advertising modernity posters, and France sexuality, and posters posters, and sexuality context context, late 19th color motion pictures, and modernity ref, secondary ref, secular ref, book LB - 1980 PB - University of California Press PY - 1985 SP - 103-29 ST - The Poster in Fin-de-Siecle Paris: ‘That Mobile and Degenerate Art’ T2 - Cinema and the Invention of Modern Life TI - The Poster in Fin-de-Siecle Paris: ‘That Mobile and Degenerate Art’ ID - 3688 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - The author notes that at the time of this chapter, there were 407 million people worldwide who used the Internet. "One step toward understanding this new global communication architecture could be to replace the conceptual framework of modern international (i.e., between nations) communication with a new globalized perspective that permits construction of new communication formats in the global context of interrelated communication structures." (310) The volume in which Volkmer's chapter appears ispart of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectivs on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organzied by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." AU - Volkmer, Ingrid CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers computers virtual reality nationalism Internet global communication community news and journalism non-USA nationalism and communication democracy democracy, and new media computers and the Internet democracy, and computers computers, and democracy Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet critics digital media democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy capitalism gatekeeping community, and democracy democracy, and virtual communities virtual communities cyberspace cyberspace, and democracy democracy, and cyberspace metaphors capitalism capitalism, and digital media digital media, and capitalism Internet, and capitalism capitalism, and Internet globalization globalization, and journalism journalism, and globalization nationalism, and Internet Internet, and nationalism nationalism, and digital media digital media, and nationalism journalism LB - 34310 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 309-30 ST - Beyond the Global and the Local: Media Systems and Journalism in the Global Network Paradigm T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - Beyond the Global and the Local: Media Systems and Journalism in the Global Network Paradigm ID - 3069 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - America, Film Council of AB - The years following World War II saw nothing less than an explosion in the availability and use of 16mm equipment. Prior to the war there were only about 500 general-interest 16mm films and about 10,000 sound projectors in operation. During the first seven years after the war no less than 25,000 16mm movies were made. By 1954, about 4,000,000 feet of new 16mm film and about 5,000 new titles were being made available per year to projection owners. The number of 16mm projectors in the United States was then estimated to be between 250,000 and 400,000. Schools, public libraries, churches, community organizations, and the government all made use of this technology. AU - Wagner, Paul A. CY - Des Plaines, IL KW - libraries nationalism Film Council of America magnetic recording World War II values preservation media effects materials materials magnetic tape cinema motion pictures celluloid film education community democracy values religion war 16mm government history +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and 16mm film 16mm film magnetic tape recording magnetic tape recording, video values, and society democracy, and media education, and 16mm film religion, and 16mm film 16mm film, and education 16mm film, and religion +nationalism and communication government, and 16mm film public libraries, and 16mm film 16mm film, and public libraries 16mm film, as paperback books +television television, and 16mm film history, and new media history, and 16mm film values, and 16mm film +sound recording sound recording, and magnetic tape World War II, and 16mm film 16mm film, and World War II 16mm film, and museums media effects, and 16mm films Film Council of America, values LB - 18090 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Film Council of America (Evanston, IL) PY - 1954 SP - 9-18 ST - What's Past Is Prologue... T2 - Sixty Years of 16mm Film, 1923-1983: A Symposium TI - What's Past Is Prologue... ID - 718 ER - TY - CHAP AB - Walker notes that the artists Kandinski saw analogies between color and color and believed that color allowed the artist to "release 'inner necessities' and invoke 'vibrations of the spirit.'" He concludes by says that to some degree, "the development of freedom in the use of colour and the degree of aesthetic freedom in art has paralleled the development of a greater degree of emotional freedom in our own lives." (507) AU - Walker, Terry CY - New York KW - avant garde Kandinsky, Wassily color Kandinsky, Wassily, and color freedom color, and science color, and architecture color, and modern art avant garde, and color color, and freedom freedom, and color color, and 1960s art LB - 32570 PB - John Wiley & Sons (a Halsted Press Book) PY - 1973 SP - 505-07 ST - Colour and the Modern Artist T2 - Colour 73: Survey Lectures and Abstracts of the Papers Presented at the Second Congress of the International Colour Association, University of York, 2-6 July 1973 TI - Colour and the Modern Artist ID - 2915 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - Walsh writes that "there is something about the Web that makes the idea of the expert seem withered, even disreputable and laughable. But why does this happen? And what exactly is the 'expert paradigm'?" (365) The volume in which Walsh's chapter appears ispart of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectivs on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organzied by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." AU - Walsh, Peter CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers computers nationalism news and journalism nationalism and communication democracy democracy, and new media computers and the Internet democracy, and computers computers, and democracy Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet critics digital media democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy capitalism gatekeeping Internet LB - 34330 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 365-72 ST - That Withered Paradigm: The Web, the Expert, and the Information Hegemony T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - That Withered Paradigm: The Web, the Expert, and the Information Hegemony ID - 3071 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - John A. Tennant, ed. AB - This article notes that "For some years past the trend of press and book illustration has been towards the use of the camera, and this is rather increasing than diminishing." Critics have complained "that true art is being injured by 'machine-made' pictures, that pencil and brush are being displaced by screws and buttons...." One cause for this trend "is the multiplicity of cheap cameras which certainly require little brain effort, and the results often are much the same as if a dabbler in painting used impure colors and bad brushes...." (97) The author contrasts book illustrations with illustrations in the press. "With book illustration there is opportunity for careful thought and study, but with events which may be forgotten in a few hours the work must be done quickly. This should presuppose practical experience, and training of eye and brain to see and think rapidly." (98) The author urges photographers to study the magazines first to see which pictures are preferred before they submit their own to editors. (101) The author, a woman, offers advice to other women: "A woman never should, where it is a question of public decency and purity, forget her womanhood or do any photographic work which will lower that in the eyes of the world no matter how great the pecuniary reward. This holds good whether she photographs or is photographed...." (102) AU - Ward, Catharine Weed CY - New York KW - journalism magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines women women, and photography photography, and women critics critics, and photography cameras cameras, and availability cameras, portable cameras, and journalism books, periodicals, newspapers photography, and books books, and photography critics, and journalism values values, and women women, and values ref, book ref, secondary ref, secular books LB - 16310 PB - Tennant and Ward PY - 1907 SP - 97-103 ST - Press Photography T2 - The American Annual of Photography: 1908 TI - Press Photography VL - 22 ID - 3784 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Vicent Mosco and Janet Wasko, eds. AB - Wasko provides a brief history of unionism in broadcasting, beginning with the American Federation of Musicians’ efforts to represent workers at radio stations in the early 1920s. Broadcast technicians at a St. Louis radio station joined the IBEW in 1926, and IBEW continued to organize in radio stations, especially in the Midwest. In 1934, the Association of Technical Employees was created at NBC. The union became the NABET in 1940. Wasko details the organizational history of the NABET in radio and early television, outlining labor disputes and membership claims. “While others in the broadcasting industry, such as actors, producers, directors, and writers, are recognized as `creative’ or `artisitic’ elements in this process, technicians generally seem to adopt a more functional attitude toward their work, and consequently they may be more susceptible to the effects of job alienation and self-estrangement in work situations.” She concludes that broadcast trade unions suffer from an imbalance of power in the labor-management relationship due to three factors: the lack of unity among labor unions and guilds, the weak economic position of labor organizations, and the narrow goals of labor groups. --Phil Glende AU - Wasko, Janet CY - Norwood, NJ KW - Glende, Phil labor +radio labor, and radio radio, and labor labor, and broadcasting industry LB - 1110 N1 - See also: office PB - Ablex Publishing PY - 1983 SP - 85-113 ST - Trade Unions and Broadcasting: A Case Study of the National Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicians T2 - The Critical Communications Review, Vol. I: Labor, the Working Class, and the Media TI - Trade Unions and Broadcasting: A Case Study of the National Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicians ID - 199 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This article discusses the computer software industry, a booming part of the economy that sets the pace for the information technology revolution. This piece appeared first in Business Week (Feb. 27, 1984). AU - Week, Business CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers materials, and silicon silicon communication revolution +computers and the Internet computers, and software communication revolution Silicon Valley computers, and consumers computers capitalism, and computers capitalism materials LB - 3160 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 27-44 ST - Software: The New Driving Force T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Software: The New Driving Force ID - 1708 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - While an office revolution was underway when this piece first appeared in Business Week (Aug. 8, 1983), it had taken unexpected directions. Company executives were bewildered by the wide array of equipment being offered and hence postponed purchasing complete systems. Instead, they brought their personal computers to the office. AU - Week, Business CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers labor communication revolution computers and the Internet computers, personal computers office, and information technology information technology +computers and the Internet computers and society personal computers computers, personal information technology, and office communication revolution, and office communication revolution computers office, and computers office LB - 3370 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 ST - Personal Computers Invade Offices T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Personal Computers Invade Offices ID - 1728 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - "Forecasts by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and Data Resources Inc. show clearly that high tech can't come near to replacing jobs lost in manufacturing because the sector is small and productivity is rising fast. Nearly every state and city in the U.S. has therefore embarked on a largely fruitless quest to create large numbers of high-tech jobs in their own versions of Silicon Valley. But some good is coming out it." This piece first appeared in Business Week (March 28, 1983). AU - Week, Business CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution microelectronics labor information technology +computers and the Internet microelectronics revolution automation information technology, and industry labor, and automation labor labor, and new media labor, and computers LB - 3450 N1 - See also: office PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 390-99 ST - High Tech is Low on Jobs T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - High Tech is Low on Jobs ID - 1735 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. AB - This piece originally appeared in Business Week (Oct. 24, 1983). “The convergence of computing and telecommunications has brought about the liberalization of the telecommunications industry and the deregulation of long-established PTT [Postal Telephone & Telegraph] monopolies. The resulting innovation explosion has in turned created a booming worldwide market for new telecommunications equipment.” AU - Week, Business CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers post office presidents, and new media communication revolution non-USA Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration media +computers and the Internet media convergence telecommunications +telephones +telegraph +postal service global communication communication revolution Reagan administration, and telecommunications LB - 5160 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 120-36 ST - Telecommunications Liberalization T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Telecommunications Liberalization ID - 1903 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This essay is an attack on Daniel Bell’s essay (published in ibid., pp. 500-49). Weizenbaum is skeptical about the “microelectronic revolution” and Bell’s belief that computer technology will bring an “Information Society.” He raises ethical issues and questions the abilities of computers. See Bell’s reply (ibid., 571-74). AU - Weizenbaum, Joe CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers values communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution community democracy values microelectronics +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology computers, and society democracy and media values, and computers Bell, Daniel microelectronics revolution communication revolution critics computers LB - 3060 PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 550-70 ST - Once More, the Computer Revolution T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - Once More, the Computer Revolution ID - 1698 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - Weizenbaum, at the time a professor of Computer Science at MIT, asks if humans are uniquely feeling creatures or merely "information processing systems"? In this piece, published originally in Datamation (Nov. 15, 1978), he attacks "unrestrained computer enthusiasts" such as Herbert Simon (see his piece in ibid.) for "reckless and unreflective" faith in "Progress." Weizebaum has also written Computer Power and Human Reason (San Francisco: Freeman, 1976). AU - Weizenbaum, Joe CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers values values communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution community democracy computers values microelectronics +computers and the Internet computers and society +artificial intelligence and biotechnology microelectronics revolution values, and computers democracy and media progress Simon, Herbert human nature critics computers, and human nature progress, and computers LB - 3070 PB - Basil Blackwell Publisher; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 434-38 ST - Where are We Going? Questions for Simon T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - Where are We Going? Questions for Simon ID - 1699 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - This is a highly critical assessment of unrestrained enthusiasm for computers, and especially artificial intelligence. In particular, Weizenbaum's attacks a recent book by Edward Feigenbaum and Pamela McCorduck, The Fifth Generation: Artificial Intelligence and Japan's Computer Challenge to the World (1983), which argued that revolutionary developments would soon occur in artificial intelligence. AU - Weizenbaum, Joe CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers nationalism community democracy non-USA myth +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology +nationalism and communication Japan democracy and media artificial intelligence, critics of myth, and artificial intelligence Feigenbaum, Edward McCorduck, Pamela critics nationalism, and computers Japan, and computers LB - 3220 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 84-94 ST - The Myths of Artificial Intelligence T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - The Myths of Artificial Intelligence ID - 1714 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - The author was a researcher for the International Labour Office when this appeared. This piece is taken from Microelectronics and Office Jobs: The Impact of the Chip on Women's Employment (Geneva: ILO, 1983). AU - Werneke, Diane CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers women, and new media labor non-USA women office, and information technology information technology +computers and the Internet women, and automation information technology, and women information technology, and office Great Britain women, and computers office, and computers office LB - 3460 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 400-16 ST - Women: The Vulnerable Group T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - Women: The Vulnerable Group ID - 1736 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - "All the things that make up the day-to-day experience of the shopfloor worker are matters of social choice. Essentially political decisions -- sometimes concealed -- are being taken today that will determine whether the craftsman of tomorrow is to be computer-aided or computer-degraded," Wilkinson says. This work first appeared in Industrial Relations Journal (Summer 1983), and a more in-depth account of the author's ideas are in his book The Shopfloor Politics of New Technology (London: Heinemann, 1983). AU - Wilkinson, Barry CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers non-USA information technology +computers and the Internet labor information technology, and industry Great Britain automation labor, and new media labor, and computers LB - 3480 N1 - See also: office PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 439-53 ST - The Politics of Technical Change T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - The Politics of Technical Change ID - 1738 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Raymond Williams, ed. AB - The author begins this essay by saying that “as we enter the 1980s, we seem to be on the threshold of a period of quite unprecedented change, during which new communications media will appear with bewildering frequency. Many of our basic preconceptions about the nature of human communication and about the role of the existing media are likely to be overturned.” William then examines changes likely in store for entertainment systems, information and calculating services, message sending services, person-to-person communications, psychological implications of new media, the impact on “city and country,” changes likely in office work, democracy and telecommunication, environmental resources and telecommunications, and the persistence of old media. AU - William, Ederyn CY - London KW - entertainment computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) interactivity entertainment, home magnetic recording photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations print labor communication revolution information technology materials materials magnetic tape +future and science fiction community democracy communication revolution, and second industrial revolution home, and new media home office office, and new media +photography and visual communication +telephones +radio +television +motion pictures popular culture printing +books, periodicals, newspapers books alphabet writing printing presses +sound recording prints color +duplicating technologies phonograph +telegraph advertising computers +computers and the Internet satellites +aeronautics and space communication telecommunications VCRs democracy and media communication revolution values, and media second industrial revolution interactive media general studies media convergence interactive media future office information technology, and office home information technology, and home home, and new media home entertainment values LB - 11690 PB - Thames and Hudson PY - 1981 ST - The Future of the Media T2 - Contact: Human Communication and Its History TI - The Future of the Media ID - 2520 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Raymond Williams, ed. AB - Williams, writing in 1981, believed that the relationship between communication technologies and the institutions of society was at a turning point. The fate of direct democracy and individual freedom would depend on decisions made relating to these technologies. He believed that “what may now be possible is a qualitative change to the wide distribution of processes: the provision of equitable access to the means and resources of directly-determined communication, serving immediate personal and social needs.” He wrote that “we are now at one of those historical moments when the relations between communications technologies and social institutions are a matter not only for study and analysis, but for a wide set of practical choices. It is not only (though it will often be presented as) a matter of instituting new technologies. The directions in which investment in research and development should go are now, in this field, fundamental social decisions. The effort to understand and take part in them is more likely to be made, as against the bewildered reception of new products and processes which ‘just happen’, if enough of us realize the scale of the communicative and thus social transformation which is now becoming, though still in ways to be decided, technically and institutionally possible.” AU - Williams, Raymond CY - London KW - computers interactivity photography advertising, and public relations time and timekeeping propaganda public relations print communication revolution community democracy communication revolution, and second industrial revolution timekeeping, and clocks democracy and media communication revolution values, and media second industrial revolution interactive media general studies +photography and visual communication +telephones +radio +television +motion pictures popular culture printing +books, periodicals, newspapers books alphabet writing printing presses +sound recording prints color +duplicating technologies phonograph +telegraph advertising calendars timekeeping computers +computers and the Internet democracy, and new media values LB - 11680 PB - Thames and Hudson PY - 1981 ST - Communication Technologies and Social Institutions T2 - Contact: Human Communication and Its History TI - Communication Technologies and Social Institutions ID - 2519 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Alan O'Connor, ed. AB - Here reprinted is Raymond Williams' Inaugural Lecture at the University of Cambridge, Oct. 29, 1974, on "Drama in a Dramatised Society." He notes an important change in society from a earlier era when people had primarily live theater for entertainment. The transformation was brought by such modern media as movies, radio, and television. He writes that "drama, in quite new ways, is built into the rhythms of everyday life." (4) "We have never as a society acted so much or watched so many others acting," (3) he said. "What we now have is drama as habitual experience: more in a week, in many cases, than most human being would previously have seen in a lifetime." (4) Of cinema's (and tv's) influence, Williams maintained that "the new mobility and with it the fade, the dissolve, the cut, the flashback, the voice-over, the montage, that are technical forms but also, in new ways, modes of perceiving, of relating, of composing and of finding our way," had become pervasive in everyday life. (12) AU - Williams, Raymond CY - Toronto KW - nationalism television critics Williams, Raymond values advertising and public relations capitalism nationalism and communication military communication new way of seeing motion pictures advertising LB - 34710 PB - Between the Lines PY - 1989 SP - 3-13 ST - Drama in a Dramatised Society T2 - Raymond Williams on Television TI - Drama in a Dramatised Society ID - 3109 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - By the early 1980s, the British automobile industry had performed so wretchedly that the UK was importing about one million vehicles each year. One optimistic development, though, was the production of the Austin Metro by the state-owned British Leyland Motor Corporation. The authors describe how new information technology was introduced despite the complicated British industrial relations system. This piece is a summary of their book Making the Metro: Technological Change, Management Strategy and Industrial Relations at BL Cars (Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 1984). AU - Willman, Paul and Graham Winch CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution non-USA microelectronics +computers and the Internet +transportation microelectronics revolution automation Great Britain labor automobiles, and Great Britain automobiles LB - 3520 N1 - See also: office PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 SP - 496-510 ST - The Making of the Metro T2 - The Information Technology Revolution TI - The Making of the Metro ID - 1742 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - A. W. Ward and A. R. Waller, eds. AB - Wilson wrote in 1910 that "the puritan attack upon the Elizabethan theatre seems little more than a distant echo of the great battle which had raged around the Roman spectacula. Yet the stage was hated as sincerely and as bitterly in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries as it was in the third and fourth, and for reasons strikingly similar. These reasons were both theological and ethical...." (421) In Elizabethan England, puritans and civil authorities alike considered actors "a very superfluous sort of men" (428) and the stage "an unholy institution." (432) Puritans were not so much interested in reforming the theater as in "abolishing it." (460) On the Continent, even such men as Montaigne classified actors with "harlots" and "vagabond objects." (Montaigne quoted, 425) AU - Wilson, J. Dover CY - New York KW - morality entertainment anti-theatrical prejudice actors acting critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater ref, secondary religion religion, and theater theater, and religion values values, and acting censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship actors acting actors, and status of theater, and bias against actors, and bias against entertainment, and immorality morality, and theater anti-theatrical bias quotations quotations, and unholy stage censorship theater LB - 41420 PB - G. P. Putnam's Sons PY - 1910 SP - 421-61 ST - The Puritan Attack Upon the Stage T2 - The Cambridge History of English Literature: Volume VI: The Drama to 1642 TI - The Puritan Attack Upon the Stage VL - 6 ID - 4241 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds. AB - Winston was chief technology adviser to the Republican National Committee. This chapter is the talk he gave at the MIT conference on democarcy and new media on May 8-9,1998. At that time Winston was Director of Planning for the Office of Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich. The volume in which Winston's chapter appears ispart of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. The volume tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectivs on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organzied by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." AU - Winston, David CY - Cambridge, MA KW - computers computers Clinton, Bill virtual reality Internet global communication community Clinton, William Jefferson Gingrich, Newt, and Internet Internet, and Newt Gingrich presidents and new media Clinton, William Clinton, William, and Internet Clinton, William, and democracy democracy democracy, and new media computers and the Internet democracy, and computers computers, and democracy Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet critics digital media democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy capitalism gatekeeping community, and democracy democracy, and virtual communities virtual communities cyberspace cyberspace, and democracy democracy, and cyberspace metaphors capitalism capitalism, and digital media digital media, and capitalism Internet, and capitalism capitalism, and Internet globalization capitalism, and globalization Clinton administration, and Internet Clinton administration, and globalization Clinton administration, and capitalism Clinton Administration LB - 34220 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 133-42 ST - Digital Democracy and the New Age of Reason T2 - Democracy and New Media TI - Digital Democracy and the New Age of Reason ID - 3060 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Joel A. Tarr, ed. AB - The author, then with General Electric, examines three cases of technology assessment: 1) assessments during the 1890s of efforts to development large-scale electrical power systems; 2) assessments between 1917-1927 of technological approaches to energy conversion; and 3) "pump-priming" during the Great Depression. He sees three lessons: 1) it has not been easy in the past to determine which technologies are worth assessing; 2) those who make assessments often have simplistic ideas about "impact"; and 3) in the words of Oliver Wendell Holmes, "time has upset many fighting faiths." This paper was given at a conference held at Seven Spring Moutain Resort, Champion, PA, Dec. 1-4, 1976. AU - Wise, George CY - San Francisco KW - technology preservation history, and new media +future and science fiction war World War I history +electricity technological assessment technology and society future history, and forecasting World War I, and electricity electricity, and networks networks LB - 3880 PB - San Francisco Press, Inc. PY - 1977 RP - Dec. 1-4 (1976) SP - 245-64 ST - Past Efforts at Technology Assessment and Prediction: 1890-1940 T2 - Retrospective Technology Assessment TI - Past Efforts at Technology Assessment and Prediction: 1890-1940 ID - 1776 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Stephen H. Cutcliffe and Terry S. Reynolds, eds. AU - Wise, George CY - Chicago KW - R & D inventions innovation professionalization +electricity experts, electrical General Electric Company professionalization, and electrical engineering professionalization, and scientists experts research and development inventors LB - 5110 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1997 SP - 217-38 ST - A New Role for Professional Scientists in Industry: Industrial Research at General Electric, 1900-1916 T2 - Technology & American History: A Historical Anthology from Technology & Culture TI - A New Role for Professional Scientists in Industry: Industrial Research at General Electric, 1900-1916 ID - 1898 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Teresa De Lauretis and Stephen Heath, eds. AB - Wollen offers interesting information about changes in the technology of cinema: cameras, breakthroughs in the technology of film stock, effects (positive and negative) brought by sound, magnetic tape, and color film, 16-mm and 8-mm film. It has good leads for those interested in pursuing these topics, although the author’s notes do not always indicate the source of his material. Wollen presented this paper at a conference at University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee in February, 1978. AU - Wollen, Peter CY - New York KW - tape recording, magnetic magnetic recording recording tape recording cinema motion pictures celluloid 8mm films 8mm 16mm tape recorders recording motion pictures motion pictures, and technology motion pictures film, 8mm 8mm film 16mm film film, 16mm motion pictures, and 8mm film motion pictures, and 16mm film motion pictures, and technological innovations sound recording tape recording color film, and color motion pictures, and color film cameras,and motion pictures motion pictures, and cameras cameras cameras, 16mm cameras, 8mm film, materials materials film LB - 6450 PB - St. Martin's Press PY - 1980 SP - 14-22 ST - Cinema and Technology: A Historical Overview T2 - The Cinema Apparatus TI - Cinema and Technology: A Historical Overview ID - 2028 ER - TY - CHAP AB - This article provides an overview of newspaper photography from the time of Matthew P. Brady and the Civil War until 1941, the year the United States entered World War II. There is, of course, the work of Brady, Fox Talbot, and Stephen H. Horgan, who printed the first halftone in the New York Graphic in 1880. (230) Wright discusses the use of arc lighting and the first reflecting camera (which appeared around 1910?). "Then, about forty years ago, the first reflecting cameras made great changes in news picture taking. The enthusiasm of the cameraman for the reflex is quite understandable. Here was a camera a man could hold in his hands, focusing by looking into a hood, and seeing his picture up to the instant of opening the shutter. Revolutionary is a mild word to describe such a camera," Wright says. (232) Flashpowder "made it possible to take pictures at night and indoors. It somewhat explosively altered much newspaper picture-taking practice.... The magnesium powder was set off in a small trough of metal, sometimes called a flashgun. The device was shaped like a T, the vertical and horizontal elements of which were about fifteen inches long...." (232) Flashpowder had problems -- not the least of which was that it was dangerous and posed a fire hazard. "The truth is, though it was not realized at the time, that all news photographers carried around with them in their kits the equivalent of a stick or two of dynamite, in the form of flashpowder." (233) This problem improved with the flash bulb. "The only real solution of the dangers and difficulties attendant upon the use of flashpowder was the flash bulb, the first of which were turned out by the General Electric Company in 1930." (235) Wright says that there were "four great boons to modern news picture making....: (1) the flashbulb; (2) the synchronizer, or speed-gun, for setting off the bulb in unison with the shutter; (3) the coupled rangefinder; and (4) the methods of transmitting pictures by wire or radio." (235) He discusses these developments on pages 235-36. He notes that the requirements of news photography required careful editing and "that many news pictures are printed from about a fifth or an even smaller fraction of the negative." (236) The article then turns to the "magic-eye cameras," and 35mm cameras, improvements in transportation such as trains and planes. Press services use planes to move pictures, Wright explains. (237) With regard to "the invention of systems of transmitting photographs by wire," the Associate Press was "probably the first to devise a practical system, and remains the leading user of Wirephoto." (237) The "transmission of news pictures by wire is a comparatively recent development, the Associated Press having sent its first picture by this means January 1, 1935. The Associated Press system, which carries the trade name of 'Wirephoto,' operates by wrapping an ordinary positive photographic print around a cylinder on the transmitting machine, while an unexposed negative is placed on an enclosed cylinder on the receiving machine. When the operator at the sending point presses a button, his machine starts and at the same instant receiving machines all over the circuit start in exact synchronization." (237) Wright goes on to say that "the entire transmission time is eight minutes." (238) The equipment, though, was bulky. "In its early stages Wirephoto required a large roomful of apparatus. It could then be operated from only the larger cities and it was still necessary to fly pictures considerable distances to these central points. The invention of portable apparatus, which can be carried in two suitcases to the scene of any disaster, made the transmission of pictures by wire even more widespread and flexible....(238) It is easy to see that, by allowing pictures to be printed everywhere in the country the same day they are taken, Wirephoto has greatly enlarged the scope of the news photographer." (239) Wright comments on the changed attitudes that people have about having their pictures taken. "Not many years ago vast sections of the public did not want to be photographed." (239) But this attitude "has to a large extent been changed." (239) Also, standard of what types of pictures newspapers will print have been lowered. It is not unusual to see graphic picture from World War I or pictures of dead gangsters. "Most papers have dropped their taboos against printing pictures of the dead." (239) Nudity is also given more leeway but there is "still... a definite line beyond which even the most yellow and sensational of journals will not go." Newspapers "restraint is far greater than that of some magazines in printing pictures that are sexy, suggestive, or just plain 'raw.'" (239) The article notes that the Kodatron speedlamp is "about 800 times as fast as the ordinary flashbulb. The possibility of action pictures with a light of this strength and duration is easy to imagine." (240) AU - Wright, Jack CY - Boston KW - wood engraving wireless communication wireless journalism journalism fame celebrity celebrity culture ref, secondary magazines, and photography magazines photography news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality quotations newspapers, and photographs photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving lighting, and flashlight powder lighting, and magnesium flash newspapers, and Frederic Ives photo engraving lighting, and arc lighting photography, and arc lighting photography, and flash gun lighting, and flash gun cameras, reflex cameras, reflecting (origins) newspapers, and reflex cameras (origins) lighting, and flash bulbs photography, and flash bulbs newspapers, and speed gun lighting, and speed gun cameras, and speed gun cameras, and range finder cameras, and 35mm 35mm cameras newspapers, and trains newspapers, and planes transportation newspapers, and transportation transportation, and newspaper photographs photography, and telegraph telegraph telegraph, and photography wireless, and photography photography, and wireless newspapers, and Wirephoto sexuality magazines, and sexuality sexuality, and magazines photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography newspapers, and Kodatron speedlamp lighting, and Kodatron speedlamp photography, and Kodatron speedlamp quotations quotations, and reflex cameras quotations, and flashpowder General Electric Company General Electric Company, and flash bulbs photography, by wire Associated Press, and wire photos Associated Press, and Wirephoto quotations, and magazine nudity quotations, and photography ref, secondary ref, secular ref, book 35mm Associated Press cameras lighting LB - 38600 PB - American Photographic Publishing Co. PY - 1941 SP - 230-40 ST - The Story of Newspaper Photography T2 - American Annual of Photography: 1942 TI - The Story of Newspaper Photography VL - 56 ID - 3959 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Ithiel de Sola Pool, ed. AB - One impact of loss of telephone service for several days in New York City was increased loneliness and anxiety as well a sense of a loss of control. AU - Wurtzel, Alan H. and Colin Turner CY - Cambridge, MA KW - entertainment entertainment, home home entertainment home, and new media home home, and information technology information technology +telephones information technology, and home home, and telephones LB - 10250 PB - MIT Press PY - 1977 SP - 246-61 ST - Latent Functions of the Telephone: What Missing the Extension Means T2 - The Social Impact of the Telephone TI - Latent Functions of the Telephone: What Missing the Extension Means ID - 2390 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Lisa Gitelman and Geoffrey B. Pingree, eds. AB - "Different as cinema and telegraphy were as technologies, turn-of-the-century discourse conceived of them as links in a chain of progress that drew the world more tightly together. Indeed, as both a thrilling new gadget and a carrier of messages -- news, spectacles, stories, emotional and visceral effects -- the cinema aspired to a place among 'instantaneous' electrical media like the telegraph and telphone in the public imagination, and this positioning played a determinant role in the experiences of early cinema," Young writes. (231) He discusses three areas in which early cinema and telegraph were compared: "technological presentation and spectacle; news reportage; and filmic representation of the telegraph that addressed the changing definitions of time and space promoted by new media." (232) Young's essay appears in a volume that is part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition. This volume offers a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. These ten essays examine media that were new in the eighteenth, nineteenth, and early twentieth centuries. The expore "momemts of transition when each new medium was not yet fully defined, its significance in flux...." They attempt to put these media into their "specific material and historical environment" and explain the "ways in which habits and structures of communication are naturalized or normalized." (viii) AU - Young, Paul CY - Cambridge, MA KW - visual communication telegraph motion pictures motion pictures, and telegraph telegraph, and motion pictures telephones telephones, and motion pictures motion pictures, and telephones news and journalism telegraph, and news motion pictures, and news news, and motion pictures news, and telegraph time and timekeeping electricity electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity modernity visual culture motion pictures, new way of seeing modernism news LB - 34440 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 SP - 229-64 ST - Media on Display: A Telegraphic History of Early American Cinema T2 - New Media, 1740-1915 TI - Media on Display: A Telegraphic History of Early American Cinema ID - 3082 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Alla Efimova and Lev Manovich, eds. and trans. AB - This essay discusses mass celebrations during the Stalin era, during the 1920s but especially during the 1930s and 1940s. Between 1939 and 1941, for example, the Leningrad Central Party Committee Club alone conducted 111 mass celebrations. The author does not have much to say about how new media were used in these spectacles. He does note that before the spread of radio and television, the mass celebrations “fulfilled the function of mass communication in a direct and personal manner, facilitating self-identification, self-knowledge, and also, in a certain sense, the development of the capabilities of a mass individual.” (208) He does mention that film footage that has survived shows some of these celebration. He says that “Lenin’s Electric Bulb” became more than a metaphor – that in some spectacles “above the Leader’s head a real electric light was shining, like the nimbus of a saint.” AU - Zakharov, Alexander CY - Chicago KW - USSR nationalism photography mass media non-USA +photography and visual communication Soviet Union propaganda Soviet Union, and propaganda spectacles mass media, and celebrations spectacles, and mass media propaganda, and spectacles +nationalism and communication nationalism, and spectacles nationalism, and mass celebrations LB - 12290 N1 - See also: media PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1993 SP - 201-18 ST - Mass Celebrations in a Totalitarian System T2 - Tekstura: Russian Essays on Visual Culture TI - Mass Celebrations in a Totalitarian System ID - 2576 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Tom Forester, ed. and intro. AB - By the late 1970s, microelectronics had made it possible for industry to make increasing use of robots. This paper discusses robot technology and its possible future use in industry. The author considers the international diffusion of robot technology and why Great Britain has been slow to adopt these innovations. The author examines motives for using robots and believes their use will increase in the future, but not without problems. AU - Zemeno, Ricardo, Russell Moseley and Ernest Braun CY - Oxford, Eng.; and Cambridge, MA KW - computers communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution +future and science fiction non-USA microelectronics +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology Great Britain microelectronics revolution automation, and robots labor future capitalism automation labor, and automation labor LB - 2880 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Publishers; and MIT Press PY - 1980 SP - 184-97 ST - The Robots are Coming -- Slowly T2 - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - The Robots are Coming -- Slowly ID - 1680 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - eds., Dolf Zillmann and Jennings Bryant AB - Zillmann argued that prolonged exposure to non-violent pornography made both men and women more accepting of pre- and extramarital sex, generated discontent with one’s sexual partner, created doubts about marriage being one of society’s essential institutions, and destroyed trust between spouses or friends. Moreover, heavy use of pornography promoted a lack of sensitivity toward victims of sexual violence because it tended to trivialize rape and the sexual abuse of children, led people to believe that unusual sexual activities were normal, and decreased the belief that women should be equal to men in intimate relations. AU - Zillmann, Dolf CY - Hillsdale, NJ KW - children, and media government hearings media effects, and pornography social science research archives sexuality motion pictures government media effects crime censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research pornography, nonviolent Meese Commission testimony primary sources hearings media effects media effects, and nonviolent pornography children children, and pornography pornography, and children pornography, and opponents pornography, and satiation pornography, and harmful effects crime, and pornography pornography, and crime LB - 22770 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Lawrence Erlbaum PY - 1989 SP - 127-57 ST - Effects of Prolonged Consumption of Pornography T2 - Pornography: Research Advances and Policy Considerations TI - Effects of Prolonged Consumption of Pornography ID - 1002 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Pornography, Commission on Obscenity and AB - This essay, which was part of the 1970 President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography, discusses efforts by citizen actions groups and other to regulate erotica and pornography. The authors look at who the people are that are most usually involved in anti-pornography campaigns. AU - Zurcher, Louis A. AU - Cushing, Robert G. CY - Washington, D. C. KW - Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) social science research values sexuality values media effects values community law censorship and ratings censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and foreign censorship, and foreign obscenity pornography, and antisocial behavior media effects, and pornography pornography, and effects community standards, and pornography pornography, and community standards censorship, and citizen action groups pornography, and citizen action groups citizen action groups, and pornography citizen action groups, and censorship censorship, and antiporn groups LB - 19370 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - U. S. Government Printing Office SP - 143-215 ST - Participants in Ad Hoc Antipornography Organizations SV - 5 T2 - Technical Report of The Commission on Obscenity and Pornography: Volume V: Societal Contral Mechanisms TI - Participants in Ad Hoc Antipornography Organizations ID - 775 ER - TY - CHAP A2 - Pornography, Commission on Obscenity and AB - This essay, which was part of the 1970 President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography, discusses efforts by citizen actions groups and other to regulate erotica and pornography. Respondents wre treated anonymously. The issue uses the term "collective dynamics" rather than "collective behavior" to explain its findings. AU - Zurcher, Louis A. AU - Kirkpatrick, R. George CY - Washington, D. C. KW - Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) social science research values sexuality values media effects values community law censorship and ratings censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and foreign censorship, and foreign obscenity pornography, and antisocial behavior media effects, and pornography pornography, and effects community standards, and pornography pornography, and community standards censorship, and citizen action groups pornography, and citizen action groups citizen action groups, and pornography citizen action groups, and censorship censorship, and antiporn groups LB - 19360 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - U. S. Government Printing Office SP - 83-142 ST - Collective Dynamics of Ad Hoc Antipornography Organizations SV - 5 T2 - Technical Report of The Commission on Obscenity and Pornography: Volume V: Society Control Mechanisms TI - Collective Dynamics of Ad Hoc Antipornography Organizations ID - 774 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 156 N. Y. S. 2d 800 (1956); affirmed 144 N. E. 2d 31 (1957) AB - The case involved a film, The Garden of Eden (1954), about a nudist camp. The movie played on the exploitation circuit. DA - 1957 KW - sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality exploitation circuit sexuality sex sexuality nudity exploitation circuit law censorship and ratings censorship court cases court cases, and nudity court cases, and obscenity court cases, and The Garden of Eden +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and nudity motion pictures, and exploitation circuit motion pictures, and exploitation circuit exploitation circuit, and Garden of Eden exploitation circuit, and nudity censorship, and nudity nudity, and censorship sex, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex court cases, and Excelsior case LB - 20660 PY - 1957 ST - Excelsior Pictures Corp. v. Regents of the University of the State of New York. TI - Excelsior Pictures Corp. v. Regents of the University of the State of New York. ID - 441 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 236 U. S. 230 AB - This U. S. Supreme Court case, which defined motion pictures as a business "pure and simple," excluded movies from protection under the First Amendment. Not until 1952, with the Court ruled on the film The Miracle, did motion pictures gain First Amendment protection. DA - 1915 KW - U. S. Supreme Court Supreme Court (U. S.) primary sources archives motion pictures law censorship and ratings censorship primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Mutual case (1915) Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases court cases, Mutual case (1915) court cases, LB - 13090 PY - 1915 ST - Mutual Film Corporation v. Industrial Commission of Ohio. TI - Mutual Film Corporation v. Industrial Commission of Ohio. ID - 483 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 239 Illinois Supreme Court Reports 251 AB - This Illinois Supreme Court case dealt with motion picture censorship. DA - 1919? KW - archives primary sources law censorship and ratings censorship primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Illinois Supreme Court, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Illinois Supreme Court court cases primary sources, court cases court cases, Illinois Supreme Court court cases, state motion pictures, state censorship censorship, state (IL) censorship, and Chicago motion pictures, and Chicago censorship LB - 13100 PB - Illinois Supreme Court PY - 1919 ST - Jack Block, Nathan Wolf, et. al. v. The City of Chicago. TI - Jack Block, Nathan Wolf, et. al. v. The City of Chicago. ID - 484 ER - TY - CASE A2 - (1868) AB - The English case, Regina v. Hicklin (1868), held material to be obscene if its “tendency” was “to deprave and corrupt those whose minds are open to immoral influences.” American courts and legislatures accepted this ruling, which sought to protect society’s weakest members. The courts used Regina v. Hicklin to repress all manner of material. The United States Supreme Court discarded Hicklin in a 1957 ruling on two cases, Roth v. United States and Alberts v. California. DA - 1868 KW - values religion primary sources archives obscenity law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Great Britain, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Great Britain court cases primary sources, court cases court cases, Great Britain court cases, obscenity motion pictures, foreign censorship censorship, Great Britain censorship, and Great Britain obscenity, and British censorship Great Britain LB - 13110 PY - 1868 ST - Regina v. Hicklin TI - Regina v. Hicklin ID - 485 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 334 U. S. 131 (1948) AB - In a decision written by Justice William O. Douglas, the U. S. Supreme Court in 1948 made the work of censoring movies much more difficult. The major studios owned hundreds of theaters, which guaranteed outlets for their films -- pictures the Production Code Administration approved. In United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., the Court ruled that studios were in violation of antitrust laws and must divest themselves of their theater chains. Control over exhibitors had already weakened in 1942 when Hays in a little- known maneuver gave theater owners freedom to show movies that had not received the PCA’s blessing. DA - 1948 KW - U. S. Supreme Court United States v. Paramount Pictures (1948) Supreme Court (U. S.) archives primary sources Paramount Pictures law censorship and ratings censorship primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Paramount Pictures case (1948) Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) primary sources, court cases court cases, Paramount Pictures case (1948) court cases, antitrust, and motion pictures motion pictures, and antitrust law, and antitrust court cases LB - 16000 PY - 1948 ST - United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc. TI - United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc. ID - 572 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 343 U. S. 495 (1952) DA - 1952 KW - U. S. Supreme Court motion pictures, and religion self-regulation Production Code Burstyn v. Wilson Supreme Court (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives primary sources freedom values religion law censorship and ratings censorship primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases court cases, Miracle case court cases, First Amendment Burstyn, Joseph Miracle case Production Code, and decline of freedom, and motion pictures motion pictures, and freedom movies, and religion motion pictures, and religion LB - 16010 PY - 1952 ST - Joseph Burstyn, Inc. v. Wilson. TI - Joseph Burstyn, Inc. v. Wilson. ID - 573 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 157 Tex. Crim. 516, 247 S. W. 2d 95 (1952), rev'd per curiam, 343 U. S. 960 (1952) AB - This case, decided after the Miracle case, further weakened motion picture censorship as the Court rejected the rationale that a movie could be suppressed as "prejudicial to the best interests of the people." DA - 1952 KW - U. S. Supreme Court self-regulation Production Code Supreme Court (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives primary sources values religion law censorship and ratings censorship primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases court cases, Gelling case court cases, Production Code, and decline of Production Code, and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases, and Production Code LB - 16030 PY - 1952 ST - Gelling v. Texas. TI - Gelling v. Texas. ID - 574 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 159 Ohio St. 315, 112 N.E. 2d 311 (1953), rev'd per curiam, 346 U.S. 587 (1954) AB - In this case, the Court voided the use of “harmful” as a justification to censor motion pictures. DA - 1953 KW - U. S. Supreme Court self-regulation Production Code Supreme Court (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives primary sources values religion law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and freedom court cases, and harmful LB - 16040 PY - 1953 ST - Superior Films, Inc. v. Dept. of Education of Ohio. TI - Superior Films, Inc. v. Dept. of Education of Ohio. ID - 575 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 305 N.Y. 336, 113 N.E. 2d 502 (1953), rev'd per curiam, 346 U. S. 587 (1954) DA - 1953 KW - U. S. Supreme Court self-regulation Production Code Supreme Court (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives primary sources religion values morality values religion law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and freedom court cases, and immoral morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality LB - 16050 PY - 1953 ST - Commercial Pictures Corp. v. Board of Regents of New York. TI - Commercial Pictures Corp. v. Board of Regents of New York. ID - 576 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 354 U. S. 476 (1957) AB - This case, together with the Alberts v. California case decided the same year, changed the Supreme Court's interpretion of obscenity, one that earlier had been defined by the Hicklin case. Henceforth, it became much hard for prosecutors to convict people for obscenity. Samuel Roth was convicted for mailing Wild Passion, Wanton by Night, and Sexual Content of Men and Women. Well-known for distributing such material, he had earlier convictions for obscenity. His appeal came at the same time as that of David Alberts, convicted in California for selling obscene literature. While the U. S. Supreme Court upheld the convictions of Roth and Alberts, and stated that obscenity was not protected by the First Amendment, it nevertheless changed fundamentally the way in which it dealt with obscenity cases. What became known as the Roth test became the foundation of American obscenity law. Obscenity would be “whether to the average person, applying contemporary community standards, the dominant theme of the material taken as a whole appeals to the prurient interest.” In delivering the opinion in Roth, Justice William J. Brennan, Jr. said that “all ideas having even the slightest redeeming social importance... have the full protection” of the First Amendment, unless “they encroach upon the limited area of more important interests.” Justice Douglas, who joined by Hugo L. Black in dissenting in both Roth and Alberts, went farther. He argued that the First Amendment protected literary treatment of sex even if it offended “the common conscience of the community.” DA - 1957 KW - U. S. Supreme Court self-regulation Roth case (1957) Production Code Supreme Court (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives primary sources obscenity values religion law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and freedom court cases, and harmful Roth v. U. S. (1957) court cases, and Roth obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.), and Roth v. U. S. (1957) motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and Roth v. U. S. (1957) Alberts case LB - 16060 PY - 1957 ST - Roth v. United States. TI - Roth v. United States. ID - 577 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 390 U. S. 629 (1968) AB - Between the Roth decision in 1957 and 1968, the year of Ginsberg v. New York, the U. S. Supreme Court in the thirteen obscenity cases rendered no less than fifty-five separate opinions. “The upshot of all this divergence in viewpoint,” Justice John M. Harlan wrote in the Ginsberg case, “is that anyone who undertakes to examine the Court’s decision since Roth which have held particular material obscene or not obscene would find himself in utter bewilderment.” DA - 1968 KW - U. S. Supreme Court self-regulation Production Code Supreme Court (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives primary sources obscenity Ginsberg v. New York values religion law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and freedom court cases, and harmful Ginsberg case court cases, and Ginsberg obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.), and Ginsberg case motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and Ginsberg case LB - 17000 PY - 1968 ST - Ginsberg v. New York. TI - Ginsberg v. New York. ID - 578 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 378 U. S. 184 (1964) AB - In 1964, Jacobellis v. Ohio, the U.S. Supreme Court overruled a decision to prohibit Louis Malle’s film The Lovers (Les Amants) (France, 1958; U.S. 1959), about a bored young woman who fell in love with an archaeologist and abandoned her husband and family. Ohio censors had found a love scene in the final reel particularly objectionable. In trying to ascertain the “dim and uncertain line” between protected expression and obscenity, the Court in a 6-3 decision judged the picture not obscene. Brennan, joined by Justice Arthur Goldberg, reaffirmed, and even expanded the Roth v. United States (1957) ruling, when they said that a work could not be outlawed unless it is “utterly without redeeming social importance.” Brennan and Goldberg also said obscenity had to be “determined on the basis of a national standard.” Douglas and Black concurred on the ground that the First Amendment permitted no restrictions. Justice Potter Stewart concluded that the Roth test applied only to hard-core pornography. He did not try to define the term, but did say in the now famous phrase, that “I know it when I see it.” Chief Justice Earl Warren dissented, rejecting the idea of a national standard for obscenity, and saying that when Roth said “community standards” should be the basis for judgment, it meant just that. DA - 1964 KW - U. S. Supreme Court self-regulation Production Code Supreme Court (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives primary sources obscenity values religion law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and freedom Jacobellis case court cases, and Jacobellis obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.), and Jacobellis case motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and Jacobellis case movie, The Lovers LB - 16090 PY - 1964 ST - Jacobellis v. Ohio. TI - Jacobellis v. Ohio. ID - 579 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 380 U. S. 51 (1966) AB - In Freedman v. Maryland, and exhibitor, Freedman, had shown Revenge at Daybreak (France, 1954; U.S., 1964) without obtaining a license from the Maryland censorship board. Although the board did not consider the film obscene, Freedman was convicted of violating state law. The Supreme Court overturned his conviction saying that the burden of proof for obscenity rested with the censor. The latter had to assure the exhibitor that the film would be proscribed or allowed to be shown within a brief, specified time, and that any judicial decision would be promptly delivered. Henceforth, any state law that tried to limit pornographic films had to satisfy the requirements set out in this case or be guilty of illegal prior restraint. DA - 1966 KW - U. S. Supreme Court self-regulation Production Code Supreme Court (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives primary sources obscenity values religion law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and freedom Freedman case court cases, and Freedman obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.), and Freedman case motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and Freedman case movie, Revenge at Daybreak censorship, and states LB - 16120 PY - 1966 ST - Freedman v. Maryland. TI - Freedman v. Maryland. ID - 580 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 383 U. S. 413 (1966) DA - 1966 KW - U. S. Supreme Court self-regulation Production Code literature Supreme Court (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives primary sources obscenity values religion law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and freedom Memoirs case court cases, and Memoirs obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.), and Memoirs case motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and Memoirs case Cleland, John censorship, and states censorship, and literature literature, and censorship Fanny Hill case LB - 16130 PY - 1966 ST - (Memoirs v. Massachusetts) TI - Memoirs v. Massachusetts [A Book Named "John Cleland's Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure" et al. v. Attorney General of Massachusetts] ID - 581 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 413 U. S. 15 (1973) AB - In Miller vs. California (1973), the U. S. Supreme Court upheld, in a 5-4 decision, a California law banning the knowing sale of obscene material. Chief Justice Burger rejected the Warren’s Court’s test for obscenity which required the matter in question to be “utterly without redeeming social value” – a standard that made it almost impossible to obtain convictions. Burger noted that this test which Justice Brennan had articulated in Memoirs vs. Massachusetts (1966) had never been supported by more than a plurality of the Court (no more than by three justices at any one time). In the Miller case, the Court also rejected a national standard for defining pornography and said instead that local community standards could be used by trial courts in obscenity cases. DA - 1973 KW - U. S. Supreme Court Miller v. California Supreme Court (U. S.) values archives primary sources sexuality obscenity values community law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases motion pictures, and freedom Miller case court cases, and Miller obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.), and Memoirs case motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and Miller case censorship, and states censorship, and community standards community standards, and censorship pornography pornography, and Miller case Miller case, and pornography pornography, and community standards Meese Commission LB - 16150 PY - 1973 ST - Miller v. California. TI - Miller v. California. ID - 582 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 327 U. S. 146 (1946) AB - In a case that had implications for Hollywood publicity, the Supreme Court in 1946 narrowed the federal government’s power to regulate sexual images in magazines when it unanimously overturned the postmaster general’s decision in 1943 to deny mailing privileges to Esquire on the grounds that it included cartoons, pictures, and other sexual material that reflected a “smoking-room type of humor.” Written by Justice William O. Douglas, the decision contributed to proliferation of so-called girlie publications. DA - 1946 KW - U. S. Supreme Court self-regulation Production Code Esquire magazine Supreme Court (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives primary sources obscenity news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers values religion law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and freedom Esquire case court cases, and Esquire obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.), and Esquire case motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and Esquire case magazines magazines, and obscenity obscenity, and magazines cartoons, and obscenity obscenity, and cartoons cartoons LB - 16640 PY - 1946 ST - Hannegan v. Esquire. TI - Hannegan v. Esquire. ID - 613 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 177 Kan 728, 282 P. 2d 412 (1955), rev'd per curiam, 350 U. S. 870 (1955) AB - In this 1955 case, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down a Kansas state censors’ ruling that The Moon Is Blue was “obscene, indecent and immoral,” and tended “to debase or corrupt morals.” DA - 1955 KW - U. S. Supreme Court self-regulation Production Code Supreme Court (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives primary sources religion values morality values religion law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and freedom court cases, and immoral morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality LB - 16690 PY - 1955 ST - Holmby Prod., Inc. v. Vaughn. TI - Holmby Prod., Inc. v. Vaughn. VL - 177 Kan 728, 282 P. 2d 412 (1955), rev'd per curiam, 350 U. S. 870 (1955) ID - 617 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 360 U. S. 684 (1959) AB - Several decisions by the U. S. Supreme Court made it more difficult to prosecute obscenity and exercise control over immorality during the late 1950s and 1960s. In 1959 the Court lifted a ban on the showing of the French film Lady Chatterley’s Lover (1957). New York censors had rejected the movie because it presented adultery “as being right and desirable for certain people under certain circumstances.” The Supreme Court ruled that the state had tried to regulate advocacy of an idea and “thus struck at the very heart of constitutionally protected liberty.” The Court said, in effect, that showing immoral activity, even in a favorable manner, was not obscene. DA - 1959 KW - U. S. Supreme Court self-regulation Production Code sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Christianity Supreme Court (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) obscenity foreign films values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church non-USA motion pictures, foreign +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, foreign motion pictures, and foreign Production Code, and foreign films Catholic Church, and foreign films foreign films, and Production Code (motion pictures) censorship, and foreign films motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and France motion pictures, and France motion pictures, and adultery motion pictures, and adultery obscenity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and obscenity court cases, and obscenity obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.), and obscenity Kingsley International Pictures Corp. v. Regents movie, Lady Chatterley's Lover Supreme Court (U. S.), and Lady Chatterly's Lover court cases LB - 16730 PY - 1959 ST - Kingsley International Pictures Corp. v. Regents of the University of the State of New York. TI - Kingsley International Pictures Corp. v. Regents of the University of the State of New York. ID - 621 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 383 U. S. 463 (1966) AB - This case was one of several during the late 1950s and 1960s involving obscenity. DA - 1966 KW - U. S. Supreme Court self-regulation Production Code Supreme Court (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives primary sources obscenity Ginsberg v. New York values religion law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and freedom court cases, and harmful Ginsberg case court cases, and Ginsberg obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.), and Ginsberg case motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and Ginsberg case LB - 16750 PY - 1966 ST - Ginzberg v. New York. TI - Ginzberg v. New York. ID - 623 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 390 U. S. 676 (1968) AB - In Dallas, a film classification board, the first of its kind in the United States, attempted to use age as a means of rating the appropriateness of films. Even though the movie industry successfully challenged this plan before the United States Supreme Court in Interstate Circuit, Inc., v. Dallas (1968), the Court did not declare classification invalid and many believed the case encouraged other cities to create their own classification boards. Indeed, Jack Valenti thought that as many as forty local regulatory boards were ready to move into action by 1968. In late 1968, the motion picture industry adopted a rating system. DA - 1968 KW - U. S. Supreme Court Supreme Court (U. S.) archives primary sources primary sources censorship and ratings children law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Interstate Circuit, Inc. v. Dallas motion pictures, and classification motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Supreme Court (U. S.), and movie classification censorship, and local court cases primary sources, court cases censorship, and local government court cases, and classification court cases, and Dallas children, and media LB - 16760 PY - 1968 ST - Interstate Circuit, Inc. v. Dallas. TI - Interstate Circuit, Inc. v. Dallas. ID - 624 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 354 U. S. 476 (1957) AB - This case, together with the Roth v. United States case decided the same year, changed the Supreme Court's interpretion of obscenity, one that earlier had been defined by the Hicklin case. Henceforth, it became much hard for prosecutors to convict people for obscenity. DA - 1957 KW - U. S. Supreme Court self-regulation Roth case (1957) Production Code Supreme Court (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives primary sources obscenity values religion law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and freedom court cases, and harmful Roth v. U. S. (1957) court cases, and Roth obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.), and Alberts case motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and Roth v. U. S. (1957) obscenity, and Alberts case Roth case (1957) (1957), and Alberts case LB - 16990 PY - 1957 ST - Alberts v. California TI - Alberts v. California ID - 642 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 413 U. S. 49 (1973) AB - In Paris Adult Theatre I v. Slaton, a case decided the same day as Miller v. California, the U. S. Supreme Court upheld (again 5 to 4) the right of states to prevent the showing of hard-core pornographic films in adult theaters even though the owner had limited the audience to consenting adults. The case, which originated in Georgia, involved two allegedly obscene movies. A trial court had thrown out the complaints on grounds that the theater had restricted minors and that exhibiting the films to consenting adults was permissible under the constitution. The Georgia Supreme Court reversed this decision. Using Miller, the United States Supreme Court upheld the Georgia high court, holding that even though “conclusive proof is lacking,” states could conclude that “a nexus does or might exist between antisocial behavior and obscene material....” Moreover, the United States Supreme Court said that showing obscene matter in a public place was “not protected by any constitutional doctrine of privacy.” Whatever right to privacy that an adult might have at home did not extend to a commercial theater. Nor was everything shown to consenting adults constitutionally protected; Georgia’s obscenity laws and their relation to the First Amendment could therefore be reinterpreted in light of the standards set out in the Miller case. DA - 1973 KW - U. S. Supreme Court audiences Miller v. California Supreme Court (U. S.) values archives primary sources sexuality obscenity values community law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases motion pictures, and freedom Miller case court cases, and Miller obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.), and Memoirs case motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and Paris Theater case censorship, and states censorship, and scommunity standards community standards, and censorship pornography pornography, and Paris Theater case Paris Theater case, and pornography pornography, and community standards, theaters theaters (adult), and Supreme Court (U. S.) Supreme Court (U. S.), and adult theaters theaters LB - 19170 PY - 1973 ST - Paris Adult Theatre I v. Slaton. TI - Paris Adult Theatre I v. Slaton. ID - 756 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 418 U. S. 153 (1974) AB - This Georgia case involved Mike Nichols’s film Carnal Knowledge (Avco Embassy/Icarus, 1971). A theater owner in Albany, Billy Jenkins, had been convicted for showing the movie, which starred Jack Nicholson, Art Garfunkle, Ann-Margaret, and Candice Bergen. A divided Georgia Supreme Court held that the conviction was within the guidelines set down by the U.S. Supreme Court in the Miller v. California case. The test for obscenity in Miller required that the work in question “portrays, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and, taken as a whole, does not have serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.” It was difficult to argue that Carnal Knowledge, which was not a hard-core film, fell into that category. The Motion Picture Association of America backed Jenkins’s appeal to the United States Supreme Court, where Louis Nizer argued that the film deserved protection under the First Amendment. The Court agreed and, in setting out the decision, Justice William H. Rehnquist said that “juries do not have unbridled discretion in determining what is ‘patently offensive’” In short, the First Amendment, which the Court uniformly applied across the nation without consideration for whatever cultural differences might exist from one locale to another, took precedent over community standards. DA - 1974 KW - U. S. Supreme Court Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Jenkins v. Georgia CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Supreme Court (U. S.) values archives primary sources sexuality obscenity NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric First Amendment values community freedom law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases motion pictures, and freedom Jenkins case court cases, and Jenkins obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.), and Jenkins case motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and Jenkins case censorship, and states censorship, and scommunity standards community standards, and censorship pornography pornography, and Jenkins case Jenkins case, and pornography pornography, and community standards movies, and banned (GA) motion pictures, and banned (GA) movie, Carnal Knowledge Nizer, Louis MPAA censorship, and First Amendment motion pictures, and First Amendment First Amendment, and motion pictures LB - 19190 PY - 1974 ST - Jenkins v. Georgia. TI - Jenkins v. Georgia. ID - 757 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 427 U. S. 50 (1976) AB - Realizing that the Miller v. California (1973), Paris Adult Theatre (1973), and Jenkins (1974) cases by themselves were inadequate to eliminate adult movie houses, communities tried a different approach that involved controlling land use and concentrating such theaters into “combat zones.” The goal was to prevent concentration in areas where residential neighborhoods and businesses might be destroyed. The United States Supreme Court upheld this method of control in two cases, Young v. American Mini Theatres (1976) and City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc. (1986). Neither case involved criminal penalties or suppressing films completely. DA - 1976 KW - U. S. Supreme Court Young v. American Mini Theatres (1976) audiences Supreme Court (U. S.) values archives primary sources sexuality obscenity values community law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases motion pictures, and freedom Young case (1976) court cases, and Young obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.), and Young case motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and Young case censorship, and states censorship, and community standards community standards, and censorship pornography pornography, and Young case Young case, and pornography pornography, and community standards theaters (adult), and Supreme Court (U. S.) Supreme Court (U. S.), and adult theaters motion pictures, and combat zones Supreme Court (U. S.), and combat zones theaters LB - 19200 PY - 1976 ST - Young v. American Mini Theatres. TI - Young v. American Mini Theatres. ID - 758 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 475 U. S. 41 (1986) AB - Realizing that the Miller, Paris Adult Theatre, and Jenkins cases by themselves were inadequate to eliminate adult movie houses, communities tried a different approach that involved controlling land use and concentrating such theaters into “combat zones.” The goal was to prevent concentration in areas where residential neighborhoods and businesses might be destroyed. The United States Supreme Court upheld this method of control in two cases, Young v. American Mini Theatres (1976) and City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc. (1986). Neither case involved criminal penalties or suppressing films completely. DA - 1986 KW - U. S. Supreme Court audiences Supreme Court (U. S.) values archives primary sources sexuality obscenity values community law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases motion pictures, and freedom Renton case court cases, and Renton obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.), and Renton case motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and Renton case censorship, and states censorship, and community standards community standards, and censorship pornography pornography, and Renton case Renton case, and pornography pornography, and community standards theaters (adult), and Supreme Court (U. S.) Supreme Court (U. S.), and adult theaters motion pictures, and combat zones Supreme Court (U. S.), and combat zones theaters LB - 19210 PY - 1986 ST - City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc. TI - City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc. ID - 759 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 190 U. S. app. D. C. 351 (1978) AB - In a case involving Home Box Office (HBO), a United States Court of Appeals held that the Federal Communications Commission had exceeded its authority when it attempted to limit the ability of cable systems to show certain kinds of movies and sporting events. The decision eliminated the Commission’s restrictions on pay TV’s use of feature-length movies. DA - 1978 KW - entertainment corporations corporations Federal Communications Commission (FCC) entertainment, home values archives primary sources sexuality obscenity home entertainment home Home Box Office (HBO) HBO regulation values community law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures +television FCC, and television television, and FCC cable TV, and FCC FCC, and cable TV censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Court of Appeals, and motion pictures motion pictures and Court of Appeals court cases primary sources, court cases motion pictures, and freedom HBO case (1978) court cases, and HBO obscenity, and Court of Appeals Court of Appeals, and HBO case motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and HBO case censorship, and community standards community standards, and censorship pornography pornography, and HBO case HBO case, and pornography pornography, and community standards, theaters motion pictures, and cable television television, and motion pictures FCC cable home, and new media LB - 19220 PY - 1978 ST - Home Box Office, Inc., et al. v. Federal Communications Commission. TI - Home Box Office, Inc., et al. v. Federal Communications Commission. ID - 760 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 434 U. S. 988 (1977) AB - In this case involving Home Box Office (HBO), a United States Court of Appeals held that the FCC had exceeded its authority when it attempted to limit the ability of cable systems to show certain kinds of movies and sporting events. The decision eliminated the Commission’s restrictions on pay TV’s use of feature-length movies. DA - 1977 KW - U. S. Supreme Court entertainment audiences corporations corporations Federal Communications Commission (FCC) entertainment, home Supreme Court (U. S.) values archives primary sources sexuality obscenity home entertainment home Home Box Office (HBO) HBO regulation values community law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures +television FCC, and television television, and FCC cable TV, and FCC FCC, and cable TV censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases motion pictures, and freedom HBO case (1977) court cases, and HBO obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.), and HBO case motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and HBO case censorship, and community standards community standards, and censorship pornography pornography, and HBO case HBO case, and pornography pornography, and community standards theaters motion pictures, and cable television television, and motion pictures FCC cable home, and new media LB - 19230 PY - 1977 ST - Federal Communications Commission v. Home Box Office. TI - Federal Communications Commission v. Home Box Office. ID - 761 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 440 U. S. 689 (1979) AB - The United States Supreme Court eroded the Federal Communications Commission’s power in FCC v. Midwest Video Corp. (1979). The Court said that the Commission had exceeded its power by requiring cable televisions systems with more than 3,500 subscribers to offer at least 20 channels by 1986 and to make available some of those channels for educational, government, and public uses. DA - 1979 KW - U. S. Supreme Court audiences Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Supreme Court (U. S.) values archives primary sources sexuality obscenity regulation values community law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures +television FCC, and television television, and FCC cable TV, and FCC FCC, and cable TV censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases motion pictures, and freedom Midwest Video case (1979) court cases, and Midwest Video obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.), and Midwest Video case motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and Midwest Video case censorship, and community standards community standards, and censorship pornography pornography, and Midwest case Midwest Video case, and pornography pornography, and community standards theaters motion pictures, and cable television television, and motion pictures FCC cable LB - 19240 PY - 1979 ST - Federal Communications Commission v. Midwest Video Corp. TI - Federal Communications Commission v. Midwest Video Corp. ID - 762 ER - TY - CASE AB - This case involved a suit filed by a theater ower who challenged the Motion Picture Association of America's rating from the 1980 movie Cruising. Some at the time saw the case as potentially a challenged to the rating system itself. KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification court cases +motion pictures and popular culture movie, Cruising rating system (U. S.), legal rating system (U. S.), and controversies CARA, and legal CARA, and controversies Heffner, Richard, and legal Heffner, Richard, and Cruising Nizer, Louis, and Cruising Heffner, Richard CARA Nizer, Louis LB - 21790 ST - College Theater v. United Artists, et al. TI - College Theater v. United Artists, et al. ID - 933 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 311 U.S. App. D.C. 224; 52 F. 3d 373; 1995 U.S. App. AB - This case involved a 1990 suit in Federal count in Washington, D. C. challenging the X rating that the motion picture industry gave to Maljack Productions' film, Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer. The movie was a brutally explicit docudrama based loosely on the story of mass murderer Henry Lee Lucas. Maljack, an Illinois-based independent film producer involved primarily with distributing videocassettes, was not an MPAA member. Filmed with then little-known actors during the winter of 1985-1986, the movie was about a psychopathic drifter, Henry (played by Michael Rooker) and his former prison buddy, Ottis (played by Tom Towles) who savagely murdered strangers and did so utterly without remorse. In one scene, the pair invade a home and record their murder of a family on videotape. The movie seemed too realistic for a typical slasher picture. The Classification and Rating Administration gave the movie an X in March, 1988, because of its violence. Early the next year, Maljack surrendered its ratings certificate and released the picture unrated. When it was shown in Chicago and New York it sparked exchanges between those who thought it exemplified brilliant film making and those who thought it too gruesome to watch. Because it lacked an R rating, Henry played in relatively few theaters. The 1990 suit was originally dismissed. Maljack appealed the dismissal. See Maljack Productions, Inc. vs. Motion Picture Association of America, 311 U. S. App. D. C. 224; 52 F. 3d 373; 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 9675 (April 28, 1995) (No. 93-7244). This case (1995) reversed the district court’s order dismissing the original complaint. The court now remanded the case for additional proceedings. DA - April 28, 1995 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) archives primary sources law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and law challenges CARA, and law challenges CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer (1990) NC-17 X-rated films court cases, and X-rating LB - 25040 PY - 1995 SE - LEXIS 9675 ST - Maljack Productions, Inc. v. Motion Picture Association of America. TI - Maljack Productions, Inc. v. Motion Picture Association of America. ID - 1105 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13284 (Oct. 3, 1990) (Civil Action No. 90-1121) // 311 U. S. App. D. C. 224; 52 F. 3d 373; 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 9675 (April 28, 1995) (No. 93-7244) AB - This case involved a 1990 suit in Federal count in Washington, D. C. challenging the X rating that the motion picture industry gave to Maljack Productions' film, Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer. The movie was a brutally explicit docudrama based loosely on the story of mass murderer Henry Lee Lucas. Maljack, an Illinois-based independent film producer involved primarily with distributing videocassettes, was not an MPAA member. Filmed with then little-known actors during the winter of 1985-1986, the movie was about a psychopathic drifter, Henry (played by Michael Rooker) and his former prison buddy, Ottis (played by Tom Towles) who savagely murdered strangers and did so utterly without remorse. In one scene, the pair invade a home and record their murder of a family on videotape. The movie seemed too realistic for a typical slasher picture. The Classification and Rating Administration gave the movie an X in March, 1988, because of its violence. Early the next year, Maljack surrendered its ratings certificate and released the picture unrated. When it was shown in Chicago and New York it sparked exchanges between those who thought it exemplified brilliant film making and those who thought it too gruesome to watch. Because it lacked an R rating, Henry played in relatively few theaters. This case was dismissed and the dismissal was later appealed. DA - Oct. 3, 1990 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings rating system (U. S.) archives primary sources law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and law challenges CARA, and law challenges CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer (1990) NC-17 X-rated films court cases, and X-rating court cases, dismissed LB - 25210 PY - 1990 SE - LEXIS 13284 (Civil Action No. 90-1121) ST - Maljack Productions, Inc. v. Motion Picture Association of America. TI - Maljack Productions, Inc. v. Motion Picture Association of America. ID - 1117 ER - TY - CASE A2 - 521 U. S. 844 (1997) // 117 S. Ct. 2329; 138 L. Ed. 2d 874; 1997 U.S. LEXIS 4037; 65 U.S.L.W. 4715; 25 Media L. Rep. 1833; 97 Cal.Daily Op. Service 4998; 97 Daily Journal DAR 8133; 11 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. S 211 AB - This case overturned the Communications Decency Act (CDA). In 1996, Congress passed the CDA. The CDA was part of the Telecommunications Act and it had two provisions that attempted to protect those under 18 years of age from harmful communications sent on the Internet. One provision made it a crime to knowingly transmit “obscene or indecent” materials to minors. The other made it illegal to use deliberately a computer service to send messages to those under 18 that depicted or described “sexual or excretory activities or organs” in a “patently offensive manner, as judged by “contemporary community standards.” The U. S. Supreme Court declared these provisions unconstitutional, in part because they amounted to an abridgment of free speech protected under the First Amendment. The scope of the CDA was too broad, the Court said, and such terms as “indecent” and “patently offensive” were so ambiguous as to “silence speakers whose messages would be entitled to constitutional protections.” DA - June 26, 1997 KW - U. S. Supreme Court computers telecommunications Supreme Court (U. S.) sexuality Internet computers law censorship and ratings court cases +computers and the Internet Communications Decency Act, 1996 Telecommunications Act (1996) pornography pornography, and pornography, and computers pornography, and Internet Internet, and pornography computers, and pornography Supreme Court (U. S.), and pornography Supreme Court (U. S.), and computers Supreme Court (U. S.), and Internet law LB - 27980 PB - U.S. PY - 1997 ST - Janet Reno, Attorney General of the United States, et al. v. American Civil Liberties Union, et al. TI - Janet Reno, Attorney General of the United States, et al. v. American Civil Liberties Union, et al. ID - 1350 ER - TY - CASE AB - Among the issues in this case, which involved the films James Boys in Missouri (Essanay, 1908) and Night Riders (Kalem, 1908), was what constituted obscenity and immorality, and also what portrayal of history might be consider immoral. The lawyers who fought these charges maintained that movies were depictions of the "American historical experience" and thus could not be censored as immoral or obscene. Lee Grieveson in Policing Cinema (2004), writes of this case: "Chief Justice James H. Cartwright dismissed these claims in the Illinois Supreme Court in early 1909. It was the purpose of the law, Justice Cartwright asserted, 'to secure decency and morality in the moving pictures business, and that purpose falls within the police power.' Notions of 'decency,' 'immorality,' and 'obscenity' were central to this power, and although it is 'doubtless true,' Cartwright noted, that there are differences as to what is immoral and obscene, 'the average person of healthy and wholesome mind knows well enough what "immoral" and "obscene" mean and can intelligently apply the test to any picture presented to him.' Cartwright's logic assumed a universal subject of moral judgment. "Even though the ordinance focused solely on moving pictures, Cartwright noted, it did not necessarily license other immoral representations; furthermore, there is something specific to the regulation of moving pictures -- 74/75 the audience. 'On account of the low price of admissions,' Cartwright claimed, nickel theaters 'are frequented and patronized by a large number of children, as well as by those of limited means who do not attend the productions of plays and dramas given in the regular theaters. The audiences include those classes whose age, education and situation in life especially entitle them to protection against the evil influence of obscene and immoral representations.' He thus concluded that exhibition of the pictures 'would necessarily be attended with evil effects upon youthful spectators.' A concern about the effects of moving pictures on children and those rather enigmatically characterized as 'of limited means' that had animated the development of reform concern in early 1907 and led to the establishment of the police censor board was central also to the establishment of the board's constitutionality. Discourse creates institutions that come, in turn, to sustain those discourses. Important precedents were set here, paving the way for the proliferation of municipal and state censor boards from this moment on. "Responding also to the claim that the films depicted 'experiences connected with the history of the country,' Cartwright suggested that it did not follow that they were 'not immoral' since they 'necessarily portray exhibitions of crime.' Representations of history in moving pictures -- at least if they portray 'crime,' that central motor force of history -- could be immoral and obscene and could thus have damaging effects on those of 'limited means' and on the children of an urban immigrant population who were seen to be the most frequent moviegoers. Of course, the representation of the history of the United States -- or, for that matter, the immorality of elites -- to those groups had critical ideological import The representation of criminal events in moving pictures was of a different order from their depiction on the stage. For Justice Cartwright clear distinctions needed to be drawn between moving pictures and historical and theatrical accounts. Even though it is almost certain that the two films under consideration -- like The Unwritten Law -- replayed historical actuality through fictional conventions, that they were only retrospectively discursively positioned as straightforward representations of historical actuality, the decision took that positioning at its word and disallowed it." "Untangling the complicated layers of this case is important to our understanding of the interaction between regulatory forces and the film industry at this moment. Allying cinema on the one hand with the theater and on the other with nonfictional discourse -- the at least ostensibly nonfictional discourse of history -- seemed to offer a way for Block to circumvent the powers of the police censor board. Yet these alliances were de- 75/76 nied by the state Supreme Court amid fears about the effects of films on audiences. Film was, this suggested, distinct from the theater and from history and uniquely a target for regulatory concern principally because it could have damaging effects on vulnerable (and potentially dangerous) audiences. The audience base for cinema meant that it could not simply represent controversial real-life events. Cartwright's concerns can be situated clearly in the context of the anxieties about 'sensational' films such as The Unwritten Law and the effect of moving pictures and nickel theaters on children, and indeed on those of 'limited means,' that emerged so forcefully in early 1907. Legal discourse is a cultural text, evidently enmeshed with the shared knowledge of the culture traced out in this chapter." (Grieveson, Policing Cinema, 74-76) DA - 1909 KW - theater stage immorality history children censorship law censorship and ratings freedom ref, court law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and legal motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Illinois Supreme Court, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Illinois Supreme Court court cases primary, court cases court cases, Illinois Supreme Court court cases, state motion pictures, state censorship censorship, state (IL) censorship, and Chicago motion pictures, and Chicago censorship history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures history, and censorship censorship, and history children children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and immorality motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures immorality, and motion pictures values values, and motion pictures Block v. City of Chicago case (1909) audiences motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures media effects motion pictures, and media effects media effects, and motion pictures media effects, and children children, and media effects sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures James Boys in Missouri (1908) Night Riders (1908) Unwritten Law, The (1907) theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship ref, secondary ref, secular ref, law children, and media history obscenity primary sources LB - 13100 PB - Illinois Supreme Court PY - 1909 ST - Jack Block, Nathan Wolf, et. al. v. The City of Chicago TI - Jack Block, Nathan Wolf, et. al. v. The City of Chicago VL - 239 Illinois Supreme Court Reports 251 ID - 3469 ER - TY - CONF A2 - Joel A. Tarr, ed. AB - The author says that we can learn from history provided that historical events are compiled properly. She offers a methodology for accomplishing this goal. AU - Hamilton, Mary R. C1 - San Francisco CY - Seven Springs Moutain Resort, Champion, PA DA - Dec. 1-4, 1976 1977 KW - technology technology and society preservation archives history, and new media values libraries libraries, and information storage +information storage history history, and technology information storage, and technology values, and technology technology assessment +information storage LB - 3830 PB - San Francisco Press, Inc. PY - 1976 1977 SP - 5-14 ST - The Use of Historical Records to Inform Prospective Technology Assessments T2 - Retrospective Technology Assessment -- 1976. TI - The Use of Historical Records to Inform Prospective Technology Assessments ID - 1771 ER - TY - CONF AB - Contains Mortimer J. Adler's testimony on causes of crime. Adler, and others, doubted that motion pictures were a leading cause of crime. AU - States, Attorney General of the United C1 - Washington, D.C. DA - Dec. 10-13, 1934 [1934?] KW - government reports government hearings motion pictures government Adler, Mortimer +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and crime government documents hearings proceedings testimony LB - 13680 PB - [Government Printing Office?] PY - 1934 T2 - Proceedings of the Attorney General's Conference on Crime, Held December 10-13, 1934 ID - 532 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In the National Television Violence Studies, researchers at four universities tried, through extensive research, to determine the amount violence, its intensity, and its effect on viewers of American television. The results are based on a research which covered 50 days during which 23 television channels were analyzed everyday from 7.00 am to 11.00 p.m. Researchers proposed a series of measures meant to repress violence on TV because they consider it a serious social ill. In the television season 1994-1995 the researchers found that 57 percent of all the programs analyzed contained some sort of violence. The violence displayed on television poses three serious threats: learning aggressive attitudes and behaviors, becoming desensitized to real-world violence, and developing unrealistic fear of being victimized by violence. The amount of violence differs from channel to channel; the highest percentage of violent programs is found on premium cable and within the genre of movies specifically; this is also where the highest frequencies of violent interactions are displayed. In contrast, the lowest percentage of violent programming is found on the broadcast networks and especially on public broadcast. Viewers do not necessarily need to identify with persons on the screen who practice violence. The prototype of such a person resembles the prototype of someone who views the program. In most cases an adult white male attacks another adult white male. The major problem with violence on TV is that it is often sanitized. Negative mental or physical consequences, e.g. paralysis, are often ignored and violence is even often depicted as funny. Within these programs talk shows are to be considered the least violent whereas police reality shows are the most violent. A way to make these reality programs less accessible to children might be to schedule these shows later in the evening. Because, as the research shows us, boys are attracted to shows and movies that they are actually not allowed to see based on the rating. These programs tend not to have the same appeal to girls. Violence tends to affect younger children even more than adolescents. As opposed to what one might think, cartoons overall contain too much violence suitable for children under the age of seven. Therefore it is not recommended to parents to let their children watch networks as Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon. All in all, the most important mean to reduce the amount of violence on American television, or at least to reduce its dangerous impact, is to inform the audience better about the effects of violence. Networks should offer people an alternative to violent shows, and if they decide to watch them, helplines and help desks should be available if the show or movie happens to cause a traumatic memory. -- Pieter Van Den Berg CY - 3 volumes, Santa Barbara, Chapel Hill, Madison DA - 1994-1995 KW - Van Den Berg, Pieter television violence television, and violence violence, and television children and media media effects television, and children children, and television children, and violence violence, and children media effects, and violence violence, and media effects violence, and children children, and violence children LB - 33080 PB - Mediascope, Inc. PY - 1994 ST - National Television Violence Study TI - National Television Violence Study ID - 61 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work examines telecommunications in Canada -- the complex problems it faces, social context, history of the industry and its corporate structure, the need for future innovations, and the government's responsibility to protect the public interest. Among the topic covered include satellites and the growing role of computers (as of 1971) in communications. CY - Ottawa, Ontario DA - 1971 KW - computers labor satellites community democracy computers community non-USA office office, and new media office Canada telecommunications telecommunications, and Canada Canada, and telecommunications infrastructure, and telecommunications telecommunications, and history of democracy, and telecommunication community, and telecommunications +computers and the Internet computers, and telecommunications +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and Canada +telephones telephones, and Canada +radio radio, and Canada Intelsat infrastructure LB - 2830 PB - Information Canada ? PY - 1971 ST - Instant World: A Report on Telecommunications in Canada TI - Instant World: A Report on Telecommunications in Canada ID - 371 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This important work has a great deal of information about Americans use of mass communication. CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1961 KW - References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps archives context primary sources, statistics context, and statistics statistics reference works primary sources LB - 13150 OP - 1960 PB - U. S. Department of Commerce PY - 1961 ST - Historical Statistics of the United States: Colonial Times to 1957 TI - Historical Statistics of the United States: Colonial Times to 1957 ID - 489 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This was the 51st Annual Edition of the Film Daily Year Book of Motion Pictures. The work has much statistical data on the motion picture industry including production and distribution figures, information on foreign theaters, and a list of the Hollywood Press Corps (the work lists 325 people in Hollywood, 125 working internationally, 94 in New York alone, and 583 motion picture newspaper editors). This volume gives a good idea of the scope of the movie industry's public relations and publicity potential. The work summarizes highlights from 1968 including the new ratings system. It defines "voluntarism" on which the rating system was based. The volume also discusses "community rlations activities." Francis O. Beermann writes about television during the previous year. CY - New York DA - 1969 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA advertising, and public relations References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps propaganda public relations propaganda advertising motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture +television motion pictures, and public relations public relations, and motion pictures advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising Valenti, Jack statistics reference works public relations advertising LB - 28600 PB - Film and Television Daily PY - 1969 ST - The 1969 Film Daily Year Book of Motion Pictures TI - The 1969 Film Daily Year Book of Motion Pictures ID - 531 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Used in Jack's Lyle's entry in Robert K. Baker and Sandra J. Ball's Mass Media and Violence: Vol. IX: A Report to the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence (1969), noting that by 1967 only 39 percent of the 462 feature films released in the U. S. were produced in America. CY - New York DA - 1968 KW - social science research media effects media violence non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and violence social science research, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures violence, and social science research National Commission on Causes and Prevention of Violence motion pictures, and foreign films foreign films motion pictures, and U.S. films made abroad LB - 16510 PB - The Film Daily PY - 1968 ST - Film Daily Yearbook of Motion Pictures TI - Film Daily Yearbook of Motion Pictures ID - 603 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This analysis of the motion picture industry during the years immediately following World War II was done for the National Association of Theater Owners (NATO). During this period, the movie industry suffered a serious decline in attendance. This report indicates, for example, that inn 1953, 5,347 theaters operated in the red on their total operations, and another 7,029 theaters were in the red on income from selling ticket but managed to stay in business on profits from concessions. CY - Box 9, Mss 1446, Records of the National Association of Theater Owners (NATO), Special Collections and Manuscripts, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT KW - audiences National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) theater owners primary sources archives primary sources motion pictures law censorship and ratings censorship audiences primary sources archives primary sources, Utah NATO theaters censorship, and NATO NATO, and censorship NATO primary sources, NATO motion pictures, and postwar decline audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences LB - 18030 N1 - ProCite field[25]: Folder 8, Box 9, Mss 1446, Utah -- Provo -- Brigham Young University -- Harold B. Lee Library -- Special Collections and Manuscripts ST - An Analysis of the Motion Picture Industry, 1946-1953: Volume I TI - An Analysis of the Motion Picture Industry, 1946-1953: Volume I ID - 712 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Michael Conant, in Antitrust in the Motion Picture Industry, cited a study in the Film Daily Yearbook showing that four-wall theaters declined between 1946 and 1956, but that when drive-ins were included the total number of theaters during this period remained constant. CY - New York DA - 1959 KW - audiences theaters +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and theaters LB - 18040 PB - MPAA PY - 1959 ST - Film Daily Yearbook TI - Film Daily Yearbook ID - 713 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This analysis of the motion picture industry during the years immediately following World War II was done for the National Association of Theater Owners (NATO). During this period, the movie industry suffered a serious decline in attendance. This report indicates, for example, that inn 1953, 5,347 theaters operated in the red on their total operations, and another 7,029 theaters were in the red on income from selling ticket but managed to stay in business on profits from concessions. CY - Box 9, Mss 1446, Records of the National Association of Theater Owners (NATO), Special Collections and Manuscripts, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT. KW - audiences National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) theater owners primary sources archives primary sources motion pictures law censorship and ratings censorship audiences primary sources archives primary sources, Utah NATO theaters censorship, and NATO NATO, and censorship NATO primary sources, NATO motion pictures, and postwar decline audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences LB - 20360 N1 - ProCite field[25]: Folder 9, ST - Analysis of the Motion Picture Industry, 1946-1953: Volume II: An Appendix to Volume I TI - Analysis of the Motion Picture Industry, 1946-1953: Volume II: An Appendix to Volume I ID - 852 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This study videotaped 3,185 TV programs and analyzed 2,693. The study was lead by researchers at the University of California, Santa Barbara, University of North Caroline, Chapel Hill, University of Texas, Austin, and the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Mediascope provided the project administration. Mediascope is a nonprofit organization that attempted to promote "constructive depictions of health and social issues in mass media." The study discusses research that has been done on the effects of violence in mass media. CY - Studio City, CA DA - [c1996] KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Cantor, Joanne National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Surgeon General social science research censorship and ratings NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA motion pictures media effects media violence censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +television +motion pictures and popular culture media effects television, and violence motion pictures, and violence media effects, and violence social science research, and violence Surgeon General's Report (1972) Donnerstein, Edward Cantor, Joanne, reports children, and media MPAA rating system (U. S.), and critics television, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and television LB - 25770 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Mediascope, Inc. ST - National Television Violence Study: Scientific Papers, 1994-1995 TI - National Television Violence Study: Scientific Papers, 1994-1995 ID - 1169 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a special edition of Cinematograph: A Journal of Film and Media Art (Feb., 1998 - Dec. 1999), and deals with the history of 8mm films. CY - San Francisco, CA DA - [1998] KW - +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and amateurism 16mm motion pictures, and 16mm film motion pictures, and new technology motion pictures, and 8mm film 8mm 8mm, and history of LB - 27920 OP - Feb. 1998 - Dec. 1999 PB - San Francisco Cinematheque ST - Big As Life: An American History of 8mm Films TI - Big As Life: An American History of 8mm Films ID - 1344 ER - TY - EDBOOK A2 - Newman, Joseph (Directing Editor) AB - This book argued in 1971 that there was “every reason to believe that we are now at the approaches of another great revolution -- one which may have even greater repercussions than the invention of the automobile, the airplane, and television. This extraordinary development -- new techniques of communication which will bring all forms of consumer services, education, and entertainment directly into the home from other points in the country and in the rest of the world -- is also likely to create new problems.” This work discusses cable television, satellite technology, videocassettes, and picture telephones. Chapter 9, “As Seen From the White House,” is an interview with Clay T. Whitehead, then director of the Office of Telecommunications Policy in the Nixon administration. This book contains good charts on the growth of cable and satellite broadcasting, as well as satellite telephone circuits. CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1971 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) nationalism interactivity magnetic recording Nixon, Richard video cassettes presidents, and new media Nixon administration communication revolution materials materials videotape magnetic tape community democracy non-USA VCRs telephones, and picture phones telecommunications satellites information technology Information Age general studies cable communication revolution democracy and media automobiles +aeronautics and space communication +television information age information technology, and education information technology, and entertainment entertainment cable, and entertainment cable, and television television, and cable Whitehead, Clay T. Nixon Administration and communication telecommunications, and policy satellites, and broadcasting global communication +nationalism and communication information technology, and consumers satellites, and technology telephones video cassettes telephones, and video information highway metaphors interactive media transportation LB - 1330 PB - Books by U.S. News & World Report PY - 1971 ST - Wiring the World: The Explosion in Communications TI - Wiring the World: The Explosion in Communications ID - 1529 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is about art posters in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. There are three relatively brief essays followed by pictures of the posters. The last section is an annotated catalogue of the posters in the museum. See under individual author: Phillip Dennis Cate, Nancy Finlay, and David W. Kiehl. CY - New York DA - 1987 KW - posters, late 19th century photography non-USA posters +photography and visual communication posters color museums color, and posters posters, and France (late 19th century) posters, and United States (1890s) posters, and France LB - 1350 PB - Metropolitan Museum of Art; Distributed by Harry N. Abrams, Inc. PY - 1987 ST - American Art Posters of the 1890s TI - American Art Posters of the 1890s ID - 1531 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work has several conclusions about the importance of the transatlantic cable, among them: “In military strategy, submarine telegraphy reinforced the importance of naval power.” It was easier for a nation to be in a state of continued readiness and to mobilize on short notice. It enhanced propaganda, spying, military intelligence, transportation, among other influences. “The most subtle but perhaps also one of the most important impacts of rapid communications was the general change in the perception of time. For the first time, it became significant that dawn in one country was midday, or midnight, in another. The ability to intervene in events occurring at a great distance, while they were still unfolding, created both opportunity and anxiety, and the pace of society -- and of personal life itself -- seemed to speed up. The simplest institutional response was the creation of international standards of time measurement and time zones. More generally, institutional response was a state of constant readiness to respond and react to distant events.” CY - San Francisco DA - 1979 KW - U. S. Navy R & D nationalism time and timekeeping time public relations advertising war military communication research and development government war non-USA transportation reconnaissance propaganda +nationalism and communication telegraph telegraph, transatlantic military communication telegraph, and naval power telegraph, and propaganda propaganda, and submarine telegraphy reconnaissance, and submarine telegraphy telegraph, and reconnaissance telegraph, and military intelligence transportation, and submarine telegraphy time telegraph, and transportation telegraph, and time cable, transatlantic U. S. Navy, and submarine telegraphy cable, Atlantic cable advertising and public relations LB - 2440 PB - San Francisco Press, Inc. PY - 1979 ST - A Retrospective Technology Assessment: Submarine Telegraphy: The Transatlantic Cable of 1866 TI - A Retrospective Technology Assessment: Submarine Telegraphy: The Transatlantic Cable of 1866 ID - 1637 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is interesting for the fact that it is a history of the transatlantic cable published in 1866. It also has a map of proposed submarine and land telegraphs in 1866. In addition, it has diagrams of the cable used. CY - London DA - 1866 KW - non-USA +telegraph telegraph, and maps of telegraph, transatlantic cable, and transatlantic (maps) cable, transatlantic telegraph, and transatlantic (maps) cable, submarine cable cable, Atlantic LB - 5140 PB - Bacon and Company PY - 1866 ST - Atlantic Telegraph: Its History, from the Commencement of the Undertaking in 1854, to the Sailing of the ‘Great Eastern’ in 1866 TI - Atlantic Telegraph: Its History, from the Commencement of the Undertaking in 1854, to the Sailing of the ‘Great Eastern’ in 1866 ID - 1901 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This industry publication has information about the growth of duplicating technologies, especially during the 1960s. “Replicating, which was practically nonexistent 35 or 40 years ago, is now the most dramatic and exciting growth area in the graphic arts," this work maintains. "In this short span of time, replicating has reached true industrial status. It has developed its own processes, technologies, equipment and materials. It has trained a complete set of management and technical personnel to make itself functional. And most significant -- it has developed its own specialized market." The encyclopedia divides replicating into two primary divisions: copying and duplicating. CY - New York DA - 1965 KW - labor communication revolution communication revolution home, and new media home +duplicating technologies office, and information technology home, and information technology information technology graphics revolution +duplicating technologies photocopying graphics revolution (1960s) information technology, and office information technology, and home office LB - 5770 PB - Wolf Business Publication PY - 1965 ST - The Reproductions Encyclopedia: Fourth Edition - 1965 TI - The Reproductions Encyclopedia: Fourth Edition - 1965 ID - 1962 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work has information on early Zenith radios and the company's work in the development of television. CY - Chicago DA - 1955 KW - corporations radio +television +radio radio, and shortwave Zenith LB - 10930 PB - Zenith Radio Corp. PY - 1955 ST - The Zenith Story TI - The Zenith Story ID - 2455 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The information in this work is based on questionnaires on mass media facilities returned to Unesco. Included are data on the number of newspapers, radio transmitters, television stations, and motion picture theaters in 200 countries. A concise paragraph is devoted to each of these media in the various nations. CY - Paris; and Epping, Essex, Eng. DA - 1975 KW - United Nations References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps journalism news and journalism non-USA news +television +radio +motion pictures reference works +books, periodicals, newspapers global communication Third World newspapers Third World developing nations UNESCO LB - 11310 PB - Unesco Press/Unipub/Gower Press PY - 1975 ST - World Communications: A 200-country survey of press, radio, television and film TI - World Communications: A 200-country survey of press, radio, television and film ID - 2491 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work contains papers and abstracts on a wide range of topics relating to color -- color vision, color differences, color rendering and reproduction, design and architecture, and more. The work contains tributed to Deane B. Judd. CY - New York DA - 1973 KW - avant garde Kandinsky, Wassily color Kandinsky Wassily, and color freedom color, and science color, and architecture color, and modern art avant garde, and color art LB - 32560 PB - John Wiley & Sons (a Halsted Press Book) PY - 1973 ST - Colour 73: Survey Lectures and Abstracts of the Papers Presented at the Second Congress of the International Colour Association, University of York, 2-6 July 1973 TI - Colour 73: Survey Lectures and Abstracts of the Papers Presented at the Second Congress of the International Colour Association, University of York, 2-6 July 1973 ID - 2914 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this book -- the author is unnamed an often writes in the third person -- offers a condemnation of the corrosive effects that commercialization was having on acting and on actors. The author found the typical professional actress "A cold, unsympathetic, bitter, calloused, calculating woman" who had become "this petted, envied servant of the public...." "She had started out upon her career with quite a degree of talent and an abnormal amount of ambition. She had attained heights which apparently satisfied ambition, and yet this is what it had done for her. Could she be happy even if she knew nothing of the discomforts luxury cannot alleviate? She had not one of the elements of happiness in her character, as it was dwarfed and twisted then, and she still suffered in a dull, dead, apathetic way that even the old vent to hysteria did not relieve. "It was when I finally did secure another engagement (not so hard a task now, as my association with 'big people' made me seem of value to lesser ones) I found, as I have already stated, that Miram [this actress] stood only as a type of almost hundred I came daily to know. I might change companies, management, but seldom, if ever, conditions...." (272) The author warns of dangers to both young women and men who enter the profession. "Just here I wish to say although I have dedicated this book to young women, it is only too true that they are not alone persecuted nor morally endangered by the conditions of this profession. Boyish young fellows entering such an environment are easy prey to women whose years, sometimes, almost double theirs, and who, through drink or morphine, present so pitiful a spectacle that they young man's sympathy is aroused, and through a beginning of kindly solicitude, he is soon the abject slave of the sensual, debauched creature he may have tried to help. I have in mind just such a case of a beautiful woman not yet in her fortieth year...." (273) The author concludes. "How bitterly cruel that all this is true, I have said to myself again and again. No more beautiful art exists than that of characterization and story 'embracing' as Charlotte Cushman has ably said: 'In its exposition all other arts combined, music, dancing, color, and even sculpture in its poses and form.' Yet to-day it stands upon the very last foundation it should ever, by any stretch of the imagination occupy -- Commercialism. [emphasis in original text] (291) "Will a play or an actor draw? That is the only consideration. Never, is the play a literary achievement, a beautiful story, or an ethical study? Nor is the act a man of experience, of natural talent who can be relied upon to bring out all that is best of the author's thoughts. Is it a money maker? Is he a good card? There are the things that count in the estimation of the men who rule things theatrical. "'What kind of house did you have?' one actor asks another. Seldom indeed, 'What kind of performance did you give?'...." (291) The author sees newspaper and magazines as willing participants in the effort to make "stars" out of actors and all too eager to accept, uncritically, material from press agents. "Let me not be misunderstood as blaming the newspaper and magazines for the very misleading statements which they print daily, weekly, monthly in their stage items. These articles are usually supplied them by press agents in the employ of the various managers, and as we could scarcely expect an editor to take the time personally to investigate these stories he is truly at the mercy of the one who 299/300 gives him the news. If the press agent chooses to write a column prevaricating about a prominent person, so long as it has the celebrity's sanction, the editor is not called upon to interfere. Flattery and adulation were never known to have been the grounds for a libel suit, so that no risk is run, either, in printing such untruths. Yet this attitude of the press unconsciously constitutes he whole thing a great, enticing honey pot to poor ambitious little flies, although the intention ma be only the advertising of a certain line of goods. Nevertheless, human nature is imitative, and we are all seeking the good things of life; so if we read constantly of lives of apparently one long Elysian feast we are apt to want some of the dainties. (299-300) "That these magazine and paper stories do not always hand together is scarcely ever taken into account by the public. A certain manager of a very well-known and firmly established star, sends out annually a new and altogether different version of her wonderful rise to fame and the manner in which she first obtained a hearing...." (300) The author speaks "out against a system that was robbing women of their purity." (312) He, or she, concludes: "If you saw the stream of young men and women daily, yearly rushing toward this luring siren, only to be swallowed up in the vortex as I have seen them, your very soul would cry out and demand a half; and I have hoped in every line I have written that the serious minded will believe me, who has been in the pit, and avoid the pitfall. "If this book saves one aspiring soul from Miriam's fate or even mine, it will not have been written in vain." (312) CY - Boston DA - 1906 KW - theaters stars (actors) theater public relations press agents journalism fame entertainment, and journalism entertainment celebrity anti-theatrical bias critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater actors acting actors acting morality magazines ref, secondary theater theater, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and theater personality fame, and theater theater, and fame theater, and stars values values, and theater theater, and values actors, and status of anti-theatrical prejudice theater, and bias against audiences, and theaters theaters, and audiences acting, and bias against censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship morality, and theater theater, and morality women women, and theater theater, and women critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and professional acting motion pictures, and stars (origins) quotations news and journalism actors, and journalism journalism, and actors actors, and newspapers newspapers, and actors magazines, and actors actors, and magazines fan magazines magazines, fan press agents, and actors actors, and press agents advertising and public relations actors, and public relations public relations, and actors false leaders false leaders, and actors actors, as false leaders entertainment, and news entertainment, and journalism journalism, and entertainment news, and entertainment celebrity culture, and journalism celebrity culture, and newspapers newspapers, and celebrity culture journalism, and celebrity culture censorship ref, book advertising audiences motion pictures news press LB - 15570 PB - Percy Ives Publishing, Co. PY - 1906 ST - The Seamy Side: A Story of the True Condition of Things Theatrical: By One Who Has Spent Twenty Years Among Them TI - The Seamy Side: A Story of the True Condition of Things Theatrical: By One Who Has Spent Twenty Years Among Them ID - 3716 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This document comments on how Eastman Kodak believed that colors could have a stronger influence on the moods of movies audiences than black and white. It begins: "It is certain that many of the emotional moods which the motion picture seeks to capture reside in colors rather than in gray tones. Psychologically the grays have a subduing, sobering power, and this power is constantly at work upon the observer of a motion picture which is screened in the monochrome of ordinary untinted films." [emphasis added] "Although gray may deepen certain moods of the screen, the peaks of emotion are usually flattened off by it, an effect which is far from ideal. A wider range of stimulation and depression seems possible through a systematic use of the affective values of different colors. The language of color as applied to the screen is still rudimentary, but that colors do have certain consistent emotional effects is well established by psychological tests." (p. [3]) [my emphasis] For example, in addition to gray, this document comments on the effects of "Verdante, a delicate green." (4) Its impact is "Refreshing. The sunny green of vegetation in spring and early summer. Simply furnished interiors." (11) Its use can also partly nullify "the impression of a somber scene, and ... it pulls down the mood of a scene that is impassioned and full of excitement." (5) [my emphasis] As for other colors, "rose doree" is "A rose pink that quickens the respiration. The tint of passionate love, excitement, abandon, fete-days, carnivals, heavily sensuous surroundings." (8) "Peachblow" is "Allegretto vivace. A tint for brief, joyous moments, buoying up scenes of light, sensuous content. The spirit of coquetry. An excellent tint for close-ups." (8) "Purplehaze" is best for "dim interiors and outdoor settings obscured with haze. Languorous, dreamy, narcotic." (13) [emphasis added] The work then discusses Eastman Sonochrome films. "The saturation of all the tints is low enough so that they can not become distracting elements in the scene but remain entirely atmospheric effects." (p. [3]) It notes that "Lighting of realistic color content is a primary emotional source to which the motion picture has never before had such free access." (4) This 13-page, undated pamphlet was probably prepared around 1930 or shortly thereafter. It is similar to a presentation made by Loyd A. Jones in 1929 ("Tinted Films for Sound Positives," Transactions of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers, 13 [May 6-9, 1929], 199-226). Jones worked for Kodak Research Laboratories in Rochester, NY. The sixteen tints, which are similar to those mentioned by Jones in May, 1929, include: sunshine, candleflame, firelight, afterglow, peachblow, rose doree, verdante, aquagreen, turquoise, azure, nocturne, purplehase, fleur de lis, amaranth, caprice, and inferno. The subtitle of this pamphlet reads: "A spectrum of sixteen delicate atmospheric colors, keyed to the moods of the screen, in the new series of Eastman Sonochrome Tinted Positive Films for silent or sound pictures." Jones in 1929 had noted that tinting often interfered with sound in the early talking films. Eastman Kodak now maintains that Eastman Sonochrome tinting will not interfere with sound films. The "tints may be used in any sequence, permitting absolute freedom in the shifting moods, without affecting the sound." (5) CY - Rochester, NY DA - 1930-39? KW - Marked ref, secondary color color, and tinting motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and tinting color, and green color, and sexuality sexuality, and color sexuality color, and gray lighting lighting, and color color, and lighting motion pictures, and lighting lighting, and color films sound recording color, and sound films motion pictures, and sound sound recording, and early color films color, as drug color, as narcotic LB - 41300 PB - Eastman Kodak Company PY - 1930 ST - New Color Moods for the Screen TI - New Color Moods for the Screen ID - 4229 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Joseph Breen prepared the first six chapters of this publication. They suggest that Breen knew a good deal about modern media and its public relations uses. This work is located in the Archdiocese of Chicago Archives and Records Center, Chicago, IL. AU - [Breen, Joseph I.] CY - Chicago DA - 1927 KW - Breen, Joseph Breen, Joseph, and Catholic Church Breen, Joseph, and public relations +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Joseph Breen LB - 15400 PB - Committee in Charge at Chicago PY - 1927 ST - The Story of the Twenty-Eighth International Eucharistic Congress Held at Chicago, Illinois, United States of America from June 20-24, 1926 TI - The Story of the Twenty-Eighth International Eucharistic Congress Held at Chicago, Illinois, United States of America from June 20-24, 1926 ID - 560 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - W. R. Clay was one of the first psychologists, if not the first, to talk about the “specious present.” He called it a “fiction of experience” and separated it from the “obvious past” and the “real present.” (168) In 1890, William James in discussing this term in The Principles of Psychology (Volume I, p. 609), quoted a passage from Clay's work. AU - [Clay, W. R.] CY - London DA - 1882 KW - space and time time and timekeeping quotations quotations, and specious present time, and psychology specious present, origins ref, secondary LB - 42840 PB - Macmillan and Co. PY - 1882 ST - The Alternative: A Study in Psychology TI - The Alternative: A Study in Psychology ID - 3687 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 57-page study compares public attitudes about satellites shortly before the launching of Sputnik by the Soviet Union on October, 4, 1957, and then after that event. Before Sputnik, more than half (54 percent) of the American public had never heard of satellites. After October, 1957, about 91 percent of the public was aware of them. “Most of this awareness was gained during the few weeks following the launching of Sputnik I….” (p. 1) The study notes that “much of the post-Sputnik satellite news emphasis was shifted towards the political ‘cold war’ and the military arms race with Russia.” The researchers also observe that a “new type of response began to appear in the post-Sputnik survey. Purposes which were not the immediate aims of the satellite scientists, but which do constitute possible outcomes of the space age, were classified under the category of ‘future possibilities.’ The scientific sophistication of response of this type varied considerably, however all ignored the current information-gathering function of the satellites. Almost one person in five was placed in this category.” (p. 4) This study attempts to gauge the extent to which people depended on different media newspapers, magazines, radio, television for news about satellites and their purposes. The study shows some decline in the use of newspaper and magazines for science news after Sputnik and slight increases in dependence on radio and television. (Table 11, p. 16) It indicates that which there was a slight increase in science news readership, this category of readership did not grow significantly in comparison with readership for other parts of the news (e.g., sports, society, national politics, etc.). This work indicates that while in November, 1957, about 25 percent of the American public considered Russian science superior to American science, by May, 1958 (after the U.S. had launched its first satellite), only about 8 percent of the American public considered Russian science superior. (p. 38) A majority of people surveyed gave “no clear edge to either America or Russia in the science race.” (p. 50) AU - [Davis, Robert C., Jack M. McLeod, and James W. Swinehart ] CY - Ann Arbor, MI DA - 1959 KW - USSR +aeronautics and space communication +television +radio books, periodicals, newspapers satellites science, and American public Soviet Union Sputnik Soviet Union, and science Soviet Union, and Sputnik Cold War Cold War, and satellites news and journalism journalism, and science news McLeod, Jack journalism science war LB - 29620 N1 - See filed under ("McLeod, Jack"). PB - Survey Research Center, Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan PY - 1959 ST - Satellites, Science, and the Public: A Report of a National Survey on the Public Impact of Early Satellite Launchings ... for the National Association of Science Writers and New York University TI - Satellites, Science, and the Public: A Report of a National Survey on the Public Impact of Early Satellite Launchings ... for the National Association of Science Writers and New York University ID - 2708 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book contains material pertaining to Samuel Insull and the Peabody Coal Company, the Century of Progress Exhibition in 1933, George Cardinal Mundelein, and Benito Mussolini. In these pages, published before World War II, Insull wrote that after a meeting with the Italian dictator that "I left the Venezie Palace with the feeling that it had been my privilege to meet one of the great statesmen of Europe." AU - [Insull, Samuel] (Edited with additional information by Larry Plachno) CY - Polo, IL DA - 1992 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories networks +electricity autobiography Century of Progress (1933-34) Mussolini, Benito Mundelein, George Cardinal Peabody Coal Company networks, electrical public utilities World Fairs World Fairs, and Century of Progress LB - 4980 PB - Transportation Trails PY - 1992 ST - The Memoirs of Samuel Insull: An Autobiography TI - The Memoirs of Samuel Insull: An Autobiography ID - 1885 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This the autobiography of the primary author of the movie industry's Production Code of 1930, which tried to bind motion pictures to the Ten Commandments. In this work, Lord discusses his reactions to the new technology of motion pictures. Lord, a Jesuit priest who taught at St. Louis University, was a prolific writer and critic. Lord comments on the powerful influence that movies had on interpreting history and religion. With regard to history, Lord wrote that in 1915: “Enthralled I sat with my mother, I the young Jesuit in transit from studies to the summer villa, and saw Cabiria. All the history of Rome and Carthage, which had slumbered through the pages of my textbooks, suddenly came to life. The battles were not dusty wrestling matches between men in tin armor, but violent conflicts to settle the future of civilization and the world. I marched with Hannibal and his elephants. I watched Fabius as he fought his magnificent delays. And out of the film emerged a great comedian, a vast giant of a man, Maciste, whose contribution to the story of the motion pictures is now only too vaguely recalled.” (272) 272/273 On holiday in Wisconsin, he watched with his mother D. W. Griffith’s Birth of a Nation. “The deep hatred that Dixon had written into The Clansman had been blown high and hot in the film. Griffith, whether he meant to or not, made many persons hate Negroes and dread an emancipation given them. And I knew that I was in the presence of a medium so powerful that it well might change our whole attitude toward life, civilization, and established custom.” (273) AU - [Lord, Daniel A.] CY - Chicago DA - 1955 KW - history censorship self-regulation Production Code PCA values Christianity Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories theater values Production Code (motion pictures) motion pictures religion values morality values religion religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church autobiography censorship, and motion pictures Catholic Church, and motion pictures theater, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and theater motion pictures, and Catholic Church Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code Administration (PCA) Legion of Decency motion pictures, and critics morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures Cabiria ref, book LB - 12980 PB - Loyola University Press PY - 1955 ST - Played By Ear: The Autobiography of Daniel A. Lord, S. J. TI - Played By Ear: The Autobiography of Daniel A. Lord, S. J. ID - 3468 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The ACLU issued this 188-page critique of the Meese Commission, which had been established by the Reagan administration to study and make recommendations on pornography. Polluting the Censorship Debate argued that the Commission promoted government censorship and “moral mob rule” as it set forth a “panorama of unconstitutional proposals” that violated not only the First Amendment but privacy, choice, and due process.Public Policy Report, July, 1986 AU - [Lynn, Barry W.] CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1986 KW - sexuality pornography Meese Commission law censorship and ratings censorship ACLU Meese Commission, and critics pornography, and ACLU ACLU, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship ACLU, and censorship LB - 27040 PB - American Civil Liberties Union PY - 1986 ST - Polluting the Censorship Debate: A Summary and Critique of the Final Report of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Polluting the Censorship Debate: A Summary and Critique of the Final Report of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography ID - 1261 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work, originally published in 1909 and in its tenth edition, "is a statement of the theory underlying the photography of colored objects." Mees, whose names does not appear on the title page, says the work makes "no pretense ... of being unbiased" and that "Eastman projects are freely discussed." (Preface) AU - [Mees, C. E. Kenneth] CY - Rochester, NY DA - 1928 KW - ref, secondary color photography color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and color color, and cameras color, and film photography, and color film color, and theory Eastman Kodak, and color color, and Eastman Kodak ref, book Eastman Kodak LB - 39410 PB - Eastman Kodak Company PY - 1928 ST - The Photography of Colored Objects TI - The Photography of Colored Objects ID - 4039 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This appendix was published in February, 1966, and it contains about four dozen statements from various corporations and labor organizations commenting on the impact of technology and it possible future consequences. Several of the statements reflect concerns about automation and unemployment. Among those statements relating to communications are those from Bell Telephone Laboratories, Edison Electric Company (which give an assessment of America's electrical network in the mid-1960s), General Electric Company, Honeywell, Inc., International Brotherhood of Pulp, Sulphite, and Paper Mill Workers, McGraw Hill, Inc., RCA, and the Xerox Corporation. AU - [National Commission on Technology, Automation, and Economic Progress] CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1966 KW - technology Edison, Thomas computers corporations labor materials office, and new media xerography +duplicating technologies paper general studies Bell Laboratories +electricity General Electric Company photocopying +duplicating technologies automation automation, and labor paper industries paper Xerox Corporation RCA +books, periodicals, newspapers McGraw Hill, Inc. Edison Electric Company infrastructure technology and society +computers and the Internet technology and society, and history of National Commission on Technology, Automation, and Economic Progress history labor labor, and new media +telephones materials corporations office LB - 4780 N1 - See also: office PB - U. S. Government Printing Office PY - 1966 ST - Statements Relating to the Impact of Technological Change: Appendix Volume VI: Technology and the American Economy, The Report of the Commission TI - Statements Relating to the Impact of Technological Change: Appendix Volume VI: Technology and the American Economy, The Report of the Commission ID - 1865 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This brief work runs 111 pages with illustrations but no index or bibliography. The work's six chapters are I) My Early Life; II) My First Efforts in Invention; III) My later Endeavors (The Discovery of the Rotating Magnetic Field); IV) The Discovery of the Tesla Coil and Transformer; V) The Magnifying Transmitter; and VI) The Art of Telautomtics. An appendix is entitled "Hydraulic Analog of Tesla Two Phase Induction Motor." AU - [Tesla, Nikola] CY - Williston, VT DA - 1982 KW - ref, secondary Tesla, Nikola autobiography, and Nikola Tesla Tesla, Nikola, and autobiography inventors and inventions electricity electricity, and Nikola Tesla Tesla, Nikola, and electricity electricity, and alternate current biography, autobiography, oral histories ref, book autobiography inventions LB - 39040 PB - Hart Brothers PY - 1982 ST - My Inventions: The Autobiography of Nikola Tesla (Ben Johnston, ed. and intro.) TI - My Inventions: The Autobiography of Nikola Tesla (Ben Johnston, ed. and intro.) ID - 4003 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Abbate focuses on the social and cultural factors that influenced the Internet's design and use. Early network breakthroughs formulated in the Cold War era saw the creation of the ARPANET by U.S. Defense Department think tanks. She examines how military and academic use influenced and shaped both the Internet and ARPANET; how usual lines between the producer of technology and the end user of it intersect, sometime with surprising results; and how later users of the technology invented their own very successful applications, such as e-mail and the World Wide Web.. Since the mid- to late- 1960s the Internet has grown from an experimental military network serving about a dozen sites across the United States to a burgeoning network of networks linking millions to computers worldwide. Abbate recounts a twisting story of conflict and collaboration among a remarkable cast of characters from the government and the military, to computer scientists in industry and academia, as well as graduate students, telecommunications companies, and the individual user. Abbate concludes that the trend toward decentralized, user-driven development that has characterized the Internet's history is a symbol of postmodern times, and says the key to the Internet's success has been its commitment to flexibility, diversity, both in technical design and organizational culture. The book is written for the computer-literate and technically minded. The dozens of references to an alphabet soup of military-influenced acronyms abound, and the amount of computer jargon can make the uninitiated head's swim! --Robert Pondillo This history of the Internet begins with the Cold War and the perfection of packet switching by the Department of Defense’s Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and ends in the mid-1990s with the popularization of the Internet and the World Wide Web. The development of the Internet, as described by Abbate, resulted from the interplay of government and military agencies, academia, the computer industry, telecommunications companies, and perhaps most importantly, net users. She finds that the Internet has progressed in an increasingly decentralized manner with success resulting from a commitment to flexibility and diversity. Abbate’s sources include documents from the National Archive for the History of Computing, ARPANET newsletters, congressional reports, interviews with central figures and a variety of secondary sources. --Mark Tremayne AU - Abbate, Janet CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1999 KW - R & D computers Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) ARPA research and development war government community democracy war Internet +computers and the Internet Pondillo, Robert ARPANET Department of Defense, U. S. World Wide Web +military communication democracy and media Internet, and history of Tremayne, Mark postmodernism packet switching DARPA LB - 8780 PB - MIT Press PY - 1999 ST - Inventing the Internet TI - Inventing the Internet ID - 2245 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Abbott begins this book by saying that "As its qualities are recognized, better understood, and more widely and intelligently applied, color may help to effect a change in the nature of humanity. If that is possible, it can be instrumental in diminishing man's most unnatural and unprofitable traits and increasing the better ones. At any rate, since it is at this moment a very important element in life and is contributing tremendously to the progress of humanity, to find out as much as can be known about it is desirable and profitable." (vii) The author maintains that "Color, a constant companion of nearly all forms of life on this earth, has, like other great forces, potential of good and of evil. It is our privilege, perhaps our duty, to learn to use it for good as much as possible. Woven into our modern civilization in such a way as to be an integral part of it, color can be taken for granted, but it cannot be ignored. The sudden removal of all color would produce chaos until vast readjustments were effected, not only in human affairs but in those of almost all other creatures associated with man." (xix) Abbott continues: "Since its influence is manifested largely through the sense of sight, the power of color is most effective when this sense is keen." (xix) When one takes the time to actually see and understand color, then the "color of life ... takes on a new meaning. It ceases to be just another inescapable factor of existence and becomes one of the most pleasurable and constantly thrilling experiences of life." (xix) This book is divided into seven parts and 20 chapters plus References. Part I considers "The Foundations of Color." Part II is "Colors by Nature and How Produced." Part III deals with "Colors by Man and How Produced" (e.g., dyes, paints, photography, printing, glass, etc.). Part IV is "Guides to Use of Color." Part V is "Colors for Everyone" and has a chapter on "Apparel" and another on "Buildings." Part VI covers the "Relation of Color to Man's Progress." Part VII, "References," has three sections: Organizations, Manufacturers, and Bibliography. In Chapter 14, "Effects of Color on Life," Abbott writes that the "effects of color on the human organism are as yet only vaguely understood. It is known that under certain conditions, visual impressions (including color) affect the blood pressure and muscular, mental, and nervous activity and mood." (129) The author says that "Color helps to make things easy to see; it helps to convey moods; it emphasizes situations and increases audience interest. A deep red-orange is said to have the most exciting influence, and yellow-green the most tranquilizing, and violet the most subduing influence." (131) For a discussion of the symbolic uses of colors, see also pp. 214-17. This work talks about the likely effects of specific colors such as green, blue, orange, yellow, violet, and red. Of red, the author says that it is a "mental stimulant, ... warm and irritating. It aggravates any inflammatory condition, and it increases the activity of the male sex glands. It is effective in adjusting cases of melancholia. Dr. [Edward] Podolsky reports the case of the employees in the Lumiere photographic factory in France. The red light under which they work had a bad effect on their temper. When the lights were changed to a particular green, the results were excellent." (132) In Part VI, Chapter 19 ("General Uses Through the Years"), Abbott says that color was often used for camouflage and other forms of deception. (210) It discusses efforts to use electric lighting and color as a form of communication and how this combination can be "independent of languages, nationalities, education, and temperament, and ... the degree of civilization." (211) There is also a consideration of motion pictures that use color (211-12). The author notes that in 1925, "Maude Adams designed 'Color Dynamics,' which was produced by the Eastman Kodak Company." (12) Chapter 20 covers "Special Uses of Colors Today." Abbott argues that black and white photography and motion pictures lack an element of life that color provides. "Color is making strides in photography of all kinds and may some day eliminate the black and white motion pictures. Still compositions in black and white will always have a certain amount of appeal, but when life and action are portrayed, they lack a very vital element without color. If the goal of motion pictures is to dramatize and present a realistic illusion of life, the ultimate product will incorporate all the elements of sight, as well as of sound. Sight includes not only color but solidity or relief. Solidity can and may be effected by applying the principles of the stereoscope. The color of animated cartoons has contributed enormously to their popularity. Educational films are vastly more instructive with color than without. Historical dramas, musical comedies, operas, or any other spectacles are only half a forceful without color." (222) (emphasis added) This work comments on the use of makeup and color the faces of actors and notes the problems of using makeup when something is filmed in black and white. (223-24) Abbott observes that by 1947 many news publications were using color. "Every magazine on the newsstand employs color on its cover to attract attention. Some newspapers run a line of color in a margin to indicate the final or some other edition. The old Police Gazette, a fixture in nearly every barber shop in the country for years, was recognized by its pink paper throughout. The current publication has added color printing to its make-up." (228) This work explains that advertisers used color because it makes their products more attractive and saleable. "A most ingenious and effective use of color in bringing products and services to the attention of the buying public is found in the Diorama," the author writes. (261) This book has an interesting Bibliography (281-89) that pulls together a good deal of research (up to 1947) on the effects of color. AU - Abbott, Arthur G. CY - New York and London DA - 1947 KW - home emotion decadence ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color color, in history color, and theory color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations censorship and ratings media effects color, media effects media effects, and color color, and sensuality sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color lighting lighting, and color color, and lighting color, and music lighting, and theater theater, and lighting censorship color, and nationalism nationlism, and color nationalism and communication advertising and public relations color, and advertising advertising, and color home and new media home, and color color, and home color, and red women women, and color color, and women photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography motion pictures, and color motion pictures color, and motion pictures war war, and color World War II, and color color, and war color, and World War II electricity electricity, and color color, and electricity color, and Maud Adams color vs. black and white quotations quotations, and color movies media effects color, and media effects media effects, and color color, and magazines magazines, and color color, and Diorama ref, book advertising magazines nationalism photography theater World War II LB - 39990 PB - McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc. PY - 1947 ST - The Color of Life TI - The Color of Life ID - 4097 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - At the turn of the century, Chicago was awash in vice, with its abundance of shady politicians, houses of ill fame, and organized crime. Two women were at the center of this depravity: the Everleigh sisters, proprietors of one of the most famous brothels in the world. Sin in the Second City chronicles their rise and fall, a story that would seem to occupy a narrow slice of history, but was tied in with larger issues like the white slave trade and evangelical religion. Abbott, a journalist who’s written for Philadelphia magazine and Salon.com, has meticulously researched Sin, relying on numerous sources such as magazines that wrote about the scourge of prostitution (The Philanthropist), newspapers (Chicago Tribune and Chicago Daily Socialist), the three other books that have been written on the Everleigh sisters, letters the sisters wrote to Irving Wallace, interviews with the sisters’ great niece, and governmental reports on the vice trade. Her extensive use of a variety of sources, and the way she uses weaves them together, makes the book read like a novel. Sin in the Second City is a valuable work of sex-related history. Abbott says that Sin “is also about identity, both personal and collective, and the struggle inherent in deciding how much of the old should accompany us as we rush, headlong, into the new (p.xii).” Not all early twentieth-century madams were worth writing books about. What makes the Everleigh sisters worthy is the fact that their mission was to elevate the prostitution industry. The Everleigh club had doctors on staff to give regular check ups to the women, they provided free meals, paid over $100 a week, and gave the workers an education in classical literature (Balzac and Longfellow were emphasized). In contrast, other brothels paid their workers $35, didn’t have doctors on staff and let syphilitic women (with visible symptoms) continue to work, and allowed drugs their workers to do drugs and steal from the clients. Although prostitution was technically illegal in Chicago, it was tolerated by the city because it was so profitable: brothel owners paid the city officials, like Bathhouse John Coughlin graft payments. Everything in the prostitution world went along swimmingly until vice crusaders decided to target the industry. Standing outside of the Evereligh Club, Ernest Bell would preach sermons on the wages of sin and the debilitating effects of syphilis. Ironically, his preaching increased business for the club. When prosecutor Clifford Roe joined in the demonizing of the prostitution trade by accusing brothel owners of drugging girls, raping them, and forcing them into the industry -- a practice referred to as the white slave tradet -- the fight was on, and the end of the freewheeling Everleigh club was on the horizon. The Everleigh Club became a symbol of the Levee district (vice district) because it was the most visible of the brothels, and the sisters dared to advice, producing a glossy book showing all of the ostentatious decorations of the club, but none of the girls. Prince Henry of Prussia visited the brothel, as well as boxer Jack Johnson, and Marshall Field Jr. (who was a regular and may or may not have died at the club). And when the White Slave Traffic Act, aka the Mann act, was passed in 1910, and the Bureau of Investigation was created to enforce it, the club was doomed. Even though the Everleigh sisters were far from white slavers (so many girls wanted to work there that they had a waiting list), they were shut down in 1911, never to re-open again. And, what makes this story interesting from a mass communication perspective is that the mayor claimed that the reason that they were targeted “was the Everleigh club’s ‘infamy, the audacious advertising of (p.248) it’; ‘it was as well known as Chicago itself and therefore a disgrace to the city ." (p.249). -Hallie Lieberman AU - Abbott, Karen CY - New York DA - 2008 KW - Chicago, IL censorship and ratings censorship, and Chicago Chicago, and movie censorship motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures theaters, and motion pictures theaters theaters, and audiences children and media children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children theaters, and children children, and theaters values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values race, and motion pictures motion pictures, and race motion pictures, and Chicago motion pictures, and Chicago censorship prostitution prostitution, and Chicago Chicago, and prostitution Lieberman, Hallie censorship Chicago, and movie censorship children race LB - 33320 PB - Random House PY - 2008 ST - Sin in the Second City: Madams, Ministers, Playboys, and the Battle for America’s Soul TI - Sin in the Second City: Madams, Ministers, Playboys, and the Battle for America’s Soul ID - 90 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Among the topics Abel examines is the rise of the movie star in Chapter 6, "'The Power of Personality in Pictures': Movie Stars and 'Matinee Girls'" (231-56). At the end of this chapter, Abel reprints newspaper articles on this topic including “Personality a Force in Pictures,’ from New York Dramatic Mirror, Jan. 15, 1913, p. 44 (see Abel, pp. 252-54). It says in part: “The secret of intimate personal expression through the medium of the camera and the screen is elusive. A pleasing face is not in itself sufficient, nor can an individuality be made distinct by means of conventional gestures and facial expressions. The players selected to appear on this page have distinctive personalities that they have learned to express in distinctive ways.” (quotation from newspaper article, in Abel, p. 252) “…Fleeting facial expressions that might indicate little at first, gain in meaning as features become familiar, until we can guess at thoughts without the need of words to express them.” (quotation from newspaper article, in Abel, p. 253) “…It seems that many people are more concerned about the figures they see on the screen than the connected series of incidents they are engaged in relating. If some of these enthusiasts stopped to ask themselves whether they were more entertained by a good photoplay acted by strangers or a mediocre one in which some favorite appeared, there is a good chance that the verdict would be in favor of the popular player. That may not be an altogether healthy condition, but it is one that exists and must be recognized by the men who produce pictures.” (quotation from newspaper article, in Abel, p. 254) In “Entr’acte 5: Trash Twins: Newspapers and Moving Pictures” (215-27), Able attempt "to sketch the more prominent patterns in the cinema's developing institutional relationship with newspapers... in selected cities from the Northeast to the upper Midwest...." (216) This relationship began to develop as early as 1911. Able writes: "As late as October 1912, the New York Dramatic Mirror claimed that the '"movies" continue to flourish' without 'the benignant approval' of the daily newspapers, that the 'pictures are left very much to speak for themselves.' Yet, by the spring of 1913, trade journals as different as the World and Motography acknowledged that local newspapers were now promoting photoplays or movies (the distinction could be significant) by running special pages and/or columns on a regular basis. Yet, if a mutually profitable relationship was well established between moving pictures and newspaper by 1913-14, signs of its emergence -- however tentative, irregular, and uneven, like those for feature films -- are quite visible as early as 1911, despite the World's complaint, and even before." (215) This book, Abel says, can be considered a companion to his earlier book, The Red Rooster Scare: Making Cinema American, 1900-1910 (1999). AU - Abel, Richard CY - Berkeley DA - 2006 KW - nationalism journalism history fame celebrity motion pictures, and Americanism actors acting magazines photography ref, secondary motion pictures motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, foreign nationalism and communication motion pictures, and Americanization motion pictures, and westerns history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Civil War motion pictures, and American Revolution ref, secondary France Pathé France, and motion pictures motion pictures, and France modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality motion pictures, and acting acting, and facial expression motion pictures, and not facing camera acting, and not facing camera acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines fan magazines magazines, fan ref, book LB - 10 PB - University of California Press PY - 2006 ST - Americanizing the Movies and 'Movie-Mad' Audiences, 1910-1914 TI - Americanizing the Movies and 'Movie-Mad' Audiences, 1910-1914 ID - 749 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This substantial, well-researched book, should be read in conjunction with Abel’s earlier work, French Cinema: The First Wave, 1915-1929 (1984). In this study Abel examines whether a national cinema existed in France. He writes: “Despite a certain ‘international’ character to early cinema, such an assumption is not without justification. First of all, the French cinema can be situated economically within the historical context of imperialism -- in the sense used by Eric Hobsbawm that the world economy of capitalism had become an aggregate of rival national economies engaged in colonial conquest -- which defined Europe as well as the United States at the turn of the century. The space of colonial expansion, along with that constructed by the more direct trading rivalry between national economies, provided a field of exploitation for Pathé - Frères when it became the first film company to move into mass production in 1904-1905. Second, the French cinema can be situated within the related historical context of nationalism, specifically in terms of the institutions and practices that defined the French Third Republic as a distinct nation- state. Although the new secular system of education served as the principal bonding agent of late nineteenth-century French society, a loose network of new mass culture practices proved increasingly crucial during the period. Within this network, the cinema quickly assumed a significant role, especially through the appropriation of a historically specific cultural tradition, so that certain film genres gained a privileged importance -- the trick film and the féerie, the comic series, the biblical film, the historical film, and the grand guignol version of melodrama. Finally, the French cinema can be situated historically according to its definition under French law, for the courts consistently classed the cinema as a spetacle de curiosité, subjecting it to the control and censorship of local officials. In 1906, a state decision to end all censorship restrictions against theater provoked efforts by the industry to upgrade the cinema’s status. The consequences of this move to align the cinema with theater were profound -- theater analogy, at the level of both commercial enterprise and critical discourse, became more deeply ingrained in France than anywhere else. That these economic, cultural, and legal practices gave the French cinema a high degree of historical specificity makes all the more valid an interrogation of the early French cinema as a more or less distinct national cinema.” AU - Abel, Richard CY - Berkeley DA - 1994 KW - nationalism corporations corporations photography popular culture cultural imperialism law censorship and ratings capitalism non-USA +motion pictures imperialism +motion pictures +nationalism and communication cultural imperialism, and France imperialism, and France motion pictures, and France France, and motion pictures censorship, and French motion pictures motion pictures, and French censorship motion pictures, and theaters +photography and visual communication +photography and visual communication censorship censorship, and motion pictures cultural imperialism culture popular culture advertising cartoons comic books Disney magazines music +radio +television France capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism cultural imperialism law, and communication communication, and law advertising and public relations LB - 6090 PB - University of California Press PY - 1994 ST - The Ciné Goes to Town: French Cinema, 1896-1914 TI - The Ciné Goes to Town: French Cinema, 1896-1914 ID - 1993 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book argues, in Abel's words, "that the Americanization process -- specifically, the concerns about constructing a distinctive American national identity -- continued to frame early cinema's institutionalization as a popular mass entertainment, particularly if certain categories of spectators formed its core audience -- namely, recent working-class immigrants, women (especially young working women), and children. It also argues that early cinema, as a mass entertainment, has to be conceived in terms that reach beyond the production of film texts and their promotion in the trade press to focus on distribution and exhibition practices, as well as regional or even local discursive traces of their promotion and reception." (quoted from Introduction, Abel, Americanizing the Movies and 'Movie-Mad' Audiences, 1910-1914 [2006], p. 3). Abel devotes a section to “The Color of Nitrate (pp. 40-47) and discusses Pathé “Heavenly Billboards.” Abel also later observes that “In the 1890s, chromolithography rapidly gave way to a new technology of halftone photoengraving, a process that allowed photographs to be reproduced on cheap paper (usually in black-and-white). Their use transformed newspaper and magazine journalism (a good example was The World’s Work), where the photo now served to guarantee accuracy and authenticity.” (p. 125) (Here Able cites Neil Harris’ Cultural Excursions and Richard Slotkin’s Gunfighter Nation.) As American film producers challenged the dominance of French-made films (around 1909-10), colored films became associated with “foreignness” (157). “That Pathé released A Western Hero in stencil color reveals its 'foreignness’ in another way. 157/158 Here, the trade press was unanimous: stencil color was perfectly appropriate for certain films d’art and ‘exotic’ scenics, but not for American subjects, especially westerns For the latter, the realist aesthetic promoted by the Mirror and the World dictated a concern for the ‘orthochromatic,’ the accuracy of tonal values in ‘the black and white picture,’ which by 1909-1910, so went the claim, the public preferred, from whatever school it came. The World singled out Biograph in particular as a model for other manufacturers to imitate, for its films’ ‘fine rich deposit in the shadows and clear, delicate lights.’ The chiaroscuro of black and white could be enhanced by tinting and/or toning effects, but, as Woods argued, those had to serve the purpose of ‘approximating reality and at the same time make the story clear.’ If color were to be invoked in the American cinema, it would be yoked to an aesthetic of ‘impressive realism’ (to cite a Biograph ad), one imbued with a distinctive, historically specific American ideology.” AU - Abel, Richard CY - Berkeley DA - 1999 KW - nationalism journalism history motion pictures, and Americanization magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary motion pictures color color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures photography and visual communication non-USA non-USA, and motion pictures motion pictures, and non-USA France France, and motion pictures motion pictures Pathé Pathé, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Pathé nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures Americanism motion pictures, and Americanism Americanism, and motion pictures patriotism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and patriotism patriotism motion pictures, and westerns war motion pictures, and war war, and motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures materials, and nitrate nitrate, and motion pictures motion pictures, and nitrate photography, and magazines magazines, and photography news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines fan magazines magazines, fan actors acting ref, book motion pictures, and Americanization women women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women Americanization, and motion pictures Americanization, and women women, and Americanization children and media children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children Americanization, and children children, and Americanization advertising Americanization children LB - 14940 PB - University of California Press PY - 1999 ST - The Red Rooster Scare: Making Cinema American, 1900-1910 TI - The Red Rooster Scare: Making Cinema American, 1900-1910 ID - 3650 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this 101-page book, the author draws on such authors as Russel Nye and John Pauly to note that "all communication media have an important societal dimension, both reflecting and shaping the social actualities of their time." Abrahamson argues that "the emergence of the special-interest magazines in the 1960s was both a product of and contributor to major sociocultural and economic changes in postwar America." (p. 3) This work examines magazine readership and it looks at publications that specialized in leisure activities such as boating, automobiles, flying, and photography. Eleven tables (73-80) give data on magazine circulation, readership, publishing, and other economic statistics. AU - Abrahamson, David CY - Cresskill, NJ DA - 1996 KW - +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines print culture values, and magazines values advertising and public relations magazines, and advertising advertising, and magazines magazines, and leisure leisure, and magazines reading magazines, and readers advertising leisure print LB - 29550 PB - Hampton Press, Inc. PY - 1996 ST - Magazine-Made America: The Cultural Transformation of the Postwar Periodical TI - Magazine-Made America: The Cultural Transformation of the Postwar Periodical ID - 2692 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Abramson, Albert CY - Jefferson, NC DA - 1987 KW - +television LB - 6470 PB - McFarland Press PY - 1987 ST - The History of Television, 1880-1940 TI - The History of Television, 1880-1940 ID - 1971 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The authors discuss the political implications of new media technologies on democratic government. Their work appeared before the widespread use of the Internet. The new media they consider include computers, satellites, cable television, videocassette recorders, direct broadcast satellites, multipoint distribution service, satellite mater antennae television, pay television, VHF drop-in TV, low-power television, videotex, teletex, lasers, and optical fibers. The authors note that such media vastly expand the amount of data that can be exchanged, and make it possible to exchange that information with little regard to real space or time. Consumers have increased control over the message they receive. Senders of messages have greater control over the audiences they will reach. These new media decentralize the control of mass communication. They also bring new two-way communication or interactive possibilities to television. The authors are noncommittal as to whether these new media constitute a "communication revolution." Their more modest purpose is to convince readers that such new media warrant serious scholarly research. The authors reject both technological determinism and political determism. "The democratic theory that lies behind this book can be described as a cross between the pluralist and communitarian views -- pluralism with a communitarian face," the authors write. They hope to explain how "we can seize the opportunity presented by the current changes in the media environment to reorient mass communications toward more robust democratic service...." The eight chapters in this work are entitled: "The New Media and Democratic Values"; "What's New About the New Media?"; "Elections and the Media: Past, Present, and Future"; "Communications Technology and Governance"; "The New Media and Democratic Participation"; "Policy in a Comparative Perspective"; "Freedom of the Press and the New Media"; and "Toward an Electronic Commonwealth." AU - Abramson, Jeffrey B. AU - Arterton, F. Christopher AU - Orren, and Gary R. CY - New York DA - 1988 KW - computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) nationalism interactivity Federal Communications Commission (FCC) magnetic recording advertising, and public relations censorship and ratings propaganda public relations fiber optics journalism materials magnetic tape materials fiber optics regulation community democracy news and journalism values polling newspapers news media general studies +television +aeronautics and space communication satellites satellites, and television television, and satellites cable television, and cable cable television lasers optical fibers VCRs teletex democracy and media videotex direct mail +computers and the Internet advertising, and new media values, and democracy +nationalism and communication FCC electronic publishing interactive media narrowcasting media convergence +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and new media polling, and new media +telegraph +telephones advertising electronic media LB - 11400 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - Basic Books, Inc. PY - 1988 ST - The Electronic Commonwealth: The Impact of New Media Technologies on Democratic Politics TI - The Electronic Commonwealth: The Impact of New Media Technologies on Democratic Politics ID - 2500 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This collection of essays grew out of various centennial celebrations in 1994 of Harold Innis’s birth. The volume has twenty chapters (with twenty-three authors) arranged around three broad themes: “Reflections on Innis” (Part One), “Gaps and Silences” (Part Two); and “Innis and Cultural Theory” (Part Three). The work has an excellent Introduction by William J. Buxton and Charles R. Acland entitled “Harold Innis: A Genealogy of Contesting Portraits.” Buxton and Acland give an information of the scholarly literature on Innis’s life and work, and they also cogent summaries of each chapter. Chapters in Part One examine Innis’s thinking and its context. Richard Noble writes on “Innis’s Conception of Freedom” within the Whig political tradition. Judith Stamp places Innis in the context of Canadian education and the Scottish Enlightenment. Michael Dorland looks at how Innis viewed the connection between religion and Canadian politics. James Carey explores the influence of the Chicago School on Innis. Irene M. Spry, a former Innis colleague, discusses his way of working and doing research. Cheryl Dahl and Liora Salter consider how Innis defined public intellectuals and the university’s role in the world. Donald Fisher deals with Innis’s relationship to academic communities and his part in the founding of the Canadian Social Science Research Council in 1941. In Chapter 8, Michèle Martin and Buxton contrast Innis’s ideas about relation between academics and moral and social life, and his worries that modern media were too “space-biased,” with the approach taken by his contemporary Victor Barbeau. Barbeau critical journalism could be a catalyst for progressive reform. Chapter 9-12 consider “gaps and silences” in Innis’s work such as gender relations. Most of the discussion of Innis and technology occurs in Part Three, “Innis and Cultural Theory.” Here there are eight chapters including Acland’s “Histories of Place and Power: Innis in Canadian Cultural Studies”; Andrew Wernick’s “No Future: Innis, Time Sense, and Postmodernity”; Jody Berland’s “Space at the Margins: Critical Theory and Colonial Space after Innis,” Kevin Dowler’s “Early Innis and the Post-Massey Era in Canadian Culture”; and Kim Sawchuk’s “An Index of Power: Innis, Aesthetics, and Technology.” This book has a thorough bibliography on work relating to Innis. AU - Acland, Charles R. and William J. Buxton, eds. CY - Montreal and Kingston DA - 1999 KW - Chicago, IL nationalism imperialism women, and new media preservation postmodernism newspapers modernity modernism news and journalism history, and new media cultural imperialism community democracy news and journalism non-USA Innis, Harold bibliographies bibliographies, and Harold Innis women postmodernism, and Harold Innis modernism, and Harold Innis Barbeau, Victor, and Harold Innis Canada Carey, James Chicago School, and Harold Innis Innis, Harold, and Chicago School Innis, Harold, and James Carey Innis, Harold, and critics democracy and media political economy political economy, and Harold Innis cultural imperialism, and Harold Innis journalism, and Harold Innis nationalism, and Harold Innis +nationalism and communication history, and Harold Innis Innis, Harold, and history Innis, Harold, and Marshall McLuhan monopoly, and Harold Innis newspapers, and Harold Innis Innis, Harold, and oral tradition oral tradition, and Harold Innis public intellectuals, and Harold Innis journalism history Chicago School news oral communication oral culture LB - 480 PB - McGill-Queen's University Press PY - 1999 ST - Harold Innis in the New Century: Reflections and Refractions TI - Harold Innis in the New Century: Reflections and Refractions ID - 136 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Henry Adams wrote this autobiography in the third person. Adams believed that the coming of electrical energy, the dynamo, represented a radical break in human history, and that one had to go back to the year 310, “when Constantine set up the Cross,” (383) to find a similar historical rupture. There was a continuity in Christianity’s power, which survived other challenges including those from Galileo and Bacon, until 1900. Then, Adams said, “continuity snapped.” (457) The child born in 1900 was “born into a new world….” (457) The dynamos promised “infinite costless energy” and “they gave to history a new phase.” (342) From Chapter XXII-- “CHICAGO (1893)” starting on page 341: Jostled by these hopes and doubts, one turned to the exhibits for help, and found it. The industrial schools tried to teach so much and so quickly that the instruction ran to waste. Some millions of other people felt the same helplessness, but few of them were seeking education, and to them helplessness seemed natural and normal, for they had grown up in the habit of thinking a steam engine or a dynamo as natural as the sun, and expected to understand one as little as the other. For the historian alone the Exposition made a serious effort. Historical exhibits were common, but they never went far enough; none were thoroughly worked out. One of the best was that of the Cunard steamers, but still a student hungry for results found himself obliged to waste a pencil and several sheets of paper trying to calculate exactly when, according to the given increase of power, tonnage, and speed, the growth of the ocean steamer would reach its limits. His figures brought him, he thought, to the year 1927; another generation to spare before force, space, and time should meet. The ocean steamer ran the surest line of triangulation into the future, because it was the 341/342 nearest of man's products to a unity; railroads taught less because they seemed already finished except for mere increase in number; explosives taught most, but needed a tribe of chemists, physicists, and mathematicians to explain; the dynamo taught least because it had barely reached infancy, and, if its progress was to be constant at the rate of the last ten years, it would result in infinite costless energy within a generation. One lingered long among the dynamos, for they were new, and they gave to history a new phase. Men of science could never understand the ignorance and naiveté of the historian, who, when he came suddenly on a new power, asked naturally what it was; did it pull or did it push? Was it a screw or thrust? Did it flow or vibrate? Was it a wire or a mathematical line? And a score of such questions to which he expected answers and was astonished to get none. From CHAPTER XXV-- “THE DYNAMO AND THE VIRGIN (1900)”: Starting on page 380: “Then he showed his scholar the great hall of dynamos, and explained how little he knew about electricity or force of any kind, even of his own special sun, which spouted heat in inconceivable volume, but which, as far as he knew, might spout less or more, at any time, for all the certainty he felt in it. To him, the dynamo itself was but an ingenious channel for conveying somewhere the heat latent in a few tons of poor coal hidden in a dirty engine-house carefully kept out of sight; but to Adams the dynamo became a symbol of infinity. As he grew accustomed to the great gallery of machines, he began to feel the forty-foot dynamos as a moral force, much as the early Christians felt the Cross. The planet itself seemed less impressive, in its old-fashioned, deliberate, annual or daily revolution, than this huge wheel, revolving within arm's length at some vertiginous speed, and barely murmuring -- scarcely humming an audible warning to stand a hair's-breadth further for respect of power -- while it would not wake the baby lying close against its frame. Before the end, one began to pray to it; inherited instinct taught the natural expression of man before silent and infinite force. Among the thousand symbols of ultimate energy the dynamo was not so human as some, but it was the most expressive. “Yet the dynamo, next to the steam-engine, was the most familiar of exhibits. For Adams's objects its value lay chiefly in its 380/381 occult mechanism. Between the dynamo in the gallery of machines and the engine-house outside, the break of continuity amounted to abysmal fracture for a historian's objects. No more relation could he discover between the steam and the electric current than between the Cross and the cathedral. The forces were interchangeable if not reversible, but he could see only an absolute fiat in electricity as in faith. Langley could not help him. Indeed, Langley seemed to be worried by the same trouble, for he constantly repeated that the new forces were anarchical, and especially that he was not responsible for the new rays, that were little short of parricidal in their wicked spirit towards science. His own rays, with which he had doubled the solar spectrum, were altogether harmless and beneficent; but Radium denied its God -- or, what was to Langley the same thing, denied the truths of his Science. The force was wholly new. “A historian who asked only to learn enough to be as futile as Langley or Kelvln, made rapid progress under this teaching, and mixed himself up in the tangle of ideas until he achieved a sort of Paradise of ignorance vastly consoling to his fatigued senses. He wrapped himself in vibrations and rays which were new, and he would have hugged Marconi and Branly had he met them, as he hugged the dynamo; while he lost his arithmetic in trying to figure out the equation between the discoveries and the economies of force. The economies, like the discoveries, were absolute, supersensual, occult; incapable of expression in horse-power. What mathematical equivalent could he suggest as the value of a Branly coherer? Frozen air, or the electric furnace, had some scale of measurement, no doubt, if somebody could invent a thermometer adequate to the purpose; but X-rays had played no part whatever in man's consciousness, and the atom itself had figured only as a fiction of thought. In these seven years man had translated himself into a new universe which had no common scale of measurement with the old. He had entered a supersensual world, in which he could measure nothing except by chance collisions of movements 381/382 imperceptible to his senses, perhaps even imperceptible to his instruments, but perceptible to each other, and so to some known ray at the end of the scale. Langley seemed prepared for anything, even for an indeterminable number of universes interfused -- physics stark mad in metaphysics. “Historians undertake to arrange sequences, -- called stories, or histories -- assuming in silence a relation of cause and effect These assumptions, hidden in the depths of dusty libraries, have been astounding, but commonly unconscious and childlike; so much so, that if any captious critic were to drag them to light, historians would probably reply, with one voice, that they had never supposed themselves required to know what they were talking about. Adams, for one, had toiled in vain to find out what he meant. He had even published a dozen volumes of American history for no other purpose than to satisfy himself whether, by severest process of stating, with the least possible comment, such facts as seemed sure, in such order as seemed rigorously consequent, it could fix for a familiar moment a necessary sequence of human movement. The result had satisfied him as little as at Harvard College. Where he saw sequence, other men saw something quite different, and no one saw the same unit of measure. He cared little about his experiments and less about his statesmen, who seemed to him quite as ignorant as himself and, as a rule, no more honest; but he insisted on a relation of sequence. and if he could not reach it by one method, he would try as many methods as science knew. Satisfied that the sequence of men led to nothing and that the sequence of their society could lead no further, while the mere sequence of time was artificial, and the sequence of thought was chaos, he turned at last to the sequence of force; and thus it happened that, after ten years' pursuit, he found himself lying in the Gallery of Machines at the Great Exposition of 1900, his historical neck broken by the sudden irruption of forces totally new. “Since no one else showed much concern, an elderly person without other cares had no need to betray alarm. The year 1900 was 382/383 not the first to upset schoolmasters. Copernicus and Galileo had broken many professorial necks about 1600; Columbus had stood the world on its head towards 1500; but the nearest approach to the revolution of 1900 was that of 310, when Constantine set up the Cross. The rays that Langley disowned, as well as those which he fathered, were occult, supersensual, irrational; they were a revelation of mysterious energy like that of the Cross; they were what, in terms of medieval science, were called immediate modes of the divine substance. 383/457 From Chapter XXXI -- “THE GRAMMAR OF SCIENCE (1903)” -- from page 457: “… The motion of thought had the same value as the motion of a cannonball seen approaching the observer on a direct line through the air. One could watch its curve for five thousand years. Its first violent acceleration in historical times had ended in the catastrophe of 310. The next swerve of direction occurred towards 1500. Galileo and Bacon gave a still newer curve to it, which altered its values; but all these changes had never altered the continuity. Only in 1900, the continuity snapped. “Vaguely conscious of the cataclysm, the world sometimes dated it from 1893, by the Roentgen rays, or from 1898, by the Curie’s radium; but in 1904, Arthur Balfour announced on the part of British science that the human race without exception had lived and died in a world of illusion until the last year of the century. The date was convenient, and convenience was truth. “The child born in 1900 would, then, be born into a new world which would not be a unity but a multiple. Adams tried to imagine it, and an education that would fit it. He found himself in a land where no one had ever penetrated before; where order was an accidental relation obnoxious; artificial compulsion imposed on motion; against which every free energy of the uni- 457/458 verse revolted...." AU - Adams, Henry CY - Boston DA - 1918 KW - electricity history and new media electricity, and Henry Adams electricity, and break with history electricity, and education education education, and electricity values values, and electricity electricity, and values democracy democracy, and electricity electricity, and democracy electricity, and history history, and electricity ref, secondary ref, autobiography ref, book history LB - 42200 PB - Houghton Mifflin Company PY - 1918 ST - The Education of Henry Adams: An Autobiography TI - The Education of Henry Adams: An Autobiography ID - 4319 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Addams comments on the negative impact that movies and movie theaters have on urban youth. She talks about the moral hazards of commercialized liesure, and likens the movie theater to dance halls and pool rooms. AU - Addams, Jane CY - New York DA - 1912 KW - audiences theaters religion values morality censorship and ratings children +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures children, and motion pictures children, and media motion pictures, and children motion pictures, and reform critics critics, and morality morality, and critics motion pictures, and morality morality, and motion pictures +motion pictures LB - 12670 PB - Macmillan Company PY - 1912 ST - Spirit of Youth and the City Streets TI - Spirit of Youth and the City Streets ID - 446 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Adler acknolwedges here that during the late 1930s and early 1940, he was on the payroll of the Hays Office (MPPDA). At the time, he wrote some of Will Hays' speeches and reports. Adler provided a defense of movies as an art form in Art and Prudence. AU - Adler, Mortimer J. CY - New York DA - 1977 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) self-regulation Production Code PCA Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. MPAA MPPDA memoirs autobiography +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Mortimer Adler motion pictures, defense of motion pictures, and Will Hays Adler, Mortimer, and motion pictures Adler, Mortimer, and Will Hays MPPDA, and Mortimer Adler Adler, Mortimer Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 13290 PB - Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc. PY - 1977 ST - Philosopher At Large: An Intellectual Autobiography TI - Philosopher At Large: An Intellectual Autobiography ID - 501 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Part of this work provides a scathing critique of the Payne Fund Studies and social science research. Part of it offers a justification of motion pictures as an art form. Will Hays considered this work a strong intellectual defense of motion pictures, one that could be used against the industry's critics. Adler was on Hays' payroll for a time, writing his annual reports. It is unclear if Adler was being paid by Hays at the time this book was written. AU - Adler, Mortimer J. CY - New York DA - 1937 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) self-regulation Production Code PCA Payne Fund Studies Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. MPAA MPPDA motion pictures freedom Payne Fund Studies, and critics motion pictures, and social science motion pictures, and defense of motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures MPPDA, and Mortimer Adler Adler, Mortimer, and MPPDA Dale, Edgar, and critics Adler, Mortimer Production Code (motion pictures) Dale, Edgar LB - 13700 PB - Longmans, Green and Co. PY - 1937 ST - Art and Prudence: A Study in Practical Philosophy TI - Art and Prudence: A Study in Practical Philosophy ID - 534 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work attempts to record the life of sharecroppers. “The immediate instruments are two," the authors write, "the motionless camera, and the printed word. The governing instrument—which is also one of the centers of the subject—is individual, anti-authoritative human consciousness.... “For in the immediate world, everything is to be discerned, for him who can discern it, and centrally and simply, without either dissection into science, or digestion into art, but with the whole of consciousness, seeking to perceive it as it stands: so that the aspect of a street in sunlight can roar in the heart of itself as a symphony, perhaps as no symphony can: and all of consciousness is shifted from the imagined, the revisive, to the effort to perceive simply the cruel radiance of what is.... That is why the camera seems to me, next to unassisted and weaponless consciousness, the central instrument of our time; and is why in turn I feel such rage at its misuse: which has spread so nearly universal a corruption of sight that I know of less than a dozen alive whose eyes I trust even as much as my own.” AU - Agee, James and Walker Evans CY - Boston DA - 1939 KW - photography +photography and visual communication +photography and visual communication photography, and reform cameras Agee, James photography, and sharecropping LB - 8790 PB - Houghton Mifflin Company PY - 1939 ST - Let Us Now Praise Famous Men TI - Let Us Now Praise Famous Men ID - 2246 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 69-page document (plus appendices) sets out the Defense Advance Research Project Agency's plan for a new strategic computing initative. It begins: "As a result of a series of advances in artificial intelligence, computer science, and microelectronics, we stand at the threshold of a new generation of computing technology having unprecedented capabilities. The United States stands to profit greatly both in national security and economic strength by its determination and ability to exploit this new technology." (1) The generation of computers "will exhibit human-like, 'intelligent' capabilities for planning and reasoning," it says. (1) The plan calls for close cooperation between industry, universities, and the military. This documents predicts that the next generation of computing will change warfare in a fundamental way and also have enormous spin-off implications for the civilian sector. The changes under way are analogous "to those resulting from the replacement of the vacuum tube by the transistor, the displacement of discrete transistors by integrated circuits, and the fourth generation displacement of simple integrated circuit technology by VLSI now occuring in the computer and electronics industry." (9) AU - Agency, Defense Advanced Research Projects CY - [Washington, D.C.?] DA - Oct. 28, 1983 KW - computers computers nationalism military-industrial complex microprocessing Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) strategic computing initiative DARPA computers and the Internet military communication nationalism and communication microprocessors Artificial Intelligence and Biotechnology military, and artificial intelligence artificial intelligence, and military computers, and artificial intelligence supercomputers military-industrial-university complex microelectronics transistors integrated circuits computers, fifth generation fifth generation computers computers, fourth generation LB - 34460 PB - Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency PY - 1983 ST - Stategic Computing: New-Generation Computing Technology: A Strategic Plan for its Development and Application to Critical Problems in Defense TI - Stategic Computing: New-Generation Computing Technology: A Strategic Plan for its Development and Application to Critical Problems in Defense ID - 3084 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - As Director Robert C. Duncan notes in his opening remarks on this Report, the "fundamental goal of the Strategic Computing Program is to advance machine intelligence technologies by emphasizing research in several scientific disciplines. First, the program supports research in advanced computing architectures including concepts that promise to allow thousand fold increases in processing capability using multiprocessors that can process data in parallel streams, thereby improving both speed and flexibility in accomplishing massive computations, both symbolic and numeric. Second, the program emphasizes research in several areas of machine intelligence: advanced expert systems, speech recognition, natural language processing, and computer vision. Third, Strategic Computing includes research in microelectronic devices such as optical interconnects that can reduce the physical interfaces between internal computer hardware, thus avoiding bottlenecks while improving speed. Finally, Strategic Computing builds the elements of infrastructure needed to support research on advanced computing technologies, such as rapid prototyping methocs for system development, large-scale emulation facilities, and access to new generation computers as they become available." (1-2) Duncan goes on to say that "An underlying objective of Strategic Computing, as with all DARPA programs, is the advancement of the scientific and technical capability of our universities, national laboratories, and industry." (2) The Report goes on to say that the "main components of the Strategic Computing Program are Military Applications and a Technology Base consisting of: New Machine Architectures (symbolic and numeric), Generic Software Systems, and Microelectronics. The current Military Applications projects include an Autonomous Land Vehicle (ALV), systems for Naval Fleet Command Center Battle Management (FCCBMP) and for Army AirLand Battle Management (ALBM), a Pilot's Associate system, and a system for Radar/Optical Imagery Analysis. The role of the applications projects is to provide a realistic task environment for technology research. Also, these projects are designed to service as the principal means of demonstrating the emerging technology and of transferring it to military systems and to the industrial base." (3) AU - Agency, Defense Advanced Research Projects DA - Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency KW - computers computers nationalism military-industrial complex microprocessing Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) strategic computing initiative DARPA computers and the Internet military communication nationalism and communication microprocessors artificial intelligence and biotechnology military, and artificial intelligence artificial intelligence, and military computers, and artificial intelligence supercomputers military-industrial-university complex microelectronics transistors integrated circuits computers, fifth generation fifth generation computers computers, fourth generation LB - 34700 OP - Feb. 1986 PB - Arlington, VA ST - Strategic Computing: Second Annual Report: New General Computing Technology: A National Strategy for Meetng the National Security Challenge of Advanced Computer Technology TI - Strategic Computing: Second Annual Report: New General Computing Technology: A National Strategy for Meetng the National Security Challenge of Advanced Computer Technology ID - 3108 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Aitken argues, among other things, that Marconi did not invent wireless telegraphy but rather that William Crookes had conceived Hertzian wave telegraphy in 1892 and that Oliver Lodge had demonstrated it in 1894 before the British Association in its annual meeting at Oxford. See Sungook Hong’s article in Technology and Culture (Oct. 1994), which argues that Aitken’s claim for Lodge is incorrect. AU - Aitken, Hugh G. J. CY - New York DA - 1976 KW - materials materials wireless telegraphy +radio wireless communication vacuum tubes Marconi, Guglielmo Crookes, William Lodge, Oliver wireless communication wireless telegraphy, and origins Hong, Sungook radio, and vacuum tubes vacuum tubes, and radio LB - 5260 PB - Wiley PY - 1976 ST - Syntony and Spark: The Origins of Radio TI - Syntony and Spark: The Origins of Radio ID - 1913 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Aitken, Hugh G. J. CY - Princeton DA - 1985 KW - materials materials +radio vacuum tubes wireless communication Marconi, Guglielmo radio, and vacuum tubes vacuum tubes, and radio LB - 5270 PB - Princeton University Press PY - 1985 ST - The Continuous Wave: Technology and American Radio, 1900-1932 TI - The Continuous Wave: Technology and American Radio, 1900-1932 ID - 1914 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author writes that "in order to use color effectively it is necessary to recognize that color deceives continually. To this end, the beginning is not a study of color systems." (1) Later he says that "both film color and volume color might be considered tricks of nature." (46) And then, "with the discovery that color is the most relative medium in art, and that its greatest excitement lies beyond rules and canons, a more sensitive discrimination was needed. The more a creative use of color developed, the less desirable became a merely trustful and obedient application." (66) AU - Albers, Josef CY - New Haven and London DA - 1963, 1971, 1975 KW - censorship avant garde context art color freedom color, and freedom color, and 1960s art, and color color, and art avant garde, and color color, and avant garde censorship, and color color, and censorship censorship and ratings color, and prejudice against sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, context context, and color color, and 1960s color, and sensation censorship and ratings censorship, and color values values, and color color, and values freedom freedom, and color color, and freedom LB - 32480 PB - Yale University Press PY - 1963 ST - Interaction of Color TI - Interaction of Color ID - 2907 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This study of British newsreels during the Spanish Civil War has information about the technology that cameramen used during the 1930s. By the mid-1930s, for example, the Mitchell and Newman Sinclair cameras from the United States were available on the British market. The camera and sound equipment together had been reduced in size to weigh about 150 pounds, although there were still obstacles to filming. The cameras held only about three minutes of film before they needed to be reloaded. The work also considered technical challenges to recording sound during this period. AU - Aldgate, Anthony CY - London DA - 1979 KW - newsreels microphones +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures +sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording motion pictures and newsreels newsreels, and sound recording cameras, and newsreels cameras, and sound recording sound recording, and cameras sound recording, and portable cameras, and portable microphones, and newsreels cameras news news and journalism LB - 17590 PB - Solar Press PY - 1979 ST - Cinema and History: British Newsreels and the Spanish Civil War TI - Cinema and History: British Newsreels and the Spanish Civil War ID - 678 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - A clash of cultures occurred during the late - nineteenth century involving affluent traditionalists who believed great art must be European-inspired and dissident intellectuals who believed that America must produce a distinctive art. This cultural clash produced a rift within the dissidents themselves, who split into factions favoring modernism and romantic nationalism. This rift determined the course of acceptable art for most of the first half of the twentieth century. While the influence of architecture, most forms of music, and nearly all writing was limited to the domestic marketplace, the effect internationally of painters, sculptors, and moviemakers was profound. Images of America and Americans were popular in Europe during the late 1920s through the 1930s. This early popularity became the foundation for American dominance of international art during the immediate years following World War II. --James Landers AU - Alexander, Charles C. CY - Bloomington DA - 1980 KW - nationalism imperialism photography motion pictures modernism modernity modernism modernity +nationalism and communication Landers, James +photography and visual communication art, and nationalism nationalism, and art modernism, and art art motion pictures, and art cultural imperialism cultural imperialism, and art LB - 8800 PB - Indiana University Press PY - 1980 ST - Here the Country Lies: Nationalism and the Arts in Twentieth-Century America TI - Here the Country Lies: Nationalism and the Arts in Twentieth-Century America ID - 2247 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization)study, which employed 29 researchers and 39 countries, has valuable information on the spread and use of video technology at the end of the 1980s. It notes that there were then four “video rich” areas: North America, Western Europe, the Arab countries, and Japan and Southeast Asia. Lagging behind in video use were Latin America, Africa, and Eastern Europe. The study found that the most important use of video technology was time shifting, recording television programs for later viewing. The next two most important uses were to watch non-broadcast material, primarily motion pictures, and to view non-broadcast amateur material such as home movies. Among the variables in explaining the diffusion of video technology were 1) price; 2) restrictions and taxes imposed by government; 3) the distribution of income (e.g., south of the Sahara, a VCR cost 29 times the minimum annual salary); and the content of broadcast TV. The study also notes that video had become “an alternative means of mass communication” in many countries. In some instances it was subversive to the prevailing power structure. Each of this work’s twenty-two chapters is devoted to a specific country or region, and has a separate author. (Paul E. Cahill wrote the chapter on the United States and Canada). The work concludes by suggesting future research on video technology should be directed to several areas: research should focus 1) less on video recorders on more on cameras, editing, and dubbing suites; 2) more on the world-wide flow of pre-recorded videos; 3) more on government policy making relating to video technology; and 4) more on audiences, especially the part played by videos in multi-language societies. AU - Alvarado, Manuel, ed. CY - Paris DA - 1988 KW - technology video cassette recorders (VCRs) USSR nationalism magnetic recording time and timekeeping video United Nations time technology and society motion pictures materials materials magnetic tape law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA sound recording videotape image recording, and videotape UNESCO +nationalism and communication technology diffusion censorship, and video video, and censorship audiences, and video VCRs timeshifting, and VCRs Great Britain Great Britain, and video Spain Spain, and video Italy Italy, and video Sweden Sweden, and video Japan Japan, and video India India, and video motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and VCRs VCRs, and motion pictures Australia Australia, and video Hong Kong Hong Kong, and video Jordan Jordan, and video Egypt Egypt, and video Poland Poland, and video Soviet Union Soviet Union, and video Yugoslavia Yugoslavia, and video Hungary Hungary, and video Africa Africa, and video Brazil Brazil, and video Peru Peru, and video Latin America Latin America, and video Colombia Colombia, and video Venezuela Venezuela, and video Chile Chile, and video Belize Belize, and video audiences sound, and space LB - 12460 PB - UNESCO PY - 1988 ST - Video World-Wide: An International Study TI - Video World-Wide: An International Study ID - 2593 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Twenty-three authors contributed to this symposium which was held on the 30th anniversary of 16-mm film. The essay discuss the medium’s history since its inception in 1923 and speculate about its future in the coming three decades. Paul A. Wagner’s (then president of the Film Council of America) Introduction, “What’s Past Is Prologue...,” gives an overview of 16-mm film and especially how World War II served as a catalyst in the medium’s development and acceptance. Wagner provides good information about the increased use of 16-mm film during the war, and especially in the first seven years after the war. This work is essentially optimistic about 16-mm film and its authors saw a bright possibilities for use in education, public libraries, museums, churches, government agencies, in labor, and theatrical productions. One author likened the functions of 16-mm prints of feature films to paperback books or the recording of classical music on long-playing records. Although this work appeared in 1954, two years before the first commercially successful video recorder had been demonstrated (and 17 years before the invention of videocassettes), and at the dawn of the transistor’s impact on communication, it clearly anticipates the impact of these developments. It predicts that quarter-inch magnetic tape will supplant 16-mm film and that “radical” changes will result. Every television set owner will have “electronic playback,” and “since the tape will be lightweight and book-size, and since its cost will be comparable to that of many good books, thousands of retail outlets will handle a large stock.” (Wagner) This work was published by the Film Council of America, a nonprofit educational organization that promoted the use of audio-visual materials in adult education. AU - America, Film Council of CY - Des Plaines, IL DA - 1954 KW - R & D libraries nationalism magnetic recording World War II values religion history and new media preservation motion pictures war research and development military communication media effects sexuality media effects violence media effects history information storage materials materials magnetic tape +future and science fiction film cinema motion pictures celluloid education democracy community 16mm government history +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and 16mm film 16mm film magnetic tape recording magnetic tape recording, video values, and society democracy, and media education, and 16mm film religion, and 16mm film 16mm film, and education 16mm film, and religion +nationalism and communication government, and 16mm film public libraries, and 16mm film 16mm film, and public libraries 16mm film, as paperback books +television television, and 16mm film history, and new media history, and 16mm film values, and 16mm film +sound recording sound recording, and magnetic tape World War II, and 16mm film 16mm film, and World War II 16mm film, and museums media effects, and 16mm film Film Council of America future, and 16mm film future libraries +information storage LB - 12630 PB - Film Council of America (Evanston, IL) PY - 1954 ST - Sixty Years of 16mm Film, 1923-1983: A Symposium TI - Sixty Years of 16mm Film, 1923-1983: A Symposium ID - 2609 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work discusses public relations tactics used by the MPPDA and Will H. Hays to divide groups critical of the movie industry such as the PTA. AU - America, Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in CY - New York DA - [c1931] KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) self-regulation Production Code PCA Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. MPAA MPPDA context +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures context, and public relations motion pictures, and public relations motion pictures, and critics MPPDA, and discrediting critics Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 13410 PB - n.p. ST - The Public Relations of the Motion Picture Industry: A Report by the Department of Research and Education, Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America TI - The Public Relations of the Motion Picture Industry: A Report by the Department of Research and Education, Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America ID - 512 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Will H. Hays, president of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America, created a Committee on Public Relations that he later turned into a department. He put Colonel Jason Joy in charge, and in 1927 replaced Joy with the former Maine governor Carl E. Milliken. The department responded to attacks on the industry, tried to engage citizens in making movies more acceptable, and attempted to make “customers out of critics.” Public relations could convince skeptics that movie makers were good citizens, well-intentioned, and capable of self regulation, which Hays believed offered the best and perhaps the only realistic way to prevent government intervention. The Public Relations Department gained impressive momentum during its first decade. In the course of a year it routinely gave 15,000 interviews and turned out several times that many letters. AU - America, Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of CY -?? DA - Feb. 5, 1934 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) self-regulation Production Code PCA advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising public relations Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. MPAA MPPDA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures public relations, and MPPDA public relations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and public relations MPPDA, and public relations reports Production Code (motion pictures) reports, MPPDA LB - 13400 PB - Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America PY - 1934 ST - Annual Report, Public Relations Department TI - Annual Report, Public Relations Department ID - 511 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This guide attempts to show union members how they can use the broadcasting industry to communicate labor messages without having to buy advertising. The authors argue that the Fairness Doctrine and other FCC rules and regulations, such as the “personal attack” rule and the “equal opportunities” rule, give unions an opportunity for access to commercial and public broadcast airwaves. “ ... For too long, labor has allowed its message to be manipulated by broadcasters who ignore their public responsibilities.” This guide contains a brief explanation of public service programming, broadcast news operations, and public broadcasting. It includes sample letters that union members can use to ask or demand to be heard, sample public service announcements for radio and television, and a sample Fairness Doctrine complaint letter to the FCC. --Phil Glende AU - American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees CY - Washington, DC DA - 1980 KW - Glende, Phil labor labor, and new media labor, and television labor, and radio labor, and public relations labor, and advertising labor, and FCC LB - 1130 N1 - See also: office PB - American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees PY - 1980 ST - Gaining Access to Radio and TV Time: A Union Member’s Guide to the Broadcast Media TI - Gaining Access to Radio and TV Time: A Union Member’s Guide to the Broadcast Media ID - 201 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Parts of this work are interesting in its consideration of nationalism and communication. The author notes (in 1983) that nationalism is far more powerful than ideology (e.g., Marxism or liberalism) and that its origins in the West grow out of the Enlightenment and the eras of the American and French Revolutions in the late eighteenth century. He has interesting things to say about the spread of printing (esp. books, and the newspapers) and the effect on nationalism as well as on conceptions of time. (Here the author draws heavily on a relatively few secondary works such as Febvre and Martin’s The Coming of the Book). “The nation is imagined as limited because even the largest of them, encompassing perhaps a billion living human beings, has finite, if elastic boundaries....It is imagined as sovereign because the concept was born in an age in which Enlightenment and Revolution were destroying the legitimacy of the divinely-ordained, hierarchical dynastic realm....Finally, it is imagined as a community, because, regardless of the actual inequality and exploitation that may prevail in each, the nation is always conceived as a deep, horizontal comradeship.” The latter chapters discuss the rise of nationalism in “Third world” areas as well as patriotism and racism. This often-cited book has been influential among researchers in communications studies. AU - Anderson, Benedict CY - London DA - 1983 KW - nationalism time and timekeeping time print journalism timekeeping, and clocks news and journalism non-USA race printing printing press newspapers news +nationalism and communication +books, periodicals, newspapers printing, and nationalism time books, and nationalism newspapers, and nationalism nationalism, and patriotism nationalism, and racism racism patriotism Enlightenment Third World French Revolution nationalism, and Marxism nationalism, and liberalism newspapers books community, imagined community newspapers, and nationalism nationalism, and books nationalism, and newspapers timekeeping democracy France LB - 2050 PB - Verso PY - 1983 ST - Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism TI - Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism ID - 1601 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book examines the developing relationship between Hollywood studios and television during the 1950s. The work has a good deal to say about the changing technology of both the movie and television industries. It also discusses the status of actors in American society and the role of advertising. Particularly interesting is the author's account of "Lights Jubilee," celebrating the 75th anniversary of the electric light. AU - Anderson, Christopher CY - Austin DA - 1994 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations lighting motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures actors, and status of motion pictures, and actors' status Screen Actors Guild television television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and studio system advertising advertising, and television television, and advertising Lights Jubilee motion pictures, and advertising advertising, and motion pictures television, and Warner Bros. Warner Bros., and television electricity Warner Bros. actors acting LB - 18280 PB - University of Texas Press PY - 1994 ST - HollywoodTV: The Studio System in the Fifties TI - HollywoodTV: The Studio System in the Fifties ID - 735 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book has information on Jack Valenti, one-time assistant to President Lyndon B. Johnson. Valenti in 1968 was president of the Motion Picture Association of America. AU - Anderson, Patrick CY - Garden City, N. Y. DA - 1968 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti LB - 19620 PB - Doubleday & Company PY - 1968 ST - The President's Men: White House Assistants of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry S Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson TI - The President's Men: White House Assistants of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry S Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson ID - 796 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - One of the interesting illustrations is a picture from Punch in 1879 of “Edison’s Telephonoscope” which was to have transmitted “light as well as sound.” It is an early vision of home entertainment. AU - Appelbaum, Stanley, and Richard Kelley, eds. CY - New York DA - 1981 KW - illustrations entertainment entertainment, home home entertainment +future and science fiction home, and new media home television, and history of home, and information technology information technology illustrations +television future illustrations, and television (1879) seeing at a distance television, and origins information technology, and home Edison, Thomas Telephonoscope +telephones Edison, Thomas, and Telephonoscope home entertainment, and Thomas Edison LB - 6490 PB - Dover Publications PY - 1981 ST - Great Drawings and Illustrations from Punch, 1841-1901 TI - Great Drawings and Illustrations from Punch, 1841-1901 ID - 2007 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Chapter 11, “Drawing with Light: Photography, Reality, and Dream,” and chapter 13, “Revolution of the Eye, Revolution of the Mind,” make perceptive observations about the influence and nature of photography. The author writes: "Photography is one of those technical devices which has so drastically altered our senses and upon which we have developed such a profound dependence that it is difficult, indeed impossible, for us to think about it with any degree of detachment. Nothing yet invented, save perhaps the tape recording, offers such a convincing ‘proof’ of what we consider to be real; and conversely, nothing is likely to be considered real unless it can be photographed. Photography makes the philosophy of materialism a closed case.... “The true culmination of the mechanistic mode of visual perception and mental ordering was the perfection of drawing with light, the literal meaning of photography. In a vital respect, the tradition of Western painting after the Renaissance is the prehistory of photography....” Before photography, the length of time needed to complete a painting ensured that “the narrative mode predominated in the visual arts as well as in other cultural areas; history painting was flanked by grand opera and the novel,” Argüelles writes. “With the rise of photography, however, history painting lost its significance, for photography’s instantaneous technique plunged the European consciousness of reality into the immediate present. With the displacement of history painting, the entire edifice of academic culture came crashing down. The history painting produced by the residual academicism of the late nineteenth century appears bombastically contrived, a stage set that could be salvaged and redeemed only by the aesthetics of Hollywood cinema.” AU - Argüelles, José A. CY - Berkeley & London DA - 1975 KW - tape recording, magnetic magnetic recording recording tape recording photography seeing at a distance preservation postmodernism modernism communication revolution history sound recording tape recording recording photography and visual communication history sound recording, and tape recorders tape recorders photography and visual communication, and materialism drawing with light visual arts, narrative mode painting painting, and academic culture photography and visual communication, and academic culture communication revolution photography and visual communication, revolution in seeing medium is the message photography and visual communication, and present history, break with history, and new media new way of seeing visual communication LB - 1360 PB - Shambhala PY - 1975 ST - The Transformative Vision: Reflections on the Nature and History of Human Expression TI - The Transformative Vision: Reflections on the Nature and History of Human Expression ID - 1532 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book offers one of the best accounts of the underground or alternative media during the 1960s and 1970s. In chapter 2, "Rise of the Underground Press," Armstrong discusses the impact of offset printing that made it possible to publish newspaper at a greatly reduced cost. For those interested in other developments related to new technologies, chapter 3, "The New Media Environment," is particularly good. There Armstrong discusses the impact of 16mm films and videotape. "Video activists believed strongly in the power of the new technology to create a video democracy," he writes. (72) He also covers the use of color in the underground press (e.g., by such underground papers as the San Francisco Oracle) and the use of radio. AU - Armstrong, David CY - Los Angeles DA - 1981 KW - underground media videotape offset printing underground press offset printing, and underground press underground press, and offset printing democracy censorship and ratings color underground press, and color color, and underground press radio underground press, and radio radio, and underground press San Francisco Oracle Berkeley Barb television cable television cable television, and democracy democracy, and cable television television, and cable television, and democracy cable magnetic tape magnetic recording underground newspapers LB - 31670 N1 - Dristributed by Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston. PB - J. P. Tarcher, Inc. PY - 1981 ST - A Trumpet to Arms: Alternative Media in America TI - A Trumpet to Arms: Alternative Media in America ID - 2854 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Armstrong attempts to assess the impact of new media technologies on American politics during the 1980s. "What is really 'new' about political television in the 1980s," he writes, "was that it was cheaper, more plentiful, and much more immediate than it had ever been before. These effects were the direct result of new video production technologies [especially videotape], new distribution technologies, new technologies in the generation of 'free media,' new technologies in media buying, and new technologies in polling -- all of which combined to make campaigns seem more 'negative' but that actually made them more 'reactive.'" Armstrong believes that during the 1980s, "the press was not just being manipulated, it was actually being supplanted." Armstrong deals with several means of communication -- direct mailings, computers, cable television, satellites, telemarketing, and other so-called "new electronic media" -- and how they intersect with American politics. The book is divided into two sections. The first has four chapters on Direct Mail. The second, entitled "The New Technologies," has five chapters dealing with telemarketing, cable TV, satellites, computers, and telecommunications and its new electronic media. AU - Armstrong, Richard CY - New York DA - 1988 KW - computers magnetic recording advertising, and public relations presidents, and new media Reagan administration propaganda public relations magnetic tape community democracy information technology general studies democracy and media critics +television cable television television, and cable +computers and the Internet direct mail telemarketing +aeronautics and space communication information technology, and politics videotape Reagan, Ronald advertising advertising, political advertising, negative cable +telephones satellites LB - 11430 PB - Beech Tree Books, William Morrow PY - 1988 ST - The Next Hurrah: The Communications Revolution in American Politics TI - The Next Hurrah: The Communications Revolution in American Politics ID - 2503 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book surveys how nine countries and one supra-national grouping have attempted to build national strategies for using information technology (IT) -- defined as "the convergence of computing and communications technologies." Chapter 3 deals with the United States. Subsequent chapters treat Japan, the European Economic Community, the United Kingdom, France and Germany, and four smaller countries -- Belgium, Canada, The Netherlands, and Switzerland. The work discusses artificial intelligence, supercomputing, the strategic computing initiative, research and development, and other topics relating to national defense. AU - Arnold, Erik and Ken Guy CY - Westport, CT DA - 1986 KW - R & D computers nationalism corporations corporations ARPA SDI research and development war communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution community democracy war non-USA computers research and development microelectronics information technology +computers and the Internet +military communication +artificial intelligence and biotechnology computers, fifth generation Japan European Economic Communication +nationalism and communication Germany France Canada Netherlands Switzerland Belgium Great Britain research and development, and government support Alvey Programme ARPANET strategic computing initiative strategic defense initiative (SDI) microelectronics revolution communication revolution democracy and media electronic media IBM information technology, and national defense telecommunications supercomputers bibliographies, and nationalism and communication +bibliographies Europe supercomputing computers, and supercomputers media convergence Europe LB - 3670 PB - Quorum Books PY - 1986 ST - Parallel Convergence: National Strategies in Information Technology TI - Parallel Convergence: National Strategies in Information Technology ID - 1755 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Asman, Edwin CY - n. p. DA - 1980 KW - non-USA networks +telegraph +telephones networks, electrical telegraph, transatlantic LB - 5130 PB - n. p. PY - 1980 ST - The Telegraph and the Telephone: Their Development and Role in the Economic History of the United States: The First Century, 1844-1944 TI - The Telegraph and the Telephone: Their Development and Role in the Economic History of the United States: The First Century, 1844-1944 ID - 1900 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 79-page background paper, published in June, 1993, "analyzes technologies for tomorrow’s information superhighways. Advanced networks will first be used to support scientists in their work, linking researchers to supercomputers, databases, and scientific instruments. As the new networks are deployed more widely, they will be used by a broader range of users for business, entertainment, health care, and education applications. “The background paper also describes six test networks that are being funded as part of the High Performance Computing and Communications Program. These test networks are a collaboration of government, industry, and academia, and allow researchers to try new approaches to network design and to attack a variety of research questions. Significant progress has been made in the development of technologies that will help achieve the goals of the High-Performance Computing Act of 1991.” This is the third background paper on this topic. Earlier papers included High Performance Computing & Networking for Science (1989), and Seeking Solutions: High-Performance Computing for Science (1991). Chapter 2 deals with “The Internet.” Chapter is on “Broadband Network Technology.” Chapter 4 deals with “Gigabit Research.” Chapter 5 is “Application of Testbed Research.” AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1993 KW - R & D computers U. S.Congress nationalism +military communication labor +future and science fiction government office office, and new media office government reports Congress, U. S. government documents research and development networks metaphors +nationalism and communication +computers and the Internet networks, and computers supercomputers computers, and supercomputers computers, and government computers, and education computers, and industry future Internet High-Performance Computing Act (1991) networks, and broadband gigabit research computers, and universities metaphors, and superhighway computers, and health care networks, advanced research and development, and government support Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) OTA infrastructure computers nationalism, and computers LB - 2350 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1993 ST - Advanced Network Technology: Background Paper TI - Advanced Network Technology: Background Paper ID - 1628 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This publication, which appeared in June, 1990, is good not only as an introduction to high definition television (HDTV), but also to the United States’ electronic communication infrastructure in 1990. As John H. Gibbons (OTA director) writes in his “Foreword”: “Television technology is now on the threshold of a new evolution. We are on the verge of combining digital-based computer technology with television. This technological marriage promises to produce offspring that can deliver movie-quality, wide-screen programs to our homes with stereo sound equivalent to the best compact disks. Its importance goes well beyond home entertainment, however. High-definition television -- HDTV as it is called -- is linked with many other basic technologies important to the United States. The impacts of the development of HDTV will ripple through the U.S. economy: It will make us confront such issues as public policy dealing with manufacturing, educational and training standardization, communications, civil and military command and control, structural economic problems, and relationships between government and business.” Chapter 3 deals with “Communication Technologies” and notes that following: “The U.S. electronic communication infrastructure is a mixture of five media: 1) terrestrial radio frequency transmissions; 2) satellite radio frequency transmissions; 3) paired copper wires; 4) coaxial cables; and 5) optical fibers.” This chapters devotes a section to each of these media. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - June 1990 KW - entertainment U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism entertainment, home fiber optics labor home entertainment materials materials fiber optics government home, and new media home office office, and new media office government reports Congress, U. S. government documents satellites radio home, and information technology media infrastructure information technology +nationalism and communication +television infrastructure infrastructure, and optical fibers optical fibers cable, coaxial infrastructure, and coaxial cable infrastructure, and paired copper wires infrastructure, and satellite radio frequency transmission radio, and satellites satellites, and radio frequency transmissions radio, terrestrial infrastructure, and terrestrial radio frequency tranmissions television, and high definition (HDTV) HDTV high definition television information technology, and home information technology, and entertainment media convergence electronic media Gibbons, John H. OTA cable +radio +aeronautics and space communication materials satellites, and radio LB - 2360 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1990 ST - The Big Picture: HDTV & High-Resolution Systems: Background Paper TI - The Big Picture: HDTV & High-Resolution Systems: Background Paper ID - 1629 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The opening chapter, which summarizes this 395-page report, offers a good account of the many problems and issues involved in America’s changing communication infrastructure. “As information is treated more and more as a commodity to be bought and sold in the marketplace, the traditional political gatekeepers -- including political parties, the traditional press, and government agencies -- are being replaced by new kinds of political gatekeepers, such as political consultants, media consultants, private sector vendors, and international newscasters. Whereas the traditional gatekeepers are governed by political rules and norms, the new gatekeepers are guided to a greater extent by market criteria. Where markets dominate the allocation of communication resources -- such as information, a speaking platform, or access to an audience -- political access may become increasingly dependent on the ability to pay. Thus, the economic divisions among individuals and groups may be superimposed on the political arena.” (emphasis in original). “OTA found that changes in the U.S. communication infrastructure are likely to broaden the gap between those who can access communication services and use information strategically and those who cannot....” (emphasis in original) Chapters are devoted to communication and: business, the democratic process, production of culture, and the individual. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1990 KW - U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism values labor communication revolution journalism +future and science fiction digital media digitization community democracy news and journalism government office office, and new media office government reports Congress, U. S. government documents values press information technology +nationalism and communication OTA democracy and media infrastructure gatekeeping information technology, and changing gatekeeping communication revolution values, and market place values, and changing gatekeeping information technology, and business information technology, and culture capitalism information technology, and democracy information technology, and gap rich , poor future information technology, and political parties information technology, and press press, and information technology digital divide news, and new media news LB - 2370 PB - U.S. Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1990 ST - Critical Connections: Communication for the Future TI - Critical Connections: Communication for the Future ID - 1630 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 72-page publication, which appeared in October, 1985, gives a good overview of the problems posed to civil liberties by electronic surveillance during the mid-1980s. The first two chapters offer a summary, introduction, and overview of the issues. Chapter 3 is on “Telephone Surveillance.” Chapter 4 covers “Electronic Mail Surveillance.” The last chapter is “Other Surveillance Issues,” and examines “Electronic Physical Surveillance,” “Electronic Visual Surveillance,” and “Data Base Surveillance.” --SV This report, prepared by the U.S. Office of Technology Assessment in 1985, was written to inform Congress of the state of electronic communications technology and the laws regarding surveillance and civil liberties. In the mid-1980s, electronic communications technologies were developing quickly, as were the means of intercepting and monitoring them. In addition, new developments in cameras, fiber optics, computer database linkage and remote sensing were being introduced to law enforcement agencies at a rapid pace. One part of this report detailed the various new methods of surveillance, both at the time the report was prepared and, speculatively, in the future. The report also detailed the federal laws that were on the books in the mid-1980s and were related to electronic surveillance and civil liberties concerns. The report concluded that new technology had out paced the law, and that no clear principles or practical guidelines were available to address the issues that would be raised by continued use of these technologies. The report also suggested various courses of action that Congress might take to address these gaps in the law. The report is divided into sections on several kinds of new technology. These include telephone surveillance, electronic mail surveillance, new methods of secret audio and video recording, and computer database-related methods of tracking activity and behavior. The report described the technical possibilities and outlined the extent to which federal and state officials were already using them. Of particular interest is the discussion of the framework of privacy and search and seizure laws. At the time, the most current laws on these issues dated from 1968 and related only to older technologies such as hidden microphones, telephone and telegraph line interception and visual surveillance by police or government agents. The report is interesting for several reasons. First, it is a useful guide for understanding how electronic communications can, and are, monitored. Most of the technologies discussed in this report, such as cellular phones, pagers, e-mail and computer database tracking, are in wide use today. We can assume that as the technologies have advanced, so have the methods of monitoring them. In fact, the current debates about Internet privacy and personal profiling by web databases shows that these issues are still a concern. The report is also interesting in that it shows a great sense of concern for privacy and civil liberties. Clearly, the authors were afraid that new technology might lead to abuse, and that there would be no clearly defined legal framework to limit surveillance. It would be interesting to study the course of subsequent action taken by Congress in response to the report. One of the policy choices that the report outlined was to do nothing, and instead wait and see how the technology developed before creating legislation. --Rob Rabe AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1985 KW - computers U. S.Congress post office Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism email law, and privacy law fiber optics labor materials materials +future and science fiction community democracy computers +computers and the Internet freedom government office government reports Congress, U. S. government documents surveillance +nationalism and communication privacy civil liberties, and electronic surveillance surveillance democracy and media electronic mail, and privacy +telephones telephones, and surveillance miniaturization electronic media cameras, and surveillance surveillance, electronic OTA surveillance, and government surveillance, and data bases cameras civil liberties +postal service surveillance, electronic Rabe, Rob electronic mail office, and new media computers, and surveillance fiber optics future, and surveillance future optical fibers LB - 2380 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1985 ST - Electronic Surveillance and Civil Liberties: Federal Government Information Technology TI - Electronic Surveillance and Civil Liberties: Federal Government Information Technology ID - 1631 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report discusses the urgency of establishing a supercomputing network. Among the networks discussed including the National Research and Education Network (NREN). AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Sept. 1989 KW - R & D computers U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism presidents, and new media labor research and development war +future and science fiction war non-USA government office office, and new media office government reports Congress, U. S. government documents computers research and development Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration +nationalism and communication +military communication +computers and the Internet National Research and Education Network (NREN) computers, and supercomputers supercomputers Reagan Administration, and supercomputers supercomputers, and Japan supercomputers, and Reagan Administration Europe, and supercomputers supercomputers, national centers telecommunications global communication education, and supercomputers future research and development, and supercomputers OTA infrastructure strategic computing initiative education Europe nationalism, and computers +nationalism and communication LB - 2390 PB - U. S. Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1989 ST - High Performance Computing & Networking for Science: Background Paper TI - High Performance Computing & Networking for Science: Background Paper ID - 1632 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work, which appeared in October, 1988, gives a good overview of the size, scope, and infrastructure of the federal government’s information dissemination enterprise. Chapter 2 give an “Overview of Federal Information Dissemination.” Chapter 3 discusses “Key Technology Trends Relevant to Federal Information Dissemination.” Here the “microcomputer revolution” and the “continuing role of paper and microform” are discussed. Chapter 4 considers “Alternative Futures for the Government Printing Office,” while chapter 6 is on “Information Technologies, Libraries, and the Federal Depository Library Program.” Chapter 7 deals with “Alternative Futures for the Depository Library Program.” “The Freedom of Information Act in an Electronic Age” is the topic of chapter 9. Chapter 10 is “The Electronic Press Release and Government-Press Relationships,” while chapter 11 is “Federal Information Dissemination Policy in an Electronic Age.” AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1988 KW - U. S.Congress post office Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism print news and journalism labor communication revolution archives materials +future and science fiction community democracy freedom government office office, and new media office government reports Congress, U. S. government documents printing printing press paper microfiche, microfilm, microform microcomputers libraries information technology libraries, and information storage information storage, and libraries Information Age +nationalism and communication democracy and media information, and government dissemination microform paper, and government information printing, and government OTA +information storage future Freedom of Information Act, and electronic media freedom of information press, and electronic government press releases electronic media information technology, and government microcomputers, and government communication revolution +information storage +telegraph +telephones +postal service future press, and government nationalism, and information technology infrastructure materials LB - 2400 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1988 ST - Informing the Nation: Federal Information in an Electronic Age TI - Informing the Nation: Federal Information in an Electronic Age ID - 1633 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report, prepared by a congressional agency early in the Reagan administration, reflects the concern then current about competition from Japan. It urges the government to take steps to make the electronics industry more competitive. “American firms making radios, TVs, and audio products such as stereo receivers and tape recorders have been under severe competitive pressures for years; many have failed or left the market. Few radios or black-and-white TVs are made in the United States. No video cassette recorders are manufactured here. Color television production has become largely an assembly operation, heavily dependent on imported components -- whether the parent firm in American-owned (RCA, Zenith, GE) or foreign-owned (Sony, Quasar, Magnavox). In television manufacture especially, the policies of the Federal Government have contributed to the plight of the industry. Dumping complaints against importers going back to 1968 have never been fully resolved. An industry legally entitled to trade protection has not received it.” AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D. C.] DA - 1983 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) U. S.Congress tape recording, magnetic corporations Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism corporations magnetic recording magnetic tape recording tape recording magnetic tape presidents, and new media materials non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents VCRs recording, and tape recorders recording, and tape recording tape recording sound recording, and magnetic tape Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration radio +nationalism and communication electronic media, and international competition Japan capitalism radio, and international competition +television television, and international competition VCRs, and manufacture of sound recording, and stereo (international competition) sound recording, and magnetic tape (international competition) tape recorders, magnetic RCA Zenith General Electric Company Sony Corporation Quasar Magnavox electronic media, and trade protection OTA +sound recording +radio wireless communication global communication Reagan administration, and communication electronic media sound recording, and magnetic tape nationalism, and new media nationalism, and sound recording sound recording, and stereo LB - 2410 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1983 ST - International Competitiveness In Electronics TI - International Competitiveness In Electronics ID - 1634 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The first page of this report gives an idea of the broad range of people who receive federal services in the United States: “46 million recipients of social security benefits. “27 million recipients of food stamps. “31 million Medicaid recipients. “14 million recipient of aid to families with dependent children. “15,000 scientists who receive National Science Foundation research grants each year. “20,000 small businesses that receive business loans. “600,000 persons participating in job-training programs. “people and organizations that annually place about 1.6 million orders for a total of 110 million publications from the U.S. Government Printing Office. “citizens who annually receive a total of 10 million pamphlets from the Consumer Information Center. “30,000 or so academic and business researchers who receive research results and technical information each week from the National Technical Information Service, and “170,000 citizens who use Federal depository libraries each week.” AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1993 KW - U. S.Congress post office Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism labor archives community democracy freedom government office office, and new media office government reports Congress, U. S. government documents libraries infrastructure information technology libraries, and information storage Information Age +nationalism and communication OTA electronic media, and government democracy and media postal service, electronic infrastructure, electronic information technology, and electronic delivery +information storage information processing freedom of information government, and federal electronic delivery +postal service electronic media government nationalism, and electronic media LB - 2420 PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1993 ST - Making Government Work: Electronic Delivery of Federal Services TI - Making Government Work: Electronic Delivery of Federal Services ID - 1635 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 290-page study relates to a larger effort by the executive and legislative branches, plus the state governments, to combine the nation’s many different networks -- cable television, telephone, computer, satellite, cellular telephone, broadcasting -- into a broader National Information Infrastructure (NII). The “Executive Summary” discusses the advantages of wireless technology and its policy implications. Chapter 1 begins: “Wireless communications technologies are poised to bring dramatic changes to the nation’s telecommunications and information infrastructure, reshaping how people communicate, access information, and are entertained. These technologies, which use radio waves instead of wires to transmit information, already play an important part in the daily lives of almost all Americans. For more than 70 years, radio and television broadcasters have entertained and informed millions of people each day. Satellites connect the countries of the world, allowing people to converse, share information, and transact business. Most recently, cellular telephones have extended the reach of the public telephone system to peoples who are on the move or beyond the reach of traditional telephones. “Over the next several years, use of wireless technologies is expected to grow dramatically as a wide range of new radio-based communication, information, and entertainment services and applications is introduced, and the prices of both equipment and services fall. Some of the wireless systems now being developed include: 1) terrestrial and satellite-based telephone systems that will allow people to make and receive calls from almost any point on Earth, 2) digital television that promises clearer images and better sound, 3) digital radio broadcasting that will offer crystal clear sound as well as a range of information services, and 4) a wide range of data communications systems that expand the reach of computer and online services. These emerging wireless technologies, along with existing wireless services, will become an integral part of the nation’s evolving telecommunications and information infrastructure -- more formally known as the National Information Infrastructure (NII). “Finally, the deeper implications of the widespread use of wireless technologies and services are not well understood. With the exception of television and radio broadcasting (and perhaps cellular telephony), radio-based systems have not yet penetrated deeply into the social and organizational fabric of American society and business....” AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D. C.] DA - 1995 KW - entertainment computers U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism entertainment, home labor home entertainment digitization government home, and new media home office office, and new media office government reports Congress, U. S. government documents radio home, and information technology networks media infrastructure information technology +nationalism and communication OTA wireless communication infrastructure infrastructure, wireless +telephones telephones, cellular cable television, and cable +television networks, wireless +aeronautics and space communication satellites National Information Infrastructure (NII) telecommunications +computers and the Internet +radio telephones, and satellites telephones, terrestrial digital media information technology, and home information technology, and wireless radio, digital television, and digital wireless communication, and data systems information technology, and entertainment capitalism wireless communication, and business media convergence home, and new media home, and wireless media nationalism, and wireless media nationalism, and infrastructure LB - 2430 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1995 ST - Wireless Technologies and the National Information Structure TI - Wireless Technologies and the National Information Structure ID - 1636 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - One of the Office of Technology Assessment's earliest assessments of communication technology, this regarding the use of broadband communication in rural areas. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.:] DA - 1976 KW - U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism Carter, Jimmy presidents, and new media fiber optics materials materials fiber optics Carter administration government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents satellites rural areas radio +radio +nationalism and communication OTA broadband radio, and broadband rural areas, and broadband communication wireless communication +television telecommunications cable, coaxial microwave relays satellites, and communication optical fibers radio, mobile +aeronautics and space communication cable microwaves Carter administration, and new media LB - 8060 PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1976 ST - The Feasibility And Value Of Broadband Communications In Rural Areas TI - The Feasibility And Value Of Broadband Communications In Rural Areas ID - 2175 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.:] DA - 1977 KW - U. S.Congress post office Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents rural areas +nationalism and communication +postal service OTA rural areas, and communications LB - 8070 PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1977 ST - Communications and Rural America: Recommendations to the U.S. Congress and the Executive: Report of OTA Conference, Washington, D.C., November 15-17, 1976 TI - Communications and Rural America: Recommendations to the U.S. Congress and the Executive: Report of OTA Conference, Washington, D.C., November 15-17, 1976 ID - 2176 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 69-page report was prepared by the Center for Policy Alternatives at MIT, under a contract given by the OTA. Its purpose was the acquaint OTA members with how governmental policies are related to technological innovation -- "the process that leads to the commercial introduction of a new technology." Several government actions influence this process: "incentives and funding for basic research; tax, patent, procurement, and antitrust policies; regulations; size, sector, and locale of the business; subsidies; inflation rate; available technical, marketing, and management skills; credit; and the formation of capital." The report also summarizes similar policies in Japan, Great Britain, France, and West Germany, and question whether policies in those nations are transferable to the United States. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1978 KW - technology R & D U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism technology and society military communication innovation non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents technological innovation, and process of science research and development Germany nationalism and communication research and development, and government support scientific research, and government support OTA Japan Great Britain Germany, West France technology, and process of innovation nationalism, and research and development inventions technological determinism LB - 8090 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1978 ST - Government Involvement in the Innovation Process TI - Government Involvement in the Innovation Process ID - 2178 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 84-page report is a background planning document for assessing the Department of Justice's National Crime Information Center and the Computerized Criminal History System. It tries to identify and analyze the significant future issues in the development of a federal-state system. "These are: the information needs for administering criminal justice programs and assuring constitutional rights; federalism, including division of authority, and cost apportionment; organization, management, and oversight; the planning process, and social impacts such as the effects on the administration of justice and the creation of a dossier society." The reports notes that many of the issues raised here are also related to problems involving electronic mail and the electronic of funds. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1978 KW - computers U. S.Congress surveillance Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism email law, and privacy law computers government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents privacy +computers and the Internet +nationalism and communication crime, and computers computers, and national computer criminal history privacy, and computers OTA electronic mail electronic funds transfer crime, and computers computers, and criminal history system Department of Justice National Crime Information Center Computerized Criminal History System crime electronic media privacy, and national data bases electricity LB - 8100 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1978 ST - A Preliminary Assessment of the National Crime Information Center and the Computerized Criminal History System TI - A Preliminary Assessment of the National Crime Information Center and the Computerized Criminal History System ID - 2179 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 45-page report predicts several critical issues will confront those who live through the 1980s. Resources will become scarcer and more expensive, not only fossil energy but minerals, land, and water resources as well. There will be rapid advances in the sciences: e.g. research in biology (particularly at the molecular level) and in solid state electronics (particularly semiconductors) will lead to extraordinary advances in new technology. Gene splicing will have great impact on agriculture and chemical production; innovations in telecommunications and microcomputers will greatly influence national defense, education, information processing, and labor and industrial productivity. There will important demographic changes as the American workforce matures and demands for jobs in developing countries increases. Problems with large-scale technologies may lead to more emphasis on small-scale technologies. Changes in lifestyles will be needed as the earth reaches its capacity to supply the needs of humankind. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.:] DA - 1980 KW - technology computers U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism Carter, Jimmy presidents, and new media values +future and science fiction computers Carter administration government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents solid state information technology Information Age +nationalism and communication OTA technology and society progress semiconductors solid state electronics information processing automation information technology, and education telecommunications +computers and the Internet computers, micro Carter administration, and technology future, and new media future labor LB - 8110 N1 - See also: office PB - United State Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1980 ST - Technology Issues of the 80's (Other Than Energy or Military) TI - Technology Issues of the 80's (Other Than Energy or Military) ID - 2180 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report has several goals: 1) To give the nonexpert an introduction to America's computer-based national information systems. 2) To give a framework for better understanding of computer and information policy issues. 3) To give readers an idea of the state-of-the-art in computers and information technologies. 4) To build a foundation for understanding subsequent OTA studies on e-mail, electronic transfer of funds, and the computerization of criminal history records. The report indicated that “evolving computer-based systems are crossing over and blurring traditional regulatory boundaries.” AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1981 KW - computers U. S.Congress surveillance Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism law, and privacy law sexuality pornography labor crime community democracy government office office, and new media office government reports Congress, U. S. government documents networks infrastructure +nationalism and communication OTA networks, national infrastructure democracy and media infrastructure, and computers email electronic mail capitalism, and electronic transfers privacy crime, and computers computers, state-of-the-art (1981) capitalism electronic mail electronic media nationalism, and computers +computers and the Internet computers pornography, and computers computers, and pornography LB - 8120 PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1981 ST - Computer-Based National Information Systems: Technology and Public Policy Issues TI - Computer-Based National Information Systems: Technology and Public Policy Issues ID - 2181 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 306-page report, finished on June 24, 1981, outlines the structure of the American telecommunications industry. It then analyzes policy alternatives facing this industry, and the impact that various policies have on research and development. It also sets out future issues needing further consideration: national security implications, biological effects of non-ionizing radiation, transborder data flow, and more. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1981 KW - R & D U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism corporations corporations corporations +military communication presidents, and new media labor research and development community democracy government office office, and new media office government reports Congress, U. S. government documents Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration radio networks national security infrastructure +nationalism and communication OTA democracy and media telecommunications Reagan administration, and telecommunications national security, and telecommunications infrastructure, and telecommunications AT & T common carriers +radio radio, and common carriers +telephones Bell Laboratories networks, and telephones networks, and telecommunications national security telecommunications, and infrastructure research and development, and telecommunications LB - 8130 PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1981 ST - Telecommunication Technology and Public Policy: Draft TI - Telecommunication Technology and Public Policy: Draft ID - 2182 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 163-page report came in response to a request from the U. S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation to evaluate the impact on the United States of the World Administrative Radio Conference in 1979 (WARC-79). "WARC-79 and related international conferences and meetings demonstrate that contention for access to the radio spectrum and its important collateral element, the geostationary orbit for communication satellites, presents new and urgent challenges to vital U. S. national interests," the OTA concludes. "Given the complexities of spectrum management in a changing world environment and the increased importance of telecommunications to both developed and developing nations, its is unlikely that traditional U. S. approaches to these issues will be sufficient to protect vital U. S. interests in the future. Problems require strategies not yet developed or tested." AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1982? KW - U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism community democracy non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents Third World satellites radio +nationalism and communication OTA +radio World Radio Conference, 1979 democracy and media telecommunications Third World, and radio radio, and spectrum allocation satellites, and radio nationalism, and radio radio, and satellites +aeronautics and space communication LB - 8140 PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1982 ST - Radiofrequency Use and Management: Impacts From the World Administrative Radio Conference of 1979 TI - Radiofrequency Use and Management: Impacts From the World Administrative Radio Conference of 1979 ID - 2183 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This background paper complements an earlier OTA report entitled Computer-Based National Information Systems: Technology and Public Policy Issues (Sept. 1981). This report deals with selected electronic funds transfer issues and grew out of a request from several congressional committees including the U. S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary. Special attention is given to electronic funds transfer and security, privacy, and equity issues. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1982 KW - U. S.Congress surveillance Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism law, and privacy law community democracy government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents privacy national security +nationalism and communication OTA democracy and media privacy, and electronic media national security, and electronic media capitalism, and electronic media banking, and electronic media +telephones capitalism, and electronic transfers capitalism nationalism, and electronic media LB - 8150 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1982 ST - Selected Electronic Funds Transfer Issues: Privacy, Security, and Equity TI - Selected Electronic Funds Transfer Issues: Privacy, Security, and Equity ID - 2184 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 50-page report, finished in September, 1982, examines the purpose and direction of the American space science program. Reallocations and budget cuts within NASA left "planetary science, solar and heliospheric physics, gamma ray astronomy, and X-ray astronomy with uncertain futures." The report outlines then current situation in space science, sets out issues, including the present and future of manned space flight, and discusses the importance of doing space science. Among the important matters that space science considers are the ozone layer, weather and climate, the effects of solar variations on communication, the reliability of satellites, and the commercial value of near-space. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1982 KW - R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism astronomy space communication satellites +military communication community democracy government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents space communication science satellites research and development +nationalism and communication +aeronautics and space communication OTA democracy and media research and development, and government support scientific research, and government support space program, and government support NASA space shuttle space science astronomy, gamma ray astronomy, X-ray satellites, and weather satellites, and space science rocketry LB - 8160 PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1982 ST - Space Science Research in the United States: A Technical Memorandum TI - Space Science Research in the United States: A Technical Memorandum ID - 2185 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report attempts to assess "the performance of MEDLARS, particularly the performance of its major biomedical data base MEDLINE, in disseminating health-related bibliographic information. It also explores "the Government's role in the creation and the distribution of health-related information by means of computerized bibliographic retrieval systems." AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Sept. 1982 KW - U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism archives community democracy government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents medicine health libraries information technology libraries, and information storage information storage information storage +nationalism and communication OTA health policy, and communication democracy and media National Library of Medicine +information storage +artificial intelligence and biotechnology information storage, and MEDLINE information technology, and medicine bibliographies, and medicine health medicine +bibliographies LB - 8170 PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1982 ST - Medlars and Health Information Policy: A Technical Memorandum TI - Medlars and Health Information Policy: A Technical Memorandum ID - 2186 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 269-page report grew out of a request from the U. S. Committees on Education and Labor, and Science and Technology in 1980 to examine how new information technologies could relate to education. The report draws two conclusions: First, the "so-called information revolution, driven by rapid advances in communication and computer technology, is profoundly affecting American education. It is changing the nature of what needs to be learned, who needs to learn it, who will provide it, and how it will be provided and paid for." Second, "information technology can potentially improve and enrich the educational services that traditional educational institutions provide, distribute education and training into new environments such as the home and office, reach new clients such as handicapped or homebound persons, and teach job-related skills in the use of technology." AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1982? KW - computers U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism labor communication revolution community democracy government home, and new media home government reports Congress, U. S. government documents office, and information technology home, and information technology information technology +nationalism and communication OTA education, and communication democracy and media education communication revolution, and education home +computers and the Internet computers, personal computers, and education communication revolution computers education home, and new media office, and new media education, and new media education, and computers +computers and the Internet labor labor, and new media office LB - 8180 N1 - See also: office PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1982 ST - Informational Technology and Its Impact on American Education TI - Informational Technology and Its Impact on American Education ID - 2187 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 141-page report was finished in March, 1984. In March, 1983, the Reagan administration had proposed to turn over the meteorological and land remote-sensing (Landsat) satellite system to private ownership. "This proposal has raised a variety of issues, including concern over the small size of the market for remote-sensing data, the public good aspects of remote sensing, and the use of the data to further foreign policy objectives." Chapters are devoted to "International Relations and Foreign Policy"; "Public Interest in Remote Sensing"; "U. S. Government Needs for Remote-Sensing Data"; and "National Security Needs and Issues." Nine appendices are devoted to such topics as: "Remote Sensing in the Developing Countries"; "The Use of Landsat Data in State Information Systems"; "Survey of University Programs in Remote Sensing Funded Under Grants From the NASA University-Space Application Program"; "Remote Sensing in Agriculture"; "Hydrology"; "Forestry"; and more. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - March 1984 KW - R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) U. S.Congress remote sensing surveillance Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism military-industrial complex presidents, and new media law, and privacy law privacy research and development war Third World community democracy war government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents universities remotely sensed data Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration nationalism and communication OTA democracy and media aeronautics and space communication Reagan administration, and communication satellites remotely sensed data, and private sector capitalism, and satellites satellites, and remotely sensed data agriculture, and remote sensing military communication hydrology environment, and remote sensing universities, and remote sensing Landsat capitalism environment nationalism, and satellites Third World, and satellites NASA privacy, and satellites agriculture LB - 8190 PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1984 ST - Remote Sensing and the Private Sector: Issues for Discussion: A Technical Memorandum TI - Remote Sensing and the Private Sector: Issues for Discussion: A Technical Memorandum ID - 2188 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 282-page report says that the "effects of technology on the internal operations, the structure and the types of services offered by the financial service industry has been profound. Technology has been and continues to be both a motivator and a facilitator of change in the financial service industry. The structure of the industry has changed significantly in recent years as firms not traditionally viewed as financial service providers have taken advantage of opportunities created by technology to enter the market. New technology -based services have emerged. These changes are the result of the interaction of technology with other forces such as overall economic conditions, societal pressures, and the legal/regulatory environment in which the financial service industry operates." The report divides the financial service industry into three segments: retail, securities, and wholesale. It describes technologies now available and what is likely to be available in the near future. The report attempts to analyze the structure of the financial service industry. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D. C.] DA - [1984] KW - U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism interactivity government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents information technology +nationalism and communication OTA capitalism, and information technology information technology, and banking information technology, and capitalism capitalism, and information technology interactive media capitalism, and financial service industry capitalism, and second industrial revolution capitalism LB - 8210 PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment ST - Effects of Information Technology on Financial Services Systems TI - Effects of Information Technology on Financial Services Systems ID - 2190 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 329-page report examines several new electric power storage, generating, and management technologies. The OTA studied "these technologies in terms of their current and expected cost and performance, potential contribution to new generating capacity, and interconnection with the electric utility grid. The study analyzes increased use of these technologies as one of a number of strategies by electric utilities to enhance flexibility in accommodating future uncertainties. The study also addresses the circumstances under which these technologies could play a significant role in U. S. electric power supply in the 1990s. Finally, alternative Federal policy initiatives for accelerating the commercialization of these technologies is examined." The report starts with the Arab oil embargo in 1973-74, and notes that by 1984, utilities had to pay on average 240 percent more for oil and 385 percent more for natural gas than in 1972 (in real dollars). "The most critical legacy of the 1970s," the report says, "is the uncertainty in electricity demand growth." AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - July 1985 KW - R & D U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism +military communication labor materials non-USA government office office, and new media office government reports Congress, U. S. government documents research and development networks infrastructure infrastructure, and electricity +nationalism and communication +electricity networks, electrical infrastructure, electrical OTA Arab oil embargo (1973-74) public utilities batteries, storage environment, and electrical power electricity, and environment Geothermal power stations electricity, and load management research and development, and electricity electricity, and photovoltaics (PVs) solar technologies electricity, and wind turbines environment Arab countries materials batteries solar power LB - 8220 PB - United States Congress PY - 1985 ST - New Electric Power Technologies TI - New Electric Power Technologies ID - 2191 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work has several conclusions. 1) The United States has traditionally been strong in information technology, both in basic science and in practical applications. It has benefited the nation in several ways. 2) Most areas explored in this study -- microelectronics, fiber optics, artificial intelligence, computer designed -- were then (1985) in early stages of development. 3) American research and development is strong and viable, although past achievements in this area may no longer provide guidelines for the future. 4) New relationships are being forged between universities, industry, and the government. 5) The Department of Defense provides nearly 80 percent of the funding and is the predominant source for federal support of research and development in information technology. 6) Concerns are raised that the predominant flow of technical and scientific research is outward to other countries. 7) Instruments of scientific research are growing obsolete at an increasingly rapid rate. 8) Policies designed to stimulate research and development in information technology need to be reexamined for possible tradeoffs in other areas. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Feb. 1985 KW - R & D U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism presidents, and new media fiber optics research and development war materials materials fiber optics war government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents universities science research and development Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration microelectronics information technology +nationalism and communication OTA research and development, and government support scientific research, and government support Reagan administration, and research and development Reagan administration, and information technology information technology, and trends +military communication Department of Defense, and research and development information technology, and Department of Defense universities, and information technology universities, and government optical fibers +artificial intelligence and biotechnology microelectronics, and government Department of Defense, U.S. military-industrial complex nationalism, and research and development military, and research and development information technology, and government support LB - 8230 PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1985 ST - Information Technology R&D: Critical Trends and Issues TI - Information Technology R&D: Critical Trends and Issues ID - 2192 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 71-page report "assesses the opportunities for the use of structural ceramics and polymer matrix composites in the next 25 years, outlines the research and development priorities implied by those opportunities, and concludes with a discussion of ... prerequisites for their realization." AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Sept. 1986 KW - U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism presidents, and new media materials government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration materials +nationalism and communication OTA materials revolution ceramics Reagan administration, and materials revolution polymers nationalism, and materials polymer matrix composites LB - 8240 PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1986 ST - New Structural Materials Technologies: Opportunities for the Use of Advanced Ceramics and Composites: A Technical Memorandum TI - New Structural Materials Technologies: Opportunities for the Use of Advanced Ceramics and Composites: A Technical Memorandum ID - 2193 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report suggests several possible policy actions for congressional consideration. These include establishing control over Federal agency use of computers in collection personal information; tighter controls over medical and insurance data pertaining to citizens; stronger controls over privacy, confidentiality, and security of personal information with in the micro-computer environment of the Federal government; a review of issues concerning use of the social security number as a "de facto national identifier"; and review of access to Internal Revenue Service's data bases by Federal and state agencies. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - June 1986 KW - computers U. S.Congress surveillance Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism presidents, and new media law, and privacy law community democracy computers +computers and the Internet government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration privacy information technology +nationalism and communication OTA democracy and media privacy, and electronic records information technology, and government Reagan administration, and privacy Reagan administration, and electronic records Privacy Act (1974) IRS, and electronic records social security numbers, as national identifier IRS computers, and privacy privacy, and computers LB - 8250 PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1986 ST - Electronic Record Systems and Individual Privacy: Federal Government Information Technology TI - Electronic Record Systems and Individual Privacy: Federal Government Information Technology ID - 2194 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - A 28-page report that reviews then current federal programs in supercomputing at the National Science Foundation,;NASA; Department of Energy; the Supercomputing Research Center, National Security Agency; and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.:] DA - March, 1986 KW - R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) computers U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) NSF presidents, and new media research and development war war government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents +computers and the Internet computers +military communication Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration +nationalism and communication OTA supercomputers strategic computing initiative Reagan administration, and supercomputers NASA DARPA Supercomputing Research Center Department of Energy Department of Defense, U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) nationalism, and computers military, and computers LB - 8260 PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1986 ST - Supercomputers: Government Plans & Policies: Background Paper TI - Supercomputers: Government Plans & Policies: Background Paper ID - 2195 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report analyzes recent and expected advances in information and communication technologies that are related to intellectual property. “It focuses primarily on the Federal copyright system, and on the continuing effectiveness of copyright law as a policy tool in the light of technologies such as audio- and video recorders, computer programs, electronic databases, and telecommunications networks.” In an effort to be comprehensive, this reports looks at intellectual property from several perspectives: the constitutional foundation of this system, its goals and economics, the creative environment it helps foster, problems in enforcing copyright, the international situation, and the Federal government’s role in administering the system. The OTA concluded that new technologies were affecting all aspects of intellectual property rights and that because we were only at the beginning of a new era in electronic information, the full impact of these technologies has not been felt or has even become apparent. New problems relating to intellectual property are likely to arise in the near future and Congress must be prepared to respond. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - April 1986 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) nationalism magnetic recording magnetic tape digital media digitization law community democracy +duplicating technologies networks intellectual property +nationalism and communication democracy and media copyright intellectual property, and electronic media VCRs +sound recording sound recording networks, and telecommunications +books, periodicals, newspapers photocopying +duplicating technologies digital media, and copyright copyright, and digital media LB - 8270 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1986 ST - Intellectual Property Rights in an Age of Electronics and Information TI - Intellectual Property Rights in an Age of Electronics and Information ID - 2196 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 58-page reports assumes that microelectronics is the "fundamental building block" of America's information technologies, and that it has assumed a "vital" place in the nation's commerce and defense. The report explains the role of microelectronics in these areas of national interest and recommends continued intelligent and aggressive investment in research and development in this area. It notes that the Federal government funds a significant part of activities in this area and that Federal agencies also have important influence on private support of research and development. The report tries to explain the current state (1986) of research and development in microelectronics. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - March 1986 KW - R & D nationalism research and development war communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution war science research and development microelectronics +nationalism and communication +military communication capitalism, and microelectronics revolution microelectronics revolution microelectronics, and federal government research and development, and microelectronics research and development, and government support scientific research, and microelectronics capitalism miniaturization nationalism, and microelectronics LB - 8280 PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1986 ST - Microelectronics: Research & Development: Background Paper TI - Microelectronics: Research & Development: Background Paper ID - 2197 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report, which runs a little over 100 pages, first surveys trends in the use computers in American education, then has a chapter on the use of educational technology. A final chapter deals with "The Use of Technology for Students with Limited English Proficiency." An appendix is entitled "Educational Technology: A Technical Survey." AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - March 13, 1987 KW - U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents information technology +nationalism and communication OTA education, and technology information technology, and education information technology, and minorities education education, and computers LB - 8290 PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1987 ST - Trends and Status of Computers in Schools: Use in Chapter 1 Programs and Use with Limited English Proficient Students TI - Trends and Status of Computers in Schools: Use in Chapter 1 Programs and Use with Limited English Proficient Students ID - 2198 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report reviews the Department of Defense's Polygraph Counterintelligence Screening Test Program. The review grew out of concerns that the Office of Technology Assessment found in 1983 "that there had been virtually no scientific research -- in or outside of the Federal Government -- on the validity of the polygraph technique for personnel security purposes." The OTA concluded that the DoD's polygraph test program was "not being conducted in such a way that the validity, utility, and general applicability of polygraphs for personnel security screening can be evaluated." AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D. C.] DA - March 30, 1987 KW - R & D U. S.Congress surveillance Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism law, and privacy law research and development war government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents privacy +nationalism and communication OTA Department of Defense, and polygraphs privacy, and polygraph tests Department of Defense, U.S. military, and polygraphs +military communication LB - 8300 PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1987 ST - Review of the Defense Department’s Polygraph Test and Research Programs: Staff Paper TI - Review of the Defense Department’s Polygraph Test and Research Programs: Staff Paper ID - 2199 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - News organizations, this 51-page report notes, are increasingly using satellite imagery in their reports on world events, leading some to conclude that the news media will soon what to own and operate their own remote sensing systems. News media "have generally supported the idea of a dedicated 'mediasat' because it could supply a stream of timely and critical information, peering where repressive governments or dangerous natural environments have heretofore kept the press at bay." But the mediasat also has raised concerns that this technology could pose national security problems, make the conduct of U. S. foreign policy more complicated, and "erode the average citizen's expectation of personal privacy." This report concludes that the current high cost and low demand will limit efforts of news organizations to own their own remote sensing satellite systems dedicated solely to newsgathering. Yet the use of remote sensing will continue and is likely to pose conflicts between First Amendment rights and national security concerns. Such conflicts are manageable but some remote sensing systems are only indirectly affected by American law and will require international negotiations. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - May 1987 KW - R & D U. S.Congress surveillance Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism law, and privacy research and development war journalism freedom news and journalism war non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents satellites privacy news +nationalism and communication +military communication OTA +aeronautics and space communication First Amendment, and satellites privacy, and satellites news, and satellites satellites, and newsgathering global communication First Amendment nationalism, and satellites military, and satellites law LB - 8310 PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1987 ST - Commercial Newsgathering from Space: A Technical Memorandum TI - Commercial Newsgathering from Space: A Technical Memorandum ID - 2200 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report was the fourth in a series of OTA studies on research and development. Earlier reports included Information Technology R & D (1985), Microelectronics (1986), and Supercomputers (1986). This report is divided into two parts. Part I reviews and analyzes patterns of Federal funding for research and development (R&D). Part II presents the results of a conference where researchers in computers and artificial intelligence discussed long-range issues. The OTA in this study found artificial intelligence at a critical juncture. In 1987, it was not on the verge of thinking or reasoning machines, and the OTA estimated that it would probably take decades before such developments took form. Yet artificial intelligence was already giving computers important new ways of solving complex problems. These areas include medical diagnosis, factory automation, natural language processing, and computer-assisted instruction. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - June 1987 KW - R & D U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism military communication medicine government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents science research and development medicine health information technology nationalism and communication artificial intelligence and biotechnology OTA research and development, and artificial intelligence research and development, and government support scientific research, and government support automation information technology, and medical diagnosis information technology, and language information technology, and education education, and artificial intelligence medicine, and artificial intelligence education nationalism, and artificial intelligence nationalism, and computers labor, and artificial intelligence education, and artificial intelligence labor LB - 8320 N1 - See also: office PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1987 ST - Federal Funding for Artificial Intelligence Research and Development: Staff Paper TI - Federal Funding for Artificial Intelligence Research and Development: Staff Paper ID - 2201 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The 141-page report examines how computer-based technologies are being used to measure the productivity of workers. These new technologies give employers new ways of supervising their employees and controlling their use of telephones. But they also enable employers to gather detailed information about those in their employ. This report looks at this technology's impact on the workplace, civil liberties, and privacy. After an introductory chapter, subsequent chapters are entitled "Using Computers to Monitor Office Work"; and "Telephone Call Accounting"; "Electronic Work Monitoring Law and Policy Consideration." Appendix A deals with "Notes on Computer Work Monitoring in Other Countries." Appendix B is "Privacy and Civil Liberties Implications of Testing Employees in the Workplace." AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Sept. 1987 KW - computers U. S.Congress surveillance Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism law, and privacy labor community democracy freedom government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents office, and information technology labor information technology +nationalism and communication OTA democracy and media privacy +telephones +computers and the Internet computers, and privacy labor, and privacy labor, and employer monitoring civil liberties, and workplace First Amendment civil liberties computers labor office, and new media labor, and new media +telephones office, and telephones labor, and computers office, and computers labor, and office monitoring (non-US) law office LB - 8330 N1 - See also: office PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1987 ST - The Electronic Supervisor: New Technology, New Tensions TI - The Electronic Supervisor: New Technology, New Tensions ID - 2202 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 113-page report grew out of Reagan administration and congressional concerns that the United States' technological lead over the USSR has been slipping and that it was "increasingly difficult to maintain a meaningful lead." The report focuses on the health of the Department of Defense's defense technology base programs and facilities. It notes that the DoD is being reorganized under the Goldwater-Nichols Reorganization Act (Public Law 99-433). The report reflects matters up to Feb. 1, 1988. The report sets out several complex factors on which American defense technology depends -- all this with little inkling that the USSR was on the verge of collapse. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - March 1988 KW - technology R & D U. S.Congress USSR Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism technology and society research and development war war non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents +nationalism and communication +military communication OTA Soviet Union Department of Defense, and defense technology base technology, and Department of Defense Department of Defense, U.S. military, and new media military-industrial complex LB - 8340 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1988 ST - The Defense Technology Base: Introduction & Overview: A Special Report of OTA’s Assessment on Maintaining the Defense Technology Base TI - The Defense Technology Base: Introduction & Overview: A Special Report of OTA’s Assessment on Maintaining the Defense Technology Base ID - 2203 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 171-page report notes that "less than two years ago, superconductivity -- total loss of resistance to electricity -- could be achieved only at temperatures near absolute zero. Since the discovery of high-temperature superconducitivity (HTS), research laboratories around the world have pushed the temperature limits steadily upward, opening the way to commercial applications with potentially revolutionary impacts. The scientific race is becoming a commercial race, one featuring U. S. and Japanese companies, and one that the United States could lose. Indeed, American firms may already be falling behind in commercializing the technology of superconductivity." The report says that Japan has been more aggressive in exploring the commercial possibilities of HTS than has the United States. Although Federal money would help the private sector compete, there is little tradition of such support in the U. S. In the U. S., post-World War II technology policy combined Federal funding for research and development with indirect measures such as tax policy. Such measures may not keep the U. S. competitive in the future. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - June 1988 KW - R & D computers U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism research and development war war non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents superconductors research and development +nationalism and communication +military communication +computers and the Internet OTA superconductivity Japan superconductivity, and high temperature (HTS) research and development, and government support capitalism, and government support capitalism Japan, and superconductivity nationalism, and superconductivity military, and superconductivity research and development, and government support LB - 8350 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1988 ST - Commercializing High-Temperature Superconductivity TI - Commercializing High-Temperature Superconductivity ID - 2204 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 246-page study deals with new interactive technologies, such as personal computers, and their potential for improving education. The study was initiated by the U. S. House Committee on Education and Labor, and its Subcommittee on Select Education. The report "examines developments in the use of computer-based technologies, analyzes key trends in hardware and software development, evaluates the capability of technology to improve learning in many areas, and explores ways to substantially increase student access to technology. The role of the teacher, teachers' needs for training, and the impact of Federal support for educational technology research and development are reviewed as well." AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Sept. 1988 KW - computers U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism interactivity community democracy computers government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents information technology +nationalism and communication OTA +computers and the Internet interactive media, and education democracy and media information technology, and education education, and interactive media computers, personal education interactive media nationalism, and computers education, and computers LB - 8360 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1988 ST - Power On! New Tools for Teaching and Learning TI - Power On! New Tools for Teaching and Learning ID - 2205 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report was prepared by the OTA Assessment International Security and Commerce Program. EMPRESS II was the U. S. Navy's electromagnetic pulser, a device that operated from a barge about 15 nautical miles off Corolla, NC in the Atlantic Ocean. "The EMPRESS II facility provides a pulse whose form and amplitude constitute an appropriate simulation of a nuclear electromagnetic pulse (EMP) that could arise from a nuclear explosion in or above the upper atmosphere. Exposure to test pulses of this sort are necessary for the Navy to verify the hardness of vital electronics on its ships. Computer simulations or sub-scale modeling would not provide adequate assurance of hardening, although they could be used to help reduce the amount of testing with EMPRESS II." The reports notes that EMP's effects on human health are not understood fully. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington D.C.] DA - Nov. 7, 1988 KW - U. S. Navy R & D U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism research and development war war government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents +nationalism and communication OTA +military communication electromagnetic pulses U. S. Navy, and EMPRESS II military, and new media electricity LB - 8370 PB - Congress of the United States PY - 1988 ST - The Potential Biological and Electronic Effects of EMPRESS II: Staff Paper TI - The Potential Biological and Electronic Effects of EMPRESS II: Staff Paper ID - 2206 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 265-page report, written in response to the U.S. House Committee on Energy and Commerce, evaluates "the technical feasibility of increased competition in the electric utility industry." Here the OTA analyzes "the impact of increased wheeling on the reliability and operation of the transmission systems. Wheeling is the use of a utility's transmission facilities to transmit power for other buyers and sellers." Competition, it was hoped, would lower costs, encourage innovations, and bring about new business opportunities. The OTA notes that the electric power system in the United States is very complex and that the introduction of increased competition needs to be done carefully. The report tries to identify technical requirements needed to keep the system working efficiently. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - May 1989 KW - U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) labor energy government office office, and new media office government reports Congress, U. S. government documents utilities networks infrastructure infrastructure, and electricity +electricity OTA networks, electrical infrastructure, electrical utilities, electric electric utilities, and competition energy, and electricity LB - 8380 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1989 ST - Electric Power Wheeling and Dealing: Technological Considerations for Increasing Competition TI - Electric Power Wheeling and Dealing: Technological Considerations for Increasing Competition ID - 2207 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 293-page report notes that modern consumer electronics give the average person the ability "to make very good copies of recorded music, television shows, movies, and other copyrighted works for private use at home. Soon, as digital recording equipment comes into widespread use, homemade copies will not just be very good -- they can be perfect reproductions of the originals. Home copying is becoming much more common; for instance, the proportion of people who make home audiotapes has doubled in the last 10 years. Copyright owners are concerned, and claim that home copying displaces sales and undermines the economic viability of their industries. They fear that the ability to make perfect copies will increase home copying even more." This report begins by examining home recording technologies. Then it focuses primarily on audiotaping and home copying's ambiguous legal status. It tries to measure the economic impact of home recording on the recording industries and weigh that against the undesirable effects of restrictions on home copying. It presents a range of recommendation to Congress for action. The report includes a 1988 survey conducted by the OTA of 1,500 people who engaged in home copying. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Oct. 1989 KW - CDs entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) U. S.Congress tape recording, magnetic Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) magnetic recording entertainment, home discs, compact audio tape tape recording tape recording home entertainment law community democracy compact discs (CDs) CDs government home, and new media home government reports Congress, U. S. government documents tape recorders recording home, and information technology information technology duplicating technologies copyright information technology, and home OTA sound recording television motion pictures VCRs intellectual property sound tape recording, audio cassettes compact discs (CDs) sound, and home recording home, and sound recording home, and duplicating technologies home, and digital media democracy, and digital media home, and VCRs recording LB - 8390 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1989 ST - Copyright & Home Copying: Technology Challenges the Law TI - Copyright & Home Copying: Technology Challenges the Law ID - 2208 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This OTA Staff Paper runs fewer than 40 pages and notes that the American federal government is the world's single largest source of scientific and technical information (STI). "Federal STI ranges from stream flow data collected by the U. S. Geological Survey, to imagery and technical reports on the Voyager II interplanetary mission produced" by NASA, "and to the energy research database prepared by the Department of Energy." Scientific advancement depends on free flow of STI, but this OTA report notes that the federal government does not have an overall strategy to facilitate such dissemination. Such a strategy is needed to maximize federal investments in research and development, and to take full advantage of the possibilities inherent in new electronic technologies. The report estimates that the federal government maintains an archive in earth and space sciences that total about 100,000 gigabytes, or 45 billion pages of text. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Oct. 1989 KW - R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) computers U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism +military communication primary sources archives government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents space communication science research and development libraries libraries, and information storage information flow Information Age +computers and the Internet +information storage electronic preservation OTA NASA information flow research and development, and government support scientific research, and government support +nationalism and communication Voyager II Department of Energy Geological Survey, U. S. +aeronautics and space communication space science space travel satellites information flow, and government electronic media archives, and earth & space science archives LB - 8400 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1989 ST - Federal Scientific and Technical Information in an Electronic Age: Opportunities and Challenges TI - Federal Scientific and Technical Information in an Electronic Age: Opportunities and Challenges ID - 2209 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - See Volume I for a summary of this study. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1990 KW - U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism news and journalism labor communication revolution +future and science fiction digital media digitization community democracy government office office, and new media office government reports Congress, U. S. government documents values press information technology +nationalism and communication OTA democracy and media infrastructure gatekeeping information technology, and changing gatekeeping communication revolution values, and market place values, and changing gatekeeping information technology, and business information technology, and culture capitalism information technology, and democracy information technology, and gap rich , poor future information technology, and political parties information technology, and press press, and information technology digital divide LB - 8410 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1990 ST - Critical Connections: Communication for the Future: Volume II: Contractor Documents TI - Critical Connections: Communication for the Future: Volume II: Contractor Documents ID - 2210 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report notes that computer software has grown to become a $60 billion per year domestic industry (as of 1990), and that the United States dominates the world market in this area, far surpassing Japan, Western Europe, and the USSR. This paper analyzes the intellectual property protections then in existence (1990) for computer software, including such things as trade secret, patents, and copyrights. It also examines the concerns that have been raised about protecting such intellectual property. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - March 1990 KW - computers U. S.Congress USSR Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) materials law computers non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents patents +computers and the Internet OTA copyright intellectual property computers, and software Japan Europe, Western Soviet Union capitalism, and computer software patents, and computer software capitalism Europe materials LB - 8420 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1990 ST - Computer Software & Intellectual Property: Background Paper TI - Computer Software & Intellectual Property: Background Paper ID - 2211 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report follows an earlier OTA analysis of high-temperature superconductivity (HTS), entitled Commercializing High-Temperature Superconductivity (June 1988). Whereas the earlier report "considered HTS as a specific case study in the context of broader issues in U. S. industrial competitiveness and technology policy, the present work focuses more on the technology itself and the spectrum of potential applications. A centerpiece of this work is an extensive OTA survey comparing industry investment in superconductivity R & D [research and development] in the United States and Japan (see Chapter 6)." Japan's International Superconductivity Technology Center assisted this study by administering an OTA survey in that country. The National Science Foundation assisted the analysis of the United States. The OTA predicts that the full potential of HTS lies 10 to 20 years in the future. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - April 1990 KW - R & D computers U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism NSF military communication non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents superconductors research and development Japan nationalism and communication computers and the Internet OTA superconductivity Japan research and development, and government support Japan, and superconductivity National Science Foundation (NSF) LB - 8430 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1990 ST - High-Temperature Superconductivity in Perspective TI - High-Temperature Superconductivity in Perspective ID - 2212 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 68-page report shows how federal scientific and technical information (STI) can help make the United States more competitive. The report assumes that American global leadership is being challenged. The federal government is the world's single largest source of STI, and making more efficient use of this information can maximize federal resources that have been poured into research and development. See also the OTA's earlier report on this topic entitled Federal Scientific and Technical Information in an Electronic Age: Opportunities and Challenges (Oct. 1989). AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1990 KW - R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) computers U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism +military communication archives government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents space communication science research and development libraries libraries, and information storage information flow Information Age +computers and the Internet +information storage electronic preservation OTA NASA information flow research and development, and government support scientific research, and government support +nationalism and communication Voyager II Department of Energy Geological Survey, U. S. +aeronautics and space communication space science space travel satellites information flow, and government electronic media nationalism, and research and development LB - 8440 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1990 ST - Helping America Compete: The Role of Federal Scientific and Technical Information TI - Helping America Compete: The Role of Federal Scientific and Technical Information ID - 2213 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 190-page report contends that many American rural communities have declined in income, economic vitality, employment, and in their ability to retain talented people. New communication land information technologies, however, hold promise for reversing these trends by reversing problems associated with distance and space. These new technologies allow rural Americans to link to urban markets in the United States, and indeed, worldwide. This reports sets out possible strategies and options aimed at promoting rural development. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1991 KW - computers U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism labor government office office, and new media office government reports Congress, U. S. government documents values networks infrastructure information technology nationalism and communication +computers and the Internet OTA information technology, and rural areas capitalism, and information technology urban studies networks, rural infrastructure, rural values, and rural areas capitalism agriculture, and new media agriculture LB - 8450 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1991 ST - Rural America at the Crossroads: Networking for the Future TI - Rural America at the Crossroads: Networking for the Future ID - 2214 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - With index, this report runs 48 pages, and it analyzes technologies that could be important to future developments in miniaturization. Research underway in America and in other countries "is pushing the limits of miniaturization to the point that structures only hundreds of atoms thick will be commonly manufactured. Researchers studying atomic and molecular interactions are continuing to push the frontiers, creating knowledge needed to continue progress in miniaturization. Scientists and engineers are creating microscopic mechanical structures and biological sensors that will have novel and diverse applications." The OTA says that American research and development in this area is the best in the world. The challenge is how to translate what takes place in the laboratory to the global marketplace. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Nov. 1991 KW - R & D entertainment computers U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism entertainment, home Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) labor research and development war archives home entertainment materials war government home, and new media home office government reports Congress, U. S. government documents office, and information technology home, and information technology materials lithography libraries information technology libraries, and information storage information storage information storage +computers and the Internet OTA +artificial intelligence and biotechnology miniaturization +military communication semiconductors biosensors +information storage information storage, and miniaturization +telephones information technology, and consumers information technology, and home information technology, and office DARPA materials revolution materials science nanotechnology lithography, ultraviolet lithography, X-ray lasers Department of Defense, U.S. materials +nationalism and communication office, and new media military, and miniaturization sensors LB - 8460 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1991 ST - Miniaturization Technologies TI - Miniaturization Technologies ID - 2215 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - See also an earlier OTA report entitled Computer Software & Intellectual Property: Background Paper (March 1990). AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D. C.] DA - 1992 KW - computers U. S.Congress USSR Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) materials law computers non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents patents +computers and the Internet OTA copyright intellectual property computers, and software Japan Europe, Western Soviet Union capitalism, and computer software patents, and computer software capitalism Europe Russia Soviet Union materials LB - 8470 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1992 ST - Finding a Balance: Computer Software, Intellectual Property and the Challenge of Technological Change TI - Finding a Balance: Computer Software, Intellectual Property and the Challenge of Technological Change ID - 2216 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report summarizes a one-day workshop devoted to assessing NASA's Office of Space Science and Applications (OSSA) planning and priority-setting mechanisms. Among its findings are: 1) That while OSSA involves a broad cross-section of the scientific community in setting its scientific priorities, it needs to be more realistic about future budgets and to find better ways of controlling costs. 2) The OSSA needs to develop means to gain better feedback on previous policies. 3) High quality space science has been seriously hindered by the lack of flight opportunities. 4) Multidisciplinary projects combining engineering and scientific goals find it particularly difficult to gain funding in the OSSA. 5) Congressional "earmarking" of funding for particular space programs undercuts the efforts by scientists to propose space science projects, and creates skepticism among scientists of congressional funding procedures. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Jan. 1992 KW - R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism space communication +military communication government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents science research and development +aeronautics and space communication OTA NASA space science NASA, and Office of Space Science and Applications research and development, and government support scientific research, and government support +nationalism and communication satellites nationalism, and satellites satellites, and space science rocketry LB - 8480 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1992 ST - NASA’s Office of Space Science Applications: Process, Priorities, and Goals: An OTA Background Paper TI - NASA’s Office of Space Science Applications: Process, Priorities, and Goals: An OTA Background Paper ID - 2217 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report summarizes an OTA workshop held on May 20, 1992. It dealt with data pricing and distribution of Landsat data. It does not consider larger issues related to commercialization of land remote sensing, nor does it deal with the decision to give responsibility for operating Landsat 7 to the Department of Defense and NASA. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1992? KW - R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) U. S.Congress remote sensing surveillance Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism military-industrial complex law, and privacy law privacy research and development war community democracy war government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents universities remotely sensed data nationalism and communication OTA democracy and media +aeronautics and space communication satellites remotely sensed data, and private sector capitalism, and satellites satellites, and remotely sensed data agriculture, and remote sensing military communication hydrology environment, and remote sensing universities, and remote sensing Landsat NASA Department of Defense, and Landsat capitalism Department of Defense, U.S. environment privacy, and satellites military, and satellites nationalism, and satellites agriculture LB - 8490 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1992 ST - Remotely Sensed Data from Space: Distribution, Pricing, and Applications TI - Remotely Sensed Data from Space: Distribution, Pricing, and Applications ID - 2218 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 452-page report argues that American agriculture is entering a new era with promising advances in biotechnology and more sophisticated computing systems. These developments should help increase productivity, enhance food safety and quality, and help the environment. The introduction of these technologies are likely to face unique problems and (especially with regard to food production) be met with resistance during the 1990s. The report contends that the new technologies can solve many agricultural problems but will require striking the right balance between government, industry, and the public. This is the fourth and final OTA report on a series started in 1990. Other titles include: 1) Agricultural Research and Technology Transfer Policies for the 1990s; 2) U. S. Dairy Industry at a Crossroad: Biotechnology and Policy Choices; and 3) Agricultural Commodities as Industrial Raw Materials. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1992 KW - technology R & D computers biotechnology U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) military communication genetics law law government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents software research and development regulation information technology artificial intelligence and biotechnology +computers and the Internet OTA information technology, and agriculture agriculture, and biotechnology research and development, and agriculture computers, and agriculture Environmental Protection Agency regulation, and agriculture Food and Drug Administration genetic engineering intellectual property information technology, and retrieval systems copyright, and computer software software, computer technology and society computers copyright agriculture, and biotechnology biotechnology, and agriculture environment censorship and ratings agriculture LB - 8500 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment, August PY - 1992 ST - A New Technological Era for American Agriculture TI - A New Technological Era for American Agriculture ID - 2219 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report grew from a request by the U. S. Senate Armed Services Committee to investigate the many formats used for collecting remotely sensed Earth data. The pros and cons of standardizing formats for remote-sensed data were discussed at a workshop held Oct. 2, 1992. This report outlines the problem as follows: "Earth data -- positional, topographic, climatological, meteorological, man-made features, and changes over time in all of these -- are increasingly important to the military. They form the heart of navigation, intelligence, combat formation, situational awareness, weapon guidance, damage assessment, and training systems. Analysis indicates that great advantages may accrue from being able to integrate these functions. However, being able to do that integration in a routine and efficient way will require either generating databases in one format (or a very few compatible formats) or developing equipment to convert quickly and routinely among various formats. Today, neither of these conditions exists. Data exist (and are gathered) in a variety of diverse formats. This is the natural consequence of a situation in which -- in the absence of a central plan for integrating collectors, processors, and users -- format commonality has not been a major design factor. The format for any one system is usually chosen to meet the specific needs of that system and is driven by the technology available at the time it is created. Often the factors that dictate format are compelling (e.g., continuity of data provided to long-standing clients, or optimization of satellite power budget). In many cases, altering format would necessitate costly, extensive changes in hardware and software systems. Finally, setting standards is difficult when technology moves quickly, and is particularly hampered by the notoriously cumbersome MILSPEC process." AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1992? KW - R & D U. S.Congress remote sensing Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism research and development war war government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents +aeronautics and space communication +nationalism and communication +military communication OTA satellites remotely sensed data satellites, and remotely sensed data military communication, and standard data formats U. S. Senate Armed Services Committee military, and satellites nationalism, and satellites military, and information processing LB - 8510 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1992 ST - Data Format Standards for Civilian Remote Sensing Satellites: Background Paper TI - Data Format Standards for Civilian Remote Sensing Satellites: Background Paper ID - 2220 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report grew out of one-day conference on Jan. 27, 1993, celebrating the twentieth anniversary of OTA's creation. Attended by members of Congress, the conference attempted to improve legislators' understanding of problems relating to technology and governing. It dealt with five issues: 1) international security; 2) American economic competitiveness; 3) sustaining a global environment; 4) health care; and 5) public education. This work contains five papers that were presented at this conference. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - April 1993 KW - technology U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism community democracy war non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents values information technology +nationalism and communication OTA democracy and media environment, and technology education, and technology information technology, and education information technology, and health care capitalism international security technology and society values, and technology Cold War, post new world order, and technology global communication Cold War education environment nationalism, and new media education, and new media LB - 8520 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1993 ST - Technology and Governance in the 1990s: Proceedings TI - Technology and Governance in the 1990s: Proceedings ID - 2221 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - During the past decade, the report begins, satellite remote sensing has been used to study the earth, and the information gathered, when combined with other data, should help predict the effects of long-term global changes. This report is the first of three that deal with Earth observation systems. It looks at issues related to publicly funded remote sensing systems in the U. S. and other nations. It examines military and intelligence use of data gathered by civilian remote sensing satellites. It also assesses the outlook for privately funded and operated systems of remote sensing. The report says that the current budget deficit will require NASA, the Department of Defense, and other agency to find ways to cut costs. The federal government should develop a flexible interagency strategy, one that would assigned increased responsibility to the private sector to collection and archive remotely sensed data. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - July 1993 KW - R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism research and development war +future and science fiction war government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents +aeronautics and space communication OTA satellites satellites, and remotely sensed data +military communication military communication, and civilian remote sensing NASA Department of Defense, U. S. satellites, and weather future, and satellites future, and remote sensing military, and satellites nationalism, and satellites +nationalism and communication future LB - 8530 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1993 ST - The Future of Remote Sensing from Space: Civilian Satellite Systems and Applications TI - The Future of Remote Sensing from Space: Civilian Satellite Systems and Applications ID - 2222 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report predicts that the European market for telecommunications will grow rapidly during the next decade as the needs for rapid data transmission increases in the European business community. In most European nations, telecommunication services are still reserved mainly for a state-owned Public Telephone Operator, but this situation is likely to change soon. American telecommunications companies, especially in cable television and cellular communication, are already competing successfully in Europe. American firms appear to have an edge in Europe because of their experience in competing in a market economy. The American economy can benefit by the increased export of telecommunications to markets overseas, and by U. S. support to other companies that operate in global markets. Such international trade can (and already has) offset the national deficit. The success of trading in European markets, though, does raise domestic policy concerns. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Aug. 1993 KW - computers U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism corporations, multinational +nationalism and communication non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents political economy +computers and the Internet OTA capitalism, and telecommunication Europe global communication capitalism, global Europe, and telecommunications political economy corporations, international multinational corporations capitalism Europe nationalism, and telecommunications nationalism, and multinational corporations corporations LB - 8540 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1993 ST - U. S. Telecommunications Services in European Markets TI - U. S. Telecommunications Services in European Markets ID - 2223 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - "This report describes what nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons can do, analyzes the consequences of their spread for the United States and the world, and summarizes technical aspects of monitoring and controlling their production. (A separate background paper analyzes the technologies underlying nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons and delivery systems in greater depth.) This report also explains the array of policy tools that can be used to combat proliferation, identifying tradeoffs and choices that confront policymakers." AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Aug. 1993 KW - R & D atomic power U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism research and development war war non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents +artificial intelligence and biotechnology +nationalism and communication +military communication OTA atomic energy nuclear proliferation military, and nuclear proliferation nationalism, and nuclear proliferation weapons of mass destruction terrorism terrorism, and weapons of mass destruction LB - 8550 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1993 ST - Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction: Assessing the Risks TI - Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction: Assessing the Risks ID - 2224 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report, completed Aug. 3, 1993, by Ball & Associates for the OTA, examines technology transfer. A section of the report is devoted to explaining the technology transfer process, and to "the philosophical gap between government and industry." Another section deals with factors that influence the effectiveness of technology transfer. The report also gives an overview of federal support for research and development. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Aug. 1993 KW - technology R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) computers U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism corporations corporations, multinational technology and society research and development war war non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents research and development political economy +computers and the Internet OTA technology transfer +nationalism and communication multinational corporations research and development, and government support NASA Department of Defense, U.S. +military communication LB - 8560 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1993 ST - Information Systems Related to Technology Transfer: A Report on Federal Technology Transfer in the United States TI - Information Systems Related to Technology Transfer: A Report on Federal Technology Transfer in the United States ID - 2225 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This reports notes that the Clinton health care plan introduced Sept. 22, 1993, relied heavily on information technology and telecommunications to reduce costs. "By linking computerized health information through a national network, the proposal envisions a system that would allow an efficient exchange of information to improve patient care and expand resources for medical research and education, while lowering health care costs. While automation may or may not achieve these goals, it will raise serious questions about individual privacy and proper use of the health care information system. This report analyzes the implications of computerized medical information and the challenges it brings to individual privacy." This report analyzes three issues: 1) privacy as it relates to health care information and the current state of laws protecting such information; 2) the nature of proposals calling for computerizing health care information and the technologies available to computerize such information as well as to protect privacy; and 3) appropriate models for protecting health care information. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Sept. 1993 KW - computers Clinton, Bill U. S.Congress surveillance Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) Clinton, William Jefferson presidents, and new media law, and privacy law government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents privacy networks information technology computers and the Internet OTA privacy computers, and medical records privacy, and medical records information technology, and medical records networks, and computers Clinton administration, and computers Clinton adminstration, and medical records Clinton Administration computers LB - 8570 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1993 ST - Protecting Privacy in Computerized Medical Information TI - Protecting Privacy in Computerized Medical Information ID - 2226 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report analyzes the changed structure of world economy with the globalization of business, communications, and transportation during the past quarter century. These changes have transformed the post-World War II system of investment and international trade. Multinational enterprises (MNEs) are essential to promote future economic growth and ensuring fair and sustained distribution of advanced technologies among competing nations. "MNEs are central to this process because they are international conduits of technology and goods and services; they also provide the quality jobs and capital that support economic growth and high standards of living." But the interests of MNEs do not always correspond to the interest of the United States. These multinational firms are more interested in their own well-being than in advancing national goals. Some ways needs to be found to ensure that the MNEs work in harmony with their host nations. "Although companies and governments may pursue different objectives, there is no irreconcilable incompatibility between the interests of MNEs and those of nations," according to this report. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Sept. 1993 KW - U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism corporations corporations, multinational non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents political economy +nationalism and communication OTA capitalism, and nationalism capitalism, global multinational corporations political economy global communication capitalism nationalism, and multinational corporations nationalism, and capitalism LB - 8580 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1993 ST - Multinationals and the National Interest: Playing by Different Rules TI - Multinationals and the National Interest: Playing by Different Rules ID - 2227 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The report assesses the United States' multi-billion dollar Global Change Research Program (the USGCRP) which is a multiyear project "to monitor, understand, and ultimately predict the nature of global changes and the mechanisms that cause them. This background report examines the direction and scope of USGCRP and its most expensive component, NASA's Earth Observing System (EOS) of satellites. In particular, it looks at whether some program elements are missing or need to be strengthened, and whether the program is meeting the needs of policymakers." The report makes suggestions for improvement. It believes that USGCRP's focus is too narrowly on climate changes, thus making if difficult to assess other dimensions of global change. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Nov. 1993 KW - National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents satellites +aeronautics and space communication OTA environment, and satellites satellites, and environment NASA Global Change Research Program NASA, and Earth Observing System environment LB - 8590 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1993 ST - Global Change Research and NASA’s Earth Observing System: Background Paper TI - Global Change Research and NASA’s Earth Observing System: Background Paper ID - 2228 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report examines electronic commerce and attempts to explain the kind of infrastructure needed to support it. It concluded that "in an electronically networked economy, the design and underlying architecture of the global information infrastructure will have a major impact on national economic growth and development." To maximize American business performance, "the information infrastructure will need to be flexible and open, seamless and interoperable, and evenly and ubiquitously employed." The report discusses strategy that will promote this network architecture. Electronic commerce will not operate in a vacuum as social factors must be taken into consideration. Congress must develop a national infrastructure policy. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - May 1994 KW - U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism corporations corporations, multinational labor non-USA government office office, and new media office government reports Congress, U. S. government documents networks political economy infrastructure +nationalism and communication OTA multinational corporations global communication infrastructure, and electronic commerce electronic commerce networks, and electronic commerce electronic media capitalism, and electronic media capitalism electricity LB - 8600 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1994 ST - Electronic Enterprises: Looking to the Future TI - Electronic Enterprises: Looking to the Future ID - 2229 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 244-page report argues that "information networks are changing the way we do business, educate our children, deliver government services, and dispense health care." They intrude on our lives in both positive and negative ways. They provide rich information but they compromise privacy because personal information can be widely and instantaneously shared through these networks. This report focuses on issues of policy in three areas: "1) national cryptography policy, including federal information processing standards and export controls; 2) guidance on safeguarding unclassified information in federal agencies; and 3) legal issues and information security, including electronic commerce, privacy, and intellectual property." AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Sept. 1994 KW - computers U. S.Congress surveillance Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) law law government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents privacy networks law information technology +computers and the Internet OTA privacy privacy, and computers networks, and privacy intellectual property copyright law, and privacy cryptography information technology, and privacy LB - 8610 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1994 ST - Information Security and Privacy in Network Environments TI - Information Security and Privacy in Network Environments ID - 2230 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 211-page report asserts that "multinational firms are critical to ensuring the health of the U. S. technology base. The most technologically sophisticated and economically significant sectors of the U. S. economy are now characterized by high levels of international production, foreign direct investment, trade among affiliated companies, and complex forms of international financial and technological collaboration." At the same time, "extensive data suggest that technology is deeply rooted in national (or in the case of Europe, regional) concentrations or bases, with partial and company-specific interconnections." Thus, America's "technology base must be well-maintained on a continuous basis. Moreover, in order for the United States to retain its technology leadership in a broad range of industries, it must address the increasingly important role of multinational enterprises in innovation and in the development of the nation's science and technology base." Spending on research and development is important, but also strategic investment by multinational corporation is important. "Between 1980 and 1992, global foreign direct investment grew by over a factor of four to reach $2.0 trillion (in nominal dollars)," thus transforming the global economy. Most multinational corporations, though, "remain firmly rooted in the national technical, financial, and corporate cultures of their home countries." This produces uneven integration of the world economy and is likely to cause friction in the future between the United States and its most important trading and investing partners. This report complements an earlier OTA report entitled Multinationals and the National Interest: Playing by Different Rules (1993). AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Sept. 1994 KW - technology R & D U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism corporations corporations, multinational Asia +military communication communication revolution non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents science research and development political economy +nationalism and communication OTA capitalism, and nationalism capitalism, global multinational corporations political economy global communication communication revolution technology and society Japan Germany Europe research and development, and government support scientific research, and government support France globalization China Great Britain capitalism nationalism, and multinational corporations nationalism, and capitalism LB - 8620 PB - Congress of the United States, Office Technology Assessment PY - 1994 ST - Multinationals and the U.S. Technology Base: Final report on the Multinationals Project TI - Multinationals and the U.S. Technology Base: Final report on the Multinationals Project ID - 2231 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - With index, this report runs 166 pages. It predicts that during the next two decades, observing the earth from space will play an ever great role in predicting the weather, understanding global changes, and managing the earth's resources. How the United States government responds to increasing interest in satellite remote sensing could have a great influence on how global resources are used and managed. This report "analyzes the case for developing a long-term, comprehensive strategic plan for civilian satellite remote sensing, and explores the elements of such a plan, if it were adopted." The report also suggests what Congress needs to do in this area. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Sept. 1994 KW - R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Clinton, Bill U. S.Congress remote sensing Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism Clinton, William Jefferson presidents, and new media research and development war global communication +future and science fiction war non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents satellites remotely sensed data +aeronautics and space communication OTA environment, and satellites satellites, and remotely sensed data remotely sensed data, and private sector weather, and satellites global change, and satellites satellites, and global change satellites, and weather +nationalism and communication Clinton administration, and remote sensing Defense Meteorological Satellite Program Department of Defense, U.S. Europe, and remote sensing Landsat NASA National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Russia Global Change Research Program Clinton Administration +military communication environment Europe future, and satellites future LB - 8630 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1994 ST - Civilian Satellite Remote Sensing: A Strategic Approach TI - Civilian Satellite Remote Sensing: A Strategic Approach ID - 2232 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is the fifth OTA report on the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. This report examines the consequences of the breakup of the Soviet Union. One threat is the breakdown of international nonproliferation arrangements. The new republics of the former USSR face many pressures. Economic hardship and low morale among people who access to nuclear weapons poses problems. While the ability of the United States to control events in this area of the world is limited, this report does suggest strategies for limiting proliferation of nuclear weapons. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Sept. 1994 KW - R & D atomic power U. S.Congress USSR Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism research and development war war non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents Soviet Union atomic energy nuclear proliferation OTA +military communication +nationalism and communication military, and nuclear proliferation nationalism, and nuclear proliferation weapons of mass destruction terrorism terrorism, and weapons of mass destruction LB - 8640 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1994 ST - Proliferation and the Former Soviet Union TI - Proliferation and the Former Soviet Union ID - 2233 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The volume of information collected about the earth from satellites challenges American data archiving and distributing facilities. To make this data that has been collected useful for scientific research, it will require an adequate storage system, and also a computer system to process, organize, and distribute this information. This report examines strategies the United States has adopted to handle this massive data. It focuses on the Earth Observing System Data and Information System being developed by NASA. The entry of private firms into the realm of remote sensing gives the United States an opportunity to develop a new space industry that could supply worldwide markets with high quality data. The report addresses the controversial question of what role the federal government should play in this emerging industry. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Sept. 1994 KW - R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) U. S.Congress remote sensing Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism corporations corporations, multinational +military communication primary sources archives non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents science research and development networks political economy libraries libraries, and information storage information storage +aeronautics and space communication OTA NASA Earth Observing System Data and Information System, NASA satellites satellites, and remotely sensed data remotely sensed data research and development, and government support scientific research, and government support global communication capitalism, and remotely sensed data multinational corporations networks, and satellites +nationalism and communication +information storage information storage, and remotely sensed data environment, and satellites capitalism capitalism, and satellites capitalism environment nationalism, and satellites archives, and satellites archives, and new media capitalism, and satellites archives LB - 8650 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1994 ST - Remotely Sensed Data: Technology, Management, and Markets TI - Remotely Sensed Data: Technology, Management, and Markets ID - 2234 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report analyzes "studies that assign monetary value to the environmental effects of energy technologies. Quantitative analysis of environmental effects has been an important feature of energy policy for several decades, and growing numbers of studies attempt to integrate these analyses into an overall framework that allows comparison of the environmental effects of different technologies for generating electricity." This report notes that the assumptions underlying these studies are often debated, and that changing the assumptions of a study "can profoundly affect its results." Currently there is no agreement on assumptions. This reports compares several studies and makes suggestions about how policymakers might make sense of them. "In contrast to other studies in this area, OTA's report explores the close ties between values, assumptions, and quantitative results and the implications of these ties for policymaking." AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - Sept. 1994 KW - U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents values networks +electricity networks, electrical OTA environment, and electricity electricity, and environment values, and studies of electricity environment +nationalism and communication nationalism, and electricity LB - 8660 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1994 ST - Studies in the Environmental Costs of Electricity: Background Paper TI - Studies in the Environmental Costs of Electricity: Background Paper ID - 2235 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1995 KW - computers U. S.Congress surveillance Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) law, and privacy law government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents privacy networks +computers and the Internet OTA privacy networks, and computers privacy, and networks networks, and privacy LB - 8670 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1995 ST - Issue Update on Information Security and Privacy in Network Environments TI - Issue Update on Information Security and Privacy in Network Environments ID - 2236 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report notes that in the race to provide students with the most up-to-date technology, perhaps the most valuable part of education process -- the teacher -- has been overlooked. The report notes that relative few of the nation's 2.8 million teachers use technology in their work. The report tries to answer why so many teachers do not use new technology in their teaching. Making the connection between technology and teachers is important to the effort to improve education for children. With appendices and index, this report runs 292 pages. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - April 1995 KW - U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism community democracy government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents information technology +nationalism and communication OTA democracy and media information technology, and education education teachers, and technology education, and new media education LB - 8680 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1995 ST - Teachers & Technology: Making the Connection TI - Teachers & Technology: Making the Connection ID - 2237 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report notes that electronic surveillance will be a valuable tool in fighting terrorism and crime in the 21st century. "Digital communications technology has recently out paced the ability of the law enforcement agencies to implement court authorized wiretaps easily and effectively. To address this problem, the 103d Congress enacted [Oct. 1994] the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (P.L. 103-414). This Act invokes the assistance of the telecommunications industry to provide technological solutions for accessing call information and call content for law enforcement agencies when legally authorized to do so." This report assesses the technical aspects of implementing this legislation. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - July 1995 KW - computers U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) radio law, and privacy law government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents surveillance +computers and the Internet OTA telephones wireless communication privacy surveillance, electronic wiretapping Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (1994) terrorism, and electronic media terrorism, and surveillance counterterrorism terrorism LB - 8690 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1995 ST - Electronic Surveillance in a Digital Age TI - Electronic Surveillance in a Digital Age ID - 2238 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 283- page report seeks to identify how biotechnology was being applied and its potential uses in sixteen nations (Australia, Brazil, Canada, Denmark, Federal Republic of Germany, France, Ireland, Japan, The Netherlands, Singapore, South Korea, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, United Kingdom, and the United States). It notes that since the early 1970s when recombinant DNA technology was discovered, many researchers and new industrial firms have found biotechnology to be a powerful tool. The report examines how these nations supported and regulated biotechnology’s commercial uses, and also how they encouraged innovation. The report discusses biotechnology’s impact in a number of industries including agriculture, chemicals, hazardous waste clean up, and pharmaceuticals. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - Washington, D.C. DA - 1991 KW - U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) genetics law non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents +artificial intelligence and biotechnology OTA Australia Brazil Canada Denmark Germany France Ireland Japan Singapore South Korea Netherlands Sweden Switzerland Taiwan Great Britain DNA genetic engineering biotechnology biotechnology, and regulation regulation, and biotechnology biotechnology, and international regulation censorship and ratings LB - 11980 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1991 ST - Biotechnology in a Global Economy TI - Biotechnology in a Global Economy ID - 2545 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 125-page background paper surveys American public opinion about the benefits, risks, legal, and ethical issues surrounding genetic engineering and biotechnology. Louis Harris & Associates conducted this survey for the Office of Technology Assessment. Questions were asked about how the public felt about genetic testing in their own community, human gene therapy, and the future of biotechnology. A related OTA report discusses ownership and commercialization of human tissues and cells. This report argues that the “United States stands at the brink of a new scientific revolution that could change the lives and futures of its citizens as dramatically as did the Industrial Revolution two centuries ago and the computer revolution today. This new revolution is based on advances in molecular biology that permit the identification, alteration, and transfer of genetic materials that control fundamental characteristics of organisms (and in some cases their offspring) promises major changes in many aspects of modern life.” AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1987 KW - technology U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) public opinion preservation communication revolution medicine history, and new media genetics communication revolution, and second industrial revolution law government history government reports Congress, U. S. government documents +artificial intelligence and biotechnology OTA genetic engineering DNA values, and biotechnology public opinion, and biotechnology technology and society technology, and values second industrial revolution law, and biotechnology medicine, and biotechnology biotechnology biotechnology, and regulation history, break with second industrial revolution values communication revolution LB - 11990 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1987 ST - New Developments in Biotechnology: Background Paper: Public Perceptions of Biotechnology TI - New Developments in Biotechnology: Background Paper: Public Perceptions of Biotechnology VL - 2 ID - 2546 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 167-page study is the first in a series of OTA reports on biotechnology. Of the report, OTA Director John H. Gibbons wrote: “In the 1960s, the term ‘biotechnology’ did not exist. In the 1970s, development of techniques for: 1) splicing genetic information of one organism into that of another, and 2) fusing cells to produce large quantities of valuable proteins led to recognition that a revolution in biological technology – that is, biotechnology– was at hand. In the 1980s, biotechnology is best viewed as a growing cohort of technologies, each with its own scientific benefits and risks, and allied social, economic, legal, and ethical issues.” This report “analyzes the economic, legal, and ethical rights of the human sources of tissues and cells and also those of the physicians or researchers who obtain and develop these biological materials. The study describes the potential of three rapidly moving technologies (tissue and cell culture, cell fusion to produce monoclonal antibodies, and recombinant DNA) for manipulating human tissues and cells to yield commercially valuable products. The report includes a range of options for congressional action related to commercialization of human biological materials, regulation of research with human subjects, and disclosure of physicians’ commercial interest in patient treatment.” AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - Washington, D.C. DA - 1987 KW - technology U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) medicine genetics law government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents +artificial intelligence and biotechnology OTA DNA genetic engineering technology and society values, and biotechnology law, and biotechnology medicine, and biotechnology Gibbons, John H. biotechnology biotechnology, and regulation values LB - 12000 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1987 ST - New Developments in Biotechnology: Ownership of Human Tissues and Cells TI - New Developments in Biotechnology: Ownership of Human Tissues and Cells VL - 1 ID - 2547 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This was the fifth report in a series that the OTA produced on issues involving biotechnology. It runs 195 pages. The United States Supreme Court ruled in 1980 that living micro-organism could be patented, and thereafter the U. S. Patent and Trademark Office also decided that some kinds of animal and plant life could be patented. This reports reviews patent law as it relates to biotechnology, “including deposit requirements and international considerations.” The report also provides Congress with a range of options about protecting intellectual property related to biotechnology. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1989 KW - R & D U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) military communication research and development intellectual property materials patents genetics law non-USA government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents artificial intelligence and biotechnology OTA biotechnology values, and biotechnology intellectual property, and biotechnology patents, and biotechnology law, and biotechnology genetic engineering DNA research and development, and biotechnology Japan Japan, and biotechnology agriculture, and biotechnology values materials agriculture LB - 12010 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1989 ST - New Developments in Biotechnology: Patenting Life TI - New Developments in Biotechnology: Patenting Life VL - 5 ID - 2548 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 296-page report is the fourth in a series that the OTA did on biotechnology. It examines investments then being made by the federal, state, and private sectors. The report considers ten issues influencing investment: 1) research priorities; 2) research and development funding; 3) coordination between agencies; 4) requirement for information; 5) what is needed in training and education; 6) efforts by states to promote biotechnology; 7) monitoring industry-university research; 8) how tax law affects commercial biotechnology; 9) how adequate is federal help for companies starting out in biotechnology; and 10) how export controls influences commerce in biotechnology. The report offers conclusion about United States investment in biotechnology. First, investment were inadequate to fulfill the potential of the work then being done. Second, some manufacturers of biotechnology related products see the government’s regulatory process as a major obstacle to commercial development. Third, rate of commercialization varies from one industry to another. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1988 KW - R & D U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) military-industrial complex +military communication presidents, and new media government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents +artificial intelligence and biotechnology OTA biotechnology research and development universities, and biotechnology capitalism capitalism, and biotechnology universities research and development, and biotechnology research and development, and government support research and development, and Reagan Administration research and development, and universities Reagan Administration Reagan Administration, and biotechnology LB - 12020 PB - Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1988 ST - New Developments in Biotechnology: U. S. Investment in Biotechnology TI - New Developments in Biotechnology: U. S. Investment in Biotechnology VL - 4 ID - 2549 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report notes that between February and May, 1978, more than 5,000 people were queried about what they believed were the most "critical technological issues" facing the United States and the world. About 1,000 of the people asked had been advisors to the OTA. "From these efforts to reach as broad and informed a public as possible, OTA received 1,530 suggested topics for study. Another 2,875 items were extracted from the published literature." From this list, the OTA prepared a list of 30 topics in rank order of importance. Several topics relating to communication appeared on this list. They included: Impact of Microprocessing on Society (no. 9); Applications of Technology in Space (no. 10); Designing for Conservation of Materials (no. 11); Future of Military Equipment (no. 12); Allocating the Electromagnetic Spectrum Globally (no. 15); Technology in Education (no. 19); Electric Vehicles: Applications and Impacts (no. 23); and Alternative Materials Technologies (no. 25). AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - Washington, D. C. DA - Jan. 1979 KW - computers U. S.Congress Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism OTA labor communication revolution community democracy government home, and new media home government reports Congress, U. S. government documents office, and information technology home, and information technology information technology +nationalism and communication OTA education, and communication democracy and media information technology, and education communication revolution, and education information technology, and home communication revolution computers education home, and new media office, and new media education, and new media education, and computers aeronautics and space communication microprocessing computers electricity materials computers, and microprocessing microprocessing, and computers microprocessors computers and the Internet office LB - 33150 PB - United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1979 ST - OTA Priorities 1979: With Brief Descriptions of Priorities and of Assessments in Progress TI - OTA Priorities 1979: With Brief Descriptions of Priorities and of Assessments in Progress ID - 2952 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report summarizes studies the OTA conducted during the year including ones on book preservation technologies, "Advanced Materials by Design: New Structural Materials Technologies," "Power On! New Tools for Teaching and Learning" (e.g., computers), "Copper: Technology and Competitiveness," "Science, Technology, and the First Amendment," genetic research and biotechnology, and more. This Annual Report also gives organizational charts and the names of various committees and their members who specialized in different areas of technology. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1988 KW - computers Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) OTA government government reports books, periodicals, newspapers computers and the Internet history and new media materials education computers, and education computers materials, copper copper freedom First Amendment, and technology biotechnology artificial intelligence and biotechnology genetic engineering military communication First Amendment history LB - 33670 PB - U. S. Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1988 ST - Annual Report to the Congress: Fiscal Year 1988 TI - Annual Report to the Congress: Fiscal Year 1988 ID - 3006 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This Report summarizes recent studies including "New Electric Power Technologies," "Strategic Materials: Technologies to Reduce U. S. Import Vulnerability," "Information Technology R & D: Critical Trends and Issues," and "Civilian Space Stations and the U. S. Future in Space." It also contains the names of OTA committees and their members. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1986 KW - Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) OTA government government reports electricity aeronautics and space communication materials LB - 33680 PB - U. S. Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1986 ST - Annual Report to the Congress: Fiscal Year 1985 TI - Annual Report to the Congress: Fiscal Year 1985 ID - 3007 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This Report has a brief opening statement by OTA Director Emilio Q. Daddario about the history and goals of the OTA. The Report then discusses the "Organization and Operations" of the OTA. It is interesting as a source for the names of members of OTA's advisory panels (e.g., Ithiel DeSola Pool). AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1975 KW - Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) OTA government government reports LB - 33690 PB - U. S. Government Printing Office PY - 1975 ST - Annual Report to the Congress by the Office of Technology Assessment (March 15, 1975) TI - Annual Report to the Congress by the Office of Technology Assessment (March 15, 1975) ID - 3008 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This Report contains an organizational roster of OTA staff members through September, 1987. It summarizes recent reports on biotechnology, "Commercial Newsgathering from Space," and "The Electronic Supervisor: New Technology, New Tensions." AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1988 KW - computers Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) OTA government government reports news and journalism artificial intelligence and biotechnology biotechnology aeronautics and space communication satellites, and news news, and satellites office surveillance computers and the Internet computers and surveillance office, and surveillance surveillance, and office freedom privacy law law, and privacy privacy, and technology freedom, and technology news satellites computers LB - 33700 PB - U. S. Congress, Office of Technology Assessment PY - 1988 ST - Annual Report to the Congress: Fiscal Year 1987 TI - Annual Report to the Congress: Fiscal Year 1987 ID - 3009 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 41-page report contains the names of advisory panels and OTA members. It lists the previous year's publications but does not summarize them as had been the case with some earlier Annual Reports. AU - Assessment, Office of Technology CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1991 KW - Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) OTA government government reports LB - 33730 PB - [U. S. Congress, Office of Technology Assessment] PY - 1991 ST - Annual Report to Congress: Fiscall Year 1990 TI - Annual Report to Congress: Fiscall Year 1990 ID - 3011 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Assessment], [Office of Technology CY - Washington, D.C. DA - 1978 KW - U. S.Congress post office Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism government government reports Congress, U. S. government documents rural areas +nationalism and communication rural areas, and communications +postal service OTA LB - 8080 PB - Government Printing Office PY - 1978 ST - Communications and Rural America: Prepared at the Request of Hon. Warren G. Magnuson, Chairman, Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, ... January 1978 TI - Communications and Rural America: Prepared at the Request of Hon. Warren G. Magnuson, Chairman, Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, ... January 1978 ID - 2177 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This history of electrical and electronics engineering is written by a non-historian, primarily for engineers and technicians, but also for a broader audience. Atherton believes that major inventors have drawn on history in their work and that it is important for contemporary practitioners to have a knowledge and appreciation of the past. The work has twelve chapters. After the Introduction, early chapters cover “electricity and magnetism to 1820,” the work of Oersted, Ampere, and other during the 1820s, and electromagnetism. Chapter 5 examines European, American, and submarine telegraphy. Chapter 6 deals with electricity and its consequences, and Chapter 7 looks at motors, generators, and other forms of electrical power. Chapter 8 treats radio, radar, and television. Chapter 9 covers theories and discoveries relating to such topics as electrons, magnetism, noise, information theory, and electrical units. Chapter 10 is about the miniaturization of electronics and discusses transistors and integrated circuits. Chapter 11 deals with computers in Germany, Britain, and the U.S. A concluding chapter is entitled “A Technological Society.” The work has brief references after each chapter and both a name and subject index. AU - Atherton, W. A. CY - San Francisco DA - 1984 KW - computers corporations materials, and silicon microprocessing transistors, and integrated circuits quantum physics preservation lighting history, and new media materials generators General Electric Company Company engineering digitization computers war non-USA electricity computers and the Internet +radio telegraph telegraph, submarine Europe Europe, and telegraph telegraph, and Europe electromagnetism lighting, electric Edison, Thomas generators, DC generators, AC magnetism electrical engineering electronic engineering Germany Germany, and computers Great Britain Great Britain, and computers transistors Babbage, Charles Ampère, A. M. Armstrong, Edwin De Forest, Lee vacuum tubes Faraday, Michael Bell, Alexander Graham Crompton, R.E.B. Davy, H. Kelvin (Thomson, W.) Marconi, Guglielmo wireless communication Morse, Samuel Oersted, H.C., and electricity Ohm, G. S., and electricity telegraph, submarine Shockley, William Brattain, Walter Bardeen, John Siemens, Werner Volta, A.G., and electricity amplifiers lighting, arc telegraph, Atlantic batteries Bell Laboratories cable electricity, and cells computers, history of electricity, and dynamo General Electric Company electricity, and generators motors electricity, and oscillators electricity, and patents quantum theory radiotelegraphy Siemens and Halske Company silicon semiconductors microprocessors +television integrated circuits transistors, and integrated circuits electricity, and war war, and electrical communication Westinghouse Corporation World War II World War II, and electricity World War I World War I, and electricity information theory miniaturization transistors, and miniaturization radar radio, FM radio, AM telegraphy, radio digital media general studies history history, and electricity history, and electronics materials military communication electronic media LB - 330 PB - San Francisco Press, Inc. PY - 1984 ST - From Compass to Computer: A History of Electrical and Electronics Engineering TI - From Compass to Computer: A History of Electrical and Electronics Engineering ID - 121 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Attali was Special Counselor to French President François Mitterrand and also a professor of economic theory at the University of Paris and at the Ecole Polytechnique. He argues in this work that music does not merely reflect society but also portends new social patterns. Music, which is the organization of noise, offers theoretical possibilities for prophesy in two interrelated ways: 1) in the manner in which noise’s violence is controlled and channeled; and 2) in the ways in which music is produced, distributed, and consumed. Attali’s book is organized around five themes, each the subject of a chapter: Listening, Sacrificing, Representing, Repeating, and Composing. For example, the chapter on sacrifice deals with rituals in sacred societies. The chapter that follows on representation considers a stage in which the creation of music is a professional activity connected to markets. The next chapter, “Repeating,” deals with the period from the late nineteenth century when sound recording became possible, an era of unending reproduction in which live performances become secondary and it becomes essential to create demand for the material that has been recorded. “The power to record sound was one of three essential powers of the gods in ancient societies,” Attali writes, “along with that of making war and causing famine. According to a Gaelic myth, it was precisely by opposing these three powers that King Leevellyn won legitimacy. “Recording has always been a means of social control, a stake in politics, regardless of the available technologies. Power is no longer content to enact its legitimacy; it records and reproduces the societies it rules. Stockpiling memory, retaining history or time, distributing speech, and manipulating information has always been an attribute of civil and priestly power.... But... the reality of power belonged to he who was able to reproduce the divine word, not to he who gave it voice on a daily basis. Possessing the means of recording allows one to monitor noises, to maintain them, and to control their repetition within a determined code. In the final analysis, it allows one to impose one’s own noise and to silence others: ‘Without the loudspeaker, we would never have conquered Germany,’ wrote Hitler in 1938 in the Manual of German Radio.” AU - Attali, Jacques CY - Minneapolis DA - 1985 KW - class communism Marx, Karl magnetic recording preservation +sound recording music communication revolution media effects media violence violence media Marxism ideology history, and new media magnetic tape law copyright communication revolution, and second industrial revolution law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA history +sound recording political economy, and music Frankfurt School, and music capitalism, and music capitalism history, break with history, and music Marxism, and music critical school, and music Adorno, Theodor France, and music France, and sound recording class, and music copyright, and music advertising, and music second industrial revolution ideology, and music phonograph phonograph records sound recording, and phonograph records sound recording, and power sound recording, and subversion +radio radio, and music sound recording, and magnetic tape magnetic tape recording history, and sound recording sound recording, and history violence, and media media, and violence violence, and music music, and violence violence, and sound recording sound recording, and violence values, and music censorship, and music public address systems, and Hitler values history France communication revolution Frankfurt School political economy public address systems advertising advertising and public relations LB - 12450 OP - 1977 PB - University of Minnesota Press PY - 1985 RP - (1977) ST - Noise: The Political Economy of Music TI - Noise: The Political Economy of Music TT - Bruits: essai sur l’économie politique de la musique ID - 2592 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author has discovered that the propaganda work of George Creel and the Committee on Public Information during World War I has renewed relevance in context of the Iraq War during the George W. Bush administration (2001-09). Axelrod contends that "Creel is little remembered outside of academic circles of historians and students of culture and media." (xi) He draws on Creel's writings and relies heavily on James Mock and Cedric Larson's 70-year-old book, Words That War the War. Little additional, more recent, scholarship on this topic was apparently consulted. AU - Axelrod, Alan CY - New York DA - 2009 KW - war propaganda World War I Creel, George Committee on Public Information propaganda, and Committee on Public Information propaganda, and World War I propaganda, and George Creel nationalism and communication propaganda, and nationalism nationalism, and propaganda advertising and public relations propaganda, and advertising advertising, and propaganda advertising nationalism LB - 33260 PB - Palgrave Macmillan PY - 2009 ST - Selling the Great War: The Making of American Propaganda TI - Selling the Great War: The Making of American Propaganda ID - 84 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Bach was vice president for East Coast and European production during the making of Heaven's Gate. The story details the disastrous story of this film. No United Artist executive had seen the final print of this movie before it opened. The movie sank United Artists which virtually ceased to exist afterward. There is material in this book that discusses the motion picture rating system, particularly as it applied to Woody Allen's movie Manhattan. There is also some information on Arthur Krim, who headed United Artists from 1951 to 1978, and who later became chair of Orion Productions. AU - Bach, Steven CY - New York DA - 1985 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification corporations self-regulation corporations corporations Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Heffner, Richard rating system (U. S.), and Manhattan rating system (U. S.), and appeals process Krim, Arthur United Artists Orion Productions CARA, and appeals process Heffner, Richard, and Manhattan CARA corporations LB - 21080 PB - William Morrow and Company, Inc. PY - 1985 ST - Final Cut: Dreams and Disaster in the Making of Heaven's Gate TI - Final Cut: Dreams and Disaster in the Making of Heaven's Gate ID - 909 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this history of the New York Tribune, the author recounts how this publication became the first to reproduce halftone photographs in its daily paper. Baehr writes: "Line cuts were used frequently after 1883; a daily political carton by Leon Barrett began on July 10, 1899, and on January 21, 1897, a portrait of Thomas Collier Platt marked the first use of the half-tone process for photographic reproduction in a daily newspaper. This innovation resulted from the experiments of Stephen H. Horgan, a former art direct on the [NY] Herald. Horgan had submitted his idea to the younger [James Gordon] Bennett, [Jr.] who, after seeking expert advice, was convinced that the notion of applying half-tone screens to the curved stereotypeplates was impractical. This shook his confidence in his art director and Horgan was presently out of a job. He applied to [Whitelaw] Reid with better success, and a fine facsimile of Platt's foxy features eventuated." (235) The author also discusses Sunday supplements. "'Sunday Supplements,' in the modern sense, first appeared in the Tribune of November 8, 1896, in the form a of a 'serio-comic Weekly' called Twinkles. This was a curious melange of 16 pages of glazed stock, headed by a colored political cartoon. An 'editorial' explained the cartoon, in rather English fashion, and the rest of the supplement was composed of comic cartoons and articles, photographs of social lights, and political comment in the lighter vein. Twinkles had a short life, being succeeded on May 30, 1897, by a regular Illustrated Supplement of more conven- 235/236 tional form -- feature articles, illustrated by line cuts and photographs, with a few jokes, usually scissored from humorous publications. In this form the Supplement ran on until it was replaced by the Sunday Magazine." (235-36) The author also notes that "The Only Woman's Page" appeared in the Tribune around 1896. AU - Baehr, Harry W., Jr. CY - New York DA - 1936 KW - wood engraving presses personality journalism fame ref, secondary magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality quotations newspapers, and photographs photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving photography, and presses presses, and newspaper photography newspapers, and photography (origins) photography, and New York Tribune Horgan, Stephen half tones, and Stephen Horgan Sunday newspapers newspapers, and Sunday newspapers color color, and newspapers newspapers, and color color, and yellow journalism yellow journalism women women, and woman's page ref, book celebrity LB - 39420 PB - Dodd, Mead & Company PY - 1936 ST - The New York Tribune since the Civil War TI - The New York Tribune since the Civil War ID - 4040 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In 1971 Bagdikian wrote: “Today we are on the threshold of a change in human communications more powerful than our innocent introduction to electronic pictures in 1927, perhaps more significant than all past changes in the technology of information. The way men deal with each other and with the distant world is about to be transformed by a combination of the computer, innovations in the transmission of signals, and new ways to feed images into this system and to take them out.” Bagdikian focuses “on what the content of daily information will be, what form it will be delivered in, and how it will be distributed throughout the population.” He believed in 1971 that a major change had already occurred. Everyone now had virtually instant access to the news. “In this generation, for the first time in the history of any large nation, the potential audience for news had become almost the total population,” he wrote . “Television and the ubiquitous car and transistor radios, plus the telephone to provide quick secondhand reporting, means that for the first time in history something approaching the total population of a society is in instantaneous contact with urgent global – and extra-global – developments.” AU - Bagdikian, Ben H. CY - New York DA - 1971 KW - computers transistors preservation communication revolution journalism history, and new media community democracy news and journalism history general studies communication revolution computers information age critics democracy and media history, break with computers news, and new media television radio radio, and transistors transistor radios, and news news, and television television, and news news, and radio news computers and the Internet LB - 20 PB - Harper & Row PY - 1971 ST - The Information Machines: Their Impact on Men and the Media TI - The Information Machines: Their Impact on Men and the Media ID - 1398 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Bagdikian argues that monopoly control of the media has allowed corporations to dictate what U.S. citizens receive as news and information. This concentration of corporate control has suppressed news and information that would reflect poorly on those corporations, big business in general and government policy written to favor big business. He asserts that media owners are pushing a pro-business news agenda. --Phil Glende Ben Bagdikian’s book has become a standard reference for any scholar interested in studying the economics of media ownership and the implications for a democratic society. Now in the fifth edition, this book documents the increasing concentration of ownership by a handful of multinational corporations. Its particular focus is the chain newspaper and the way in which news is prepared and disseminated by them. He uses the introduction to note that the largest newspaper chain at the time was fifty-six times larger than the largest chain at the time of the first edition. This new edition is updated to include material on the Internet and other elements of the Information Age. To Bagdikian, the importance of monitoring the increasing concentration of ownership goes beyond financial or statistical interest. He believes that the American democratic system is at stake. These media corporations have the power to alter the political agenda of the country and exert influence over both voters and political leaders. Because of their capitalist nature, Bagdikian argues that these businesses shape economic and political debates to their own financial advantage. News is not presented to inform, but to sell an image and increase profits. Bagdikian believes that the democratic process works best when a wide range of voices and opinions are available. In his view, the media monopoly artificially constricts the range of debate, presents the public with inaccurate information, and ultimately erodes democratic freedoms. Serious concerns are played down while advertising and trivial entertainment fills the newspaper each day. He also argues that corporate absentee ownership, rapidly taking the place of local ownership, disrupts the relationship between communities and their government. The book contains a wealth of examples of biased or incomplete coverage of news stories, along with an examination of the way in which advertising concerns shape this coverage. Bagdikian sees little chance for the Internet to break down this system. As it becomes more commercial, the most popular and widely used web sites are owned and maintained by the same corporate powers that own the other media outlets. The final chapter of the book lists a series of actions that would address many of these problems. Bagdikian does not argue against commercial control of the media. Instead, he proposes stronger governmental regulation of media ownership and a tax on national mass advertising. He urges journalists and media managers alike to strengthen the wall between objective news content and corporate business interests. Finally, he asks for greater public awareness and interest in the problem. Political leaders are still willing to listen to the voice of the people. --Rob Rabe AU - Bagdikian, Ben H. CY - Boston DA - 1983, 1997 KW - computers corporations corporations, multinational newspapers journalism community democracy law news and journalism non-USA regulation news political economy multinational corporations news, and media monopoly political economy global communication democracy and media critics capitalism, and news capitalism, and mass media Glende, Phil Rabe, Rob +computers and the Internet regulation, and media ownership regulation, and advertising capitalism news, and capitalism newspapers, and monopoly newspaper chains news, and advertising news, and entertainment censorship and ratings LB - 9180 PB - Beacon Press PY - 1983 ST - The Media Monopoly TI - The Media Monopoly ID - 2285 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Born in the Ukraine, Bagrit came to London at age 12 at the outbreak of World War I. He became an authority on automation and maintained that the mechanization of the industrial revolution should not be confused with the automation of the mid-20th century. “Automation is not a devil, a Frankenstein,” he said. “It is no more than a tool, but a tool of such immense possibilities that no one can yet see the full extent of what it might achieve for mankind.” In these lectures, he argued that whereas mechanization had “sometimes given millions of people sub-human work to do,” automation would do “the exact opposite.” He predicted that some day, people would carry computers that were the size of transistor radios. These lectures might be read in conjunction with an interview Bagrit gave to Clyde H. Farnsworth of the New York Times (March 17, 1965, p. 66). There he said that automation represented “the greatest change in the whole history of humankind.” It was a process that would change life so dramatically that within a few decades the pre-1960 world would “seem as rural as England before the Industrial Revolution.” (Farnsworth paraphrasing Bagrit) AU - Bagrit, (Sir) Leon CY - London DA - 1965 KW - computers preservation communication revolution history, and new media communication revolution, and second industrial revolution non-USA history history Great Britain +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology computers, personal automation computers, and automation second industrial revolution history, break with Great Britain Great Britain, and computers Great Britain, and automation Bagrit, Leon computers communication revolution labor LB - 7710 PB - Weidenfeld and Nicolson PY - 1965 ST - The Age of Automation: The BBC Reith Lectures, 1964 TI - The Age of Automation: The BBC Reith Lectures, 1964 ID - 2140 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book deals with the way in which computers change the way we assimilate knowledge and conduct research. Massive changes are in store, Bailey suggests. Bailey argues that computers are poised to supplant human beings in the evolutionary process. What he calls “bit evolution” is a third evolutionary phase, following upon the original genetic evolution, which was followed by the much more rapid cultural evolution sped along by the printing press and other modes of mass communication. Something Bailey terms “intermaths” will correlate to newly relevant data as the now outdated geometry and calculus did in their own time. Computers are already vital organisms, Bailey maintains, and the better part of human wisdom is simply to stand back and give them ample room to evolve as they will. The book, which uses primarily secondary sources, is something of a history of human knowledge as it has been manifested through numbers. --Gordon Jackson AU - Bailey, James CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - computers computers Information Age +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology computers, personal information processing computers, and research Jackson, Gordon LB - 7720 PB - Basic Books PY - 1997 ST - After Thought: The Computer Challenge to Human Intelligence TI - After Thought: The Computer Challenge to Human Intelligence ID - 2141 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This collection of eight essays on various aspects of the colonial and revolutionary press remains the most useful source of information for historians studying the development of newspapers during this crucial period. American newspapers changed dramatically in their content and purpose in the years before the war and played a key role in informing early Americans about news and events, mobilizing and maintaining public opinion, and helping give shape to a budding American nationalism. The newspaper that emerged in the 1780s would no longer be an a-political commercial sheet run by an artisan printer, but would instead become an actor on the political stage. One strength of the collection is the inclusion of essays on less common topics, like the loyalist press, newspapers of the southern colonies and the German-language press of the day. These selections help broaden the normal scholarly focus on the New England area patriot printers. The book also contains a collection of statistical tables and charts, explained clearly in an essay by G. Thomas Tanselle, that gives a numerical sense of early publishing. Two of the essays stand out as most insightful. First is Stephen Botein’s “Printers and the American Revolution,” which details the growing political orientation of the press. Events like the Stamp Act in 1765 and the rising factionalism of public opinion forced printers to take a stand on the question of independence, however reluctantly. As printers became politicized, newspapers began to play a greater role in the movement for independence (or the loyalist cause in some instances). Printers saw themselves as public servants, deserving of strong safeguards of press liberty. The essay “Freedom of the Press in Revolutionary America,” by Richard Buell, Jr., is a valuable contribution to the study of the emergence of press freedom in the Unites States. Americans, Buell argues, understood press freedom in a way that seems contradictory only in retrospect. The Sedition Act, for example, was not seen as necessarily at odds with the first amendment as it clearly does to us today. The revolutionary experience left Americans deeply committed to preserving press freedom for legitimate political dialog and information, but also deeply worried about its potential for misuse. -- Rob Rabe AU - Bailyn, Bernard AU - John B. Hench, eds. CY - Worcester, MA DA - 1980 KW - nationalism Rabe, Rob +books, periodicals, newspapers print culture printers, and American Revolution American Revolution, and printers newspapers, and American Revolution American Revolution, and newspapers news and journalism +nationalism and communication nationalism, and newspapers newspapers, and nationalism newspapers news print LB - 28960 PB - American Antiquarian Society PY - 1980 ST - The Press and the American Revolution TI - The Press and the American Revolution ID - 2673 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Chapter two (“Orbital Eyes: Reconnaissance from space”), and some pages from the next chapter (“Soviet Ploy”) have good, basic information about the various stages of satellite reconnaissance during the 1960s, and how this technology dramatically changed what was known of the USSR and more generally of our planet. AU - Baker, David CY - New York DA - 1981, 1982 KW - USSR nationalism photography war non-USA reconnaissance +aeronautics and space communication satellites reconnaissance, satellite satellites, and reconnaissance Soviet Union Cold War +photography and visual communication rocketry +nationalism and communication military communication LB - 7540 PB - Stein and Day PY - 1981 ST - The Shape of Wars to Come TI - The Shape of Wars to Come ID - 2124 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Baker warns about the destruction of paper records, newspapers, "book wastage and mutiliation." One wave came with microfilming. Another, just starting, he maintains, is digital recording keeping. Baker laments the wholesale destruction of old newspapers. The book's title comes from a test employed by librarians on paper "in which they folded the corner of a page back and forth until it broke." Brittle records were scheduled for destruction. This book has a excellent bibliography. AU - Baker, Nicholson CY - New York DA - 2001 KW - Library of Congress primary sources history and new media preservation microfiche, microfilm, microform libraries archives materials non-USA +information storage libraries, and new media paper libraries, and paper information storage, and new media information storage, and paper preservation, and paper preservation, and new media microfilm libraries, and microfilm libraries, and microform preservation, and microfilm preservation, and digital media information storage, and digital media bibliographies, and preservation preservation, and bibliography +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and preservation preservation, and newspapers books, and preservation preservation, and books Great Britain Great Britain, and preservation preservation, and Great Britain preservation, and Library of Congress Library of Congress, and preservation paper archives, and paper paper, and archives paper, and libraries critics archives +bibliographies books newspapers materials news news and journalism history LB - 2450 PB - Random House PY - 2001 ST - Double Fold: Libraries and the Assault on Paper TI - Double Fold: Libraries and the Assault on Paper ID - 333 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This Report to the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence in 1969 provides information about research on the effects of television violence. At that time, there were relatively few empirical studies on this topic -- something that would change dramatically during the 1970s as numerous researchers began to study this problem. AU - Baker, Robert K. AU - Ball, Sandra J. CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1969 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA government hearings Valenti, Jack television, and media effects social science research violence media effects media violence government hearings censorship and ratings children +television television, and violence violence, and television violence, and social science research social science research, and violence children, and media +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures violence, and bibliography +bibliographies bibliographies, and TV violence National Commission on Causes and Prevention of Violence reports hearings, Causes and Prevention of Violence (1969) Valenti, Jack, and media violence Valenti, Jack, and Congress LB - 20010 M1 - 9 PB - Government Printing Office PY - 1969 ST - Mass Media and Violence. Volume IX. A Report to the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence TI - Mass Media and Violence. Volume IX. A Report to the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence VL - 9 ID - 826 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Baker, Thomas Thorne CY - New York DA - 1927 KW - photography +radio journalism news and journalism television, and history of +telegraph newspapers news +television +photography and visual communication telegraph, and photographs +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and photographs wireless communication wire communication, and photographs television, and origins LB - 6520 PB - Van Nostrand PY - 1927 ST - Wireless Pictures and Television: A Practical Description of the Telegraphy of Pictures, Photographs and Visual Images TI - Wireless Pictures and Television: A Practical Description of the Telegraphy of Pictures, Photographs and Visual Images ID - 2030 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This short, readable book examines the commercialization of news during the nineteenth century. Baldasty looks at the role of advertising, hidden ownership, and other pressures that changed newspapers during the Industrial Revolution. This work offers a good treatment of this subject, one appropriate for undergraduate readers. -- SV What this book lacks in length it more than makes up for in insight and clarity. Baldasty’s 140 odd pages of text are probably the most important examination of the enormous changes in the newspaper industry in the late nineteenth century. More accurately, it is the story of the emergence of something that can be called a newspaper industry in the United States and the decline of the partisan newspapers so dominant in the early and middle century. Baldasty also upsets the traditional narrative of the rise of urban commercial journalism as progress, making instead the provocative argument that the partisan press may have actually served Americans better because of their emphasis on politics and promotion of the obligations of citizenship. As he says, the low cost of the cheap urban newspaper hid important real social costs and were no bargain. Baldasty’s background as a scholar of the Jacksonian era party press informs this book as well, and the first chapter of The Commercialization of the News in the Nineteenth Century is one of the most succinct and informative discussions of the operation of what he calls the Party Press Model. He briefly outlines the role of the editor in the party structure and the necessity of patronage as a source of funds for the newspaper, while offering an evenhanded assessment of the limitations of one-sided “news” presentation and the potential for corruption. This chapter, and the book as a whole, serves the needs of an instructor teaching a journalism history course very well. The remainder of the book shows how commercially-driven changes in the later nineteenth century affected newspapers. Most notably, advertising replaced patronage and subsidy and the journalist in effect was forced to serve a new master. Baldasty highlights the tension between “good journalism” as editors might have wished to practice it and the needs and desires of the advertisers who paid the bills. As the cost of operation a newspaper skyrocketed, largely due to increases in the cost of presses and newsgathering, newspapers began to run like a business, with the ultimate goal of profit for the investors. With this in mind, predictability and lowering operation costs became paramount concerns. The newspaper at the turn of the century was a totally different creature than it had been in the 1830s and, as Baldasty points out, was no longer serving the needs of a democratic society, despite the fact that the press still enjoys special legal status. The book is readable, but not eloquent. It is broken into many small sections and suffers from excessive quotations and examples considering its length. While not ideal leisure reading, Baldasty’s book is an excellent supplemental text for undergraduates in a journalism history class. The book is based on dozens of manuscript collections, trade publications, and newspapers. Of interest is the author’s use of the proceedings of press association meetings, which are often a neglected source of “inside information” about the newspaper business. -- Rob Rabe AU - Baldasty, Gerald J. CY - Madison DA - 1992 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations newspapers journalism news and journalism news +books, periodicals, newspapers news, and capitalism advertising news, and advertising Industrial Revolution news, and commercialism news, and monopoly newspapers, and hidden ownership newspapers, and commercialism Rabe, Rob LB - 10460 PB - University of Wisconsin Press PY - 1992 ST - The Commercialization of News in the Nineteenth Century TI - The Commercialization of News in the Nineteenth Century ID - 2410 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Neil Baldwin, English professor, specializing in modern American poetry, has written a captivating biography of one of the most pivotal figures in American history. Relying on the letters of Edison and his associates, Edison’s own autobiography (which he admits is not to be completely trusted), other Edison biographies, scientific articles written by Edison, his reception in the media, and the literary fiction of the period (such as Edward Bellamy’s Looking Backwards), Baldwin tells the story of Edison the man, the inventor, and the bad husband. Edison’s many inventions are dissected in detail: his race to perfect the telephone before Bell did, his aspirations for the phonograph (education through recordings of Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire), his motion pictures (he was unable to conceptualize film as entertainment and lost out on the film industry), and most importantly: electric lighting (which he promoted by publicly decrying gas as dirty and producing ugly light). Baldwin presents Edison as a complicated man who was so focused on work that he slept only 4-6 hours night, frequently skipped meals, and rarely saw his wife and children. He was deaf, but did not want to work on inventing a hearing aid because he saw his deafness as an asset. Although many worked on his inventions, he usually expected to get full credit. Although he was a brilliant man, he was unable to let go of his cylinders even when records became popular. For Baldwin's discussion such innovations as the phonograph, electricity, and motion pictures, see especially chapters 8-12, 19, and 21. -Hallie Lieberman AU - Baldwin, Neil CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - biography, autobiography, oral histories biography, autobiography, memoirs, oral histories innovation sound recording networks electricity motion pictures sound recording phonograph networks,electrical biography inventions inventors inventions patents Lieberman, Hallie LB - 4890 PB - Hyperion PY - 1995 ST - Edison: Inventing the Century TI - Edison: Inventing the Century ID - 9 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Although this book does not specifically focus on the Internet, it explores the process of media convergence–the coming together of print, broadcasting, cable and telecommunications media enabled by computers and digitization. The authors consider the conditions that led to this convergence, the hurdles which must still be overcome, and the implications for the businesses involved, their management, public policy, and the economy. Included in this analysis is a detailed description of the key technological breakthroughs (fiber optics, satellite, ISDN, and increasing bandwidth) and what each means for the future of interactive media. The work relies primarily on secondary sources. --Mark Tremayne AU - Baldwin, Thomas F., D. Stevens McVoy, and Charles Steinfeld CY - Thousand Oaks, CA DA - 1996 KW - entertainment computers interactivity entertainment, home optical fibers media effects media convergence mass media home entertainment materials materials fiber optics community democracy home, and new media home home, and information technology media information technology +computers and the Internet media convergence interactive media telecommunications information technology, and home optical fibers digital media democracy and media cable, television Tremayne, Mark cable home, and new media digital media digitization optical fibers satellites +aeronautics and space communication LB - 9010 N1 - See also: media PB - Sage Publications PY - 1996 ST - Convergence : Integrating Media, Information & Communication TI - Convergence : Integrating Media, Information & Communication ID - 2268 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This collection contains several essays that touch on the technology of cinema, censorship, and the economics of Hollywood. The essays are divided into four parts: "A Novelty Spawns Small Businesses, 1894-1908" (including Gordon Hendricks' piece on "The History of the Kinetoscope"); "Struggles for Control, 1908-1930" (including Balio on the founding of United Artists, and Douglas Gomery on "U.S. Film Exhibition," and "The Coming of Sound: Technological Change in the American Film Industry"); "A Mature Oligopoly, 1930-1948"; and "Retrenchment, Reappraisal, and Reorganization, 1948- " (including Richard S. Randall on "Censorship: From The Miracle to Deep Throat," and John Cogley on "HUAC: The Mass Hearings"). AU - Balio, Tino, ed. CY - Madison DA - 1976, 1985 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations propaganda advertising motion pictures Hollywood cinema motion pictures celluloid film law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +television Hollywood, and television television, and Hollywood television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television film industry Hollywood, and film industry advertising advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising public relations public relations, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and The Miracle censorship, and Deep Throat blacklisting +sound recording motion pictures, and sound Kinetoscope materials LB - 25720 PB - University of Wisconsin Press PY - 1976 ST - The American Film Industry TI - The American Film Industry ID - 1165 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume, the fifth in Scribner's History of American Cinema (Charles Harpole, ed.), has chapters by several authors. Balio's contribution is the Introduction, Chapter 2 ("Surviving the Great Depression"), Chapter 4 ("Feeding the Maw of Exhibition"), Chapter 6 ("Selling Stars"), and Chapter 7 ("Production Trends"). The chapter that speaks most directly to film technology is Chapter 5 by David Bordwell and Kristin Thompson entitled "Technological Change and the Classical Film Style." Other chapters include "The Production Code and the Hays Office," by Richard Maltby; "The B Film: Hollywood's Other Half," by Brian Taves; "The Poetics and Politics of Nonfiction: Documentary Film," by Charles Wolfe; and "Avant-Garde Film," by Jan-Christopher Horak. --SV Part of the Scribner’s series on American cinema, this work deals with the development of Hollywood into a major industry in the 1930s. It draws on secondary sources, as well as magazine articles and the movies of the time. It deals briefly with the influence of technology, in particular the development of special effects. A stunning ten-minute earthquake scene in the highly popular movie San Francisco represented a groundbreaking use of special effects. That the audience was able to stay riveted for ten minutes to such footage in an era of more conversational films was duly noted by the industry, and a trend was begun that has resulted in the Star Wars series and its numerous imitators in our own time. --Gordon Jackson AU - Balio, Tino CY - New York DA - 1993 KW - celebrity self-regulation Production Code PCA documentaries Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) journalism values religion law censorship and ratings news and journalism Production Code (1930) news news +motion pictures +motion pictures motion pictures, and technology censorship, and motion pictures Hays, Will H. motion pictures, and avant-garde motion pictures, and B films motion pictures, and documentaries documentaries, motion pictures newsreels news, and motion pictures Breen, Joseph Production Code Administration (PCA) celebrity culture motion pictures, and star system color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor censorship color documentaries Jackson, Gordon LB - 9530 PB - Charles Scribner's Sons PY - 1993 ST - Grand Design: Hollywood as a Modern Business Enterprise, 1930-1939 TI - Grand Design: Hollywood as a Modern Business Enterprise, 1930-1939 ID - 2320 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book offers a lucid account of how the materials available for making colors, and the technology of color, have infuenced the nature of painting. "Color, like music, takes a shortcut to our senses and our emotions," Ball writes. (vii) He notes that during the latter half of the twentieth century, “color itself [was] being reinvented.” Philip Ball is a science writer trained in chemistry with a doctorate in physics. His earlier books include Made to Measure: New Material for the 21st Century (1997), a study in materials science about how scientists are inventing thousands of new materials. AU - Ball, Philip CY - New York DA - 2001 KW - avant garde World War I Kandinsky, Wassily context art , color freedom color, and freedom color, and 1960s art, and color color, and art avant garde, and color color, and avant garde censorship, and color color, and censorship censorship and ratings color, and prejudice against sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, context context, and color color, and 1960s materials color, and materials materials, and color Cezanne, Paul, and color color, and Paul Cezanne color, and chemistry color, and dyes color, and Vincent van Gogh van Gogh, Vincent, and color color, and Greeks color, and Impressionism color, and Middle Ages Matisse, Henri, and color color, and Henri Matisse color, and Wassily Kandinsky Kandinsky, Wassily, and color color, and Claude Monet Monet, Claude, and color color, and Isaac Newton Newton, Isaac, and color color, and oil painting color, and van Rijn Rembrandt color, and Renaissance color, and Georges Seurat color, and World War I World War I, and color color, and sensation Jung, Carl, and color color, and Carl Jung values war LB - 32430 PB - Farrar, Straus and Giroux PY - 2001 ST - Bright Earth: Art and the Invention of Color TI - Bright Earth: Art and the Invention of Color ID - 2903 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Philip Ball begins this work by quoting Norbert Wiener who said that "invention, as contrasted with the more general process of discovery, is not complete until it reaches the craftsman," by which time, Ball says, "it no longer seems heroic, and the rest of the world has generally lost interest." By taking this attitude, Ball argues, is to lose sight of some of the most important consequences of innovation. "This book is about invention," he writes, "and I think also about a craft: the craft of making new materials, of designing new fabrics for our world. I find these fabrics astonishing. We can make syntheic skin, blood, and bone. We can make an information superhighway from glass. We can make materials that repair themselves, that swell and flex like muscles, that repel any ink or paint, that capture the energy of the Sun." (3-4) Ball writes intelligently about complex scientific developments and in a manner that is understandable for non-scientists and other non-specialists. Heoffers a series of self-contained chapters designed to be "a collection of snapshots of materials science." (13) The opening chapter, "Light Talk: Photonic Materials," maintains that the next information technology revolution will abandon the transistor and use light to convey information. Chapter 2, "Total Recall: Materials for Information Storage," looks at light-based information storage. In this chapter, Ball explains magnetic recording ("writing with magnetisim"). He suggests that photonics will supersede this means of information storage. "Convention magnetic information storage is a technology designed to be compatible with electronic information processing," he writes. "But when photonics replaces this means of handling data (as it surely will), information storage will have to adapt to suit the new regime.... If photonics is to be the information technology of the future, there will be ever more of a pressing need to develop ways of storing data optically." (79) He discusses the advantages of compact discs and suggests that despite its advantages, its "fatal flaw ... is that its is not (yet) possible to erase and write over the information on a disk." (80) Chapter 3, "Clever Stuff: Smart Materials," argues that by coupling smart materials "to sensors and microprocessors" it will be possible to create "intelligent systmes that adapt their properties to their environment." (103) Chapter 4 is "Only Natural: Biomaterials." Chapter 5, "Spare Parts: Biomedical Materials," points out that "most of the human body can now be replaced with artificial parts," and that increasingly, the trend is "toward bioactive or bioadaptive materials that cooperate with living tissues rather than ignoring them. The ultimate goal is the growth of new organs, which will come from a marriage of molecular biology and materials science." (209) Chapter 6 is entitled "Full Power: Materials for Clean Energy." Chapter 7, "Tunnel Vision: Porous Materials," explains how "materials with finely sculpted interiors are now being built by molecular architects." (282) In "Hard Work: Diamond and Hard Materials," chapter 8, Ball talks about synthetic diamonds and "diamond films" that "can now be grown at low pressures from carbon-containing vapors," and which "promise to usher in ultra-hard protective coatings and new kinds of electrical and optical devices." (313) Chapter 9, deals with "Chain Reactions: The New Polymers," and chapter 10, "Face Value," covers "Surfaces and Interfaces" that are engineered with "molecular-scale precision." (384) Ball is a science writer trained in chemistry with a doctorate in physics. He has also written Bright Earth: Art and the Invention of Color (2001), about how the materials available for making colors, and the technology of color, have infuenced the nature of painting. AU - Ball, Philip CY - Princeton DA - 1997 KW - materials, and silicon discs, compact materials artificial intelligence and biotechnology digital media compact discs (CDs) digital media, and compact discs (CDs) optical fibers gallium arsenide genetic engineering graphite sound recording magnetic recording sound recording, and magnetic tape nanotechnology photodetectors optoelectronics phospholipids lasers polymers semiconductors integrated circuits sensors silicon dioxide silicon titanium information storage history and new media transistors inventions photonics CDs compact discs (CDs) fiber optics history inventions, and process of LB - 32940 PB - Princeton University Press PY - 1997 ST - Made to Measure: New Materials for the 21st Century TI - Made to Measure: New Materials for the 21st Century ID - 2932 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Barger, Susan M. CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1991 KW - photography science daguerreotype +photography and visual communication photography, and science science, and photography LB - 1370 PB - Smithsonian Institution Press PY - 1991 ST - The Daguerreotype: Nineteenth Century Technology and Modern Science TI - The Daguerreotype: Nineteenth Century Technology and Modern Science ID - 1533 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is an excellent study of how actors have been regarded through history in most, if not all, cultures of the world. The author notes that throughout history, at least prior to the twentieth century, actors have been held in low regard. AU - Barish, Jonas CY - Berkeley DA - 1981 KW - audiences values religion theaters theater morality law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and actors' status motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and critics theater, and critics motion pictures, and morality morality, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures censorship, and theater motion pictures, and censorship theater, and censorship values, and actors LB - 12770 PB - University of California Press PY - 1981 ST - The Antitheatrical Prejudice TI - The Antitheatrical Prejudice ID - 455 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book focuses on the visual makeup of the modern newspaper. “In these pages,” Barnhurst writes, “I have tried to describe and map out what has been published, so that journalists and readers need not make or see the newspaper without some sense of its visual history and meaning. I have also attempted to introduce the ideas from philosophy, science, and art that contribute to a visual understanding of newspapers.” The acknowledges that television is perhaps more important to mass culture. He believe, though, that studying the newspaper and its advertising has implications for better understanding television. Chapter 2, “Understanding Photography,” has a discussion of histories of photography. “General histories of photography often recite a story of technology pushed forward by ‘great men’ who responded to their social milieu. However, pictures also wield ideological power, convey myths, and affect their subjects. Photojournalists have tended to ignore ideology as they invented new ways of thinking about pictures.” AU - Barnhurst, Kevin G. CY - New York DA - 1994 KW - photography advertising, and public relations visual communication propaganda public relations democracy and media democracy communication revolution journalism communication revolution news and journalism newspapers news +photography and visual communication +books, periodicals, newspapers advertising newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers newspapers, and photography graphics revolution photojournalism photography, and history of press newspapers newspapers magazines books newspapers, and visual communication visual communication, and newspapers newspapers, and television newspapers, and visual makeup LB - 1380 PB - St. Martin’s Press PY - 1994 ST - Seeing the Newspaper TI - Seeing the Newspaper ID - 1534 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Tube of Plenty is a condensation of Barnouw's multi-volume History of Broadcasting in the United States. Barnouw presents a detailed history of television, from its earliest days, through the late 1980s, focusing on the evolution of the technology and the content. He follows the development of television from its roots in radio technology and business, and relates its history to the economic and political history of the United States. He describes in great detail the history of television programming, and provides rich insight into why Americans saw what they did when they did. --Phil Glende Tube of Plenty is a history of American television (and some radio) that is widely considered to be a classic. Erik Barnouw (now deceased), a former professor at Columbia University, writes the history as a series of stories. The birth of television cannot be understood without a look at the history of radio, according to Barnouw, so that’s where he begins, with fascinating stories of radio broadcasts in World War I (amateur operators got in the way of official army and navy transmissions) as the first radio stations (KDKA began broadcasting in Pittsburgh, PA before radios were commercially available). He details the history of television by beginning with the story of Philo Farnsworth, an Idahoan farm boy who invented TV and continues through to the 1980s and the rise of reality television. Barnouw argues that television has become a defining influence on American life, affecting everything from the level of political discourse (news broadcasts have become more superficial and politicians to rely more on advertising and media) to social change (cigarette advertising led to anti-cigarette broadcasts that informed the public about the dangers of nicotine). He deftly synthesizes his (mostly secondary) sources that include biographies of television personalities, advertisements; television programs themselves, and court documents. --Hallie Lieberman AU - Barnouw, Erik CY - New York DA - 1982 KW - U. S. Navy R & D USSR corporations corporations corporations corporations Federal Communications Commission (FCC) magnetic recording advertising and public relations censorship and ratings presidents, and new media Reagan administration propaganda public relations fiber optics research and development war journalism government materials magnetic tape materials cinema motion pictures celluloid fiber optics regulation news and journalism war non-USA radio news Hollywood Great Britain film television radio broadcasting advertising, and broadcasting American Broadcasting Company ABC AT & T Great Britain, and television cable, television television, and cable Columbia Broadcasting System crystals FCC radio, and FM General Electric Company radio, and Hollywood Hollywood, and radio Radio Act of 1927 Radio Act of 1912 Communication Act of 1934 U. S. Navy, and wireless military communication radio, and news news, and radio documentaries Paley, William television, public RCA Videotex Reagan, Ronald Sarnoff, David Soviet Union Twentieth Century-Fox optical fibers videodiscs videotape television, and videotape Glende, Phil advertising cable CBS NBC ABC Lieberman, Hallie Farnsworth, Philo T. advertising, and tobacco LB - 6540 OP - 1975 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1982 ST - Tube of Plenty: The Evolution of American Television TI - Tube of Plenty: The Evolution of American Television ID - 50 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Barnouw, Erik CY - New York DA - 1966 KW - U. S. Navy R & D corporations corporations corporations Federal Communications Commission (FCC) advertising, and public relations censorship and ratings propaganda public relations research and development war journalism government regulation news and journalism war radio news Hollywood +television +radio broadcasting advertising, and broadcasting crystals FCC radio, and frequency modulation General Electric Company radio, and Hollywood Hollywood, and radio Radio Act of 1927 Radio Act of 1912 Communication Act of 1934 U. S. Navy, and wireless +military communication radio, and news news, and radio documentaries Paley, William RCA advertising NBC radio, and FM National Broadcasting Corporation motion pictures LB - 6530 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1966 ST - A Tower of Babel: A History of Broadcasting in the United States, Volume I -- to 1933 TI - A Tower of Babel: A History of Broadcasting in the United States, Volume I -- to 1933 ID - 2031 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Barnouw based this work on interviews with documentarists and research in film archives in twenty countries. He (and his wife) also viewed some 700 documentary films and looked at many of their scripts. He notes that the documentary can both enlighten and deceive. "The documentarist has a passion for what he finds in images and sounds -- which always seem to him more meaningful than anything he can invent. Unlike the fiction artist, he is dedicated to not inventing. It is in selecting and arranging his findings that he expresses himself; these choices are, in effect, comments. And whether he adopts the stance of observer, or chronicler, or whatever, he cannot escape his subjectivity. He presents his vision of the world. "In denying himself invented action, the documentarist adopts a difficult limitation. Some artists turn from documentary to fiction because they feel it lets them get closer to the truth. Some, if would appear, turn to documentary because it can make deception more plausible. "Its plausibility, its authority, is the special quality of the documentary -- its attraction to those who use it, regardless of motive -- the source of its power to enlighten or deceive." AU - Barnouw, Erik CY - New York DA - 1974 KW - USSR Asia journalism news and journalism non-USA Sweden Soviet Union news +motion pictures Japan Italy India Great Britain Germany +motion pictures motion pictures, and documentaries documentaries Africa, and film documentaries Canada, and National Film Board Canada, and film documentaries China, and film documentaries Great Britain, and film documentaries France, and film documentaries Germany, and film documentaries Grierson, John India, and film documentaries Italy, and film documentaries Japan, and film documentaries Soviet Union, and film documentaries Poland, and film documentaries Riefenstahl, Leni Sweden, and film documentaries Vertov, Dziga, and film documentaries newsreels Africa Canada China Poland France Soviet Union LB - 10650 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1974 ST - Documentary: A History of the Non-Fiction Film TI - Documentary: A History of the Non-Fiction Film ID - 2428 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work follows volume I (A Tower of Babel) and Volume II (The Golden Web) by Barnouw. This volume covers television in the age of Joseph McCarthy, the Cold War, John F. Kennedy, Vietnam, and the first man landing on the moon. There is much interesting information in this work. For example, Barnouw discusses the use of videotape during the so-called "Kitchen Debate" between then Vice President Richard Nixon and then Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev. The work has an Appendix that covers major events chonologically from 1953-70. Another appendix deals with "Laws" with relevant sections from the Central Intelligence Agency Act of 1949, and the Communications Act of 1934. AU - Barnouw, Erik CY - New York DA - 1970 KW - Soviet Union corporations nationalism corporations Johnson, Lyndon corporations corporations corporations Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Eisenhower administration Central Intelligence Agency , television magnetic recording videotape Nixon, Richard Kennedy, John F. Eisenhower, Dwight D. Johnson, Lyndon McCarthy, Joseph presidents and new media war nationalism and communication blacklisting ABC CBS NBC radio CIA radio, and CIA CIA, and radio FCC videotape, and Kitchen Debate motion pictures television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television USSR Great Britain Khrushchev, Nikita television, and press conferences Kennedy, John F., and television radio, and shortwave shortwave radio videotape, and origins war Cold War Cold War, and television television, and Cold War advertising television advertising, and television television, and advertising aeronautics and space communication news and journalism satellites, and news news and journalism, and satellites FCC satellites CBS NBC ABC RCA USSR USIA propaganda Central Intelligence Agency Act (1949) Communications Act (1934) regulation non-USA news censorship and ratings magnetic tape magnetic recording advertising and public relations LB - 31880 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1970 ST - The Image Empire: A History of Broadcasting in the United States: Volume III -- from 1953 TI - The Image Empire: A History of Broadcasting in the United States: Volume III -- from 1953 VL - 3 ID - 2843 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Erik Barnouw tried to capture a period when the history of magic and history of cinema intersected. In his chapter on “ Nitrate Magic,” he talks about how magicians used movies and also how films were used to create new forms of magic film tricks, ghosts, metamorphoses, mayhem (e.g., decapitations), and “new tricks.” He asks in 1981 “Does not our magic industry via drama, documentary, docu-drama still summon up ghosts of yesterday and use them for present purposes, whether of statecraft, religion commerce.?” (105) He talks about slow motion being used as early as 1899. (p. 99) See especially pages 85-105. AU - Barnouw, Erik CY - New York DA - 1981 KW - theater stage words vs. images motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space ref, secondary theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magic motion pictures, and special effects cinema of attractions images vs. words cameras motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology motion pictures, and magic motion pictures, and slow motion ref, book LB - 860 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1981 ST - The Magician and the Cinema TI - The Magician and the Cinema ID - 3381 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This anti-pornography tract appeared as feminists and other groups were making a concerted efforts to boycott films and other entertainment deemed to be pornographic. Pornographic was seen as a form of sexual slavery. AU - Barry, Kathleen CY - Englewood Cliffs, N.J. DA - c1979 KW - women, and new media values sexuality motion pictures women feminism law censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture pornography women feminists women, and pornography feminists, and pornography pornography, and women pornography, and feminists censorship censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship feminists, and censorship censorship, and feminists values, and pornography critics values LB - 22580 PB - Prentice-Hall PY - 1979 ST - Female Sexual Slavery TI - Female Sexual Slavery ID - 894 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - French cultural critic and historian Roland Barthes here offers a study of photography that focuses on the mystical and almost spiritual properties of the photographic image that are often hard to account for in traditional interpretive or historical studies of the medium. His study grows out of a wider theoretical project which examined the extent to which we can view photographs as messages. He concluded that we can indeed look at photographs this way, but only after taking into account the fact that it is a message that appears without a 'code' (or a series of representational forms that stand for concrete meanings -- the way that words stand for objects they represent). The writing in Camera Lucida draws on the work of Swiss linguist Ferdinand de Saussure, who proposed that we might view language as a series of signifiers (words) that refer to distinct signifieds (meanings). Barthes problematizes this distinction through his claim that the signifiers and signifieds in a photograph do not always line up the way they do in language. Here he explores other ways images might convey meaning. This work was translated from French by Richard Howard. --Matt Lavine AU - Barthes, Roland CY - New York DA - 1981 KW - photography values +photography and visual communication linguistics +photography and visual communication Lavine, Matt linguistics, and photography photography, and linguistics Saussure, Ferdinand de values, and photography LB - 11180 PB - Hill and Wang PY - 1981 ST - Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photograph TI - Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photograph ID - 2479 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - “The MOS (metal-oxide-semiconductor) transistor,” writes the author, “the fundamental element in digital electronics, is the base technology of late-twentieth-century and early-twenty-first-century America. Though it digital electronics have entered almost every area of American life, first through the calculator, then through the digital watch, and finally through the microprocessor. The rise of the MOS transistor has made what was once ludicrous commonplace.” (1) The MOS transistor was “revolutionary” in the way it replaced the bipolar transistor which had been invented by John Bardeen, William Shockley, and Walter Brittain, and which previously had dominated the market. While the MOS transistor was slower than the bipolar transistor, it had an advantage in that more MOS transistors could be put on an integrated circuit. Intel was the company that exploited this technology perhaps most effectively. This work covers the years from 1945, when research began that led to the transistor at Bell Labs, until 1975, by which time MOS technology had produced such successful products as semiconductor memories and microprosessors. It attempts to trace MOS technology from a point when it seemed to be a bad idea until it was clear that this technology had become “the technological foundation of American society.” (11) This work is a volume in the Johns Hopkins Studies in the History of Technology series, edited by Merritt Roe Smith. It is well researched, and is based on primary and secondary sources. It also has an informative “Essay on Sources.” This book appears in the Johns Hopkins Studies in the History of Technology (Merritt Roe Smith, editor). AU - Bassett, Ross Knox CY - Baltimore DA - 2002 KW - R & D computers microprocessing transistors, and integrated circuits IBM digital media war +computers and the Internet transistors transistors, MOS transistors, bipolar Intel, and transistors IBM, and transistors semiconductors semiconductors, and bibliography microprocessors integrated circuits Moore, Gordon Moore's law Bell Laboratories, and transistors transistors, and Lee Boysel digitization Fairchild Semiconductor Boysel, Lee, and transistors research and development +military communication transistors, and military RAM Shockley, William, and bipolar transistors materials Shockley, William Random Access Memory (RAM) Bell Laboratories Intel Corp. LB - 220 PB - Johns Hopkins University Press PY - 2002 ST - To the Digital Age: Research Labs, Start-Up Companies, and the Rise of MOS Technology TI - To the Digital Age: Research Labs, Start-Up Companies, and the Rise of MOS Technology ID - 111 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This well-illustrated book provides an uncritical history of Technicolor’s efforts to bring color to motion pictures. One finds, for example, little information here on the government’s antitrust suit against Technicolor in 1947 or about competition from Eastman Kodak. Anyone wishing to verify quotations or examine the original sources used will be frustrated by the lack of endnotes. Herbert Kalmus is a central figure in the development of Technicolor. In addition to Kalmus, there is some information here about Leonard Troland, the Harvard psychologist who also helped to develop Technicolor. Basten provides an excerpt from Troland in which he discusses what types of films would be most appealing in Technicolor. He view contrasted with Kalmus who favored, according to Basten, "a series of historical dramas." (38) Troland favored films that appeared to "primitive instincts, such as sex, fear, and laughter. etc." (quoted, 38) Troland says in this passage: "'It is obvious that we are making subjects to sell to the public for the purpose of amusing them and that our main purpose is not uplift or education. It, therefore, seems to me that we must not be high-brow in our selections and that our pictures should appeal in a fairly simply way to primitive instincts, such as sex, fear, laughter, etc. Becoming acquainted with American history is certainly not a fundamental motive of this sort, although the appeal to patriotic emotion may work under certain circumstances. "'I am afraid that we are an academic or high-brow organization... Anything which we feel is beautiful is apt to be a flop with the public. Isn't it the best business judgement [sic] to do the old stuff that we know the public will buy, rather than try to set new standards in any domain except photography? "'I should like to see us make a series of two-reel comedies of a very ordinary type so far as action goes, but Ziegfeldized to the absolute limit that the censorship will stand. Then you will be playing color's highest card so far as box office value is concerned. I am as sure of this as any psychological proposition I would dare to lay down, because I know that the high-brows will buy as well as the low-brows when it come to sex appeal, and color has a great deal to add here. People want to laugh or a kick and not tears or historical instruction. The latter is what they desire for their children, not themselves. "'I should strongly recommend that we experiment with at least one subject which is distinctly of the type which we as a high-brow group would shun and would blush to sign our names to. Such an experiment will, in my opinion, be the best box office success of all.'" (quoted, p. 38) (my emphasis) Basten notes that in movies there was a decided shift to color in the mid-1960s, but as a for television, color videotape was difficult to transfer to other countries because of the different technology there. Basten writes: "The swing, however, was to color. Monochromatic filming, once the overwhelming choice of the industry, was now being pushed aside. The ratio of color to black-and-white took a pronounced leap in 1965 when practically all film exposed for television was multi-hued. And, beginning in 1967, with so few black-and-white films being made, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences no longer felt it was necessary to continue the two separate classification in their awards structure. (157) "Technicolor's decision to enter the television field was influenced by its major customers and independent producers, as well as by the move of the three major networks to increase broadcasting of programs filmed in color. The company's reputation was enhanced almost immediately by the disclosure, in late 1966, of a revolutionary technical breakthrough developed by its subsidiary division, Vidtronics. The new technique made possible production of full color television prints from television color tapes of both feature shows and commercials. Previously, shows and commercials on color video tape could not be used overseas because of incompatibility with foreign telecasting equipment. Transferring such color taped shows to color film by the Technicolor Vidtronics systems made taped color shows economically available for telecasting anywhere in the world." (157) (my emphasis) Like sound, color changed filmmaking bringing about new techniques of lighting, makeup, and set design as well as creating new stars. Basten emphasizes the high quality and durability of the Technicolor process. “Films made less than a decade ago,” he wrote in 1980, “processed by other methods than dye transfer Technicolor, are beginning to fade, slowly turning red in the studio vaults. “Despite modern technology, scientists have yet to discover how to create dyes for color positive prints that will remain stable when exposed to sunlight and air. Purists, in their concern, say that the most fool-proof way to preserve color films is to isolate the three basic colors – as in the old Technicolor process – and make dye transfer prints. The dyes in these prints are so stable that the life of the prints is not yet known. The oldest available samples, prior to 1930, show no visible signs of fading.” (166) This works includes a filmography of Technicolor productions or which contained scenes by Technicolor from 1917 to 1979. There is also a timeline of milestones in Technicolor history. Two other appendices explains the “Technicolor Technique” and list Technicolor films given Academy Awards. AU - Basten, Fred E. CY - South Brunswick and New York DA - 1980 KW - Kalmus, Herbert illustrations history historical preservation ref, secondary References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps preservation history, and new media motion pictures and popular culture timelines timelines, and Technicolor motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor history, and motion pictures historical preservation, and color motion pictures color, and Technicolor dye transfer Technicolor, and dye transfer process illustrations history cameras Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color history and new media history, and Technicolor Technicolor, and history nationalism and communication Technicolor, and patriotism patriotism, and Technicolor quotations quotations, and Technicolor and sex magnetic recording magnetic recording, and videotape videotape, and color color, and videotape quotations, and Techicolor TV abroad television television, and Technicolor Technicolor, and television television, and color videotape television, and color shows sent abroad nationalism, and color TV televisioin, and US influence abroad ref, book color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color nationalism patriotism videotape LB - 40120 PB - A. S. Barnes and Company PY - 1980 ST - Glorious Technicolor: The Movies' Magic Rainbow TI - Glorious Technicolor: The Movies' Magic Rainbow ID - 4110 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This brief book (125 pages counting references and bibliography) provides a stimulating account of how color in art has throughout history been viewed with suspicion. That prejudie can be traced back as far as Plato and Aristotle and may have helped to form the foundation for “a whole tradition … of ‘moral Puritanism and aesthetic austerity,’” in which only a black-and-white world stripped of odor and color “may be said to be true, beautiful, and good.’” (Bachelore quoting Jacqueline Lichtenstein). Color has been viewed as “the corruption of culture,” something with the “power to overwhelm and annihilate,” or at the very least “undo all the hard-won achievements” of civilization, and hence in need of strong social and moral controls. Long “the object of extreme prejudice” in literature, philosophy, and art, often “regarded as alien and therefore dangerous,” color has been sometimes linked with “the feminine, the oriental, the primitive, the infantile, the vulgar, the queer or the pathological.” It has been commonly associated with “sexual and racial phobias” (e.g., male homosexuality). AU - Batchelor, David CY - London DA - 2000 KW - censorship avant garde context art Aristotle , color freedom color, and freedom color, and 1960s art, and color color, and art avant garde, and color color, and avant garde censorship, and color color, and censorship censorship and ratings color, and prejudice against sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, context context, and color color, and 1960s color, and sensation Aristotle, and color color, and Aristotle Plato, and color color, and Plato Plato values values, and color color, and values LB - 32420 PB - Reaktion Books PY - 2000 ST - Chromophobia TI - Chromophobia ID - 2902 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author writes: “The development in exhibitions from an annual event on a public holiday to the exclusive medium for the presentation of art, the emergence of the public and public criticism, and the orientation of artists to exhibition work, was the most decisive and consequential change in the art world since the Renaissance. Artists had to define, legitimate and finance their work in public competition with each other. Generally, the court artists were appointed to a position by contract, and the studio artists had contracts for commissions, stating the price. The patron could prove to be difficult, moody or a bad payer, and the court artist could also find himself at the mercy of advisers and intriguers. The studio artist had to adjust to the changing demands of patrons and the requirements of the market. By contrast, the exhibition artist had to work “at his own risk, to be judged by an unknown recipient, who could not always be accused of ignorance and a one-sided view. To calculate or steer public reaction, which could vary between aggressive disdain and enthusiasm or even acclamation, new strategies had to be developed. The exhibition as a forum for rivalry and an arena where artists fought for recognition intensified competition between artists. To be successful the exhibition artist had to be the subject of public discussion, had to find access to the media and project an interesting image to accompany his works. He was and is forced to win from the exhibition-going public followers of like mind, media support, buyers and patrons; and if necessary he must go to court to defend his interests. “The exhibitions immediately gave rise to the suspicion that artists could be corrupted by money, mass taste, cheap applause and the pressure to succeed in the competitive art world.” AU - Bätschmann, Oskar CY - Cologne DA - 1997 KW - exhibitions photography media mass media photography and visual communication art exhibitions, and art mass media, and art capitalism, and art mass media, and culture artists, and market place self-expression, and market place capitalism art, and commercialism commercialism, and art art commercialization LB - 1390 PB - DuMont Buchverlay PY - 1997 ST - The Artist in the Modern World: The Conflict Between Market and Self-Expression TI - The Artist in the Modern World: The Conflict Between Market and Self-Expression ID - 1535 ER - TY - EDBOOK A4 - Mark Poster, ed. and intro. AB - This work assembles many of Baudrillard's writings between 1968 and 1985, published originally in French. Mark Poster's "Introduction" provides an informative overview of Baudrillard's work. Poster writes: "Baudrillard has developed a theory to make intelligible one of the fascinating and perplexing aspects of advanced industrial society: the proliferation of communications through the media. This new language practice differs from both face-to-face symbolic exchange and print. The new media employ the montage principle of film (unlike print) and time-space distancing (unlike face-to-face conversation) to structure a unique linguistic reality. Baudrillard theorizes from the vantage point of the new media to argue that a new culture has emerged, one that is impervious to the old forms of resistance and impenetrable by theories rooted in traditional metaphysical assumptions. Culture is now dominated by simulations, Baudrillard contends, objects and discourses that have no firm origin, no referent, no ground or foundation. In this sense, what Walter Benjamin wrote about 'the age of mechanical reproduction,' Baudrillard applies to all reaches of everyday life." The last selection in this work is Baudrillard's 1985 article in New Literary History entitled "The Masses: The Implosion of the Social in the Media." In this essay, he takes a different tone than that of his earlier pessimistic "Requiem for the Media," a response to Hans Enzensberger's optimism about new media. In "The Masses....," Baudrillard writes: "....I would no longer interpret in the same way the forced silence of the masses in the mass media. I would no longer see in it a sign of passivity and of alienation, but to the contrary an original strategy, an original response in the form of a challenge; and on the basis of this reversal I suggest ... a vision of things which is no longer optimistic or pessimistic, but ironic and antagonistic." AU - Baudrillard, Jean CY - Stanford, CA DA - 1988 KW - technology advertising, and public relations seeing at a distance reality propaganda public relations print print culture preservation postmodernism modernism modernity communication revolution history, and new media communication revolution, and second industrial revolution non-USA history values polling new way of seeing linguistics history general studies Enzensberger, Hans Benjamin, Walter McLuhan, Marshall advertising polling, and opinion values, and new media new way of seeing, and new media France, theory theory history, break with second industrial revolution communication revolution reality, and media technology and society linguistics, and media Baudrillard, Jean electronic media France montage modernism print v. visual media postmodernism LB - 4120 PB - Stanford University Press PY - 1988 ST - Jean Baudrillard: Selected Writings TI - Jean Baudrillard: Selected Writings ID - 1800 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - French postmodernist Jean Baudrillard writes that "America is the original version of modernity. We are the dubbed or subtitled version. America ducks the question of origins; it cultivates no origin or mythical authenticity; it has no past and no found truth. Having known no primitive accumulation of time, it lives in a perpetual present. Having seen no slow, centuries-long accumulation of a principle of truth, it lives in perpetual simulation, in perpetual present of signs. The Indians' territory is today marked off in reservations, the equivalent of the galleries in which America stocks its Rembrandts and Renoirs. But this is of no importance -- America has no identity problem. In the future, power will belong to those peoples with no origins and no authenticity who know how to exploit that situation to the full.... America was already in its day a satellite of the planet Europe. Whether we like it or not, the future has shifted towards artificial satellites. (76) "The US is utopia achieved." (77) Later Baudrillard says that the "advertisements which cut into the films on TV are admittedly an outrage, but they aptly emphasize that most television productions never even reach the 'aesthetic' level and are, basically, of the same order as advertisements. Most films -- including many of the better ones -- are made up from the same everyday romance: cars, telephones, psychology, make-up. They are purely and simply illustrations of the way of life. Advertising does just the same: it canonizes the way of life through images, making the whole a genuinely integrated circuit." (101-02) He goes on to say that "it is Disneyland that is authentic here! The cinema and TV are America's reality! The freeways, the Safeways, the skylines, speed, and deserts -- these are America, not the galleries, churches, and culture." (104) AU - Baudrillard, Jean (translated by Chris Turner) CY - London and New York DA - 1986, 1988 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations values preservation motion pictures history, and new media history postmodernism simulations +television +motion pictures and popular culture advertising motion pictures, and advertising advertising, and motion pictures television, and advertising advertising, and television values values, and technology values, and media history, break with LB - 3170 PB - Verso PY - 1986 ST - America TI - America ID - 405 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Baudrillard sets out a theory of modern culture, one that focuses more on cultural expenditures and on cultural production. He uses the terms “simulacrum – the copy without an original” and “simulation” to consider mass reproduction and reproducibility in contemporary electronic media culture. “Today abstraction is no longer that of the map, the double, the mirror, or the concept. Simulation is no longer that of a territory, a referential being, or a substance,” Baudrillard writes. “It is the generation by models of a real without origin or reality: a hyperreal. The territory no longer precedes the map, nor does it survive it. It is nevertheless the map that precedes the territory – precession of simulacra – that engenders the territory....” A few of the chapters in this work include “The Precession of Simulacra”; “The Implosion of Meaning in the Media”; “Absolute Advertising, Ground-Zero Advertising”; “ Holograms”; “Simulacra and Science Fiction”; and “On Nihilism.” AU - Baudrillard, Jean (translated by Sheila Faria Glaser) CY - Ann Arbor, MI DA - 1994 (originally 1981 by Éditions Galilée) KW - nationalism imperialism advertising, and public relations reality propaganda public relations values print print culture electronic media non-USA postmodernism virtual reality critics advertising advertising, and Jean Baudrillard print v. electronic reality, and new media electronic media, and reality values, and electronic media empire, and communication +nationalism and communication nationalism, and new media cultural imperialism values LB - 710 PB - University of Michigan Press PY - 1994 ST - Simulacra and Simulation TI - Simulacra and Simulation ID - 159 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a collection of papers given at a conference in London in April, 1993, on “Resistance to New Technology -- Past and Present.” About 150 people from twenty countries attended the meeting. The conference had three objectives: 1) to assess the nature of resistance in the recent past; 2) to make comparison between different technologies within this context; 3) “to think about, and work towards, a functional analysis of resistance in the process of technological development. The meeting provided material to overcome the technocratic bias according to which resistance is nothing but a nuisance in the technological process.” The book focuses on three major post-1945 developments: nuclear power, innovations in computers and information technology, and biotechnology. The work’s attention is mainly, although not exclusively, on Europe. “In making comparisons the contributions reach out historically to the origins of the idea of ‘progress’ and the Luddite revolt of the early nineteenth century, and geographically to Australia, North America and Japan. The scope of the book prohibits the inclusion of several dimensions of the problem of resistance worth mentioning. First, the book excludes the problems of resistance or non-resistance to new technology in authoritarian and totalitarian systems such as Eastern Europe between 1945 and the collapse of communism, the USSR, or China. Secondly, it excludes the problem of resistance to new technology in developing regions such as South America, India and South East Asia....” The publisher summarizes this book as follows: “This book compares resistance to technology across time, nations and technologies. ... The focus is on post-1945 Europe, with comparisons made with the USA, Japan and Australia. Instead of assuming that resistance contributes to the failure of a technology, the main thesis of this book is that resistance is a constructive force in technological development, giving technology its particular shape in a particular context. Whilst many people still believe in science and technology, many have become more skeptical of the allied ‘progress’. By exploring the idea that modernity creates effects that undermine its own foundations, forms and effects of resistance are explored in various contexts. This interdisciplinary work includes essays by sociologiests, political scientists, historians, and psychologists. The volume includes the following essays: Martin Bauer’s Preface, “Resistance to new technology and its effects on nuclear power, information technology and biotechnology.” In Part I (“Conceptual Issues”), papers include: Alain Touraine, “The crisis of ‘Progress’”; Adrian Randall, “Reinterpreting ‘Luddism’: resistance to new technology in the British Industrial Revolution”; Dancker D L. Daamen and Ivo a Van Der Lans, “The changeability of public opinions about new technology: assimilation effects in attitude surveys”; Martin Bauer, “‘Technophobia’: a misleading conception of resistance to new technology.” Part II deals with “Case studies” in Scandinavia, Australia, Great Britain, and the United States (see John Staudenmaier, “Henry Ford’s relationship to ‘Fordism’: ambiguity as a modality of technological resistance.” Part III is entitled “International comparisons.” Essays in this section include: Antonio J. J. Botelho, “The politics of resistance to new technology: semiconductor diffusion in France and Japan until 1965"; Ian Miles and Graham Thomas, “User resistance to new interactive media: participants, processes and paradigms”; Dieter Rucht, “The impact of anti-nuclear power movements in international comparison”; Robert Bud, “In the engine of industry: regulators of biotechnology, 1970-86"; Sheila Jasanoff, “Product, process, or programme: three cultures and the regulation of biotechnology.” Part IV is “Comparison of different technologies”: Joachim Radkau, “Learning from Chernobyl for the fight against genetics? Stages and stimuli of German protest movements -- a comparative synopsis”; Hans Mathias Kepplinger, “Individual and institutional impacts upon press coverage of sciences: the case of nuclear power and genetic engineering in Germany”; Dorothy Nelkin, “Forms of intrusion: comparing resistance to information technology and biotechnology in the USA.” Bauer’s Afterword is entitled “Towards a functional analysis of resistance.” AU - Bauer, Martin, ed. CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - technology computers USSR interactivity modernism modernity modernism communication revolution genetics community democracy non-USA values semiconductors progress Luddism Information Age Industrial Revolution +artificial intelligence and biotechnology biotechnology information age, and resistance to technology, and resistance to Luddism Great Britain Japan Australia Switzerland Soviet Union, and Chernobyl Germany Europe France, resistance to technology semiconductors, and France interactive media biotechnology, and regulation (1970-86) Industrial Revolution, and Great Britain progress, and history of Luddism, and Great Britain genetic engineering communication revolution values, and biotechnology values, and information technology values, and nuclear energy Ford, Henry technology and society culture, and resistance to technology democracy and media modernity Soviet Union culture France Japan semiconductors, and Japan critics +computers and the Internet biotechnology, and regulation LB - 2580 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1995 ST - Resistance to new technology: nuclear power, information technology and biotechnology (conference proceedings) TI - Resistance to new technology: nuclear power, information technology and biotechnology (conference proceedings) ID - 1651 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The early days of television were fraught with experimentation by networks, regulators and other mass media industries. Competing philosophies among the network front-runners led to a variety of show types and a race for audience cultivation. Meanwhile, regulators were forced to choose between enforcing network commitment to public service programming and ensuring ubiquitous public access to the new medium. Film and, to a lesser extent, radio and newspapers adapted themselves to complement, rather than compete with, the new broadcast network. While evolving technology and viewer preferences significantly impacted the direction of the American system of broadcasting, advertisers played perhaps the most influential role. Through their direct involvement in programming, their dependency upon the most far-reaching medium of the time but mostly through their choice of which programs to support, advertiser influence on networks have made American TV what it is. As television spread to major cities and then to all corners of the country, preferences of the television audience were sounded through network programming experiments. A variety of shows were produced, and not all of those that were to remain standing tropes of television appeared as successes early on. Both networks and advertisers spent the early years of television trying to figure out not only what the audience liked, but who the audience was and how to expand the latter. The competing schedules of the Big Two early TV networks (CBS and NBC) were partially accounted for by practical reasons of investment opportunities and counter-programming strategies. But they were also a product of distinctly different philosophies of the network executives. Ultimately, mass entertainment prevailed over high culture or news programming due to viewer and advertiser preference as well as the pressures of competition and profit-making. As the regulations and structures of radio were transferred to television, problems of public access and network competition were almost inevitable. While broadcasters were overwhelmingly conscious of a civic duty demanding high standards and public service programming, the commercial pressures of competition were something neither morals nor governmental regulation were able to completely overcome. The cultural values expressed in early television programming were a direct import of the norms of radio broadcasting. Dominated by a house-guest mentality, broadcasters were careful not to offend neither the (active) listener audience nor the political elites of Congress and the FCC. Even before television, advertisers had played a major role in sponsoring America’s mass media. With television, advertisers actually lost some of the control over programming that they’d had with radio, as expensive programs demanded multiple sponsors and less oversight. However, advertisers still had a strong say in what went on air and, through their patronage, encouraged less competition between networks in order to reach the largest possible audience. Only after the commercial sponsorship system was firmly entrenched did advertisers begin to consider targeted demographic in conjunction with broadest possible appeals. Television news began at a time of changing standards for broadcast reporting, facilitated by the demands created by World War II and the Korean War. However, public demand for television news was slight at best, and that usually only when the news contained some inherent drama. Networks produced news mostly to cultivate goodwill among political leaders; but while quality did increase in the 1950s, television never established itself as the dominant medium of news. The film industry was a late entrant to the television age, initially anticipating as many did that the TV fad could not compete with theaters. Eventually, though, the two industries began to work together, sharing technology and performers. Executives slowly discovered the profitability of reruns and TV movies, and partnerships with Hollywood studios proved a boon whenever networks struggled. --Dale Erlandson AU - Baughman, James L. CY - Baltimore DA - 2007 KW - Erlandson, Dale television motion pictures television, and motion pictures news and journalism television, and news journalism, and television censorship and ratings television, and censorship censorship, and television advertising and public relations television, and advertising advertising, and television public relations, and television television, and public relations FCC television, and FCC FCC, and television democracy education television, and democracy democracy, and television education, and television television, and education advertising censorship journalism public relations LB - 33040 PB - Johns Hopkins University Press PY - 2007 ST - Same Time, Same Station: Creating American Television TI - Same Time, Same Station: Creating American Television ID - 51 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Although this book discusses several media, television is at the core of this study. Baughman writes: “During the second half of the twentieth century, the American mass media underwent an extraordinary transformation. A new mass medium, television, quickly proved the most popular of the public arts. Americans who had once spent their evenings using a variety of mass media -- films, newspapers, periodicals, and radio -- were likely by the mid- and late-1950s to watch television. People still went to the movie house, read a daily paper or a magazine, and listened to a radio program, but the amount of time they devoted to each activity declined, in some cases dramatically.” AU - Baughman, James L. CY - Baltimore DA - 1992 KW - law values +television general studies +motion pictures +radio +books, periodicals, newspapers regulation values, and media censorship and ratings LB - 6550 PB - The Johns Hopkins University Press PY - 1992 ST - The Republic of Mass Culture: Journalism, Filmmaking, and Broadcasting in America since 1941 TI - The Republic of Mass Culture: Journalism, Filmmaking, and Broadcasting in America since 1941 ID - 2033 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Why has the United States had “the least regulated broadcasting system of any modern democracy,” Baughman asks? This work argues that the Federal Communications Commissions was often ineffective because of political opposition in Washington, not because it was controlled by broadcasters. Such liberal FCC chairs as Newton Minow and E. William Henry, who succeeded Minow, had their initiatives to regulate television frustrated “by jealous members of Congress and cautious Presidents.” During the late 1960s, widespread dissatisfaction with the commercial networks led to the establishment by Congress of the Public Broadcasting System. By the late 1970s and early 1980s, conservatives and liberals alike called for abolishing the FCC. AU - Baughman, James L. CY - Knoxville DA - 1985 KW - Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulation censorship and ratings regulation community democracy law media +television regulation television, and regulation Minow, Newton Henry, E. William public broadcasting FCC democracy and media censorship LB - 6560 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - University of Tennessee Press PY - 1985 ST - Television’s Guardians: The FCC and the Politics of Programming, 1958-1967 TI - Television’s Guardians: The FCC and the Politics of Programming, 1958-1967 ID - 2034 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Vannevar Bush assigned Baxter to write this official history of the Office of Scientific Research and Development during World War II. The book attempts to survey the range of scientific advances during the war: chemistry, military medicine, the development of the atomic bomb. Some material here relates to communication. For example, Part II (“New Weapons and Devices”) has chapters on radar, sonar, and rocketry, as well as the proximity fuse. There are also pages on high altitude communication, VHF, and “speech secrecy systems.” AU - Baxter, James Phinney, 3rd CY - Boston DA - 1946 KW - R & D atomic power research and development war war general studies Bush, Vannevar World War II +military communication radar sonar rocketry VHF Office of Scientific Research and Development research and development World War II, and research and development atomic bomb nuclear weapons proximity fuse +aeronautics and space communication atomic energy LB - 40 PB - Little, Brown and Company PY - 1946 ST - Scientists Against Time TI - Scientists Against Time ID - 1400 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - A Great Idea at the Time is a narrative that discusses the long and tortuous history of the “Great Books” idea in America. Beam focuses on Robert Hutchins and Mortimer Alder, the two prime advocates of a Great Books curriculum in American higher education. Beam spends the early part of his book discussing the Great Books idea in both higher education and adult/extension education during the 1930s and 1940s. The second part of A Great Idea at the Time is devoted largely to the publishing history of the Great Books collection, and all the trials and tribulations that resulted. Beam also examines why the Great Books were as popular as they were during the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. The last section of the book examines the Great Books idea today, particularly their downfall in academia and their role in the “Culture Wars.” Beam also places himself squarely in the narrative by visiting a Great Books discussion session as well as a college (St. John’s) devoted entirely to the Great Books. -Ryder Kouba AU - Beam, Alex CY - New York DA - 2008 KW - Kouba, Ryder Books, Periodicals, Newspapers Adler, Mortimer, and Great Books Hutchins, Robert, and Great Books education democracy children and media values, and Great Books information storage, and Great Books information storage values Adler, Mortimer LB - 4980 PB - Public Affairs PY - 2008 ST - A Great Idea at the Time: The Rise, Fall, and Curious Afterlife of the Great Books TI - A Great Idea at the Time: The Rise, Fall, and Curious Afterlife of the Great Books ID - 10 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Robert C. Beck was an electronic and optical engineer who had pioneered techniques used in kaleidoscopic light shows that were in vogue among underground film makers and in West Coast discotheques during the mid- and late-1960s. Beck worked with producer-director Roger Corman in creating the special effects for the movie The Trip (1967), that starred Peter Fonda, and was about the psychedelic experience taking LSD. Beck had been involved with experimental cinema and was interested in what was then emerging as the “Theatre of the Now,” and had also been a technical adviser for film about Timothy Leary and LSD called Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out (United Productions of America, UPA,1967). This manual talks about how to set up light shows and where to get the appropriate equipment. It also has an essay by Dr. Henry Hill entitled "Color Games Traps," in which, a psychedelic artist who designed the cover of Beck's manual, talks about the psychological effects of light and color shows. AU - Beck, Robert C. CY - Los Angeles DA - 1967 (3d ed.) KW - censorship drug abuse color motion pictures motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and drugs drugs, and motion pictures Nicholoson, Jack Corman, Roger Hill, Henry, and psychedelic art color, and special effects special effects, and color censorship and ratings color, and media effects media effects, and color censorship, and color color, and censorship media effects special effects substance abuse LB - 30610 OP - 1966 PB - Pericles Press PY - 1967 ST - Color Games: Light Show Manual TI - Color Games: Light Show Manual ID - 2822 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Becker describes this work by saying that it “presents the results of two research projects which were undertaken separately, but which were related in content to each other.” Becker and English paper engineer Arthur W. Western supervised the projects which were undertaken for the German Agency for Technical Cooperation (GTZ). “The first project was an attempt to develop a model for the relationship between cultural paper and the Third World.... The second ... had a more concrete, practical orientation; together with colleagues from Third World countries, we aimed at the evaluation of paper mills which complied at least with the following two critieria: 1. annual production of approximately 10,000 tonnes, 2. using non-wood pulp as raw material.” This volume assembles papers that emerged from the second GTZ project. They were first delivered at a workshop in New Delhi in April, 1988, entitled “Small Paper and Paper Mills in Developing Countries.” The work contains twenty-two essays divided under five headings: “General Situation,” The GTZ Project,” “Different Country Reports,” “Pollution Control and Process Technology,” and “Outlook.” AU - Becker, Jörg, ed. CY - New Delhi, India DA - 1991 KW - Asia materials Third World non-USA materials paper Third World, and paper paper, non-wood pulp India India, and paper Burma Burma, and paper China China, and paper Germany Germany, and paper environment, and paper technology paper, and environment environment LB - 2270 PB - Concept Publishing Company PY - 1991 ST - Small Pulp and Paper Mills in Developing Countries TI - Small Pulp and Paper Mills in Developing Countries ID - 315 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Jefferson lived before the typewriter, carbon paper, and photocopying machines. How did he manage to preserve so much of his writing, Bedini asks. “Reviewing his writing tools and habits, it is surprising to learn that although he owned the most advanced writing tools of his time, including a ‘reservoir’ or fountain pen, he customarily used the common quill for most of his life. Writing was such an important activity in his life that he even designed furniture for the purpose. He as well as Benjamin Franklin and George Washington owned and used Watt copying presses, then considered the most innovative writing aid. Always alert to the new and experimental, however, Jefferson promptly abandoned his press for a new invention called the ‘polygraph,’ a writing machine which he continued to use for more than twenty years and which, of all his writing tools, he loved best and most intrigued him. Nonetheless, he never overlooked an opportunity to experiment with new writing and duplicating processes and devices as they became available.” This book uses correspondence between Jefferson, the manufacturer Charles Willson Peale, engineer Benjamin Henry Latrobe, and the inventor John Isaac Hawkins. The papers of Peale, Labrobe, and Jefferson are among the primary collections used to document Jefferson preoccupation copying and duplicating. AU - Bedini, Silvio A. CY - Charlottesville DA - 1984 KW - print presses +duplicating technologies Jefferson, Thomas writing Latrobe, Benjamin Henry Peale, Charles Willson Hawkins, John Isaac writing machines, the polygraph presses, Watt writing machines writing print media LB - 5620 PB - University Press of Virginia PY - 1984 ST - Thomas Jefferson and His Copying Machines TI - Thomas Jefferson and His Copying Machines ID - 1947 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This unannotated two-volume bibliography has 11,784 entries, a detailed index, and attempts to cover the entire scope of American history. It is a continuation of a work first published in 1942 and reprinted in 1959 and 1973. This edition contains the titles in the earlier editions plus new entries. The compilation took place mainly in the Library of Congress, the National Agricultural Library, the National Archives Library, the Department of Justice Library, and at Georgetown University Library. Numerous entries relate to history of new communication technologies. Themes covered include aeronautics, aviation, satellites, photography, radio, sound recording, photocopying, phonograph records, television, paper, books, newspapers, microfilm, electricity, information storage and libraries, magazines, motion pictures, and more. AU - Beers, Henry Putney CY - Woodbridge, CT DA - 1982 KW - technology R & D science magnetic recording photography women, and new media theses technology, and bibliographies and society print research and development war microfiche, microfilm, microform news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers archives materials materials magnetic tape law law news and journalism war non-USA +bibliographies bibliographies, and eronautics bibliographies, and satellites bibliographies, and photography bibliographies, and radio bibliographies, and sound recording bibliographies, and photocopying bibliographies, and phonograph bibliographies, and phonograph records bibliographies, and television bibliographies, and paper bibliographies, and books bibliographies, and magazines bibliographies, and microfilm bibliographies, and electricity bibliographies, and libraries bibliographies, and information storage bibliographies, and technology, and bibliographies bibliographies, and Ph.D. theses bibliographies, and cartography bibliographies, and Canada bibliographies, and chapbooks bibliographies, and copyright bibliographies, and medical data banks bibliographies, and motion pictures bibliographies, and Europe bibliographies, and science fiction bibliographies, and geography bibliographies, and communication bibliographies, and printing bibliographies, and prints bibliographies,and Latin America bibliographies, and law bibliographies, and microform bibliographies, and military communication bibliographies, and newspapers bibliographies, and transportation bibliographies, and railroads bibliographies, and women bibliographies, and World War II bibliographies, and World War I bibliographies, and videotape +aeronautics and space communication satellites +photography and visual communication radio +sound recording photocopying phonograph +television paper books books, periodicals, newspapers magazines microfilm +electricity libraries information storage technology, and bibliographies Theses, Ph. D. cartography Canada chapbooks copyright medicine medical data bases +motion pictures Europe science fiction geography printing prints Latin America law microform +military communication newspapers +transportation railroads women World War II World War I videotape +duplicating technologies +future and science fiction future news technology and society LB - 11920 PB - Research Publications, Inc. PY - 1982 ST - Bibliographies in American History, 1942-1978 TI - Bibliographies in American History, 1942-1978 VL - 2 volumes ID - 2539 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This carefully worded report is the result of two year of work by a committee of distinguished behavioral scientists. The committee is frank about questions it was unable to answer. An opening chapter provides the report's "Findings and Conclusions." Nine chapters and five appendices follow. The chapters deal with "Violence in Society and in the Television Medium"; "Some Problems of Research on the Impact of Television"; "Television Content"; "Changing Patterns of Television Use"; "Television and Violence in the World of Children"; "Television and Adolescent Aggressiveness"; "Current Knowledge and Questions for Future Research"; "The Unfinished Agenda." With regard to the question "how much contribution to the violence of our society is made by extensive violent television by our youth?" the Report answers: "The evidence (or more accurately, the difficulty of finding evidence) suggests that the effect is small compared with many other possible causes, such as parental attitudes or knowledge or and experience with the real violence of our society. "The sheer amount of television violence may be unimportant compared with such subtle matters as what the medium says about it: is it approved or disapproved, committed by sympathetic or unsympathetic characters, shown to be effective or not, punished or unpunished? Social science today cannot say which aspects of the portrayal of violence make a major difference or in what way. It is entirely possible that some types of extensive portrayals of violence could reduce the propensity to violence in society and that some types might increase it. In our present state of knowledge, we are not able to specify what kinds of violence portrayal will have what net result on society." (7-8) This work appeared at a time when empirical research on violence in the mass media was relatively undeveloped. In the decades that followed, literally hundreds of studies on this topic appeared. AU - Behavior, Surgeon General's Scientific Advisory Committee on Television and Social CY - Washington, D.C. DA - [1972] KW - children Surgeon General media effects media violence violence media effects censorship and ratings children television television, and violence violence, and television children, and media effects media effects, and children Surgeon General, and tv violence violence, and behavior scientists media effects, and behavior scientists children children, and media LB - 490 PB - U. S. Government Printing Office ST - Television and Growing Up: The Impact of Televised Violence TI - Television and Growing Up: The Impact of Televised Violence ID - 137 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In the 1976 Foreword to this book, Bell wrote“In a narrower, technical sense, the major problem for the post-industrial society will be the development of an appropriate ‘infrastructure’ for the developing compunications networks (the phrase is Anthony Oettinger’s) of digital information technologies that will tie the post-industrial society together. The first infra-structure in society is transportation -- roads, canals, rail, air -- for the movement of people and goods. The second infra-structure has been the energy utilities -- oil pipeline, gas, electricity -- for the transmission of power. The third infra-structure has been telecommunications, principally the voice telephone, radio, and television. But now with the explosive growth of computers and terminals for data (the number of data terminals in use in the United States went from 185,000 in 1970 to 800,000 in 1976) and the rapid decrease in the costs of computation and information storage, the question of hitching together the varied ways information is transmitted in the country becomes a major issue of economic and social policy. “The ‘economics of information’ is not the same character as the ‘economics of goods,’ and the social relations created by the new networks of information (from an interactive research group communication created by national television) are not the older social patterns -- or work relations -- of industrial society. We have -- if this kind of society develops -- the foundations of a vastly different kind of social structure than we have previously known.” One example of the way in which cheap communication created new social patterns was the use of citizen band radio, which became something of a fad during the mid-1970s. Two ways contemporary society differed from earlier eras was in the pace of change and in the “change of scale,” Bell said. “These two concepts -- the pace of change and the change of scale -- are the organizing idea for the discussion of the central structural components of the post-industrial society, the dimensions of knowledge and technology.” Chapter 3 deals with “The Dimensions of Knowledge and Technology The New Class Structure of Post-Industrial Society.” Bell said that technology had been a major factor in creating “the radical gap between the present and the past.” He offered five ways in which it had created this gap 1) it had raised the standard of living by creating more goods and reduced cost; 2) it had created a new class of engineers and technicians; 3) it created a new definition of rationality emphasizing functional relationships and quantitative techniques; 4) revolutions in communication and transportation had created new social relationships and economic interdependencies; and 5) “esthetic perceptions, particularly of space and time, have been radically altered.” This book considers a good deal more than communication, but new ways of communicating were important to understanding the nature of post-industrial society, Bell believed. AU - Bell, Daniel CY - New York DA - 1973 KW - space (spatial) and communication aeronautics and space communication time and timekeeping time preservation labor communication revolution archives history, and new media communication revolution, and second industrial revolution history office office, and new media office +transportation geography general studies postindustrial society infrastructure digital media railroads +telephones +electricity telecommunications +radio +television citizen band radio communication revolution space (spatial) time quantification transportation revolution +aeronautics and space (spatial) communication critics digitization +information storage second industrial revolution postmodernism history, break with satellites LB - 11520 PB - Basic Books PY - 1973 ST - The Coming of Post-Industrial Society A Venture in Social Forecasting TI - The Coming of Post-Industrial Society A Venture in Social Forecasting ID - 1401 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - One interesting section of Bellamy’s book discusses a room in which a wide array of music is broadcast by means of telephone. The volume was adjusted by merely touching “one or two screws.” Of course, by this time (1887) concerts had been broadcast by telephone to people who could afford this service in Europe. Other interesting sections in Bellamy’s work include the use of a system that employed tubes to deliver messages between stores and warehouses. The author also talks about books, libraries, newspapers, and magazines of the future. AU - Bellamy, Edward CY - Boston DA - 1887 KW - entertainment entertainment, home labor archives future and science fiction news and journalism home, and new media home office office, and information technology home, and information technology libraries information technology libraries, and information storage telephones future science fiction information storage libraries networks information technology, and office information technology, and home books, periodicals, newspapers sound recording radio office, and new media home entertainment newspapers news LB - 5290 PB - Houghton Mifflin Company PY - 1887 ST - Looking Backward, 2000 - 1887 TI - Looking Backward, 2000 - 1887 ID - 1647 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is based on research in the Sponable Collection at Columbia University, the Warner Bros. Archives at USC, the UCLA Film Archives, the Film Study Center at the Museum of Modern Art, and the Lincoln Center Library for the Performing Arts. Belton writes that “Cinerama, CinemaScope, and other widescreen systems did not emerge magically from the head of Hollywood; their success in the mid-1950s did not occur in a historical vacuum but against a background of earlier failure. A close examination of the factors which led to the abortion of the wide-film revolution of 1926-1930, when Fox and other studios attempted to innovate various wide-film systems, revealed that these ‘negative’ determinants were reversed in the postwar era, prompting the adoption of technologies remarkably similar to those which had earlier been rejected. I also look forward from the 1950s to the transformations that have taken place in motion picture exhibition during the past thirty years. If the ‘rise’ of widescreen could be located in the period 1926-1930, then its ‘demise’ would seem to be integrally bound up with multiplexing, the marketing of widescreen films to television, the advent of the videocassette recorder, and, with it, the growth of a major subsidiary form of distribution for widescreen films through videotape sales and rentals.” AU - Belton, John CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1992 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) magnetic recording materials materials magnetic tape +motion pictures +motion pictures widescreen motion pictures, and widescreen +television television, and motion pictures VCRs videotape Cinerama CinemaScope LB - 6110 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1992 ST - Widescreen Cinema TI - Widescreen Cinema ID - 1995 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Predicting the future has usually been the province of science fiction writers. Hence, it is no surprise that Beyond Human: Living with Robots and Cyborgs is written by the acclaimed sci-fi writer Gregory Benford and his wife, fellow sci-fi writer Elisabeth Malartre. Because Benford is steeped in fiction, most of the evidence in the book comes from sci-fi books and movies, with an emphasis on Asimov, whose three rules of robotics are discussed extensively, and Philip K. Dick. In addition to supporting his claims about the future of robotics with fiction, Benford also interviews several scientists and theologians working in the field of robotics, focusing on M.I.T.’s artificial intelligence lab, a pioneer in robotics technology. M.I.T.’s lab produced one of the most popular home robots, iRobot Roomba, a robotic vacuum cleaner that is designed like a turtle, a trend in small consumer robots. Beyond Human is divided into three main sections: one on cyborgs, another on robots, and the last on bionics and future developments in the field. A woman wearing eyeglasses would be considered a cyborg, the authors say, because a cyborg is simply a “hybrid of man and machine." (p.102) Robots, on the other hand, are stand-alone beings that may even have a soul (according to some scientists). In the last section, the authors discuss the superorganism, using the Internet as an example of a mass of human desires aggregated in one place. The main argument of Beyond Human is that in the future robots will become as ubiquitous as computers; therefore, we need to respect robots and not fear them. We will not be taken over by an all robot army. More likely, robots will give us emotional support in addition to being able to perform useful tasks. They will be the pets of the mid- to late-twentieth-first century. --Hallie Lieberman AU - Benford, Gregory AU - Malartre, Elisabeth CY - New York DA - 2007 KW - future computers biotechnology Lieberman, Hallie science fiction and future Dick, Philip K. Asimov, Isaac science fiction, and Philip Dick science fiction, and Isaac Asimov robotics computers and the Internet cybernetics values values, and artificial intelligence biotechnology, and human nature values, and human nature values, and cyborgs cyborgs artificial intelligence, and human nature human nature, and biotechnology human nature, and artificial intelligence artificial intelligence and biotechnology genetics infomatics future and science fiction second industrial revolution military communication nationalism and communication DARPA DARPA, and human enhancement values freedom democracy values, and artificial intelligence freedom, and artificial intelligence democracy, and artificial intelligence artificial intelligence, and values biotechnology, and freedom biotechnology, and democracy military communication, and biotechnology nationalism and communication, and artificial biotechnology, and values biotechnology, and democracy biotechnology, and freedom nanotechnology values, and biotechnology freedom, and biotechnology democracy, and biotechnology biotechnology, and values artificial intelligence, and freedom artificial intelligence, and democracy military communication, and artificial intelligence nationalism, and biotechnology Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) human nature nationalism science fiction LB - 33190 PB - Forge Books PY - 2007 ST - Beyond Human: Living with Robots and Cyborgs TI - Beyond Human: Living with Robots and Cyborgs ID - 74 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is a substantial, thought-provoking book. “To what comparable technological and economic ‘revolution’ might we attribute the emergence of the Information Society?” Beniger asks. “My answer ... is what I call the Control Revolution, a complex of rapid changes in the technological and economic arrangements by which information is collected, stored, processed, and communicated, and through which formal or programmed decision might effect societal control. From its origins in the last decades of the nineteenth century, the Control Revolution has continued unabated, and recently it has been accelerated by the development of microprocessing technologies. In terms of the magnitude and pervasiveness of its impact upon society, intellectual and cultural no less than material, the Control Revolution already appears to be as important to the history of this century as the Industrial Revolution was to the last.” “The Information Society, ... is not so much the result of any recent social change as of increases begun more than a century ago in the speed of material processing. Microprocessor and computer technologies, contrary to currently fashionable opinion, are not new forces only recently unleashed upon an unprepared society, but merely the latest installment in the continuing development of the Control Revolution. This explains why so many of the computer’s major contributions were anticipated along with the first signs of a control crisis in the mid-nineteenth century.” Among the most interesting chapters in this book are chapter 6 (“Industrial Revolution and the Crisis of Control”) and Chapter 8 (“Revolution in Control of Mass Consumption”). The latter chapter deals with modern advertising, modern media, government control of broadcasting, and the technology of market feedback. The work has tables throughout dating important communication inventions and related developments. AU - Beniger, James R. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1986 KW - computers microprocessing advertising, and public relations steam power References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps social control propaganda public relations preservation labor communication revolution archives history, and new media computers and the Internet communication revolution, and second industrial revolution law capitalism history office office, and new media office second industrial revolution office, and information technology information technology information processing Information Age Industrial Revolution history general studies control revolution Industrial Revolution computers microprocessors advertising information age history, break with timelines +transportation infrastructure advertising, and timeline transportation, and timeline second industrial revolution, and timeline industry, and timeline steam, and timeline information processing, and timeline automation, and timeline broadcast media, and timeline office technology, and timeline information technology, and office information processing automation office, and information technology +information storage capitalism, and new media social control, and new media second industrial revolution history, break with computers, and microprocessors regulation communication revolution censorship and ratings industry LB - 70 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1986 ST - The Control Revolution: Technological and Economic Origins of the Information Society TI - The Control Revolution: Technological and Economic Origins of the Information Society ID - 1403 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - A few good insights can be found in the chapter on “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction,” although often when Benjamin moves off into theory and speculation he becomes tedious and virtually incomprehensible. “With the woodcut,” he writes, “graphic art became mechanically reproducible for the first time, long before script became reproducible by print.... During the Middle Ages engraving and etching were added to the woodcut; at the beginning of the nineteenth century lithography made its appearance. “With lithography the technique of reproduction reached an essentially new stage. This much more direct process was distinguished by the tracing of the design on a stone rather than its incision on a block of wood or its etching on a copperplate and permitted graphic art for the first time to put its products on the market, not only in large numbers as hitherto, but also in daily changing forms. Lithography enabled graphic art to illustrate everyday life, and it began to keep pace with printing. But only a few decades after its invention, lithography was surpassed by photography.... Around 1900 technical reproduction had reached a standard that not only permitted the most profound change in their impact upon the public; it also had captured a place of its own among the artistic processes. “Even the most perfect reproduction of a work of art is lacking in one element: its presence in time and space, its unique existence at the place where it happens to be....” AU - Benjamin, Walter CY - New York DA - [1968] KW - wood engraving photography time and timekeeping time geography general studies +photography and visual communication lithography mechanical reproduction woodcuts space (spatial) time Arendt, Hannah LB - 80 PB - Harcourt, Brace and World ST - Illuminations: Essays and Reflections. Edited and with an Introduction by Hannah Arendt. TI - Illuminations: Essays and Reflections. Edited and with an Introduction by Hannah Arendt. ID - 1404 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author warns that with the arrival of electronic, digital media, that much of what is being created and saved is in danger of being permanently lost. New technology becomes obsolete rapidly and often data stored on it becomes inaccessible. Moreover, many new media deteriorate very quickly (in historical terms), much fast that more stable media such as paper and microfilm. Many companies and insitutions have no plan for data loss. --SV Although computers often operate proficiently and effectively in storing and processing data, because of the possibility that something might go wrong, it is important to prepare for alternative measures of data collection. “Millions of computers operate flawlessly for years without anyone ever noticing anything out of the ordinary,” the author writes. “However, given the complexity and interconnectedness of modern society, when a computer system containing critical data fails, the repercussions ripple throughout the fabric of an organization. Knowing what can go wrong with computer systems, learning to recognize the relevant situations, and then preparing to deal with the most likely outcomes is a reasonable approach to managing the risk of digital data loss in a rapidly evolving technological environment.” Companies may have employees who recognize the importance of date storage backup systems, however there is seldom a specific management plan in place for ensuring the existence of data. “Unfortunately, surprisingly few companies---and even fewer individuals---have a data loss management plan. That is, they may have an inkling of what should be done and perform backups relatively regularly because everyone knows that backups are important. However, unless there’s a written plan that can be read, examined, scrutinized, and followed, one or more of the above stages will be skipped or shortchanged. In particular, without a written plan in place, there is a much greater likelihood that there will be an actual data loss incident. As described here, there are ways to control and understand the economic ramifications of data loss and reduce the chances of it recurring in the future.” The United States has misplaced priorities on deciding what information should be stored via a mandated government system. The health care industry seems to be one that has been left to fend for its data on their own. “The issue of who decides what data are valuable and should be saved and what data should be disposed of seems critical in larger social systems, such as health care. In the United States, short term economics often dictates many corporate practices, with little or no regard for time horizons past, say, five years. However, except for stockholders and those who like potato chips, it seems that the chip companies should decide the fate of their data. To allow other companies, such as large health care enterprises, to decide on their own how to handle patient data seems less appropriate. It may be more appropriate for federal legislation to decree the value of universal health care data.” The best bet for securing digital data for years to come is to transfer it to the latest communication medium, Bergeron argues. Waiting to long can jeopardize any hope of transfer. “Because of competing architectures, rapidly evolving hardware, and the lack of enduring standards, it’s difficult to share data among contemporary systems, much less work with media from a decade ago. The rapid evolution of the microcomputer, from Altair to the modern PC, and of media, from paper and cassette tape to floppy disks to flash RAM, illustrates how media, operating systems, and data formats have yet to stabilize. If the world changes to a new microcomputer platform---a descendent of Linux, for example---then prudent computer users will migrate their data to the new system as soon as it’s stable.” --Michael Shefky AU - Bergeron, Bryan CY - Upper Saddle River, N.J. DA - 2002 KW - computers obsolete media nationalism microprocessing discs, compact archives primary sources history and new media preservation new media microfiche, microfilm, microform libraries information storage history digital media digitization computers compact discs (CDs) CDs history new media, and history +information storage information storage, and history history, and new media history, and digital media digital media, and history history, break with computers, and information storage libraries, and digital media information storage, and digital media obsolete technology history, and obsolete technology +computers and the Internet computers, and software new media, and archives archives archives, and new media archives, and digital media computers, and hardware microfilm microprocessors computers, and microprocessors compact discs (CDs) +nationalism and communication nationalism, and information storage Shefky, Michael LB - 110 PB - Prentice Hall PTR PY - 2002 ST - Dark Ages II: When the Digital Data Die TI - Dark Ages II: When the Digital Data Die ID - 100 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work examines common themes (e.g., "rags-to-riches") in Depression- and New Deal-era motion pictures. AU - Bergman, Andrew CY - New York DA - 1971; 1972 KW - context +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures context, and 1930s motion pictures, and government motion pictures, and FBI LB - 15520 PB - New York University Press; Harper & Row PY - 1972 ST - We're in the Money: Depression America and Its Films. New York TI - We're in the Money: Depression America and Its Films. New York ID - 565 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this work, Henri Bergson comments on the characteristics of the cinematograph, or motion pictures, and how, in some respects, human knowledge has characteristics of the cinematograph: “Suppose we wish to portray on a screen a living picture, 304/305 such as the marching past of a regiment. There is one way in which it might first occur to us to do it. That would be to cut out jointed figures representing the soldiers, to give to each of them the movement of marching, a movement varying from individual to individual although common to the human species, and to throw the whole on the screen. We would need to spend on this little game an enormous amount of work, and even then we should obtain but a very poor result: how could it, at its best, reproduce the suppleness and variety of life? Now, there is another way of proceeding, more easy and at the same time more effective. It is to take a series of snapshots of the passing regiment and to throw these instantaneous views on the screen, so that they replace each other very rapidly. That is what the cinematograph does. With photographs, each of which represents the regiment in a fixed attitude, it reconstitutes the mobility of the regiment marching. It is true that if we had to do with photographs alone, however much we might look at them, we should never see them animated: with immobility set beside immobility, even endlessly, we could never make movement. In order that the pictures may be animated, there must be movement somewhere. The movement does indeed exist here; it is in the apparatus. It is because the film of the cinematograph unrolls, bringing in turn the different photographs of the scene to continue each other, that each actor of the scene recovers his mobility; he strings all his successive attitudes on the invisible movement of the film. The process then consists in extracting from all the movements peculiar to all the figures an impersonal movement abstract and simple, movement in general, so to speak: we put this into the apparatus, and we reconstitute the individuality of each particular movement by combining the nameless movement with the per- 305/306 sonal attitudes. Such is the contrivance of the cinematograph. And such also is that of our knowledge. Instead of attaching ourselves to the inner becoming of things, we place ourselves outside them in order to recompose their becoming artificiality. We take snapshots, as it were, of the passing reality, and, as these are characteristics of the reality, we have only to string them on a becoming abstract, uniform and invisible, situated at the back of the apparatus of knowledge, in order to imitate what there is that is characteristic of this becoming itself. Perception, intellection, language so proceed in general. Whether we would think becoming, or express it, or even perceive it, we hardly do anything else than set going a kind of cinematograph inside us. We may therefore sum up what we have been saying in the conclusion that the mechanism of our ordinary knowledge is of a cinematographical kind." (emphasis in original text) AU - Bergson, Henri (trans. by Arthur Mitchell) CY - New York DA - 1911 KW - motion pictures photography motion pictures, and photography photography, and motion pictures new way of seeing motion pictures, and Henri Bergson Bergson, Henri, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and movement ref, secondary ref, book Bergson, Henri modernity LB - 41930 PB - Henry Holt and Company PY - 1911 ST - Creative Evolution TI - Creative Evolution ID - 4292 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work provides statistical data, predominantly for the 1990s but some tables give information for much earlier. For example, tables show the sales of color television sets in the United States from 1954 to the late 1990s. The work covers a wide range of technologies. Among those relating to communication include: biotechnology, computers, construction and infrastructure, consumer products and entertainment, materials, military, space, and transportation. AU - Berinstein, Paula CY - Phoeniz, AZ DA - 1999 KW - R & D computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) Federal Communications Commission (FCC) discs, compact telephones cell phones magnetic recording advertising, and public relations timelines References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps censorship and ratings propaganda public relations fiber optics labor research and development war Internet home, and new media information technology archives materials materials magnetic tape materials fiber optics regulation computers compact discs (CDs) CDs war office office, and new media office reference works statistical data +television +military communication +artificial intelligence and biotechnology biotechnology +sound recording +duplicating technologies +telephones compact discs (CDs) sound recording, and CDS satellites +aeronautics and space communication telephones, and answering devices +radio laser discs VCRs advertising media convergence interactivity +information storage information technology, and home information technology, and office information technology, and libraries libraries libraries, and new media information technology, and education +computers and the Internet computers, and education Internet, and education energy +electricity +military communication information technology, and law enforcement +transportation infrastructure cable optical fibers cable, transatlantic +telephones telephones, transatlantic common carriers telephones, penetration (U.S.) +radio radio, FM radio, AM telephones, cellular cellular telephones FCC timelines, and computers computers, timelines statistics cable interactive media home lasers LB - 12280 PB - Oryx Press PY - 1999 ST - Statistical Handbook on Technology TI - Statistical Handbook on Technology ID - 2575 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The central thesis of this book is that “the Information Revolution has fundamentally changed the nature of combat. To win war today, you must first win the information war.” Winning the information war against terrorists in the post-September, 2001 world will be critical and moreover, “U.S. leaders must also be able to decide when and how to strike them before they strike us. Doing this while observing the traditional rules of war will be a challenge,” the author admits. So, too, “will maintaining democratic control of U.S. armed forces.” Satellites, optical fibers, and digital media make it possible to deliver information virtually anywhere instantaneously. Terrorist groups can now remain autonomous cells but still be interconnected by modern communication. These networks can be joined together with secure command and control systems that an exploit both military and commercial communications. These networks can also control extraordinarily power nuclear, biological, or chemical weapons. Recent thinking about information warfare owed much to Andrew Marshall, who started with the RAND Corporation, and Thomas Rona, a scientist at Boeing Corporation. They met during the late 1970s and Rona became deputy director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy after Ronald Reagan’s election in 1980. During the George H. W. Bush administration, then Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney ordered that the Department of Defense focus strongly on attacking and defending information systems. Berkowitz discusses the ability to strike single targets with precision from great distances and also how new communication technologies allow American forces to disrupt opponents infrastructure and “swarm” the enemy unexpectedly. Chapter 12, entitled “Killing,” notes that modern precision weaponry makes the assassination of foreign leaders much easier and raises crucial issues in international law. Assassinating Osama bin Laden or Saddam Hussein “covertly would undercut our standing as a country trying to uphold the rule of law,” he acknowledges. At the time of this book’s publication, Berkowitz was senior analyst at the RAND Corporation and a research fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. Earlier he had worked for the CIA and been on the staff of the U.S. Select Committee on Intelligence. AU - Berkowitz, Bruce CY - New York DA - 2003 KW - R & D information processing cybernetics computers USSR corporations nationalism corporations corporations Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) Central Intelligence Agency Bush, George W. Bush, George H. W. Boeing Corporation Asia Advanced Research Projects Agency Vietnam War Vietnam War presidents, and new media Bush, George W. administration Bush, George H. W. administration Reagan administration RAND Corporation public relations advertising preservation new media nationalism and communication national security war research and development military communication research and development war communication revolution communication revolution history, and new media global communication future and science fiction electronic media digitization cyberspace computers Cold War cinematography CIA war non-USA history future future, and war September 11, 2001 military communication computers and the Internet propaganda information warfare Reagan administration, and information warfare Reagan administration, and new media new media, and Cold War Cold War, and new media Soviet Union new media, and Soviet Union information warfare, and Soviet Union terrorism terrorism, and new media new media, and terrorism Bush, George H.W., and new media Bush, George W., and new media Iraq, and information warfare information warfare, and Iraq military, and new media Afghanistan ARPA DARPA CIA, and terrorism CIA, and new media China China, and cyberwarfare cyberwarfare computers, and warfare computers, and security Gulf War, 1991 electronic warfare digital media digital media, and warfare bin Laden, Osama Hussein, Saddam National Security Agency Al-Qaeda Rona, Thomas, and information warfare satellites aeronautics and space communication satellites, and warfare Global Position Systems Vietnam War electronic warfare, and World War I World War I, and electronic warfare electronic warfare, and World War II World War II, and electronic warfare electronic warfare, and Vietnam War Vietnam War, and electronic warfare World War I World War II RAND Corporation Information Revolution history, break with military-industrial complex Boeing and military-industrial complex Marshall, Andrew, and information warfare motion pictures public relations advertising and public relations Information Age LB - 370 PB - Free Press PY - 2003 ST - The New Face of War: How War Will Be Fought in the 21st Century TI - The New Face of War: How War Will Be Fought in the 21st Century ID - 125 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Berkowitz, a psychologist who was Vilas Reseach Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, puts forth a study on aggression that is a synthesis of both previous work from various scholars in the field and his own definitive work on the issue of aggression and violence. As a study in the field of psychology, the book is laid out by theme, with chapters devoted to the forms of aggression, the causes, and role of the media, and the psychology of murder and domestic abuse. Berkowitz makes a positive correlation between media and violence. Berkowitz stresses that these particular studies only show a short-term connection between aggression and media. Violence seems to occur only immediately after exposure to publicized violence. Berkowitz calls this a priming effect, in which the publicized violence stimulates other ideas that are likewise aggressive. “Before going further, I should remind you that I am now dealing only with the relatively immediate and transient effects of seeing violence on TV and movies screens or reading about it on the printed pagenot with the long-term consequences of repeated exposure. Nevertheless, I believe it will be helpful to explain these aftereffects in terms of the ‘priming’ concept . . . the central notion of priming is that when people encounter a stimulus (or an event) that has a particular meaning, other ideas occur to them that have much the same meaning. These thoughts in turn can activate yet other semantically related ideas and even tendencies to act . . . just this type of phenomenon contributes to the aggressive behaviors that results from exposure to a violent movie or TV program or the news report of a violent incident. People in the audience get aggressive ideas.” Aggressive acts depicted in movies likewise will be less likely to incite aggressive actions if the acts are depicted as having negative consequences, or are not shown in a positive light. “This outcome is definitely pertinent to movie violence. A highly aggressive film won’t promote aggression-enhancing thoughts and motor reactions when the viewers regard the fighting, shooting, and killing in the movie as morally wrong. But most violent movies don’t really question the aggression they portray.” Most movies do not show the negative consequences of violence, however. In fact, Berkowitz notes that often, movies show the hero of a movie triumphantly using aggression to subdue villains. “However, the typical violent movie does more than portray obviously improper aggression. It usually goes on to show the hero triumphantly beating up the bad guys at the end of the story. This is certainly the case in Bad Day. After being picked on throughout most of the film, Spencer Tracy finally decides he has taken enough and turns on his oppressors . . . Audiences love this ending. They enjoy seeing the wrongdoers receive the treatment they deserveand the thoughts activated by this gratifying violence may actually increase the chances that at least some person in the audience will assault another individual soon afterward.” Berkowitz concludes by emphatically stating that the majority of researchers have shown that violence can incite aggressiveness, and not only among the young or the mentally deranged, but also to an extent among the populace at large. “The public at large and even some media specialists believe that depictions of violence on movie and TV screens and in the print media have at most a very minor effect on audience members. Further, they think that only children or mentally deranged viewers are susceptible to even this minor effect. However, the majority of researchers who have investigated media effects and/or who have carefully studies the pertinent research literature believe otherwise. In this chapter, I show that1. Portrayals and even news reports of violence increase the chances that people in the media audience, adults as well as children, will behave aggressively themselves. 2. This influence is not trivial, especially when one consider that millions of peersons are ordinarily exposed to the media. 3. Psychological concepts that are becoming well accepted can help to identify the factors that heighten or weaken the likelihood of aggressive reactions.” --Nicholas Wolf AU - Berkowitz, Leonard CY - New York DA - 1962 KW - social science research media effects violence media violence Wolf, Nicholas +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures +television television, and violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and television violence, and popular culture violence, and motion pictures media effects, and violence motion pictures, and social science media effects, and violence social science research, and violence LB - 17470 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - McGraw-Hill Book Company PY - 1962 ST - Aggression: A Social Psychological Analysis TI - Aggression: A Social Psychological Analysis ID - 668 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is a collection of original papers delivered at a conference (by the same title as the book) held at the University of Namur in June, 1988. The contributors are international experts in different areas of information technology (IT) and its influence on society. The authors maintain "that the relationship between IT and society has to be considered in an holistic context." The book’s six sections are divided into themes: “Ethics,” “Roots, Legitimacy and Ideology,” “Towards New Cultural Perspectives?”, “Politics,” “Economics,” and “Artificial Intelligence, Human Mind and Image of Reality.” Like so many conference publications, the entries in this volume are of uneven quality. A work from which to cull isolated insights. AU - Berleur, Jacques, Andrew Clement, Richard Sizer, and Diane Whitehouse, eds. CY - New York DA - 1990 KW - computers values +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology values, and information technology LB - 7730 PB - Springer-Verlag PY - 1990 ST - The Information Society: Evolving Landscapes TI - The Information Society: Evolving Landscapes ID - 2142 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Bernhard begins with the premise that television news and the Cold War matured simultaneously. Following this, she argues that when the government needed to build public support for long-term armament programs, it looked to television networks to shape public opinion. Bernhard writesThis book tells the story of a partnership between government information officers and network news producers to report and sell the Cold War to the American public. It chronicles dozens of news and public affairs series produced in collaboration between the inexperienced federal information bureaus and the fledging network news divisions. Much of the news about the early Cold War on television was scripted, if not produced, by the defense establishment. These programs defined American freedom as the absence of government control (2). In the course of her study, Bernhard draws on numerous primary and secondary sources. Sifting through the papers of both the television networks and the United States government, Bernhard explores, among other thingsearly Cold War propaganda on television; the rise of the Broadcasters Advisory Council; the television programs Battle Report -- Washington and Meet the Press which aired on NBC; and various television programs created by the Department of Defense. In her analysis of Meet the Press, Bernhard shows that while it seemed to fulfill televisions democratic promise of bringing government into the home in an objective and unbiased forum, it was in fact tightly regulated by the network so that it always enacted a supportive function for the government (162-3). After tracing the intersections and collaborations between the government and television networks manifest in these various programs and institutions, Bernhard meditates on the blurred line between culture and conspiracy. Although she cautions her reader against concluding that there was a vast conspiracy afoot in the early Cold War period, Bernhard acknowledges that certain covert collaboration between government agents and networks supposedly devoted to freedom from governmental regulation is undeniable. This study finally reminds the reader that history is itself necessarily constructed, and, when viewed through the lens of commercial television, the early Cold War can be seen as a period in which truth itself was a contested area (179). In her conclusion, Bernhard leaves the reader with several seminal questions that her study provokes, questions that remain as much unanswered in the early Cold War period as they do in our own time. Does this intimate relationship signal the disappearance of the ostensible line separating news and government, or does it represent reasonable service to country on the part of the broadcasters? Is it conspiracy, or is it culture? When the culture of reporting is so proudly and unapologetically intimate with the government, that line is rather hard to draw. The lingering question is how such an access-proud news establishment maintains a public image of oppositionalism (187). U.S. Television News and Cold War Propaganda, 1947-1960 is valuable for the student interested in how seemingly-objective news programs of the early Cold War period were actually constructed with political goals in mind. Bernhard’s work is a useful compliment to studies such as Michael Curtains Redeeming the Wasteland: Television Documentary and Cold War Politics (1995) because it explains how the very growth and expansion of the television news industry was connected to and influenced by the United States government. --Steve Belletto AU - Bernhard, Nancy E. CY - New York DA - 1999 KW - R & D nationalism public relations advertising propaganda research and development war journalism Cold War news and journalism war Belletto, Steve +television television, and news news, and television propaganda, and television television, and propaganda news, and propaganda propaganda, and television news +nationalism and communication nationalism, and news nationalism, and television television, and nationalism +military communication military, and television Cold War, and television television, and Cold War propaganda, and Cold War Cold War, and propaganda news public relations advertising and public relations LB - 1380 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1999 ST - U. S. Television News and Cold War Propaganda, 1947-1960 TI - U. S. Television News and Cold War Propaganda, 1947-1960 ID - 226 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work argues that between 1949 and 1957, there was a steady increasing in the number of so-called "runaway" or American-interest films produced in Europe and other parts of the world. These films, made by American film companies with a few American stars and directors, used mostly foreign labor. It was cheaper to film abroad and often quotas imposed by other countries required American films to meet legal standards imposed by the host country. Most of these runaway productions were made in Great Britain, followed by Italy, Mexico, France, and Germany. This work notes the problems this trend posed for Hollywood labor. The work also notes that these hybrid films often were similar to foreign film in their production values and in their content. In trying to satisfy an international audience, movies had to be made with international appeal rather than narrowly made to appeal only to U. S. audiences. The work discusses the reasons for the decline in movies attendance in the U. S. and notes that the Baby Boom generation which will come of age in the 1960s and 1970s will likely provide new opportunities for movie makers. AU - Bernstein, Irving CY - Hollywood, CA DA - Dec. 1957 KW -, motion pictures motion pictures, and American-interest films motion pictures, and labor labor motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings television motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures children children and media audiences motion pictures, and audiences LB - 35750 PB - Hollywood A.F.L. Film Council PY - 1957 ST - Hollywood at the Crossroads: An Economic Study of the Motion Picture Industry TI - Hollywood at the Crossroads: An Economic Study of the Motion Picture Industry ID - 3214 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author accepted an invitation to write about Bell Labs in September 1982 (the divestiture of Bells Labs occurred in 1982). This work is not footnoted and has only a brief bibliography but chapters 5-9 deal with solid state and transistors. Chapters 10-13 deal with telephony. The title refers to the average temperature of the universe (3 degrees above absolute zero), a discovery that began with observations of two Bell lab radio astronomers in 1964. AU - Bernstein, Jeremy CY - New York: DA - 1984 KW - corporations corporations radio general studies Bell Laboratories transistors solid state telephones radio astronomy materials LB - 90 PB - Charles Scribner’s Sons PY - 1984 ST - Three Degrees Above Zero: Bell Labs in the Information Age TI - Three Degrees Above Zero: Bell Labs in the Information Age ID - 1405 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a collection of articles on motion picture censorship, most of which have been previously published in such journals as the Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, Journal of American History, Velvet Light Trap, Screen, Cinema Journal, and Quarterly Review of Film and Video. The authors include: Garth Jowett, Shelley Stamp, Richard Maltby, Lea Jacobs, Ruth Vasey, Clayton R. Koppes and Gregory D. Black, Matthew Bernstein, Ellen Draper, Jeff Smith, and Justin Wyatt. The work also includes a twelve-page annotated bibliography. AU - Bernstein, Matthew CY - New Brunswick, NJ DA - 1999 KW - classification self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality Burstyn v. Wilson Burstyn, Joseph CARA blacklisting sexuality women, and new media women sex censorship and ratings Mutual case (1915) motion pictures media effects media violence violence law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship war +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures law, and motion pictures censorship, and Mutual case (1915) Mutual case (1915), and movie censorship blacklisting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and blacklisting World War II, and motion pictures African Americans, and motion pictures motion pictures, and African Americans sex, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sex violence, and censorship violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women rating system (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures, and X rating Trumbo, Dalton Miracle case, and movie censorship censorship, and Miracle case bibliographies, and movie censorship +bibliographies Miracle case World War II African Americans LB - 1790 PB - Rutgers University Press PY - 1999 ST - Controlling Hollywood: Censorship and Regulation in the Studio Era TI - Controlling Hollywood: Censorship and Regulation in the Studio Era ID - 267 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Bertrand, an fine historian of cinema, writes about efforts to censor Australian motion pictures. This solid work provides a comparative context for scholar working on American and British film censorship. AU - Bertrand, Ina CY - St. Lucia, Australia DA - c1978 KW - context non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign censorship motion pictures, and Australia Australia Australia, and motion picture censorship context, and censorship LB - 13170 PB - University of Queensland Press PY - 1978 ST - Film Censorship in Australia TI - Film Censorship in Australia ID - 491 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Bettinger, Hoyland CY - New York DA - 1947 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins television, and technology LB - 10850 PB - Harper PY - 1947 ST - Television Techniques TI - Television Techniques ID - 2447 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This short book (112 pages) grew out of an address to journalism educators at Ohio State University in April, 1930. The author is interested in how the radio was beginning to change the nature of news and the newspaper business. He notes that several changes are underway that will vastly expand the “boundaries of men’s minds”: radio, television (which he sees as “just around the corner”), and talking motion pictures which through newsreels are presenting current events. These developments are inevitably merging to enlarge the reporting of news, and Bickel believed this to be a positive trend. Among the changes that radio were bringing, Bickel said, was that radio would come increasingly to be used for flash news, or bulletins, thus leading to the decline of “extra” editions from newspapers. Bickel did not see the new media of radio, talking pictures, and television threatening the existence of newspaper. Rather by widen people’s intellectual horizons, there would be an increased demand to read about events in more detail. Bickel did have concerns about radio. He believed radio broadcasting in 1930 was dominated by the electric power industry in the United States. He believe diversifying ownership of local stations was important. He also realized that radio provided a powerful tool for government or special interest propagandists. He warned that excessive government regulation would damage broadcasting excellence. This work contains an appendix listing more than 90 U. S. radio stations affiliated with newspapers in 1930. (81-85) Another appendix (86-112) gives a brief summary of the relationship between radio and government in 39 countries. AU - Bickel, Karl A. CY - Philadelphia DA - 1930 KW - USSR censorship and ratings regulation public relations advertising motion pictures journalism law news and journalism non-USA +radio propaganda propaganda, and radio radio, and propaganda newspapers newspapers, and radio radio, and news radio, and newspapers news, and radio +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and news +television television, and news radio, and newspaper affiliation radio, and journalism radio, and journalism education regulation, and radio radio, and regulation radio, global Argentina Argentina, and radio Australia Australia, and radio Austria Austria, and radio Bolivia Bolivia, and radio Great Britain Great Britain, and radio Bulgaria Bulgaria, and radio Canada Canada, and radio Canary Islands, and radio Chile Chile, and radio Costa Rica Costa Rica, and radio Cuba Cuba, and radio Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia, and radio Danzig, and radio Denmark Denmark, and radio Ecuador Ecuador, and radio France France, and radio Germany Germany, and radio Greece Greece, and radio Guatemala, and radio Haiti, and radio Netherlands Netherlands, and radio Hungary Hungary, and radio India India, and radio Ireland, and radio Italy Italy, and radio Japan Japan, and radio Latvia, and radio Malta, and radio Mexico Mexico, and radio New Zealand, and radio Nicaragua, and radio Peru, and radio Spain Spain, and radio Sweden Sweden, and radio Switzerland Switzerland, and radio South Africa, and radio Soviet Union Soviet Union, and radio Russia Russia, and radio Venezuela, and radio Yugoslavia Yugoslavia, and radio news regulation Ireland New Zealand Peru South Africa Venezuela advertising and public relations Guatemala Latvia Haiti LB - 12480 PB - J. B. Lippincott Company PY - 1930 ST - New Empires: The Newspaper and the Radio TI - New Empires: The Newspaper and the Radio ID - 2595 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Chapter 12 (“Man Captures Records of Light”) deals with the influence of photography (as well as films and television) on art. From the fifteenth to the nineteenth century, “painters ruled the world of art without question.” But, Biederman writes, “With the invention of the Camera we have witnessed the conclusion of one epoch of painting-history -- that epoch predominantly characterized by the attempt to copy and create a permanent record of nature’s appearances.” AU - Biederman, Charles CY - [Minneapolis] DA - 1948 KW - photography seeing at a distance preservation postmodernism modernism modernity history, and new media +photography and visual communication iconography history daguerreotype photography, and art photography, and new way of seeing icons cubism photography, and modernism photography, and reality photography, and modern art photography, and history history, and photography +motion pictures +television modernism new way of seeing LB - 1400 PB - Charles Biederman, Red Wing, Minnesota PY - 1948 ST - Art as the Evolution of Visual Knowledge TI - Art as the Evolution of Visual Knowledge ID - 1536 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Several chapters of this 500-page work are relevant to communication. Chapter 3 deals with the "Arts of Writing and Printing," and covers such topics as coping machines, printing presses, stereotyping, and machine printing. Chapter 4, entitled "Arts of Designing and Painting," treats color, as does Chapter 18, entitled "Arts of Communicating and Modifying Color." Chapter 5 deals with engraving and lithography. Chapter 9, "Arts of Illumination," discusses various lamps (gas, coal, oil). Chapter 10, "Arts of Locomotion," and Chapter 12, "Of the Moving Forces use in the Arts," treats locomotion and has material on roads, railroads, and steam power. Chapter 16, "Arts of Horology," considers clocks and watches. AU - Bigelow, Jacob CY - Boston DA - 1831 ET - 2 KW - photography time and timekeeping print engines timekeeping, and clocks +general studies +photography and visual communication color lithography engraving +transportation railroads engines, steam writing printing stereotyping timekeeping clocks watches copying machines +duplicating technologies stereotyping LB - 11760 PB - Hilliard, Gray, Little and Wilkins PY - 1831 ST - Elements of Technology Taken Chiefly from a Course of Lectures Delivered at Cambridge, on the Application of the Sciences to the Useful Arts TI - Elements of Technology Taken Chiefly from a Course of Lectures Delivered at Cambridge, on the Application of the Sciences to the Useful Arts ID - 2523 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This "unofficial biography" traces the life of one of the pioneers of the American communications industry, David Sarnoff. Bilby, a one time associate and RCA manager, traveled with Sanroff during the 1960s, the General's final active years. The book recounts Sarnoff's work as a Marconi telegraph operator, rising through the ranks to become President of NBC and shepherd of radio, television, and eventually color television. The book reveals that the story regarding Sarnoff and his relationship with the Titanic sinking was a myth. The myth held that Sarnoff was the first telegraph operator to receive word of the sinking of the Titanic and stayed on the wire for 72 hours, with the blessing of President William Howard Taft, until all family members were notified. Bilby explains it was actually a Wanamaker's department store promotion, that three men manned the telegraph wire, and Taft was not involved. Bilby paints Sarnoff as a man obsessed with image, pretense, and legacy. Sarnoff ached to be an important part of his adopted land and to wanted to be remembered as "the Father of Television." Bilby's book follows a traditional rags-to-riches story of the immigrant arriving in America at the turn-of-the-century who goes on to overcome great hardship and poverty, eventually rising to the pinnacle of success. --Robert Pondillo AU - Bilby, Kenneth CY - New York DA - 1991 KW - corporations corporations corporations Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories +television biography Sarnoff, David Titanic RCA NBC Wanamaker's Pondillo, Robert LB - 6580 PB - Columbia University Press PY - 1991 ST - The General: David Sarnoff and the Rise of the Communications Industry TI - The General: David Sarnoff and the Rise of the Communications Industry ID - 2036 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This brief 128-page book provides an informative look at the Office of Technology Assessment, an agency created by Congress in 1972. This legislative unit, which was concerned with the social effects of new technologies, operated until 1995 when a Republican-controlled Congress voted to terminate it operations. The author’s background is in electrical engineering and political science. An underlying theme of this work is the “possibility of isolating objective truths from human values, and the ability to capture what is most important about public life with science, shapes both experts’ attempts to inform policy-making and scholars’ struggles to define methodology for understanding political action.” This work focuses on the relationship between experts and politicians rather than on the content of the OTA’s many studies about specific technologies. Senator Edward M. Kennedy was one of the initial supports of OTA and later Vice President Al Gore was one of the OTA’s major patrons. But Bimber challenges the prevailing theory that experts tend to become more politicized the longer and closer they are near the exercise of power. Because Congress is “an institution with a highly pluralistic distribution of power,” it “tends to reward experts who provide broadly applicable, politically uncommitted expertise.” This work maintains that “Congress is actually quite successful at producing neutrally competent advisors,” unlike the Executive Office of the President where experts are confronted with different incentives. Over the years, the OTA came to provide Congress with relatively unbiased assessments of new technologies’ social impact. Bimber has not attempted an exhaustive history of the OTA. He concentrates on the “essential outlines of the agency’s life.” The work has nine chapters. After an introductory chapter, Chapter 2 makes comparisons between the OTA and the Office of Management and Budget, and with the President’s Science Advisory Committee. Chapter 3 gives an overview of the OTA and some ways legislators used information from the agency. Chapter 4 deals with the OTA origins, while Chapter 5 considers matters of “neutrality and politicization.” Chapter 6 examines the OTA’s survival strategy with the committee system. Chapter 7 explains why the OTA was abolished. Chapter 8 compares the OTA to the Congressional Budget Office, the Congressional Research Service, and the General Accounting Office. Chapter 9 attempts to draw “lessons from the record of OTA as a case study in the politics of expertise.” AU - Bimber, Bruce CY - Albany, N.Y. DA - 1996 KW - technology Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism science government nationalism and communication OTA Gore, Al Kennedy, Edward M. Gibbons, John H. President’s Science Advisory Committee U. S. Congress scientific research experts technology and society technology, and Congress U. S. Congress, and technology technology, and politicians technology assessment experts, and U. S. Congress experts, and politicians information age Congress, U. S. presidents and new media LB - 11940 PB - State University of New York Press PY - 1996 ST - The Politics of Expertise in Congress: The Rise and Fall of the Office of Technology Assessment TI - The Politics of Expertise in Congress: The Rise and Fall of the Office of Technology Assessment ID - 2541 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Business leaders through their use of public relations and advertising associated their corporations with public virtue rather than money making. They sought to sell their corporation over and above any particular product. In this endeavor, they were able to exploit the latest developments in communication technology -- radio, television, visual imagery in magazines and other publications. AU - Bird, William L., Jr. CY - Evanston, IL DA - 1999 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations propaganda advertising values values general studies advertising public relations values, and advertising capitalism, and advertising values, and corportions capitalism values, and public relations advertising, and new media public relations, and new media LB - 11290 PB - Northwestern University Press PY - 1999 ST - "Better Living": Advertising, Media, and the New Vocabulary of Business Leadership, 1935-1955 TI - "Better Living": Advertising, Media, and the New Vocabulary of Business Leadership, 1935-1955 ID - 1544 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Posters were an important means during the Second World War to mobilize the American home front for the conflict that its country was engaged in. The most important purpose of posters was to link the military front with the home front. Through posters the government tried to convince its people that they too were part of the military machine and that they were obliged to fulfill their patriotic duty. The most important task of the working people in America was to boost production in order to increase the military strength. The government emphasized that an effort war the increase in war productivity would not result in personal gain for the workers. The government wanted people to change their attitude from antagonism of the war to cooperation. The posters celebrated the life of the middle-class families. They showed what kind or role people could have and how efforts during the war would lead to an ideal postwar world. There were hundreds and thousands of posters produced because the Office of War Information, responsible for the war propaganda, decided that the government had to shout in everybody’s face. There was no way for ordinary citizens to stay out of the war. The OWI wanted to have a propaganda poster everywhere people looked. The most important feature of a successful poster was that it was supposed to appeal to the emotion of the reader. Americans had to become emotionally involved with the war so that would feel obliged to fulfill their patriotic duty. Appealing to the emotion was not enough, however. The OWI needed to prevent the production of posters which promised the safe return of a loved one if people increased productivity of the war. Furthermore, the posters should not be recognized as a political message because people would not accept political propaganda. Also pictures of mutilation and death would demoralize the public. However, they had to show the seriousness of the conflict to prevent the public from becoming skeptic. --Pieter Van Den Berg AU - Bird, William L. AU - Rubenstein, Harry R. CY - Princeton DA - 1998 KW - Van Den Berg, Pieter propaganda advertising and public relations democracy democracy, and propaganda propaganda, and democracy propaganda, and posters posters posters, and propaganda war war, and posters posters, and World War II World War II World War II, and propaganda propaganda. and World War II posters, and World War II World War II, and posters media effects media effects, and war posters media effects, and propaganda photography and visual communication war, and visual communication World War II, and visual communication advertising photography LB - 32990 PB - Princeton Architectural Press PY - 1998 ST - Design for Victory: World War II Posters on the American Home Front TI - Design for Victory: World War II Posters on the American Home Front ID - 42 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Birren says that in this book the “ambition is a sizable one, but here in these pages is an attempt to review the history of color.” Birren discusses such major figures as Aristotle, Pliny, Da Vinci, Albert Munsell, Wilhelm Ostwald, but his commentary is often discursive and vague on chronology. Two appendices are of interestA) “The Symbolism of Color” and B) “The Psychology of Color.” AU - Birren, Faber CY - Westport, CT DA - 1941 KW - photography +photography and visual communication color, and history of color, and psychology of color, and symbolism of color, and mysticism color, and science color LB - 1410 PB - Crimson Press PY - 1941 ST - The Story of ColorFrom Ancient Mysticism to Modern Science TI - The Story of ColorFrom Ancient Mysticism to Modern Science ID - 1537 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Two science writers for the Wall Street Journal produced this thoughtful book aimed at nonspecialized readers. They argue that while genetic discoveries have not been kept secret, their implications for society have not been adequately considered. They note that by 1989, ethicists had begun to warn that “gene discoveries would lead to the creation of a new social stratum called the biological underclass.” Important research unraveling the secrets of genes came during the 1940s when “a series of discoveries began suggesting that genes were composed of an acid found in the nuclei of cells. This nucleic acid which was rich in a sugar called deoxyribose and hence was known as deoxyribonucleic acid, or DNA.” In 1953, British physicist Francis Crick and American biologist James Watson discovered the structure of DNA. Progress followed during the early 1960s when the genetic code was broken. By the middle of the 1970s, enzymes had been discovered “that could snip pieces of DNA out of one organism’s genome and splice it into the genome of another organism.” Techniques known as amniocentesis and later chorionic villus made sampling for chromosomal defects possible and led to widespread prenatal testing during the 1980s, and to the routine termination of pregnancies “for reasons that would have left previous generations aghast.” By the late 1970s, “geneticists and molecular biologists were frustrated in the decades-long hunt for the human gene. It was as though they stood on the steps of some huge Alexandrian library where the accumulated genetic knowledge of three billion years of evolution was stored. They knew the architecture of the library with its twenty-three pairs of wings. They knew the alphabet used to write its 50,000 to 100,000 tomes. They even knew the titles of a few of the genetic tomes. But they had no way of finding which books lay in each wing and on each shelf. What they desperately needed was a map. “Then, almost unexpectedly, several lines of biological and medical research began to converge, and the means of drawing the genetic map became evident. The ‘genomic library’ was suddenly accessible. Humans were about to gain unprecedented mastery of their genetic destines.” AU - Bishop, Jerry E. & Michael Waldholz CY - New York DA - 1990 KW - values preservation history, and new media genetics history values +artificial intelligence and biotechnology abortion genome genetic engineering Watson, James Crick, Francis DNA amniocentesis chorionic villus prenatal testing genetic code values, and genetic engineering chromosomes history, break with LB - 2190 PB - Simon and Schuster PY - 1990 ST - GenomeThe Story of the Most Astonishing Scientific Adventure of Our Time -- The Attempt to Map All the Genes in the Human Body TI - GenomeThe Story of the Most Astonishing Scientific Adventure of Our Time -- The Attempt to Map All the Genes in the Human Body ID - 1612 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Black argues that an alliance developed between Adolf Hitler and IBM, beginning in 1933 and running through World War II. IBM and its subsidiaries created technologies, starting the with Hollerith punch cards machines of the 1930s, that helped the Nazis to identify and locate rapidly European Jews. Indeed, IBM technology helped the Germans to organize not only Jews but censuses, registration, Nazi businesses, the German military, train schedules, and the slave labor in concentration camps. Most literature about the Holocaust, with a few exceptions, do not discuss the Hollerith technology, the author says. This book is based on research in numerous archives. The author worked in archival collections in the United States, England, Israel, and Germany. Black says that he more than 20,000 pages of documents in fifty archives, museum files, and other collections, including previously classified State Department and OSS material. He notes that more than 100 people in seven countries helped to locate and translate documents. Black is the son of Polish Holocaust survivors. AU - Black, Edwin CY - New York DA - 2001 KW - R & D Jews computers nationalism corporations corporations corporations World War II new media research and development war Hitler, Adolf war non-USA +computers and the Internet +computers computers, and punch cards +nationalism and communication computers, and national power computers, and Hollerith technology Hollerith technology IBM IBM, and Germany Germany, and IBM Germany Hollerith technology, and Nazi Germany Hitler, Adolf, and Hollerith technology IBM, and Hitler Hitler, Adolf, and IBM new media, and Holocaust Holocaust, and new media IBM, and Holocaust Holocaust, and IBM World War II, and new media new media, and World War II Hollerith, and punch cards Hollerith, Herman +military communication military communication, and Hollerith technology Watson, Thomas, and IBM IBM, and Thomas Watson IBM, and Jews Jews, and IBM Watson, Thomas LB - 12670 PB - Crown Publishers PY - 2001 ST - IBM and the Holocaust: The Strategic Alliance between Nazi Germany and America’s Most Powerful Corporation TI - IBM and the Holocaust: The Strategic Alliance between Nazi Germany and America’s Most Powerful Corporation ID - 2613 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This, the second volume in Black’s history of Catholics and American film censorship, brings the story into the mid-1970s. Some of the ground here has been covered earlier by Frank Walsh (on the Legion of Decency) and such writers as Frank Miller, and Leff and Simmons (on the censorship of specific films). Black is good in discussing the censorship of individual films. For example, he explains that several challenges to the PCA preceded the decision to come down hard on the foreign movie, The Miracle, the picture that led to the U.S. Supreme Court in 1952 to give cinema protection under the First Amendment for the first time. It is not clear why Black chose 1940 and 1975 as the starting and ending points of this work. The work deals with efforts to regulate this medium although it does not deal with film technology per se. AU - Black, Gregory D. CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - self-regulation Production Code PCA values Christianity Production Code (motion pictures) context freedom law values religion censorship and ratings law censorship and ratings values regulation Production Code (1930) +motion pictures First Amendment +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship values, and motion pictures regulation, and motion pictures Catholics, and film censorship First Amendment, and motion pictures Production Code Administration (PCA) Legion of Decency Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. Catholic Church censorship children, and media children context, and censorship Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code, and decline of LB - 6120 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1997 ST - The Catholic Crusade Against the Movies, 1940-1975 TI - The Catholic Crusade Against the Movies, 1940-1975 ID - 1996 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is the best book on Catholics and movie censorship in the United States during the 1930s. During this decade, Catholic leaders in the United States and elsewhere viewed the technology of cinema as a threat to fundamental values. Black's work is based on research in the Production Code Administration Files in Beverly Hills, CA, and in several archdiocese archives. AU - Black, Gregory D. CY - New York DA - 1994 KW - self-regulation Production Code PCA values Christianity Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) religion values morality law values religion censorship and ratings law censorship and ratings values regulation Production Code (1930) motion pictures motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship values, and motion pictures regulation, and motion pictures Catholics, and film censorship Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Legion of Decency Hays, Will H. Catholic Church censorship children, and media children, and movie morality motion pictures, and morality motion pictures, and critics Payne Fund Studies bibliographic essay, Payne Fund Studies children bibliographies bibliographies, and Payne Fund Studies Ireland Ireland, and Catholic morality LB - 6130 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1994 ST - Hollywood Censored: Morality Codes, Catholics, and the Movies TI - Hollywood Censored: Morality Codes, Catholics, and the Movies ID - 1997 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work deals with the effort after World War II by American leaders to export its press system to the rest of the world. The effort reflected a belief in American exceptionalism, that American values and ideals could be exported and would take root elsewhere; that virtually every country could be transformed into "a miniature United States in form of government, traditions, and institutions." The American press system could inform the citizens of other nations about the workings of their governments, thus helping to ensure that another Hitler could not rise to power. This endeavor ran into problems, and many nations became cynical about the motives of American journalists. The free-press crusade became part of the ideological struggle against Soviet communism. It was "part of a larger effort by American diplomats and business leaders to create a world safe for democracy by remodeling that world in the image of the United States," the author writes. AU - Blanchard, Margaret A. CY - New York DA - 1986 KW - USSR nationalism Asia Truman administration presidents, and new media public relations advertising journalism news and journalism freedom law censorship and ratings news and journalism war non-USA journalism World War II United Nations news +nationalism and communication mission, idea of mission, American American exceptionalism First Amendment, and export of free-press crusade American Newspaper Guild American Society of Newspaper Editors Associated Press censorship, and press Cold War Soviet Union India France Great Britain freedom of information Mexico Lebanon freedom of information news, and nationalism Pakistan Poland propaganda +radio China Saudi Arabia Truman, Harry United Nations, and free press United Press World War II, and free press American mission censorship First Amendment capitalism, and free press capitalism public relations advertising and public relations LB - 9550 PB - Longman PY - 1986 ST - Exporting the First Amendment: The Press-Government Crusade of 1945-1952 TI - Exporting the First Amendment: The Press-Government Crusade of 1945-1952 ID - 2322 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work provides interesting information on the origin and development of broadcasting in the United States. The author notes that as early as 1898, “through facilities provided by Marconi’s newly founded wireless company, the Dublin Daily Express received minute-by-minute coverage of the Kingstown Regatta. This was wireless telegraphy- no sportscaster’s voice was heard- and the audience was minuscule. But it was news, and it was heard over the air.” As for the first voice broadcast, while the origins are debated, certain facts are clear. “Reginald Fessenden, working in his Pittsburgh laboratory, succeeded in transmitting his voice by radio in 1901. Logic led him to use a continuous, smooth flowing electromagnetic wave, instead of trying to use the interrupted or staccato-type wave adopted for the transmission of code. This was a radical departure, a heresy so important to the future of broadcasting that Erik Barnouw calls it 'the foundation of radio.'” With regard to television, “CBS experimental station, W2XAB, went on the air on July 21, 1931, with a stellar program that included George Gershwin, the Boswell Sisters, and Kate Smith, who sang her radio theme song, “When the Moon Comes Over the Mountain.” In the same year, CBS introduced television’s first regularly scheduled news program.” The author also notes the importance of magnetic tape to broadcasting after World War II: “‘One World Flight,’ produced by Norman Corwin and Lee Bland, is notable not only because it was the most ambitious documentary series of the late 1940s, but because of its use of magnetic tape, the new reporting tool. For ‘On a Note of Triumph,’ and his other broadcasts promoting global unity, Corwin had received the Wendell Willkie-Freedom House ‘One World Award.’ The award consisted of a trip around the world, dramatizing Willkie’s concept of one world.” AU - Bliss, Edward CY - New York DA - 1991 KW - tape recording, magnetic corporations corporations magnetic recording magnetic tape recording tape recording magnetic tape +sound recording news and journalism news news and journalism archives news and journalism wireless communication recording, and tape recorders recording tape recording libraries libraries, and information storage +radio +television sound recording, and magnetic tape magnetic tape wireless broadcasting, and origins CBS Marconi, Guglielmo Fessenden, Reginald Corwin, Norman Willkie, Wendell magnetic tape, and broadcasting +information storage electronic media electronic preservation magnetic tape journalism, and broadcasting news, and wireless news, and television radio, and news television, and news magnetic tape, first use journalism wireless LB - 9560 PB - Columbia University Press PY - 1991 ST - Now the News: The Story of Broadcast Journalism TI - Now the News: The Story of Broadcast Journalism ID - 2323 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this nicely written, 236-page book, Bliven points out that in 1853 the speed record for hand writing was but 30 word-per-minute. By 1868, Christopher Sholes of Milwaukee, had invented the typewriter. Sholes was not the first person to have invented the typewriter – indeed, he was only the fifty-second, Bliven notes. But his was the first commercial and practical machine to become available. Bliven notes the impact this invention had on women and war. By the 1880s, there was a shortage of trained typists and women increasing entered the workforce in this field. By 1888, there were perhaps 60,000 female typists in the United States. By the mid-twentieth century, the typewriter had been a critical component in military communication. “The captain of a battleship insists that there be fifty-five typewriters on board before he feels equipped to meet the enemy,” Bliven says. “On the ground, as the army move forward, there are more writing machines within four thousand yards of the front lines than medium and light artillery pieces combined.” AU - Bliven, Bruce CY - New York DA - [1954] KW - typewriters women women, and typewriters office, and new media office, and typewriters +military communication military communication, and typewriters inventions inventors Sholes, Christopher labor labor, and typewriters typewriters, and women typewriters, and military typewriters, and labor war office LB - 28630 N1 - See also: office PB - Random House ST - The Wonderful Writing Machine TI - The Wonderful Writing Machine ID - 550 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book examines the rise of the Associated Press and chronicles the AP’s battles with other wire services for dominance in the wire service news industry. During the period covered by Blondheim, the AP battled numerous other news agencies, and had run ins with telegraph companies, all on its way to becoming the number one American wire service. As it grew, the AP served as a funnel to channel and nationalize the news, and according to Blondheim, create a demand for national news. Blondheim begins by explaining that during the nineteenth century, even prior to the invention and employment of the telegraph, the time-lag between an event and its appearance as news in a newspaper was decreasing. The steam engine, canals and roads all helped to improve transportation within the United States, reducing the time it took for news of events to spread and mail to be carried throughout the nation. The author also argues that the rise of the penny papers, and their greater focus on local news, created a demand for more timely news, as did greater interest in speculation and finance. The desire for news of the Mexican War was a major impetus behind the formation of the New York Associated Press, according to Blondheim. All the New York newspapers wanted news from the war, but the cost of obtaining it individually was prohibitive. The NYAP forced newspapers to share the cost of obtaining war (and later any) news. It was this model that other news sharing organizations followed. Blondheim is more interested in the formation and activities of the news organizations than the telegraph itself. He does discuss some of the telegraph companies, noting the often secretive or shady business practices were used to lure investors or triumph over rivals. Blondheim states that the Atlantic Telegraph Company, trying to lay a trans-Atlantic ocean cable in the 1850s, may have faked transmissions on its first cable so as to secure investors for a subsequent cable. By 1859, most American telegraph companies had consolidated into Western Union, a large trust controlling a significant share of the telegraph lines and most telegraph operators and repairmen. The author devotes significant space to the competition between the Western Associated Press and the New York Associated Press. He chronicles the “Press Association War,” an all-out battle for supremacy (or monopoly) in 1866 and 1867, ending in the breaking of the previously more powerful NYAP. The onset of telegraph regulation in the late 1870s further diminishes the unbridled competition and less-reputable practices of the past. Politicians during the Gilded Age courted the wire services in order to get more national press coverage. Many tried to befriend executives of Western Union or one of the wire services, both to secure favorable news stories and also to suppress unfavorable ones. Blondheim observes that in 1881 alone, over thirty politicians made requests for special coverage to the Western Associated Press. Perhaps the most striking example of a politician aided by a wire service is Rutherford Hayes, elected to the presidency in 1876. Hayes was a close friend of the president of Western Associated Press. The WAP released damaging information on Hayes’ rivals at the Republican nominating convention, particularly James Blaine. The same occurred in the general election as bad stories about Tilden surfaced right before the election. Blondheim provides extensive citations and this book is valuable addition to the literature on the wire services. Blondheim’s footnotes are helpful because he often includes additional explanatory information in them. This book, like so many others published in the 1990s, contains an excellent footnote section but no complete bibliography. He lists some primary sources and gives the reader a brief “selected” bibliography. The first time a work is cited the author gives the complete citation, and then refers back to that rather than including a separate bibliography for all materials cited or consulted. But this shortcoming does not undercut this book's value. --David Henning AU - Blondheim, Menahem CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1994 KW - corporations post office nationalism censorship and ratings journalism news and journalism innovation law news and journalism non-USA journalism journalism Information Age +telegraph +books, periodicals, newspapers news Henning, David Associated Press Western Union wire services networks information networks Morse, Samuel telegraph, electric inventions inventors signaling systems news syndicates journalism, and 19th century cable, transatlantic transatlantic cable cable, Atlantic +nationalism and communication news, and nationalism news, and steam power news, and telegraph postal service penny press regulation, and telegraph cable regulation cable LB - 4080 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1994 ST - News Over the Wires: The Telegraph and the Flow of Public Information in America, 1844-1897 TI - News Over the Wires: The Telegraph and the Flow of Public Information in America, 1844-1897 ID - 1796 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this readable account of homefront propaganda during World War II, Blum discusses the use of radio, motion pictures, and newspapers for propaganda. This book provides historical context for the use of these media during the war. AU - Blum, John Morton CY - New York DA - 1976 KW - nationalism Truman administration Roosevelt, Franklin administration presidents, and new media public relations advertising war World War II propaganda +radio +books, periodicals, newspapers +motion pictures Roosevelt, Franklin D. Truman, Harry propaganda World War II, and propaganda propaganda, and World War II +nationalism and communication advertising and public relations LB - 9570 PB - Harcourt Brace Jovanovich PY - 1976 ST - V Was for Victory: Politics and American Culture during World War II TI - V Was for Victory: Politics and American Culture during World War II ID - 2324 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Boddy documents the sea change in American television that transformed it from a novelty of little consequence to a broadcast medium that reached into the homes of millions of Americans. Boddy focuses largely on the rise of the big three networks--NBC, ABC, CBS--and explains how cultural and economic imperatives put control of broadcast television into the hands of these networks. One of the major threads of Boddy’s argument is that as commercial sponsorship of television programs shifted from a single-sponsor format to the shorter commercials familiar today, there was an attendant shift away from live drama to telefilms and other types of pre-recorded programming. As Boddy demonstrates over the course of his study, questions of commercial sponsorship were also bound with the troubled relationship between television networks and the Hollywood film industry. The multiplicity of perspectives that Boddy evokes in his book--from network executives and television playwrights to critics and magazine editors--is both the books greatest strength and its greatest weakness. It is the book’s greatest strength because it shows that despite the great power the networks eventually came to exert over the industry, during the 1950s, they were buffeted by other forces such as public opinion; multiplicity is also the books greatest weakness because Boddy tends to bounce around from perspective to perspective within paragraphs, making it difficult for the reader to gain a sense of the books argumentative arc. That said, it is possible to trace Boddy’s major ideas through the four main sections of the book: “Setting the Stage for Commercial Television”; “The Television Industry in the Early 1950s”; “Programs and Power: Networks, Sponsors, and the Rise of Film Programming”; and “Crisis and Counterattack, 1958-60.” In the first part of the book, Boddy show that while television eventually came to replace radio as the dominant broadcast medium in America, the television industry in the late 1940s was wary of modeling itself too closely on the early radio industry, which was perceived as too hit or miss (16). Following this contrast with the radio industry, Boddy explains how in 1952 the FCC located television service in the VHF band (28). Since RCA owned numerous patents relating to this band, they soon became an early leader in the industry. It was RCA, the parent company of NBC, that set the tone for how the television industry would interact with the film industry. Boddy is perhaps at his best when chronicling the complex relationship between the television and film industries. Traditional historical accounts need to be revised that suggest a mutual lack of interest and collaboration between the film industry and the television networks in the early years of the TV industry. Despite doubts about the viability of either films or original film programming in the early years of the medium, the major Hollywood studies followed events in the television industry very closely (67). In parts two and three of his book, Boddy spends a great deal of time explaining the dimensions of this relationship. Though, for example, there was a certain demand for telefilms, A-list Hollywood films rarely made it onto television, which instead broadcast low-budget films (77). Boddy demonstrates that the networks feared telefilms would lead to deals between individual stations and studio subsidiaries that would leave them out of the financial loop; in order to reassert their control over broadcast content, by the late fifties the networks predominantly showed programs written by their in-house writers. Despite the sometimes-antagonist relationship between the television and film industries, Boddy shows that once commercial sponsorship began to take off in the mid-fifties, television proved an ideal medium for advertising films. In 1954, for example, the success of the feature-length film 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea was attributed to its promotion on the Disneyland television show (147). Following discussions of how the television and film industries intersected through advertising, Boddy shows that by the late 1950s, television industry practices and programming came to be inexorably linked to commercial sponsorship. In other words, by 1960, Boddy argues, the television industry recognized television was the ultimate advertising medium and began to develop its policies accordingly. Because the financial success of network television soon depended on showing the largest number of people the sponsors product, the industry made some poor choices that resulted in what Boddy calls TVs Public Relations Crisis of the Late 1950s (214). Citing such examples as the well-known quiz show scandals and the fact that Mutual Broadcasting Company made a deal with Dominican Republic dictator Rafael Trujillo that for $750,000 they would offer 425 minutes of months of favorable coverage, Boddy shows how the television industry grew to become at least partially accountable to the public and vocal television criticsLike their effects on the economic practices of network television, the scandals hardened industry responses to a half-decade of rising critical attacks on the medium. In the process, the television industry, under the leadership of the three networks, offered new public definitions of its programs, its creative workers, and its audience (234). Fifties Television is a useful book for anybody who wants a detailed account of the rise of television from the perspective of the industry. Boddy succeeds in weaving the complicated social, cultural, and economic milieu in which television was formed into pervasive medium that it remains today. --Steve Belletto AU - Boddy, William CY - Urbana DA - 1990 KW - corporations corporations corporations corporations advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations propaganda advertising motion pictures Belletto, Steve +television critics critics, and television NBC ABC CBS advertising advertising, and television television, and advertising television, and motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and television television, and Hollywood public relations television, and public relations public relations, and television LB - 1390 PB - University of Illinois PY - 1990 ST - Fifties Television: The Industry and Its Critics TI - Fifties Television: The Industry and Its Critics ID - 227 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author seeks to describe artificial intelligence in a manner that emphasizes its relevance to humans. She attempts to avoid jargon and specialized language. Readers with philosophical or psychological interests in artificial intelligence may find this work most interesting. "Above all," she writes, "I have tried to convey a sense of the relevance of artificial intelligence to the understanding of natural man. Contrary to what most people assume, this field of research has a potential for counteracting the dehumanizing influence of nature science, for suggesting solutions to many traditional problems in the philosophy of mind, and for illuminating the hidden complexities of human thinking and personal psychology. The common view that machine research must tend to display us humiliatingly to ourselves as 'mere clockwork' is false. The more widely this is realized, the less of a threat will artificial intelligence present to humane conceptions of society." (from Preface) The author at the time was a Reader in Philosophy and Psychology at the University of Sussex. AU - Boden, Margaret A. CY - New York; and Hassocks, Sussex DA - 1977 KW - computers values communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution computers communication revolution, and second industrial revolution values microelectronics human nature +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology values, and computers values, and artificial intelligence human nature, and artificial intelligence microelectronics revolution microelectronics revolution, and artificial intelligence communication revolution second industrial revolution computers, and artificial intelligence artificial intelligence, and computers artificial intelligence, and human nature LB - 3100 PB - Basic Books, Inc.; and Harvester Press PY - 1977 ST - Artificial Intelligence and Natural Man TI - Artificial Intelligence and Natural Man ID - 1702 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Bogart explores "the relations between surveillance and simulation technologies, and their significance for issues of control in postindustrial or ... 'telematic' societies at the end of the twentieth century." Theoretically, he relies heavily on poststructuralist or postmodernist writers such as Michel Foucault and Jean Baudrillard. Considering computer profiling, virtual reality, artificial intelligence, and genetic mapping, Bogart builds a "social science fiction" that explains how simulation technology revolutionizes the surveillance at work, in war, in sexuality, and in one's private life. AU - Bogard, William CY - Cambridge, Eng. DA - 1996 KW - R & D computers time and timekeeping time sexuality law, and privacy law labor research and development war labor genetics computers war geography +computers and the Internet virtual reality privacy surveillance +artificial intelligence and biotechnology genetic engineering computer profiling genetic mapping Foucault, Michel Baudrillard, Jean postmodernism time space (spatial) sexuality, and survelliance +military communication office, and new media office, and privacy labor, and privacy office LB - 11450 N1 - See also: office PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1996 ST - The simulation of surveillance: Hypercontrol in telematic societies TI - The simulation of surveillance: Hypercontrol in telematic societies ID - 2505 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author explains the organization of this work as follows: "Although not rigidly defined, the book is divided into three parts. Chapters 1 through 6 present the earliest beginnings of film and continue through the technological improvements and the artistic development that began an industry. The second part (chapters 7 through 11) begins with sound. In this part, the reader is engaged by the problems, frustrations, and inspiration which came from the adddition of the new dimension. The final section begins with an international renaissance, the simultaneous arrival of television, a crucial court decision, politica pressures, and the beginning of the 'new realism' directly after World War II. The concluding chapters in the three sections are intended to serve as an overview of the period, pulling together the evolution of form and function up to those pivotal periods." (xv-xvi) In the opening chapter, the author discusses the prehistory and origins of cinema. Five important developments formed the needed theoretical and technology base for cinematography -- 1) peristence of vision; 2) photography; 3) the movie camera; 4) film; and 5) the motion picture projector. During the late 1960s, the author notes, te Cinemobile Mark IV appeared that made it much easier to film on location almost anywhere in the world. -SV Chapter 7 in this book is entitled “Sound and Color: A New Beginning.” The author takes the position that technology has been essential to the development of the film industry. No artist can transcend the nature of his medium. Especially interesting is the discussion of the ways in which technology directed the movies toward the large mass audience. Among the points made is that technology was extremely expensive, and therefore films needed widespread appeal to recover costs and make money. The point is made that the industry has always turned to technological innovation whenever it has slipped a bit in the affections of the public. --Gordon Jackson AU - Bohn, Thomas W. and Richard L. Stromgren CY - Port Washington, N.Y. DA - 1975 KW - color motion pictures, and color Cinemobile cameras film color, and motion pictures television television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sound sound recording Jackson, Gordon motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and technology sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures LB - 30840 PB - Alfred Publishing Co., Inc. PY - 1975 ST - Light and Shadows: A History of Motion Pictures TI - Light and Shadows: A History of Motion Pictures ID - 2832 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Bolter attempts to assess the computer's impact on western culture. The first couple of chapters are interesting in discussing dominant metaphors of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries (the clock), and the nineteenth (the engine). The author writes that "the age of the computer is in some ways a return to the age of the potter's wheel." Chapter 3 ("Principles of Operation") discusses John von Neumann's computer. The remaining chapters (e.g., "Embodied Symbol" and "Electronic Space", etc.) are less oriented toward providing historical perspective. This book was completed before the widespread use of personal computers and the Internet. AU - Bolter, J. David CY - Chapel Hill DA - 1984 KW - computers computers +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology Turing, Alan metaphors Neumann, John von computers, and history of LB - 7740 PB - University of North Carolina Press PY - 1984 ST - Turing’s Man: Western Culture in the Computer Age TI - Turing’s Man: Western Culture in the Computer Age ID - 2143 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Referring to the movie Strange Days (1995), about virtual reality, the authors write that "digital technologies are proliferating faster than our cultural, legal, or educational institutions can keep up with them. In addressing our culture's contradictory imperatives for immediacy and hypermediacy, this film demonstrates what we call a double logic of remediation. Our culture wants both to multiply its media and to erase all traces of mediation: ideally, it wants to erase its media in the very act of multiplying them. "In this last decade of the twentieth century, we are in an unusual position to appreciate remediation, because of the rapid development of new digital media and the nearly as rapid response by traditional media." This book is divided into three parts and mostly concerned with "visual technologies, such as computer graphics and the World Wide Web." Part I considers remediation in the context of cultural and literary theory. Readers not especially interested in theory can skip directly to Part II "which illustrates the work of remediation in such media as computer graphics, film, television, the World Wide Web, and virtual reality. These illustrative chapters should make sense even without the fuller explanations of transparent immediacy, hypermediacy, and remediation provided in Part I." Part III turns back to theory to examine "how new digital media are participating in our culture's redefinition of self." The authors offer references ("the rinted equivalent of hyperlinks") for those who do not wish to read this book in a linear fashion. AU - Bolter, Jay David AU - Grusin, Richard CY - Cambridge, MA DA - c1999 KW - computers special effects, digital special effects, and digitization theory television, and digital special effects seeing at a distance postmodernism modernism motion pictures digitization computers virtual reality +computers and the Internet digital media remediation media convergence +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and special effects motion pictures, and digital effect digital media, and motion pictures +television television, and digital media digital media, and television computer graphics special effects, and computers special effects, and digital media digital media, and special effects World Wide Web new way of seeing digital media, and new way of seeing remediation digital media, and remediation remediation, and digital media theory, and remediation Internet LB - 120 PB - MIT Press PY - 1999 ST - Remediation: Understanding New Media TI - Remediation: Understanding New Media ID - 101 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This anthology stresses that photography is regarded not only as a form of the aesthetic practice but also a medium of ideology. Photography, according to this volume, should be understood in a larger social, economic and political context. Being aware of the dissatisfaction of traditional photographic history which “emphasizes homogeneity and continuity” (p. x), the writers shift their focus to the disruptions and change within the history of photography. Some writers discuss about the social impact generated by the dual role of photography as a means of serving democracy and promoting social control. Some focus on the photographic technology which is endowed with spiritual value of people’s everyday life on the one hand. On the other hand, photographs also make the familiar become strange. Hence, the question in the social consequence of photography and the politics of photographic truth is concerned with the heterogeneous interpretations of photographic images. These essays in this volume attempt to demonstrate the works of power relation behind the representation of photographic images and their contested meanings. Contributors include: Douglas Crimp, Christopher Phillips, Benjamin Buchloh, Abigail Solomon Godeau, Catherine Lord, Deborah Bright, Sally Stein, Jan Zita Grover, Carol Squiers, Esther Parada, Richard Bolton, Rosalind Krauss, Martha Rosler, and Allan Sekula. --Huai-Hsuan Chen AU - Bolton, Richard, ed. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1989 KW - art Chen, Huai-Hsuan photography and visual communication tourism photography photography, and travel photography, and tourism photography, and history of photography, and critics critics critics, and photography photography, and women women women, and photography photography, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and photography photography, and modernism photography, and art art, and photography values values, and photography photography, and values photography, and truth LB - 33090 PB - MIT Press PY - 1989 ST - The Contest of Meaning: Critical Histories of Photography TI - The Contest of Meaning: Critical Histories of Photography ID - 62 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 124-page book is not one of Boorstin’s best works, yet does offer interesting observations. It is a revision of the William W. Cook Lectures on American Institutions which Boorstin delivered at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, in April, 1972. “Perhaps the most important single change in the human consciousness in the last century, and especially in the American consciousness,” he argues, “has been the multiplying of the means and forms of what was call ‘communications.’...” Boorstin’s distinguishes “information” from “knowledge.” Information’s “most prominent and distinctive characteristic is its randomness. Knowledge is a coherent structure, where each part is related to every other, and where discovery consists of finding these relationships. (William James defined a genius as a person especially adept in this ability)....” Boorstin’s treatment of photography and repeatable experience brings to mind William Ivin’s treatise on the significance of prints and photographs. Boorstin also discusses the role of the phonograph in repeatable experience, and argues that “the triumphs of American industry have led to the decline of the miraculous.” Photography, the phonograph, motion pictures, instant replay and “done much to remove ... spontaneity.” Boorstin, a critic of 1960s counterculture, worried about the decline of civility and its effect of democracy. “Democracy thrives on selective communication. And to keep the society democratic, the selection must be made not by some outside political agency, but by the self-controlled citizen.” Boorstin advocated better programming to make television “less a solvent and more a cement in our American community.” AU - Boorstin, Daniel J. CY - New York DA - 1971, 1974 KW - photography motion pictures communication revolution community democracy +sound recording general studies democracy and media communication revolution information v. knowledge +photography and visual communication phonograph instant replay television counterculture critics +television television, and instant replay +motion pictures and popular culture television, and democracy LB - 11720 PB - Random House PY - 1971 ST - Democracy and Its Discontents: Reflections on Everyday America TI - Democracy and Its Discontents: Reflections on Everyday America ID - 1409 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Boorstin’s book is an exploration of the culture of the manufactured and artificial event, the pseudo-event in the United States. Boorstin argues that as the demand for information has grown, journalists have been forced to create news that would not have ordinarily been reported. In order to fill the multiple daily editions and hourly news broadcasts, journalists have resorted to new techniques, such as the interview, and new perspectives, such as the news analysis and summary. The trend is apparent in all parts of our culture, as people become more interested in image than reality, and in celebrity over character. Boorstin traces the history of what he calls the Graphic Revolution. This is the rise of mass print culture, made possible by technological advances in papermaking and printing. It also includes new methods of image reproduction, such as photography and high-quality reproduction, which have filled our print media. As this has happened, Americans, in Boorstin’s view, have become enamored of the image, and now have lost touch with reality. All aspects of society have been affected by this change. In the political arena, spin and public relations have replaced truth and character. Americans now vote for an image rather than a candidate. The same can be said of travel and first-hand experience. A culture that is focused on the image wants travel that is exciting and exotic, but also convenient, inexpensive, and most importantly, conforming to the preconceived idea of the place visited. Boorstin also discusses the decline of literature and serious art in a world where complexity, thoughtfulness and originality are marginalized. Advertising is the clearest example of this kind of social shift. The advertiser purposely creates the pseudo-event, the public relations image that will focus attention on the product or service out of nowhere. Brand recognition, corporate logos and the like are all artificial, pseudo-events created to shape opinion and reinforce passive conformity rather than critical thinking. Boorstin is highly critical of this shift, and the overall culture that has developed. This 25th anniversary edition was reprinted in 1987 with little revision. In his introduction, Boorstin explains that the same forces are at work and that even the same examples and illustrations are adequate for his discussion. The book is interesting, though one-sided. Boorstin offers little analysis of the social or economic forces that drive this change, or at the more specific effect it has on public opinion, voting, foreign policy debate, economic policy or consumption decisions. --Rob Rabe AU - Boorstin, Daniel J. CY - New York DA - 1961, 1982, 1987 KW - celebrity photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations propaganda advertising communication revolution journalism communication revolution community democracy news and journalism values public relations news media general studies Rabe, Rob graphics revolution +photography and visual communication +motion pictures +duplicating technologies +sound recording +television democracy and media critics advertising pseudoevents celebrity culture values, and media news, and pseudoevents media literacy reproduction revolution news, and public relations news, and entertainment news, and advertising advertising public relations LB - 9190 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media OP - 1961 PB - Atheneum PY - 1961 ST - The Image: A Guide to Pseudo-Events in America, 25th Anniversary Edition TI - The Image: A Guide to Pseudo-Events in America, 25th Anniversary Edition ID - 2286 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book was the third volume in Boorstin's trilogy on the American experience. Written for a literate and broad reading public, this work discusses numerous inventions that transformed the United States after the Civil War. Boorstin deals with developments in communication but provides a much broad context of inventions during the Industrial Revolution. AU - Boorstin, Daniel J. CY - New York DA - 1973 KW - technology nationalism photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations communication revolution archives communication revolution community democracy +sound recording libraries libraries, and information storage +nationalism and communication +photography and visual communication general studies +telephones +telegraph advertising +motion pictures +duplicating technologies +sound recording phonograph technology and society democracy and media graphics revolution +information storage LB - 9580 M1 - 3 PB - Vintage Books PY - 1973 ST - The Americans: The Democratic Experience T2 - The Americans TI - The Americans: The Democratic Experience ID - 2325 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work has two sections that deal with the technology of cinema. Part Four, "Film style and technology to 1930," have the following essays: David Bordwell and Janet Staiger, "Technology, style and mode of production"; Kristin Thompson, "Initial standardization of the basic technology"; Kristin Thompson, "Major technological changes of the 1920s"; David Bordwell, "The Mazda tests of 1928"; and David Bordwell, "The introduction of sound." Part Six, "Film style and technology, 1930-60," is written by Bordwell and has chapters entitled: "Deep-focus cinematography," "Technicolor," and "Widescreen processes and stereophonic sound." This work also has a useful "Select Bibliography." --SV This work takes the position that technological innovation in the movies was strictly governed, and hence restrained to a degree, by the requirement to conform to the classical style of film making and narrative exposition, and to traditional modes of production. Hollywood is presented here as an essentially conservative industry, in which the vested heavyweights systematically grind down the competition. On this reading, technology does not shape the idea content of the movies, but is enlisted to help elaborate the preexisting conventions. The book uses both secondary and primary sources. --Gordon Jackson AU - Bordwell, David, Janet Staiger, and Kristin Thompson CY - New York DA - 1985 KW - photography widescreen +sound recording +motion pictures +photography and visual communication motion pictures, and technology (to 1960) widescreen, and motion pictures sound recording, and stereophonic sound color, and motion pictures Technicolor cameras, and motion pictures sound recording, and motion pictures Thompson, Kristin Staiger, Janet Bordwell, David bibliographies, and motion picture styles bibliographies, and motion picture technology cameras color Hollywood Hollywood, and classical system motion pictures, and technology Jackson, Gordon +bibliographies LB - 4840 PB - Columbia University Press PY - 1985 ST - The Classical Hollywood Cinema: Film Style & Mode of Production to 1960 TI - The Classical Hollywood Cinema: Film Style & Mode of Production to 1960 ID - 1871 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this 132-page book, Borst argues that “the prevailing notions of time and numbers were little altered even by the invention of the mechanical clock, whose revolutionary influence tends to be overrated by modern scholars.” “The eighteenth century saw the beginning of changes in the European concept of time. These were too uneven, too slow in forming, to be described as part of a revolution, but they finally brought the 1,400-year-old history of the computus to an end....” “...What is new about the modern age is not the uniqueness of events or the changeability of structures. Each generation has always justifiably felt that what happened to them and was expected of them in their lifetime was without precedent. In the modern age, it is only the acceleration of historical change, far beyond human comprehension, which has increased. Changes no longer occur gradually, between generations and regions, but within a few years and throughout the world. It is no longer just the scholars in their studies who feel the piercing wind of change, but people on the street as well. Most of these upheavals have considerably prolonged and substantially enriched human life; if its very existence is to be ensured, permanent innovations will be needed in the future, too.” AU - Borst, Arno (English translation) CY - Chicago DA - 1990; 1993 KW - computers time and timekeeping time preservation communication revolution history, and new media computers timekeeping, and clocks non-USA history history timekeeping time clocks, mechanical communication revolution history, break with +computers and the Internet computers, and time time, and computers change, acceleration of time, and European conception of clocks change Europe LB - 2010 PB - Verlag Klaus Wegenbach; University of Chicago Press PY - 1993 ST - The Ordering of Time: From the Ancient Computus to the Modern Computer TI - The Ordering of Time: From the Ancient Computus to the Modern Computer ID - 1597 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is Volume 34 in the series World Perspectives. The thesis of this series, according to editor Ruth Nanda Anshen, is that “man is in the process of developing a new consciousness which, in spite of his apparent spiritual and moral captivity, can eventually lift the human race above and beyond fear, ignorance, and isolation which beset it today.” Boulding, an economist and leader in the area of conflict resolution, said that “the twentieth century marks the middle period of a great transition in the state of the human race. It may properly be called the second great transition in the history of mankind.” That first transition “was that from precivilized to civilized society which began to take place about five (or ten) thousand years ago.” That first transition was nearing its end and humans were now making the “transition from civilized to post-civilized society.” On indicator of the magnitude of change, Boulding believed in 1964, was that for many kinds of activities, “the date that divides human history into two equal parts is well within living memory.” For example, an equal number of chemical publication appeared between 1950 and 1964, as appeared before 1950. People extracted as much from mines after 1910 as they did in all the years before that date. About 90 percent of all the scientists who ever lived were alive in 1964. While mankind’s destructive powers had become unprecedented, so too had its recuperative abilities. The rate of change in society had been accelerated, Boulding believed. He also thought (in 1964), that “we are now on the edge of a biological revolution which may have results for mankind just as dramatic as the nuclear revolution of a generation ago.” AU - Boulding, Kenneth E. CY - New York DA - 1964 KW - preservation communication revolution history, and new media communication revolution, and second industrial revolution history history general studies history, break with change, and America biotechnology change second industrial revolution +artificial intelligence and biotechnology communication revolution LB - 120 PB - Harper & Row PY - 1964 ST - The Meaning of the Twentieth CenturyThe Great Transition TI - The Meaning of the Twentieth CenturyThe Great Transition ID - 1408 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This, the second volume in Scribner's History of theAmerican Cinema series (Charles Harpole, editor), "is an effort to understand, through a better knowledge of how films were seen and experienced at the time they first appeared to their audiences and of the surrounding circumstances of their production, distribution, and exhibition, and the prevalent cultural and social ideas at the time, just how it was that films and filmmaking were transformed in this period. Film forms changed as drastically in the seven years covered by this volume as at any point in motion-picture history. At the same time, the film business itself changed from a hand-crafted amusement enterprise and sideshow to a gigantic entertainment industry and the first mass-communication medium. One of the goals of this book is to demonstrate that these two phenomena were in certain ways related." The work's fifteen chapters are devoted to such topics as: "The Nickelodeon"; "The Recruiting Station of Vice"; "Acting: The Camera's Closer View"; "Movie Palaces"; "Detours on the Way to Hollywood"; "The Genre Film"; "The Feature Film"; and "Scene Dissection, Spectacle, Film as Art." AU - Bowser, Eileen CY - New York DA - 1990 KW - Edison, Thomas audiences photography women, and new media seeing at a distance modernism materials cinema motion pictures celluloid cinematography law law censorship and ratings women theaters regulation motion pictures motion pictures, and theaters film motion pictures motion pictures, and silent movies motion pictures, and theaters (silent) audiences, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures regulation, and motion pictures cinematographers film stock motion pictures, and lighting theaters, and motion pictures women, and motion pictures new way of seeing cameras, and motion pictures African Americans, and motion pictures Edison Film Manufacturing Company Griffith, D. W. color,and Kinemacolor color, and motion pictures nickelodeons motion pictures, and music photography and visual communication motion pictures, and photography audiences cameras censorship color motion pictures, and race theaters motion pictures, and theaters cameras, and effect on acting, materials African Americans LB - 9520 PB - Charles Scribner's Sons PY - 1990 ST - The Transformation of Cinema, 1907-1915 TI - The Transformation of Cinema, 1907-1915 ID - 2319 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This well-known and important book deals with efforts to censor works that often contained modern themes. Many of those themes were of a sexual nature. Boyer comes down strongly on the side of those who believed that books and other written communications should have greater latitude to deal with the complexities of human existence. AU - Boyer, Paul S. CY - New York DA - 1968 KW - cultural change values print print culture modernity cyberspace culture freedom law censorship and ratings context censorship, and print print, and censorship books books, and censorship Victorianism cultural change, late 19th cultural change, early 20th modernism censorship First Amendment censorship, and First Amendment First Amendment, and books +books, periodicals, newspapers censorship, and books critics values, and books values LB - 12970 PB - Charles Scribner's Sons PY - 1968 ST - Purity in Print: The Vice Society Movement and Book Censorship in America TI - Purity in Print: The Vice Society Movement and Book Censorship in America ID - 473 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is the second edition of Boyer's well-known and important examination of efforts to censor works that often contained modern themes. Many of those themes were of a sexual nature. Boyer comes down strongly on the side of those who believed that books and other written communications should have greater latitude to deal with the complexities of human existence. The final two chapters in this edition cover develops from the 1960s to the end of the century. Boyer deals with such topics as conservative reaction to the President 1970s Commission on Obscenity and Pornography, the Meese Commission (1985-86), and attempts to censor material in libraries. AU - Boyer, Paul S. CY - Madison DA - [1968], 2002 ET - 2nd KW - presidents and new media computers cultural change , context censorship, and print print, and censorship Victorianism cultural change, late 19th cultural change, early 20th modernism censorship First Amendment censorship, and First Amendment First Amendment, and books books, periodicals, newspapers critics President Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) Meese Commission computers and the Internet computers, and censorship censorship and ratings freedom censorship, and freedom freedom, and censorship values values, and censorship censorship, and values religion religion, and censorship censorship, and religion information storage censorship, and information storage information storage, and censorship pornography print computers LB - 30550 PB - University of Wisconsin Press PY - 2002 ST - Purity in Print: Book Censorship in America from the Gilded Age to the Computer Age TI - Purity in Print: Book Censorship in America from the Gilded Age to the Computer Age ID - 2817 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Brand poses two questions: "How do we make long-term thinking automatic and common instead of difficult and rare? How do we make the taking of long-term responsibility inevitable?" One device to help us think about these question is the "Clock/Library." Brand places these question into the context of our modern communication revolution. "The pace of Moore's Law has become the pacesetter for human events," he writes. "According to a rule of thumb among engineers, any tenfold quantitative change is a qualitative change, a fundamentally new situation rather than a simple extrapolation. Moore's Law brings such tenfold structural changes every three years or so, thus three revolutions every decade, for five decades straight." --SV The Ancient Greeks distinguisged between two different types of time. There was the "kairos" which is the opportunity or the propsitious moment. The other kind is the eternal or ongoing time, which is called chronos. "While the first...offers hope, the second extends a warning. Kairos is the time of cleverness, chronos the time of wisdom. Our dead and unborn reside in the realm of chronos, murmuring opportunistic, kairotic seizures of the day." The clock/library serves as a point of reference for humans. It is more of a thesis than a thing but the clock also allows people to think long-term. “The main characteristic of the Clock is its linearity. It treats one year absolutely like another, oblivious of Moore’s Law accelerates, national fares, wars, dark ages, or climate changes. In its company there is nothing special about now. While we discount on a sliding scale both the future and the past, the Clock does neither. Far future and near future are the same; distant past and recent past have equal value.” Richard Benson, dean of Yale Art School says the library of the future is not a library but is a museum. “Embed the Clock, as a centerpiece, in a new museum of the history of technology. If technology is to be the future of the living world, then we have to admit that it is at its starting block. We are the Cambrian explosion of technology, and we are at the perfect point in time to gather the fossils as they are being made and discarded...” --Amanda Novak AU - Brand, Stewart CY - New York DA - 1999 KW - computers Moore, Gordon time and timekeeping time preservation preservation history, and new media preservation communication revolution Internet archives communication revolution +future and science fiction digitization timekeeping, and clocks history geography libraries libraries, and information storage information processing Information Age history +computers and the Internet +information storage libraries, electronic electronic preservation information revolution clocks timekeeping time space (spatial) digital media Moore's Law future Clock, Millennial history, and Internet history, and computers history, break with change clocks electronic media information storage libraries Internet, and history Internet, and information storage information storage, and Internet Novak, Amanda history, and new media preservation, and new media clock of the long now LB - 11080 PB - Basic Books PY - 1999 ST - The Clock of the Long Now: Time and Responsibility TI - The Clock of the Long Now: Time and Responsibility ID - 2469 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is based on 70 hours of interviews, and by reading papers written by people who worked in the Media Lab at MIT. “The rest of the book explores ‘so what?’ ... The structure of communications is so fundamental to a society that when the structure changes, everything is affected.... Each time the means of communications advanced, the ‘world’ metamorphosed.” Brand quoted from Peter Drucker’s Innovation and Entrepreneurship (1985): after World War II the “model of technology” became “the biological process, the events inside an organism. And in an organism, processes are not organized around energy in the physicist’s meaning of the term. They are organized around information.’” Of interest in this book are Chapter 1, “Demo or Die”; Chapter 2, “New Media 1 -- Receiving”; Chapter 3, “Terminal Garden”; Chapter 5, “The Science of Apparition”; Chapter 8, “The Room Who Will Giggle”; Chapter 11, “The Politics of Broadcast”; Chapter 12, “The World Information Economy”; and Chapter 13, “The Quality of Life.” AU - Brand, Stewart CY - New York DA - 1987 KW - R & D +military communication communication revolution +future and science fiction war general studies political economy biotechnology World War II information age communication revolution change, and America future change +artificial intelligence and biotechnology research and development political economy global communication LB - 11710 PB - Viking PY - 1987 ST - The Media Lab inventing the future at MIT TI - The Media Lab inventing the future at MIT ID - 2522 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Braudy comments on the way photography changed the nature of fame. “The emotional intimacy that the photograph helped foster between the famous and their audience was also reflected in the movement away from former standards of how prominence was conveyed. … But nothing in artistic portraiture really anticipated the almost total break with the traditional look of a European public face expressed in Brady’s photographs of Lincoln. This was a look unadorned by the motifs of fame and glory that even the 494/495 French Revolution had only transformed instead of obliterating (which Napoleon III was spending a good deal of energy from 1852 on trying to revive)….”(494-95). [my emphasis] AU - Braudy, Leo CY - New York DA - 1986 KW - fame celebrity Marked actors acting ref, secondary celebrity culture fame personality photography, and new art form photography, and psychology photography, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and photography photography, and fame photography, and stars audiences media effects photography, and audiences audiences, and photography media effects, and audiences media effects, and photography photography, and media effects photography, and modernity modernity, and photography photography and modernity new way of seeing fame, and new media modernity photography LB - 41590 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1986 ST - The Frenzy of Renown: Fame & Its History TI - The Frenzy of Renown: Fame & Its History ID - 4258 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The authors write that “The main impetus for the development of solid state electronics came from three directions: the invention and development of wireless telegraphy and all that it led to in radio and television, the success of valve electronics, which widened the scope of electronics far beyond the original wireless telegraphy applications, and finally pure research in solid state physics which had, from time to time, almost by accident, brought about various solid state devices....” This is an interesting work on the technical developments leading up to the discovery of the transistor and the industry that grew up in its aftermath. The authors discuss the invention of the transistor and the roles of Bardeen, Brattain, and Shockley. Their interactions often were less than harmonious. The final chapter speculates on the future (as it then appeared to the authors who wrote in 1978). Much of their speculation, of course, has come to pass. AU - Braun, Enest and Stuart MacDonald CY - Cambridge, Eng. DA - 1978 KW - R & D computers microprocessing transistors, and integrated circuits +military communication communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution +telegraph solid state microelectronics +computers and the Internet transistors miniaturization microprocessors microelectronics revolution Shockley, William Bardeen, John Brattain, Walter integrated circuits +radio +television solid state electronics electronics, and solid state telegraph, wireless electronic media telegraph, and wireless electronics, valve research and development materials LB - 8810 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1978 ST - Revolution in Miniature: The history and impact of semiconductor electronics TI - Revolution in Miniature: The history and impact of semiconductor electronics ID - 2248 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This biography examines the life of Etienne-Jules Marey, who made contributions to photography, cinematography, aviation, and such other fields as cardiology, physiological instrumentation, and the science of labor. Braun places Marey in the context of nineteenth century positivism and scientific thought. Although Marey’s work is often associated with that of Eadweard Muybridge, the author that there an “enormous difference between Marey’s photographic study of locomotion and the one ... Muybridge carried out in Philadelphia at roughly the same time.” Like Muybridge, Marey’s work was influential in the field of art. This 450-page book is generously illustrated with many of Marey’s photographs. The work also has a bibliography of Marey’s works, arranged by year (1857-1904). AU - Braun, Marta CY - Chicago and London DA - 1992 KW - Muybridge, Edward Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories photography +photography and visual communication +motion pictures and popular culture cinematography cameras France France, and photography photography, and France Muybridge, Eadweard Muybridge, Eadweard, and Etienne-Jules Marey bibliographies, and Etienne-Jules Marey bibliographies, and photography +aeronautics and space communication aeronautics, and Etienne-Jules Marey Bergson, Henri chronophotography Demeny, Georges Duchamp, Marcel Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Etienne-Jules Marey celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid time photography, and time time, and photography biography + inventors inventions Lumiere Cinematographe photography, and Etienne-Jules Marey Tatin, Victor labor labor, and photography bibliographies materials motion pictures non-USA time and timekeeping aeronautics LB - 28850 N1 - See also: office PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1992 ST - Picturing Time: The Work of Etienne-Jules Marey (1830-1904) TI - Picturing Time: The Work of Etienne-Jules Marey (1830-1904) ID - 2634 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Briggs, Asa CY - London DA - 1961 KW - non-USA Great Britain +television television, and Great Britain Great Britain, and television broadcasting Great Britain LB - 6610 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1961 ST - The Birth of Broadcasting: The History of Broadcasting in the U. K.: Volume I TI - The Birth of Broadcasting: The History of Broadcasting in the U. K.: Volume I VL - 1 ID - 2039 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Briggs, Asa CY - London DA - 1965 KW - non-USA Great Britain +television Great Britain Great Britain, and television television, and Great Britain LB - 6620 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1965 ST - The Golden Age of Wireless: The History of Broadcasting in the U. K.: Volume II TI - The Golden Age of Wireless: The History of Broadcasting in the U. K.: Volume II ID - 2040 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author starts this book by saying: “The idea of transmitting thought across the seas by means of the electric fluid -- that wonderful agent [electricity] which reserves fresh surprises for us every day -- dates back to the first years of this century....” Appendix II has interesting material on submarine telephony, and Chapter V, entitled “Recent Developments," has information on types of cable used. Pages 695-702 deal with Marconi’s “Wireless” telegraphy. This work has good maps on the cable system worldwide and many illustrations. AU - Bright, Charles CY - London DA - 1898 KW - illustrations radio References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps geography non-USA telegraph electricity telephones telephones, submarine cable, submarine telegraph, submarine wireless communication global communication cable, maps of telegraph, and maps of Marconi, Guglielmo wireless telegraphy telegraph, electric cable maps illustrations LB - 5150 PB - Crosby Lockwood and Son PY - 1898 ST - Submarine TelegraphsTheir History, Construction, and Working TI - Submarine TelegraphsTheir History, Construction, and Working ID - 1902 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Brinkley, Joel CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - +future and science fiction community democracy +television future democracy and media future, and television LB - 6630 PB - Harcourt Brace & Company PY - 1997 ST - Defining Vision: The Battle for the Future of Television TI - Defining Vision: The Battle for the Future of Television ID - 2041 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work reproduces seminal articles on a wide range of electrical technologies. Part I covers the Colonial period to 1876. In includes such topics as Benjamin Franklin's experiments, electrochemical batteries and electromagnetism, the telegraph and telephone, and electrical lighting. One selection is an 1858 report in the American Journal of Science reporting on the successful completion of the Atlantic cable. Part II covers the century from 1877 to 1976. Topics include the professionalization of the electrical profession, electric lights and power systems, and electrical communication systems (which includes telegraphy, telephones, radio, the kinescope and early experiments with television, coaxial cable, radar, transatlantic communications by means of telephones and satellites, and advances in antennas). Also included in Part II are sections on electronics, feedback control and computers. AU - Brittain, James E., ed. CY - New York DA - 1977 KW - computers information theory labor materials non-USA office office, and new media office networks IEEE +electricity +computers and the Internet +telegraph +telephones radar cable, transatlantic telephones, and transatlantic networks, electrical electronic media vacuum tubes antennas satellites satellites, and communication global communication Franklin, Benjamin infrastructure motors batteries, electrochemical electromagnetism +television cable, coaxial kinescope Shannon, Claude De Forest, Lee +radio radar Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) cable cable, Atlantic television, and cable +aeronautics and space communication materials batteries LB - 4810 PB - IEEE Press PY - 1977 ST - Turning Points in American Electrical History TI - Turning Points in American Electrical History ID - 1868 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is based on the author’s Ph.D. dissertation in economic history completed at the University of London. This work concentrates almost exclusively on the question of railway finance, with a case study on the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway (main line was completed in 1841). This work is based on primary sources, including traffic receipts and expense reports, gross receipts, data on revenue accounts, and other institutional records. This narrow focus enables the author to show in a detailed manner the flow of capital investment in this period, particularly the tendency in Britain to “over-invest” per mile in comparison with other nations. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Broadbridge, Seymour CY - London DA - 1970 KW - non-USA Wolf, Nicholas +transportation Great Britain railroads Great Britain, and railroads railroads, and Great Britain LB - 1850 PB - Frank Cass & Co. PY - 1970 ST - Studies in Railway Expansion and the Capital Market in England, 1825-1873 TI - Studies in Railway Expansion and the Capital Market in England, 1825-1873 ID - 273 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author summarizes his work in the following manner: “The main theme of this book is the development of television from a position as a newcomer and an outsider in society to its present status as a ubiquitous phenomenon, tightly integrated into the fabric of society. The author maintains that when television became a mass medium during the early post-War era it was variously regarded as a spectacle, as an intruder or even as a menace. Several decades later it had turned into a valued companion, a fixture of our existence, and even an object of worship. Broddason reviews scholarly literature in an effort "to clarify the development of the image of television." He then "moves on to historical comparisons and concludes with the presentation of empirical results obtained from repeated surveys among young people in Iceland over a period of 23 years. The empirical material is used to test the applicability of basic concepts introduced in the first part of the book. At the same time it is used to throw light on the dynamics in the relationship between television and the rest of society. This is accomplished through an analysis of some survey questions central to the problem of television in society.” Chapter 2, “The Image of Television: The Development of Three Research Perspectives,” is an informative and thought-provoking discussion of television’s changing image during the latter half of the 20th century. The author notes that the initial reaction to television -- like the reaction to the appearance of virtually all new media since the printing press -- was one of moral panic. This chapter offers a good survey on how researchers and other commentators -- Wilbur Schramm, Marshall McLuhan, Raymond Williams, Paul F. Lazarsfeld, Daniel Boorstin, Joshua Meyrowitz, James Carey, Harold Innis, Karl Erik Rosengren, Neil Postman, and many others -- viewed television’s impact on society. The chapter is interesting on the metaphors (intruder, menace, companion, etc.) that have been used to describe television, and it offers an excellent introduction to theoretical research that has been done on this medium. AU - Broddason, Thorbjörn CY - Lund, Sweden DA - 1996 KW - television, and values law non-USA values Europe +television values, and television regulation regulation, and television McLuhan, Marshall Williams, Raymond Schramm, Wilbur Lazarsfeld, Paul Boorstin, Daniel Meyrowitz, Joshua Carey, James Innis, Harold Rosegren, Karl Erik Postman, Neil television, and research on television, and Europe Iceland television, and Iceland censorship and ratings LB - 6640 PB - Lund University Press PY - 1996 ST - Television in Time: Research Images and Empirical Findings TI - Television in Time: Research Images and Empirical Findings ID - 2042 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - There is some discussion in the work of Spielberg's use of special effects in such films as Poltergeist (1982). AU - Brode, Douglas CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Spielberg, Steven special effects motion pictures, and special effects Poltergeist LB - 28010 PB - Citadel Press PY - 1995 ST - The Films of Steven Spielberg TI - The Films of Steven Spielberg ID - 537 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The book grew out of the Laser History Project, started in 1982, at the Laser Institute of America. Four scientific societies encouraged the study: the American Physical Society, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers’ Quantum Electronics and Applications Society (now the Lasers and Electro - Optics Society), the Laser Institute of America, and the Optical Society of America. Chapter 2 deals with masers, chapter 3 with the laser, with the next two chapters on the acceleration of laser research and the marketplace. Chapter 6 is “Explaining the Laser,” while the final chapter discusses the laser “now and in the future.” AU - Bromberg, Joan Lisa CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1991 KW - R & D +military communication research and development +future and science fiction lasers masers electronic media research and development, and lasers future, and lasers future LB - 8710 PB - MIT Press PY - 1991 ST - The Laser in America, 1950-1970 TI - The Laser in America, 1950-1970 ID - 2240 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book, part of the Doubleday Pictorial Library series, attempts an encyclopedic treatment of technology. The first of its 16 chapters is historical, attempting to give an overview of technology through human history. Subsequent chapters are devoted to techniques of measurement (e.g., time, weights, temperature, etc.); power; natural resources; chemical technology; metals; glass and ceramics; agriculture and food production; textiles; building technology; land, water, and air transportation; military technology; communications, including printing, photography, recording, motion pictures, radio, television, computers, cybernetics, and more. A final concluding chapter explores social consequences. The authors predict that soon "the moon will be covered with semiconductors and photoelements that will convert the sun's energy into power" that can be used on earth. But the social impact of technology is not examined very deeply. The work says that "new discoveries unfailingly bring social changes, and society must adapt to them or die." AU - Bronowski, J., with Gerald Barry, James Fisher, and Julian Huxley CY - Garden City, N.Y. DA - 1963, 1964 KW - R & D computers tape recording, magnetic magnetic recording magnetic tape recording photography time and timekeeping magnetic tape print research and development war materials materials genetics engines digitization +computers and the Internet timekeeping, and clocks war +general studies |+photography and visual communication +sound recording +motion pictures +military communication +television +radio rocketry tape recording telecommunications cybernetics automation +computers digital media analog media computers, digital computers, analog printing +transportation +aeronautics and space communication satellites ceramics engines, steam nuclear energy timekeeping biotechnology genetic engineering railroads +artificial intelligence and biotechnology labor LB - 11750 PB - Doubleday & Company, Inc. PY - 1963 ST - Technology: Man Remakes His World T2 - Doubleday Pictorial Library TI - Technology: Man Remakes His World ID - 1413 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Is there a virtual public? The question is of course quite difficult to answer because, in part, those who study public discourse cannot agree on the existence of an actual public. But if one applies the definitions of “the public” offered by those scholars to the activity now observable on the Internet, at least a partial answer can be found. The premise of Resisting the Virtual Life is that public life has already been diminished by television and other technologies, and further erosion of the public sphere is likely with the spread of the global Internet. The book is a collection of essays edited by Iain Boal, who teaches in the Geography Department at Berkeley, and James Brook, a Silicon Valley technician-turned-poet. The editors call virtual technologies “pernicious” because they are substitutes for face-to-face interactions. This is a recurrent theme in the book, and follows closely the arguments of John Dewey, Juergen Habermas and James Carey on the importance of talk and public assembly. If democracy depends upon, and the “public sphere” is created by face-to-face rational-critical discussions, then anything which reduces such contacts could indeed be viewed as “pernicious.” This view is effectively argued in the chapter by Chris Carlsson, a multimedia designer and critic. Carlsson believes the erosion of the public sphere may be responsible for some users’ retreat into cyberspace, particularly evident in the proliferation of electronic forums called newsgroups or bulletin boards. But Carlsson says the geographic distance between participants does not allow them to “reclaim the public space essential to a free society.” They are engaged in what he terms “empty, pointless verbiage.” Carlsson calls them dreamers. A similar point is made in the essay by Howard Besser, a professor of Information Science at Berkeley. Besser believes that time spent online will necessarily reduce the amount of time spent with real people. For example, Besser says museum attendance will decline as people choose the safe, predictable “virtual” world and shun public spaces where chance encounters could occur. The Besser and Carlsson essays typify the conceptualization of “the public” found in Resisting the Virtual Life. Because time spent in front of a computer screen is not time spent talking with people, “virtual reality” diminishes the public sphere. Democratic life is therefore embodied by face-to-face conversation. This view would not be shared by Michael Schudson. Schudson argues against what he calls this “romance-of-conversation.” He emphasizes the contributions made by the printed word and even mass media messages. And it is not, according to Schudson, free, equal and spontaneous discussion which makes conversation democratic, but equal access to the floor, and rules which encourage pertinent speaking, and careful listening. Without this structure, the loudest or most articulate speaker will often dominate the process. The kind of public debate which Schudson proposes can now be found in online chat rooms and discussion groups. Each person, regardless of status, or appearance, or speaking style can post messages to the group. They can spend as much time as needed to express their views, without fear of being interrupted or shouted down. Debate is kept focused by the variety of discussion groups available and the grouping of messages by topic. Do these forums serve no purpose? Are they filled with “empty pointless verbiage?” One essay in Resisting the Virtual Life does address the egalitarian nature of some parts of the Internet. Laura Miller, a freelance journalist, disputes the popular notion that cyberspace is no place for women. While acknowledging that some men will try to intimidate women online, Miller argues that their usual tools of intimidation, physical size, deep voice and threats of violence, are neutralized in virtual reality. Would Schudson’s Vermont town meeting where the men spoke twice as often as the women have played out the same way if it had been conducted online? In Miller’s view, the playing field is leveled in cyberspace because bodies are absent and only thoughts exist. To think otherwise assumes women’s’ minds are, as Miller puts it “weak, fragile and unsuited to the rough and tumble of public discourse.” The Internet offers one other advantage over the print and broadcast media, the possibility of two-way communication or “interactivity.” Several essays in Resisting the Virtual Life address, and ultimately reject the potential of this new feature. Most of the essayists fail to see the human-to-human aspects of interactivity, focusing solely on human-to-computer interactive programs. These are criticized as the latest examples of human withdrawal from the “real” world. The book’s editors see interactivity as means of “intensifying” passive behavior. However, two contributing authors do address the potential for two-way communication. Jesse Drew, a producer of alternative media and a doctoral student at the University of Texas, predicts interactivity which is now used for real interaction will eventually be limited to home shopping and movies on demand. He says technology usually attends to profit, not to public need. This viewed is reiterated by Besser who believes the current two-way flow of information will eventually be like a “ten-lane highway coming into the home, with only a tiny path leading back out,” and that path will be just large enough to accommodate credit card numbers. Is this view of the future overly cynical, or are the authors right on track? In reality, the contributors to Resisting the Virtual Life don’t want to be right. The books’ main purpose is one of caution. While sounding quite Luddite, in the end most of the authors ask, actually implore, the users of new technologies to consider the long-term ramifications of their behavior. Drew, while skeptical of “cybermedia,” recognizes the communal spirit evident in such developments as “shareware” and free access to the Internet provided by libraries. He wants its users to take what they can from it and try to make a positive difference in the “real” world. So is there a virtual public? If public life only occurs during face-to-face contact then the answer must be “no.” But if we look at the other defining characteristics of the public sphere, the answer might be “yes.” Citizens are coming together to engage in rational-critical debate over political and moral issues. Participation is open to anyone who wants to post a message (and can get access to the Internet, certainly a difficulty for some). A code of conduct is even apparent, although enforcement is problematic. The status of the communicator is not important and usually unknown, and any topic is open for discussion. The combination of these factors makes for debate which is more “democratic” than you’ll find just about anywhere in the “real” world, but alas, it is not conducted in person, face-to-face. On that basis, Resisting the Virtual Life would have us reject it. --Mark Tremayne AU - Brook, James and Ian Boal, eds. CY - San Francisco DA - 1995 KW - computers interactivity women, and new media censorship and ratings regulation media media effects) media convergence mass media Internet democracy community law regulation media +computers and the Internet Tremayne, Mark democracy and media critics cyberspace public sphere Carey, James Habermas, Jûrgen Dewey, John women women, and cyberspace women, and computers virtual reality media convergence interactive media regulation, and Internet public opinion community, and Internet +television television, and community television, and public sphere Schudson, Michael Internet, and democracy democracy, and Internet LB - 9020 PB - City Lights PY - 1995 ST - Resisting the Virtual Life: The Culture and Politics of Information TI - Resisting the Virtual Life: The Culture and Politics of Information ID - 2269 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Brooks, John CY - New York DA - 1976 KW - +telephones Bell, Alexander Graham LB - 5300 PB - Harper and Row PY - 1976 ST - Telephone: The First Hundred Years TI - Telephone: The First Hundred Years ID - 1895 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work deals with innovations in special effects and how they increased the ability to show violence and horror in motion pictures. The work is nicely illustrated. AU - Brosnan, John CY - London DA - 1974 KW - motion pictures media effects media violence horror non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture special effects special effects, and horror horror films, and special effects violence violence, and special effects special effects, and violence motion pictures, and violence Great Britain Great Britain, and special effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and motion pictures LB - 27930 PB - MacDonald and Jane's St. Giles House PY - 1974 ST - Movie Magic: The Story of Special Effects in the Cinema TI - Movie Magic: The Story of Special Effects in the Cinema ID - 1345 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work's four chapters are: 1) "The Physiognomy of American Labor: Photography and Employee Rationalization"; 2) "Industrial Choreography: Photography and the Standardization of Motion"; 3) "Engineering the Subjective: Lewis W. Hine's Work Portraits and Corporate Paternalism in the 1920s"; 4) "Rationalizing Consumption: Photography and Commercial Illustration." AU - Brown, Elspeth H. CY - Baltimore DA - 2005 KW - photography women, and new media advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations communication revolution photography and visual communication magazines labor general studies photography and visual communication electricity capitalism advertising advertising, and photography cameras, portable color, and new film (1930s) cameras, and flash bulbs (1930s) magazines, and color communication revolution reproduction technologies (1930s) labor, and photography women, and photography photography, documentary cameras color color, and magazines duplicating technologies labor photography, and bias labor women capitalism, and photography photography, and capitalism labor, and photography photography, and labor photography, and Lewis Hine Hine, Lewis, and photography reproduction revolution LB - 33250 PB - Johns Hopkins University Press PY - 2005 ST - The Corporate Eye: Photography and the Rationalization of American Commercial Culture, 1884-1929 TI - The Corporate Eye: Photography and the Rationalization of American Commercial Culture, 1884-1929 ID - 83 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Brown, Julie K. CY - Tucson DA - 1994 KW - photography World Fairs +photography and visual communication +photography and visual communication World Fairs, and Columbian Exposition (1893) Columbian Exposition, and photography photography, and world fairs photography, and Columbian Exposition LB - 1420 PB - University of Arizona Press PY - 1994 ST - Contesting Images: Photography and the World’s Columbian Exposition TI - Contesting Images: Photography and the World’s Columbian Exposition ID - 1538 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Brown looks at the ways in which the diffusion of information in America changed from the colonial period to the early decades of the republic. Essentially, those changes moved American society toward a far more egalitarian system of information distribution. The colonial period was characterized by a “top-down” mode of distribution in which information of general concern often came first through conversation or correspondence to elites, who then decided the degree to which it would be promulgated to the public at large. As print culture in the post-Revolution period expanded the ways in which information might be obtained, the general public acquired more ready access to knowledge that previously had been disposed of by the elites. In many ways this helped to realize the republican ideal of an informed and educated citizenry fit for self-government. But it also led to the trivialization and commercialization of information, as well as to a system in which the individual chose what he deemed to be valuable for his own purposes. These latter trends sped up the process of fragmentation and community dissolution that arguably characterize modern American life. -- Gordon Jackson Brown writes that at least one implication “jumps out from the evidence assembled here. Colonial society, for all its diversity, had been essentially a collection of local societies in which both a patina and much of the substance of a common, coherent Christian culture was maintained. Reading and oratory were dominated by religious messages, and the themes of order and stability expressed by church and state were mutually reinforcing. Competition, while real, was subordinate to cooperation in community and even, in many instances, in commercial life. But as the 19th-century republic developed, coherence was supplanted and competition ruled. Clergymen like Henry Ward Beecher, politicians like Daniel Webster who could win the largest followings, lyceum speakers who could sell the most tickets, authors whose works sold widely became influential not because of any office they held or any prescribed public role, but because of their engaging popular performances. In a competitive environment of regional or national dimensions, where purveyors of each type of information had to compete with others conveying similar information as well as with a multitude of entirely different sorts of information, each individual was invited to discover his or her own coherent culture from within the galaxy of religious sects, political parties, and reform societies that were thriving in the new republic. The new patterns for the diffusion of information were not in themselves responsible for these developments, but they would have been inconceivable without the new configuration of information diffusion that offered many choices to many people.” AU - Brown, Richard D. CY - New York DA - 1989 KW - print journalism community democracy news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers printing Jackson, Gordon informantion diffusion print culture democracy and media democracy, and print culture print culture, and democracy news, and print culture news, and colonial America commercialization news LB - 9590 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1989 ST - Knowledge is Power: The Diffusion of Information in Early America, 1700-1865 TI - Knowledge is Power: The Diffusion of Information in Early America, 1700-1865 ID - 2326 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book provides historical perspective on the use of electronic technology to bug and otherwise invade the privacy of citizens. It describes the state of the art in 1967. The author begins by saying that “despite the protection against insidious invasions of privacy afforded by the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution, electronic bugging is so shockingly widespread and so ingeniously devised that no one can be certain any longer than his home is his castle. Widespread attention to this problem from the President on down testifies to the serious threat many persons feel this situation poses to the society in which we live.” The opening chapter discusses how electronic snooping evolved. A turning point came in 1960, Brown believes, when then United States ambassador to the United Nations, Henry Cabot Lodge, revealed that the Soviet had bugged the Great Seal of the U.S. Public interest in this topic increased thereafter, as did the efforts by many countries to engage in this activity. Some indication as to how far miniaturization had proceeded by 1967 is found in this work. One picture shows a thimble containing 8,000 wafers, each a complete circuit. Future amplifiers, the author says, will probably be the size of these wafers. Another picture shows a human tooth that has been bugged. Brown devotes chapters to buyers and sellers of this technology, telephone bugging, eavesdropping microphones and miniature audio amplifiers, FM wireless microphones and room bugs, bumper beepers, recording devices, spy receivers, electronic bug detection, speech scramblers, and bugging and de-bugging circuits. A chapters also lists who then sold this equipment, and legal restrictions on eavesdropping. AU - Brown, Robert M. CY - New York DA - 1967 KW - computers surveillance integrated circuits transistors law, and privacy law materials computers recording radio public address systems general studies privacy Fourth Amendment electronic media bugging, electronic United Nations Lodge, Henry Cabot miniaturization microphones recording devices bugging, legal bugging, equipment eavesdropping +sound recording +radio radio, and FM microphones, wireless +computers and the Internet computers, chips integrated circuits bugging radio, and FM materials LB - 11730 PB - John F. Rider Publisher, Inc. PY - 1967 ST - The Electronic Invasion TI - The Electronic Invasion ID - 1406 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This substantial, well-researched book is a study of cinema in the silent era. Brownlow shows that silent pictures dealt with an “astonishing range of subjects.” “While few of these films made history,” he writes, “all of them -- if only for a few moments -- recorded it.” Brownlow show that nudity, adultery, drug addition, abortion, and many other themes were treated in films. An excellent source for the content of moving pictures, many of which are difficult to find, if in fact, they still exist. AU - Brownlow, Kevin CY - New York DA - 1990 KW - history preservation sexuality history, and new media substance abuse drug abuse law censorship and ratings law censorship and ratings values regulation nudity +motion pictures +motion pictures values, and motion pictures abortion, and motion pictures drug addiction, and motion pictures nudity, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures regulation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and drug addition motion pictures, and nudity motion pictures, and adultery motion pictures, and silent movies abortion censorship children, and media children motion pictures, pre-Production Code children, and motion pictures history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history history LB - 6140 PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 1990 ST - Behind the Mask of Innocence TI - Behind the Mask of Innocence ID - 1998 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book examines the growing relationship between movie celebrities and political leaders. It demonstrates how closely woven the movie industry is to American political culture. Early in the twentieth century, movie stars were often regarded with great suspicion by politicians. That began to change during the Franklin D. Roosevelt administration as studio executives such as Jack and Harry Warner courted the president. Brownstein's chapter on John F. Kennedy and Hollywood, especially relation with Frank Sinatra, make excellent reading. Of course, Ronald Reagan, himself a former movie actor, was elected President in 1980. His adminstration marked a high point in the connection between Hollywood and the corridors of power. AU - Brownstein, Ronald CY - New York DA - 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA presidents, and new media Reagan administration motion pictures Kennedy administration Johnson administration Hollywood +motion pictures and popular culture Reagan, Ronald, and Hollywood Hollywood, and Ronald Reagan Johnson, Lyndon, and Hollywood Johnson, Lyndon Kennedy, John F. Kennedy, John F., and Hollywood Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack Hollywood, and politics Krim, Arthur Weisl, Edwin, Sr. Reagan, Ronald LB - 21200 PB - Pantheon Books PY - 1990 ST - The Power and the Glitter: The Hollywood-Washington Connection TI - The Power and the Glitter: The Hollywood-Washington Connection ID - 921 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 497-page biography provides valuable detail on both the invention of the telephone, and on Bell’s life before and after the invention. AU - Bruce, Robert V. CY - Boston DA - 1973 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories +telephones biography Bell, Alexander Graham LB - 5310 PB - Little, Brown and Company PY - 1973 ST - Bell: Alexander Graham Bell and the Conquest of Solitude TI - Bell: Alexander Graham Bell and the Conquest of Solitude ID - 1916 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is based to a large degree on about 250 interviews (including Lew Waserman and many of his associates) and to a lesser degree on oral histories and other documents. The work is not footnoted and so it is difficult to know the precise location of quotations and other cited materials. There are also errors: "Will Hayes" should be "Will Hays"; the "Motion Pictures Producers Association" should be "Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America"; Eric A. Johnston retired from the MPAA in 1961. (231) This work does provide a good deal of information about Wasserman including his political connections with Washington, D.C. Wasserman and Jack Valenti claimed that Lyndon Johnson offered Wasserman the cabinet post of Secretary of Commerce in 1964, but that Wasserman declined. Bruck argues that Valenti and Wasserman are the sources for this story and that other close to the President doubted that Johnson would have made such an offer to Wasserman, feeling that Senate confirmation hearings might have raised possible connections between Wasserman and organized crime. AU - Bruck, Connie CY - New York DA - 2003 KW - music Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA corporations Johnson, Lyndon corporations corporations corporations +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Valenti, Jack motion pictures, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew Music Corporation of America (MCA) MCA Valenti, Jack, and Lyndon Johnson Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and public relations Reagan, Ronald Reagan, Ronald, and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and Ronald Reagan Wasserman, Lew, and Jack Valenti Krim, Arthur presidents and new media presidents, and Hollywood Hollywood, and politics Screen Actors Guild Universal Pictures Kennedy, John F. Kennedy, John F., and Hollywood Nixon, Richard Nixon, Richard, and Hollywood Johnson, Lyndon Johnson, Lyndon, and Hollywood Johnson, Lyndon, and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew and Lyndon Johnson Stein, Jules, and MCA MCA, and Jules Stein +television television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television television, and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and television MPAA, and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and MPAA United Artists MGM Paramount Pictures Hollywood MPAA Reagan administration LB - 28770 PB - Random House PY - 2003 ST - When Hollywood Had a King: The Reign of Lew Wasserman, Who Leveraged Talent into Power and Influence TI - When Hollywood Had a King: The Reign of Lew Wasserman, Who Leveraged Talent into Power and Influence ID - 2651 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author opens this book by writing: “The universe of colors is a little jewel box of images, a place where Newton built his theory of modern physics with sunlight and certainty, where Goethe in turn constructed an entire history to enshrine a principle he had sought after madly -- namely, the unpredictability of nature and the natural simplicity of the arts, of knowing how to see and feel.” He then asks: “But what has science proposed concerning this universe of colors?” Brusatin goes on to write: “In this brief history, we will be noting how much actually is derived from the material aspects of colors, the mode of their manufacture, their use and the fate of these colors, up until the tragic beginning of the industrial age, tracing a history from natural dyes subject to the fading of time and the violet-colored ghosts they leave behind, to strong chemical dyes as violent and basic as poison. Beyond this line of inquiry, this will be a story with many fleeting events, wherein we will draw close to the production of ancient marvels so near themselves to the body and yet not to be confused with mere corporeality, a time capable for the art of knowing, without feeling either the weight or the space of it.” The author devotes a few pages on nineteenth-century colors that were the product of the chemical industry. “This book is dedicated to the rebirth of painting,” the author says. AU - Brusatin, Manlio CY - Boston DA - 1991 KW - photography +photography and visual communication Newton, Isaac, and color Goethe, J. W. von, and color color, and history of color, and natural dyes color, and chemical dyes color, and 19th century painting color LB - 1430 PB - Shambhala PY - 1991 ST - A History of Colors (translated from Italian by Robert H. Hopcke and Paul Schwartz). TI - A History of Colors (translated from Italian by Robert H. Hopcke and Paul Schwartz). ID - 1539 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book was written by the man who later would become President Jimmy Carter’s national security adviser. Brzezinski argued in 1970 that the United States and other advanced industrial nations were emerging from the industrial stage of their development and moving into an age of “technetronics” (in which technology and electronics were becoming the primary factors in determining social change, altering values, and creating a global society). Brzezinski’s set out these ideas earlier in an article, “America in the Technetronic Age,” Encounter (Jan. 1968). He acknowledges the influence of Daniel Bell, who later would write about “post-industrial” society. The book is divided in to five sections. The first considers the impact of the revolution in science and technology on the U.S. and Third World. “A new pattern of international politics is emerging,” Brzezinski wrote. “The world is ceasing to be an arena in which relatively self-contained, ‘sovereign,’ and homogeneous nations interact, collaborate, clash or make war.” In America, this revolution, driven especially by computers and communication, was already creating a society unlike the industrial era. New social patterns were appearing. Cybernetics and automation were replacing machines operated by people. Unemployment and obsolete skills plagued blue-collar workers. Barriers to education were falling. People with special skills and intellectual abilities challenged the urban-plutocratic leadership elite of the industrial era. Universities were becoming “think tanks” more political and social planning and innovation. These and other changes promised to make “the technetronic society as different from the industrial as the industrial was from the agrarian.” Brzezinski saw that satellite television would “enable some states to ‘invade’ private homes in other countries,” creating “unprecedented global intimacy.” America was the primary disseminator of this global revolution. Of interest is Brzezinski’s assessment of Soviet technological capabilities. They were near the bottom of developed nations in radios, telephones, air communication, cars, highways, and computers. In 1968, he notes that 50,000 to 70,000 computers were in use in the United States (of which only 10 percent were used by the Pentagon). In the USSR, only 2,000 to 3,500 computers were in nonmilitary use. AU - Brzezinski, Zbigniew CY - New York DA - 1970 KW - computers USSR nationalism values preservation communication revolution history, and new media communication revolution, and second industrial revolution war non-USA history home, and new media home values +aeronautics and space communication +telephones Soviet Union +radio home, and information technology labor information technology +nationalism and communication global communication values, and information technology postindustrial society Bell, Daniel change, acceleration of labor automation computers satellites television, and satellites education, and information technology information technology, and home cybernetics labor, and automation computers, and Department of Defense America, and global revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution Soviet Union, and radio Soviet Union, and telephones Soviet Union, and air communication Soviet Union, and automobiles Soviet Union, and transportation Soviet Union, and computers Soviet Union, and new media computers, and Soviet Union telephones, and Soviet Union radio, and Soviet Union automobiles, and Soviet Union Third World technetronics Japan communism +television Germany automobiles change computers +computers and the Internet education Soviet Union +telephones +computers and the Internet computers, and nationalism nationalism, and computers nationalism, and satellites satellites, and nationalism history, break with military communication artificial intelligence and biotechnology transportation LB - 2060 N1 - See also: office PB - Viking Press PY - 1970 ST - Between Two Ages: America’s Role in the Technetronic Era TI - Between Two Ages: America’s Role in the Technetronic Era ID - 1602 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is more of an enthusiast’s history of the railways. Largely nostalgic, this book concentrates largely on the locomotives with brief backgrounds on the industry. The work is grouped thematically by rail lines, and includes railways in Scotland, England, and Wales. Well illustrated, but otherwise lacks cited source material. A bibliography included at the beginning of the book lists railway studies from the late nineteenth- and early twentieth-centuries. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Bucknall, Rixon CY - London DA - 1970 KW - non-USA Wolf, Nicholas +transportation Great Britain Great Britain, and railroad railroads LB - 1860 PB - George Allen and Unwin, Ltd. PY - 1970 ST - Our Railway History TI - Our Railway History ID - 274 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is part of the Sloan Technology Series, which seeks to reach a non-specialized audience. Buderi was formerly the technology editor of Business Week. This work discusses the scientists “who created the microwave radar systems that not only helped win World War II, but set off an explosion of scientific achievements and technological advances that have transformed our daily lives.” A team of British scientists came to Washington in September, 1940, bringing with them the cavity magnetron, “a revolutionary new source of microwave energy.” This device “triggered the dramatic mobilization of America’s top scientists, who enlisted in the ‘war within the war’ to convert the invention into a potent military weapon....” The author follows these radar scientists into the postwar era “as they applied the knowledge gained from their wartime work in many different fields. Among their numerous accomplishments, these scientists helped to create the field of radio astronomy and discover the transistor, nuclear magnetic resonance, and the maser, all advances that won Nobel Prizes. During the Cold War, others continued to push for the development of early warning systems. Still others came up with discoveries that were the basis for digital computer memories. “In countless ways,” the author maintains, “radar and its spin-offs have changed our world forever.” Buderi writes: “The Radiation Lab, coupled with related microwave radar endeavors in the United States and Britain, emerged as a science and technology incubator on a scale probably unprecedented in history. At least two Nobel Prizes -- for nuclear magnetic resonance and the maser -- can be traced directly to wartime radar work. Every day several thousand commercial air carriers take to the skies. Virtually all the aircraft are tracked continuously by radar, sometimes to and from their gates. It takes more than three hundred radars, backed up by a ponderous array of display screens, communications nets, and personnel, just to keep the U.S. skies organized. Thousands more radar sets provide extra eyes for ships, boats, and pleasure craft. Many vessels also draw on the global navigational network Loran. Virtually all of these sprang directly from the Rad Lab, as do much of the world’s storm-watching systems and the TV weather report. “The transistor -- via the legacy of the solid-state semiconductor crystals that formed the heart of radar receivers -- is largely a product of work contracted by the Rad Lab to places like Purdue University, the University of Pennsylvania, and Bell Labs, the second largest of the wartime radar houses. Digital computers, including the cathode ray displays and memories, owe a great debt to radar: they are the offspring of World War II systems. Microwave telephones and early television networks got critical boosts from wartime radar. The technology made a huge impact on astronomy by opening a region of the electromagnetic spectrum -- radio as opposed to optical -- that ultimately brought on the discovery of pulsars, quasars, and a plethora of hidden galaxies. And the list hardly stops there. Early particle accelerators owe a great debt to [the discovery of radar]. So does microwave spectroscopy. So, too, do the microwave ovens common in today’s homes, for a secret radar transmitter carried from Britain to America in fall 1940 forms the very core of these time-saving appliances.” AU - Buderi, Robert CY - Boston DA - 1996 KW - U. S. Navy R & D atomic power USSR corporations corporations corporations corporations astronomy transistors integrated circuits research and development war government materials materials war non-USA home, and new media home World War II rocketry research and development home, and information technology Japan information technology military communication radar transistors Great Britain solid state semiconductors microwaves aeronautics and space communication satellites World War II, and radar research and development, and World War II air travel transportation U. S. Air Force, and radar U. S. Army, and radar AT & T atomic energy Bell Laboratories Bowen, Edward Geroge Bush, Vannevar Churchill, Winston DuBridge, Lee Germany Japan, and radar Jones, Reginald IBM U.S. Navy, and radar Office of Scientific Research and Development Purcell, Edward radar, and Radiation Laboratory astronomy, radio resonant cavity magnetron telecommunications Tizard, Henry Soviet Union vacuum tubes rocketry, and V-1 Watson-Watt, Sir Robert Alexander information technology, and home home, and new media World War II World War II, and research and development masers telephones telephones, and microwaves television, and microwaves television radar, and astronomy astronomy, and radar U. S. Air Force LB - 6010 PB - Little, Brown and Company PY - 1996 ST - The Invention that Changed the World: The Story of Radar from War to Peace TI - The Invention that Changed the World: The Story of Radar from War to Peace ID - 1979 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This useful reference work begins with the Stone Age (2,400,000 - 4000 BC) and moves forward rapidly to more recent developments. Chapter 2 deals with the Metal Ages: 4000 BC - 1000 CE. Chapter 3 is “The Age of Water and Wind: 1000-1732.” Chapter 4 covers “The Industrial Revolution: 1733-1878.” Chapter 5 deals with “The Electric Age: 1879-1946.” There follows a chapter that covers the years from 1947-1972 on “The Electronic Age,” followed by a chapter entitled “The Information Age: 1973-1993.” The timelines for each year are broken into developments in the following categories: General, Architecture and Construction, Communication, Energy, Food and Agriculture, Materials, Medical Technology, Tools and Devices, and Transportation. The work has both extensive name and subject indexes. It also has occasional short essays on such topics as “The integrated circuit, or chip,” “Scientists and defense,” to name only two. AU - Bunch, Bryan AU - Hellemans, Alexander CY - New York DA - 1993 KW - technology R & D computers post office microprocessing photography steam power References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps print motion pictures research and development war communication revolution materials communication revolution, and second industrial revolution war timelines reference works technology and society Industrial Revolution second industrial revolution transistors electricity microprocessors television telephones telegraph transportation photography and visual communication motion pictures and popular culture military communication books, periodicals, newspapers aeronautics and space communication satellites lasers computers and the Internet radio railroads canals engines plastics printing postal service paper rocketry sound recording duplicating technologies engines, steam vacuum tubes writing X-rays communication revolution integrated circuits LB - 12270 PB - Simon & Schuster PY - 1993 ST - The Timetables of Technology: A Chronology of the Most Important People and Events in the History of Technology TI - The Timetables of Technology: A Chronology of the Most Important People and Events in the History of Technology ID - 2574 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Burke, Colin CY - Metuchen, NJ and London DA - 1994 KW - R & D computers nationalism research and development research and development war Bush, Vannevar research and development, and government support research and development, and Bush, Vannevar +nationalism and communication +military communication +computers and the Internet Bush, Vannevar, and Memex Memex LB - 2850 PB - Scarecrow Press, Inc. PY - 1994 ST - Information and Secrecy: Vannevar Bush, Utlra, and the Other Memex TI - Information and Secrecy: Vannevar Bush, Utlra, and the Other Memex ID - 373 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Burke writes that “the more the tools, the faster the rate of change. “It is with that aspect of change that this book is concerned. Today the rate of change has reached a point where it is questionable whether the environment can sustain it. My purpose is to acquaint the reader with some of the forces that have caused change in the past, looking in particular at eight recent innovations which may be most influential in structuring our own futures and in causing a further increase in the rate of change to which we may have to adapt. These are [1] the atomic bomb, [2] the telephone, [3] the computer, [4] the production-line system of manufacture, [5] the aircraft, [6] plastics, [7] the guided rocket and [8] television.” This book attempts to set these developments into a broad historical context dating back hundreds , if not thousands of years. It is nicely illustrated in both color and black and white. AU - Burke, James CY - Boston DA - 1978 KW - computers atomic power time and timekeeping time preservation history, and new media materials censorship and ratings children change history satellites general studies telephones computers aeronautics plastics materials rocketry television change, acceleration of time computers and the Internet atomic energy aeronautics and space communication air travel transportation satellites, and communication history, break with children, and media LB - 11530 PB - Little, Brown and Company PY - 1978 ST - Connections TI - Connections ID - 1412 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The Rise of the Computer State is well-written. In it, Burnham argues that inexpensive computing power makes it possible to keep enormous amounts of transactional data such as telephone records, credit card transactions, etc., and to transmit such information virtually anywhere at low cost. These new computer networks strengthen the power of large organizations over individuals and this power is easily abused. Chapters include: "Surveillance," "Data Bases," "Power," "The National Security Agency -- The Ultimate Computer Bureaucracy," "Values," and more. Burnham's bibliography also provides a helpful introduction to the topic. At the time this book appeared, Burnham was with the New York Times. Earlier he had published articles on corruption in New York City, based on information from Frank Serpico, and which led to the formation of the Knapp Commission. He also had written about the Kerr-McGee plutonium factory in Oklahoma, was to have interviewed Karen Silkwood, a worker at the plant, the night she was mysteriously killed. AU - Burnham, David CY - New York; and London DA - 1980, 1981, 1983 KW - R & D computers Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism corporations, multinational corporations values law, and privacy law research and development war archives government community democracy war non-USA values +telephones surveillance national security political economy multinational corporations +computers and the Internet computers, and society values, and computers privacy computers, and data bases multinational corporations, and data bases democracy and media surveillance, and data bases +nationalism and communication telephones, and computer data bases critics AT & T Central Intelligence Agency National Security Agency FBI Department of Defense, and computers Internal Revenue Service, and computers OTA +military communication computers Department of Defense, U.S. +telephones +information storage information storage, and computers CIA LB - 3560 PB - Random House; and Weidenfeld & Nicolson PY - 1980 ST - The Rise of the Computer State TI - The Rise of the Computer State ID - 1746 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work details how intellectuals, political, military, and religious leaders, and others have promoted the idea of American mission from the Puritans into the twentieth century. The press played a role in promoting such ideas as manifest destiny. Political oratory, sermons, art, and letters helped build American nationalism. Burns writes that “Americans have devoted much time and energy to rationalization of their idea of mission . . .Nearly every speaker and writer, whether liberal or conservative, has assigned the credit for our national superiority to such qualities as initiative, independence, aggressiveness, perseverance, industry, frugality, and enterprise. That a nation might experience a call to greatness for its generosity, humanity, tolerance, or justice seems never to have crossed their minds. Though America is officially proclaimed a Christian nation, it is not the virtues of Christianity that are credited with making her great. It is the ethics of the Book of Proverbs and of the Book of Kings and Chronicles that is exalted above all others. . . . “There can be no doubt that industry, frugality, ambition, and glorification of material success are deeply imbedded in our folkways, but Puritanism is not necessarily their only source. . .Among the movers and shakers of American social and intellectual history at least half have had antecedents essentially non-Puritan. . .They undoubtedly exalted the individual and the virtues associated with ambition and self-assertion. But it was an individualism derived from the Enlightenment, from German Idealism, from Darwinism, and from the humanism fostered by an increasing awareness of man’s helplessness in a complex society. It had nothing to do with the Puritan conception of man as the instrument of divine omnipotence.” Burns argues that before the nineteenth century, warfare played a small part in the idea of mission. “Recognition of war as a beneficent institution was almost unknown in America prior to the nineteenth century. The Puritans and their immediate descendants saw fighting as merely another evidence of the depravity of man. For Roger Williams and the Quakers, war conflicted with the basic principle that all men are brothers, regardless of their nationality, status, or color skin. The men of the Enlightenment conceived of international war as both inhumane and irrational and therefore unworthy of civilized beings who professed to follow the system of nature. But the French Revolution, and to some extent the American Revolution also, introduced into the world a fanatical idealism, which recognized bloodshed as a desirable means of attaining ends. . . Fanatical nationalism was born, and every war became a people’s war, with whole nations fighting against each other in self-defense or for some hallowed purpose. Whereas the wars of the eighteenth century had been chiefly wars of maneuver, with limited armies striving to win by superior strategy, the post-Revolutionary conflicts became total wars with annihilation their cardinal object.” AU - Burns, Edward CY - New Brunswick, NJ DA - 1957 KW - R & D nationalism race research and development war values war +nationalism and communication +military communication +books, periodicals, newspapers oratory nationalism, and mission nationalism, and art nationalism, and oratory nationalism, and print culture racism, and mission religion, and mission religion LB - 9610 PB - Rutgers University Press PY - 1957 ST - The American Idea of Mission: Concepts of National Purpose and Destiny TI - The American Idea of Mission: Concepts of National Purpose and Destiny ID - 2328 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Burns, Robert CY - London DA - 1986 KW - non-USA +television Great Britain television, and Great Britain Great Britain, and television LB - 6650 PB - Peter Peregrinus Ltd. PY - 1986 ST - British Television: The Formative Years TI - British Television: The Formative Years ID - 2043 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - “‘I wouldn’t want to be quoted on this,’ Lyndon Johnson told a small group of local government officials and educators in Nashville in March, 1967, ‘but we’ve spent thirty-five or forty billion dollars on the space program. And if nothing else had come out of it except the knowledge we’ve gained from space photography, it would be worth ten times what the whole program has cost. Because tonight we now how many missiles the enemy has and, it turned out, our guesses were way off. We were doing things we didn’t need to do. We were building things we didn’t need to build. We were harboring fears we didn’t need to harbor.’” So begins Burrows’s book. By 1961, satellite photos were so good that U.S. intelligence could identify practically every car in Red Square in Moscow. Chapter 5 gives an information account of this technology during the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962. Chapter 6 is entitled “Arms Control and the Acceptance of ‘Spies’ in the Sky.” Chapter 10, “Real Time: The Advent of Instant Intelligence,” discusses President Carter’s use of information from spy satellites. Chapter 11 considers “killer satellites.” A former reporter, Burrows at the time of this book was teaching journalism at New York University. AU - Burrows, William E. CY - New York DA - 1986 KW - R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) computers corporations nationalism Kennedy, John F. Johnson, Lyndon Eisenhower, Dwight D. SDI photography presidents, and new media RAND Corporation research and development war Kennedy administration Johnson administration Eisenhower administration war non-USA computers and the Internet computers military communication space communication reconnaissance photography, and satellites photography and visual communication national security photography and visual communication aeronautics and space communication satellites national security, and space reconnaissance reconnaissance, and satellite photography photography, and satellite reconnaissance Cuban Missile Crisis, and satellite reconnaissance U-2 plane space shuttle space reconnaissance strategic computing initiative strategic defense initiative (SDI) rocketry RAND Corporation photoreconnaissance satellites, and photoreconnaissance NASA satellites, and Keyhole satellite system satellites, and Discoverer reconnaissance, and balloons cameras, and reconnaissance satellites, and anti-satellite weapons reconnaissance, aerial cameras nationalism and communication cameras, and surveillance National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) photography, and surveillance reconnaissance, and satellites satellites, and photography cameras Johnson, Lyndon, and satellites Kennedy, John F., and satellites Eisenhower, Dwight, and satellites Cuba LB - 1440 PB - Random House PY - 1986 ST - Deep Black: Space Espionage and National Security TI - Deep Black: Space Espionage and National Security ID - 1540 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a collection of articles and speeches by Bush from 1933 to 1945 (most are from 1943-45). Chapter 1 (“The Inscrutable Past”) appeared in Technological Review (Jan. 1933) and talks about the typical life of a professor. Here one finds observations about the telephone, radio, television, advertisements, contemporary music. In discussing the library used by the professor, Bush writes that the “idea that one might have the contents of a thousand volumes, located in a couple of cubic feet in a desk, so that by depressing a few keys one could have a given page instantly projected before him, was regarded as the wildest sort of fancy.” Chapter 2 (“As We May Think”) is a famous piece that original appeared in Atlantic Monthly (July 1945). “The world has arrived at an age of cheap complex devices of great reliability; and something is bound to come of it,” Bush said. He discusses the coming of dry photography (instant photos), facsimile transmission, and microfilm. “The Encyclopedia Britannica could be reduced to the volume of a matchbox. A library of a million volumes could be compressed into one end of a desk. If the human race has produced since the invention of movable type a total record, in the form of magazines, newspapers, books, tracts, advertising blurbs, correspondence, having a volume corresponding to a billion books, the whole affair, assembled and compressed, could be lugged off in a moving van.” Bush talks about recording processes, complex calculating machines, and “selection devices” that will aid a person to find specific information buried in a mass of data. “One cannot hope thus to equal the speed and flexibility with which the mind follows an associative trail, but it should be possible to beat the mind decisively in regard to the permanence and clarity of the items resurrected from storage.” (See the section “Memex Instead of Index.”) “Consider a future device for individual use, which is a sort of mechanized private file and library. It needs a name, and, to coin one at random, ‘memex’ will do. A memex is a device in which an individual stores all his books, records, and communications, and which is mechanized so that it may be consulted with exceeding speed and flexibility. It is an enlarged intimate supplement to his memory. “It consists of a desk, and while it can presumably be operated from a distance, it is primarily the piece of furniture at which he works. On the top are slanting translucent screens, on which material can be projected for convenient reading. There is a keyboard, and sets of buttons and levers. Otherwise it looks like an ordinary desk. “In one end is the stored material. The matter of bulk is well taken care of by improved microfilm. Only a small part of the interior of the memex is devoted to storage, the rest to mechanism. Yet if the user inserted 5,000 pages of material a day it would take him hundreds of years to fill the repository, so he can profligate and enter material freely.” AU - Bush, Vannevar CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1946 KW - R & D computers photography advertising, and public relations +military communication propaganda public relations research and development archives war microfiche, microfilm, microform libraries libraries, and information storage general studies +telephones +radio +television advertising +information storage +photography and visual communication facsimile microfilm books miniaturization computers memex libraries photography, instant photography, dry +books, periodicals, newspapers information storage +duplicating technologies +computers and the Internet research and development, and World War II World War II World War II, and research and development calculating machines LB - 11740 PB - Public Affairs Press PY - 1946 ST - Endless Horizons TI - Endless Horizons ID - 1411 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this seminal work Bush attempted to justify long-term government support for scientific research in the post-World War II era. Of course, linking science to the metaphor of the frontier was a stroke of inspiration. The government had underwritten research and development in science in an unprecedented way during World War II, something that Bush oversaw. But whether that support would remain was questionable. Bush argued that “Government should accept new responsibilities for promoting the flow of new scientific knowledge and the development of scientific talent in our youth. These responsibilities are the proper concern of the Government, for they vitally affect our health, our jobs, and out national security. It is in keeping also with basic United States policy that the Government should foster the opening of new frontiers and this is the modern way to do it. For many years the Government has wisely supported research in the agricultural colleges and the benefits have been great.” The time had come, he maintained, to extend such support to other fields, especially medicine and the military. AU - Bush, Vannevar CY - Washington, D.C. DA - 1945 KW - technology R & D research and development war war World War II science general studies research and development World War II, and research and development +military communication scientific research and government support radar technology and society LB - 180 PB - Government Printing Office PY - 1945 ST - Science: The Endless Frontier: A Report to the President TI - Science: The Endless Frontier: A Report to the President ID - 1414 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - A biography of Steven Jobs and history of Apple Computer with no notes or bibliography. AU - Butcher, Lee CY - New York DA - 1988 KW - computers materials, and silicon corporations corporations Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories silicon +computers and the Internet biography Jobs, Steven Apple Computer IBM Sculley, John Silicon Valley Wozniak, Stephen materials LB - 10990 PB - Paragon House PY - 1988 ST - Accidental Millionaire: The Rise and Fall of Steve Jobs at Apple Computer TI - Accidental Millionaire: The Rise and Fall of Steve Jobs at Apple Computer ID - 2460 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The contents of this work are divided into eight categories: books and dissertations; psychological articles; sociological articles; philosophical and religious articles; popular articles; government documents; legal articles; and court cases. AU - Byerly, Greg AU - Rubin, Rich CY - New York and London DA - 1980 KW - sexuality pornography +bibliographies bibliographies, annotated bibliographies, and pornography pornography, and bibliographies pornography, and law pornography, and sociology pornography, and social science pornography, and psychology pornography, and theses pornography, and religion pornography, and philosophy pornography, and government documents LB - 28050 PB - Garland Publishing, Inc. PY - 1980 ST - Pornography: The Conflict over Sexaully Explicit Materials in the United States: An Annotated Bibliography TI - Pornography: The Conflict over Sexaully Explicit Materials in the United States: An Annotated Bibliography ID - 1354 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - While this work does not have much on the technology of space communication, it does discuss the image-making efforts of NASA. “NASA has used three images -- nationalism, romanticism, and pragmatism -- to build political support over its history....Nationalist statements have emphasized that the space program should be supported because it is good for America as a nation.... Nationalism was NASA’s primary image during the late 1950s and into the 1960s. “Romanticism has played to the emotional aspect of the human character. It has highlighted the excitement and adventure inherent in NASA’s activities and described how space exploration fulfills some basic human yearnings....NASA employed romanticism often during the middle to late 1960s. “Pragmatism has emphasized that the space program produced practical benefits for all citizens, thus appealing to individuals’ material self-interest.... According to pragmatism, the space program stimulates technological advances, generates new products and techniques, delivers economic returns, enhances scientific knowledge, offers educational opportunities, and provides a space transportation system. NASA stress pragmatism throughout the 1970s and well into the 1980s.” The book’s last chapter, “Transmitting the Images” talks about NASA’s use of the media and its effort to control the flow of information about the agency. AU - Byrnes, Mark E. CY - Westport, CT DA - 1994 KW - National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) nationalism photography advertising, and public relations space communication propaganda advertising war +aeronautics and space communication NASA satellites +nationalism and communication rocketry +photography and visual communication +transportation space communication, and romanticism public relations NASA, and public relations public relations, and NASA military communication LB - 7560 PB - Praeger PY - 1994 ST - Politics and Space: Image Making by NASA TI - Politics and Space: Image Making by NASA ID - 2126 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author describes this work as follows: "A book that quotes and evaluates many past predictions about the 1980s, and looks to the decades ahead, is here cast in the form of a dialogue with a perfect retrieval system." "The tin interlocutor is itself open to appraisal as a part of the foreseeable future. The quest for superhuman intelligence seems to stand on a par with the development of nuclear weapons, as a misapplication of scientific knowledge. The name O'Brien [the retrieval system] is ostensibly an acronym for Omniscient Being Re-interpreting Every Notation. A more sinister meaning emerges as the conversation proceeds, and links O'Brien's name with the writings of George Orwell, to whose percipience this book is an oblique tribute." (7-8) AU - Calder, Nigel CY - New York DA - 1983, 1984 KW - computers surveillance values law, and privacy law preservation archives history, and new media +future and science fiction computers libraries libraries, and information storage history +artificial intelligence and biotechnology +computers and the Internet history, and computers progress privacy Orwell, George future 1984 information storage computers, and image of LB - 4440 PB - Viking Press PY - 1983 ST - 1984 and Beyond TI - 1984 and Beyond ID - 1832 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Campbell, Robert CY - New York DA - 1976 KW - corporations corporations +radio +television NBC LB - 5820 PB - Scribner’s PY - 1976 ST - The Golden Years of Broadcasting: A Celebration of the First 50 Years of Radio and Television on NBC TI - The Golden Years of Broadcasting: A Celebration of the First 50 Years of Radio and Television on NBC ID - 1967 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is part of the Sloan Technology Series. It was written for a broad public and provides a good introduction to the history of computing. The book is divided into four sections. Section one deals with the way people handled computing before electronic computers. Chapter 1 shows that sophisticated information processing existed before the twentieth century. Chapter 2 treats the “origins of office machinery and the business machine industry.” Such leading firms in the modern computing industry as IBM started in the last decades of the nineteenth century and manufactured business machines. Between World War I and World II such companies were major innovators in the computing field. Chapter 3 discusses Charles Babbage’s efforts during the 1830s to build a calculating engine. Babbage failed but a century later IBM and Harvard University realized his dreams. Sections two and three cover the period roughly from 1945 to 1980, and treats the creation and evolution of computers. Section two focuses on the invention of electronic computing during World War II through the 1960s when IBM established its dominance in this area. Chapter 4 describes the building of ENIAC during the war at the University of Pennsylvania and its successor, the EDVAC, which became the “blueprint” for subsequent computers up to the present. Chapter 5 discusses changes in the computer industry in which computers became more than mere instruments to make scientific or mathematical calculations and reached into the realm of data processing for businesses. Chapter 6 deals with the growth of the mainframe computer industry. Section three “presents a selective history of some key computer innovations” between the end of World War II and the appearance of the first personal computers. Chapter 7 looks at the technologies of computing in real time (e.g., its use in airlines reservations and at supermarkets). Chapter 8 examines the evolution of software technology. Chapter 9 covers “key features of the computing environment at the end of the l960s: time-sharing, minicomputers, and microelectronics.” This chapter revises the notion that the change from using mainframes to personal computers came abruptly. The last section covers the origins of personal computers and the Internet, and the new computing environment they have created. Chapter 10 covers events from the mid-1970s and the use of the first “hobby computers” to the arrival of the first personal computers by the end of the decade. Chapters 11 examines the environment of personal computers during the 1980s and the development of “user-friendly” software. Here the rise of Microsoft and other companies are discussed. The last chapter covers the Internet, and the relation between the World Wide Web and the information sciences. AU - Campbell-Kelly, Martin CY - New York DA - 1996 KW - computers microprocessing time and timekeeping time labor communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution war World War II office, and information technology microelectronics information technology information processing Information Age +computers and the Internet Babbage, Charles IBM information processing, and history of information technology, and office computing, before computers ENIAC World War II, and computers time computers, and airlines computers, and supermarkets +transportation microelectronics microprocessors microelectronics revolution computers, personal software World Wide Web computers office Internet LB - 7750 PB - Basic Books PY - 1996 ST - Computer: A History of the Information Machine T2 - Sloan Technology Series TI - Computer: A History of the Information Machine ID - 2144 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This brief, 197-page book raises questions about longevity of libraries and knowledge. “Surveying this series of foundations, refoundations and disasters, we follow a thread that links the various and mostly vain, efforts of the Hellenistic-Roman world to preserve its books,” the author writes. “Alexandria is the starting point and the prototype; its fate marks the advent of catastrophe, and is echoed in Pergamum, Antioch, Rome, Athens. At Byzantium there was to be one last reincarnation -- a palace library, once again, in the palaces of the emperor ... and the patriarch. The great concentrations of books, usually found in the centres of power, were the main victims of these destructive outbreaks, ruinous attacks, sackings and fires. The libraries of Byzantium proved no exception to the rule. In consequence, what has come down to us is derived not from the great centres but from the ‘marginal’ locations, such as convents, and from scattered private copies.” AU - Canfora, Luciano (translated by Martin Ryle) CY - Berkeley DA - 1987, 1989 KW - preservation archives history, and new media history non-USA +books, periodicals, newspapers books, and libraries information storage information storage, and Hellenistic-Roman world historical preservation libraries libraries, and Hellenistic-Roman world +information storage information storage, and preservation books LB - 11880 PB - University of California Press PY - 1987 ST - The Vanished Library TI - The Vanished Library ID - 2535 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is by one of the leading scholars of media effects, especially the effects of motion picture and television violence and horror. Here Cantor is looking at fear research, an area that communication researchers have begun to develop – this in addition to an already substantial body of empirical research on the influence of media violence. Cantor examines the reactions of children to such movies as Jaws and Poltergeist and maintains that such films may have long-lasting and damaging effects. AU - Cantor, Joanne CY - New York DA - 1998 KW - media research fear syntheses Poltergeist motion pictures meta-analyses media effects violence (see also: media violence) violence media effects violence media violence media effects censorship and ratings children television television, and violence violence, and television social science research social science research, and violence violence, and social science research violence, and pornography pornography, and violence media effects media effects, and TV violence media violence, meta-analyses social science research, and literature review social science research, and meta-analysis violence, and children children, and media children, and media violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures children, and fear fear, and media effects media effects, and fear social science research, and fear fear, and social science research fear, and Poltergeist fear, and Jaws Poltergeist, and children Jaws (the movie), and children fear, and children motion pictures, and fear television, and fear fear, and television fear, and motion pictures motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and fear motion pictures, and media effects motion pictures, and violence children, and motion pictures children, and horror films children, and violent movies children and violence pornography LB - 28180 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Harcourt Brace & Company PY - 1998 ST - "Mommy, I'm Scared": How TV and Movies Frighten Children and What We Can Do to Protect Them TI - "Mommy, I'm Scared": How TV and Movies Frighten Children and What We Can Do to Protect Them ID - 1367 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Cantril examined public reaction to Orson Welles’ 1938 radio program “War of the Worlds,” a program that cased many people to panic. This work is an example of an early effort to measure the impact of radio. Long after the broadcast, people talked about it and newspapers ran stories about the shock of terror. A poll taken by the American Institute of Public Opinion found that about twelve percent of the people said they listened to the show. Cantril estimated that approximately 9,000,000 Americans heard the broadcast. "The panic was clearly a nationwide reaction. The figures dictate the percentage of those who heard the broadcast as a news report and were frightened." In terms of regional averages all but the northeast had more than 69 percent of those polled believed the broadcast was real. In this south, more than 80 percent believed the broadcast was a news report – the highest in the nation. (58) --Amanda Novak AU - Cantril, Hadley CY - Princeton DA - 1940 KW - fear sensationalism public relations advertising propaganda journalism media effects news and journalism +radio fear, and radio media effects media effects, and fear radio, and fear radio, and propaganda propaganda, and radio War of the Worlds (1938) Welles, Orson Wells, H. G. Novak, Amanda news, and radio news, and sensationalism sensationalism, and radio sensationalism, and news news fear, and media effects fear, and media effects public relations advertising and public relations LB - 1830 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Princeton University Press PY - 1940 ST - Invasion From Mars: A Study in the Psychology of Panic TI - Invasion From Mars: A Study in the Psychology of Panic ID - 271 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Four essays in this book are of special interest. They are: “The Mythos of the Electronic Revolution” (with John J. Quirk); “Space, Time, and Communications: A Tribute to Harold Innis”; “The History of the Future” (with John J. Quirk); and “Technology and Ideology: The Case of the Telegraph.” Carey argues that there are two views in communication research, one emphasizing transmission, the other ritual. Until recently, the research in mass communication emphasized effects but gave less consideration to the ritual view. The whole picture needs to be studied if communication phenomena are to be understood. In a ritual definition, this work contends, communication is linked to terms such as ‘sharing,’ ‘participation,’ ‘association,’ ‘fellowship,’ and ‘the possession of a common faith.’ This definition exploits the ancient identity and common roots of the terms ‘commonness,’ ‘communion,’ ‘community,’ and ‘communication.’ A ritual view of communication is directed not toward the extension of message in space but toward the maintenance of society in time; not the act of imparting information but the representation of shared beliefs.” ... “If one examines a newspaper under a transmission view of communication, one sees the medium as an instrument for disseminating news and knowledge, sometimes divertissement, in larger and larger packages over greater distances. Questions arise as to the effects of this on audiences....” “A ritual view of communication will focus on a different range of problems in examining a newspaper. It will, for example, view reading a newspaper less as sending or gaining information and more as attending a mass, a situation in which nothing new is learned but in which a particular view of world is portrayed and confirmed. News reading, and writing, is a ritual act and moreover a dramatic one.... Moreover, as readers make their way through the paper, they engage in a continual shift of roles or of dramatic focus. A story on the monetary crisis salutes them as American patriots fighting those ancient enemies Germany and Japan... The model here is not that of information acquisition, though such acquisition occurs, but of dramatic action in which the reader joins a world of contending forces as an observer at a play.” – Doobo Shim AU - Carey, James W. CY - Boston DA - 1989 KW - technology Chicago, IL time and timekeeping time technology and society preservation communication revolution history, and new media +future and science fiction news and journalism geography history general studies Innis, Harold telegraph technology and ideology space (spatial) time myth communication revolution, and myth of future history, and future critics communication revolution Shim, Doobo community Chicago School newspapers communication, ritual democracy news LB - 190 PB - Unwin Hyman PY - 1989 ST - Communication as Culture: Essays on Media and Society TI - Communication as Culture: Essays on Media and Society ID - 1415 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In his Introduction to this anthology, Carey writes: “The essays in this volume attempt two things: to elucidate concepts such as myth, narrative, and story, and, then, to apply them to specific phenomena and episodes in televisions and the press.” Among the essays in this volume are: Roger Silverstone, “Television Myth and Culture,” pp. 20-48; Thomas H. Zynda, “The Mary Tyler Moore Show and the Transformation of the Situation Comedy,” pp. 126-45; and Michael Cornfield, “The Watergate Audience: Parsing the Powers of the Press,” pp. 180-204. AU - Carey, James W., ed. CY - Newbury Park, CA DA - 1988 KW - values democracy and media democracy journalism news and journalism news and journalism values press news general studies myth critics values, and media +television press, and narrative news, and narrative news, and myth press, and myth television, and press journalism, and television journalism LB - 200 PB - Sage PY - 1988 ST - Media, Myths, and Narratives: Television and the Press TI - Media, Myths, and Narratives: Television and the Press ID - 1416 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Carlebach describes the tremendous increase and diffusion of photographs in American between 1839 (the year Daguerre’s invention was announced) and 1880. He notes that “long before the establishment of mass-circulation picture magazines like Life, Look, and Colliers in the 1930s, even before the invention of the halftone process and rotogravure printing press in the 1880s, photographs were used to inform the public about events, people, and places in the news.” Often pictures were displayed crudely, sometimes even pasted into books and magazines. “Most often, however, artists copied photographs, and they were printed in magazines, books and newspapers as woodcuts or steel engravings; often, only the caption suggested their photographic origin. In addition, early photographic methods made it difficult to record fast-moving events or unposed human activity. Until hand-held cameras and roll film revolutionized photography late in the century, photographers in America performed most camera work indoors, in studios, under conditions they rigidly controlled.” Carlebach says that the “idea that photographs could be printed with words, even crudely printed with words, was epochal and led to fundamental changes in the way information was gathered and disseminated to the public. The combination of text and photographs is, indeed, the guiding principle and single most important characteristic of photojournalism. Wilson Hicks, the redoubtable editor of Life magazine from 1937 to 1950, said as much in his classic study, Words and Pictures, published in 1952. He rightly contends that the basic unit of photojournalism is not the gritty hard-news picture standing alone, but photographs and text printed together. In this informational mix, picture content matters less than the manner in which the picture is used. Photojournalism does not consist exclusively of those familiar, powerful, and persuasive images of accident and mayhem, death and destruction; its content is really as varied as journalism itself. In photojournalism, words that provide a context for the photograph are vital; so, too, is the publication of the picture. “The ability of photographs to inform and persuade a mass audience is based upon the public’s belief in their infallibility and objectivity. In mid-nineteenth-century America, the photographic process was understood to rely less upon the imagination of the photographer than on the mute precision of solar energy. Photography was a more perfect art not because photographers were more artistic, but because their product was created by light itself. ‘No man quarrels with his shadow,’ wrote Ralph Waldo Emerson more than a century ago, ‘nor will he with his miniature when the sun was the painter. Here is no interference, and the distortions are not the blunders of an artist.’" AU - Carlebach, Michael L. CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1992 KW - photography print magazines news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers news journalism printing +photography and visual communication newspapers news magazines +photography and visual communication photojournalism newspapers, and photography newspapers, and halftones newspapers, and woodcuts newspapers, and steel engravings photography, and hand-held cameras photography, and roll film +books, periodicals, newspapers books, and woodcuts books, and photography books, and halftones magazines, and photography magazines, and halftones magazines, and woodcuts printing, and rotogravure printing, and woodcuts prints +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers books magazines newspapers, and photographs photography, and news news, and photography LB - 1460 PB - Smithsonian Institution Press PY - 1992 ST - The Origins of Photojournalism in America TI - The Origins of Photojournalism in America ID - 1542 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This, the third volume in a series, contains papal encyclicals including Pope Pius XI's 1936 encyclical on motion pictures. AU - Carlen, Claudia, IHM CY - Raleigh DA - 1981 KW - values Christianity values archives primary sources Pope Pius XI motion pictures values religion Catholic Church non-USA primary sources Pope Pius XI, and 1936 encyclical Catholic Church Catholic Church, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholic Church Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity primary sources, papal encyclicals LB - 13030 M1 - 3 PB - McGrath Publishing Company, a Consortium Book PY - 1981 ST - The Papal Encyclicals, 1903-1939 TI - The Papal Encyclicals, 1903-1939 ID - 478 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This, the fifth volume in a series, has the Vatican's response to many issues including the problems posed by modern communications. This volume contains, for examples, Pope John XXIII 1959 encyclical and Pope Paul VI's 1968 encyclical. AU - Carlen, Claudia, IHM CY - Raleigh, N. C. DA - 1981 KW - values Christianity values archives primary sources motion pictures values religion Catholic Church non-USA primary sources Catholic Church Catholic Church, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholic Church Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity primary sources, papal encyclicals Catholic Church, and modern communications Pope John XXIII, and 1959 encyclical Pope Paul VI, and 1968 encyclical Pope John XXIII Pope Paul VI LB - 20770 M1 - 5 PB - McGrath Publishing Company, a Consortium Book PY - 1981 ST - The Papal Encyclicals, 1958-1981 TI - The Papal Encyclicals, 1958-1981 ID - 879 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This, the fourth volume in a series, contains the Vatican's response to many issues including those raised by modern communications. This volume, for examples, has Pope Pius XII's 1957 encyclical dealing the motion pictures, radio, and television. AU - Carlen, Claudia, IHM CY - Raleigh, N. C. DA - 1981 KW - values Christianity values archives primary sources motion pictures values religion Catholic Church non-USA primary sources Pope Pius XII, and 1957 encyclical Catholic Church Catholic Church, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholic Church Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity primary sources, papal encyclicals Catholic Church, and modern communications Pope Pius XII LB - 20780 M1 - 4 PB - McGrath Publishing Company, a Consortium Book PY - 1981 ST - The Papal Encyclicals, 1939-1958 TI - The Papal Encyclicals, 1939-1958 ID - 880 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work offers brief summaries of Papal pronouncements from 1740 to 1978, some of which pertain to communication. AU - Carlen, Claudia, IHM CY - Ann Arbor, MI DA - 1990 KW - values Christianity References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps values values Catholic Church critics values religion, and communication Catholic Church, and communication +bibliographies bibliographies, and Papal Pronouncements bibliographies, annotated reference works religion LB - 28380 PB - Pierian Press PY - 1990 ST - Papal Pronouncements: A Guide: 1740-1978: Volume I: Benedict XIV to Paul VI TI - Papal Pronouncements: A Guide: 1740-1978: Volume I: Benedict XIV to Paul VI ID - 1377 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work, published by UNESCO, pulls together research that has been done on media effects relating to children and violence in mass media. AU - Carlsson, Ulla and Cecilia von Feilitzen, eds. CY - Göteborg, Sweden DA - 1998 KW - computers children UNESCO social science research motion pictures media effects violence (see also: media violence) violence media effects violence media violence media effects Internet video games computers censorship and ratings non-USA +television +motion pictures and popular culture media violence, global television, and media violence media violence, and television motion pictures, and media violence media violence, and motion pictures children, and media violence media violence, and children children media effects, and violence violence, and media effects media effects, and children children, and media effects social science research, and media violence media violence, and social science research Japan Japan, and media violence Australia, and media violence Australia New Zealand New Zealand, and media violence Israel Israel, and media violence Europe Europe, and media violence Argentina Argentina, and media violence UNESCO, and media violence media violence, and UNESCO Asia Asia, and media violence China China, and media violence South Africa South Africa, and media violence Flanders Flanders, and media violence +computers and the Internet computers, and media violence Internet, and media violence Denmark Denmark, and media violence France France, and media violence Brazil Brazil, and media violence Senegal Senegal, and media violence United Nations United Nations, and media violence video games, and children children, and video games video games, and media violence media violence, and video games UNESCO, and television children, and media LB - 28200 PB - UNESCO International Clearinghouse on Children and Violence on the Screen PY - 1998 ST - Children and Media Violence: Yearbook from the UNESCO International Clearinghouse on Children and Violence on the Screen TI - Children and Media Violence: Yearbook from the UNESCO International Clearinghouse on Children and Violence on the Screen ID - 1068 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book offers an informative account of motion picture censorship from early in the twentieth century until the mid-1960s. It discusses the 1952 Burstyn v. Wilson case in which films gained freedom under the First and Fourteenth Amendments, and the effect that that and other Supreme Court cases had on state a local censorship. The work is especially good in covers state and local censorship. Among the states covered are Lousiana, Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, New York, Maryland, Virginia, and Kansas. Local censorship boards include discusses of Chicago, Detroit, Memphiss, and Atlanta. AU - Carmen, Ira H. CY - Ann Arbor DA - 1966 KW - Burstyn v. Wilson Burstyn, Joseph censorship and ratings motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and foreign films motion pictures, and television audiences motion pictures, and audiences law law, and film censorship classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification motion pictures, and First Amendment Miracle case motion pictures, and state censorship law, and state film censorship law, and local film censorship motion pictures, and local censorship LB - 36250 PB - University of Michigan Press PY - 1966 ST - Movies, Censorship and the Law TI - Movies, Censorship and the Law ID - 3258 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - As the title suggests, this work examines the railway as an image in culture, particularly in terms of literature and print. The author seeks to understand the railway as a symbol for modernity by measuring its impact on culture. The works of many Victorian novelists and artists, from George Cruikshanks and J.M.W. Turner to Charles Dickens are cited in this argument. Naturally, source material includes the works of these artists, along with historical, sociological, and psychological studies that treat issues of modernity. This project is particular apt when once considers the relationship of the railway--a means of communication--with other nineteenth-century communications media such as the novel. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Carter, Ian CY - Manchester DA - 2001 KW - print print culture modernism modernity modernism non-USA Wolf, Nicholas +transportation Great Britain Great Britain, and railroad railroads modernity railroads, and modernity modernity, and railroads print culture, and railroads railroads, and print culture railroads, and literature LB - 1870 PB - Manchester University Press PY - 2001 ST - Railways and Culture in Britain: The Epitome of Modernity TI - Railways and Culture in Britain: The Epitome of Modernity ID - 275 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Carter, Paul A. CY - New York DA - 1977 KW - science +future and science fiction values science fiction future progress science, and society values, and science fiction future, and science fiction LB - 8910 PB - Columbia University Press PY - 1977 ST - The Creation of Tomorrow: Fifty years of Magazine Science Fiction TI - The Creation of Tomorrow: Fifty years of Magazine Science Fiction ID - 2258 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - A survey of the Irish railway system between c.a. 1840 and 1960, organized by railway company with a chapter devoted to each. Most details center on routes, mileage, and train engines. Although an extended work, this book is narrowly focused in terms of information. Only the first chapter explores some of the unique aspects of the Irish Railway, the trajectory of construction, and the impact of government and private interests. Sources are a set of secondary publications (now dated bibliography) and some published institutional records. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Casserly, H. C. CY - London DA - 1974 KW - non-USA Wolf, Nicholas Ireland Ireland, and railroads railroads railroads, and Ireland +transportation Ireland LB - 1880 PB - David & Charles PY - 1974 ST - Outline of Irish Railway History TI - Outline of Irish Railway History ID - 276 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is the concluding work in a three-volume study entitled, The Information Age: Economy, Society, and Culture. While somewhat redundant, these works represent a major accomplishment by the author. In these three volumes, Castells attempts to document “a new historical landscape, whose dynamics is likely to have lasting effects on our lives, and on our children’s lives.” He maintains that the last quarter of the twentieth century has been marked by a “transition from industrialism to informationalism, and from the industrial society to the network society, both for capitalism and statism.” In End of Millennium, Castells examines the collapse of the former Soviet Union, and notes that the inability of Soviet “statism to manage the transition to the Information Age” played a crucial part in this downfall. The Soviets had attempted to control information flow, regulating everything from paper, to typewriters, to photocopy machines. They failed to keep pace with the information technology revolution of the 1970s, however. “What had been a situation close to parity [with the United States] in computer design in the early 1960s became, in the 1990s, a 20-year difference in design and manufacturing capability.” Gorbachev, who attempted to modernize Soviet communism, inadvertently unleashed forces that brought down the USSR. He “will remain the hero who changed the world by destroying the Soviet empire,” Castells writes, “although he did it without knowing it and without wanting it.” In addition to treating developments in the former USSR and in post-Soviet Russia, Castells considers other areas of the world: Africa (chapter 2), Japan, China, Taiwan, Singapore, South Korea, Hong Kong, and other Asian regions (chapter 4), and the unification of Europe (chapter 5). He also devotes chapter 3 to the worldwide criminal economy. A concluding chapter, “Making Sense of our World,” pulls together themes developed in this work and in the two previous volumes in his trilogy, Rise of Network Society, and The Power of Identify. “A new world is taking shape in this end of millennium. It originated in the historical coincidence, around the late 1960s and mid-1970s, of three independent processes: the information technology revolution; the economic crisis of both capitalism and statism, and their subsequent restructuring; and the blooming of cultural social movements, such as libertarianism, human rights, feminism, and environmentalism. The interaction between these processes, and the reactions they triggered, brought into being a new dominant social structure, the network society; a new economy, the informational/global economy; and a new culture, the culture of real virtuality.” What is “new” about this era? Castells suggests the following“Chips and computers are new; ubiquitous, mobile telecommunications are new; genetic engineering is new; electronically integrated, global financial markets working in real time are new; and inter-linked capitalist economy embracing the whole planet, and not only some of its segments, is new; a majority of the urban labor force in knowledge and information processing in advanced economies is new; a majority of urban population in the planet is new; the demise of the Soviet Empire, the fading away of communism, and the end of the Cold War are new; the rise of the Asian Pacific as an equal partner in the global economy is new; the widespread challenge to patriarchalism is new; the universal consciousness on ecological preservation is new; and the emergence of a network society, based on a space of flows, and on timeless time, is historically new.” AU - Castells, Manuel CY - Malden, MA DA - 1998 KW - computers USSR nationalism women, and new media time and timekeeping time reality values preservation +nationalism and communication communication revolution history, and new media materials materials genetics women communication revolution, and second industrial revolution values religion capitalism war non-USA history geography virtual reality +duplicating technologies general studies communication revolution informationalism microelectronics Soviet Union, and collapse of photocopying typewriters computers communication revolution, and capitalism Gorbachev, Mikhail capitalism statism feminism environmentalism real virtuality, culture of chips, computer telecommunications genetic engineering biotechnology space (spatial) time Cold War communism global communication Japan China Taiwan Singapore South Korea Hong Kong Asia Africa +artificial intelligence and biotechnology human rights second industrial revolution patriarchy Soviet Union computer chips environment Soviet Union Soviet Union, and new media history, break with capitalism, and new media +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology nationalism, and new media labor labor, and new media communism, and new media military communication LB - 220 M1 - 3 N1 - See also: office PB - Blackwell Publishers PY - 1998 ST - End of Millennium T2 - The Information Age: Economy, Society, and Culture TI - End of Millennium ID - 1418 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This collection of original essays samples current research (as of 1985) on “the existence of a web of interactions between technology and space, mediated by economic, cultural and political processes.” The common ground for these essays “is the recognition of the importance of technological change for the evolution of spatial and social forms, together with an emphasis on the need to integrate technology in a broader framework of social relationships to understand the diversity of its effects on people’s lives, on institutions, and, ultimately, on spatial forms and processes.” The editors contend that these essays represent a “new frontier of urban studies” but do not attempt to construct “a coherent view” of this phenomenon. Two opening chapters, one by Manuel Castells, the other by geographer Peter Hall, provide an overview of this field, but do not provide a synthesis of the other contributions to this volume. Castells writes that “We are in the middle of a major technological revolution that is transforming our ways of producing, consuming, organizing, living, and dying. Cities and regions are also changing under the impact of new technologies.... “Two features are characteristic of the stream of technological innovation under way. First, the object of technological discoveries, as well of their applications, is information.... “The second feature concerns the fact that the outcome is process-oriented, rather than product-oriented.” Among the essays in this volume areManuel Castells, “High Technology, Economic Restructuring, and the Urban-Regional Process in the United States”; Peter Hall, “Technology, Space, and Society in Contemporary Britain”; AnnaLee Saxenian, “Silicon Valley and Route 128Regional Prototypes or Historic Exceptions?”; Ann Roell Markusen and Robin Bloch, “Defensive Cities: Military Spending, High Technology, and Human Settlements”; Claude Fischer, “Studying Technology and Social Life.” AU - Castells, Manuel, ed. CY - Beverly Hills DA - 1985 KW - technology R & D materials, and silicon materials silicon research and development war communication revolution labor war non-USA general studies space (spatial) urban studies communication revolution technology and society Great Britain telephones automobiles +military communication Silicon Valley geography Route 128 capitalism labor, and new media +military communication Fischer, Claude Hall, Peter transportation LB - 230 N1 - See also: office PB - Sage Publications PY - 1985 ST - High Technology, Space, and Society TI - High Technology, Space, and Society ID - 1419 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work focuses on the United States, and argues that during the 1970s major changes occurred simultaneously in communication technology and in the restructuring of capitalism to produce societies’ “fundamental matrix of institutional and economic organization.” The changes in communication led to the “emergence of a new mode of socio-technical organization” which Castells calls the “informational mode of development.” At the core of this “new technological paradigm” is microelectronics, and a series of innovations that built on the discoveries of the transistor in 1947, the integrated circuit around 1957, the planar process in 1959, and the microprocessor in 1971. “Computers, spurred on by exponential increases in power and dramatic decreases in cost per unit of memory, were able to revolutionize information processing, in both hardware and software. Telecommunications became the key factor for the diffusion and full utilization of the new technologies by enabling connections between processing units, to form information systems.” Applying microelectronic-based informational system in workplaces made for more flexible and integrated systems of management and production. “Around this nucleus of information technologies, a number of other fundamental innovations took place, particularly in new materials (ceramics, alloys, optical fibers), and more recently, in superconductor, in laser, and in renewable energy sources. In a parallel process, which benefitted from the enhanced capacity to store and analyze information, genetic engineering extended the technological revolution to the realm of living matter. This laid the foundations for biotechnology, itself an information technology with its scientific basis in the ability to decode and reprogram the information embodied in living organisms.” Two features characterize the new technological paradigm1) the paradigm’s most distinguishing features is that “the core new technologies are focused on information processing.” 2) another characteristic of these technologies, one “common to all major technological revolutions,” is that the “main effects of their innovations are on processes, rather than on products.” These points, of course, were also made in High Technology, Space, and Society (1985). Occurring along with these changes in technologies was a restructuring of capitalism during the 1980s. The relation between this restructuring and technology is complex. The social and political system in many ways shapes the technology; at the same time, without the technology, the restructuring of capitalism would have surely taken a different form. Castells sees three phases of capitalism. The pre-1929 era was characterized by laissez-faire, and was thrown into crisis by the Great Depression and World War II, which triggered a restructuring. What emerged was state-regulated capitalism which flourished from 1945 until the mid-1970s when this system fell into crisis. The oil shortages of 1974 and 1979 help bring on this crisis, although its causes ran much deeper. During the 1980s, another restructuring took place that gave birth to a new model of capitalism, one characterized by “the overpowering of labor by capital, the shift of the state toward the domination-accumulation functions of its intervention in economy and society, and the internationalization of the capitalist system to form a worldwide interdependent unit working in real time.” Castells is particularly good in explaining how new communication technologies made possible the internationalization of capitalism. AU - Castells, Manuel CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1989 KW - computers superconductivity nationalism microprocessing time and timekeeping transistors, and integrated circuits time optical fibers fiber optics communication revolution labor office archives materials genetics fiber optics non-USA materials Information Age general studies capitalism microelectronics communication revolution transistors integrated circuits planar process microprocessors telecommunications information processing materials revolution optical fibers ceramics alloys lasers superconductors genetic engineering biotechnology oil global communication time +artificial intelligence and biotechnology urban studies +computers and the Internet +nationalism and communication +information storage labor labor, and new media capitalism, global LB - 240 N1 - See also: office PB - Basil Blackwell Inc. PY - 1989 ST - The Informational City: Information Technology, Economic Restructuring, and the Urban-Regional Process TI - The Informational City: Information Technology, Economic Restructuring, and the Urban-Regional Process ID - 1420 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book develops themes set out in Castells’ Informational City (1989), and it is the first volume of a trilogy. Volume II, The Power of Identity, explores the interaction of the Net and Self in the context of the patriarchal family and the national state, two institutions in crisis. Volume III, End of Millennium, pulls together themes in the first two volumes and is more theoretical. Among other themes covered is the collapse of the former Soviet Union. The Rise of Network Society is a tour de force. Castells examines the complex interaction between historic changes in communication brought by the microelectronics revolution of the 1970s, and the restructuring of capitalism during the 1980s. “My starting point,” he writes, “is that, at the end of the twentieth century, we are living through of these rare intervals in history. An interval characterized by the transformation of our ‘material culture’ by the works of a new technological paradigm organized around information technologies.” We should not underestimate the current revolution in technology, he argues, because it is “at least a major a historical event as was the eighteenth-century Industrial Revolution, inducing a pattern of discontinuity in the material basis of economy, society, and culture.” Castells distinguishes between “information society” and “informational society.” The former term “emphasizes the role of information in society. But I argue that information, in its broadest sense, e.g. as communication of knowledge, has been critical in all societies, including medieval Europe which was culturally structured, and to some extent unified, around scholasticism, that is, by and large an intellectual framework.... In contrast, the term informational indicates the attribute of a specific form of social organization in which information generation, processing, and transmission become the fundamental sources of productivity and power, because of new technological conditions emerging in this historical period.” Castells’ opening chapter on “The Information Technology Revolution” is informative, thought-provoking, and provides good leads to related literature. Chapter 2 is “The Informational Economy and the Process of Globalization,” while chapter 3 is entitled “The Network Enterprise: The Culture, Institutions, and Organizations of the Informational Economy.” Chapter 4 explores “the transformation of work and employment.” Chapter 5 is “The Culture of Real Virtuality,” which discusses the rise of interactive networks and the end of the mass audience. Chapter 6 deals with “The Space of Flows,” while the final chapter is “The Edge of Forever: Timeless Time.” Castells, who was born in Spain, is a professor of sociology and planning. This work is based on research in Asia, Latin America, the United States, and Europe. AU - Castells, Manuel CY - Oxford, UK DA - 1996 KW - nationalism interactivity time and timekeeping time second industrial revolution reality communication revolution microelectronics revolution labor office) communication revolution, and second industrial revolution non-USA geography virtual reality labor general studies +nationalism and communication microelectronics capitalism information age global communication labor and communication real virtuality, culture of space (spatial) time interactive media urban studies capitalism, and microelectronics revolution capitalism, restructuring of demassification LB - 250 M1 - 1 N1 - See also: office PB - Blackwell Publishers Ltd. PY - 1996 ST - The Rise of the Network Society T2 - The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture TI - The Rise of the Network Society ID - 1421 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Castells presents an account of what he argues are two great and conflicting trends shaping the world at the end of the 20th century: globalization and identity. He sees the information-technology revolution restructuring capitalism, which has, in turn, meant the demise of statism. Such instability has changed the notion of national identity and created a "network society" ushering in globalization of strategic economic activities, a workforce dangerously in constant flux, and a culture of "real" virtuality. Castells see the emerging virtual culture as an expression of collective identity. Castells also says the techno-economic forces that use the media to promote their own agenda are in fundamental, ideological conflict with the idea of the nation-state and the notion of political democracy. During this time of globalization, he asks who regulates powerful multinational corporations that have no clear national boundary or character? Can a nation exist without a state? Castells examines the effect of the feminist and environmentalist movements (and other proactive and reactive movements as he terms them) that have dug the trenches of resistance on behalf of ethnicity, locality, family, God, and the idea of nationhood. --Robert Pondillo AU - Castells, Manuel CY - Oxford, UK, DA - 1997 KW - nationalism corporations corporations, multinational interactivity women, and new media time and timekeeping time reality communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution identity women communication revolution, and second industrial revolution non-USA values geography virtual reality political economy microelectronics labor general studies nationalism and communication microelectronics revolution capitalism second industrial revolution communication revolution information age global communication labor and communication real virtuality, culture of space (spatial) time interactive media urban studies capitalism, and microelectronics revolution capitalism, restructuring of Pondillo, Robert values, and microelectronics revolution feminism patriarchy identity, and microelectronics revolution multinational corporations globalization virtual reality women, and feminism LB - 9620 M1 - 2 PB - Blackwell Publishers Ltd. PY - 1997 ST - The Power of Identity T2 - The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture TI - The Power of Identity ID - 2329 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - During the 1890s, French avant-garde artists preferred color lithography over other means of printmaking. Cate and Hitchings devotes two chapters to this development. Chapter 1 is “The 1880s: The Prelude,” and Chapter 2 is “The 1890s: Revolution.” There follows numerous color illustrations. At the end of this work are short biographies of several artists: Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Pierre Bonnard, Henri-Gabriel Ibels, Edouard Vuillard, Maurice Denis, Ker-Xavier Roussel, Alexandre Lunois, Benjamin Jean Pierre Henri Rivière, Charles-Marie Dulac, Georges de Feure, Hermann René Georges Paul, Jean Veber, Théophile Alexandre Steinlen, Eugè-Samuel Grasset, Paul Signac, and Maximilien Luce. This volume also contains chapters by Sinclair Hamilton Hitchings entitled “Simplicity of Means" and "Eighty Years of an Artist’s Medium”; and a reprint of André Mellerios’ 1898 short book, La Lithograpie originale en couleurs (Original Color Lithography), translated by Margaret Needham. Cate provides a short biography of Mellerios who lived from 1862 to1943. Cate and Hitchings have tried to build on the work of Mellerios and others “by documenting the early history of the medium as well as the events in commercial and noncommercial color printing which led up to the 1890s and which helped to set the atmosphere which was favorable to color printing; by revealing the vehicles of support which began to emerge in the mid-eighties – the print. and poster dealers, color lithographic printers, independent exhibitions, print albums and journals; by indicating the conflicting printmaking aesthetics of the period, and by discussing the variety of stylistic approaches to the medium. “Finally, as an epilogue to the color revolution, achievement in color lithography by twentieth-century artists in Europe and the United States are discussed. Though original work in color lithography slowed at the turn of the century, the medium has remained an important means of expression for many artists throughout the last seventy-eight years.” AU - Cate, Phillip Dennis AU - Hitchings, Sinclair Hamilton CY - Santa Barbara, CA and Salt Lake City, UT DA - 1978 KW - illustrations Chicago, IL photography color non-USA photography and visual communication prints lithography lithography, color France France, and color lithography prints, and color lithography Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri de illustrations color, and posters posters prints, and printmaking Bonnard, Pierre Chéret, Jules chromolithography posters, late 19th century posters, and Toulouse-Lautrec posters, and France posters, and France (late 19th century) posters, and color Mellerios, André Chéret, Jules LB - 12080 PB - Peregrine Smith, Inc. PY - 1978 ST - The Color Revolution: Color Lithography in France, 1890-1900 TI - The Color Revolution: Color Lithography in France, 1890-1900 ID - 2555 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In chapter 13, “The World as a Whole: Color,” Cavell talks about specific films -- Gone With the Wind, The Wizard of Oz, Vertigo, Rosemary’s Baby, among others -- and about how they establish “a world of private fantasy.” The consideration of color technology is disappointing. “The great example of this combination of fantasy and color symbolism is Hitchcock’s Vertigo," the author writes. "The film establishes the moment of moving from one color space into another as one of moving from one world into another. In Rosemary’s Baby this is accomplished by showing the modernizing of one apartment in the Dakota building, then moving between its open chic and the darker elegance. An instance in Vertigo is James Stewart’s opening of a storage-room door -- the whole car-stalking passage leading up to this moment shot in soft washed-out light -- into a florist shop alive with bright flowers, predominantly red. The moment is almost comic in its display of assured virtuosity.” AU - Cavell, Stanley CY - New York DA - 1971 KW - photography seeing at a distance postmodernism modernism new way of seeing +motion pictures +motion pictures color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color new way of seeing, and color films +photography and visual communication LB - 6150 PB - Viking Press PY - 1971 ST - The World Viewed: Reflections on the Ontology of Film TI - The World Viewed: Reflections on the Ontology of Film ID - 1999 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Louis Cazamian, who was at the time of this work as professor of English literature at the University of Paris, devotes a chapter (63-80) on "The Method of Discontinuity in Modern Art and Literature." He observes that "in all the arts" there was "a movement away from a need which, whether in the ascendant or not, was always felt and honored: the craving for some sort of continuity in form." (64) The author discusses modern painting (e.g., impressionism and cubism), music, sculpture, literature and psychology (e.g., Joyce's Ulysses). He discusses cinema (76-78) and notes its appeal to those people "without the training and refinement of higher culture." (76) The enjoy a film, he says, one need have "only a mood of passiveness; and to such moderate demands, the many were eager to respond." (77) The movie theater provided an "atmosphere in which the principle of literary discontinuity has been able to thrive." (77) "The spell of discontinuous art, in music, painting, the drama, and writings of all kinds," Cazamian wrote, "works upon us like a halluciantion; the intelligence, always exacting and diffident, is set at rest; our senses and imaginations are drowned in the soft-whirling, rippling current of things. A trance seizes our minds and our wills. The audiences in picture palaces know that hypnotic effect well, and are very probably fond of it." (78) AU - Cazamian, Louis CY - New York DA - 1929 KW - modernism motion pictures motion pictures, and modernism new way of seeing critics modern art color color, and impressionism audiences media effects motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects LB - 34720 PB - Macmillan Company PY - 1929 ST - Criticism in the Making TI - Criticism in the Making ID - 3110 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Several categories pertain to communication in this volume. Chapter Q on Transportation, covers railroads, water transit, highways, and air travel. Chapter R, Communications, has data on telephone and telegraphy systems, radio, television, postal service, newspapers and books. Chapter S -- Power -- deals with electrical energy. Chapter W, Productivity and Technological Development, has statistics on copyrights, patents, and research and development. AU - Census, U. S. Bureau of the CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1960 KW - R & D reference works post office References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps law research and development general studies reference works intellectual property copyright books, periodicals, newspapers research and development, and government support +telephones networks +telegraph +television +radio +transportation +aeronautics and space communication railroads automobiles +electricity +postal service statistics statistics, and new media LB - 11340 PB - U. S. Government Printing Office PY - 1960 ST - Historical Statistics of the United States: Colonial Times to 1957: A Statistical Abstract Supplement TI - Historical Statistics of the United States: Colonial Times to 1957: A Statistical Abstract Supplement ID - 2494 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This, the first of three volumes, argues that there is a strong consensus in communication research on media effects linking violence on television to real world problems. “While recognizing the complexity in determining the causes of violent behavior," numerous medical and professional assocations "have concluded that the mass media bear some responsibility for contributing to real world violence,” this national study concluded in 1997. “Viewing media violence is not the only, nor even the most important, contributor to violent behavior.” Nor did every violent act shown affect every child or adult who saw it. But “children’s exposure to violence in the mass media, particularly at young ages, can have lifelong consequences,” this study found. There was “clear evidence that exposure to media violence” contributed significantly to violence in society in at least three ways. First, it increased aggression toward other because some people imitated what they had learned by watching. Second, it desensitized people, or made them the more callous, to violence toward others. Finally, it elevated people’s fear of becoming a victim. These conclusions were “based on careful and critical readings in the social science research collected over the last 40 years.” AU - Center for Communication and Social Policy, University of California, Santa Barbara ed. CY - Thousand Oaks, CA DA - 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Cantor, Joanne National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Surgeon General social science research censorship and ratings NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA motion pictures media effects media violence censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +television +motion pictures and popular culture media effects television, and violence motion pictures, and violence media effects, and violence social science research, and violence Surgeon General's Report (1972) Donnerstein, Edward Cantor, Joanne, reports children, and media MPAA rating system (U. S.), and critics television, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and television LB - 28090 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Sage Publications PY - 1997 ST - National Television Violence Study: Volume 1 TI - National Television Violence Study: Volume 1 ID - 1358 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This, the second of three volumes, argues that there is a strong consensus in communication research on media effects linking violence on television to real world problems. “While recognizing the complexity in determining the causes of violent behavior," numerous medical and professional assocations "have concluded that the mass media bear some responsibility for contributing to real world violence,” this national study concluded in 1997. “Viewing media violence is not the only, nor even the most important, contributor to violent behavior.” Nor did every violent act shown affect every child or adult who saw it. But “children’s exposure to violence in the mass media, particularly at young ages, can have lifelong consequences,” this study found. There was “clear evidence that exposure to media violence” contributed significantly to violence in society in at least three ways. First, it increased aggression toward other because some people imitated what they had learned by watching. Second, it desensitized people, or made them the more callous, to violence toward others. Finally, it elevated people’s fear of becoming a victim. These conclusions were “based on careful and critical readings in the social science research collected over the last 40 years.” (Quotations from Volume I) AU - Center for Communication and Social Policy, University of California, Santa Barbara ed. CY - Thousand Oaks, CA DA - 1998 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Cantor, Joanne National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Surgeon General social science research censorship and ratings NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA motion pictures media effects media violence censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +television +motion pictures and popular culture violence media effects television, and violence motion pictures, and violence media effects, and violence social science research, and violence Surgeon General's Report (1972) Donnerstein, Edward Cantor, Joanne, reports children, and media MPAA rating system (U. S.), and critics television, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and television LB - 28100 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality Volume 2 PB - Sage Publications PY - 1998 ST - National Television Violence Study: 2 TI - National Television Violence Study: 2 ID - 1359 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This, the third of three volumes, argues that there is a strong consensus in communication research on media effects linking violence on television to real world problems. “While recognizing the complexity in determining the causes of violent behavior," numerous medical and professional assocations "have concluded that the mass media bear some responsibility for contributing to real world violence,” this national study concluded in 1997. “Viewing media violence is not the only, nor even the most important, contributor to violent behavior.” Nor did every violent act shown affect every child or adult who saw it. But “children’s exposure to violence in the mass media, particularly at young ages, can have lifelong consequences,” this study found. There was “clear evidence that exposure to media violence” contributed significantly to violence in society in at least three ways. First, it increased aggression toward other because some people imitated what they had learned by watching. Second, it desensitized people, or made them the more callous, to violence toward others. Finally, it elevated people’s fear of becoming a victim. These conclusions were “based on careful and critical readings in the social science research collected over the last 40 years.” (Quotations from Volume I) AU - Center for Communication and Social Policy, University of California, Santa Barbara ed. CY - Thousand Oaks, CA DA - 1998 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Cantor, Joanne National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Surgeon General social science research censorship and ratings NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA motion pictures media effects media violence censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +television +motion pictures and popular culture violence media effects television, and violence motion pictures, and violence media effects, and violence social science research, and violence Surgeon General's Report (1972) Donnerstein, Edward Cantor, Joanne, reports children, and media MPAA rating system (U. S.), and critics television, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and television LB - 28110 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality Volume 3 PB - Sage Publications PY - 1998 ST - National Television Violence Study: 3 TI - National Television Violence Study: 3 ID - 1360 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The authors note that after the arrival of sound technology in Hollywood, studios had to turn increasingly to screenwriters for their story treatments. While this book does not discussion moviemaking technology per se, it is an excellent treatment of the efforts by writers to use motion pictures for social reform during the Great Depression, World War II and the Cold War. The work is based on substantial research in primary collections and on oral histories. AU - Ceplair, Larry & Steven Englund CY - Garden City, NY DA - 1980 KW - nationalism nationalism blacklisting law censorship and ratings capitalism war propaganda +motion pictures +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures Cold War communism, and motion pictures propaganda, and motion pictures motion pictures, and reform motion pictures, and communism censorship communism capitalism, and motion pictures labor labor, and motion pictures nationalism, and motion pictures blacklisting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and blacklisting +nationalism and communication LB - 9640 N1 - See also: office PB - Anchor Press/Doubleday PY - 1980 ST - The Inquisition in Hollywood: Politics in the Film Community, 1930-1960 TI - The Inquisition in Hollywood: Politics in the Film Community, 1930-1960 ID - 2331 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work deals with the history of cinema up to 1897, and has material on the history of photography in the 19th century. Ceram’s purpose “is to make order out of a vast amount of material which has been accumulating for decades: the prehistory and early history of the cinema. What I am really concerned with is the genesis of the cinema as a technique, and my book ends in 1897, the year which saw the birth of the cinema industry.” This work is richly illustrated with black and white photographs. It deals with cinema in Europe and Russia, but also deals with Edison and Eastman in the United States. AU - Ceram, C. W. CY - London DA - 1965 KW - illustrations photography seeing at a distance postmodernism modernism non-USA Russia +photography and visual communication new way of seeing +motion pictures illustrations Great Britain +photography and visual communication motion pictures, and pre-1897 Eastman, George Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Europe motion pictures, and Russia motion pictures, and United States photography, and 19th century motion pictures, and prehistory Russia, and motion pictures Europe, and motion pictures Great Britain, and motion pictures +motion pictures illustrations, and origins of cinema new way of seeing, and motion pictures Europe Great Britain Russia LB - 1490 PB - Thames and Hudson PY - 1965 ST - Archaeology of the Cinema TI - Archaeology of the Cinema ID - 1545 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Although somewhat technical, this work does have useful information and insights. Chapter 2 deals with “Computers in Germany.” Chapter 4 treats computers at Bell Labs, and chapter 5 is on “The ENIAC.” Chapter 6 is called “To the First Generation.” Chapter 7 (the last chapter) is entitled “The Revolution?” AU - Ceruzzi, Paul E. CY - Westport, CT DA - 1983 KW - computers corporations corporations digitization war non-USA World War II Germany +computers and the Internet Germany Germany, and computers Bell Laboratories ENIAC World War II, and computers digital media computers LB - 7770 PB - Greenwood Press PY - 1983 ST - Reckoners: The Prehistory of the Digital Computer, from Relays to the Stored Program Concept, 1935-1945 TI - Reckoners: The Prehistory of the Digital Computer, from Relays to the Stored Program Concept, 1935-1945 ID - 2146 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The Commission on Freedom of the Press, which was made up of several distinguished scholars in addition to Chafee, argued that the "word 'press' should not confine us to newspapers or printed matter generally; the inquiry should include other means of communicating news and opinions such as films and radio broadcasting of news and comment. And 'freedom' must mean more than the traditional conception of immunity from government control." This work is devided into two volumes. Chafee's Introduction to Volume I is entitled "The Relations of the Government to the Press Today and Tomorrow." This volume considers "Protection of Individual Interests Against Untruthful and Unjustifiable Publications," "Protection of Common Standards of the Community," and "Protection Against Internal Disorder and Interferences with the Operation of Government." Volume II deals with "Affirmative Governmental Activities for Encouraging the Communication of News and Ideas," and considers: "The Provision of Essential Physical Facilities Accessible to All," "Traffic Regulations," "Applications to the Press of General Legislation," and "The Government as a Party to Communications." An Appendix list the Commission's recommendations and a list of all the Commission's publications is also included. AU - Chafee, Zechariah, Jr. CY - Chicago DA - 1947 (2 volumes) KW - nationalism values values obscenity newspapers journalism law censorship and ratings censorship news and journalism +nationalism and communication nationalism, and censorship nationalism, and freedom of the press newspapers, and censorship news, and censorship news, and government obscenity, and censorship censorship, and obscenity news LB - 2520 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1947 ST - Government and Mass Communications: A Report from the Commission on Freedom of the Press TI - Government and Mass Communications: A Report from the Commission on Freedom of the Press ID - 340 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author attempts "to provide a general history of the medium from Edison's talking tin foil of 1877 to the age of the compact disc." This work is a "spin-off" of a larger work on Western music, entitled Musica Practica. AU - Chanan, Michael CY - London and New York DA - 1995 KW - CDs tape recording, magnetic corporations magnetic recording corporations corporations discs, compact audio tape tape recording photography public address systems photography and visual communication sound recording motion pictures materials materials Edison, Thomas Third World law copyright compact discs (CDs) CDs non-USA tape recorders recording music sound recording phonograph sound, and music sound, and records tape recording sound discs, compact CDs sound, and compact discs (CDs) Edison, Thomas, and sound recording microphones sound, and microphones sound, and vinyl sound, and LP records Adorno, T.W. , and sound recording audio cassettes tape, and audio cassettes African Americans, and sound recording sound, and African Americans Columbia Record Company ABC CBS copyright, and sound recording sound, and copyright sound, and cylinders cylinders, and sound recording electricity electricity, and sound recording gramophone Great Britain Great Britain, and sound recording sound, and loudspeakers loudspeakers photography, and phonography phonography, and photography radio radio, and sound recording sound, and radio stereo sound, and stereo motion pictures, and sound recording sound, and motion pictures Third World, and audio cassettes audio cassettes, and Third World sound, and multinational corporations globalization, and sound recording global communication recording globalization Adorno, Theodor LB - 5440 PB - Verson PY - 1995 ST - Repeated Takes: A Short History of Recording and Its Effects on Music TI - Repeated Takes: A Short History of Recording and Its Effects on Music ID - 1929 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work, by a major economic historian, has a section entitled “Communication: The Postal Service, Telegraph, and Telephone" in Chapter 6 (“Completing the Infrastructure”). AU - Chandler, Alfred D., Jr. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1977 KW - post office nationalism labor office office, and new media office networks +telegraph +telephones +postal service infrastructure capitalism +nationalism and communication +electricity networks, electrical LB - 5170 PB - The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press PY - 1977 ST - The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business TI - The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business ID - 1904 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The essays in this volume vary in quality and are divided into four sections. 1) “Bodies and Sensation” contains essays by Tom Gunning, Jonathan Crary, and Ben Singer. “The essays explore such techniques as photography, detective fiction, scientific psychology, Impressionist painting, the mass press, and ‘thrilling’ entertainments, all of which endeavored to regulate and manage the newly mobilized subject.” 2) “Circulation and Consumer Desire” has essays by Marcus Verhagen , Erika Rappaport, Alexandra Keller, and Richard Abel. They “elaborate a culture of market mechanisms that challenged boundaries between private and public spheres and reconstituted gender and national identities. These essays also make clear that cinema participated in but did not create an urban leisure culture that pivoted on women’s active participation.” 3) “Ephemerality and the Moment” features essays by Margaret Cohen, Jeannene Przyblyski, and Leo Charney. They “suggest that modernity resided in an immersion in the everyday; yet the everyday was, by definition, ephemeral. In response to this problem, such forms as panoramic literature, photography, and film endeavored to freeze fleeting distractions and evanescent sensations by identifying isolated moments in the ‘present’ experience. In these literary, artistic, and philosophical discourses, the negotiation between ephemerality and stasis emerged as a defining feature of modernity.” 4) “Spectacles and Spectators” has essays by Venessa R. Schwartz, Mark Sandberg, and Miriam Bratu Hansen. They “investigate the allure of such diverse phenomena as wax museums, folk museums, amusement parks, and cinema in the development of a mass audience.” These essays identify six elements of “modernity” and ways in which cinema relates to the “modern”: 1) “the rise of a metropolitan urban culture leading to new forms of entertainment and leisure activity; [2] the corresponding centrality of the body as the site of vision, attention, and stimulation; [3] the recognition of a mass public, crowd, or audience that subordinated individual response to collectivity; [4] the impulse to define, fix, and represent isolated moments in the face of modernity’s distractions and sensations, an urge that led through Impressionism and photography to cinema; [5] the increased blurring or the line between reality and its representations; and [6] the surge in commercial culture and consumer desire that both fueled and followed new forms of diversion.” AU - Charney, Leo and Vanessa R. Schwartz, eds. CY - Berkeley DA - 1995 KW - photography seeing at a distance reality preservation modernism modernism modernity modernism history, and new media non-USA history values posters new way of seeing +motion pictures modernity leisure history motion pictures photography and visual communication modernism, and cinema values, and motion pictures color color, and movie theaters color, and posters posters, and color France urban studies history, break with history, and cinema new way of seeing, and motion pictures leisure, and motion pictures crowds motion pictures, and audiences consumer culture capitalism reality v. representation context context, late 19th context, early 20th motion pictures, and modernism values, and motion pictures audiences amusement parks consumerism LB - 6170 PB - University of California Press PY - 1995 ST - Cinema and the Invention of Modern Life TI - Cinema and the Invention of Modern Life ID - 2000 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This well-illustrated, 173-page work offers a history of Nikola Tesla's life and inventions. It also has a good bibliography (175-78) on Tesla. This book deals with Tesla's work with electricity and other topics such as his attempt to build a particle beam weapon (or death ray) ("A Weapon to End War," the title of Chapter 15). AU - Cheney, Margaret AU - Uth, Robert CY - New York DA - 1999 KW - death rays ref, secondary Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories innovation networks lighting biography, and Nikola Tesla networks, electrical lighting, fluorescent and neon remote control wireless communication inventors inventions robotics artificial intelligence and biotechnology Tesla, Nikola radio artificial intelligence and biotechnology Edison, Thomas Westinghouse, George Marconi, Guglielmo Edison, Thomas, and Nikola Tesla Westinghouse, George, and Nikola Tesla Marconi, Guglielmo, and Nikola Tesla death rays, and Nikola Tesla Grindell-Mathews, Harry, and death rays electricity electricity, and Nikola Tesla robotics, and Nikola Tesla remote control, and Nikola Tesla Tesla, Nikola, and particle beam weapon lighting ref, book biography LB - 39080 PB - Barnes & Noble Books PY - 1999 ST - Tesla: Master of Lighting TI - Tesla: Master of Lighting ID - 4007 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Cherry finished only the first three chapters of this work before his death. He argued that “society is currently experiencing a second industrial revolution, consequent upon a widespread adoption of information technology.” Cherry’s earlier work included On Human Communication: A Review, a Survey, and a Criticism (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1957, 1966). AU - Cherry, Colin, (compiled and edited by William Edmondson) CY - London; Dover, NH DA - c1985 KW - communication revolution communication revolution, and second industrial revolution general studies second industrial revolution communication revolution information age Cherry, Colin LB - 260 PB - Croom Helm PY - 1985 ST - The Age of Access: Information Technology and Social RevolutionPosthumous Papers of Colin Cherry TI - The Age of Access: Information Technology and Social RevolutionPosthumous Papers of Colin Cherry ID - 1422 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a substantial text aimed at students during the mid-1950s who were interested in radio and television broadcasting. The authors note that when the first edition of the book appeared in 1950, there were 100 television stations broadcasting several hours per day and there were about 5 million sets. By 1956, 450 stations existed, some broadcasting up to 18 hours per day, and there were about 37 million sets. With regard to the technology of radio and television during this era, chapter 16 (“Technical Aspects of Radio”) and chapter 17 (“Technical Aspects of Television”) are perhaps most useful. These chapters discuss microphones, cameras, radio’s relation to the telephone network, color television, recording equipment, transmitters, the studio, and film and slide projectors. The work has a decent, but unannotated bibliography, including a section on “Techniques.” AU - Chester, Giraud and Garnet R. Garrison CY - New York DA - 1950, 1956 KW - corporations corporations corporations Federal Communications Commission (FCC) advertising, and public relations censorship and ratings propaganda public relations journalism cinema motion pictures celluloid film regulation education law news and journalism +radio +television microphones cameras, and television film, and television television, and film radio, and telephone network telephones, and radio +telephones +sound recording sound recording, and radio sound recording, and television color color, and television television, and home advertising advertising, and television advertising, and radio regulation, and television regulation, and radio FCC CBS NBC education, and television education, and radio radio, and education television, and education news, and television news, and radio radio, and news television, and news radio, AM radio, FM news cameras regulation home, and television materials home LB - 12520 OP - 1950 PB - Appleton-Century-Crofts, Inc. PY - 1950 ST - Television and Radio: An Introduction TI - Television and Radio: An Introduction ID - 2599 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This brief, 78-page book, surveys early sound recording. AU - Chew, V. K. CY - London DA - 1967 KW - labor +sound recording music +sound recording office, and information technology information technology +sound recording gramophone phonograph sound recording, and music information technology, and office sound recording, and office office LB - 5450 PB - Her Majesty’s Stationery Office PY - 1967 ST - Talking Machines 1877-1914: Some aspects of the early history of the gramophone TI - Talking Machines 1877-1914: Some aspects of the early history of the gramophone ID - 1930 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book, based on a series of lectures by Noam Chomsky, provides an outline of his theories on the press and press manipulation. Chomsky argues that the mass media should be seen as an instrument by which corporate elites manage information, maintain social control, and retain political and economic power. Chomsky believes that the corporate nature of the mass media ensures that they share the same goals and motivation as other powerful corporations. To Chomsky, the government, a far lesser threat to freedom, is an active supporter of the corporate agenda and acts to ensure that business interests are enhanced at home and abroad. These institutions seek to create the “necessary illusion” of democracy, freedom of information, and informed debate. In actuality, none of these exist in any meaningful form. Chomsky has described a propaganda model of the press in his previous work, and this book offers more discussion and examples of this model in practice. Scholars looking for a fully detailed explanation of the model should read Manufacturing Consent. This book, however, includes a series of updated examples of how the media can shape the range of policy debate by avoiding or playing down certain stories, and how almost all coverage of any issue falls within a narrow, pro-corporate domain. Chomsky argues that the corporate press and the state set the terms of discussion and thus limit democratic deliberation. Chomsky also discusses ways in which certain leaders or groups are cast as “terrorists” or “leftists” if they are opposed to American corporate initiatives. This often misleading or simplistic representation leads to an artificially constructed understanding of foreign policy. This book, and all of Chomsky’s work, provides excellent examples of this process in the Middle East, Vietnam, and Latin America, as well as domestically. Chapter 1 (pp. 1-20) is entitled "Democracy and the Media." --Rob Rabe AU - Chomsky, Noam CY - Boston DA - 1989 KW - nationalism corporations corporations, multinational values religion propaganda public relations advertising journalism news news and journalism community democracy freedom news and journalism non-USA values news political economy political economy news, and capitalism capitalism, and news democracy and media critics values, and media news, and corporate bias multinational corporations stereotypes propaganda freedom of information news bias capitalism news news magazines newspapers radio television news, and capitalism nationalism and communication Rabe, Rob public relations advertising and public relations LB - 9200 PB - South End Press PY - 1989 ST - Necessary Illusions: Thought Control in Democratic Societies TI - Necessary Illusions: Thought Control in Democratic Societies ID - 2287 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Chomsky writes that “the basic question reduces to this: To what extent is the United States a democratic society, in which the general population is able to influence public policy? ... One crucial dimension in terms of which one can evaluate the democratic credentials of some political system has to do with the power of the state to coerce its citizens and protect itself from their scrutiny and control, its power to prevent free expression and free association, to maintain state secrets and conduct its affairs without public awareness and influence.” AU - Chomsky, Noam CY - Boston DA - 1987 KW - nationalism corporations corporations, multinational journalism community democracy news and journalism non-USA news political economy media democracy and media critics media bias multinational corporations news, and corporate bias news, and capitalism +nationalism and communication LB - 9630 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - South End Press PY - 1987 ST - On Power and Ideology: The Managua Lectures TI - On Power and Ideology: The Managua Lectures ID - 2330 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Pornography: The Other Side is a response to the common, yet myopic view, that pornography is strictly harmful and nothing else. Christensen, at times a critic of experimental pornography research himself, argues that the increasing power of the feminist and moral-right movements have lead to stricter regulations on pornography as well as decreasing public sentiment. He also argues that since the decision-makers, such as those leading the 1986 Final Report on Pornography, entered into the fray with there decision in handpornography is bad and we must find ways to regulate it. An additional consideration is the shame and guilt that are levied on those that do use pornography. What is missed, according to Christensen, are the potential positive uses of pornography such as stimulation, use in sexual therapy, and as a tool in sexual relationships. --Michael Boyle AU - Christensen, F. M. CY - New York DA - 1990 KW - women, and new media women social science research sexuality motion pictures Boyle, Michael pornography media effects pornography, and defenders women, and pornography pornography, and women +motion pictures and popular culture pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects pornography, and positive effects LB - 1200 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Praeger PY - 1990 ST - Pornography: The Other Side TI - Pornography: The Other Side ID - 208 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Commissioned by the BBC to celebrate movie making’s centennial in 1996, this work places film in the context of the larger technological revolution taking place during that century. Particularly noted are the changes in transportation and the extent to which this encouraged immigration and created the immigrant populations that made up the movies’ first large group of customers. Christie is particularly interesting in discussing realism in the movies and its relationship to industrialization. When the modern world finally became too complex and obtrusive as a result of industrialization, the movies served as a refuge and helped create a collective fantasy life for the twentieth century. --Gordon Jackson AU - Christie, Ian CY - London DA - 1994 KW - motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality photography time and timekeeping time seeing at a distance modernism new way of seeing context +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures context, new media new way of seeing, and motion pictures motion pictures, and new way of seeing motion pictures, and history motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, as new technology +photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality motion pictures, and immigrants transportation, and motion pictures +transportation motion pictures, and transportation time space (spatial) motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space (spatial) Jackson, Gordon motion pictures, and realism motion pictures, and escapism LB - 13190 PB - BBC Educational Developments PY - 1994 ST - The Last Machine: Early Cinema and the Birth of the Modern World TI - The Last Machine: Early Cinema and the Birth of the Modern World ID - 492 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This, the third edition of Clapperton's book, covers then recent advances in wood pulp and pulps from other materials in Great Britain, Scandinavia, and North America. The author notes that "quite revolutionary changes in the methods of preparation of paper-stock have also taken place, and new machinery has been introduced, which in some cases has made obsolete the plant which was in use before the war. [World War II] There have also been important improvements in the use of suction-rolls and vacuum transfer on the paper-machines, and very definite improvements in the paper-finishing equipment, such as slitters and cutters. The book's twenty-seven cover such topics as the history of papermaking and the manufacturing of newsprint. This edition has advertisements for different papermaking plants. AU - Clapperton, Robert Henderson CY - Oxford DA - 1952 KW - illustrations Asia paper materials papermaking timelines, and papermaking references, statistics, timelines, maps China China, and papermaking bibliographies, and papermaking printing printing, block Egypt Egypt, and block printing India India, and papermaking non-USA Japan Japan, and papermaking Korea Korea, and papermaking papyrus paper, and papermaking machines parchment patents, and papermaking inventions, and papermaking paper, and watermarks illustrations paper, and wood pulp bibliographies inventions patents print timelines LB - 28660 PB - Basil Blackwell PY - 1952 ST - Modern Paper-Making TI - Modern Paper-Making ID - 2037 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The term "boffin" refers to scientists who work with the British government during the 1930s, sometimes defined as "a civilian technician who advises air crew and others on specialized subjects." This book deals with the work of scientists in Britain before and during World War II and their impact on policy. It covers early investigations into stories about death ray weapons that might be build for air defense and notes that the Tizard Committee concluded by 1935 it was not possible with the technology that then existed to build such weapons. However, British scientists did believe that radio waves could be used to locate airplanes and this line of research led to the discovery of radar. AU - Clark, Ronald W. CY - London DA - 1962 KW - non-USA Great Britain radar Great Britain, and radar Germany Germany, and radar radar, and Germany radar, and Great Britain radio Great Britain, and radio radio, and Great Britain death rays beam weapons Tizard, Henry Tizard Committee Great Britain, and death rays death rays, and Great Britain military communication Great Britain, and military communication military communication, and Great Britain Watson-Watt, Robert Jones, R. V. Lindermann, F. A. Wimperis, H. E. LB - 20 PB - Phoenix House Ltd PY - 1962 ST - The Rise of the Boffins TI - The Rise of the Boffins ID - 1 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Arthur C. Clarke (1917-2008) dedicates Voice Across the Sea to a vital engineering achievement: the submarine telecommunications cable. The book telling this story is divided into two sections: the first half is a romantic story about communications pioneering, the second half is purely scientific. Clarke’s goals are to entertain as much as to instruct. The entertainment part is by far the most interesting, as the author sheds light on unknown but important key figures of the era in which transatlantic communication systems were established by telling little stories and anecdotes that combine into a complete and pleasant to read history of the establishment of worldwide communications systems. Clarke wrote: “In 1858 a handful of far-sighted men succeeded in laying a telegraph cable across the North Atlantic, and at the closing of a switch the gap between Europe and America dwindled abruptly from a month to a second.” (14) -Bart Nijman AU - Clarke, Arthur C. CY - New York DA - 1959, 1974 KW - telegraph electricity non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and transatlantic cable transatlantic cable telegraph, and transatlantic cable Clarke, Arthur C. Nijman, Bart Field, Cyrus Morse, Samuel capitalism capitalism, and transatlantic cable transatlantic cable, and capitalism LB - 4990 PB - Harper & Row PY - 1959 ST - Voice Acress the Sea TI - Voice Acress the Sea ID - 11 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book was started soon after the laying of the first transatlantic telephone cable in 1956. It not only discusses the laying of cable, but Chapter 25 is about communications satellites, including Telstar. Clarke, also a science fiction writer, says that “technology may be possible without Civilisation; but Civilisation is not possible without Technology.” AU - Clarke, Arthur C. CY - New York DA - 1959, 1974 KW - technology science +future and science fiction non-USA values +television satellites +telephones telephones, submarine telephones, and transatlantic telephones, and satellites future satellites, and communication technology and society values, and technology Telstar science fiction global communication cable, submarine +aeronautics and space communication cable cable, Atlantic cable, transatlantic satellites LB - 5180 PB - Harper & Row PY - 1959 ST - Voice Across the Sea TI - Voice Across the Sea ID - 1905 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book first appeared in 1962 and grew out of essays written between 1959 and 1961. Here Clarke speculates about the future, not to “describe the future, but to define the boundaries within which possible futures must lie.” Clarke predicts planetary landings and personal radios by the 1980s, colonization of the planets and a global library by the first decade of the twentieth-first century, the control of gravity by 2050, and that during the latter part of the twenty-first century, machine intelligence will have exceeded human intelligence. One might compare this work to Ray Kurzweil’s later speculations in The Age of Spiritual Machines (1999). AU - Clarke, Arthur C. CY - New York DA - 1962, 1973 KW - computers archives +future and science fiction radio libraries libraries, and information storage information storage +radio +computers and the Internet future +aeronautics and space communication radios, personal rocketry +artificial intelligence and biotechnology libraries, and future libraries, and global +information storage information storage, and future future, and information storage future, and radio future, and artificial intelligence satellites LB - 5830 PB - Harper & Row PY - 1962 ST - Profiles of the Future: An Inquiry into the Limits of the Possible TI - Profiles of the Future: An Inquiry into the Limits of the Possible ID - 1968 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This interesting work offers insight into how a visionary writer viewed space exploration during the 1950s, before the transistor and computer had entered the equation. For example, Clarke predicted that only atomic energy would be able to carry large pay-loads outside the earth’s gravitational field. He says that scientists will be able to build “radio tubes miles long” if they so desire. Clarke said that space exploration as one of four great turning points in human history. The first two were the development of agriculture and the harnessing of fire. The third was the splitting of the atom and the release of atomic energy, dating to 1942. Clarke advocated exploration of the planets and beyond. He believe that the spaceship would become “the ultimate toy that may lead mankind from its cloistered nursery out into the playground of the stars.” Clarke thought that the space exploration might affect thought as profoundly as the Copernican revolution in astronomy, Darwinian evolution, and Freudian psychology. He speculated that artificial satellites would make weather prediction much more accurate and perhaps even lead (together with other technologies) to controlling the weather. A global system of satellite television would give any nation a tremendous advantage in imposing their culture on other parts of the world. He believed that it would make “the more extreme forms of nationalism” less likely. “Interplanetary travel is now the only form of ‘conquest and empire’ compatible with civilization,” he wrote. The book is interesting, too, in giving some measure of how profoundly intellectual life has changed since the 1950s. It reflects an optimistic, no doubt naive, view about atomic energy’s potential to replace fossil fuels. Clarke notes that as late as 1947, it was commonly accepted that life could not have formed spontaneously, but rather its appearance needed some “organizing force,” perhaps “the hand of God.” Yet Clarke’s work is forward looking. He discusses global warming , and the possibility of melting the South Pole, revealing the Antarctic continent and its rich natural resources buried beneath the surface. The chapter “The Radio Universe” give an brief and informative account of the development of radio astronomy. Only in 1931 did Jansky discover radio signals coming from outer space in the general direction of the Milky Way. Clarke also discusses how radio astronomy after World War II used surplus radar equipment from the war. AU - Clarke, Arthur C. CY - New York DA - 1958 KW - atomic power science nationalism astronomy preservation history, and new media +future and science fiction war non-USA history World War II +television space communication radio +aeronautics and space communication science fiction satellites space travel future atomic energy global warming radio astronomy radar World War II, and radar satellite television television, and satellites future, and science fiction future, and space exploration rocketry, and atomic energy history, break with +nationalism and communication nationalism, and satellites satellites, and cultural imperialism radar, and radio astronomy astronomy, and radio radio astronomy global communication rocketry military communication LB - 7570 OP - 1953 PB - Harper & Brothers PY - 1958 ST - The Challenge of the Spaceship: Previews of Tomorrow’s World TI - The Challenge of the Spaceship: Previews of Tomorrow’s World ID - 2125 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Clarke, I.F. CY - New York DA - 1979 KW - +future and science fiction future LB - 8920 PB - Basic Books PY - 1979 ST - The Pattern of Expectation TI - The Pattern of Expectation ID - 2259 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Clarke, I.F. CY - London DA - 1966 KW - +future and science fiction future LB - 8930 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1966 ST - Prophesying War, 1763-1984 TI - Prophesying War, 1763-1984 ID - 2260 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The article critical of the motion picture industry's rating system and what he believes to be entertainment that is too promiscuous. AU - Cline, Victor B., ed. CY - Provo, UT DA - 1974 KW - classification self-regulation CARA censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) values sexuality media effects media violence violence media effects violence media violence law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification pornography pornography, and critics Heffner, Richard, and conservatives violence, and conservatives violence, and media media violence, and conservatives rating system (U. S.), and critics critics values Heffner, Richard media effects LB - 27060 PB - Brigham Young University Press PY - 1974 ST - Where Do You Draw the Line? An Exploration into Media Violence, Pornography, and Censorship TI - Where Do You Draw the Line? An Exploration into Media Violence, Pornography, and Censorship ID - 1263 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Although radio was still in its infancy in 1930, Lee DeForest notes in his essay on “The Future of Radio” in this volume that already there were 600 stations broadcasting to about 50 million Americans, in addition to many daily shortwave broadcasts from around the world. This volume contains 29 essays divided, somewhat arbitrarily, among five broad themes: Broadcasting, Communications, Industry, Regulation, and Some Scientific and Other Considerations. In addition to DeForest, other contributors include: Martin Codel (“The Radio Structure”), William S. Paley (“Radio and Entertainment”), Major General James G. Harbord (“Radio in World Communications”), E. H. Colpitts (“Radiotelephony”), David Sarnoff (“Art and Industry”), and more. Other topics covered include radio in U.S. military and naval communications, short waves, long waves, radio and the law, and television. AU - Codel, Martin, ed. CY - New York DA - 1930 KW - R & D nationalism corporations corporations corporations corporations FM radio advertising, and public relations censorship and ratings propaganda public relations public address systems labor networks research and development war materials materials General Electric Company Company +future and science fiction education law law war office office, and new media office +radio +nationalism and communication +television advertising, and radio advertising radio, FM frequency modulation (FM radio) radio, shortwave Sarnoff, David +military communication Paley, William military communication, and radio radio, and national broadcasting radio, amateur De Forest, Lee AT & T +transportation transportation, and radio aviation, and radio radio, and aviation bandwidth, and radio radio, and bandwidth regulation, and radio radio, and regulation CBS NBC wireless communication +telephones telephones, and radio radiotelephony future, and radio education, and radio radio, and education General Electric Company radio, and international broadcasting international broadcasting KDKA law, and radio loudspeakers Marconi, Guglielmo microphones radio, and U.S. navy networks, and radio vacuum tubes vacuum tubes, audion infrastructure, and radio WEAF radio, and long waves infrastructure future regulation aeronautics and space communication LB - 12500 PB - Harper & Brothers PY - 1930 ST - Radio and Its Future TI - Radio and Its Future ID - 2597 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This well-illustrated book provides a good introduction to different types of cameras. Its 20 chapters are devoted to such topics as "The Evolution of Photography," "Concealed Cameras," "Magazines and Multiple Images," "Roll-Film Box Cameras," "The 35-mm Camera," "Small and Miniature Cameras," "Stereoscopic Cameras," "Lenses," "Flash Equipment," and more. AU - Coe, Brian CY - [New York] DA - 1978 KW - photography materials 35mm +photography and visual communication photography, and cameras photography, and 35mm cameras 35mm cameras cameras cameras, and flash equipment photography, and flash equipment photography, and roll-film cameras photography, and concealed cameras cameras, and roll film cameras, and history of cameras, and lenses photography, and types of cameras cameras, concealed cameras, and history of materials LB - 11840 PB - Crown Publishers, Inc. PY - 1978 ST - Cameras: From Daguerreotypes to Instant Pictures TI - Cameras: From Daguerreotypes to Instant Pictures ID - 2531 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work, one of several books Coe’s has written on photography, examines cinema. The work starts in the eighteenth century and examines shadow plays, the camera obscura, and attempts to provide “illusions of reality.” Coe then deals with early photography and attempts by Eadweard Muybridge and others to capture movement. Chapter 4 discusses inventors such as Louis Le Prince, who first explored the possibilities of Eastman’s paper roll film, Thomas Edison and the Kinetoscope, William Dickson, and others. Chapter 5 treats early moving pictures projected onto screen, and explains such developments as the Lumiére Cinématographe show. Subsequent chapters consider the coming of sound in film, color movies, widescreen cinema and 3-D. The final chapters discusses home movie making and deals with 16 mm, 9.5 mm, and 8 mm photography. This book is richly illustrated with black and white, and color photographs of camera technology. Although it covers developments from the end of World War II up to the early 1970s, it is strongest on the pre-World War II era. The author provide a brief, half-page bibliography at the end. AU - Coe, Brian CY - Westfield, N. J. DA - 1981 KW - Muybridge, Edward Lumiére, Louis illustrations entertainment entertainment, home photography widescreen new way of seeing seeing at a distance postmodernism modernism motion pictures inventions innovation information technology illustrations home entertainment materials non-USA 8mm 35mm 16mm photography and visual communication +motion pictures photography, and color 8mm film 16mm film 35mm film 9.5mm film cameras cameras cameras, 16mm cameras, 8mm cameras, 9.5mm cameras, 35mm cameras, 70-mm information technology, and home photography, amateur photography, and 19th century photography, and color color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and photography photography, and color (history of) photography, and hand-held cameras cameras, hand-held photography, and new way of seeing new way of seeing, and photography photography, and roll film photography, and three-color processes motion pictures, and 16mm film motion pictures, and 3-D motion pictures, and 8mm film motion pictures, and 35mm film motion pictures, and 9.5mm film motion pictures, and 70mm film motion pictures, and cameras motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and color (history of) motion pictures, and cinerama cinerama motion pictures, and celluloid motion pictures, and depth motion pictures, and cameras (history of) motion pictures, and new way of seeing motion pictures, amateur motion pictures, and home movies home movies motion pictures, and origins motion pictures, and sound technology motion pictures, and technological innovations motion pictures, and widescreen widescreen, and motion pictures inventors color, and Agfacolor cameras, and lens cameras, and Bell and Howell cameras, and Super-8 Edison, Thomas Dickson, W.K.L. CinemaScope Cinerama, and Fred Waller Daguerre, Louis Eastman, George IMAX Gaumont, Léon Lumiere, Auguste Lumiére, Louis Marey, Étienne-Jules Muybridge, Eadweard Photographic Convention, London (1889) camera obscura motion pictures, and projection equipment sound recording sound recording, and magnetic tape Technicolor Waller, Fred, and cinerama illustrations, and cameras motion pictures, and technology home home, and new media materials 9.5mm LB - 11850 PB - Eastview Editions PY - 1981 ST - The History of Movie Photography TI - The History of Movie Photography ID - 2532 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author was Curator of the Kodak Museum between 1969 and 1985. The Museum was located at the Kodak factory in Harrow, England, and much of the research for this work was done there as well as in the Kodak Research Laboratory Library. The book, however, was not sponsored by either Kodak Limited or by the Eastman Kodak Company. This work builds on earlier chronological lists of Kodak cameras – first by Vic Moyes of the Kodak Patent Department Museum in Rochester and then expanded by Don Ryon and later David Gibson. These early lists concentrated primarily on the United States, but Coe notes that many, sometimes different, Kodak cameras were produced in Great Britain, France, and Germany. This book is more comprehensive than previous works on Kodak. It concentrates “on the ‘mainstream’ Kodak and Brownie cameras." It begins with a brief history of George Eastman and the Kodak Company. There follow descriptions and remarks about the many different cameras, each illustrated with a photograph. AU - Coe, Brian CY - Hove, East Sussex, Great Britain DA - 1988 KW - illustrations corporations corporations photography materials cinema motion pictures celluloid Eastman Kodak non-USA 35mm +photography and visual communication photography Eastman, George Eastman Kodak Company Kodak cameras cameras, Kodak cameras, 35mm 35mm cameras cameras, Brownie cameras, instant film film, and Kodak Great Britain Great Britain, and Kodak cameras Germany Germany, and Kodak cameras France France, and Kodak cameras illustrations Great Britain Germany France materials LB - 12120 PB - Hove Foto Books PY - 1988 ST - Kodak Cameras: The First Hundred Years TI - Kodak Cameras: The First Hundred Years ID - 2559 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This brief book purports to tell the history of the telegraph’s invention in the United States. The author argues that for much of mankind’s history people have set up systems to signal others at a distance, and that the telegraph is merely an extension of that process. Coe limits his discussion to inventions and devices constructed in America, only briefly touching upon relevant European technology as a means for comparison or refinement. Coe notes that both Native Americans and ancient Greeks used fire and smoke signals for long-distance communication. Through a system of pre-arranged codes (one fire, two fires, various puffs of smoke), a few simple ideas could be communicated rapidly to others far away, who in turn transmitted that signal to the next signal watchers. In a matter of minutes a simple message, such as “the enemy is on the march toward us,” could be sent by fire signal hundred of miles. Coe’s discussion of pre-telegraph signaling methods includes both the semaphore system and the heliograph. The semaphore system usually employed flags displayed in different positions to communicate messages one letter or idea at a time. In late-eighteenth -century France there was a system of semaphores connected by long chains to facilitate automatic signaling. The semaphore system is still in use in the United States Navy and in other maritime services throughout the world. The heliograph is a way to communicate with small mirrors which reflected sunlight to an observer miles away. This system was employed by the U.S. Army in the nineteenth century. Coe spends a good deal of the book cataloging the numerous improvements on Morse’s invention. He provides some detail about the introduction of Thomas Edison’s quadruplex telegraph, a device which made it possible to send four messages over the same line simultaneously. Coe spends the better part of two chapters examining the role of the telegraph in the Civil War, relating the exciting story of telegraph-tappers and other special telegraph units. Coe argues that the U.S. telegraph system was much more advanced than that in Europe, something the American signal corps found out upon arrival in France in 1917. Although this book contains valuable information and fascinating tidbits, from a historian’s standpoint it is a problematic book. Coe offers no citations for the many quotations he uses. He overuses block quotes, tossing them in liberally without any introduction or explanation. He reproduces conversations and relays anecdotes as if he heard them himself, an impossibility for someone publishing in 1993. Coe’s bibliography is brief and mostly unhelpful for someone interested in tracking references. In addition to the lack of citations or useable references, the writing itself detracts from the author’s presentation. Although the major figures in this book are given some biographical detail in an appendix, Coe introduces many other names without any biographical information at all. This book is poorly written, with awkward sentences, misplaced punctuation and a confusing narrative. In places it reads like a high school history text. Coe states the obvious too much frequenctly— e.g., “during the Morse era, there were no cassette tape recorders.” This book is of value to students of the telegraph or mass communications, although not a definitive study. --David Henning AU - Coe, Lewis CY - Jefferson, NC DA - 1993 KW - R & D war research and development military communication war innovation war non-USA World War I Information Age +telegraph Henning, David telegraph, electric Morse, Samuel inventions inventors signaling systems networks information networks Europe, and telegraph World War I, and telegraph telegraph, and World War I Edison, Thomas telegraph, and quadruplex telegraph, optical semaphore system semaphore system, and U.S. Navy +military communication military communication, and semaphore system heliography Europe World War I LB - 4070 PB - McFarland Press PY - 1993 ST - The Telegraph: A History of Morse's Invention and Its Predecessors in the United States TI - The Telegraph: A History of Morse's Invention and Its Predecessors in the United States ID - 1795 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Cohen devotes some space (pp. 129-43 and 324-46) to discussing radio and labor. He argues that the rise of radio provided a common, unifying experience for ethnic laborers in Chicago and that this “common ground” was an important factor in the development of unionism. By the 1930s, the CIO unions recognized the importance of unity and attempted to use radio to reach workers with a union message. Before the networks, “all radio programming was local, and radio consequently brought familiar distractions into the homes of Chicago’s workers: talk, ethnic nationality hours, labor news, church services, and vaudeville-type musical entertainment by hometown, often ethnic talent. ... Workers discovered that participating in radio, as in mass consumption and the movies, did not require repudiation of established social identities.” The growth of radio required financing, and the introduction of advertising led to the creation of networks that could deliver mass audiences. This mass working-class audience shared a common experience that broke down ethnic, racial and geographic boundaries, Cohen argued. “Workers in the 1930s were more likely to share a cultural world, to see the same movies and newsreels in the same chain theaters, shop for the same items in the same chain stories, and listen to the same radio shows on network radio. ... Radio, probably more than any other medium, contributed to an increasingly universal working-class experience.” As workers listened to the same programs, they shared an experience that transcended job differences on the shop floor and neighborhood differences off the job. The radio, according to Cohen, made workers feel they were part of a national culture, which helped to establish unionism between plants in isolated cities. “In sum, rank-and-file workers were communicating better in their work groups and factories and feeling more akin to each other within Chicago and across the nation.” According to Cohen, the CIO attempted to build on the common experience that radio and other mass culture experiences provided to “cultivate a culture of unity among the rank and file of America’s factories.” --Phil Glende AU - Cohen, Liz CY - Cambridge, Eng. DA - 1990 KW - ethnicity Glende, Phil +radio labor radio, and labor labor, and radio radio, and CIO radio, and ethnicity ethnicity, and radio LB - 750 N1 - See also: office PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1990 ST - Making a New Deal: Industrial Workers in Chicago, 1919-1939 TI - Making a New Deal: Industrial Workers in Chicago, 1919-1939 ID - 163 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book's sixteen chapters deal with a number of interesting topics. Chapters are devoted to "'War Stuff'," "Aero-Photography," "The News Photographer," "Motion News Pictures," "Commercial Photography," "Government Work," "Scientific Research," "Travel and Adventure," and "The Future." This work says that by 1919 "Actual moving pictures of events of public interest may be seen in the motion -picture theaters almost as quickly as the news itself can be reported and printed in the newspapers." (82) It also predicts that "in a few years the transmission of photographs by wireless electricity, even across the Atlantic Ocean, will probably be a commonplace. An actual photograph taken in London or Paris of some important news event will be transmitted by this unseen force and appear in the newspapers in American within a few hours. We will have a wireless telegraph picture service just as to-day the cable service knits the entire world so closely together. In other words, the camera man will in effect enable us to see across the Atlantic, or to the furthermost corners of the world." (226) AU - Collins, Francis A. CY - New York DA - 1916, 1919 KW - wireless communication wireless journalism journalism magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines cameras cameras, and availability cameras, portable cameras, and journalism books, periodicals, newspapers newsreels journalism, and newsreels photography, and science modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures electricity electricity, and photography photography, and electricity wireless, and photography photography, and wireless telegraph telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph war war, and photography photography, and war aeronautics and space communication photography, and airplanes reconnaissance, and photography photography, and reconnaissance ref, book reconnaissance LB - 16360 PB - The Century Co. PY - 1916 ST - The Camera Man: His Adventures in Many Fields, With Practical Suggestions for the Amateur TI - The Camera Man: His Adventures in Many Fields, With Practical Suggestions for the Amateur ID - 3789 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume is a collection of essays by political scientists and economists about the deployment of new communication technologies and international political economy (IPE). Contributors see recent developments as but “the latest manifestation of a much older pattern. For a century and a half -- at least since the perfection of the electrical telegraph -- technology has promised the abolition of distance and the globalisation of everyday life. Twice before -- in 1865 with the creation of the International Telegraph Union and in 1906 with the creation of the Radiotelegraphy Union -- international agreement to encourage and then to regulate new international communication technologies have marked the beginning of generation-long conflicts over the boundaries of new, larger (but certainly less-than-global) economic orders.... “Perhaps some future historian will look back on the creation of the International Telecommunication Satellite Organisation (Intelsat) in the mid-1960s not only as the beginning of a third generation-long conflict over the shape of the global economic order, but as the vanguard of the globalised, co-operative world order that actually may take shape in the 1990s. But, right now at least, the communication revolution of which Intelsat was part looks more like a harbinger of world disorder and a real contributor to today’s global uncertainties.” (from Craig N. Murphy’s Foreword) Essays include: Comer’s “Introduction: The Global Political Economy of Communication and IPE”; Ian C. Parker, “Myth, Telecommunication and the Emerging Global Informational Order: The Political Economy of Transitions”; Martin Hewson, “Surveillance and the Global Political Economy”; Adam Jones, “Wired World: Communications Technology, Governance and the Democratic Uprising”; and James D. Halloran, “Developments in Communication and Democracy: The Contribution of Research.” AU - Comer, Edward A. CY - New York DA - 1994 KW - nationalism space (spatial) and communication aeronautics and space communication censorship and ratings regulation community democracy law law non-USA surveillance geography radio general studies political economy space (spatial) telegraph International Telegraph Union Radiotelegraphy Union International Telecommunication Satellite OrganizationIntelsat global communication myth democracy and media nationalism and communication telecommunications surveillance bugging privacy reconnaissance aeronautics and space (spatial) communication radio satellites Intelsat regulation, and global communication global communication, and regulation law, and global communication regulation LB - 290 PB - St. Martin’s Press PY - 1994 ST - The Global Political Economy of Communication: Hegemony, Telecommunications and the Information Economy TI - The Global Political Economy of Communication: Hegemony, Telecommunications and the Information Economy ID - 1425 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This well-known intellectual history of American thought is extraordinarily well -written. Commager was not writing a history of technology per se, but he does consider the major changes in the currents of American thought. He saw the 1890s, for example, as a watershed. Such developments were made possible by the great technological changes brought by the Industrial Revolution which made possible the expansion of newspapers and magazines. This work provides context to the changing technological landscape in the United States during the late nineteenth and first half of the twentieth century. AU - Commager, Henry Steele CY - New Haven DA - 1950 KW - cultural change cyberspace culture context cultural change, late 19th cultural change, early 20th LB - 12910 PB - Yale University Press PY - 1950 ST - The American Mind: An Interpretation of American Thought and Character since the 1880s TI - The American Mind: An Interpretation of American Thought and Character since the 1880s ID - 468 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This Commission emphasized the negative impact that movies had on the education of young people. The report asked why should the community turn over this important function of educating the young to amoral movie makers? The work assumed that movies had a much more powerful effect on children than books. As Carl Roden, Librarian of the Chicago Public Library said: "'We do not approve of putting books out without restriction. We want to feel that the books on the shelves will not harm any one. A film can be absolutely absorbed merely by seeing it. It is probably the easiest way to receive impressions that the world has yet discovered.'" (17) This work comments on the powerful appeal that movie actors had on children. "Emphasizing the great interest that school children take in the movies, it may be well to give the experiences of Principal Stephenson, of the Lincoln 19/20 Public School, Chicago, during the Liberty Loan Drive. Mr. Stephenson appeared before the Commission, and explained the incident of the visit to his school of Charley [sic] Chaplin, Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks. He said in part: "'I simply marvel at the power of the movies. It was my school which Miss Pickford, Mr. Chaplin and Mr. Fairbanks came to visit last year. You will remember that they "blew in" here and went to a school and spoke to the children. That happened to be the school of which I am principal. I never have in all my life seen the electrical, wonderful grasp that those people had over a school. Why, they seemed to take it right off of our hands. We were nothing when these people came along. Their power was marvelous. It interfered with our studies completely. Everybody was as light as though they had inhaled some laughing gas.'" (19-20) Speaking of the government's use of film during World War I, the Report says that "No such publicity power has ever been known to the world." (20) AU - Commission, Chicago Motion Picture CY - Chicago DA - 1920 KW - nationalism government reports celebrity audiences government hearings values religion theaters morality education censorship and ratings children law censorship and ratings censorship celebrity culture government motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and morality children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children morality, and motion pictures reports, Chicago censorship, local censorship, Chicago government documents, local critics, and morality morality, and critics motion pictures, and critics censorship, local theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and theaters motion pictures motion pictures, and actors' status motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture, and motion pictures reports hearings hearings, Chicago government documents hearings reports critics education, and motion pictures ref, secondary words vs. images images vs. words media effects children and media media effects, and children motion pictures, and children actors, and status of celebrity culture actors, and children children, and actors quotations quotations, and movies actors' appeal propaganda nationalism and communication motion pictures, and propaganda propaganda, and motion pictures nationalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and nationalism World War I World War I, and motion pictures motion pictures, and World War I acting actors war LB - 41570 PB - np PY - 1920 ST - Report: Chicago Motion Picture Commission TI - Report: Chicago Motion Picture Commission ID - 4256 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Due to the increasing concern with pornography at the time, 1983, a Special Committee on Pornography and Prostitution was formed by the Department of Justice of Canada. This committee was similar to the committees formed in the United States (1970 & 1986) in that experts were called on to speak at hearings on the uses and impacts of pornography and prostitution. Of particular concern to this committee was the issue of access to pornographic materials and what the ultimate effects of those materials are. These areas were accentuated in the committees concern with the beginning of the proliferation of video-taped pornography into the general public. The committee puts an emphasis on classification of videos so that users, or potential users, are aware of the content of such videos. Additionally, the committee is against prohibition or censorship of pornographic materials, however, they stress the need to keep these materials out of the hands of minors. This report gives an indication of how the change to video as a viable form of pornographic media acted as a catalyst for much of the discussion and research on pornography. --Michael Boyle AU - Committee on Pornography and Prostitution, Department of Justice of Canada CY - Ottawa, Ontario DA - 1985 KW - classification video cassette recorders (VCRs) self-regulation CARA magnetic recording censorship and ratings sexuality magnetic tape law law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification non-USA Boyle, Michael pornography Canada Canada, and pornography Canada, and VCRs Canada, and video rating system (U. S.) VCRs rating system (U. S.), and videos cassettes pornography, and prostitution regulation, and video cassettes regulation LB - 1330 PB - Communication and Public Affairs, Department of Justice of Canada PY - 1985 ST - Pornography and Prostitution in Canada TI - Pornography and Prostitution in Canada ID - 221 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work contains research reports and papers that Harvard University's Program on Information Resources Policy previously published. The book seeks to help policymakers and strategic planners identify issues and problems that are likely to be most significant during the 1980s. The work is divided into three parts. Part I provides an overview of the information industry. Part II looks at trends and factors influencing information distribution. Part III examines strategic implications of changes that have taken place in media formats and processes. Articles in this part include William H. Read, "The First Amendment Meets the Second Revolution"; Benjamin M. Compaine, "Videotex and the Newspaper Industry: Threat of Opportunity?"; and Benjamin F. Compaine, "The New Literacy: Or How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love Pac-Man." AU - Compaine, Benjamin M., ed. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1984 KW - entertainment computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) corporations Federal Communications Commission (FCC) entertainment, home magnetic recording audio tape video cassettes steam power censorship and ratings print nonprint media communication revolution journalism home entertainment videotape magnetic tape regulation community democracy communication revolution, and second industrial revolution freedom law news and journalism non-USA home, and new media home xerography VCRs +sound recording nonprint culture print culture presses +duplicating technologies newspapers news media information technology Information Age +computers and the Internet literacy print media v. electronic media +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and electronic media information processing penny press presses, rotary presses, steam steam press +telephones telephones, and computers First Amendment freedom of expression second industrial revolution communication revolution critics information technology, and business cable, television television, and cable sound recording, and audio cassettes audio cassettes photocopying audio cassettes, and Iran photocopying , and Iran democracy and media media convergence regulation regulation, and new media regulation, and cable cable, and regulation AT & T broadcasting Communication Act of 1934 FCC +radio satellites telecommunications +television videotex Xerox Corporation video cassettes Program on Information Resources Policy, Harvard audio cassettes cable +sound recording newspapers, and videotex video games home, and video games +aeronautics and space communication materials LB - 4730 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - Ballinger Publishing Company PY - 1984 ST - Understanding New Media: Trends and Issues in Electronic Distribution of Information TI - Understanding New Media: Trends and Issues in Electronic Distribution of Information ID - 1860 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book was written by a man whose name became synonmous with censorship during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Already by 1884, there was much in modern communication that Comstock feared would damage children and weaken the morality of adolescents. The work has ten chapters and Comstock devoted chapters to "Household Traps ...-- Newspapers" (13-19), "Half-Dime Novels and Story Papers" (20-42), and "Advertisement Traps" (43-55). The newspapers, of course, were filled with stories of crime. The cheap novels traded in romance and violence. As for the ads: "Millions of copies of daily and weekly papers contain tens of thousands of advertisements. Along this great highway of communication the vendors of obscene and infidel publications, the lottery and policy gamblers, the quacks, the frauds, the poolsellers, the liquor-saloon keepers, the managers of low theatres display their fingerboards. Here are thousands upon thousands of traps set to ruin youth and rob the unwary." (43) He goes on to talk about "vile books, papers, novels; and the headquarters of men and women engaging in most shameful practices -- all these and more are posted here with flaming colors." (43) AU - Comstock, Anthony CY - New York DA - 1884 KW - cultural change photography advertising, and public relations values propaganda public relations new media religion values morality media culture censorship and ratings children law censorship and ratings censorship Victorianism cultural change, late 19th censorship, and newspapers newspapers, and censorship advertising advertising, and censorship censorship, and advertising +photography and visual communication context photography, and censorship censorship, and photography morality, and cultural new media, and morality morality, and new media Comstock, Anthony morality, and children children, and morality censorship, and children children, and censorship children, and media media, and children newspapers news news and journalism color color, and immorality color, and Anthony Comstock LB - 12960 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - Funk & Wagnalls PY - 1884 ST - Traps for the Young TI - Traps for the Young ID - 4182 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The 203-;age book discusses the state of knowledge about electricity. Readers who are interested in Leonard Troland and his work with Technicolor will find a brief discussion of "Color and the Absorption and Reflection of Light" (157-59). The authors write that "Physics as such offers no explanation of the fact that light of one wave-length gives us a sensation quality almost wholly different from that produced by light from another wave-length. Neither does it account for the fact that a mixture of lights of many different wave-lengths gives white. These are problems in physiology although their solution is, of course, closely connected with the physics of light." (158) AU - Comstock, Daniel F. AU - Troland, Leonard T. CY - New York DA - 1917 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects motion pictures, and talking movies sound recording motion pictures, and 3-D 3-D, and motion pictures color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures electricity color, and electricity electricity, and color electricity, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and electricity color, and sensation Troland, Leonard 3-D LB - 40200 PB - D. Van Nostrand Company PY - 1917 ST - The Nature of Matter and Electricity: An Outline of Modern Views TI - The Nature of Matter and Electricity: An Outline of Modern Views ID - 4118 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book provides an analysis of the legal and economic dimensions of antitrust problems in the motion picture industry. AU - Conant, Michael CY - Berkeley DA - 1960 KW - motion pictures context +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and antitrust motion pictures, and business context, and antitrust motion pictures, and studio system LB - 15620 PB - University of California Press PY - 1960 ST - Antitrust in the Motion Picture Industry: Economic and Legal Analysis TI - Antitrust in the Motion Picture Industry: Economic and Legal Analysis ID - 570 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This nicely illustrated work resulted from a Library of Congress exhibition on papermaking that opened in late April, 1968. It provides an excellent introduction to this topic. AU - Congress, Library of CY - Washington, D.C. DA - 1968 KW - Asia innovation materials non-USA paper materials papermaking China Korea China, and paper paper, and China Korea, and paper paper, and Korea paper, and papermaking machines inventions inventors, and paper paper, and inventors paper, and rags paper, and wood pulp Japan Japan, and paper paper, and Japan Europe Europe, and paper paper, and Europe Arab countries Arab countries, and paper paper, and Arab countries LB - 2350 PB - Library of Congress PY - 1968 ST - Papermaking: Art and Craft TI - Papermaking: Art and Craft ID - 323 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - One useful feature of this book is an appendix entitled “The Infostructure Index.” It ranks nations’ use of mass communication. Categories include literacy rate, newspapers, radios, TV sets, and telephones per 1,000 people. This work “describes the evolution of information infrastructures in the past, considering the role of technology and other factors, and predicts the course of events up to the year 2005. Its principal messages are that technology, the major drive of the process, is essentially predictable in that time frame, that the information revolution will have marked negative, as well as positive consequences and that, perhaps contrary to popular perception, it will be the developing world, not the developed nations, which will be its major beneficiaries.” Among these so-called “info-tigers” in the developing world are India and Thailand. This work as a brief, two-page bibliography, and no notes. AU - Connors, Michael CY - Oxford, UK DA - 1997 KW - nationalism References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps statistics office labor communication revolution second industrial revolution microelectronics revolution news journalism news and journalism non-USA office office, and new media office news general studies newspapers +telephones global communication infrastructure information age India Thailand communication revolution developing nations Third World +nationalism and communication political economy literacy +radio +television +telephones +books, periodicals, newspapers Third World developing nations statistical data, and mass media microelectronics LB - 310 N1 - See also: office PB - Capstone PY - 1997 ST - The Race to the Intelligent State: Charting the Global Information Economy into the 21st Century TI - The Race to the Intelligent State: Charting the Global Information Economy into the 21st Century ID - 1427 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is an extended study of the development of the railway industry in Ireland largely reconstructed from the legislation that shaped its course. This work is based extensively on Parliamentary papers and committee reports starting from the 1840s and extending to the 1920s. Though an older work, this book still holds merit for detail and completeness in considering the business and policy side of the subject. An interesting early chapter considers the relationship between food distribution during the Great Famine and the push for railways. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Conroy, J. C. CY - London DA - 1928 KW - non-USA Wolf, Nicholas Ireland +transportation Ireland, and railroads railroads railroads, and Ireland Ireland LB - 1890 PB - Longmans, Green, and Co. Ltd. PY - 1928 ST - A History of Railways in Ireland TI - A History of Railways in Ireland ID - 277 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report notes the central dilemma of modern media and its preservation: "Our capacity to record information has increased exponentially over time while the longevity of the media used to store the information has decreased equivalently." This report sets out a plan for action, speaks to priorities that should be given in preserving digital materials, and notes the differences and similarities between preservation as it is currently practiced and future needs. The report "suggests that many of the basic tenets of preservation management can be applied in a highly technological environment, but that some long-held principles may not longer apply." The report also addresses where it will be difficult to bring change. AU - Conway, Paul CY - Washington, D. C. DA - March 1996 KW - primary sources archives libraries libraries, and information storage +information storage libraries electronic preservation digital media electronic media digitization information storage, and digital media books, and digital media libraries, and digital media archives, and new media archives, and digital media archives +books, periodicals, newspapers books LB - 11020 PB - Commission on Preservation and Access PY - 1996 ST - Preservation in the Digital World [report] TI - Preservation in the Digital World [report] ID - 2463 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - "Digital image quality, indexing structures, and production workflow" were the three primary issues examined in this report. "In 1993 Yale set up and evaluated the components of an in-house production conversion facility, converted and indexed 100 volumes in a test run, and prepared for the conversion from preservation microfilm of the next 3,000 volumes of a projected 10,000 volume digital library. The setup phase built upon the first phase of the project -- the organizational phase -- in which Yale conducted a formal bid process and selected Xerox Corporation to serve as the principal partner in Project Open Book." AU - Conway, Paul and Shari Weaver CY - Washington, D.C. DA - June 1994 KW - corporations corporations primary sources archives digital media xerography microfiche, microfilm, microform libraries libraries, and information storage +information storage electronic preservation microfilm digital imagery, and microfilm Project Open Book Xerox Corporation libraries electronic media digitization information storage, and digital media books, and digital media libraries, and new media archives, and new media archives, and digital media libraries, and digital media archives +books, periodicals, newspapers books photocopying +duplicating technologies LB - 11010 PB - Commission on Preservation and Access PY - 1994 ST - The Setup Phase of Project Open Book: A Report to the Commission on Preservation and Access On the status of an effort to convert microfilm to digital imagery [report] TI - The Setup Phase of Project Open Book: A Report to the Commission on Preservation and Access On the status of an effort to convert microfilm to digital imagery [report] ID - 2462 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this, the ninth volume in the History of the American Cinema series, David Cook writes about major developments during the 1970s. Chapter 9 is devoted specifically to “Technological Innovation and Aesthetic Response,” and covers cinematography, lens technology and aesthetics, lighting and film stock, camera technology, stabilization systems and camera mounts (e.g., the Steadicam), Video-assist technology, special effects and motion control, Dolby stereo optical sound, sound design and post-production (e.g., attempts at electronic editing), projection technology, and the relationship between technology and narrative form. This book, for course, deals with other topics including the manufacturing of blockbuster movies, auteur cinema, different film genres, and the rising cost of film making, agents, and movie stars. In addition to Cook, three other authors contribute chapters. Douglas Gomery writes about American movie exhibition during the 1970s (chapter 10). William Rothman deals with documentary films during the decade (chapter 11), and chapter 12 by Robin Blaetz is about avant-garde cinema. It also has an avant-garde cinema filmography. Appendices cover annual box office receipts, average weekly attendance, inflation figures, ticket prices, number of theaters, marketing data, top rental films, and major academy awards. --SV Cook looks at the period of American film making when a European-style cinema of social criticism and emphasis on the creativeness of the auteur gave way to the blockbuster mentality. Between 1967 and 1975, due largely to Vietnam and Watergate, American movie making was far more introspective and socially critical than it ever was before or has been since. This was, of course, supplanted in the mid-1970s by the Lucas/Spielberg genre of expensive blockbusters centering around dazzling special effects. This trend in the movies mirrored the political culture, which was withdrawing altogether from the progressive tradition and embracing an ascendant Reaganism. The blockbuster frame of mind discredited the modest though respectable earnings of early 1970s movies, and meant that the idea content would once again center around a mythos directed at the masses. This lengthy book uses mostly secondary sources. --Gordon Jackson In Lost Illusions, David A. Cook shows how the 1970s changed the nature and production of modern American cinema. The greatest and most visible change came in the form of the blockbuster. Up until that time, movie producers believed that Hollywood stars were the engine that drove a movie’s profits; that it was folly to believe that any customer would pay to see a movie more than once; and movie elements such as sound quality and special effects were secondary to a movie’s box office appeal. “Jaws” and “Star Wars,” changed every concept of what it took to make a movie profitable, much less a ‘blockbuster.’ “The Godfather” was the first movie to use the ‘event’ idea- the notion that a customer wasn’t going to see a movie, they were participating in an important ‘event.’ But “Jaws” took it to a whole new level with its combination of proven plot devices, new camera technologies and a clever marketing strategy meant to maximize interest by reducing it to one image, the familiar shark icon from shirts and posters. Then George Lucas took it one step farther when he made sound and special effects key aspects of his Star Wars franchise and unleashed a barrage of toys and other products to go with the films. Few films viewed ‘licensing’ as a viable means to money making, but Lucas millions more in licensing the Star Wars brand to products than he did on the movie itself. But it wasn’t just these two films that characterized the decade’s movies. Several directors released edgy, counter-culture films in a variety of formats. Martin Scorsese gave Americans a hard-edged urban world in films such as “Taxi Driver”; Robert Altman invented overlapping dialogue for his counter-culture films, such as “M*A*S*H”; and William Friedkin showed that horror and vulgarity could equal big money with “The Exorcist.” The decade introduced many other film styles to American culture. It was the decade that all but invented the horror film with classics like “The Omen” and “Halloween”; established the cult followings for blaxploitation (such as “Shaft”), kung-fu and martial arts (i.e. “Enter the Dragon”); created a new style of film called “Vietnam Westerns” (such as “Little Big Man”); and showed new ways of presenting old styles, such as film noir (i.e. “Chinatown”). When the directors weren’t making history with their movies, they were doing it with their movie technology. Advances in movie-making technology led to the invention of Dolby sound systems for theater and the Steadicam, which allowed directors and cinematographers to shoot films while standing next to actors or from moving vehicles. Although the book does an excellent job of outlining the decade in movie making, it serves more as a categorical look at the movies, people and technology that made the decade historic. Rarely, does the book delve into how Watergate and Vietnam influenced the plots and stories of those movies. -Patrick Wright AU - Cook, David A CY - New York DA - 2000 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) home entertainment computers Classification and Rating Administration classification video cassette recorders (VCRs) MPAA underground cinema self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality exploitation circuit entertainment, home Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) magnetic recording National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) women, and new media advertising, and public relations women underground media underground films censorship and ratings rating system (U. S.) advertising propaganda advertising public relations sexuality new media MPAA NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPPDA motion pictures violence media effects media violence satellites horror home entertainment Hollywood magnetic tape exploitation circuit context computers and the Internet children censorship and rating system (U. S.) law rating system (U. S.) censorship classification non-USA home home, and new media home motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and history of motion pictures, and avant-garde underground films, and motion pictures 16mm 16mm, and avant-garde 8mm 8mm, and avant-garde context, and 1970s motion pictures, and new technology motion pictures, and marketing advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and art cinema motion pictures, and blockbusters motion pictures, and box office cameras cameras, and motion pictures motion pictures, and camera technology motion pictures, and special effects cable TV television television, and cable television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and cable TV satellites, and motion pictures motion pictures, and satellites cinematography motion pictures, and cinematography violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Dolby sound sound recording, and Dolby motion pictures, and exploitation exploitation women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women motion pictures, and feminism foreign motion pictures, and foreign motion pictures, and genre home video new media, and home home entertainment revolution VCRs home, and motion pictures videotape motion pictures, and horror cameras, and zoom lenses MPAA CARA rating system (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) pornography pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and X-rated motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures computers and the Internet computers, and motion pictures computers, and special effects computers, and computer graphics computers, and computer animation motion pictures, and computers motion pictures, and computer graphics motion pictures, and computer animation Panaflex, and violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence Hollywood, and science fiction Hollywood, and horror horror science fiction Jackson, Gordon advertising cable future and science fiction cameras future Wright, Patrick children, and media computers Panaflex science LB - 18570 PB - Charles Scribner's Sons PY - 2000 ST - Lost Illusions: American Cinema in the Shadow of Watergate and Vietnam, 1970-1979 TI - Lost Illusions: American Cinema in the Shadow of Watergate and Vietnam, 1970-1979 ID - 43 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book contains series of article which the author had previously published in Vanity Fair. Ebenezer Wake Cook was a critic of Impressionism, post-Impressionism, and degeneracy art. He drew parallels between what he consider to be degenerate art and degenerate politics which produced anarchy. Cook, who himself was an artist, insisted on "truth to nature." In this book, Cook writes in his opening chapter ("The Situation") that "the goddess of Vulgarity is ousting the modest must of Painting; and some of the narrowest doctrines that ever gained a moment's credence of the unthinking are preached as saving evangels." ([p. 9]) In chapter 4 ("Impressionism"), he begins: "'The Impressionist,' it has been wittily said, 'is a man with an independent income!'" (38) In chapter 10 ("The Future of Art"), Cook writes: "The democratisation of Art by reproductive processes is the new factor which differentiates the present state of things from anything every known. The plethora of pictures caused by over-production and reproduction, and the consequent jading of the aesthetic faculties of those having most to do with them, created a desire for change which led to blind experimenting. The newly-discovered power of advertising, and the introduction of something closely resembling the claque to support new men or cliques, led to anarchy. The confusion created by the new 'criticism' resulted in a set of circumstances which a quick-witted student planning his career might have thrown into this series of propositions: (69) "(a) A picture unusually good, or unusually bad, will look 'distinguished.' The attainment of unusual excellence is increasingly difficult, while its antithesis is easy enough. (b) Insanity is allied to genius; in the absence of genius, may not assumed insanity be mistaken for it, at least by the new critics? (c) Notoriety brings the emoluments of fame; it is easier of attainment, and may be mistaken for fame itself. (d) In Realism the criterion of excellence is always at hand, and shortcomings are sure of detection. Then, why not adopt Impressionism with its arbitrary criteria, by which incompetence may pass as genius?" (69) Cook is also discussed in S. K. Tillyard, The Impact of Modernism: The Visual Arts in Edwardian England (New York: Routledge, 1988), 106-08. AU - Cook, E. Wake CY - London DA - 1904 KW - journalism celebrity art photography, and art art, and photography values art, and values values, and art art, and decadence sound recording phonograph electricity metaphors color photography, and color color, and photography cameras cameras, and art art, and cameras history and new media art, and history history, and art gramophone quotations advertising art, and advertising advertising, and art modernity history, break with critics news and journalism art, and journalism journalism, and art critics, and modernity modernity, and critics critics, and new media critics, and art ref, secondary ref, book advertising and public relations advertising, and art art, and advertising history, and break with fame, and notoriety notoriety, and fame celebrity culture celebrity, and notoriety quotations quotations, and notoriety duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and art fame history photography LB - 42390 PB - Cassell and Company, Limited PY - 1904 ST - Anarchism in Art: Chaos in Criticism TI - Anarchism in Art: Chaos in Criticism ID - 4338 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Timothy Cook uses this book to explain his vision of the press as an instrument of government. He believes that the idea of an independent press, operating outside of the government, is inaccurate. Instead, he sees the press as a social institution that is used by the government to manage the population. It plays an intermediary role in providing selected information and opinions. He goes further to argue that our system of constitutional government could not exist today without the media playing this role. The heart of this argument is that the press enjoys a special relationship with the state. It is protected by the First Amendment and receives various kinds of subsidies. It is also given special access to information through press releases and news conferences. Journalists are allowed to follow military campaigns, election campaigns and any number of behind-the-scenes situations. In return, the press comes to rely on these official sources of news as the most accurate or authoritative. The press naturally focuses on the government as the source of news. Cook argues that this leads to “government by press release” in which leaders relate to the public indirectly through the media. Both those in power and those seeking recognition use the media to set agendas and publicize programs or achievements. In effect, this democracy is played out in the media, and it is not clear how it relates to real life situations. Cook is not entirely critical of this development, but he does suggest that there are problems. He believes that the Internet may evolve into a means for citizens to reclaim a voice in the process and become involved in direct democracy. He also argues that journalists need to become more aware of their role and take it more seriously. --Rob Rabe AU - Cook, Timothy E. CY - Chicago DA - 1998 KW - computers nationalism advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising journalism Internet freedom news and journalism public relations news +nationalism and communication Rabe, Rob First Amendment freedom of the press news, and government public relations, and government news, and public relations public relations public relations, and news +computers and the Internet Internet, and news news, and Internet law LB - 9390 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1998 ST - Governing With the News: The News Media as a Political Institution TI - Governing With the News: The News Media as a Political Institution ID - 2306 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book attempts to document the founding of the National Press Photographers Association and the early years of its history under the leadership of Joseph Costa. The book is based on Costa’s papers (about 90 file boxes) at Syracuse University, the first decade of the National Press Photographer magazine, and interviews with Costa and about 35 other people. The work is illustrated with black-and-white pictures and is indexed primarily by people rather than by topics. A brief “Chronology” (174-75) covers events each year from 1945 to 1956. AU - Cookman, Claude CY - Durham, N. C. (?) DA - 1985 KW - journalism +photography and visual communication photojournalism photography cameras cameras, and journalism news and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and journalism timelines references, statistics, timelines, maps National Press Photographers Assocation Costa, Joseph, and National Press Photographers Association journalism LB - 28790 PB - National Press Photographers Association PY - 1985 ST - A Voice Is Born TI - A Voice Is Born ID - 2666 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Coopersmith’s study looks exclusively at the development of an electricity industry in Russia between 1880 and 1926. This span of years is broken up into three period of electrification: under the tsarist government, 1880-1917; during the Revolutions and civil war, 1917-1920; and under communism and the New Economic Policy (NEP) of 1921-1926. Coopersmith relies on technical journals and state archives, as well as some secondary studies of Russian industrialization and development. The author argues that the "paucity of commercially successful inventors is a striking aspect of Russian electrification and indicative of the societal and economic weaknesses that hindered its development. Russian engineers and scientists were not passive recipients of foreign technologies; they invented and developed their own equipment too . . . Yet only three Russian inventors received national and international recognition in the late nineteenth century . . . Why did invention not translate into success in innovation and application? Responsibility falls on two intertwined causes: a systematic failure of the Russian economic and social environment to support and foster domestic inventions, and technological prematurity, the development of an idea before its supporting materials and components attain technological and economic feasibility.” Coopersmith sees World War I as a turning point. “World War I was the single most important factor in the transition from electrification in Russia to Russian electrification. The war drastically worsened the environment for utilities, which lost their technology, financing, and fuel just as military requirements sharply increased demand for electricity. This inability to satisfy wartime needs brought electric power to the attention of state officials and industrialists more effectively than a score of prewar petitions. The war forced the government to recognize the economic importance of electro-technology, but the state’s response was too little, too late, and too disorganized to forge an accommodation with the private sector and electrical engineers.” After the war, Lenin was an enthusiastic proponent of electrification. – Nicholas Wolf This text explores the process in which Russia became electrified during the last years of tsarist Russia through the revolutions, the period of Civil War, and finally the first years of Soviet Russia. According to Coopersmith’s evidence, Russia’s progress lags far behind the West in its production, invention and implementation of electrification. This was due in part to many reasons, but most evident was the crippling bureaucracy that plagued the country and stifled invention and new ideas. Russian’s inventors often went abroad to produce their ideas instead of working at home. Russia required foreign work, and investment in order to implement electrification, but was plagued by poor ideas, centralization to such a scale that most cities got little or no electric power, or failure of implementation to such a level that cities such as St. Petersburg were wired with a system that was different in each region of the city, and completely incompatible with each other. The coming of World War I, forced changes to the country as modernization was required in order to fight the war. During Soviet times, electrical engineers, encouraged by Lenin took new precedence in the country. The grand GOELRO plan was to be implemented using the same framework of previous Russian plans, centralized through St. Petersburg and Moscow, and then to be extended out to other areas. But, the engineers attempted to bite off more than they could chew, as the effort was plagued by lack of resources. Foreign dollars were limited after the Bolshevik revolution. It took until 1924 before the great cities of Russia began to turn the corner and reach their pre-war levels. With Lenin’s death in 1924, Stalin’s industrialization plans began to take precedent over the work of the engineers, and the country traded its focus from giving power to the people, instead to power for heavy industry. The moment available for Russia to catch up to the West in electric power during the NEP years, was lost. The Soviet Union would constantly battle issues with power output throughout the rest of its history, despite bountiful natural resources. In the second chapter, Coopersmith looks at the invention that did occur in Russia by Russians. Most of the best work done by Russians were done abroad, due to the restrictions and tsarist bureaucracy that crippled new ideas. Russia’s best work was done by its military that encouraged new ideas, but the government scared of rivals to its throne, prevented any wide-scale work. Instead the foreign looking court, turned to more expensive foreign ideas and investments, due to its suspicions of its own people. This was situation that set Russia far behind the west infrastructure-wise a gap evident by World War I. Chapter 3 focuses on how electrification was implemented in Russia prior to World War II. Coopersmith uses numerous statistics as evidence of just how much Russia lagged. Here facts about the cities of Russia show how poorly electrification was implemented and how disastrous the coming war would be due to the poor infrastructure. Chapter 4, “The Rise of Electrification, 1914-1917,” focuses on how electrification was implemented in Russia prior to World War II. Coopersmith uses numerous statistics as evidence of just how much Russia lagged. Here facts about the cities of Russia show how poorly electrification was implemented and how disastrous the coming war would be due to the poor infrastructure. The fifth chapter looks at electrification during the Civil War and the War Communism period. With the country suffering from strife, depression and starvation, electrification took a back seat as the Bolsheviks struggled to keep their foothold on power in the country. But, the engineers, admired by Lenin, gained a foothold and began planning a much more centralized and promoted from the top plan to fully electrify Russia. Electrification was one of the first steps toward the planned communist economy. Chapter 6 focuses on the development and implementation of the GOELRO plan for Russian state electrification. It would be put along the lines of Regional plans in the past with the focus being Moscow and St. Petersburg. It also allocated plans for the development of new power stations, and the development of Russia’s first massive hydroelectric facilities. GOELRO’s ideas were beyond what was possible given the resources, but Lenin’s encouragement gave the engineers clout to implement such a plan. In the end GOELRO was hardly as successful as expected due to the lack of foreign investment and resources and failure to come up with long term solutions, but rather to implement short term ideas. “The NEP Years, 1921-1926” is a look with statistics at GOELRO’s work with implementation of its plans. GOELRO succeeded to an extent of getting the country back on its feet and improving conditions for the major cities. However, the program never had the resources or the know how to electrify the countryside. GOELRO was able to be as successful as it was due to the power of its leaders, whose ideas were propaganda for the forward and technologically thinking Bolsheviks, and encouraged by Lenin. After Lenin’s death in 1924 and the end of the NEP in 1926, any plans to move beyond the strict regionalization of work were abandoned in favor of the 5-year plans of the Stalinist period for rapid industrialization. This took away from countrywide electrification, as resources were allocated for industry. Stalin’s reduction of electrification’s role was a reversal of Lenin’s ideas. Coopersmith’s short conclusion notes that the high point of electrification certainly came during the NEP, and by 1926 Russia’s electrical production had finally exceeded pre-war levels and were steadily improving. Though GOELRO was never as successful as intended, it provided the network that allowed for Russia’s industrial boom of the 1930s. But, like other sectors, the independence engineers enjoyed during the 1920s, was reduced under Stalin’s suspicions and implementation of the of a statewide plan that controlled all sectors of the economy. Electrification became subordinate as opposed to the focal point it was in the 1920s. -Jason Karnosky AU - Coopersmith, Johnathan CY - Ithaca, NY DA - 1992 KW - USSR nationalism war non-USA networks electricity Russia networks, electrical nationalism and communication Russia Soviet Union Russia, and electricity Soviet Union, and electricity electricity, and Soviet Union Wolf, Nicholas World War I World War I, and Russian electrification Lenin, N., and electrification electricity, and Lenin Lenin, Vladimir I. Karnosky, Jason LB - 4910 PB - Cornell University Press PY - 1992 ST - The Electrification of Russia, 1880-1926 TI - The Electrification of Russia, 1880-1926 ID - 36 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The editors at the time of the book's publication taught in the philosophy department at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia. This anthology grew out of a conference on pornography during fall, 1979. The editors describe the orientation of the work's essays as follows: "The essays are by contemporary philosophers in the Anglo-American tradition, and the issues are approached from a number of theoretical points of view. It is worth mentioning, though, that the essays are secular; those whose thoughts on the morality of pornography are based on a theological position, or on faith, will not find their underlying viewpoints discussed here. Part One of the book is devoted to philosophical essays: Ann Garry, "Pornography and Respect for Women"; Lorenne M. G. Clark, "Liberalism an Pornography"; Fred Berger, "Pornography, Sex, and Censorship"; Joel Feinberg, "Pornography and the Criminal Law"; T. M. Scanlon, "Freedom of Expression and the Categories of Expression"; Susan Wendell, "Pornography and Freedom of Expression"; Committee on Obscenity and Film Censorship, Chairman, Bernard Williams, "Offensiveness, Pornography, and Art"; and Bonnelle Strickling, with David Copp and Susan Wendell, "Selected Bibliography of Academic and Popular Philosophy." Part Two contains essays from social scientific research. Authors include: Diana E. H. Russell, Edward Donnerstein, Donnerstein and Leonard Berkowitz, Neil M. Malamuth and James V. P. Check, Dolf Zillman, Jennings Bryant, et al., Berl Kutchinsky, and a select bibliography compiled by Bonnelle Strickling. Part Three contains Judicial Essays on Regina v. Hicklin, Shaw v. Director of Public Prosecutions, U. S. v. Roth, Miller v. California, Paris Adult Theatre v. Slaton, Regina v. Pink Triange Press, and a select bibliography. AU - Copp, David AU - Susan Wendell, eds. CY - New York DA - 1983 KW - women, and new media sexuality pornography motion pictures women feminism court cases law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography court cases, and pornography pornography, and motion pictures pornography, and court cases pornography, and liberalism pornography, and social science research pornography, and women women women, and pornography feminism, and pornography pornography, and women pornography, and feminism Great Britain Great Britain, and pornography pornography, and Great Britain Great Britain, and censorship censorship, and Great Britain pornography, and philosophy British Committee on Obscenity and Pornography censorship, and pornographny pornography, and censorship bibliographies, and pornography +bibliographies LB - 26680 PB - Prometheus Books PY - 1983 ST - Pornography and Censorship TI - Pornography and Censorship ID - 1232 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - An interesting collection of essays on several media includingradio (Susan J. Douglas); X Rays (Nancy Knight); computers (Paul Ceruzzi); and electric lights (Carolyn Marvin). It also has pieces on “The Home of Tomorrow, 1927-1945" (Brian Horrigan); World’s Fairs during the 1930s (Folke T. Kihlstedt); and “The Technological Utopians” (Howard P. Segal). See also under individual authors. AU - Corn, Joseph J., ed. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1986 KW - technology entertainment computers entertainment, home photography World Fairs utopianism technology and society technology, and utopianism home entertainment +future and science fiction home, and new media home home, and information technology information technology general studies future +radio x-rays computers electricity technological utopias +photography and visual communication information technology and home home, and new media electricity, and lighting future, and home World Fairs (1930s) utopia, and new media technological utopias +computers and the Internet LB - 320 PB - MIT Press PY - 1986 ST - Imagining Tomorrow: History, Technology, and the American Future TI - Imagining Tomorrow: History, Technology, and the American Future ID - 1428 ER - TY - EDBOOK A2 - Chambers, Katherine AB - A nicely illustrated (color as well as black and white) book prepared by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service with interesting discussions of several topics including death rays (one illustration, dated about 1920, shows such a ray knocking a plane out of the sky and is attributed to the Germans), and the “Electronic Battlefield of the Future.” The book has a short but useful bibliography on related works. The work was edited by Katherine Chambers, and was part of the Smithsonian Institution's Traveling Exhibition Service. AU - Corn, Joseph J. and Brian Horrigan CY - New York DA - 1984 KW - R & D research and development war +future and science fiction war non-USA general studies future Smithsonian Institution death rays +military communication lasers +television death rays, and Germany Germany, and death rays Germany LB - 330 PB - Summit Books PY - 1984 ST - Yesterday’s Tomorrows: Past Visions of the American Future TI - Yesterday’s Tomorrows: Past Visions of the American Future ID - 1429 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 780-page book, first published in 1936, is a broad survey of color cinematography, a subject for which at the time there was, in the author’s view, “a woeful lack of knowledge of fundamental principles” among those who made motion pictures. The objective here was not so much a detailed history of the subject but rather “to give the reader a reliable description of processes now being worked, and to give a simple outline of the principles upon which all systems have been based.” In the Prefaces to the different editions of this work, the author provides a brief discussion on what he feels are effects of color on audiences and how color on a movie screen differs from our vision of color in the real three-dimensional world. The book is divided into three parts. Part I, the longest (580 pages), provides a history of color cinematography; a lengthy discussion of the theoretical basis for this technology; two long chapters, one on additive processes, another on subtractive processes; a chapter on color camera and beam-splitting processes, and a chapter on the bipack which had an important role as a way of recording negatives for color cinematography. Parts II and III are shorter. Part II has chapters on process projection, color film sound tracks, toning, processing of two-color prints by deep tank methods, color stereoscopic motion pictures, make-up, and color sensitometry. The chapters in Part III deal with “The Phenomena of Colour Vision and the Making of Films in Colour,” color harmony, and color standards (with a consideration of the future of color film). The book has several appendices. One contains a chart of color film (35-mm and 16-mm) sound tracks characteristics. Another is a complete list of British patents “containing every patent having some bearing on colour cinematography.” AU - Cornwell-Clyne, Adrian CY - London DA - 1936, 1939, 1951 KW - dyes dyeing motion pictures media effects sexuality violence lighting materials patents color non-USA 35mm +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures Great Britain, and color motion pictures color, and Great Britain patents, and color motion pictures patents, and British color motion pictures color, and subtractive processes color, and additive processes color, two-process motion pictures, and two-process color 16mm film, and color 16mm film, and Great Britain 35mm film, and color Agfacolor film color, and Agfacolor cameras, beam-splitter cameras, and color motion pictures lighting, and arc lamps color, and Ansco Color color, and bipack Technicolor color, and dyes dyes, and color motion pictures color, and filters color, and Gasparcolor color, and Gevacolor Europe, and color motion pictures color, and Kodachrome 16mm film, and Kodachrome color, and make-up color, and multilayer film sound recording sound recording, and color motion pictures color, and toning color, and three-color process Kalmus, Herbert Troland, L. T. color, emotional responses to media effects, and color Maxwell, James Clerk Great Britain 16mm Europe cameras materials 16mm film Troland, Leonard LB - 12650 PB - Chapman & Hall, Ltd. PY - 1936 ST - Colour Cinematography TI - Colour Cinematography ID - 2611 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Cortada maintains that contemporary discussions of the so-called “information society” frequently fail to appreciate that this development is the process of “historical evolution” that has been centuries in the making. “I have concluded that our relationship with information is a far more pervasive feature of American life than journalists, historians, sociologists, or political scientists have told us before. Until now, when they discussed the Information Age, many observers treated it as if it were something new, an emerging world of connectivity through the Internet with vast quantities of information. The discussion is normally all about computers. As you will see, they basically missed the big point, namely that we have been at this for a long time and that it is about much more than computers. As a result, information and its technologies have been a greater part of who we are than otherwise has been acknowledged. New waves of technology are part of a larger pattern making up the American experience.” The book’s twelve chapters are organized into three groups. Chapters 1-4 offer a general discussion of information technologies over three centuries. Chapters 5-9 look at information technology’s relationship to different aspects of American life: work, leisure, religion, public policy, and democracy. Chapters 10 (“The Future of Information in America”), 11 (“Leveraging Information for Fun and Profit”), and 12 (“Learning More About Info-America”) deal with the question of “so what?” A prominent theme in this work “is the profound influence information technologies have on how information is used.” Cortada describes himself as a trained historian who spent most of his adult life working for IBM “selling, managing, and consulting on computer-related issues.” AU - Cortada, James W. CY - London and New York DA - 2002 KW - R & D information processing Information Age computers obsolete media corporations corporations ARPA values +postal service new media research and development war communication revolution literacy communication revolution materials +future and science fiction community democracy computers Cold War values capitalism news and journalism war non-USA new media and society information revolution typewriters +computers and the Internet calculating machines computers, punch cards obsolete technology computers, and software new media, and work computers, and work new media, and leisure computers, and leisure new media, and religion religion, and new media +television television, and religion religion, and television +radio radio, and religion religion, and radio new media, and democracy democracy, and new media future, and new media new media, and future capitalism, and new media new media, and capitalism telephones ARPANET AT & T books books, and new media new media, and books Cold War, and computers computers, and Cold War computers, chips +military communication computers, and military communication military communication, and computers new media, and economy new media, and capitalism capitalism, and new media ENIAC globalization new media, and globalization globalization, and new media IBM +bibliographies information, and bibliographies bibliographies, and information new media, and literacy literacy, and new media Microsoft Corporation +newspapers personal computers computers, personal email Post Office bibliographies, and telephones telephones, and bibliographies global communication future +books, periodicals, newspapers religion electronic mail materials electronic media news LB - 100 PB - Prentice Hall PY - 2002 ST - Making the Information Society: Experience, Consequences, and Possibilities TI - Making the Information Society: Experience, Consequences, and Possibilities ID - 99 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Complex mechanical devices gradually found their way into business offices and government agencies. The typewriter, adding machines, tabulating machines, cash registers, and keypunch systems evolved during decades of development. These basic machines became the foundation for computers. The tasks performed by each were incorporated when technology had progressed. The lesson of these machines was that information had to be processed for analysis and that control of any business or entity depended on the accurate and timely generation of relevant data. Cortada writes that “Like typewriters, adding and calculating machines became permanent fixtures in organizations of any size. They also came closer than the typewriter to fitting the image of a precursor for the modern computer because they computed and handled numeric and, later, alphabetic data. These devices were the direct ancestors of computers. Their evolution led to the creation of computers capable of work that could not be done by calculators. In short, adding machines and calculators contributed to the foundation of the American data-processing industry while they introduced thousands of office workers and scientists to the possibilities presented by mechanical aids to data calculation and handling.” According to Cortada, such technology, to use James R. Beniger’s phrase, “reflected part of the ‘Control Revolution,’ in which technology was employed to support the flow of greater amounts of information in ever-larger organizations. Most contemporary writers and historians lean toward the economic interpretation of the development of adding and calculating machines. “As organizations evolved in size and were characterized by multiple layers of management or locations, such structures provided economic incentives to generate cost-effective, useful information. Statistical reports and numerical data, in particular, made it possible for middle and upper management to carry out one of their most vital functions: to inspect performance. The information-handling process directly contributed to the expansion of the managerial class that Chandler called the new mandarins of the economy.” Cortada discusses the importance of calculating machines to the government, in collecting taxes, and also during World War I and World War II. --James Landers AU - Cortada, James W. CY - Princeton DA - 1993 KW - R & D computers nationalism corporations corporations data processing labor research and development war computers war +computers and the Internet Landers, James IBM cash registers computers, and history of calculating machines typewriters computing before computers office, and calculating machines +duplicating technologies mimeograph +nationalism and communication punch cards computers, and punch cards nationalism, and calculating machines World War I World War II World War I, and data processing World War II, and data processing data processing data processing, and World War I data processing, and World War II capitalism, and data processing data processing, and capitalism +military communication military communication, and data processing data processing, and military communication labor labor, and data processing data processing, and labor capitalism office LB - 8820 N1 - See also: office PB - Princeton University Press PY - 1993 ST - Before the Computer: IBM, NCR, Burroughs, and Remington Rand and the Industry They Created, 1865-1956 TI - Before the Computer: IBM, NCR, Burroughs, and Remington Rand and the Industry They Created, 1865-1956 ID - 2249 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This brief 78-page history of the New York Tribune seeks to recount the most significant people and dates in the paper's history, starting with its founding in 1841 by Horace Greeley. In addition, the author discusses the paper's use of new innovations such as the linotype during the 1880s (52-53) and the use of half-tone photographs by the paper beginning on January 21, 1897. The author, drawing on his own personal experiences, tells of Stephen Horgan's proposal to James Gordon Bennett, Jr. of the New York Herald (53-54) to handle "the half-tone in such wise that it could be printed from the curved stereotyped plates of a newspaper." (54) Bennett's expert mechanic thought Horgan was "merely an idiot" and as a result Horgan was fired. He presented his idea to Whitelaw Reid of the Tribune who in early 1897 published a half-tone of Thomas C. Platt who had just been elected to the U.S. Senate. The paper continued to refine Horgan's process "making a substantial contribution toward the universal adoption of the half-tone as a means of newspaper illustration. It still flourishes," the author says in 1923, "holding its own even beside those developments, exemplified in the rotogravure supplements of The Tribune to-day, for which it pave the way." (54) AU - Cortissoz, Royal CY - New York DA - 1923 KW - wood engraving presses journalism fame ref, secondary magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality quotations newspapers, and photographs photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving photography, and presses presses, and newspaper photography newspapers, and photography (origins) photography, and New York Tribune Horgan, Stephen half tones, and Stephen Horgan Sunday newspapers newspapers, and Sunday newspapers linotype newspapers, and linotype linotype, and newspapers Greeley, Horace Reid, Whitelaw ref, book celebrity personality LB - 39530 PB - New York Tribune PY - 1923 ST - The New York Tribune: Incidents and Personalities in Its History TI - The New York Tribune: Incidents and Personalities in Its History ID - 4051 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Costigan, Daniel M. CY - New York DA - c1978 KW - labor communication revolution communication revolution community democracy office, and information technology information technology Information Age +duplicating technologies facsimile information technology, and office information processing electronic delivery graphics revolution capitalism democracy and media electronic media office, and duplicating technologies office electricity LB - 5640 PB - Van Nostrand Reinhold Co. PY - 1978 ST - Electronic Delivery of Documents and Graphics TI - Electronic Delivery of Documents and Graphics ID - 1949 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Costigan, Daniel M. CY - Philadelphia DA - [1971] KW - labor communication revolution communication revolution office, and information technology information technology +duplicating technologies facsimile graphics revolution information technology, and office office, and facsimile office LB - 5650 PB - Chilton Book Co. ST - Fax: The Principles and Practice of Facsimile Communication TI - Fax: The Principles and Practice of Facsimile Communication ID - 1950 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a collection of addresses delivered during autumn, 1986, to British businessmen, government officials, journalists, and others. They were designed to encourage thinking about the impact of "fifth generation" computers. In 1982, Britain's Alvey Committee on Advanced Information Technology had issued a report responding the Japan's Fifth Generation Computer Programme. The addresses in this volume include: Brian Oakley, "An overview of research and co-operation in Advanced Information Technology"; Chris Humphries, "Implications for education and training"; Sir Geoffrey Allen, "The experience of corporate users: Experience of Information Technology at Unilever"; Derek Seddon "Experience of IT innovations in ICI"; Derek Barker, "Directions for research and development: Directions for Information Technology research and development"; John Taylor, "Expert Systems -- where do we go from here?"; Bill Jordan, "Implications of Advanced Information Technology: a trade union view: Social effects of IT -- past and future"; Dave Rogers, "The problems of IT and their solutions"; and Igor Aleksander, "The Management of Advanced Information Technology." An Appendix is entitled "The Bide Report." AU - Cotterell, Arthur CY - New York DA - 1988 KW - computers non-USA labor Great Britain +computers and the Internet Japan Great Britain Great Britain, and computers Alvey Programme Bide Report Great Britain, and information technology labor, and information technology computers computers, fifth generation fifth generation computers Japan, and fifth generation computers LB - 11470 N1 - See also: office PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1988 ST - Advanced Information Technology in the New Industrial Society: The Kingston Seminars TI - Advanced Information Technology in the New Industrial Society: The Kingston Seminars ID - 2507 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work explains the important changes that have been brought to publishing and the creation of intellecual property by digital media. These media poses major problems for copyright law, much of which were formulated in an predominantly analog world and before the digital revolution. The developments affect libraries, the entertainment industry, and other major parts of the economy. AU - Council], [National Research CY - Washington, D.C. DA - 2000 KW - intellectual property materials materials law copyright law analog media digital media intellectual property, and digital media digital media, and intellectual property digitization analog v. digital copyright, and digital media law, and digital media LB - 28230 PB - National Academy Press PY - 2000 ST - The Digital Dilemma: Intellectual Property in the Information Age TI - The Digital Dilemma: Intellectual Property in the Information Age ID - 1369 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This planning documents builds on the work of the interagency High Performance Computing and Communication program, and "sets forth a high level strategy for the Federal government’s research and development investment in information and communications technologies.” It includes an “Executive Summary” and an “Implementation Plan” (in four sections), plus Appendices A-G, and a Bibliography. The bibliography has interesting citations. AU - Council], [National Science and Technology CY - [Washington, D. C.?] DA - March 10, 1995 KW - R & D computers Clinton, Bill nationalism Clinton, William Jefferson +military communication presidents, and new media Clinton Administration government research and development +nationalism and communication government reports bibliographies, and information and communication research and development, and government support research and development, and information technologies government documents +bibliographies Clinton administration, and new media nationalism, and new media +computers and the Internet nationalism, and computers Clinton administration, and computers LB - 8750 PB - [National Science and Technology Council?] PY - 1995 ST - Strategic Planning Document -- Information and Communications TI - Strategic Planning Document -- Information and Communications ID - 2244 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Courtwright, a historian of violence, has some discussion in this book on motion pictures and television programs and the possible effects on those who watch them. AU - Courtwright, David T. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1996 KW - sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality sex motion pictures media effects media violence motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures media effects media effects, and violence +television violence, and television television, and violence African Americans, and TV violence television, and blacks LB - 26420 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1996 ST - Violent Land: Single Men and Social Disorder from the Frontier to the Inner City TI - Violent Land: Single Men and Social Disorder from the Frontier to the Inner City ID - 1224 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a collection of essays by several historians of cinema. Among the topics included in this volume is blacklisting and the Hollywood Ten. AU - Couvares, Francis G., ed. CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1996 KW - blacklisting values Hollywood law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Hollywood Ten blacklisting, and Hollywood Hollywood, and blacklisting censorship, and Hollywood Ten censorship, and Hollywood values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and reform motion pictures, and anticommunism motion pictures, and communism values LB - 16370 PB - Smithsonian Institution Press PY - 1996 ST - Movie Censorship and American Culture TI - Movie Censorship and American Culture ID - 591 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book attempts to explains high fidelity and its impact on listening to music and home entertainment. While it is not a history, this work does offer insight into the state of sound recording during the mid- to late-1960s. The book contains a glossary of audio terms and a bibliography that include audio books and pamphlets, audio magazines and annuals, test records, record libraries, as well as a list of manufacturers and retailers. It also has an index. AU - Crabbe, John CY - London DA - 1968 KW - entertainment tape recording, magnetic entertainment, home magnetic recording audio tape magnetic tape recording tape recording public address systems materials materials magnetic tape non-USA home, and new media home +sound recording sound recording, and high fidelity home, and high fidelity sound Great Britain Great Britain, and high fidelity recording audio books books, audio magnetic recording tape recorders sound recording, and disc records sound recording, and automobiles hi-fi automobiles, and high fidelity sound loudspeakers sound recording, and records radio, and frequencies radio, FM sound home entertainment home, and sound recording books, periodicals, newspapers radio automobiles transportation books LB - 350 PB - Blandford Press, Ltd. PY - 1968 ST - Hi-Fi in the Home TI - Hi-Fi in the Home ID - 123 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is a richly detailed and carefully argued study of Hollywood’s transition to sound. “This book emphasizes the longevity -- not the suddenness -- of the transition to sound. Instead of focusing on one personality, event, studio, or single strand of technological development," Crafton addresses "several interlaced aspects of film production, reception, and, to a lesser extend, distribution.” He goes on to say that like “much of our general knowledge about Hollywood, the concept of a dividing line between antediluvian silent cinema and the modern talkies was conscripted by the industry and the media.....” The first four chapters in Part 1 are: 1) “A New Era in Electrical Entertainment”; 2) “Electric Affinities”; 3) “Virtual Broadway, Virtual Orchestra: De Forest and Vitaphone”; and chapter 4: “Fox-Case, Movietone, and the Talking Newsreel.” Chapter 18, “The Voice Squad” (from Part 3: “Hearing the Audience”), deals with censorship of sound films. While the acceptance of sound technology was by no means a certainty during the 1920s, the movies did link themselves and sound with science and electricity. “Science was often considered progressive in the 1920s, and anything associated with electricity tended to generate awe and respect, as it combined intellectual complexity, the promise of a better future, and the risk of mishandling. The talkies were readily plugged into this popularly constructed circuit that connected new developments in transportation (electric trains and elevators), communication (telephone and radio), and labor- saving and leisure - time appliances (the phonograph). Like other electrical technologies, the sound film was on the cusp of modernity. More specifically, it was the newest application of electrical science, thermionics, which was proffered to explain the ‘origins’ of the talkies and to create an aura of modernity and inevitability. This was the name for the far-flung applications based on the vacuum tube, which include the modern sound cinema.” Chapter 2 on “Electric Affinities” is especially informative. There is discussion here of the connection between movies and radio, the telephone, phonograph, and also television. Crafton also discusses the importance of the microphone and loud speaker. “The zesty fast-paced era of the 1920s known as the Jazz Age could just as readily be called thermionic Age.... (Thermionics was the predecessor to the word electronics, which was coined in the 1920s but not used widely until after the invention of the transistor in 1947.)...” There is much more here -- the text of this book runs 546 pages. This work is Volume 4 in Scribner's History of American Cinema series, Charles Harpole, editor. AU - Crafton, Donald CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - transistors modernity modernism loudspeakers journalism law censorship and ratings news and journalism radio +sound recording news networks motion pictures public address systems leisure +motion pictures motion pictures, and sound technology +electricity electricity, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures newsreels motion pictures, and newsreels phonograph +sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures networks, electrical +transportation leisure, and motion pictures +radio radio, and motion pictures +television television, and motion pictures telephones telephones, and motion pictures microphones public address systems loudspeakers public address systems thermionics electronics, and use of term transistors De Forest, Lee Vitaphone censorship electronic media modernism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernism news, and newsreels materials LB - 6180 M1 - 4 N1 - ProCite field[31]: Charles Harpole, ed. PB - Charles Scribner’s Sons PY - 1997 ST - The Talkies: American Cinema’s Transition to Sound, 1926-1931 T2 - History of the American Cinema Series TI - The Talkies: American Cinema’s Transition to Sound, 1926-1931 ID - 2001 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - “In 1984," this work begin, "a federal antitrust suit against the American Telephone and Telegraph Company was settled when AT&T consented to a breakup that allowed it to enter businesses other than regulated communications. This settlement was predicated on two beliefs: first, that competition should discipline market participants in telecommunications whenever possible, and second, that AT&T should be free to pursue the potentially convergent technologies of computers and telecommunications. The Brookings Institution organized a conference in 1987 “to examine the changes brought about by procompetitive policies in the U.S. telecommunications industry, the degree to which those changes were spreading to other developed economies, and the convergence in technologies between computers and communications.” American, European, and Japanese business people, government officials, and university researcher attended the conference. This volume consists of revised versions of the papers given there. Among the essays of interest is Eli M. Noam’s “International Telecommunications in Transition.” (257-97). Page 299 has an table on large exporters of electronics products in 1979, and from 1983 to 1985. AU - Crandall, Robert W. and Kenneth Flamm, eds. CY - Washington, D.C. DA - 1989 KW - computers corporations corporations non-USA general studies AT&T telecommunications global communication electronic media, and exports Japan computers telephones telegraph Europe electronic media +computers and the Internet Noam, Eli LB - 340 PB - The Brookings Institution PY - 1989 ST - Changing the Rules: Technological Change, International Competition, and Regulation in Communications TI - Changing the Rules: Technological Change, International Competition, and Regulation in Communications ID - 1430 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Crane devoted a few pages to the influence of photography. He wrote in 1896 that “Indeed, the photograph, with all its allied discoveries and its application to the service of the printing press, may be said to be as important a discovery in its effects on art and books as was the discovery of printing itself. It has already largely transformed the system of the production of illustrations and designs for books, magazines, and newspapers, and has certainly been the means of securing to the artist the advantage of possession of his original, while its fidelity, in the best processes, is, of course, very valuable. “Its influence, however, on artistic style and treatment has been, to my mind, of more doubtful advantage. The effect on paintings palpable enough, but so far as painting becomes photographic, the advantage is on the side of the photograph. It has led in illustrative work to the method of painting in black and white, which has taken the place very much of the use of line, and through this, and by reason of its having fostered and encouraged a different way of regarding nature -- from the point of view of accidental aspect, light and shade, and tone -- it has confused and deteriorated, I think, the faculty of inventive design, and the sense of ornament and line; having concentrated artistic interest on the literal realization of certain aspects of superficial facts, and instantaneous impressions instead of ideas, and the abstract treatment of form and line. “This, however, may be as much the tendency of an age as the result of photographic invention, although the influence of the photograph must count as one of the most powerful factors of that tendency.” AU - Crane, Walter CY - London DA - 1896, 1901, 1905 KW - illustrations photography print communication revolution news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers journalism news and journalism printing printing press painting newspapers news magazines illustrations +photography and visual communication +books, periodicals, newspapers books, and illustrations illustrations, and books books, and photography photography, and books photography, and magazines photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography painting, and photography's influence photography, and art and artistic style printing, and photography communication revolution photography, and new way of seeing books LB - 1500 PB - George Bell and Sons PY - 1896 ST - Of the Decorative Illustration of Books Old and New TI - Of the Decorative Illustration of Books Old and New ID - 1546 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Crary says that “this is a book about vision and its historical construction. Although it primarily addresses events and developments before 1850, it was written in the midst of a transformation in the nature of visuality probably more profound than the break that separates medieval imagery from Renaissance perspective. The rapid development in little more than a decade of a vast array of computer graphics techniques is part of a sweeping reconfiguration of relations between an observing subject and modes of representation that effectively nullifies most of the culturally established meanings of the terms observer and representation. The formalization and diffusion of computer-generated imagery heralds the ubiquitous implantation of fabricated visual ‘spaces’ radically different from the mimetic capabilities of film, photography, and television. These latter three, at least until the mid-1970s, were generally forms of analog media that still corresponded to the optical wavelengths of the spectrum and to a point of view, static or mobile, located in real space. Computer-aided design, synthetic holography, flight simulators, computer animation, robotic image recognition, ray tracing, texture mapping, motion control, virtual environment helmets, magnetic resonance imaging, and multispectral sensors are only a few of the techniques that are relocating vision to a plane severed from human observer. Obviously other older and more familiar modes of ‘seeing’ will persist and coexist uneasily alongside these new forms.” Crary’s attention, though, is focused earlier. “By outlining some of the ‘points of emergence’ of a modern and heterogeneous regime of vision, I simultaneously address the related problem of when, and because of what events, there was a rupture with Renaissance, or classical, models of vision and of the observer. How and where one situates such a break has an enormous bearing on the intelligibility of visuality within nineteenth- and twentieth-century modernity....” The author sees photography and the scientific realism of the mid-nineteenth century as important developments. But he suggests “that a broader and far more important transformation in the makeup of vision occurred in the early nineteenth century. Modernist painting in the 1870s and 1880s and the development of photography after 1839 can be seen as later symptoms or consequences of this crucial systemic shift, which was well under way by 1820.” Crary sees “the camera obscura as paradigmatic of the dominant status of the observer in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, while for the nineteenth century I discuss a number of optical instruments, in particular the stereoscope, as a means of detailing the observer’s transformed status.” Crary admits that he is not seeking to write “a ‘true history,’ or to restore “to the record ‘what actually happened.’ The stakes are quite different -- how one periodizes and where one locates ruptures or denies them are all political choices that determine the construction of the present.” This 150-page book is based on published sources, and is often heavily theoretical and filled with jargon. The Bibliography divides work published before 1900 and after that date, and is helpful. AU - Crary, Jonathan CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1990 KW - computers holograms cyberspace photography seeing at a distance preservation postmodernism modernism modernism modernity communication revolution media effects history, and new media materials materials computers communication revolution, and second industrial revolution history virtual reality television geography radio new way of seeing motion pictures modernity history +photography and visual communication history, break with digital media analog media television, and different from digital computers radio, and different from digital computers motion pictures, and different from digital computers stereoscope Baudrillard, Jean new way of seeing modernism postmodernism photography, and new way of seeing camera obscura Benjamin, Walter holography communication revolution Renaissance, new way of seeing Medieval, way of seeing computers, graphics computers, and digital images computers, and new way of seeing digital media, and new way of seeing second industrial revolution space (spatial) flight simulators cyberspace (spatial) virtual environment helmets magnetic resonance imaging sensors, multispectral motion pictures, and phenakistoscope phenakistoscope history, and digital imaging new way of seeing new way of seeing, and Renaissance new way of seeing, and camera obscura cameras new way of seeing, and computers new way of seeing, and digital images computers and the Internet sensors digitization computers and the Internet media effects, and computers modernity magnetic recording LB - 1510 PB - MIT Press PY - 1990 ST - Techniques of the Observer: On Vision and Modernity in the Nineteenth Century TI - Techniques of the Observer: On Vision and Modernity in the Nineteenth Century ID - 1547 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This story talks about "a central receiver of sound and light," which gives a person the ability to "see and hear what is taking place at a distance. It is also a medium of thought-transference, and a constant radiator of electrical force." It also mentions electrical lights that do not have wires. One character in this novel talks about a device that brings together the principles of the phonograph, telephone, and Edison's kineotograph. Chapter IX is entitled "The Revelations of the House of Light," and says that the "whole world is bare to the gaze of inspectors, who watch the globes that are in our sub-telegraph stations." AU - Crawford, T. C. CY - New York DA - 1894 KW - surveillance +future and science fiction television, and history of +sound recording +television future surveillance seeing at a distance television, and origins thought transference +electricity phonograph LB - 11150 PB - Charles B. Reed, Publisher PY - 1894 ST - The Disappearance Syndicate and Senator Stanley's Story TI - The Disappearance Syndicate and Senator Stanley's Story ID - 2476 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book follows an earlier work that Crawford co-authored with Michael Gorman entitled Future Libraries: Dreams, Madness, & Reality (American Library Association, 1995). It warned about the accepting "digital utopias" in constructing future libraries. "The glory days of the all-digital brigade are in the past," Crawford writes in Being Analog. Within librarianship, the peak may have been 1990-1994. Since Future Libraries, visions of virtual libraries seem to be fading away. Some futurist voices continue to argue for the death of print and the convergence of all media, computing, and communication. The narrowness and emptiness of these projects are becoming apparent to most people." The chapters in this book are divided into four parts: Part I is "Being Analog"; Part II, "Libraries and Librarians"; Part III, "Resources and Users"; and Part IV, "Creating Tomorrow's Libraries." The concluding chapter is entitled "Revolution through Evolution." The work has a brief, one-page bibliography. AU - Crawford, Walt CY - Chicago and London DA - 1999 KW - archives materials digitization libraries libraries, and information storage +information storage libraries, and digital media libraries, analog electronic preservation analog media digital media electronic media libraries critics LB - 10070 PB - American Library Association PY - 1999 ST - Being Analog: Creating Tomorrow's Libraries TI - Being Analog: Creating Tomorrow's Libraries ID - 2372 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This brief 146-page biography covers Innis life from his birth in 1894 and death in 1952. Creighton devotes attention to the formative influences of Innis’s rural upbringing and his participation in the Great War of 1914-1918 during which he was wounded. He notes that Innis developed a dislike of the United States in the aftermath of World War I. The biography then discusses Innis’s work at the University of Chicago and his development as a historian and political economist. It is not until the last twenty-five pages that the author turns to Innis and his study of communication. Creighton notes that by the end of World War II Innis “had ceased spiritually to be a North American,” and that he had become a critic of specialization and “present-mindedness” in economics. By then Innis had come to see communication as a key to understanding history. He insisted upon the necessity of the ‘broad approach’. He valued, above everything else, the truth of synthesis. And he was driven inevitably into a stupendous comparative investigation of the interrelations of communications with politics, economics, and religion, throughout history and over the entire world.” This work lacks notes, bibliography, and index. AU - Creighton, Donald CY - Toronto DA - 1957 KW - imperialism Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories preservation new media non-USA history Innis, Harold Canada political economy cultural imperialism history, break with new media, and history history, and new media biography history, and present-mindedness present-mindedness history LB - 12040 PB - University of Toronto Press PY - 1957 ST - Harold Adams Innis: Portrait of a Scholar TI - Harold Adams Innis: Portrait of a Scholar ID - 2551 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Writing in 1993, the author concludes that over "the decade or two ... AI will gradually seep into all human activities, with mostly beneficial effects. Since, during that period, machines will remain less intelligent than people, we should keep the upper hand on them without too much difficulty. "In the longer term, however, AI remains immensely threatening. The machines will eventually excel us in intelligence, and it will become impossible for us to pull the plug on them..... "When machine acquire an intelligence superior to our own, they will be impossible to keep at bay..... "At the very least, human society will have to undergo drastic changes to survive in the face of artificial intelligences. Such changes may be for the best, but the possibility of evil will always be lurking in the silicon innards of our new allies. Their arrival will threaten the very existence of human life as we know it. Whatever the outcome, we will have to radically re-examine our values and ask ourselves such questions as: Is intelligence what humanity is about? Whether it is or not, where do our loyalties belong -- to humanity or to evolution? Can non-biological life achieve a higher spiritual evolution than humanity can? "It is neither possible nor desirable to outlaw AI. We should not, however, expect the main battles of the twenty-first century to be fought over such issues as the environment, overpopulation or poverty. No, we should expect the fight to be about how we cope with the creations of our own human ingenuity; and the issue, whether we or they -- our silicon challengers -- control the future of the earth." (340-41) AU - Crevier, Daniel CY - New York DA - 1993 KW - R & D future computers strategic defense initiative (SDI) nationalism corporations corporations Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) Advanced Research Projects Agency artificial intelligence and biotechnology strategic computing initiative computers and the Internet Reagan, Ronald presidents and new media Reagan administration, and artificial intelligence ARPA values values, and artificial intelligence digital media nationalism and communication military communication SDI military communication, and aritifical intelligence military, and digital media cybernetics DARPA DARPA, and strategic computing initiative research and development artificial intelligence, and R&D IBM, and artificial intelligence education computers, and language education, and artificial intelligence education, and computers computers, and education computers, and LISP MIT, and artificial intelligence artificial intelligence, and MIT computers, and software robotics Winston, Patrick, and AI Waltz, David, and AI Sussman, Gerald, and AI Simon, Herbert, and AI Schank, Roger, and AI Papert, Seymour, and AI Newell, Allen, and AI Moravec, Hans, and AI Minsky, Marvin, and AI computer, chips McCarthy, John, and AI supercomputers computers, fifth generation future and science fiction artificial intelligence, and values aritifical intelligence, and future Newell, Allen IBM MIT Reagan administration Simon, Herbert computers future Papert, Seymour LB - 33850 PB - BasicBooks, a Division of HaperCollins Publishers, Inc. PY - 1993 ST - AI: The Tumultuous History of the Search for Artificial Intelligence TI - AI: The Tumultuous History of the Search for Artificial Intelligence ID - 3023 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Thomas Cripps Hollywood’s High Noon: Moviemaking and Society Before Television (1997) is a captivating study that considers movies as social phenomena and locates its analysis in the period between the two world wars. Cripps, also the author of what Stanley Kutler calls the “authoritative history of African Americans in films, is interested in charting the classist implications of the Hollywood film industry in the first half of the twentieth century. This is a valuable study because it does not simply examine Hollywood from the point of view of the big studios, but it rather from that of the American movie-going population, with particular concern for the ethnic and working-class contingents that have so often been over-looked in social histories of the film industry. Cripps begins his study about Hollywood’s social effects on the United States by first explaining how Hollywood became the center of the American film industry. Considering The Birth of a Nation (1915) for its stylistic qualities that came to define Hollywood cinema, Cripps writes it is a “key document in the history of Hollywood’s becoming HOLLYWOOD.” (29) Cripps not only notes the innovative style of The Birth of a Nation (which included such features as the close-up, the cross-cut, and the wide-angle shot), but also suggests that its glitzy advertising campaign foretold the future glamour of Hollywood. In addition to this exploration of Hollywoods stylistic beginnings, Cripps demonstrates how World War I helped the movie industry into leveraging national prominence: “with the onset of World War I in the summer of 1914, the American cultural hegemony that had already begun stealing over Europe mushroomed. The war quickly gave birth to a diplomacy that calculatedly entwined American ideology with Hollywood profiteering. . . . The gain for Hollywood was incalculable.” (32) With the growing power and influence of Hollywood during and after World War I, Cripps also shows how a sort of self-standardization emerged, so that trade publications codified every stage of production and distribution.” (34) After he establishes how Hollywood became HOLLYWOOD, Cripps shifts his focus to the everyday American citizen who consumed Hollywoods products. In order to begin discussing the position of the moviegoer relative to the film industry between the two world wars, Cripps emphasizes the fact that movies were marketed along distinct class lines. He explores the reasons for and effects of having 1st-run showings of movies in palatial theatres in white neighborhoods distinct from 4th-run movies shown in the grind houses of the poorer neighborhoods. With such top-down class distinctions in mind, Cripps moves on to explain how ethnic and working-class moviegoers negotiated the differences between first-run theaters and the fourth-run grind houses, both of which played movies that were largely exclusionary to anyone but a middle-class WASP audience. Cripps argues that the segregation of American movies along race and class lines, coupled with the rise of television, led to the dissolution of the massive movie-going audience of the inter-war period. He writes: "With the passing of the great movie audience and of the movies as an oligopolic medium of entertainment, there passed a form of expression that had simultaneously provided a prismatic spectrum of the politics of entertainment and spoken as though on behalf of a mythic universal American. Classical Hollywood had come to its end, perhaps victim of its own part in the very myth--that of a white bread America--it helped to create, by means of its narrative form and gilded downtown palaces." (67) Where Cripps study differs from other histories of Hollywood and the film industry is that he devoted serious attention to what he calls “Others” Movies--films that existed outside this myth of a “white bred America.” After a discussion of how Hollywood self-censorship under the Hays office tended to reinforce the white bread myth, Cripps looks at films made by and for minority audiences, particularly African American. Cripps discusses, for example, The Birth of A Race (1918), which was a response to the racist The Birth of a Nation that was intended to explore American race relations from an African-American perspective (132). In addition to explications of particular films, Cripps’ study argues that organizations such as the NAACP and others spearheaded campaigns which, in combination with minorities purchasing power, led Hollywood to revise its production code. Following such discussions about ethnic alternatives to mainstream Hollywood films, Cripps uses a similar socio-political lens to examine the role of Hollywood during the Second World War, and, finally, to chart the collapse of the studio system in the post-war years. In the end, Hollywood’s High Noon is a nuanced, well-argued study that would be useful for anyone interested in how Hollywood affected Americas multi-ethnic and economically diverse population. --Steve Belletto AU - Cripps, Thomas CY - Baltimore DA - 1997 KW - race motion pictures Hollywood law censorship and ratings censorship war Belletto, Steve +motion pictures and popular culture Hollywood, origins of censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship World War I, and motion pictures motion pictures, and World War I World War I race, and motion pictures motion pictures, and race LB - 1400 PB - Johns Hopkins University Press PY - 1997 ST - Hollywood's High Noon: Moviemaking and Society Before Television TI - Hollywood's High Noon: Moviemaking and Society Before Television ID - 228 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author writes that "this book gives a survey of color theories between 500 BC and 2000 AD." (1) Among the ideas explored is the limitations of language in commenting on color. Crone notes that "the number of simple, abstract, color terms is small. In their Basic Color Terms (1969), Brent Berlin and Paul Kay come to the rather unexpected (and not universally accepted [33]) conclusion that in all civilized languages there are exactly eleven: three achromatic (white, grey, black) and eight chromatic (red, yellow, green, blue, brown, purple, organe and pink). ... There is little purpose in enquiring into the physiological process by means of which we can categorize colors. We do not know nearly enough about the neurophysiology of color vision to be able to answer that question...." (236) AU - Crone, Robert A. CY - Dordrecht/Boston/London DA - 1999 KW - ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color non-USA non-USA, and color non-USA, and bibliographies color, and inadequacy of language color, in history color, and theory ref, book LB - 38630 PB - Kluwer Academic Publishers PY - 1999 ST - A History of Color: The Evolution of Theories of Lights and Color TI - A History of Color: The Evolution of Theories of Lights and Color ID - 3962 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The book is a collection of essays which study the significance of the consumption of images in different approaches to illuminate the interactions between media practices and tourism. Some chapters disclose the institutional power of the media to constraint tourist experience; some, on the contrary, present ethnographic examples of how tourists play active roles in negotiating the meaning of space. Also, there are other chapters which intend to indicate the close relationship between an entertainment industry and tourist development. The collection thus explores the connection between tourism and the media with diverse angles and provides stimulating ideas for thinking of the images and tourist imagination in the notion of consumption. This work is a volume in the Contemporary Geographies of Leisure, Tourism, and Mobility series. --Huai-Hsuan Chen AU - Crouch, David AU - Jackson, Rhona AU - Felix Thompson, eds. CY - New York DA - 2005 KW - tourism geography Chen, Huai-Hsuan photography and visual communication photography photography, and tourism tourism, and photography photography, and geography geography, and photography photography, and leisure LB - 33100 PB - Routledge PY - 2005 ST - The Media and the Tourist Imagination: Converging Cultures TI - The Media and the Tourist Imagination: Converging Cultures ID - 63 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book recounts the rise of James Gordon Bennett and the New York Herald, one of the pathbreaking newspapers of the nineteenth century, and one of the earlysuccessful penny papers. Bennett and other penny press editors, exploited new technology such as the telegraph and steam ships to gain an advantage on competitors. Bennett initiatived a form of investigative reporting in the sensation Robinson-Jewett murder case. Here was a paper that exploited sex and violence, used sensationalism, and helped create an early form of mass culture. Nationalism was also a strong theme in Bennett's paper. -- SV This is the most useful of the modern studies of James Gordon Bennett, the man often associated with the development of “modern journalism” in the form of the penny newspaper of the antebellum years. Bennett has been the subject of a great deal of scholarship over the years, beginning with several flattering biographies and histories that were penned by his colleagues and friends and continuing with a recent debate over the “mythology” of the penny press. Crouthamel here gives us a more objective and focused account of Bennett himself as a journalist. To a lesser degree, the book is an examination of the rise of a new means of mass communication, the cheap urban newspaper, supported by advertising and circulation rather than party patronage and displaying political independence rather than partisan ties. The penny press is described as a revolution and Bennett, in this account, is the leading revolutionary. Crouthamel spends the first couple of chapters describing Bennett’s innovations, including the aggressive gathering of news, the use of technology like the rotary press and the telegraph, hiring foreign correspondents, and similar developments that opened the way toward a more modern, timely, and event-centered journalism. Bennett was also, of course, known for unleashing a torrent of sensationalism and dramatic coverage of crime, scandal, and the mysteries of the new urban life. As Crouthamel makes clear, Bennett was largely reviled by his competitors and “respectable” New Yorkers because of this style, but other newspapers were quick to imitate, or at least adapt, some of the more profitable tactics. Regardless of how widely hated he was, there is no question that Bennett showed editors that journalism could be a lucrative enterprise. The bulk of the book, however, is more of an examination of Bennett’s editorial position, such as it was, on a wide variety of issues. The book, in fact, might be more aptly titled “Bennett’s Opinion on the Issues Affecting American Life,” which perhaps is due to Crouthamel’s track record as a political biographer of editors (he is the author of an early volume on James Watson Webb, who is maybe best known today for having attacked Bennett and beat him with a cane on several occasions). The New York Herald was one of the first independent newspapers, but it was by no means apolitical. Bennett outlined his strongly held if erratic opinions in paper and his large readership made him a force to be reckoned with, even though Crouthamel ultimately argues that people read the Herald despite, rather than because of, its editorial page. Bennett was non-partisan, but tended to support Democratic positions. This did not prevent him from endorsing Whigs and Republicans as they suited his purposes. However, it was Bennett’s strong pro-Southern ideology and his hatred of abolitionists that define him today. Crouthamel also outlines Bennett’s typical use of conspiracy theories to explain policies or developments that displeased him and his vacillation on complicated issues. He was, to say the least, “politically erratic and inconsistent.” Crouthamel’s book is even-handed and generally well-written if a little bit dry. He also is frank in his acknowledgement of his work’s limitation. Scholars who wish to examine the penny press have very little material aside from issues of the papers and Crouthamel’s argument is based almost entirely on his reading of the Herald. Bennett left very few personal papers and the Herald’s records are not available. This probably explains why it is easier to write about what was in the paper than why the paper was the way it was. Bennett’s political opinions, such as they were, are easily studied from microfilm copies of the Herald. Despite this, James Gordon Bennett and the Rise of the Popular Press is a good study of an innovative journalist and the editorial positions of the nation’s largest circulation newspaper of the mid-nineteenth century. If you are looking for more discussion of the penny press’s non-political content or its popularity with readers, a book like Andie Tucher’s Froth and Scum would be more useful. -- Rob Rabe AU - Crouthamel, James L. CY - Syracuse, NY DA - 1989 KW - nationalism steam power newspapers journalism news and journalism +nationalism and communication +books, periodicals, newspapers penny press +telegraph telegraph, and news Bennett, James Gordon news, and telegraph newspapers, and telegraph steam power, and newspapers news Rabe, Rob newspapers, and steam power telegraph telegraph, and penny press LB - 9650 PB - Syracuse University Press PY - 1989 ST - Bennett’s New York Herald and the Rise of the Popular Press TI - Bennett’s New York Herald and the Rise of the Popular Press ID - 2332 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This pamphlet provides an intelligent history of motion pictures censorship, both by state and local governments, and by the movie industry. Crowther see television bringing important changes in the entertainment patterns of Americans and changing the audience for motion pictures. TV took away the family audience and hence Hollywood had to come up with more engaging and mature films if it was to survive economically. Crowther explains the significance of the Miracle case. Several states -- Ohio, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts -- soon overturned their movie censorship laws. This work ends with a discussion of the merits and disadvantages of a classification system in which films are rated according to their appropriateness of youth and a discussion of the British classification system which rated films U, A, or X. Crowther notes that in Britain, already the X rating was being used a an advertising lure -- e.g., "the X-iest film on the screen." The author argues for a system in which parents decide what films their children will watch. He maintains that there was already enough information about movies (e.g., The Green Sheet, reviews, etc.) to give parents all they needed to know in making decisions. AU - Crowther, Bosley CY - New York DA - 1962 KW - Burstyn v. Wilson Burstyn, Joseph censorship and ratings motion pictures television motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and foreign films motion pictures, and television audiences motion pictures, and audiences law law, and film censorship classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification motion pictures, and First Amendment Miracle case LB - 36220 PB - Public Affairs Committee PY - 1962 ST - Movies and Censorship: Public Affairs Pamphlet No. 332 TI - Movies and Censorship: Public Affairs Pamphlet No. 332 ID - 3255 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is the fourth edition of a book originally published by Edward Cressy entitled Discoveries and Inventions of the Twentieth Century (1914?). This edition attempts to retain Cressy's original structure. Cressy began, as does this book, "the revival of water-power, economy in the use of fuel, modern steam engines, gas, oil, and petrol engines, and the generation and distribution of electricity." Then follow chapters on electrical lighting and heating, new processing in producing steel, changes in engineering workshops, and electrical furnaces. Then the work deals with refrigeration, and improvements in farming and raising livestock. Subsequent chapters cover railroads, electric traction, motor cars, ships, aircraft, radio and radar, photography, and atomic energy (in the 1955 edition). (Cressy had also considered "recent marvelous discoveries relating to radium, electricity, and matter.") AU - Crowther, J. G. [James Gerald] CY - New York DA - 1955 KW - atomic power photography steam power networks general studies +electricity +photography and visual communication +transportation railroads automobiles radar +radio refrigeration air travel atomic energy radium water-power steam engines engines, steam engines networks, electrical Cressy, Edward +aeronautics and space communication LB - 4770 OP - 1914? PB - E. P. Dutton & Company, Inc. PY - 1955 ST - Discoveries and Inventions of the 20th Century TI - Discoveries and Inventions of the 20th Century ID - 1864 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Cubitt, Sean CY - London and New York DA - 1991 KW - entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) entertainment, home magnetic recording time and timekeeping video cassettes time materials materials videotape magnetic tape home, and new media home home, and information technology information technology +television time VCRs information technology, and home video cassettes home entertainment home, and VCRs LB - 7520 PB - Routledge PY - 1991 ST - Timeshift: On video culture TI - Timeshift: On video culture ID - 2122 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 149-page book examines the invention of the typewriter and is informative about efforts to construct a workable machine before Christopher Sholes patented a successful device. About twenty different inventors in the United States, Great Britain, and France had tried to make writing machines before Sholes. “One might think that the technique of printing with types, widespread before 1500, would soon have suggested the possibility of writing with types. However, no such effort was made, so far as is know, for over two centuries, and no really successful effort for about four centuries. Even the steel pen, a humble enough device, was hailed as a marvelous improvement when it finally began to replace the quill, around 1800.” Pages 144-49 included a reprint of the 1875 trade catalog put out by Densmore, Yost & Co., entitled "The Typewriter." AU - Current, Richard N. CY - Urbana, IL; Arcadia, CA DA - 1954; c1988 KW - typewriters inventions inventors office, and new media office, and typewriters Sholes, Christopher +duplicating technologies writing writing, and typewriters women women, and typewriters +military communication military, and typewriters war office LB - 28620 PB - University of Illinois Press; Post-Era Books PY - 1988 ST - The Typewriter and the Men Who Made It TI - The Typewriter and the Men Who Made It ID - 400 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This abstract was provided by the author on his website at UCLA: "The last twenty-five years have seen major changes in the nature and scope of geographical information. This has happened in one way in society at large, where computers, satellites and global positioning systems have made geographical information more extensive, more detailed and more available. It has happened in another way within the university, where rapidly evolving geographic information systems have been touted as tools useful in a wide range of disciplines, tools that will resolve problems as different as the nature of global climate change and the routing of mail. In both settings the move from manual to computer-based systems is viewed as having a natural trajectory, from less powerful to more powerful technologies. These systems are held to be increasingly able to model and represent all that is important in geographical knowledge and behaviour. They are seen as fitting into and supporting traditional scientific and social practices and institutions. Digital Places: Living with Geographic Information Technologies shows that on each score the systems have been misunderstood and their impacts underestimated. By offering an understanding of Geographic Information Systems within the social, economic, legal, political and ethical contexts within which they exist, the author shows that there are substantial limits to their ability to represent the very objects and relationships, people and places, that many believe to be most important. Focusing on the ramifications of GIS usage, Digital Places shows that they are associated with far-reaching changes in the institutions in which they exist, and in the lives of those they touch. In the end they call for a complete rethinking of basic ideas, like privacy and intellectual property and the nature of scientific practice, that have underpinned public life for the last one hundred years." "Table of Contents Introduction Part I: The World According to Geographic Information Systems I. Reason and language in geographic information systems II. On space in geographic information systems III. Optical consistency, technologies of location, and the limits of representation Part II: Geographic Information Systems in Practice IV. On the roots of geographic information systems V. The reshaping of geographic practice VI. Who owns geographic information? VII. The digital individual in a visible world Part III: Living with Geographic Information Systems VIII. Place, practice, and the ethics of complex systems IX. Beyond PaleoGIS." AU - Curry, Michael CY - London DA - 1998 KW - computers surveillance computers and the Internet geography aeronautics and space communication satellites satellites, and GPS global positioning systems law satellites, and privacy privacy, and GPS intellectual property computers, and intellectual property copyright law, and intellectual property satellites, and cartography cartography, and satellites law law, and privacy law, and satellites digital media privacy computers global communication LB - 33660 PB - Routledge PY - 1998 ST - Digital places: Living with geographic information technologies TI - Digital places: Living with geographic information technologies ID - 3005 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Michael Curtain’s Redeeming the Wasteland: Television Documentary and Cold War Politics 1995) takes its title from FCC chair Newton N. Minow’s famous 1961 speech in which he called television “a vast wasteland.” Partly as a reaction to Minow’s charge, in the early 1960s the television industry developed many documentaries that it saw as serving the public good. By first fitting the television industry into a distinct cultural and political climate and then performing close readings of various Cold War television documentaries, Curtain shows that such documentaries were carefully constructed to garner public support for the governments aggressive stance on foreign policy. Curtain writes: “This book is . . . about a distinctive and complicated moment when political and corporate leaders as well as network officials embraced the television documentary in an explicit attempt to mobilize public opinion behind a more activist foreign policy.” (3) In order to prove this assertion, Curtain does not organize his book chronologically, but rather around a series of relationships--such as, for example, mass media and “the national imaginary,” and government institutions and broadcasters. (11) Because the book operates relationally, it is more theoretical than a historical work that sticks to a linear narrative, but in the end Curtains arguments are quite convincing. Following chapter one, in which Curtain introduces the general climate of New Frontier America, he focuses his discussion on the results of industry-imposed television reform; namely, documentaries that were designed to educate the public against the Communist menace. In chapter two, Curtain focuses on specific documentaries such as “Who Goes There? A Primer on Communism” and “The Death of Stalin” to finally abstract key characteristics that relate to U.S. foreign policy: “In each of these programs the central narrative conflict revolves around the Communist challenge to the Free World.” (40) By analyzing particular aspects of these documentaries (such as editing technique and angle-choice), Curtain demonstrates that many television documentaries in the early 1960s served as visual arguments for the opposition of Communism worldwide. After analyzing how particular documentaries worked, Curtain expands his discussion to think about how American documentaries functioned on a global scale. Noting the advent of such new communication technologies as the transistor and the communications satellite, Curtain argues that “many government and broadcast executives considered documentary to be one of the most promising ways to use television to bring together the community of the Free World.” (86) Television documentary, then, not only functioned to strengthen opposition to Communism in the United States, but was also used to yoke other countries into a ideological union with America. In the chapters in which Curtain is not analyzing particular documentaries, he demonstrates how such documentaries were related to television news in general. Through a discussion of the three networks--NBC, ABC, CBS--Curtain shows that they created a discourse of objectivity so that the analyses of television news programs--and, by extension, their longer documentaries--were rarely challenged by the public (150). Despite the fact that challenges were rare because “communists and foreigners were specifically denied standing before the FCC,” Curtain does not think that television documentaries of the early 1960s were necessarily homogenous. He writes: “Although none of these efforts produced fundamentally radical critiques of the status quo, they do point to the fact that even though the genre may have been constrained by powerful economic and institutional forces, the programs were far less predictable than one might imagine.” (151) Curtains study is an important supplement to books such as William Boddy's Fifties Television: The Industry and Its Critics (1990) because it focuses on documentaries, a genre that enjoyed a relatively large amount of air time in the 1960s, but which has subsequently received little scholarly attention. Curtain also sees his book as augmenting studies of the Cold War period that simply document changes in, for example, gender roles--by examining how television networks purposively shifted their programming in the early 1960s, Curtain attempts to get at how such changes came about, an attempt that is on the whole successful. Redeeming the Wasteland is useful for anyone who is interested in the specific ways in which the privately-owned television industry produced cultural documents designed explicitly to stir public support for governmental policies. The strength of Curtains book is that he demonstrates how such a relationship worked through close analysis of particular programs, which he then links to larger cultural, economic, and political realties. --Steve Belletto AU - Curtain, Michael CY - New Brunswick, NJ DA - 1995 KW - nationalism corporations Kennedy, John F. corporations corporations corporations transistors integrated circuits television, and values presidents, and new media values Kennedy administration journalism satellites Cold War news and journalism war Belletto, Steve television television, and documentaries Cold War, and television television, and Cold War news, and television television, and news values, and television ABC NBC CBS nationalism and communication nationalism, and documentaries nationalism, and television television, and nationalism Kennedy, John F., and television aeronautics and space communication satellites, and television television, and satellites satellites, and nationalism nationalism, and satellites transistors satellites, and documentaries Kennedy administration, and satellites values news LB - 1410 PB - Rutgers University Press PY - 1995 ST - Redeeming the Wasteland: Television Documentary and Cold War Politics TI - Redeeming the Wasteland: Television Documentary and Cold War Politics ID - 229 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - James Curtis uses well known, widely circulated photographs by four FSA photographers--Walker Evans, Dorothea Lange, Arthur Rothstein, and Russell Lee--to address the topic of manipulation in FSA photography. Originally created as part of the New Deal program to alleviate rural poverty, the Resettlement Administration, and its successor the Farm Security Administration, produced images of rural America during the Great Depression that were often perceived as factual documents of the era. Consequently, the images were effectively used as powerful tools for creating social awareness and affecting social change due to their dynamic compositions and expressive statements. In this fine study, Curtis challenges the notion of FSA photographs as realistic and truthful documents of the Depression, and provides visual evidence showing how the photographers deliberately posed and arranged their subjects and surroundings to promote and publicize New Deal relief efforts. Moreover, Curtis emphasizes that Roy Stryker and the photographers sought to convey a specific idea of what America should look like during the Depression, resulting in socially constructed, highly contrived depictions of reality. -Michele Kroll AU - Curtis, James CY - Philadelphia DA - 1989 KW - reform Roosevelt, Franklin D. photography Kroll, Michele +photography and visual communication photography, documentary photography, and New Deal Roosevelt, Franklin, and photography presidents, and new media Evans, Walker Lange, Dorothea Rothstein, Arthur Lee, Russell photography, and reform reform, and photography Roosevelt, Franklin administration LB - 28800 PB - Temple University Press PY - 1989 ST - Mind’s Eye, Mind’s Truth: FSA Photography Reconsidered TI - Mind’s Eye, Mind’s Truth: FSA Photography Reconsidered ID - 2629 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This anthology consists of articles that appeared in Technology & Culture between 1963 and 1996. Included in this collection are: Cutcliffe and Reynolds’ introduction, “Technology in American Context”; John G. Burke, “Bursting Boilers and the Federal Power”; Gail Cooper, “Custom Design, Engineering Guarantees, and Unpatentable Data: The Air Conditioning Industry, 1902-1935"; Ruth Schwartz Cowan, “The ‘Industrial Revolution’ in the Home: Household Technology and Social Change in the 20th Century”; Claude S. Fisher, “‘Touch Someone’: The Telephone Industry Discovers Sociability”; Richard F. Hirsh and Adam H. Serchuk, “Momentum Shifts in the American Electric Utility System: Catastrophic Change -- or No Change at All?”; Reese V. Jenkins, “Technology and the Market: George Eastman and the Origins of Mass Amateur Photography”; Bruce Seely, “Research, Engineering, and Science in American Engineering Colleges, 1900-1960"; George Wise, “A New Role for Professional Scientists in Industry: Industrial Research at General Electric, 1900-1916.” AU - Cutcliffe, Stephen H., and Terry S. Reynolds, eds. CY - Chicago DA - 1997 KW - technology R & D entertainment entertainment, home photography +military communication values values preservation home entertainment history, and new media materials non-USA home, and new media home science progress home, and information technology information technology history Germany general studies technology and society history, and technology progress, and technology air conditioning information technology and home telephones electricity +photography and visual communication research and development General Electric Company scientific research and government support materials LB - 350 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1997 ST - Technology & American History: A Historical Anthology from Technology & Culture TI - Technology & American History: A Historical Anthology from Technology & Culture ID - 1431 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work provides a comprehensive history of public relations. The author, who taught many years at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, was one of the pioneers in public relations education and in writing the history of this field. This large work attempts to be a comprehensive history of the field. It discusses public relations in the context of various media. AU - Cutlip, Scott M. CY - Hillsdale, NJ DA - 1994 KW - advertising and public relations propaganda advertising public relations advertising context +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and public relations public relations public relations, and motion pictures Bernays, Edward Lee, Ivy context, and public relations propaganda propaganda, and public relations public relations, and propaganda LB - 13270 PB - Lawrence Erlbaum Associates PY - 1994 ST - The Unseen Power: Public Relations. A History TI - The Unseen Power: Public Relations. A History ID - 499 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The second edition of this unannotated bibliography has 5,949 entries. One section of this work deals with "Communications, Tools, and Media," and covers works dealing with film, newspapers, books, magazines, radio, television, and advertising as they are related to public relations. Another section covers public relations and the military. Cutlip was one of the early advocates of studying public relations as both a profession and as a social force in American culture. AU - Cutlip, Scott M., comp. CY - Madison and Milwaukee DA - 1957, 1965 KW - bibliographies bibliographies, and public relations advertising and public relations motion pictures, and public relations public relations radio radio, and public relations television television, and public relations books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and public relations books, and public relations magazines, and public relations advertising newspapers books magazines motion pictures news news and journalism LB - 28760 PB - University of Wisconsin Press PY - 1957 ST - A Public Relations Bibliography TI - A Public Relations Bibliography ID - 2625 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This informative survey is good on how such theorists as John Dewey, Charles Cooley, Robert Park, Harold Innis and Marshall McLuhan viewed communication as well as on individual media such as the telegraph, wireless, and television. The telegraph, movies and radio wrought significant changes in American society after their introduction. Initially, the public enthusiastically welcomed each invention as beneficial to society. Gradually, concern developed regarding the cultural influence each medium had, especially the supremacy of commercialism and its consequent determination of media content. Also, control of each medium by a limited number of corporations caused worry among some libertarians, scholars and social activists. Later, philosophers and sociologists would assess the effects of each medium, would analyze the process of communication via mass media and would theorize about the possible impact of new media on society. The study of mass communications would benefit researchers, who learned to refine their techniques and to evaluate the variety of factors that affected recipients of messages from the mass media. – James Landers AU - Czitron, Daniel CY - Chapel Hill DA - 1982 KW - preservation history, and new media non-USA history +telephones +telegraph +television Innis, Harold McLuhan, Marshall Park, Robert Cooley, Charles Dewey, John general studies global village global communication +radio wireless communication +motion pictures Landers, James context motion pictures, and history context, and new media context, and theory history, break with LB - 5190 PB - University of North Carolina Press PY - 1982 ST - Media and the American Mind: From Morse to McLuhan TI - Media and the American Mind: From Morse to McLuhan ID - 1906 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume, for 1969, was apparently the last published in this series. It has a great deal of information about the motion picture industry including media relations, overseas markets, television, and more. AU - Daily, Film and Television CY - New York DA - 1969 ET - 51st KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda advertising NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture MPAA, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and origin Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and appeals process voluntarism MPAA, and voluntarism public relations public relations, and rating system (U. S.) public relations, and MPAA MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and MPAA MPAA, and international markets ref, industry publication trade publication LB - 26480 PB - Film and Television Daily PY - 1969 ST - The 1969 Film Daily Year Book of Motion Pictures TI - The 1969 Film Daily Year Book of Motion Pictures ID - 1227 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This Yearbook as a great deal of information about the motion picture industry -- the rating system, international markets, agents and other public relations data. AU - Daily, Film and Television CY - New York DA - 1966 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations Valenti, Jack References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda advertising NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture MPAA, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and origin Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and appeals process voluntarism MPAA, and voluntarism public relations public relations, and rating system (U. S.) public relations, and MPAA MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and MPAA MPAA, and international markets ref, industry publication trade publication statistics LB - 26550 PB - np PY - 1966 ST - The 1966 Film Daily Yearbook TI - The 1966 Film Daily Yearbook ID - 1230 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume in the Payne Fund Studies was an early effort to teach media literacy -- in respect of motion pictures -- to high school students. He wanted the public to be educated about film’s power. As an art form cinema was comparable to drama, literature, painting, and music, “too fine an instrument to be used only for passing entertainment or to kill time.” The public needed to learn how to discriminate between good and bad films just as they might discern the difference between great literature and pulp fiction: “to enjoy with understanding,” as he put it. To that end, he prepared a manual, How To Appreciate Motion Pictures (1933), to help high school students. It covered the gamut of film making, from cameras, to acting , directing, and settings. He ended with controversial recommendations. One advocated doing away with the star system and celebrity culture that was growing up around it. Another called for creating a “new point of view regarding the place of motion pictures in our scheme of living,” so that cinema could better speak to such problems as abolishing war, crime and punishment, “the more satisfactory distribution of wealth,” and understanding democratic government. He challenged Hollywood to produce movies for adults and different films for children. AU - Dale, Edgar CY - New York DA - 1933 KW - education censorship and ratings children audiences +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and social science media literacy, and motion pictures media literacy motion pictures, and critics Payne Fund Studies education, and motion pictures children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences children, and media LB - 13530 PB - Macmillan Company PY - 1933 ST - How To Appreciate Motion Pictures: A Manual of Motion-Picture Criticism Prepared for High-School Students TI - How To Appreciate Motion Pictures: A Manual of Motion-Picture Criticism Prepared for High-School Students ID - 523 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume in the Payne Fund Studies is an n early effort to document attendance of motion pictures by children. In Children’s Attendance at Motion Pictures (1935), Dale argued that the number of children attending the movies was much greater than the industry acknowledged. He called on parents to be more active. Preferably they should attend films with their children, and failing that, they should at least help them interpret what they had seen. In 1929-1930, he had used Columbus, Ohio as a case study, and also sent out more than 50,000 questionnaires to collect movie attendance data on school children in fifty Ohio communities and several localities in one North Dakota county. From that data, he extrapolated that throughout the United States, perhaps a third of motion pictures audiences were made up of youth under the age of twenty-one, and that parents were accompanying their children to the theaters less and less frequently. Because children lacked adult experience, they were unable to make mature judgments about what they watched, and could “only acquiesce” in what they had seen. AU - Dale, Edgar CY - New York DA - 1935 KW - education censorship and ratings children audiences motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and social science media literacy, and motion pictures media literacy motion pictures, and critics Payne Fund Studies education, and motion pictures children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences children, and media LB - 13540 PB - Macmillan Company PY - 1935 ST - Children's Attendance at Motion Pictures TI - Children's Attendance at Motion Pictures ID - 524 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume in the Payne Fund Studies was an early attempt to analyze the content of motion pictures. Dale analyzed several hundred feature films released at five-year intervals between 1920 and 1930. His method involved using plot summaries in Harrison Reports; he actually watched 115 of these pictures, and selected forty to study in detail. The social values embedded in movies worried him. In The Content of Motion Pictures (1935), he analyzed about 1,500 movies between 1920 and 1930, and discovered that sex, love, and crime dominated. Half the movies that treated love emphasized sex. The considerations of problems confronting singles over thirty or the difficulties encountered in marriage were so unsatisfactory that Dale doubted if young people gained any insight to what that they might later encounter. Rarely did films explain why people turned to crime -- its causes and remedies were neglected. Criminals sprang “Minerva-like...from the head of Jupiter” in the movies, and were not always shown to be punished. In an age of prohibition, alcohol was featured in seventy-five percent of the films, and tobacco was used in almost ninety percent of the pictures. Movies that dealt with history, travel, or children’s themes accounted for only a minuscule percentage of the pictures that Dale studied. AU - Dale, Edgar CY - New York DA - 1935 KW - education censorship and ratings children audiences +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and social science media literacy, and motion pictures media literacy motion pictures, and critics Payne Fund Studies education, and motion pictures children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences motion pictures, and content children, and media LB - 13550 PB - Macmillan PY - 1935 ST - The Content of Motion Pictures T2 - Payne Fund Studies TI - The Content of Motion Pictures ID - 525 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This biography of Lyndon B. Johnson has information about Jack Valenti, who after leaving the Johnson administration in 1966, became president of the Motion Picture Association of America. AU - Dallek, Robert CY - New York DA - 1998 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti biography LB - 19670 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1998 ST - Flawed Giant: Lyndon Johnson and His Times, 1961-1973 TI - Flawed Giant: Lyndon Johnson and His Times, 1961-1973 ID - 801 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work provides an excellent introduction to the history and development of magnetic recording, a field that by the end of the twentieth century had become a $100 billion industry employing a half million people. The book is organized around three broad areas: audio recording which constituted magnetic recording from 1898 to the end of World War II; video recording, which began in the early 1950s; and data recording, which also began to take form during the early 1950s. The editors of this volume maintain that only four generic design formats, each pioneered 30 to 60 years prior to this books appearance (1999), have endured over the long-term. They are: 1) the Magnetophon audio recorder developed in Germany during the 1930s and 1940s, and which used magnetically coated plastic tape. It created the format for later magnetic tape recorders that used stationary heads. 2) The quadruplex video recorder, introduced by Ampex in 1956, set the standard for all video recorders that used heads that scanned moving tape. 3) The random access method of accounting and control (RAMAC) disk file, developed by IBM also in 1956. This development followed the appearance of electronic computers and it met an urgent need for data storage devices with much more rapid access than tape. The RAMAC set the format for “hard” disk drives. 4) The diskette, which IBM developed in the late 1960s which permitted random access to any recorded track and which became a removable, low-cost storage apparatus. This invention provided the basic format for all later “floppy” disk drives. The creators of this volume predict that in the future digital magnetic recording will increase, that the storage capacity on magnetic media of all kinds will continue to grow, and that magnetic recording in some areas will be challenged by optical disk recording – e.g., audio compact discs (CDs), CD-ROMs, and DVDs (digital versatile disks). This work has more than 100 illustrations and more than 90 photographs. AU - Daniel, Eric D. AU - Mee, C. Denis AU - Mark H. Clark, eds. CY - New York DA - 1999 KW - illustrations computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) corporations corporations corporations corporations discs, compact data storage magnetic recording video cassettes preservation optical disks archives materials materials videotape magnetic tape digitization computers compact discs (CDs) CDs non-USA +sound recording +television +radio +computers and the Internet magnetic recording sound recording, and magnetic tape video recording magnetic recording, and video magnetic recording, and sound magnetic recording, and data storage history, and new media data storage, and magnetic recording optical disk recording optical disk recording, and CDs optical disk recording, and CD-ROMs optical disk recording, and DVDs digital versatile disks DVDs CD-ROMs compact discs (CDs) computers, and floppy disks computers, and data storage computers, and hard drives Magnetophon audio recorder sound recording, and Magnetophon VCRs VCRs, and quadruplex video recorder RAMAC Random Access Method of Accounting and Control (RAMAC) sound recording, and magnetic tape sound recording, and wire sound recording, and steel tape Poulsen, Valdemar sound recording, and Valdemar Poulsen sound recording, and Oberlin Smith Smith, Oberlin Pfleumer, Fritz, and tape recording sound recording, and Fritz Pfleumer sound recording, and IBM computers, and IBM IBM BASF, and sound recording sound recording, and BASF Germany, and sound recording Germany Austria Austria, and sound recording Ampex, and sound recording video recording, origins Betamax Sony Corporation VCRs, and VHS video cassette recorders (VCRs), and VHS video cassettes cassettes, video digital media digital audio recording digital video recording television, and magnetic recording television, and videotape quadruplex recorders RCA Telegraphone sound recording, and Telegraphone Video Home System illustrations digitization, and magnetic recording +information storage illustrations history materials LB - 12660 PB - IEEE Press PY - 1999 ST - Magnetic Recording: The First 100 Years TI - Magnetic Recording: The First 100 Years ID - 2612 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Robert Darnton argues that to understand the attitudes that lead to the French revolution, we must not just look at canonical philosophical works (like those written by Rousseau), but we must also examine the bestsellers that were banned by the government, the books that the public was actually reading. By examining three banned best-sellers in depth -- Therese philosophie, L’An 2440, and Anecdotes sur Mme la comtesse du Barry -- he is able to detail the purposes each served the general public. Therese could also be read as a contraception manual and a book that promoted masturbation at a time when it was thought to cause disease. L’An 2440 provided an indictment of the condition of eighteenth-century France through a futuristic story set in 2440. It focused on the power of books and the printed word. Anecdotes fed the public’s appetite for gossip; it was a “true” story of Louis XV’s mistress and her ability to arouse the impotent king. Anecdotes was similar to the National Enquirer of today, providing scandalous stories about actresses and political luminaries that people eagerly devour. Although the banned bestsellers were powerful, they did not cause the revolution, Darnton argues. They were part of a larger movement; they caused the general public to lose faith in the monarchy, by portraying Louis XV and XVI as buffoons, and the government as corrupt. Ultimately, it is difficult for us to understand the power books had in the 1700s, Darnton says, because we have television, movies, and radio -- media that did not exist during the French revolution. Darnton, who is a student of both the French Revolution and also the history of the book, examines here a genre of book that provides insight into French cultural history prior to the Revolution. He also looks at the book during this period as a communication system. The producing, distributing, and consuming books can be viewed as a "communications circuit which runs from author to reader -- and ultimately back to the author again." -Hallie Lieberman AU - Darnton, Robert CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - sexuality law censorship and ratings non-USA pornography books, periodicals, newspapers censorship France censorship, France French Revolution pornography pornography, and France France, and pornography non-USA, and France sexuality, and France values values, and sexuality Lieberman, Hallie LB - 11610 PB - W. W. Norton and Company PY - 1995 ST - The Forbidden Bestsellers of Pre-Revolutionary France TI - The Forbidden Bestsellers of Pre-Revolutionary France ID - 12 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Randall Davidson traces the history of Wisconsin Public Radio from 1909 to 1979. The network has its origins in a license for the experimental radio broadcaster 9XM that was granted to a professor in the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s electrical engineering department, Edward Bennett, in 1914. This frequency was later “borrowed” by a professor in the physics department, Earle M. Terry, for experiments with “wireless telegraphy” (p. 8). Terry would lead the station throughout its early years as it continued to be housed within the physics department. Davidson focuses on the individuals that were influential in the development of the station in the early and mid-1900s, as well as the development and expansion of its programming. Early broadcasts of 9XM included weather reports aimed helping rural farmers plan their crop production. In 1922, the station switched to the call letters WHA. Early radio started as a wireless method to transmit telegraph messages. There was increasing interest in wireless transmission after the sinking of the Titanic. The first radio broadcasters, such as 9XM at the University of Wisconsin, started out sending “point-to-point” telegraphic messages to experiment with the technology. These transmissions could then be overheard by anyone between the two points who had a radio receiver. This eventually developed into the idea of using the technology to broadcast to the general public. The station’s educational focus included extension and outreach to the state’s rural residents with the notion of making the university accessible to listeners across the state through the “Wisconsin Idea.” Notably Davidson debunks the myth that 9XM/WHA is the “oldest” radio broadcaster in the United States and concludes that WHA is in fact the second “oldest” station in the United States. However he does find that it is the oldest educational radio station in the country. --Jill Hopke AU - Davidson, Randall CY - Madison, WI DA - 2006 KW - wireless communication Hopke, Jill radio radio, and WHA radio, public radio, and Wisconsin Public Radio public radio, and origins education radio, and education education, and radio democracy democracy, and radio radio, and democracy radio, and wireless wireless, and Titanic wireless LB - 33020 PB - University of Wisconsin Press PY - 2006 ST - 9XM Talking: WHA Radio and the Wisconsin Idea TI - 9XM Talking: WHA Radio and the Wisconsin Idea ID - 48 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this autobiography, Bette Davis discusses her film career and such movies as Beyond the Forest, a film based on a 1948, that dealt with abortion, a topic then forbidden under the motion picture Production Code. AU - Davis, Bette CY - New York DA - [1962] KW - motion pictures censorship and ratings motion pictures, and abortion Davis, Bette Warner Bros. LB - 36570 PB - Putnam ST - Lonely Life: An Autobiography TI - Lonely Life: An Autobiography ID - 3290 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 1886 history of paper was reprinted in Arno Press’s Technology and Society series. This work is informative on the technology and processes of nineteenth-century paper making. AU - Davis, Charles Thomas CY - Philadelphia; New York DA - 1886; 1972 KW - materials paper paper, history of materials paper, and wood pulp paper, and rags paper, and patents paper, and cellulose cellulose, and paper LB - 2300 PB - Henry Carey Baird & Co.; Arno Press PY - 1972 ST - The Manufacture of Paper: Being a Description of the Various Processes for the Fabrication, Coloring, and Finishing of Every Kind of Paper.... TI - The Manufacture of Paper: Being a Description of the Various Processes for the Fabrication, Coloring, and Finishing of Every Kind of Paper.... ID - 318 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 168-page work continues the earlier Electrical and Electronic Technologies which covered events up to 1900. This work deals with the first four decades of the twentieth century. Each chapter treats a decade and within each chapter there are brief descriptions by year of major inventors and innovations. Two appendices follow. One is an “Index to Vacuum Tubes”; the other is an “Index to Radio Stations.” AU - Davis, Henry B. O. CY - Metuchen, N. J. and London DA - 1983 KW - U. S. Navy R & D computers tape recording, magnetic corporations corporations corporations corporations corporations corporations FM radio Federal Communications Commission (FCC) cathode rays magnetic recording photography time and timekeeping References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps shortwave radio networks research and development war lighting inventions innovation government materials materials magnetic tape General Electric Company Company regulation electronic media timekeeping, and clocks war non-USA Chronologies timelines inventors aeronautics and space communication microphones radar radio radio, amateur Alexanderson, Ernst F. W. alternators American Radio Relay League AT&T amplifiers radio, FM frequency modulation (FM radio) Armstrong, Edwin vacuum tubes Baird, John Logie batteries Bell Laboratories broadcasting, foreign broadcasting, chain cable cable, coaxial cable, submarine telegraph telephones cable, telegraph telegraph, cable cathode ray tubes circuits television television, and color communication links headphones computers conferences De Forest, Lee crystals Edison, Thomas electricity timekeeping, electric clocks typewriters, and electric motors electric motors motors, electric facsimile duplicating technologies sound recording FCC Farnsworth, Philo T. Fessenden, Reginald General Electric Company lighting, electric electric lighting iconoscope instrumentation lamps, incandescent Marconi, Guglielmo NBC military communication oscillators patents photography and visual communication photography, photo transmission photo transmission video phones telephones, and video phones RCA transportation transportation, and electrification railroads railroads, and electrification networks, electrical receivers tape recording sound recording, and magnetic tape sound recording, and wire remote control scanning Sarnoff, David radio, shortwave shortwave radio magnetic tape recording public address systems microwaves television, and origins transmitters tubes U. S. Navy, and communication communication, and U.S. Navy Western Electric Company wireless communication wireless installations X-rays Zworykin, Vladimir reference works electronics broadcasting timekeeping timekeeping, and clocks computers and the Internet materials typewriters censorship and ratings LB - 12200 PB - Scarecrow Press, Inc. PY - 1983 ST - Electrical and Electronic Technologies: A Chronology of Events and Inventors from 1900 to 1940 TI - Electrical and Electronic Technologies: A Chronology of Events and Inventors from 1900 to 1940 ID - 2567 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 1965 University of Iowa Ph. D. thesis (Department of Speech and Dramatic Art) is here republished by Arno Press. The author is interested in people "suspicious of ... new influences" who "predicted that the mass media would damage culture, subvert values, and overturn respected institutions. Innovation, they said, would cause the evils society most feared. The effects of motion pictures, radio, and television, both real and predicted, have been the cause for lively and persistent controversy for some six decades." AU - Davis, Robert Edward CY - New York DA - (1965), 1976 KW - technology television, and values values motion pictures critics values technology and society theses Ph.D. thesis values, and new media +motion pictures and popular culture +television +radio values, and motion pictures values, and radio values, and television LB - 2650 PB - Arno Press PY - 1976 ST - Response to Innovation: A Study of Popular Argument About New Mass Media TI - Response to Innovation: A Study of Popular Argument About New Mass Media ID - 353 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 844-page biographical dictionary contains almost 1,300 names. The overwhelming majority are white, European and North American males. An effort was made to include important Asian, African Americans, and women. The work has three indexes -- by subject area, by topic, and by name. Entries usually have brief suggestions for further reading. AU - Day, Lance and Ian McNeil CY - London and New York DA - 1996 KW - R & D computers post office Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Asia photography time and timekeeping References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps print fiber optics research and development war materials materials fiber optics electronic media timekeeping, and clocks war non-USA Biography biographical dictionaries biography, dictionaries reference works +aeronautics and space communication +transportation automobiles broadcasting engineering, civil +electricity canals information technology electronics engineering paper printing +motion pictures +photography and visual communication photography optical fibers railroads public utilities +sound recording engines, steam engines, combustion telecommunications +military communication timekeeping clocks timekeeping, and clocks China celluloid +computers +computers and the Internet electronics engines photography, lenses postal service mail, air photolithography satellites +telegraph +telephones +television typesetting Linotype timekeeping, and watches X-rays +military communication airmail LB - 12210 PB - Routledge Reference PY - 1996 ST - Biographical Dictionary of the History of Technology TI - Biographical Dictionary of the History of Technology ID - 2568 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The authors write that this "book is about the festive viewing of television. It is about those historic occasions–mostly occasions of state–that are televised as they take place and transfix a nation or the world. They include epic contests of politics and sports, charismatic missions, and the rites of passage of the great–what we call Contests, Conquests, and Coronations. In spite of the differences among them, events such as the Olympic Games, Anwar el-Sadat’s journey to Jerusalem, and the funeral of John F. Kennedy have given shape to a new narrative genre that employs the unique potential of the electronic media to command attention universally and simultaneously in order to tell a primordial story about current affairs. These are events that hang a halo over the television set and transform the viewing experience. We call them collectively ‘media events,’ a term we wish to redeem from its pejorative connotations. Alternatively, we might have ‘television ceremonies,’ or ‘festive television,’ or even ‘cultural performances’.... These telecasts share a large number of common attributes which we shall attempt to identify. Audiences recognize them as an invitation–even a command–to stop their daily routines and join in a holiday experience. If festive viewing is to ordinary viewing what holidays are to the everyday, these events are the high holidays of mass communication. Conceptually speaking, this book is an attempt to bring the anthropology of ceremony ... to bear on the process of mass communication.” AU - Dayan, Daniel and Elihu Katz CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1992 KW - nationalism preservation history, and new media community democracy civil liberties freedom values history +television values and society civil religion, and television history, and television +nationalism and communication democracy and media television, and democracy nationalism, and television television, and nationalism nationalism, and civil religion television, and civil religion LB - 6690 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1992 ST - Media Events: The Live Broadcasting of History TI - Media Events: The Live Broadcasting of History ID - 2047 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The text of this brief book runs 129 pages. There are not notes but there are sidebars, a Glossary, short bibliography, and an Index. The work is broken into seven chapters, each devoted to a leading innovator in the field of motion pictures: W. K. L. Dickson and the Kinetograph; Auguste and Louis Lumiere; Lee de Forest and Optical Sound; Herbert Kalmus and Technicolor; Linwood Dunn and the Optical Printer; Mike Tode and Todd-AO; and Garret Brown and the Steadicam. The chapter on Klamus (63-75) notes that "Although almost every color movie made between 1925 and 1950 used Technicolor, these were only 12 percent of the total number of Hollywood films made during that time. Even into the 1960s, at least half of all movies were still short in black and white. Hollywood did not convert entirely to color until the advent of color television made it a competitive necessity. By 1970, 94 percent of American feature films were made in color, and today [2004] it costs more to film in black and white than it does to use color." (75) AU - De Angelis, Gina CY - Minneapolis DA - 2004 KW - Lumiére, Louis ref, secondary color motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures Kalmus, Herbert color, and Herbert Kalmus de Forest, Lee Dunn, Linwood Garrett Brown Lumiere, Auguste Lumiére, Louis Dickson, W. K. L. cameras cameras, and portable cameras, and steadicam kinetograph kinetoscope Technicolor color, and Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor Technicolor, and Herbert Kalmus motion pictures, and number of color movies LB - 40830 PB - Oliver Press, Inc. PY - 2004 ST - Motion Pictures: Making Cinema Magic TI - Motion Pictures: Making Cinema Magic ID - 4181 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - De Forest, Lee CY - New York DA - 1942 KW - materials materials +television vacuum tubes television, and history of television, and origins television, and vacuum tubes LB - 10690 PB - Dial PY - 1942 ST - Television: Today and Tomorrow TI - Television: Today and Tomorrow ID - 2432 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author writes: "In historical perspective, it can be remarked that under Justice Brennan's leadership the Supreme Court interpreted the First Amendment's guarantees of speech and press in ways that permitted authors and artists, their publishers and promoters, to communicate on the subjects of sex, religion, politics, and anything else in almost limitless ways -- much as the Court (equally controversially, and again following Brennan's lead) privileged this xiii/xiv country's newspaper press. Here admittedly is a degree of freedom or license that many people prefer to deny themselves and others. The liberty asserted by American artists and writers is nothing less than the right to upset the basic assumptions upon which our family, social, political, religious, and cultural life is based." (xiii-xiv) AU - De Grazia, Edward CY - New York DA - c1992 KW - U. S. Supreme Court self-regulation Production Code Supreme Court (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) sexuality pornography values context values religion law censorship and ratings censorship obscenity context, and obscenity censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and obscenity Supreme Court (U. S.), and obscenity obscenity, and Production Code, and decline of censorship, and literature censorship, and Random House censorship, and Ulysses +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures, LB - 16660 PB - Random House PY - 1992 ST - Girls Lean Back Everywhere: The Law of Obscenity and the Assault on Genius TI - Girls Lean Back Everywhere: The Law of Obscenity and the Assault on Genius ID - 615 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is divided into two parts. The first discusses motion picture censorship and legal/constitutional developments that led to the breakdown of regulation and protection under the First Amendment. The second part then discusses specific films that were important in censorship battles. This solid, informative book is an excellent reference for those interested in learning about benchmark cases in motion picture censorship. The individual cases involving specific films are discussed in some detail. --SV Motion picture, no less than literature and art, are means for the circulation of ideas and for the carrying out of the nation’s dialogue. And yet, the authors observe, the movies were censored by police, prosecutors, customs officials, and all sorts of city, state boards and federal censors; by mayors, governors, fire, safety and health commissioners, educators and librarians as well. For much of the twentieth century – certainly during the first two-thirds of it – “people were prevented from seeing on the movie screen what was happening around them, unless the censors considered it safe. The censorship interfered with the communication of political as well as sexual information and ideas. Movie critical of the courts or the police were frequently condemned.” (xvi) In this book, the author use “censorship” to mean “ any government or industry practice that has interfered with or changed the content of the movies as determined by its creators – from criminal prosecutions and governmental censor boards to private industry self-regulation, including war-time “voluntary cooperation” with the military.” (xvii-xviii) --Amy Chu AU - De Grazia, Edward AU - Newman, Roger K. CY - New York DA - 1982 KW - U. S. Supreme Court self-regulation Roth case (1957) Production Code Burstyn v. Wilson Burstyn, Joseph Miller v. California values Supreme Court (U. S.) religion Production Code (motion pictures) First Amendment freedom law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures, and Supreme Court (U. S.) Mutual case (1915) Miracle case Roth v. U. S. (1957) Miller case motion pictures, and critics law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law motion pictures, and freedom motion pictures, and morality motion pictures, and First Amendment First Amendment, and motion pictures Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code, and decline of Chu, Amy LB - 12780 PB - R. R. Bowker Company PY - 1982 ST - Banned Films: Movies, Censors and the First Amendment TI - Banned Films: Movies, Censors and the First Amendment ID - 456 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - These essays came from a conference on ‘The Cinematic Apparatus’ held in February, 1978, by the Center for Twentieth Century Studies of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. The conference coordinating committee included David Bordwell, Kristin Thompson, and Douglas Gomery. The essays in this volume are of mixed value. Among the best chapters of a historical nature are those by Peter Wollen (“Cinema and Technology: A Historical Overview”); Dudley Andrew (“The Post-War Struggle for color” [in France]); and Kristin Thompson (“Implications of the Cel Animation Technique”). Many other papers are more theoretical than historical. AU - De Lauretis, Teresa and Stephen Heath, eds. CY - New York DA - 1980 KW - seeing at a distance postmodernism modernism new way of seeing +motion pictures +motion pictures new way of seeing, and motion pictures motion pictures, and technology color color, and France cartoons motion pictures, and cartoons cartoons, and technology of LB - 6190 PB - St. Martin’s Press PY - 1980 ST - The Cinema Apparatus TI - The Cinema Apparatus ID - 2002 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This, the author's first book, examines the collaboration between Hollywood and American cultural institutions between 1915 and the mid-1960s. The author makes two arguments. This first is "that museums, universities, and government agencies embraced film and the film industry to maintain their hold on American art, education, and the idea of American identity itself. They formed partnerships with Hollywood in order to expand their reach to the swelling and increasingly diverse mass audience for art and entertainment -- the audience, that is, that had already been captured by Hollywood. This expansion entailed neither a one-directional reassertion of traditional values nor a wholesale adoption of popular culture. Instead high and low culture, ethic minorities and WASPs, and movie producers and university professors mixed in unpredictable patterns." (2) The second argument is "that the leader of the film industry welcomed the opportunity to join forces with established institutions, because they saw it as a means of stabilizing their industry and retaining their new and tenuous hold on 2/3 American culture. Together, these two arguments reconnect intertwined histories that have previously been considered parallel." (2-3) Decherney's book has six chapters plus a Conclusion. In chapter 1, "Vachel Lindsay and the Universal Film Museum," the author discusses Lindsay's book The Art of the Moving Picture (1915; revised 1922) and Lindsay's "vision for a film library or film museum that would have recaptured an ideal public sphere 6/7 of democratic debate and representation." (6-7) This book was especially influential with some faculty at Columbia University. Chapter 2, "Overlapping Publics: Hollywood and Columbia University, 1915," examines the establishment of Columbia's programs for film education. Chapter 3 is "Mandarins and Marxists: Harvard and the Rise of Film Experts." It "argues that the emphasis on skilled evaluation and the extension of connoisseurship to popular culture were part of a larger move within the field of art history to replace the paternalism of cultural stewardship based on lineage with a new model of art appreciation defined by professional skills and credentials. The new professional standards allowed Jews in particular and anyone not born to the genteel class more generally to enter the ranks of art historians and curators." (9) Chapter 4 is entitled "Iris Barry, Hollywood Imperialism, and the Gender of the Nation." It examines the work of "Ezra Pound's protégé" and "her influence on the reception and international definition of American film. Barry was an important British film critics of the 1920s, and in that role she articulated one of the strongest positions against the global spread of Hollywood films and American culture.... Barry theorized film in gendered terms. She diagnosed Britain's emasculation by U. S. cultural imperialism on the one hand, and, on the other, she speculated about film's ability to transport women out of their culturally prescribed gender roles." (10) In Chapter 5, "The Museum of Modern Art and the Roots of the Cultural Cold War," the author looks at the effort to mobilize film during World War II and the Cold War. It "charts the points of contact between commercial pubic relations and war propaganda since World War I, controversies over the presentation of Nazi and Soviet films in the United States during the 1930s, and the long arm of the Rockefeller Foundation in the brokering of Hollywood-government-cultural organization interaction from the 1930s to the 1950s." (10) Chapter 6 is calls "The Politics of Patronage: How the NEA (Accidentally) Created American Avant-Garde Film," and the Conclusion is subtitled "The Transformation of the Studio System." This book has Endnotes (213-51) and an Index (253-69) but no Reference section. AU - Decherney, Peter CY - New York DA - 2005 KW - nationalism Jews fame celebrity ref, secondary motion pictures nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and patriotism patriotism, and motion pictures actors acting ref, secondary motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality Lindsay, Vachel motion pictures, and Vachel Lindsay actors, and status of acting, and status of motion pictures, and art art, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Jews Jews, and motion pictures art, and Jews Jews, and art motion pictures, and studio system studio system, and motion pictures critics critics, and American films abroad motion pictures, and Americanism women women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women motion pictures, and cultural imperialism cultural imperialism, and motion pictures war World War II, and motion pictures motion pictures, and World War II Cold War, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Cold War propaganda propaganda, and motion pictures motion pictures, and propaganda motion pictures, and avant garde avant garde films ref, book art art avant garde Cold War cultural imperialism patriotism photography World War II LB - 39370 PB - Columbia University Press PY - 2005 ST - Hollywood and the Culture Elite: How the Movies Became American TI - Hollywood and the Culture Elite: How the Movies Became American ID - 4036 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work argues that the “landscape of world politics is undergoing rapid and fundamental transformations related to the advent of digital-electronic telecommunications,” what the author calls the “hypermedia environment.” Diebert maintains that the best way to understand these changes is by using “medium theory,” something first set out by the Canadian political economist and historian, Harold A. Innis, and later popularized by his University of Toronto colleague, Marshall McLuhan. Medium theory holds that “changing modes of communication have effects on the trajectory of social evolution and the values and beliefs of societies.” It “traces these effects to the unique properties of different modes of communication – to the way information is stored, transmitted, and distributed through different media at different times in history. It focuses on the material properties of communication environments rather than on the content of the message being conveyed,” a view captured in McLuhan’s well-known phrase, “the medium is the message.” Diebert attempts to ground his views in what he calls a “historical-materialist perspective” reflected in the work of such scholars as Innis, Lewis Mumford, and Fernand Braudel, more so than in the work of such post-modernist theorists as Michel Foucault, Jacques Derrida, and Jean François Lyotard. This 329-page book is divided into two parts. Part 1, “Printing and the Medieval to Modern World Order Transformation,” examines the parchment codex and the Roman Catholic Church’s rise to power during the Middles Ages. It also looks at the changes brought by the printing press and it role in the changing political authority from a medieval to modern outlook. Part 2, “Hypermedia and the Modern Postmodern World Order Transformation,” deals with the emerging hypermedia environment and how has changed distributional patterns and social epistemology. The work has notes, a 30-page bibliography, and index. The author at the time of the book's publication taught in the political science department at the University of Toronto. AU - Deibert, Ronald J. CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - R & D computers surveillance nationalism values Christianity surveillance values print preservation postmodernism materials new media research and development war satellites history, and new media digitization values war non-USA history Innis, Harold medium theory McLuhan, Marshall printing parchment hypermedia digital media +military communication digital media, and military history, break with +nationalism and communication +computers and the Internet international relations, and new media postmodernism, and new media satellites, and reconnaissance surveillance, and new media media revolution medium is the message religion, and new media new media, and religion Catholic Church, and new media new media, and Catholic Church military-industrial complex digital media, and military military, and digital media books codex printing press, and change parchment, and codex Canada Canada, and new media +books, periodicals, newspapers Catholic Church religion aeronautics and space communication LB - 300 PB - Columbia University PY - 1997 ST - Parchment, Printing, and Hypermedia: Communication in World Order Transformation TI - Parchment, Printing, and Hypermedia: Communication in World Order Transformation ID - 119 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - A well-illustrated history of the office through history, designed for a non-specialized reader (the text runs only 113 pages). The author discusses such innovations as pens and writings instruments, the typewriter, photocopying, dictating and duplicating machines, the computer -- and their impact on office work. AU - Delgado, Alan CY - London DA - 1979 KW - illustrations computers women, and new media time and timekeeping labor timekeeping, and clocks non-USA office women +duplicating technologies office, and information technology information technology illustrations +duplicating technologies information technology, and office dictating machines +sound recording +computers and the Internet photocopying typewriters illustrations, and office technology +writing writing, and pens women, and office technology +telephones telephones, and office timekeeping Great Britain capitalism sound recording, and dictating machines women, and new media office, and new media LB - 5660 PB - John Murray, Ltd. PY - 1979 ST - The Enormous File: A Social History of the Office TI - The Enormous File: A Social History of the Office ID - 1951 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work has interesting material on how satellite photography has been used to recover the past. AU - Denevan, William M., ed. CY - Madison DA - 1992 KW - photography preservation history, and new media satellites photography, and satellites +photography and visual communication history +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and photography photography, satellite history, and satellite photography +photography and visual communication LB - 7590 PB - University of Wisconsin Press PY - 1992 ST - The Native Population of the Americas in 1492 TI - The Native Population of the Americas in 1492 ID - 2128 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Denning comments on the significance of dime novels, an early for of mass communication and mass marketing. “A century later, the controversies over this literary movement are as faded as the decaying dime novels themselves. But the questions surrounding the dime novel, one of the first mass media, one of the first culture industries, remain central to contemporary cultural politics. ... Thus the book will weave together an economics and a poetics of the dime novel, an account of the novels as commodities, of the relations between author, publisher and reader within the dime novel industry, and of the relations between these commodities and the culture industry as a whole.” (2) Denning contends that “these popular stories, which are products of the culture industry ‘popular’, ‘mass’, or ‘commercial’ culture can be understood neither as forms of deception, manipulation and social control nor as expressions of a genuine people’s culture, opposing and resisting the dominant culture. Rather they are best seen as a contested terrain, a field of cultural conflict where signs with wide appeal and resonance take on contradictory disguises and are spoken in contrary accents.” (3) This work notes the connection and similarities between dime novels and journalism. Like journalism, “dime novels are best considered as essentially anonymous, ‘unauthored’ discourse. ... Indeed dime novels and newspapers are linked by more than the coincidence of new technologies and new reading publics. Many dime novelists were newspaper reporters and editors. Moreover, as Bok’s testimony about the fiction factory demonstrates, dime novel plots were often constructed out of the events reported in the daily and weekly newspapers of cities around the country.” (24) AU - Denning, Michael CY - London and New York DA - 1987, 1998 KW - publishing print literacy news and journalism paper news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers print culture print culture, and dime novels journalism, and dime novels paper, and wood pulp literacy, and dime novels books, and dime novels publishing, and dime novels capitalism, and dime novels commercialization, and dime novels labor labor, and dime novels journalism books capitalism materials commercialization LB - 1630 PB - Verso PY - 1987 ST - Mechanic Accents: Dime Novels and Working Class Culture TI - Mechanic Accents: Dime Novels and Working Class Culture ID - 251 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Derian argues that there are two distinct technical cultures. The first “is the ‘exposed’ culture of competitive activity, of government support for basic science and higher education in support of innovative new ventures: Silicon Valley, Route 128, and the Research Triangle. The second is the ‘sheltered’ culture of high-technology multinational companies whose growth was ensured by the protection of a vast domestic market and by support through military and space procurement (or, in the case of telecommunications, by the warm blanket of status as a public monopoly).” Derian contends that the Japanese are proficient and competitive in the exposed culture, while France and the United Kingdom (and other European countries) are better in the sheltered culture. In the United States, these two cultures are, in effect, “two universes, foreign to each other, operating on different bases, with different objectives and motivations.” In contrast to the French economist Christian Stoffaës, who in Fin de Mondes used the hypothesis of Russian economist Kondratieff to argue that American hegemony would decline during the last phase of Kondratieff's fourth cycle, Derian concluded in 1990 that “American industry is not declining but is in transition, probably in the process of adapting to a world that is radically new to it.” The author also discusses the value of the space shuttle to communication and mentions the strategic computing initiative. This work, originally published in French, was translated by Severen Schaeffer. AU - Derian, Jean-Claude CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1990 KW - R & D computers materials, and silicon nationalism corporations corporations, multinational materials silicon research and development war war non-USA +computers and the Internet computers space communication science political economy general studies +nationalism and communication Silicon Valley Research Triangle Route 128 research and development scientific research and government support Japan Great Britain +military communication +aeronautics and space communication multinational corporations global communication strategic computing initiative space shuttle Stoffaes, Christian Kondratieff cycles science and society satellites Kondratieff, Nikolai telecommunications military communication, and civilian sector LB - 380 PB - MIT Press PY - 1990 ST - America’s Struggle for Leadership in Technology (translated from French by Severen Schaeffer) TI - America’s Struggle for Leadership in Technology (translated from French by Severen Schaeffer) ID - 1434 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Dertouzos, head of the MIT Laboratory for Computer Science, here tries in 336 pages to give a “preview of the inventions that will usher in a Third Revolution to rival the Agricultural and Industrial Revolutions.” AU - Dertouzos, Michael L. CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - computers communication revolution communication revolution, and second industrial revolution +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology second industrial revolution communication revolution Industrial Revolution Agricultural Revolution agriculture LB - 7780 PB - HarperEdge PY - 1997 ST - What Will Be: How the New World of Information Will Change Our Lives TI - What Will Be: How the New World of Information Will Change Our Lives ID - 2147 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book resides somewhere in between a scholarly monograph and work of journalism. Dery is a cultural critic who has written for Wired, Rolling Stone, and New York Times Magazine. He writes of this book that it “rewards nonlinear reading and welcomes readers at ease with mental hyper-links -- far-flung, associative leaps of logic. It’s tuned to the keynote assumption of our age of Nets and Webs and massively parallel Connection Machines -- namely, that information exists not in discrete atoms of fact but in synergistic meshworks and unexpected juxtapositions.” Dery’s Introduction points to how fact and fiction converge in modern American culture. These pages provide examples of how conspiracy theories and paranoia infuse our society, from Chris Carter’s The X-Files, to speculation about the Kennedy assassination, to Noam Chomsky, to fears about high-tech spying. “Conspiracy theory is a magic spell against the Information Age, an incantation that wards off information madness by organizing every scrap of the free-floating data assaulting us into an impossibly ordered scheme,” Dery says. “In the Luna Park we now inhabit, the permeable membrane between fact and fiction, actual and virtual, is in danger of dissolving altogether.” Dery’s work is divided into five sections: 1) “Dark Carnival” treats such themes as “psycho-killer clowns and Jim Carrey’s “excremental excess.” 2) “Dead Meat” contains chapters entitled “Mad Cows and Englishmen,” “Mysteries of the Organism: The Operation” and “Formaldehyde Photography and the New Grotesque.” 3) “Main Street, U.S.A.: The Public Sphere” has chapters on “Past Perfect: Disney Celebrates Us Home,” and “Trendspotting: I Shop, Therefore I Am.” 4)”The Parent Trap” offers chapters entitled “Grim Fairy Tales: Renée French’s Kinderculture,” “The Unheimlich Maneuver: The Doll Hour,” and “Empathy Bellies: Cloned Sheep and Pregnant Men.” 5) “Riding Shotgun with the Doom Patrol” includes “Wild Nature, Wired Nature: The Unabomber Meets the Digerati,” and “Space Oddities: Heaven’s Gate and Home Cyber -- Strange Alliances on the Level Above Human.” AU - Dery, Mark CY - New York DA - 1999 KW - computers corporations corporations photography preservation genetics community democracy reading history general studies reading, nonlinear conspiracy theories fact and fiction, convergence +photography and visual communication public sphere Disney cyberspace history, and entertainment history, and new media information age genetic engineering +motion pictures +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology democracy and media LB - 390 PB - Grove Press PY - 1999 ST - The Pyrotechnic Insanitarium: American Culture on the Brink TI - The Pyrotechnic Insanitarium: American Culture on the Brink ID - 1435 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book focuses on what some would call the fringes of Internet culture and others would place more centrally–the so-called computer counterculture–”cyberpunks, cyberhippies, and technopagans.” Dery’s work examines the appeal of cyberspace and potential downsides of the new technologies. The work is based primarily on secondary sources, particularly the work of Marshall McLuhan. --Mark Tremayne AU - Dery, Mark CY - New York DA - 1996 KW - computers values +computers and the Internet Tremayne, Mark cyberspace values, and Internet critics McLuhan, Marshall computers, and counterculture computers LB - 9030 PB - Grove Press PY - 1996 ST - Escape Velocity : Cyberculture at the End of the Century TI - Escape Velocity : Cyberculture at the End of the Century ID - 2270 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Dessauer was executive vice-president of Xerox Corporation, vice-chair of its Board of Directors, and head of its Research and Engineering Division. He was with Xerox from 1935 until he retired in 1970. This book is surprisingly informative and contains good material on the growth of Xerox during the 1960s after the introduction of the 914 Model around 1960. The author also gives a good portrait of Chester Carlson. Other interesting pieces of information concern Xerox’s decision to sponsor a series of TV programs on the UN; the use of facsimile copies; and the acquisition of University Microfilms in 1962. AU - Dessauer, John H. CY - Garden City, N.Y. DA - 1971 KW - corporations corporations Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories labor communication revolution communication revolution non-USA xerography United Nations +duplicating technologies office, and information technology microfiche, microfilm, microform information technology graphics revolution +duplicating technologies +autobiography photocopying Xerox Corporation graphics revolution (1960s) microfilms, and University Microfilms United Nations, and Xerox Carlson, Chester information technology, and office facsimile microfilm office LB - 5670 PB - Doubleday & Company, Inc. PY - 1971 ST - My Years with Xerox: The Billions Nobody Wanted TI - My Years with Xerox: The Billions Nobody Wanted ID - 1952 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is largely a collection of essays dealing with the scientific developments leading to xerography. The opening chapter is by Chester F. Carlson, the primary inventor of this process“History of Electrostatic Recording.” AU - Dessauer, John H. and Harold E. Clark, eds. CY - London and New York DA - 1965 KW - labor +duplicating technologies office, and information technology information technology +duplicating technologies Carlson, Chester photocopying xerography electrostatic recording information technology, and office office, and photocopying duplicating technologies, and electrostatic recording office LB - 5680 PB - Focal Press PY - 1965 ST - Xerography and Related Processes TI - Xerography and Related Processes ID - 1953 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This collection of essays explores the explores the relationship between the motion picture industry and American consumer culture. The essays are organized under three broad themes: “Creating Consumers,” “Consuming Creators,” and “Hollywood: The Dreamscape.” Part I, “Creating Consumers,” examines how the movie industry built its audience and how the movies encouraged the consumption of goods. In this process, the movies were often part of a larger complex that included newspapers, magazines, and books. Part II, “Consuming Creators,” considers how movie stars promoted consumption. Part III, “Hollywood: The Dreamscape,” deals with the importance of a specific place (i.e., Hollywood, Los Angeles, California) in this culture. As David Desser and Garth Jowett note in their Introduction, cinema “even as an entertainment medium ... inaugurated vast shifts in social life” and provided “educational lessons ... about what it means to be American.” One lesson strongly emphasized consumption. The editors explain their goal as follows: “From the influence of cinema on society to the influence of society on cinema, the contributors to this book seek to highlight these relationships through the lens of consumerism and consumer culture.” Of special interest in these pages has been the effects that this culture has had on women, how they are often targeted by consumer culture and how they are presented in the movies. Several essays are devoted to exploring this theme. This book contains fourteen essays by involving nineteen different writers. Contributors to the work include: Heather Addison, Barbara Wilinsky, Sara Ross, Cynthia Felando, Sarah Berry, Rick Worland and David Slayden, Gaylyn Studlar, Rebecca L. Epstein, Aida A. Hozic, Angela Curran, Jeffrey Charles and Jill Watts, Josh Stenger, Thomas E. Wartenberg, Larry W. Riggs and Paula Willoquet-Maricondi. This volume is part of the University of Minnesota Press’s Commerce and Mass Culture Series. AU - Desser, David and Garth S. Jowett, eds. CY - Minneapolis DA - 2000 KW - celebrity nationalism women, and new media advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations motion pictures consumerism capitalism news and journalism motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and consumerism motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and values values, and motion pictures critics capitalism, and motion pictures consumerism, and motion pictures women women, and consumerism women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women consumerism, and women advertising, and women advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising color color, and consumer culture color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color newspapers, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspaper books, and motion pictures motion pictures, and books Jowett, Garth advertising newspapers values advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures motion pictures and popular culture capitalism women, and motion pictures values, and motion pictures capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and women media effects media effects, and consumerism advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising audiences nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism celebrity culture women, and celebrity culture celebrity culture, and women sexuality motion pictures, and consumerism Jowett, Garth Hoziƒ, Aida books books, periodicals, newspapers news LB - 1800 PB - University of Minnesota Press PY - 2000 ST - Hollywood Goes Shopping TI - Hollywood Goes Shopping ID - 268 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report by the OECOD, made up of mainly European nations plus Canada and the United States, gives a good summary of American electricity supply industry around 1961. Part I discusses the characteristics of supply and demand in electricity in the U.S., plus power pools and the interconnected network in operation. Part II discusses eight power pools visited. Part III deals with items related to high voltage interconnection and load dispatching. Part IV presents the conclusion and Part V includes appendices (including members of the mission that filed this report). Among the conclusions of this short work (40 pages) are that per capita consumption in the United States was about twice that of most European countries. The report also noted the willingness among American electrical engineers to cooperate among themselves. AU - Development, Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and CY - [Paris] DA - May, 1961 KW - labor non-USA office office, and new media office networks infrastructure +electricity Europe infrastructure infrastructure, and electricity networks, electrical LB - 3970 PB - Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Electricity Committee PY - 1961 ST - Power System Operation in the U.S.A.: Report of the "Ingrid" Mission TI - Power System Operation in the U.S.A.: Report of the "Ingrid" Mission ID - 1785 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - There is little history in this work and it is poorly written and organized. One chapter of interest, though, deals with the video-telephone and its anticipated impact on society. AU - Development], [Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and CY - Paris DA - 1978 KW - +future and science fiction +telephones future video telephones telephones, video LB - 4870 PB - Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) PY - 1978 ST - Social Assessment of Technology TI - Social Assessment of Technology ID - 1874 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Chapter 13 in this Pulitzer-Prize winning work is entitled "Necessity's Mother," and deals with the process technological invention. Occasionally, new technologies are developed to meet specific needs. The Manhattan Project during World War II to create an atomic weapon before Nazi Germany is one such example. But far more frequently, inventions are created and at first society has little or no idea of how they might be used. It is only later that society discovers uses for the new inventions. Thomas Edison's phonograph and the development of the motor vehicle are two such examples. (Edison, for example, at first doubted the commercial values of the phonograph and did not see that its primary purpose would be to record music.) "Thus," the author writes, "invention is often the mother of necessity, rather than vice versa." Diamond also sees the process of invention as usually incremental, not the result of a bold stroke of genius. While inventors such as Edison, Eli Whitney, and Samuel Morse made great improvements over the technology that went before them, they nevertheless built on earlier work. Diamond's two primary conclusions "are that technology develops cumulatively, rather than in isolated heroic acts, and that it finds most of its uses after it has been invented, rather than being invented to meet a foreseen need." These conclusions are especially true, he says, for ancient technologies. AU - Diamond, Jared CY - New York DA - 1998 KW - innovation +sound recording general studies inventors inventions Edison, Thomas Morse, Samuel +sound recording +transportation phonograph inventions, process of LB - 11350 PB - W. W. Norton & Company PY - 1998 ST - Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies TI - Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies ID - 2495 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is an informative study of the political and social ideas of the blacklisted writers and directors known as the Hollywood Ten. While much attention was focused on these men's ties to the Communist Party, they also wrote extensively on labor, race, and foreign relations, as well as offering a critique of mainstream American history. AU - Dick, Bernard F. CY - Lexington, KY DA - 1988 KW - blacklisting values Hollywood law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Hollywood Ten blacklisting, and Hollywood Hollywood, and blacklisting censorship, and Hollywood Ten censorship, and Hollywood values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and reform motion pictures, and anticommunism motion pictures, and communism motion pictures, and writers values LB - 16400 PB - University Press of Kentucky PY - 1988 ST - Radical Innocence: A Critical Study of the Hollywood Ten TI - Radical Innocence: A Critical Study of the Hollywood Ten ID - 593 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Dickson, Edward M. CY - Ithaca, NY DA - 1973 KW - +future and science fiction telephones, and picture phones +telephones +television telecommunications video telephones telephones, and video future LB - 6700 PB - Cornell University Press PY - 1973 ST - The Video Telephone: A New Era in Telecommunications TI - The Video Telephone: A New Era in Telecommunications ID - 2048 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This very readable book deals with the impact that the Soviet Union’s launching of Sputnik in 1957 had on the United States. President Dwight Eisenhower welcomed this event because it believed it would strengthen the principle of “freedom and space.” He was most interested in the surveillance possibilities of satellites, believing that they could give the United States an accurate picture of Soviet power. In the author’s view, Sputnik is a seminal event in modern history, as evidenced by the following quotation from physicist Lloyd V. Berkner in October 1957: “From the vantage point of 2100 A.D., the year of 1957 will most certainly stand in history as the year of man’s progression from a two-dimensional to a three-dimensional geography. It may well stand, also, as the point in time at which intellectual achievement forged ahead of weapons and national wealth as instruments of national policy. The earth satellite is a magnificent expression of man’s intellectual growth – of his ability to manipulate to his own purposes the very laws that govern his universe.” This work has a bibliography and index. There is also a "Notes" section that discusses the literature used in each chapter but no numbered endnotes. The author has worked as a reporter and has several other popularly oriented books dealing with such topics as baseball and slang. He has also written books entitled Think Tanks (1971), The Electronic Battlefield (1976), and Out of This World: American Space Photography (1977). AU - Dickson, Paul CY - New York DA - 2001 KW - R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) computers USSR corporations Khrushchev, Nikita Kennedy, John F. Johnson, Lyndon Eisenhower, Dwight D. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) Central Intelligence Agency Advanced Research Projects Agency Nixon, Richard U-2 plane presidents, and new media RAND Corporation preservation Nixon administration research and development war Kennedy administration Johnson administration history, and new media Eisenhower administration freedom cinematography CIA war non-USA history aeronautics and space communication satellites Eisenhower, Dwight, and satellites Kennedy, John F., and satellites satellites, and reconnaissance satellites, and communication Kennedy, John F., and moon race ARPA DARPA computers history, break with Apollo space program von Braun, Wernher rocketry CIA, and satellites satellites, and Cold War Cold War Cold War, and satellites Eisenhower, Dwight, and Sputnik Eisenhower, Dwight, and space Explorer space program CORONA satellites, and CORONA Germany Germany, and rocketry rocketry, and Germany freedom of space principle Johnson, Lyndon, and satellites Johnson, Lyndon, and space Khrushchev, Nikita, and space manned space flights NASA Nixon, Richard, and space Nixon, Richard, and satellites Germany, Peenemunde RAND Corporation Sputnik Soviet Union Soviet Union, and space U-2, and reconnaissance satellites, Vanguard Vanguard project +military communication satellites, and weapons World War II World War II, and rocketry rocketry, and World War II computers and the Internet LB - 390 PB - Walker & Company PY - 2001 ST - Sputnik: The Shock of the Century TI - Sputnik: The Shock of the Century ID - 127 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book presents a laudatory biography of Edison and discusses his inventions up to the early 1890s. Of the early projection of moving pictures, the authors, who worked with Edison, write: “…On exhibition evenings the projection-room, which is situated in the upper story of the photographic department, is hung with black, in order to prevent any reflection from the circle of light emanating from the screen at the other end, the projector being placed behind a curtain, also of black, and provided with a single peep-hole for the accommodation of the lens. The effect of these sombre draperies, and the weird accompanying monotone of the electric motor attached to the projector, are horribly impressive, and one’s sense of the supernatural is heightened when a figure suddenly springs into his path, acting and talking with a vigor which leaves him totally unpre 311/312 pared for its mysterious vanishing. Projected stereoscopically, the results are even more realistic, as those acquainted with that class of phenomena may imagine, and a pleasing rotundity is apparent, which, in ordinary photographic displays, is conspicuous by its absence. “Nothing more vivid or natural could be imagined than these breathing, audible forms with their tricks of familiar gesture and speech. The inconceivable swiftness of the photo graphic successions, and the exquisite synchronism of the photographic attachment, have removed the last trace of automatic action, and the illusion is complete….” (311-12) AU - Dickson, W. K. L. AU - Dickson, Antonia CY - New York DA - 1892, 1894 KW - history motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and movement history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures democracy democracy, and entertainment sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures kinetoscope Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and biography Dickson, W. K. L., and kinetoscope kineto-phonograph motion pictures, and sound motion pictures, and phonograph phonograph Dickson, W. K. L. ref, secondary ref, book kinetoscope, and phonograph electricity electricity, and Thomas Edison motion pictures, and magic motion pictures, as mysterious LB - 42360 PB - Thomas Y. Crowell & Co. PY - 1892 ST - Life and Inventions of Thomas Alva Edison TI - Life and Inventions of Thomas Alva Edison ID - 4335 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work contains more than forty-five essays speculating about communications and the future. The volume was put together in conjunction with the World Future Society’s Fourth General Assembly held in Washington, D. C., July 18-22, 1982. The papers herein are a selection of those submitted to an editorial review committee. The World Future Society: An Association for the Study of Alternative Futures, based in Bethesda, Maryland, then claimed 30,000 members in more than 80 countries, and described itself as a non-profit scientific and education organization for people interested in how social and technological innovations might influence the future. Among the essays in this volume is John N. Pelton’s speculation about “The Future of Global Satellite Communications”; William E. Halal writing about “Information Technology and the Flowering of Enterprise”; and Richard M. Neustadt on “Politics and the New Media.” Several essays see problems with the new media including Howard F. Didsbury, Jr.’s “The Serpent in the Garden”; Tony M. Lentz’s “The Medium Is the Madness: Television and the Pseudo-Oral Tradition in America’s Future”; and Gerald M. Phillips, “The Decay of Purposive Communication.” AU - Didsbury, Howard F., Jr. CY - Bethesda, MD DA - 1982 KW - computers magnetic recording utopianism telecommunications preservation politics libraries satellites archives history, and new media materials materials magnetic tape +future and science fiction community democracy computers +computers and the Internet non-USA history future communication revolution, and critics of critics democracy, and media information storage information storage, and new media libraries, and new media history, break with Japan Japan, and new media Brazil Brazil, and new media India India, and new media utopia, and computers computers, and utopia +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and future future, and satellites future, and computers videotape videotex telecommunications, and rural areas politics, and new media World Future Society Neustadt, Richard communication revolution LB - 340 PB - World Future Society PY - 1982 ST - Communications and the Future: Prospects, Promises, and Problems TI - Communications and the Future: Prospects, Promises, and Problems ID - 122 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Diebold was a specialist in automation and at the time of this book, president and chairman of the board of the Diebold Group, Inc. Of special interest is chapter 3, “The High Promise of Information Technology-- and Four Problems it Raises for Business.” Diebold believed that information technology was creating “entirely new families of machines, of which the electronic computer is only one.” He discusses the computer, electronic circuitry, advances in long-distance communication, improvement in data storage, networks of machines that retrieve information, and satellites. Such technology was not two decades old when he wrote in 1964, but “already over 15,000 computers and 2,500 tape controlled machines” were at work in the United States. He predicted that this new technology would create new kinds of organization and new businesses. The most significant consequences of automation, though, would be tremendous social change. “Buying patterns, consumption habits, and other social attitudes will be radically affected by the technology,” he contended. Diebold saw four critical issues confronting business: 1) Businesses must replace their piecemeal approach to information technology with “an organized discipline of information systems.” 2) New professional classifications must be established to achieve these disciplined systems. 3) Future managers must receive education in information systems. 4) Business leadership must be aware of changes brought by automation. In chapter 4, Diebold attempts to refute four myths about automation: 1) that it is usefully primarily as a labor-saving device; 2) that oil refineries and other process plants had already realized the ultimate in automation; 3) that because automated machinery was highly complex that most of the decisions regarding it should be left to experts -- technicians and engineers; 4) that only wealthy companies can afford to take advance of automation and information technology. AU - Diebold, John CY - New York DA - 1964 KW - computers integrated circuits transistors labor communication revolution archives office, and new media libraries labor libraries, and information storage general studies control revolution information age computers integrated circuits information storage data storage information storage long-distance communication satellites infrastructure communication revolution capitalism labor, and new media oil automation experts electronic media computers and the Internet capitalism, and new media labor aeronautics and space communication office LB - 400 PB - McGraw-Hill Book Company PY - 1964 ST - Beyond Automation: Managerial Problems of an Exploding Technology TI - Beyond Automation: Managerial Problems of an Exploding Technology ID - 1436 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This collection of papers by experts from six countries grew out of a 1986 workshop sponsored by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. The editor of this volume outlines this book in the Preface: "The importance of information technology in modern weapon systems is constantly growing. Since the beginning of the 1980s, artificial intelligence has become a significant part of this trend because of its potential applications in military decision-making. This book is a first attempt to present a broad overview of the prospects for information technology in general, and a machine intelligence in particular, in the context of international security. "As it is often the case with a new and rapidly developing area, relevant material is quite scattered and inaccessible to non-specialists...." "An overview of this prospects of artificial intelligence in weapon and arms control applications is presented in Part I. The workshop papers constitute Part II, III and IV of the book and provide a technical, strategic and political analysis of the dangers and promise underlying weapon and arms control applications of computers and artificial intelligence. Part II gives an introduction to basic aspects of artificial intelligence concepts and computer hardware. In Part III, military and strategic implications are discussed, including the Strategic Computing Program of the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the automated tactical battlefield, strategic defence systems and political perspectives. Finally, in Part IV, there is a description of arms control applications of information technology, and artificial intelligence, including verification, simulation, modelling and negotiation." (p. [iii]) The work has abstracts of each paper following the Table of Contents. AU - Din, Allan M., ed. CY - New York DA - 1987 KW - R & D computers computers Soviet Union simulations strategic defense initiative (SDI) Reagan administration nationalism microprocessing Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) computers and the Internet artificial intelligence and biotechnology artificial intelligence strategic computing initiative aeronautics and space communication Reagan administration, and artificial intelligence Reagan, Ronald Reagan, Ronald, and computers military communication nationalism, and communication computers, and artifical intelligence military communication, and artificial intelligence nationalism, and computers DARPA Japan computers, and chips research and development USSR microelectronics microprocessors personal computers computers, personal war war, and artificial intelligence computers, and war war, and computers SDI Reagan administration, and SDA satellites computers, and simulations simulations, and computers bibliographies bibliographies, and AI non-USA LB - 33750 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1987 ST - Arms and Artificial Intelligence: Weapon and Arms Control Applications of Advanced Computing TI - Arms and Artificial Intelligence: Weapon and Arms Control Applications of Advanced Computing ID - 3013 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - With alarmist but insightful passion, Daniel Dinello traces society’s relationship with technology through the thinkers and scientists who made the world as we know and imagine it possibilities; and through the dreams and fears expressed in science fiction. Dinello confronts the techno-utopian possibilities continuously espoused by those who with full faith in the power of technology to make lives easier and humanity better prophesy a post-human transcendence out of nature and into immortal cyborgs and/or fully synthetic humanoids. Drawing extensive parallels between technophiles and (fundamentalist) Christians, Dinello like the sci-fi dystopia warns strongly against blind dependence on technology developed and controlled by military, corporate and government interests. He explores issues of control and dominance in the relation of humans to their technology, including science fiction parallels to real world slavery, racism, sexism and political oppression. Detailing current biological and mechanic human enhancements, he wonders where the lines are drawn to determine what constitutes human. Technophobia! explores the warnings of science fiction in regard to particular technological developments, including robotics, medical technology, gene manipulation (such as genetically engineered crops), replication (via cloning or nanobots) and infection (via biological or technological viruses); and, in an impressively wide-ranging cultural-literary analysis of popular works, Dinello reveals just how far from far-fetched science fiction has become. --Dale Erlandson AU - Dinello, Daniel CY - Austin DA - 2005 KW - technology future cybernetics computers biotechnology Erlandson, Dale future and science fiction artificial intelligence and biotechnology cyborgs values values, and artificial intelligence values, and human nature computers and the Internet critics critics, and technology technology, and technophobia technology, and critics nanotechnology genetics infomatics second industrial revolution military communication nationalism and communication DARPA DARPA, and human enhancement values freedom democracy freedom, and artificial intelligence democracy, and artificial intelligence artificial intelligence, and values biotechnology, and freedom biotechnology, and democracy military communication, and biotechnology nationalism, and artificial intelligence biotechnology, and values biotechnology, and democracy biotechnology, and freedom nanotechnology values, and biotechnology freedom, and biotechnology democracy, and biotechnology biotechnology, and values artificial intelligence, and freedom artificial intelligence, and democracy military communication, and artificial intelligence nationalism, and biotechnology Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) nationalism technology and society LB - 33220 PB - University of Texas Press PY - 2005 ST - Technophobia!: Science Fiction Visions of Posthuman Technology TI - Technophobia!: Science Fiction Visions of Posthuman Technology ID - 78 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Dinsdale, Alfred CY - New York DA - 1932, 1974 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins television, and technology LB - 10860 PB - Arno Press PY - 1932 ST - First Principles of Television TI - First Principles of Television ID - 2448 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - "The panicky response to Sputnik had long-lasting effects on American life," diplomatic historian Robert Divine writes. "It opened a debated over the state of education, science, space exploration, and national security that lasted well into the 1960s. ...In a sense, the anxiety raised by Sputnik did not end until Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin took their historic steps in July 1969." Yet President Dwight Eisenhower was not particularly impressed by the Soviet's accomplishment in 1957. Eisenhower counseled "prudence and restraint" but failed to understand the uneasiness caused by Sputnik. This book focuses on Eisenhower's response to the Soviet satellite. It is based to a large degree on papers in the Dwight D. Eisenhower Library in Abilene, Kansas. AU - Divine, Robert A. CY - New York DA - 1993 KW - R & D nationalism Kennedy, John F. Johnson, Lyndon Eisenhower, Dwight D. presidents, and new media research and development research and development war Kennedy administration Johnson administration satellites Eisenhower administration education Cold War war non-USA +aeronautics and space communication Sputnik education, and Sputnik research and development, and government support research and development, and Sputnik +nationalism and communication nationalism, and satellites Eisenhower, Dwight, and satellites satellites, and Dwight Eisenhower Kennedy, John F., and satellites Johnson, Lyndon, and satellites satellites, and Cold War Cold War, and satellites +military communication military, and satellites LB - 2840 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1993 ST - The Sputnik Challenge TI - The Sputnik Challenge ID - 372 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This uneven book argues that “as a production medium, 16mm film is dead; 35mm may well follow within the next ten to fifteen years, signaling a significant shift in the production and reception process” of cinema. Film will be replaced by “a high-definition matrix of dots and pixels laser-projected onto a conventional theater screen,” a development readily accepted by audiences. Dixon believes that the multiplication of new movie making technologies – videos, film, tv programs, the Internet – will help to crumble international image boundaries and will in the near future lead to “an explosion of voices from around the globe, in a new and more democratic process that allows a voice to even the most marginalized factions of society.” These developments will challenged, if not overwhelm, Hollywood control over the narrative structure of entertainment. Dixon’s opening chapter, “Voices from the Margins, and the New Digital Cinema,” discusses several out-of-the-mainstream films – e.g., Sex, Lies and Videotape (1989), Darren Aronofsky’s 16mm black-and-white film Pi, Steven Soderbergh’s color 16mm, low budget movie, El Mariachi (1992), Lisa Cholodenko’s High Art (1998), and others. Dixon’s treatment of some of these films (although not all) considers the movie technology used. “A new generation of video cameras may make conventional 35mm cinematography, if not obsolescent, at least a luxury, or perhaps an aesthetic choice for the filmmakers of the twenty-first century,” he writes. This chapter also includes discussion of nanotechnology and advances in surveillance cameras, and how the latter, in particular, has already started to challenge Hollywood narratives. Chapter Two is entitled “Visions of the Gothic and Grotesque,” and Chapter Three is “Images of Conquest and the Colonialist Instinct.” Chapter Four, “The Commodofication of Desire, ... “ looks at the film career of black actor Paul Robeson and argues that Robeson’s films during the 1930s and 1940s failed to take advantage of his true talents, binding him instead to “a rigid social and racial stereotype.” The final chapter, “The Past and the Future of the Moving Image,” covers several interesting themes. Dixon notes that Shakespeare’s Richard III is much more effective on film than on videotape (which gives the play an “immediate” look). A section is devoted to 16mm and 35mm industrial short films between the 1930s to the 1970s (now on CD-ROM). Another section deals with Roberto Rossellini color docudrama India (1958). Still other pages cover digital cinema and virtual reality. Increasingly works that had been marginalized are gaining a wider viewing. Dixon maintains that “it is impossible to hold back the flood of images created by these new technologies, and in the coming century, these images will both inform and enlighten our social discourse.” AU - Dixon, Wheeler Winston CY - Albany, N. Y. DA - 2000 KW - computers magnetic recording photography special effects motion pictures labor materials materials magnetic tape cinema motion pictures celluloid film digital media digitization law censorship and ratings censorship audiences 35mm 16mm +motion pictures and popular culture digital cinema motion pictures, digital motion pictures, avant garde videotape film, 16mm film, 35mm film, color censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and new technology +computers and the Internet +photography and visual communication nanotechnology cameras, surveillance motion pictures, and surveillance cameras cameras, miniaturization camcorders motion pictures, independent motion pictures, low budget audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences censorship, and new technology special effects, computer generated motion pictures, and special effects virtual reality +television video imaging, and computer-generated video imaging, and digital 16mm film 35mm film digitization, and motion pictures capitalism, and 16mm film capitalism, and 35mm film labor, and 16mm film labor, and 35mm film 35mm film cameras capitalism film LB - 12430 N1 - See also: office PB - State University of New York Press PY - 2000 ST - The Second Century of Cinema: The Past and Future of the Moving Image TI - The Second Century of Cinema: The Past and Future of the Moving Image ID - 2590 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Taking the death of Diana Spencer, Princess of Wales, as a starting point, examines the roots of celebrity culture. The book is “a series of extended meditations” about “the cult of celebrity, the nature of public surveillance, the role of the print and television media in shaping the words and images that form the fabric of our shared communal consciousness, and the role of the public as a coproducer of the wave of emotion surrounding Diana’s death.” The obsession that both members of the media and the public had over Princess Diana “are grounded in a cult of personality which has gradually overtaken the world as a congruent whole, brought together yet separated by global cable, broadcast and satellite networks, and international print publications which can service many different markets around the world simultaneously.” (Preface) Dixon examines this topic from the 1950s, when television became a major presence in the lives of most Americans. He treats in depth the careers of “two somewhat marginalized” movie and TV personalities, Ida Lupino and Richard Carlson, and the efforts these two people made to recast their images. Dixon also attempts to assess how “televisual media (cable, videocassettes, instant print magazines and newspapers, pictures stored in digital memory and then recalled with the push of a button)” influence the way the public saw Prince Diana. This 182-page book as a “Selected Bibliography” and Index, but no footnotes. AU - Dixon, Wheeler Winston CY - New York DA - 1999 KW - celebrity video cassette recorders (VCRs) +television +motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture news and journalism VCRs books, periodicals, newspapers advertising and public relations celebrity culture values television, cable cable, television digital media democracy democracy, and new media violence television, and violence violence, and television media effects print culture, and celebrity culture advertising cable print LB - 29650 PB - Columbia University Press PY - 1999 ST - Disaster and Memory: Celebrity Culture and the Crisis of Hollywood Cinema TI - Disaster and Memory: Celebrity Culture and the Crisis of Hollywood Cinema ID - 2712 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book, though slightly out of date, is a fine resource for understanding the infrastructure and technology of new media, in addition to the political and economic system which supports it. Dizard begins by arguing that the key to political or economic security in the future is linked to information, and specifically being able to control and command the new information technologies. The United States gains much of its dominant position in the world from its advantage in this area. He believes that governmental support is a key to ensuring this position in the future. One useful section of the book examines the physical makeup of the new computing and networking systems. Though the book is several years old, most of it is still relevant. The discussion of this technology is introductory, but thorough. Dizard also discusses the role of governmental regulation. He uses the example of the Bell system breakup to show that regulation can increase service and open the system to profitable competition. The major role of the government, however, is in promoting US interests overseas. American telecommunications businesses dominate the global market, often with help from government programs and incentives. Chapter 8 of this book is an excellent discussion of various means that are used to promote these businesses and the extent to which they have penetrated every market. Dizard also provides a nice summary of the economics of the telecommunications industry. He discusses growing conglomeration, and argues that this is often needed to generate the large amount of capital that goes into research. Increased concentration of power and government assistance will help the US maintain this dominant position. He does recognize the social costs and the implications for the citizen, but downplays them. --Rob Rabe AU - Dizard, Wilson P. CY - New York DA - 1989 KW - R & D computers +military communication labor research and development communication revolution community democracy capitalism non-USA office office, and new media office telecommunications networks media general studies Rabe, Rob democracy and media networks, and computers +computers and the Internet critics media literacy infrastructure telecommunications, and overview communication revolution global communication capitalism, and new media research and development, and government support LB - 9400 N1 -; media effects; media convergence; mass media PB - Longman PY - 1989 ST - The Coming Information Age: An Overview of Technology, Economics, and Politics TI - The Coming Information Age: An Overview of Technology, Economics, and Politics ID - 2307 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Dizard saw television as a "truly revolutionary" form of communication, one that was global in its reach. In 1966, he wrote: “By 1975, television will be an integral part of a vast international communications network built around computers and space satellites. These machines will provide any kind of data instantaneously in all parts of the world to meet the needs of the new information explosion. They will carry a dialogue of experts speaking the international language of technology, and that dialogue will affect the prospects for a more stable world order. Television can be the sight-and-sound interpreter of the dialogue, making it understandable to everyone. Properly used, television can be the forum of a new age of interdependence, the only mass medium fully capable of crossing geographical, cultural, and political barriers to link men and nations in an evolving world community. The alternative is a world struggling to meet its informational needs largely through traditional means. This is a losing race. Books and other written materials reach no more than half the earth’s population. The other half is still functionally illiterate. Outside Europe, Japan, and the United States, newspapers are an insignificant media factor. The film medium has developed primarily as an entertainment spectacle. Only radio is still expanding at a rate which begins to match present-day mass communications needs.” AU - Dizard, Wilson P. CY - Syracuse, NY DA - 1966 KW - computers nationalism journalism +future and science fiction news and journalism non-USA Third World news networks +television future +aeronautics and space communication satellites satellites, and television Third World, and television global communication +nationalism and communication newspapers networks, and international television +computers and the Internet television, and computers +radio LB - 9660 PB - Syracuse University Press PY - 1966 ST - Television: A World View TI - Television: A World View ID - 2333 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work, completed before the collapse of the Soviet Union, might be read in conjunction with other books that explore the relation between the fall of the USSR and new media such as Scott Shane’s Dismantling Utopia (1994), Gladys Ganley’s Unglued Empire (1996),and Manuel Castells’ End of Millennium (1998). AU - Dizard, Wilson P. and S. Blake Swensrud CY - [Washington, D.C.] DA - 1987 KW - USSR nationalism freedom law censorship and ratings non-USA information technology +nationalism and communication Soviet Union, and collapse of information technology, and collapse of USSR freedom of expression, Soviet Union censorship, and Soviet Union Gorbachev, Mikhail Soviet Union censorship Soviet Union, and censorship Soviet Union, and new media LB - 2200 PB - Center for Strategic and International Studies/Westview Press PY - 1987 ST - Gorbachev’s Information Revolution: Controlling Glasnost in a New Electronic Era TI - Gorbachev’s Information Revolution: Controlling Glasnost in a New Electronic Era ID - 1613 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author writes: "This book is about the representability of time in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Photographic and cinematic technologies played a central role here precisely because they were so crucial to thinking that representability. Although popular accounts tended to endow the cinema with determinant agency -- that is, cinematic technology made possible a new access to time or its 'perfect' representation -- in fact the emerging cinema participated in a more general cultural imperative, the structuring of 3/4 time and contingency in capitalist modernity. Although the rupture here is not technologically determined, new technologies of representation, such as photography, phonography, and the cinema, are crucial to modernity's reconceptualization of time and its responsibility. A sea change in thinking about contingency, indexicality, temporality, and chance deeply marked the epistemologies of time at the turn of the last century. The reverberations of this break are still perceptible today in the continual conjunction of electronic technologies and questions of instantaneity and the archievability of time. As Andreas Huyssen points out, 'the issue of media ... is central to the way we live structures of temporality in our culture.' Film, television, and video are frequently specified by the term time-based media." (3-4) (italics in original text) AU - Doane, Mary Ann CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 2002 KW - history ref, book ref, secondary motion pictures motion pictures, and time time, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity time and timekeeping motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism capitalism, and timekeeping capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and archives information storage information storage, and motion pictures history and new media history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history Bergson, Henri, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Henri Bergson Benjamin, Walter photography photography, and time time, and photography motion pictures, and photography photography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and phonograph phonograph, and motion pictures television television, and time time, and television sound recording sound recording, and time time, and sound recording time, and motion pictures time, and television sound recording, and phonograph archives, and motion pictures archives Bergson, Henri phonograph LB - 42070 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 2002 ST - The Emergence of Cinematic Time: Modernity, Contingency, the Archive TI - The Emergence of Cinematic Time: Modernity, Contingency, the Archive ID - 4305 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - James C. Dobson, who held a Ph.D. in child development, was a member of the Meese Commission in 1985-86. He was a licensed psychologist and family counselor, and president of Focus on the Family, a California-based organization that produced a syndicated radio program. Dobson had written several books including Dare to Discipline (1970) and Hide or Seek (1979), the latter about self-respect in children. A devout Christian, he considered pornography harmful in many ways and felt that it threatened the “future of the family itself.” AU - Dobson, James C. CY - Wheaton, IL DA - [1970] KW - values motion pictures media effects media Hollywood values religion censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture children children, and media media, and children Meese Commission religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion religion, and motion pictures pornography, and religion religion, and pornography media effects, and pornography critics pornography LB - 22210 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Tyndale House Publishers ST - Dare to Discipline TI - Dare to Discipline ID - 950 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - James C. Dobson, who held a Ph.D. in child development, was a member of the Meese Commission in 1985-86. He was a licensed psychologist and family counselor, and president of Focus on the Family, a California-based organization that produced a syndicated radio program. Dobson had written several books including Dare to Discipline (1970) and Hide or Seek (1979), the latter about self-respect in children. A devout Christian, he considered pornography harmful in many ways and felt that it threatened the “future of the family itself.” AU - Dobson, James C. CY - Old Tappan, NJ DA - c1979 KW - values motion pictures media effects media Hollywood values religion censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture children children, and media media, and children Meese Commission religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion religion, and motion pictures pornography, and religion religion, and pornography media effects, and pornography critics pornography LB - 22220 N1 - See also media effects; media convergence; mass media; violence; sexuality PB - Revell PY - 1979 ST - Hide or Seek TI - Hide or Seek ID - 951 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a personal exploration and critique of the “virtual world.” Doheny-Farina urges the reader to stay connected to their real communities instead of abandoning it for virtual ones. The author does not believe technology to be necessarily detrimental, but believes its effects weaken the ties that individuals once had for the communities, families, co-workers, and friends. --Mark Tremayne Doheny-Farina argues that digital technology has been a destabilizing force in community life. So far, Internet communications have led to a lessening of connection with geophysical space, and that digital communications are being substituted for public meetings in neighborhoods or localities. Citizens must search for ways to use technology to enhance public life rather than diminish it. --Phil Glende AU - Doheny-Farina, Stephen CY - New Haven DA - 1996 KW - computers nationalism digitization community democracy values +computers and the Internet public sphere values, and computers Tremayne, Mark virtual reality community, and Internet +nationalism and communication Glende, Phil community democracy and media community, and computers digital media democracy, and digital media LB - 9040 PB - Yale University Press PY - 1996 ST - The Wired Neighborhood TI - The Wired Neighborhood ID - 2271 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author describes his purpose as follows: "This book of empirically based essays is intended to deepen, extend and defend the picture of how America is governed that I presented in two previous works [Who Rules America? and C. Wright Mills and the Power Elite]. After a short introductin in which I show from our study of the social stratification literature that only a small percentage of it concerns the highest level of society, the four essays in the first section attempt to extend our understanding of the upper class as a social class. The three essays which compose the second section attempt to deepen our understanding of the upper class as a governing class; they explore the involvement of members and organizations of the upper class in the governing mental process. The third and final section, consisting of two essays, defends my views by contrasting them with those of pluraists and ultra-conservatives." (vii-viii) Domhoff says that "the power elite ... try to influence public opinion through the formation of publicity committees composed of prominent private citizens.... In early 1958, President Eisenhower asked corporate executive, Eric Johnston, ... founder of CED [Committee for Economic Development] and a former president of the US Chamber of Commerce, to head a special White House meeting to convey information to the public on foreign policy aspects of national security. Johnston and his staff invited over 1,000 corporate, organizational, community and labor leaders to a one-day conference of meetings and speeches. Out of the conference came a new citizens' committee, the Committee for International Economic Growth (CIEG), charged with the reponsibility of carrying the conference's message to the entire populace." (152-3) Johnston was also at the time president of the Motion Picture Association of America. AU - Domhoff, G. William CY - New York DA - 1970 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) nationalism Eisenhower administration Johnston, Eric capitalism democracy democracy, and capitalism capitalism, and democracy MPAA Johnston, Eric, and MPAA MPAA, and Johnston advertising and public relations nationalism and communication presidents and new media Eisenhower, Dwight D. motion pictures motion pictures, and nationalism motion pictures, and foreign policy advertising LB - 35080 PB - Random House PY - 1970 ST - The Higher Circles: The Governing Class in America TI - The Higher Circles: The Governing Class in America ID - 3148 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is on the order of Bill McKibben’s The Age of Missing Information. It is not footnoted, although it does have a bibliography. The author draws on Marshall McLuhan and David Riesman, among others. His focus starts with television. He discusses cable, the VCR during the 1960s and 1970s, and the VCR revolution which was underway during the mid-1980s. He also gives space to video games and the home computer. This “new media will cause a new kind of individualized cultural segmentation,” he says. “The result will be the Confetti Generation, for the current Autonomy Generation does not possess the cultural tools to absorb such an explosion of information and entertainment, such an implosion of speed and remoteness.... We will witness an aggravated version of today when all ideas are equal, when all religions, life-styles, and perceptions are equally valid, equally indifferent, and equally undifferentiated in every way until given value by the choice of a special individual. This will be the Confetti Era, when all events, ideas, and values are the same size and weight.... “New technology in all of its forms will simply aggravate the confusion. Information will rain on us like confetti and become just as meaningless. The information we receive, isolated with our television sets, will be increasingly incomprehensible.” Donnelly’s pessimism brings to mind Landon Winner’s chapter on “Mythinformation” in The Whale and the Reactor (1986). --SV Donnelly, a rare combination of academic and former vice president of Young & Rubicam, takes all of the emerging electronic technologies of communication and finds a similarly fragmenting effect. The overall impact of these technologies is to isolate Americans as individual consumers unable to form a conception of the common good, or even to identify issues of common concern. He works in some interesting notions about David Riesman’s “outer-directed” man of the second half of the twentieth century ironically seeking self realization and lapsing into a “culture of narcissism.” Television and related technologies, while having the potential to form a public of common interests, serve instead to exacerbate this tendency to turn inward. --Gordon Jackson AU - Donnelly, William J. CY - New York DA - 1986 KW - entertainment computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) entertainment, home magnetic recording values preservation home entertainment magnetic tape community democracy community home, and new media home home, and information technology information technology history general studies McLuhan, Marshall Riesman, David history, and television history, and new media +television VCRs video games information technology, and home information v. knowledge myth critics +computers and the Internet home, and new media community, and new media television, and cable home, and VCRs home, and video games home, and computers values, and new media Jackson, Gordon critics democracy and media values LB - 410 PB - Henry Holt and Company PY - 1986 ST - The Confetti Generation: How the New Communications Technology Is Fragmenting America TI - The Confetti Generation: How the New Communications Technology Is Fragmenting America ID - 1437 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book synthesizes research on media effects and pornography, and discusses implications that those findings might have on policy making. AU - Donnerstein, Edward AU - Linz, Daniel AU - Penrod, Steven CY - New York DA - 1987 KW - social science research sexuality pornography motion pictures media effects media violence violence law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science Donnerstein, Edward violence, and pornography pornography, and violence media effects media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects +television television, and violence television, and pornography television, and media effects media effects, and violence media effects, and television media effects, and motion pictures violence, and television violence, and motion pictures pornography, and television LB - 26690 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - The Free Press PY - 1987 ST - The Question of Pornography: Research Findings and Policy Implications TI - The Question of Pornography: Research Findings and Policy Implications ID - 1233 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book grows from the author's interest in American studies and the history of technology. She examines the origins of the American broadcasting system. She looked first to the 1920s, but realized that this decade "was hardly the beginning; nor was this era, in the end, the most interesting to me. As I kept going back in time ... I was struck by how the basic questions surrounding broadcasting's role in society were raised decades before radio broadcasting as we know it began. It was also struck by how many precedents were set before KDKA ever went on the air. Thus, I chose to examine in detail what has sometimes been dismissed as broadcasting's 'pre-history,' and to argue that it was during this period between 1899 and 1922 that the basic, technological, managerial, and cultural template of American broadcasting was cast." The author's nine chapters are entitled: "Marconi and the America's Cup: The Making of an Inventor-Hero, 1899," "Competition over Wireless Technology," "The Visions and Business Realities of the Inventors, 1899-1905," "Wireless Telegraphy in the New Navy, 1899-1906," "Inventors as Entrepreneurs... 1906-1912," "Popular Culture and Populist Technology: The Amateur Operators, 1906-1912," "The Titanic Disaster and the First Radio Regulation, 1910-1912," "The Rise of Military and Corporate Control, 1912-1919," and "The Social Construction of American Broadcasting, 1912-1922." AU - Douglas, Susan J. CY - Baltimore DA - 1987 KW - U. S. Navy technology R & D heroes corporations corporations Roosevelt, Theodore presidents, and new media news and journalism research and development war innovation government materials community democracy law war non-USA World War I +telegraph regulation radio press Germany +radio democracy and media wireless communication radio, and amateur operators radio, and crystal wireless communication, and crystal wireless communication, and amateur operators inventors inventions Marconi, Guglielmo +military communication technology and society technology, and popular culture Titanic regulation, and radio radio, and regulation radio, and corporate control radio, and capitalism heroes, as inventors inventors, as heroes U. S. Navy, and wireless communication radio, and U. S. Navy AT & T radio, and continuous waves De Forest, Lee Fessenden, Reginald audion General Electric Company National Electric Signalling Company (NESCO) press, and amateur radio operators amateur radio operators, and press Radio Act of 1912 Roosevelt, Theodore, and wireless communication World War I, and radio radio, and World War I telegraph, wireless wireless telegraphy capitalism, and radio capitalism censorship and ratings materials Roosevelt, Theodore administration LB - 5280 PB - Johns Hopkins University Press PY - 1987 ST - Inventing American Broadcasting, 1899-1922 TI - Inventing American Broadcasting, 1899-1922 ID - 1915 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Douglas, Susan J. CY - New York DA - 1994 KW - women, and new media women values +motion pictures +television women, and mass media values, and media women LB - 6200 PB - Times PY - 1994 ST - Where the Girls Are: Growing Up Female with the Mass Media TI - Where the Girls Are: Growing Up Female with the Mass Media ID - 2003 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Douglas examines the public relations efforts of the AFL-CIO and four key unions: the UAW, IAM, AFSCME, and the ILGWU. Douglas also outlines three pro-labor media campaigns: the UFW’s grape strike, the ACWA’s boycott of Farah, the United Labor Committee’s right to work campaign; and she provides a detailed study of the ACTWU’s campaign against J.P. Stevens. The Stevens campaign is examined using a protest communications model to offer a strategy of how labor might be more effective in public relations. Douglas briefly describes the efforts of the unions using the labor press and some radio public affairs programming before the merger in the mid-1950s. She noted that unions grew more assertive in issue and advocacy advertising after the merger. “Few avenues have been overlooked in labor’s attempt to inform and persuade its audiences. Newspapers, radio, and television utilization is regarded as essential by many labor leaders today. And although a few unions have used various new communications technologies almost as soon as they became available, many labor officials remain disappointed in the quality and results of labor’s communications programs.” In the late 1950s, the AFL-CIO sponsored two network news programs, with hosts Edward P. Morgan and John W. Vandercook. In addition, broadcast rules gave unions access to free air time for public service announcements. The federation increased its public relations budget in 1957 in response to adverse publicity from a congressional investigation of union leadership. Spending for television was increased from under $10,000 in 1955-56, to more than $250,000 in 1957-58. A series of 15-minute films, Americans at Work, were produced for weekly use on television. Even with a budget cut for radio programming, the AFL-CIO spent nearly twice as much for radio that year. A total of 104 films were produced between 1958 and 1960 and they were shown on television until 1967. No comparable television production effort occurred until the Labor Institute for Public Affairs was created in 1982. LIPA created a 12-part television series, America Works. LIPA also began producing spot television advertising, started a videocassette news service, distributed an information bulletin on electronic media, and invested in cable television. Douglas noted that ILGWU also produced a “Hollywood-type” film, With These Hands, in 1950 using the same writer who produced the successful play Pins and Needles in the 1930s. The IAM also produced public relations films for general audiences, such as My Dad J.R., as well as films for lodge meetings, such as Anatomy of a Lie, a documentary intended to counter an anti-union film about a strike. The IAM also pioneered in cable television, using a satellite in 1979 for a nationwide showing of a labor film followed by an audience call-in program. AFSCME used a satellite transmission service in 1980 for the Labor News Network, which distributed news and features to television and radio stations and cable systems. Douglas concludes that organized labor has become more active and more aggressive in public relations, and that labor is improving its chances of communicating its message. -- Phil Glende AU - Douglas, Sara U. CY - Norwood, NJ DA - 1986 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising journalism satellites news and journalism Glende, Phil labor +radio +television labor, and television television, and labor radio, and labor labor, and radio labor, and print media newspapers, and labor public relations labor, and public relations public relations, and labor labor, and newspapers Labor News Network news associations, labor +aeronautics and space communication labor, and satellites satellites, and labor news labor, and cable television news newspapers LB - 780 N1 - See also: office PB - Ablex Publishing PY - 1986 ST - Labor's New Voice: Unions and the Mass Media TI - Labor's New Voice: Unions and the Mass Media ID - 166 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Downey examines the critical importance of messenger boys in the spread and use of the telegraph in the United States. “Information networks are inevitably socially constructed technological systems,” Downey says. He argues that “the technological network of the telegraph was more than just a combination of electromechanical systems; it was also a combination of systems of labor, in which messenger boys served different functions at different moments – sometimes working as technological components themselves, sometimes being sold as commodities along with the telegrams they carried, and sometimes acting as agents of change within the technological network itself. Messengers were not simply rendered obsolete by the slow and steady advance of technology – whether in telegraphy, telephony, or airmail. Instead, over the course of a century, they both cooperated in maintaining their usefulness to the telegraph, and fought to change their relationship to the telegraph in a way that would ultimately bring about their own exit from the industry.” (7) This book grew out of a 2000 doctoral thesis in two separate departments – the Department of History of Science, Medicine and Technology, and the Department of Geography and Environmental Engineering – at the Johns Hopkins University. AU - Downey, Gregory J. CY - New York and London DA - 2002 KW - technology corporations post office corporations corporations +telegraph office, and new media office labor labor and new media +telephones telegraph, and messenger boys networks, and telegraph +postal service postal service, and telegrams Western Union Telegraph Company AT&T labor, and messenger boys geography space (spatial) labor, and geography geography, and labor urban studies technology and society geography, historical capitalism networks Western Union LB - 28670 N1 - See also: office PB - Routledge PY - 2002 ST - Telegraph Messenger Boys: Labor, Technology, and Geography, 1850-1950 TI - Telegraph Messenger Boys: Labor, Technology, and Geography, 1850-1950 ID - 2347 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 202-page book examines the contentious political controversies in the United States and Europe surrounding the adopting of daylight saving time. The author uses congressional hearings, newspaper accounts, records of town meetings, and letters to editors to look at the arguments of both proponents and opponents of daylight saving. The work, written for a popular audience, has a brief essay on sources (171-3), notes, and index. AU - Downing, Michael CY - Washingtn, D. C. DA - 2005 KW - time and timekeeping time standard time advertising communication revolution labor timekeeping, and clocks war World War I motion pictures timekeeping time clocks railroads transportation communication revolution transportation revolution standard time, and origins capitalism timekeeping, and factories Taylorism clocks, mechanical timekeeping, and commerce timekeeping, and watches motion pictures, and timekeeping timekeeping, and motion pictures +motion pictures general studies timekeeping, and daylight savings World War I, and daylight savings time telegraph propaganda timekeeping, and railroads railroads, and timekeeping labor, and timekeeping non-USA Great Britain Great Britian, and timekeeping timekeeping, and Great Britain Europe Europe, and timekeeping timekeeping, and Europe advertising and public relations LB - 36580 PB - Shoemaker & Hoard PY - 2005 ST - Spring Forward: The Annual Madness of Daylight Saving TI - Spring Forward: The Annual Madness of Daylight Saving ID - 239 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is both a legal analysis of First Amendment law with regard to the censorship of objectionable materials and also a historical analysis of attempts in the United States to limit pornography without violating basic First Amendment protections. Downs specifically studies the attempts of Minneapolis and Indianapolis to pass city anti-pornography ordinances during the 1980s. Downs observes that these ordinances marked a new kind of censorship. In the past, according to Downs, almost every attempt to censor came from the right of the political spectrum. Conservatives have often used this kind of law to block objectionable or "radical" material. However, the motivation behind the censorship discussed in this book came from the left, opening up the concept of "progressive" censorship. Much of the philosophy and terminology in these cases came from left feminist activists who viewed pornography as harmful to women and as a means of subjugation. They believe that it would be fair to censor such material because it caused harm. In his analysis, Downs correctly notes that the restrictions on the First Amendment can only be applied in a content- neutral manner and he is highly critical of the Minneapolis and Indianapolis ordinances and the implications such laws would have for freedom of expression. Much of the book is dedicated to legal theory and First Amendment philosophy. Downs explains carefully the way in which the courts have interpreted the First Amendment and how it should be applied in cases like these. He also discusses the possibility of creating a class of materials which would fall outside of First Amendment protection. The Supreme Court has already established certain categories of speech and expression which are not protected, including libel, obscenity and "fighting words." Downs sums up some of the recent scholarship on the links between pornography, sex crimes and harassment. Ultimately, he argues that the relationship between general, non-violent pornography and violence toward women is unclear, but that a clear link does exist between the violent pornography and sexual violence toward women. It is this kind of pornography that arguably could be censored, but it cannot be done with ordinances of the kind discussed in this book. As he notes, it is very difficult to craft a law that bans one kind of expression without endangering the constitutionally protected freedoms we all cherish. This book provides background to the legal aspects of censorship and to interpreting the political motivations behind attempts at censorship. This study of the development of pornography law in the United States is useful to historians and other scholars. --Rob Rabe This book examines pieces of legislation, one in Minneapolis, the other in Indianapolis, to suppress pornography. The legislation was authored by prominent feminist activists, Catharine MacKinnon and Andrea Dworkin. In Minneapolis, the mayor vetoed the legislation; in Indianapolis, a local federal judge struck down the law on grounds that it violated the First Amendment. The Minneapolis ordinance "respresented a new approach to the restiction of erotic materials, defining pornography as 'the sexually explicit subordination of women, graphically or in words.' Treating pornography as 'discrimination against women,' it was to be administered by the city's Civil Rights Commission rather than by the Criminal Justice Division, the traditional unit of enforcement. This approach departed from the legal treatment of sexual materials that has prevailed for more than a century in the United States. Where previous 'obscenity law' forcused on alleged moral harms wrought by certain sexual materials, the new ordinance postulated a social relationship between pornography and the systematic oppression of women. And where obscenity doctrine held back from designating sexually explicit materials as obscene if its dominant theme gave it 'serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value,' the new ordinance admitted no such delimitation in determining whether a work was pornographic." --SV AU - Downs, Donald A. CY - Chicago DA - 1989 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) magnetic recording women, and new media regulation sexuality magnetic tape women feminism context freedom law censorship and ratings censorship and ratings censorship law censorship and ratings pornography pornography, and First Amendment First Amendment, and pornography law, and pornography women, and pornography pornography, and feminists feminists, and pornography pornography, and Minneapolis pornography, and Indianapolis MacKinnon, Catharine Dworkin, Andrea +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography motion pictures, and First Amendment pornography, and motion pictures context, and pornography law women VCRs values regulation motion pictures law +motion pictures and popular culture censorship, and pornography pornography women, and pornography regulation, and pornography First Amendment children, and media values, and pornography law, and pornography VCRs, and pornography motion pictures, and theaters censorship children censorship, progressive Rabe, Rob LB - 9670 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1989 ST - The New Politics of Pornography TI - The New Politics of Pornography ID - 2334 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Doyle discusses how American presidents beginning with Franklin Roosevelt recorded conversations in the Oval Office. The work is long on political history, but information about the recording technology used is also discussed in these pages. The author begins by discussing FDR's authorization to J. Edgar Hoover in May, 1940, to use "listening devices" against person suspected of espionage or subversion. Roosevelt used an ancestor to the tape recorder, a "Continuous-film Recording Machine," which he had installed in August, 1940. It was a gift from David Sarnoff of RCA. It could run for 24 hours unattended. The quality of Truman's recordings is very poor. Eisenhower used dictabelts and the sound reproduction is also poor. John F. Kennedy, in summer, 1962, installed the first full-scale secret recording network in the White House, turning the office "into a private recording studio." Kennedy, and brother Robert, also began electronic surveillance of their political enemies, reporters, and some staff members. AU - Doyle, William CY - New York DA - 1999 KW - corporations Kennedy, John F. Johnson, Lyndon Ford, Gerald Eisenhower, Dwight D. Carter, Jimmy magnetic recording Roosevelt, Franklin D. Nixon, Richard presidents, and new media law, and privacy law magnetic tape surveillance Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration privacy +sound recording sound recording, and White House surveillance, and White House surveillance, electronic electronic surveillance, and FBI sound recording, and Franklin Roosevelt sound recording, and Harry Truman sound recording, and Dwight Eisenhower sound recording, and John Kennedy sound recording, and Lyndon Johnson sound recording, and Richard Nixon sound recording, and Gerald Ford sound recording, and Jimmy Carter sound recording, and Ronald Reagan Reagan administration, and sound recording sound recording, and George H. W. Bush sound recording, and William Jefferson Clinton privacy, and sound recording sound recording, and Henry Kissinger RCA Sarnoff, David electronic media magnetic recording magnetic recording, and White House Roosevelt, Franklin administration Truman administration Eisenhower administration Kennedy administration Johnson administration Nixon administration Carter administration Ford administration Reagan administration Roosevelt, Franklin, and tape recording Truman, Harry, and tape recording Eisenhower, Dwight, and tape recording Kennedy, John F., and tape recording Johnson, Lyndon, and tape recording Nixon, Richard, and tape recording Ford, Gerald, and tape recording Carter, Jimmy, and tape recording Reagan, Ronald, and tape recording Truman, Harry LB - 4360 PB - Kodansha International PY - 1999 ST - Inside the Oval Office: The White House Tapes from FDR to Clinton TI - Inside the Oval Office: The White House Tapes from FDR to Clinton ID - 1824 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The idea for this anthology began in 1990, and was one of the first projects of the Twentieth Century Fund's communications projects. This volume assumes that a new information infrastructure is in the process of emerging but its precise nature is not yet clear. In the past newspaper played a central part in keeping citizens informed about their government. Radio and television later added immediacy to the news. Now "we are in the early stages of another extraordinary change in the way many Americans transmit and receive information." How these new electronic media will affect governing is uncertain. This book poses several questions. Will the new National Information Infrastructure (NII) be structured mainly for corporate users, or will it also include small businesses, nonprofit agencies, and individuals citizens who can use it without restrictions? What kinds of regulatory policies are needed? Does the American experience with communications serve as a model for other nations, both developing and industrialized? As national economies are eroded, how can a global information infrastructure be created that will incorporate the difference NIIs around the world? This book is divided into four parts and twelve chapters. Part I, "The New Policy Environment," has the following essays: Eli M. Noam, "Beyond Telecommunications Liberalization: Past Performance, Present Hype, and the Future Direction"; François Bar, "Information Infrastructure and the Transformation of Manufacturing"; Linda Garcia, "The Globalization of Telecommunications and Information"; and Richard Jay Solomon, "Telecommunications Technology for the Twenty-first Century." Part II, "Politics for the National Information Infrastructure," includes: Henry Geller, "Reforming the U. S. Telecommunications Policymaking Process"; Lee McKnight and W. Russell Neuman, "Technology Policy and the National Information Infrastructure"; and Herbert S. Dordick, "The Social Consequences of Liberalization and Corporate Control of Telecommunications." Part III, "Polices for the Global Information Infrastructure," includes: Peter Cowhey, "Building the Global Information Highway: Toll Booths, Construction Contracts, and Rules of the Road"; Bruno Lanvin, "Why the Global Village Cannot Afford Information Slums"; Anthony M. Rutkowski, "Multilateral Cooperation in Telecommunications: Implications of the Great Transformation"; Joel R. Reidenberg, "Information Flows on the Global Infobahn: Toward New U. S. Policies"; and Kalypso Nicolaïdis, "International Trade in Information-Based Services: The Uruguay Round and Beyond." Part IV is entitled "Outlook and Conclusion," and includes two essays by William J. Drake, the volume's editor. They are "The National Information Infrastructure Debate: Issues, Interests, and the Congressional Process," and "Policies for the National and Global Information Infrastructures." AU - Drake, William J., ed. CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - nationalism corporations corporations, multinational censorship and ratings labor communication revolution community democracy law capitalism non-USA office office, and new media office political economy infrastructure Information age +nationalism and communication infrastructure, national infrastructure, global global communication regulation telecommunications communication revolution democracy and media capitalism, and new media global village information superhighway, global capitalism, and digital media multinational corporations capitalism digital media nationalism, and digital media digitization information superhighway LB - 11490 PB - Twentieth Century Fund Press PY - 1995 ST - The New Information Infrastructure: Strategies for U. S. Policy T2 - A Twentieth Century Fund Book TI - The New Information Infrastructure: Strategies for U. S. Policy ID - 2509 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This provocative book argues that nanotechnology has placed us on the threshold of a social upheaval of unprecedented dimensions. “To have any hope of understanding our future,” Drexler writes, “we must understand the consequences of assemblers, disassemblers, and nanocomputers. They promise to bring changes as profound as the industrial revolution, antibiotics, and nuclear weapons all rolled up in one massive breakthrough. To understand a future of such profound change, it makes sense to seek principles of change that have survived the greatest upheavals of the past. They will prove a useful guide.” Nanotechnology, if used wisely, will dramatically enhance the quality of life. If used unwisely, it will make possible our destruction. “Dangerous replicators,” Drexler says, “could easily be too tough, small, and rapidly spreading to stop -- at least if we made no preparation. We have trouble enough controlling viruses and fruit flies.” AU - Drexler, K. Eric CY - New York DA - 1987 KW - technology R & D computers preservation research and development war communication revolution history, and new media genetics community democracy communication revolution, and second industrial revolution censorship and ratings children change war history computers nanotechnology assemblers disassemblers nanocomputers artificial intelligence and biotechnology genetic engineering automation history, break with democracy and media DNA evolution change, acceleration of hypertext medicine medicine, and nanotechnology technology and society values values, and technology +military communication second industrial revolution communication revolution +computers and the Internet labor children, and media LB - 11790 PB - Anchor Press/Doubleday PY - 1987 ST - Engines of Creation: The Coming Era of Nanotechnology TI - Engines of Creation: The Coming Era of Nanotechnology ID - 2526 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book synthesizes fifteen years of research on molecular manufacturing. It is intended for several audiences. One is the person with a general science background who is interested in molecular nanotechnology -- its characteristics, principles, capabilities -- but not in the mathematical details. The work is presented in a fashion that the general reader can skip technical sections without becoming lost. Other readers for whom this work is aimed are those considering working in nanotechnology, physicists, chemists, computer scientists, materials scientists, molecular biologists, and mechanical engineers. Each of the work’s 15 chapters and two appendices begins with an overview of its topic. The author has discussed the broader implications of this subject in his earlier book Engines of Creation: The Coming Era of Nanotechnology (New York: Anchor Press/Doubleday, 1986); and in K. E. Drexler, C. Peterson, and G. Pergamit, Unbounding the Future: The Nanotechnology Revolution (New York: William Morrow, 1991). AU - Drexler, K. Eric CY - New York DA - 1992 KW - computers communication revolution materials +computers and the Internet communication revolution, and second industrial revolution biochemistry nanotechnology nanocomputers computers computers, and nanocomputers miniaturization molecular computers computers, and molecular molecular manufacturing materials revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution materials LB - 11890 PB - John Wiley & Sons, Inc. PY - 1992 ST - Nanosystems: Molecular Machinery, Manufacturing, and Computation TI - Nanosystems: Molecular Machinery, Manufacturing, and Computation ID - 2536 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The authors believe that we are near an era in which nanotechnology will radically alter the way in which we live. “A short summary of what molecular nanotechnology will mean is thorough and inexpensive control of the structure of matter. Pollution, physical disease, and material poverty all stem from poor control of the structure of matter. Strip mines, clear-cutting, refineries, paper mills, and oil wells are some of the crude twentieth-century technologies that will be replaced. Dental drills and toxic chemotherapies are others.” The authors’ goal is to explain molecular nanotechnology in a practical way so that readers can think about it and the future realistically. Speculation about this technology’s impact is not limited to communication, but future possibilities include “pocket supercomputers” and “pocket libraries.” Drexler earlier published a book entitled Engines of Creation: The Coming Era of Nanotechnology (New York: Doubleday, 1986). AU - Drexler, K. Eric and Chris Peterson (with Gayle Pergamit) CY - New York DA - 1991 KW - computers archives materials +future and science fiction computers non-USA materials libraries Japan libraries, and information storage information storage information storage +artificial intelligence and biotechnology +computers and the Internet +information storage materials revolution computers, and supercomputers Japan, and nanotechnology future +miniaturization nanotechnology libraries future miniaturization, and nanotechnology computers, and nanotechnology LB - 2160 PB - William Morrow and Company, Inc PY - 1991 ST - Unbounding the Future: The Nanotechnology Revolution TI - Unbounding the Future: The Nanotechnology Revolution ID - 1445 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Drucker writes: “What began as a semiotic analysis of typography produced by artists in the 1910s has evolved into an inquiry into the transformation of semeiotically based critical practices in the course of the twentieth century. The study of typographic experimentation offers an excellent case study for such an inquiry. Because of its interdisciplinary character, the treatment of typography within critical interpretation can be used to trace the transformations in the premises on which both literary and visual arts criticism conceive of their objects.” AU - Drucker, Johanna CY - Chicago DA - 1994 KW - photography print printing modernism modernity modernism news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers news and journalism press modernity magazines +photography and visual communication typography press, and experimental typography modern art, and experimental typography magazines, and experimental typography +books, periodicals, newspapers printing, and typography modern art LB - 1530 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1994 ST - The Visible Word: Experimental Typography and Modern Art, 1909-1923 TI - The Visible Word: Experimental Typography and Modern Art, 1909-1923 ID - 1549 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Drucker, a management scholar and futurist, first published this book in 1968. This edition has a new introduction (1992) and an introduction written to the 1983 edition. Chapters include “The End of Continuity,” “The New Industries and Their Dynamics,” and “The Sickness of Government.” AU - Drucker, Peter F. CY - New Brunswick, NJ DA - 1968, 1992 KW - nationalism preservation communication revolution history, and new media communication revolution, and second industrial revolution government history history general studies history, break with capitalism nationalism and communication government, and decline of government second industrial revolution communication revolution LB - 430 PB - Transaction Publishers; originally New York: Harper & Row, 1968 PY - 1968 ST - The Age of Discontinuity: Guidelines to Our Changing Society TI - The Age of Discontinuity: Guidelines to Our Changing Society ID - 1439 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - “Every few hundred years in Western history there occurs a sharp transformation,” Drucker writes. “We cross what in an earlier book [The New Realities (1989)] I called a ‘divide.’ Within a few short decades, society rearranges itself -- its worldview; its basic values; its social and political structure; its arts; its key institutions. Fifty years later, there is a new world. And the people born then cannot even imagine the world in which their grandparents lived and into which their own parents were born. “We are currently living through just such a transformation. It is creating a post-capitalist society, which is the subject of this book.” AU - Drucker, Peter F. CY - New York DA - 1993 KW - preservation communication revolution history, and new media communication revolution, and second industrial revolution history history general studies capitalism history, break with communication revolution second industrial revolution change, and America change postmodernism capitalism, post LB - 440 PB - Harper Business, A Division of HarperCollins Publishers PY - 1993 ST - Post-Capitalist Society TI - Post-Capitalist Society ID - 1440 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Du Maurier, George CY - London DA - 1897 KW - television, and history of science television television, and origins science fiction, and television +future and science fiction future science fiction LB - 6740 PB - George Bell and Sons PY - 1897 ST - The Martian TI - The Martian ID - 2052 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Du Maurier, George CY - London DA - 1891 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins LB - 6750 PB - Bradbury, Agnew and Co. PY - 1891 ST - Society Pictures TI - Society Pictures ID - 2053 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - As the 500th anniversary of Gutenberg's printing press approached, French author and publisher Georges Duhamel warned that print culture, which made up the very foundation of Western civilization, was being supplanted by movies, the phonograph, and radio. “The book is one of the springs of creative individualism, that individualism which, in these uncertain times, remains the guardian angel of human society," Duhamel said. "For five hundred years the book has been, for the solitary mind, an incomparable instrument of uplift and liberation.” (vii) Yet film, the phonograph, and the radio were bringing "serious changes in our modern culture" (xi) that threatened "the life of the book and the supremacy of the printed word...." (xi) There had been, he argued, “a sharp change of direction of which there are many examples in the story of the human race, and civilized activities seem to be operating temporarily so as to suspend the very progress of civilization itself and divert it into other channels.” (viii) Duhamel went on to say that “Various indications lead us to suppose that books, while still the pâtée royale, that is to say, the essential diet of the elect, the master minds, are going to play an ever diminishing role in the enlightenment and entertainment of the multitude.” (viii) Duhamel did "not despise " these new forms of learning and entertainment so much as he was "afraid of them. I do not underestimate their importance, because I believe that they are capable of transforming the face of the globe that we live in and changing the harmony of our existence. I even admit that I believe, in the bottom of my heart, that the cinema and the radio, wisely handled, could yet work for the salvation of their victim the book. So let no one think of me as an obstinate opponent. The greatest service that can be rendered to cinema and radio and so to their supporters--is to criticize their methods.” (x) Duhamel saw grave consequences if these developments were not challenged and checked. “If the public gets out of the habit of reading they will not come back to it. We shall enter a new phase of our history from ix/x which there is no turning back,” he believed. (ix-x) “Our moral balance, maintained with such difficulty, may find itself impaired.” (xi) What might follow, he feared were "two or three centuries of barbarism." (x) Duhamel thought it was impossible “to create and maintain a true culture, a strong and flourishing culture, through the medium of pictorial and oral apparatus” alone at least as they existed during the 1930s. (21) “Education demands work, real work digging, hoeing, and rolling. Nothing can be acquired without effort….” (45) Film and radio required little of their audiences and were far more powerful instruments of propaganda that they were of education.] The problem the movies and the radio during the 1930s was that they offer little choice or time for reflection. The see one good film one had to sit through hundreds of mediocre ones. “For one good concert on the radio we have to put up with a thousand disgusting or ridiculous noises.” (30) Unlike a book where the reader could go back over a paragraph and consider what had been read, “The cinema and the radio do not repeat themselves they march on, they break into a run. They are … like rivers.” (30) Books were “the friends of solitude.” (42) They developed “individuality and freedom. In solitary reading a man who is seeking himself has some chance of finding himself; he chooses, and he chooses form himself; he escapes from the poisonous air of propaganda. Radio, on the other hand, is now the chief agent of imperialism. It does not purify the spirit of man, does not, like the book bring him back to the sanctuary of solitude, but throws him to the lions, subtly preparing his mind for the blood and chains of the public sacrifice.” (42) This book is divided into four sections. "The first part only," the author said, "is devoted to the serious changes in our modern culture, and to the new forces that threaten the life of the book and the supremacy of the printed word, which is the sign in our time of effective thought. (xi) This book appeared originally as: Georges Duamel, De´fense des lettres. Biologie de mon me´tier (Paris, Mercure de France, 1937). For a less dire view of the likely impact of new media on the book and print culture, written in response to Duhamel, see: Donald Bean, "Books vs. Movies, Phonographs, and Radios," Peabody Journal of Education, 17, No. 4 (Jan. 1940), 253-60. AU - Duhamel, Georges CY - New York DA - 1939 KW - ref, secondary ref, book non-USA France motion pictures books, periodicals, newspapers phonograph radio history, break with motion pictures, and print culture print culture, and motion pictures print culture, and radio print culture, and phonograph print culture, and civilization words vs. images images vs. words France, and print culture print culture, and France propaganda radio, and propaganda motion pictures, and propaganda education education, and books education, and motion pictures education, and radio critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and critics radio, and critics critics, and radio history print LB - 42740 PB - Greystone Press PY - 1939 ST - In Defence of Letters (translated by E. F. Bozman) TI - In Defence of Letters (translated by E. F. Bozman) ID - 474 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Early in the twentieth century, a line of criticism emerged that considered cinema to be part of a mechanical revolution that was undermining print culture, and with it, an essential cornerstone of Western Civilization. In 1928, the French physician and writer George Duhamel returned home from the United States troubled that American culture, which had come to be dominated by motion pictures, radio, the phonograph, newspapers, electric signs, and automobiles, was the wave of the future. He wrote a book about his experiences, Sce`nes de la vie future (1930). No nation had “thrown itself into the excesses of industrial civilization more deliberately than America,” he said. “If you were to picture the stages of that civilization as a series of experiments made by some malign genie on laboratory animals, North America would immediately appear to you as the most scientifically poisoned of them all.” (xiii) A centerpiece of this “material or mechanical civilization” (ix) was the cinema where the spectator was “given no chance to use his intelligence, to discuss, to react, to participate in any manner whatsoever.” (35) At the cinema, everything was “an abridgement,” (31) an “imitation,” and “false,” (27) he asserted. “I began to lose any sense of having a soul,” Duhamel’s recalled. (27) And yet “this terrible machine, so elaborately dazzling, with its luxury, its music, its human voice, this machine for stupefying and destroying the mind, is today among the most astonishing forces in the world.” (35) Motion pictures had become “a most powerful instrument for enforcing a uniform standard, alike in ethics, politics, and aesthetics,” and for smothering “forever the springs of an old and noble spiritual life.” (40) When Duhamel’s book was translated into English, it carried the unfortunate title America the Menace: Scenes from the Life of the Future (1931), which led many American critics to dismiss it out of hand. At first glance, Duhamel’s views might remind one of a condemnation of the movies made about the same time in America by the Jesuit priest Daniel Lord. But where Lord feared erosion of Christianity, Duhamel worried about the loss of a “moral civilization” (ix) based on great literature, art, and music. He would gladly trade all the best movies, he said, “for one play of Moliere’s, for one picture of Rembrandt’s, or for a single fugue of Bach’s.” (36) Duhamel devotes Chapter XI to "The Segregation of Races" in New Orleans, Alabama, and elsewhere. A few years later, Duhamel elaborated on his concerns in another book, In Defence of Letters (1937; trans. 1939). AU - Duhamel, Georges CY - Boston and New York DA - 1931 KW - ref, book non-USA France motion pictures motion pictures, and France France, and motion pictures critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and critics phonograph phonograph, and critics history, break with motion pictures, and break with history history and new media motion pictures, and print culture print culture, and motion pictures critics, and modernism modernism, and critics words vs. images images vs. words race race, and segregation history modernity print LB - 42750 PB - Houghton Mifflin Company PY - 1931 ST - America the Menace: Scenes from the Life of the Future TI - America the Menace: Scenes from the Life of the Future ID - 1548 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book attempts to create a catalog of all the significant inventions and improvements in electronics. The author, an electrical engineer, intended the book not as a “learned treatise” but rather a brief summary of “firsts” in a very widely defined scientific field. As such, he provides brief descriptions of these inventions, often no more than a few sentences, but also includes a couple of citations for scientific journal articles on the particular invention described. The first few chapters are introductory in nature. Dummer briefly chronicles the beginnings of research into electricity in the eighteenth century. He discusses the development of circuits and the science of circuitry, including a few illustrations which help the reader understand the primitive nature of early circuitry. Dummer provides several timelines, including ones for tubes, transistors and integrated circuits, audio reproduction, radio, radar and television. Each timeline is accompanied by a short explanatory chapter. In his chapter on television, Dummer omits developments prior to 1897, which undercuts his hope for an all-inclusive summary volume. Dummer arranges timelines by subject area and chronologically. Although this approach is helpful to the reader, it also results in a good deal of duplication. Dummer includes a short bibliography of inventions and books on inventors. The main portion of the book is the large section of entries explaining the various inventions. Organized chronologically, Dummer lists the invention, the inventor, and the country where the invention occurred. For the most part, these entries are explained in simple, clear language, a definite plus for the non-scientist. Dummer provides an index, both of inventor names, and of inventions. This book is a helpful tool for the historian of science or inventions. It is a starting point, a place to glean the basic information about specific devices or technologies related to electricity and electronics. Dummer sometimes includes more than one citation for an entry, but he does not produce anything resembling a comprehensive bibliography for any of the entries. Rather than viewing this as an encyclopedia or textbook, this book can be thought of as an introductory volume. --David Henning, 1999 AU - Dummer, G. W. A. CY - New York DA - 1983 (3rd ed.) KW - transistors, and integrated circuits References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps recording innovation materials materials +sound recording general studies Henning, David +electricity electronic media vacuum tubes transistors integrated circuits recording, and sound radio radar television inventions inventors general studies timelines LB - 450 PB - Pergamon Press PY - 1983 ST - Electric Inventions and Discoveries: Electronics from its Earliest Beginnings to the Present Day TI - Electric Inventions and Discoveries: Electronics from its Earliest Beginnings to the Present Day ID - 1441 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Dunlap, Orrin CY - New York DA - 1937, 1971 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories non-USA +radio wireless communication Marconi, Guglielmo biography LB - 5870 PB - Macmillan (1937); reprint, New York: Arno Press (1971) PY - 1937 ST - Marconi: The Man and His Wireless TI - Marconi: The Man and His Wireless ID - 1972 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Dunlavy examines the many ways in which the differing political structures in antebellum America and in Prussia (from 1815 to 1848) influenced early railroad development. She argues that political structures plays an important part in both political and economic affairs. Her work is an interesting comparative study of technology in these two nations. It also offers insight into how the American railroad industry managed to push railroad policy away from the state level to the federal government. Chapter 5 deals with “National Styles of Railroad Technology.” In Prussia “railroad promoters dealt with a unitary-bureaucratic state, which meant that they dealt with a handful of central state officials in Berlin. These officials, enjoying greater structural insulation, viewed the new technology with considerable (and well-founded) skepticism during the 1830s, and they scrutinized railroad projects more carefully throughout the period. As a result, the Prussian state granted far fewer railroad charters than the American state legislatures did.” In the United States between the 1850s and 1880s “both federalism and separation of powers provided leverage that the railroads used to good advantage.” Federalism offered railroads two ways to get around state legislatures. Using one strategy, “business could take a ‘lateral’ route, in theory at least, moving from a ‘hostile’ to a ‘benign’ state. And, indeed, American railroad partisans, like Prussian railroad men, quickly used the ‘alarmed capital’ argument precisely to highlight this threat.” By the 1870s, the railroads (and their critics) exploited federalism in a second way, “this time moving ‘upward’ to seek national, in place of state, legislation.” Critics of railroads saw national legislation as perhaps the best way to control a business that had become national. The railroads considered such legislation a way to defend themselves from hostile state legislators. AU - Dunlavy, Collen A. CY - Princeton DA - 1994 KW - technology post office nationalism time and timekeeping censorship and ratings timekeeping, and clocks law non-USA +transportation railroads transportation, and railroads timekeeping timekeeping, and railroads timekeeping, and standard time Germany Germany, and railroads Prussia, and railroads +nationalism and communication nationalism, and American railroads technology and society comparative studies, U. S. and Prussia technology transfer capitalism capitalism, and democracy Great Britain Great Britain, and railroads France France, and railroads federalism technology, and political structure capitalism, and political structure +postal service postal service, and railroads regulation, and railroads technological systems nationalism, and railroads railroads, and nationalism regulation LB - 12100 PB - Princeton University Press PY - 1994 ST - Politics and Industrialization: Early Railroads in the United States and Prussia TI - Politics and Industrialization: Early Railroads in the United States and Prussia ID - 2557 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Dunlop, Orrin Elmer CY - New York DA - 1932 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins LB - 10700 PB - Harper and Row PY - 1932 ST - The Outlook for Television TI - The Outlook for Television ID - 2433 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - By 1965, the number of lines devoted to color in large circulation magazines exceeded those given to black and white are among the interest facts in this advertising textbook. AU - Dunn, Watson and Arnold M Barban CY - Hinsdale, IL DA - 1978 KW -, advertising and public relations color advertising, and color color, and advertising psychology psychology, and color color, and psychology advertising, and psychology psychology, and advertising advertising, and texts color, and magazines magazines, and color advertising magazines LB - 32510 PB - Dryden Press PY - 1978 ST - Advertising: Its Role in Modern Marketing TI - Advertising: Its Role in Modern Marketing ID - 2910 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This brief work with index runs 117 pages. Chapter one covers such subjects as color hearing, memory and color, imagination and color, feeling and color, and dreams and color. It also has an interesting section on "Appearance of a Color by Using Chemical Stimulants" (15-19) and a subheading entitled "Artificial Paradise" (15-16). "An artificial paradise of colors is created by chemical stimulants acting from the interior of the body: alcohol, hashish, peyote, LSD." (15) The phrase "articial paradise" is taken from Charles Baudelaire's book Les Paradis Artificiels (1860), published in English under the title Artificial Paradise: On Hashish and Wine as Means of Expanding Individuality (1971). Duplessis also cites Aldous Huxley's Doors of Perception (1954), who wrote about the influence on perception of mescaline, the active ingrediate in peyote. This work, translated from French by Paul von Toal, was originally published in France under the title La Vision Parapsychologique des Couleurs. AU - Duplessis, Yvonne CY - New York DA - 1975 KW - censorship avant garde ref, secondary context art color freedom color, and freedom color, and 1960s art, and color color, and art avant garde, and color color, and avant garde censorship, and color color, and censorship censorship and ratings color, and prejudice against sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, context context, and color color, and 1960s color, and sensation color, and drug culture values values, and color color, and values media effects color, and media effects media effects, and color quotations quotations, and color as artificial paradise Huxley, Aldous metaphors metaphors, and articial paradise ref, book LB - 39750 PB - Parapyschology Foundation PY - 1975 ST - Paranormal Perception of Color TI - Paranormal Perception of Color ID - 4073 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work examines the federal government's role in promoting science up to 1940 -- before the enormous expansion of government support for research and development that came with World War II and then later, after the Soviets had launched Sputnik in 1957. AU - Dupree, A. Hunter CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1957 KW - R & D nationalism science research and development +nationalism and communication scientific research, and government support research and development, and government support (pre-World War II) LB - 9680 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1957 ST - Science in the Federal Government: A History of Policies and Activities to 1940 TI - Science in the Federal Government: A History of Policies and Activities to 1940 ID - 2335 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Dupuy, Judy CY - Schenectady, NY DA - 1945 KW - General Electric Company General Electric Company Company television, and history of +television television, and origins General Electric Company, and television television, and General Electric Company LB - 10710 PB - General Electric PY - 1945 ST - Television Show Business TI - Television Show Business ID - 2434 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Duysters contends that “the use of dynamic insights which were originally developed in biology can improve our current understanding of the evolution of complex industrial systems over time.” His central argument “is that the evolution of complex industrial systems is shaped by the interplay of industrial structures, company strategies and technological developments. Therefore, in order to understand the complex dynamics of industrial systems it is necessary to analyse not only the development of market structures, but we also need a thorough understanding of the nature of technological change and the role that is played by various organizational forms over time. Central to my approach,” the author says, “is the model of natural selection. The model, as set out by Darwin and Wallace, “argues that species which are best adapted to a specific environment survive, while other less well-adapted species die. In this study I will argue that firms better equipped to meet environmental changes than others may grow successfully, while other less successful firms decline.” Duysters devotes chapters to the international computer industry, the telecommunications industry, and the semiconductor industry. The concluding chapter attempts “an appraisal of the usefulness of our integrated biology- inspired approach.” AU - Duysters, Geert CY - Cheltenham, UK and Brookfield, VT DA - 1996 KW - computers Darwinism non-USA Information Age general studies information age information processing natural selection biotechnology Darwin, Charles capitalism global communication computers semiconductors telecommunications miniaturization +artificial intelligence and biotechnology +computers and the Internet social Darwinism Darwinism, social LB - 460 PB - Edward Edgar PY - 1996 ST - The Dynamics of Technical Innovation: The Evolution and Development of Information Technology TI - The Dynamics of Technical Innovation: The Evolution and Development of Information Technology ID - 1442 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Dworkin was a strong anti-pornography feminist and her views are explained Pornography: Men Possessing Women (c1981). In Minneapolis, Dworkin and Catharine MacKinnon, a law professor, proposed a law that would make it easier to prosecute pornographers. The two women had been at the University of Minnesota in 1983 where they co-taught a Law School course on pornography. Their plan differed from previous obscenity law. It defined pornography as “the sexually explicit subordination of women, graphically or in words,” and treated pornography as “discrimination against women.” This legal strategy placed the administration of the law under the city’s Civil Rights Commission, not the Criminal Justice Division. Whereas obscenity in the Miller decision held that material was not obscene unless a work, “taken as a whole,” lacked “serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific values,” the measure devised by Dworkin and MacKinnon allowed no such qualification. In Minneapolis, the city council passed the Dworkin-MacKinnon measure but Mayor Donald Fraser vetoed it on grounds that it violated the First Amendment. AU - Dworkin, Andrea CY - New York DA - c1981 KW - women, and new media sexuality motion pictures women feminism law censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture pornography women feminists women, and pornography feminists, and pornography pornography, and women pornography, and feminists censorship censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship feminists, and censorship censorship, and feminists LB - 22200 PB - Perigee Books PY - 1981 ST - Pornography: Men Possessing Women TI - Pornography: Men Possessing Women ID - 949 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book, with extensive illustrative material interspersed with text gives the reader a good visual image of the history of the railway system in Britain. Thematically organized by various aspects of the railway, from locomotives and stations to early public reactions and the lives of employees, this book is the equivalent of wandering through a train museum. A third section explores the train in everyday life, with pages devoted to the train in leisure, the military, crime, and the arts. Content is largely anecdotal, but still informative and detailed. A good work for understanding the social impact of the railways. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Eaglemoss Publications, Ltd. CY - Newton Abbot (UK) DA - 2001 KW - illustrations non-USA Wolf, Nicholas Great Britain +transportation railroads Great Britain, and railroads railroads, and Great Britain illustrations LB - 1900 PB - David & Charles PY - 2001 ST - Scenes from a Signalbox: A Social History of Britain’s Railways TI - Scenes from a Signalbox: A Social History of Britain’s Railways ID - 278 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book deals with Jean Rouch and covers his use of 16mm cameras in documenting his work relating to anthropology. AU - Eaton, Mick, ed. CY - London DA - 1979 KW - 16mm +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and anthropology motion pictures, and 16mm film anthropology, and 16mm film 16mm film, and anthropology 16mm film LB - 18120 PB - British Film Institute PY - 1979 ST - Anthropology -- Reality -- Cinema: The Films of Jean Rouch TI - Anthropology -- Reality -- Cinema: The Films of Jean Rouch ID - 721 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This collection of essays examines how issues of race, class and gender will come into play on the Internet. The authors use a variety of methodologies to address the following questions: 1) Will the new medium include marginalized constituencies?; 2) Will the Internet serve as an equalizer or will it create “hedonistic isolations” which will hurt communities?; 3) Will knowledge gaps increase?; and 4) How will the economics of the Internet shape class and gender relations? --Mark Tremayne AU - Ebo, Bosah CY - Westport, CT DA - 1998 KW - computers class nationalism women, and new media digital media digitization community democracy community race information technology +computers and the Internet Tremayne, Mark women women, and the Internet race, and Internet class, and the Internet digital divide, and rich and poor cyberspace public sphere democracy and media information technology, and education +nationalism and communication capitalism writing community, and Internet LB - 9060 PB - Praeger PY - 1998 ST - Cyberghetto or Cybertopia? Race, Class and Gender on the Internet TI - Cyberghetto or Cybertopia? Race, Class and Gender on the Internet ID - 2273 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Eckhardt, George CY - New York DA - 1936, 1974 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins LB - 10720 OP - 1936 PB - Arno Publishing PY - 1936 ST - Electronic Television TI - Electronic Television ID - 2435 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a translation from the German-language fourth edition of Eder’s History that appeared in 1932. In 1905, in the Preface to the Third Edition, Eder wrote: “There are three stages in the development of my Geschichte der Photographie. The first was the period to the beginning of the eighteenth century; this fragment ... was published in 1881. In 1890 I published ... the development of photochemistry up to Daguerre and Niépce. Then followed the first authoritative and exhaustive treatment of the general field of photography, with accurate references to the literature and historical sources, in my Ausführliches Handbuch der Photographie, which served as the groundwork for my history of the modern photographic process. With this material in hand, I was enabled for the first time to attempt, in this (third) edition of my history, to present the history of the invention of photography up to the end of the nineteenth century. I undertook also to include in this work careful reproductions of many incunabula and portraits of importance to the history of photography. The originals of most of these are fast disappearing and have become very rare and difficult to obtain....” The work provides a technical history of photography but also attempts to set photography’s development into an international context up to the end of the nineteenth century. As an Austrian, Eder provides considerable information about Austrian contributions to this field – contributions he felt in 1932 that had been often neglected by recent histories of German origin. This translation omits the illustrations that appeared in Eder’s original volume. This book, which runs 860 pages, is not only informative on early personalities involved with the development of photography, but also on the scientific processes that contributed to advances in this field. This edition contains a biography of Eder (pages 720-28) by Hinricus Lüppo-Cramer. AU - Eder, Josef Maria CY - New York DA - 1881, 1890, 1905, 1932, 1945 KW - Lumiére, Louis corporations Lumiére, Louis corporations dyes dyeing Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Aristotle photography projection print printing motion pictures materials paper cinema motion pictures celluloid film color collodion celluloid news and journalism non-USA +photography and visual communication photography Austria, and photography photography, and Austria color, and photography photography, and color Europe, and photography photography, and Europe collodion process, and photography photography, and collodion process +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, origins cinematography Daguerre, Louis daguerreotype celluloid, and film color, and Aristotle Aristotle, and color dyes, and color photography photography, and dyes Eastman Kodak Eder, Josef Maria, biography film, and celluloid film, and photography Goethe, J. W. von, and color color, and Goethe half tone process photography, and half tone process newspapers, and half tones printing, and newspapers lenses lighting photography, and lighting Lumière brothers Marey, Étienne Jules paper, and photography photography, and paper photomicrography photolithography printing, and photography projection, and photography photography, and projection Talbot, William Fox photography, and balloons balloons, and photography zincography color, and three-color photography photography, and snapshots color, and bipack Maxwell, James Clerk Austria biography, and Josef Maria Eder biography newspapers Europe materials film half tones news LB - 12640 OP - 1932 (1881, 1890, 1905) PB - Columbia University Press PY - 1881 ST - Geschichte der Photographie (History of Photography, translated by Edward Epstean) TI - Geschichte der Photographie (History of Photography, translated by Edward Epstean) ID - 2610 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book deals with the "Fatty" Arbuckle scandal that ruined the commedian's career and fueled public outrage against the immorality of movies and their stars. This scandal was an important factor that led to the creation of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America and the hiring of Will H. Hays to be it president in 1922. AU - Edmonds, Andy CY - New York DA - 1991 KW - celebrity Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories values +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures biography motion pictures, and scandal motion pictures, and actors' status motion pictures, and censorship celebrity culture motion pictures, and celebrity culture Arbuckle, Fatty critics values LB - 13330 PB - William Morrow and Company, Inc. PY - 1991 ST - Frame Up! The Untold Story of Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle TI - Frame Up! The Untold Story of Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle ID - 505 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This uneven book nevertheless has interesting information about the development of computers and the American military. Some of the author’s information and quotations are not footnoted. The notes do not reflect much research in primary sources, yet there may be primary material (e.g., from the Reagan years during the 1980s) that was seen but not cited. Readers may find the opening chapter disjoined and disappointing. Subsequent pages are better. Chapters 2-4 deal with the military and use of computers from World War II through the 1960s. Chapter 4 (“From Operations Research to the Electronic Battlefield”) is good on the RAND Corporation and former Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara’s obsession with game theory and mathematical modeling, as well as how the computer became an icon during the Kennedy/Johnson years. Chapter 9 (“Computers and Politics in Cold War II”) is quite interesting. Edwards notes that Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford reduced spending on research and development, while Jimmy Carter, and especially Ronald Reagan, greatly expanded spending in this area. Shortly after Reagan announced the Strategic Defense Initiative in 1983, he put forward a $600 million program called Strategic Computing Initiative (SCI) which greatly accelerated spending on research and development in computer technology. Chapter 10 (“Minds, Machines, and Subjectivity in the Closed World”) discusses several films beginning with Fail Safe and Dr. Strangelove through 2001, The Forbin Project, Blade Runner, other popular films (Terminator 2 is discussed in the Epilogue), and William Gibson’s science fiction novel Neuromancer (1984). Edwards announces in note 8 (p. 425) of this chapter that he deliberately has “chosen not to consult” the other literature written about these films. He provides useful summaries of the plots and common themes connecting these pictures but does not carry his analysis to a deeper level where he tries to determine through research how these pictures were constructed. In many ways this approach is reflective of one taken elsewhere in the book-- a tendency to use theory rather than research to sustain one’s argument. Still, there are ideas and leads for future research and in this way the book is stimulating. In his Introduction, Edwards writes: “Of all the technologies built to fight the Cold War, digital computers have become its most ubiquitous, and perhaps its most important, legacy. Yet few have realized the degree to which computers created the technological possibility of Cold War and shaped its political atmosphere, and virtually no one has recognized how profoundly the Cold War shaped computer technology. Its politics became embedded in the machines -- even, at times, in their technical design -- while the machines helped make possible its politics. This book argues that we can make sense of the history of computers as tools only when we simultaneously grasp their history as metaphors in Cold War science, politics, and culture.” Other topics covered in this book include: chapter 5, ”Interlude: Metaphor and the Politics of Subjectivity”; chapter 6, “The Machine in the Middle: Cybernetic Psychology and World War II”; chapter 7, “Noise, Communication, and Cognition”; and chapter 8, “Constructing Artificial Intelligence." This book began as a doctoral thesis in the Studies in History of Consciousness at the University of California at Santa Cruz. AU - Edwards, Paul N. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1996 KW - R & D computers corporations nationalism Ford, Gerald SDI Nixon, Richard presidents, and new media RAND Corporation research and development war Kennedy administration digital media government war World War II research and development information technology iconography icons +nationalism and communication +military communication +artificial intelligence and biotechnology RAND Corporation Strategic Computing Initiative strategic defense initiative (SDI) computers, digital Cold War, and computers computers, and Cold War Department of Defense, and information technology Department of Defense, and computers Department of Defense, and artificial intelligence information technology, and Department of Defense cybernetics metaphors World War II, and cybernetics McNamara, Robert, and computers Kennedy administration, and computers icons, and computers computers, as icon computers, and popular culture research and development, and Nixon Administration research and development, and Ford Administration research and development, and Carter Administration research and development, and Reagan Administration supercomputers computers, and supercomputers Gibson, William Forbin Project (1970) Blade Runner Terminator (1984) military communication, and electronic battlefield Cold War +computers and the Internet computers Department of Defense, U.S. Kennedy, John F. military, and digital media nationalism, and digital media nationalism, and computers digitization computers, and nationalism computers, and military Ford administration Ford administration, and research and development Nixon administration Nixon administration, and research and developoment Reagan administration Reagan administration, and research and development LB - 2210 PB - MIT Press PY - 1996 ST - The Closed World: Computers and the Politics of Discourse in Cold War America TI - The Closed World: Computers and the Politics of Discourse in Cold War America ID - 1614 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Ehrlich, Matthew C. CY - Urbana DA - 2004 KW - news and journalism motion pictures motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures Capra, Frank myth motion pictures, and myth news, and motion pictures journalism, and myth Watergate, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Watergate news, and myth journalism, and motion pictures journalism news Watergate LB - 32950 PB - University of Illinois Press PY - 2004 ST - Journalism in the Movies TI - Journalism in the Movies ID - 2933 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a perceptive, often eloquently written book on the changes brought by the phonograph and the ability to record music and other sounds. The phonograph record, "heavy and cold, like black ice," changed the way people experience music. "In 1877," the author writes, "music began to become a thing." It became a commodity, to be bought and sold. Prior to capitalism, "the musician sang for his supper." With the growth of a music industry, the "cathedral of culture" became the "supermarket." Before the phonograph record, listening to music almost always (except when the artist played alone) was a social occasion. After 1877, it became a more solitary experience. Where the radio tended to enhance unification, the recorded fractured society. Totalitarian states tried to control phonograph recordings. The Soviets during the 1920s, for example, tried to punish the importation and playing of American jazz. AU - Eisenberg, Evan CY - New York DA - 1987 KW - nationalism time and timekeeping time preservation +sound recording history, and new media non-USA music radio +sound recording phonograph public address systems public address systems loudspeakers history +sound recording phonograph records sound recording, and phonograph sound recording, and music +nationalism and communication loudspeakers, and Nazis microphones Edison, Thomas Gaisberg, Fred Gould, Glenn +radio radio, and Nazis Plato time history, and phonograph sound recording, and commercialization nationalism, and sound recording sound recording, and nationalism LB - 3930 PB - McGraw-Hill Book Company PY - 1987 ST - The Recording Angel: Explorations in Phonography TI - The Recording Angel: Explorations in Phonography ID - 1781 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is an illustrated and abridged 297-page version of Eisenstein's two-volume Printing Press as an Agent of Change: Communications and cultural transformations in early-modern Europe (1979). The two-volume study is a substantial intellectual history that examines how the printing press altered Western (indeed, world) civilization. Eisenstein shows how European society changed with of rapid expansion of printed materials after the advent of printing with movable metal type. The increased availability of reading material moved civilization from an oral culture with a listening public to a written and reading public. The printing press also encouraged individualism. The increased availability of Bibles created an environment that encouraged Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation. Other books written in the vernacular promoted more democratic and nationalistic government. The printing press freed intellectuals and scientists from the necessity of rote memorization, and thus freed minds for more creative endeavors. This new, light weight form of communication which utilized the book and paper facilitated the expansion of Western Europe. This abridged volume is good for classroom use. AU - Eisenstein, Elizabeth L. CY - New York DA - 1983 KW - nationalism imperialism Protestants print communication revolution cultural imperialism community democracy values religion non-USA values printing printing +books, periodicals, newspapers Gutenberg, Johann printing communication revolution, and printing values, and printing Protestant Reformation Luther, Martin Europe +nationalism and communication expansion, European communication revolution nationalism, and printing press religion, and printing press capitalism, and printing press democracy, and printing press cultural imperialism, and printing press printing press, and cultural expansion capitalism LB - 9220 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1983 ST - The Printing Revolution in Early Modern Europe TI - The Printing Revolution in Early Modern Europe ID - 2289 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This substantial, two-volume intellectual history examines how the printing press altered Western (indeed, world) civilization. Eisenstein shows how European society changed with of rapid expansion of printed materials after the advent of printing with movable metal type. The increased availability of reading material moved civilization from an oral culture with a listening public to a written and reading public. The printing press also encouraged individualism. The increased availability of Bibles created an environment that encouraged Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation. Other books written in the vernacular promoted more democratic and nationalistic government. The printing press freed intellectuals and scientists from the necessity of rote memorization, and thus freed minds for more creative endeavors. This new, light weight form of communication which utilized the book and paper facilitated the expansion of Western Europe. AU - Eisenstein, Elizabeth L. CY - New York DA - 1979 KW - nationalism imperialism values religion Protestants print communication revolution second industrial revolution microelectronics revolution cultural imperialism democracy community non-USA printing press printing books, periodicals, newspapers Gutenberg, Johann printing communication revolution, and printing values, and printing Protestant Reformation Luther, Martin Europe nationalism and communication expansion, European communication revolution nationalism, and printing press religion, and printing press capitalism, and printing press democracy, and printing press cultural imperialism, and printing press printing press, and cultural expansion capitalism LB - 12680 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1979 ST - The Printing Press as an Agent of Change: Communications and cultural transformations in early-modern Europe (2 volumes) TI - The Printing Press as an Agent of Change: Communications and cultural transformations in early-modern Europe (2 volumes) ID - 2614 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is an informative introduction to major developments in electronics up to 1981. It begins with the world of communication in 1930, and a brief history of the technology of that period. Chapters are devoted to radio and to World War II. Chapter 5 is "The Solid State Era," and chapter 6 considers developments in the aftermath of the transistor. Chapter 7 looks at "Computers and Space," while chapter 8 considers the digital age. Pages are then given to brief biographies of "great innovators" and to "classic circuits." The final 80 pages look ahead (from 1981) to the year 2000, a period, the editors predict, that will see "profound changes" in technology, the engineering profession, and in the industry's structure. --SV This is a 50-year anniversary publication by the publishers of Electronics magazine, established 1930. The book details the many advances in electronic technology over the past half-century, largely informed by the pages of the magazine. It concentrates on semi-conductor technology, radio, TV, and computers. The bulk of it centers on a decade-by-decade analysis, with a final section detailing predictions for the remainder of the twentieth century. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Electronics, Editors of CY - New York DA - 1981 KW - R & D computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) microprocessing cathode rays magnetic recording time and timekeeping transistors, and integrated circuits fiber optics motion pictures research and development war innovation archives materials magnetic tape future and science fiction fiber optics timekeeping, and clocks war non-USA television recording recording, and sound radio radio, and broadband sound recording lithography libraries libraries, and information storage Information Age general studies microelectronics electronic media radio World War II World War II, and research and development solid state inventions inventors engineering vacuum tubes Marconi, Guglielmo Faraday, Michael Edison, Thomas Maxwell, James Clerk Hertz, Heinrich Fleming, John De Forest, Lee computers Eniac Edvac digital media Nipkow, Paul Baird, John Logie television, and big-screen television, and stereo television, and color Zworykin, Vladimir radio, and automobiles radio, and AM radar microwaves radar jamming Alexanderson, Ernst F. W. Bell Laboratories oscilloscopes military communication sonar miniaturization proximity fuse information storage information processing vacuum tubes cable, coaxial television, and cable recording, and tape recording, and stereo recording, and phonograph phonograph transistors Bardeen, John Shockley, William Brattain, Walter transistors, and germanium integrated circuits radio, and transistors transistors, and radio Texas Instruments Company ceramics lasers microprocessors electronics industry, growth of television, and vidicon cathode ray tubes recording, and phonograph 78-rpm recording, and phonograph 45-rpm Univac IBM satellites global communication aeronautics and space communication rocketry space communication masers Telstar satellites, and Echo I satellites, and Telstar satellites, and telephones satellites, and radio satellites, and television television, and satellites radio, and satellites telephones, and satellites integrated circuits, and miniaturization revolution television, and cameras cameras, television computers, desktop Terman, Frederick Ponte, Maurice Nobel, Daniel E. Hogan, C. Lester Wheeler, Harold Alden Ardenine, Manfred von Black, Harold S. Sanders, Royden S. Forrester, Jay W. Maiman, Theodore H. circuits, classic microscopes, electron lithography lithography, x-ray lithography, electron beam lithography, ion-beam clocks, quartz television, and vacuum tubes word processing optical fibers radio, citizen band radio, and broadband amplifier radio, mobile radio, and shortwave radio, and telephones weather, and satellites satellites, and weather future engineering motion pictures and popular culture television television, and cable VCRs radio electricity telephones duplicating technologies sound recording cable cameras circuits clocks computers and the Internet timekeeping television digitization future, and new media Wolf, Nicholas materials LB - 470 PB - McGraw-Hill Publications Co. PY - 1981 ST - An Age of Innovation: The World of Electronics, 1930-2000 TI - An Age of Innovation: The World of Electronics, 1930-2000 ID - 1443 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Ellul writes that “Modern propaganda could not exist without the mass media–the inventions that produced press, radio, television, and motion pictures, or those that produced the means of modern transportation and which permit crowds of diverse individuals from all over to assemble easily and frequently.” This work is essentially a theoretical explication of the term “propaganda.” While Ellul draws on history (primarily the twentieth century) and makes comparisons between societies, the work is not a history of propaganda. Rather, Ellul seeks to elaborate on the conditions necessary for it to flourish, as well as on propaganda's characteristics and effects. While most of the book focuses on the similarities between so-called “authoritarian” propaganda and “democratic” propaganda, Ellul ultimately argues that democracy and propaganda do not mix well. His book is intended then as a warning to western nations. --Mark Tremayne AU - Ellul, Jacques CY - New York DA - 1965 KW - advertising and public relations propaganda public relations propaganda advertising media effects community democracy war general studies democracy and media critics propaganda +radio +books, periodicals, newspapers +television advertising +motion pictures Cold War Tremayne, Mark public relations propaganda, democratic propaganda, authoritarian media effects, and propaganda military communication LB - 9690 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 1965 ST - Propaganda: The Formation of Men’s Attitudes TI - Propaganda: The Formation of Men’s Attitudes ID - 2336 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The FM Atlas and Station Directory offers a variety of data on FM stations including call letters, maps indicating stations’ location and coverage, applications for new stations in the United States and Canada, and precise station frequencies. These editions (4th through 8th) provide a good account of the extent and growth of FM radio from the mid-1970 into the early 1980s. AU - Elving, Bruce F. CY - Adolph, MN DA - 1976, 1978, 1980, 1982, 1983 KW - FM radio References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps non-USA +radio radio, FM Canada Canada, and radio Canada, and FM radio frequency modulation (FM radio) FM radio, and U.S. FM radio, and Canada reference works atlases LB - 12490 PB - FM Atlas Publishing Co. PY - 1976 ST - FM Atlas and Station Directory TI - FM Atlas and Station Directory ID - 2596 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work runs 89 pages plus an index. AU - Engineering, Center for the History of Electrical CY - New York DA - 1992 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories primary sources engineering electric lighting electrical engineering +electricity electricity, and oral history electricity, and archives +archives oral histories electrical engineers LB - 3980 PB - Center for the History of Electrical Engineering; IEEE PY - 1992 ST - Sources in Electrical History 2: Oral History Collections in U. S. Repositories TI - Sources in Electrical History 2: Oral History Collections in U. S. Repositories ID - 1786 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 104-page treatise seeks to "bridge the gap between the artistic approach and scientific know-how" that existed in making color films in 1957. This is largely a work aimed at engineers rather than an effort to explain what emotional or psychological impact color in motion pictures might have. Chapter 11 is devoted to "Motion Pictures and Color Television." (91-94) Chapter 5 is on "Planning a Motion Picture in Color" (38-50). "The simple fact of the matter is that color has proved to be a tremendous asset to a motion picture -- so much so that it has often been considered another 'star' in a picture, included in the advertising, in the publicity, and usually on the marquee." (38) One often quoted passage reads: "There are many factors which strongly influence the overall planning of a color motion picture. The feminine star, for example, whose appearance is of paramount concern, must be given undisputed priority as to the color of make-up, hair and costumes which will best compliment here complexion and her figure." (40) Later, this work comments on the psychological impact of color. "This psychological factor can be one of great importance in creating an atmosphere of reality or verisimilitude on the screen. With the filming of an historical or a 'period' picture, for example, research is done not only on architecture and decoration, but also on the colors in use during the particular period and in the specific country. Yet the use of the actual colors of the period or the country are very rarely employed. Because of psychological factors governing the response of a modern viewing audience, far better results are achieved by the use of a desaturated tonality of the times -- that is, a less saturated range or 41/42 'palette' of color and pattern, but adequately punctuated with authentic identifying colors so that the end result tends to be identified as historically accurate, yet believable." (41-42) This work also notes that "skin tones are of prime importance in a color picture." (43) AU - Engineers, Special Committee of the Society of Motion Picture and Television CY - New York DA - 1957 KW - ref, secondary color color, and motion pictures color, and television color, and women color, and skin tones color, and sexuality motion pictures motion pictures, and color television television, and color television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television sexuality sexuality, and color women women, and color color, and special effects special effects, and color motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and motion pictures special effects, and color quotations quotations, and color quotations, and color skin tones quotations, and women and color special effects LB - 41240 PB - Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers PY - 1957 ST - Elements of Color in Professional Motion Pictures TI - Elements of Color in Professional Motion Pictures ID - 4223 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This poem begins: "The typeriter is crating/ A revlootion in peotry/Pishing back the frontears ...." AU - Enright, D. J. CY - New York DA - 1971 KW - typewriters +duplicating technologies writing LB - 2420 PB - Library Press PY - 1971 ST - The Typewriter Revolution & Other Poems TI - The Typewriter Revolution & Other Poems ID - 330 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Political scientist Robert Entman examines the many paradoxes that face the press in the United States. The ideal is to have a vigorous political system driven by a vibrant marketplace of ideas in a free press. He argues that it is impossible for the press to be truly free in the American system. Journalists are reliant on power elites, both in government and business, for information and support and are necessarily biased. Entman continues, however, by saying that the larger problem comes from the lack of a politically sophisticated public. Because the economics of the current media system seem to dictate that content be softened and geared toward entertainment, journalists are discouraged from engaging in deeper analysis or aggressive reporting. Entman sees a debilitating paradox that leads to the decay of civic life, or “democracy without citizens.” The public needs a strong and independent media to become more sophisticated. However, because the public is seemingly uninterested in politics, the press does not become strong and independent. Entman’s book explains this cyclical relationship. One of the major issues that Entman examines is corporate, profit-driven, media. He believes that, since the media is ultimately designed to make money rather than inform, the emphasis will be on providing content that is entertaining and enjoyable and attracts readers, viewers and listeners. He does not, however, believe that monopolization plays a serious role in this trend. Chain newspapers are no more likely to be motivated for profit than a locally owned one. In fact, there are more media outlets now than ever before, and yet people are not more informed. Entman also believes that power elites and political candidates are more likely to turn to news management and demagoguery when the press is weak and public opinion uninformed or confused by mixed messages. Another problem that Entman sees is the reluctance of the press to be critical of leadership. Journalists are reliant on leaders for information and often let themselves be led. When they do become critical, it is often after much damage has already occurred. Criticism is also largely tied to the popularity of the figures involved. Entman makes an interesting comparison between press coverage of Presidents Nixon, Ford, Carter and Reagan. Not only were they treated differently, but each President was treated differently as his popularity rose or fell. The key, according to Entman, is to increase the public’s sense of citizenship. One proposal is to create party-funded news sources that would provide political information and encourage participation, similar to the party press model of the 1800s. He also believes that computer technology and the Internet will provide a whole range of new media outlets that can potentially reinvigorate the system and enhance citizenship. --Rob Rabe Entman writes “In theory, democracy in the United States benefits from a vigorous marketplace of ideas created by an energetic ‘free press.’ The press is supposed to enhance democracy both by stimulating the citizenry’s political interest and by producing the specific information they need to hold government accountable. But American’s ‘free press’ cannot be free. Restricted by the limited tastes of the audience and reliant upon political elites for most information, journalists participate in an interdependent news system, not a free market of ideas. In practice, then, the news media fall far short of the ideal vision of a free press as civic educator and guardian of democracy. “Despite their institutional shortcomings, the news media do influence politics significantly. This book weaves an explanation of the media’s simultaneous dependence and strength into a theory of news, public opinion, and democracy in the United States. theory explains how the media can wield the power to alter public policy and cripple presidencies--yet cannot harness that power to serve democratic citizenship and promote government accountability as free press ideals demand.” AU - Entman, Robert M. CY - New York DA - 1989 KW - entertainment, and journalism computers nationalism citizenship journalism news and journalism entertainment community democracy computers community news and journalism news media +computers and the Internet Rabe, Rob democracy and media critics media literacy citizenship, and media +television news, and corporate influence news, and entertainment public sphere public opinion media effects +nationalism and communication television, and democracy computers, and democracy community, and new media capitalism, and journalism journalism, and capitalism capitalism, and democracy democracy, and capitalism entertainment, and journalism journalism, and entertainment journalism capitalism LB - 9410 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1989 ST - Democracy Without Citizens: Media and the Decay of American Politics TI - Democracy Without Citizens: Media and the Decay of American Politics ID - 2308 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Epstein attempts to refute the charge that only a few men, an elite, dictate what becomes news. He writes: “For example: before any programs can reach a national audience, affiliated stations must ‘clear’ them....Further, the very fact that broadcasting is licensed and regulated by the federal government, which makes both the affiliated stations and the networks dependent for their continuing existence on some measure of government approval, must be taken into account by the networks in their overall policies on news coverage and presentation. And the economic realities of network television, reflected in budgets and schedules, restrict the choices of stories available to news personnel. Finally established routines and procedures for gathering information and narrowing down the list of possible stories reduce the opportunities for politically selecting news stories or modes of presentation. In short, the outputs on network news are not simply the arbitrary choices of a few men; they result from a process.” AU - Epstein, Edward CY - New York DA - 1973 KW - preservation journalism history, and new media community democracy news and journalism news history +television television, and news news, and television democracy and media history, and television news, bias LB - 9700 PB - Random House PY - 1973 ST - News From Nowhere; Television and the News TI - News From Nowhere; Television and the News ID - 2337 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This interesting cultural history deals with the changes in New York nightlife between 1890 and 1930. These were years when major technological changes came to America -- electrification, sound recording, wireless and radio, photography and moving pictures. Numerous innovations vastly increased the ability of Americans to experience music and other sights and sounds during this period. AU - Erenberg, Lewis A. CY - Chicago DA - c1981, 1984 KW - cultural change cyberspace culture +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures context cultural change, late 19th cultural change, early 20th motion pictures, and community motion pictures, and cultural change leisure motion pictures, and leisure leisure, and motion pictures LB - 12830 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1981 ST - Steppin' Out: New York Nightlife and the Transformation of American Culture, 1890-1930 TI - Steppin' Out: New York Nightlife and the Transformation of American Culture, 1890-1930 ID - 461 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This interesting cultural history of big band jazz explores changes in music and the ability of many more people to experience such things as jazz. Electrication and improvements in sound recording, what with vinyl records, not to mention radio expanded cultural opportunities for Americans. AU - Erenberg, Lewis A. CY - Chicago DA - c1998 KW - cultural change +sound recording music cyberspace culture +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures context cultural change, late 19th cultural change, early 20th motion pictures, and community motion pictures, and cultural change leisure motion pictures, and leisure leisure, and motion pictures music, and motion pictures music, and jazz motion pictures, and music motion pictures, and critics race race, and motion pictures race, and music race, and jazz jazz, and race motion pictures, and race music, and race LB - 12840 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1998 ST - Swingin' the Dream: Big Band Jazz and the Rebirth of American Culture TI - Swingin' the Dream: Big Band Jazz and the Rebirth of American Culture ID - 462 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is one of the best histories of Jews in the American film industry. Jews made up a high percentage of studio owners and actors. Erens writes that Jews had a "virtual monopoly on producing" and that many major Hollywood producers of the late 1920s had come to the United States from eastern Europe in the wave of Jewish immigration during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. During the 1930s, Hollywood became a refuge for Jewish intellectuals and others fleeing the Third Reich. Many movies during the 1930s and 1940s that dealt with Germany, military preparedness, and war reflect the presence of Jewish writers and directors. So, too, does the patriotic tenor of many American movies. AU - Erens, Patricia CY - Bloomington, IN DA - 1984 KW - context +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Jews motion pictures, and anti-Semitism context, and anti-Semitism motion pictures, and actors' status LB - 13220 PB - Indiana University Press PY - 1984 ST - The Jew in American Cinema TI - The Jew in American Cinema ID - 494 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Ernst was a foe of censorship, including motion picture self regulation. In this work, Ernst criticized the concentration of power in the hands of a few studios. He called on the government to break the power of the large studios. AU - Ernst, Morris L. CY - New York DA - 1946 KW - context +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures context, and censorship motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and First Amendment motion pictures, and freedom motion pictures, and studio system LB - 15610 PB - Macmillan Company PY - 1946 ST - The First Freedom TI - The First Freedom ID - 569 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a tour-de-force against censorship, written in the early months of World War II. Chapters are devoted to “Sex and Literature,” theater, “The Censor and the Movies” (two chapters), “Freedom of the Air,” “Art and Censorship,” birth control (two chapters), “Nudism and the Law,” “Who Is the Censor?”, and “The Case Against Censorship” (two chapters). This book discusses specific books, films, and cases. In their consideration of movies, the authors write: “Faith in the destiny of man means giving him the privilege of choice between right and wrong, and trusting him to choose the right. If he’s headed for perdition, putting blinders on him or plugs in his ears will not stop him....” Morris and Lindey argued that part of the blame for the lack of freedom of expression in film lay with the movie industry: “Vacillating, jittery, bank-ridden, lacking vision and leadership, never much concerned with the freedom of expression or the spread of ideas, Hollywood has been content to string along with the administration. Only here and there has a voice been raised in opposition.” The book has an interesting discussion of Professor Mamlock, a film produced in Russia that showed Nazi persecution of Jews. It was banned in Ohio for two months and police refused to let be shown in Rhode Island. On the Production Code, the authors write: “The trouble with the code is the trouble with obscenity statutes. Its mandates are shot through with generalities; its social policy is one of hypocrisy and hush-hush; its criteria are predicated on the susceptibilities of morons; its effect is one of forcible suppression; it lends itself readily to abuse; and above all, it creates a viciously false picture of life.” The latter point is also later made by Gregory Black in Hollywood Censored (1994), and Catholic Crusade Against the Movies (1997). The book by Ernst and Lindey was part of a then growing literature calling for greater freedom for the screen -- e.g., Mortimer Adler, the Hutchins Commission. Of course movies gained protection under the First Amendment in 1952 in the Miracle case. AU - Ernst, Morris L. & Alexander Lindey CY - New York DA - 1940 KW - self-regulation Production Code PCA Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) values obscenity sexuality freedom law values religion law censorship and ratings regulation Production Code (1930) nudity +motion pictures First Amendment +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship regulation, and motion pictures First Amendment, and motion pictures freedom of expression, and motion pictures nudity, and motion pictures Production Code Administration (PCA) art, and censorship censorship, and art art censorship obscenity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and new media LB - 6210 PB - Doubleday, Doran & Company, Inc. PY - 1940 ST - The Censor Marches On: Recent Milestones in the Administration of the Obscenity Law in the United States TI - The Censor Marches On: Recent Milestones in the Administration of the Obscenity Law in the United States ID - 2004 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 736-page memoir has no index. Eszterhas, once a heavy smoker, discusses his battle with throat cancer in the last chapter (701-36), and his Op-Ed piece for the New York Times in which he asked Hollywood to stop making motion pictures that showed smoking onscreen (in the New York Times piece he had acknowledged that he had added dialogue to Basic Instinct designed to encourage people to smoke). AU - Eszterhas, Joe CY - New York DA - 2004 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories motion pictures motion pictures, and popular culture Basic Instinct (1992) Showgirls (1995) values motion pictures, and values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and smoking smoking, and motion pictures LB - 29490 PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 2004 ST - Hollywood Animal: A Memoir TI - Hollywood Animal: A Memoir ID - 2804 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume contains a selection of Ithiel de Sola Pool's writings over 40 years on systems of communication, and especially on communications technology's impact on society and politics. Chapters are divided into three parts. 1) Political Communication; 2) Societal Impact; and 3) Technology, Policy, and Freedom. AU - Etheredge, Lloyd S., ed. and intro. CY - New Brunswick, NJ and London DA - 1998 KW - technology nationalism communication revolution community democracy freedom general studies Pool, Ithiel de Sola democracy and media communication revolution freedom, and communication technology electronic media +aeronautics and space communication satellites +nationalism and communication communism, and mass media propaganda +telephones telecommunications +television +telegraph communism technology and society LB - 11100 PB - Transaction Publishers PY - 1998 ST - Politics in Wired Nations: Selected Writings of Ithiel de Sola Pool TI - Politics in Wired Nations: Selected Writings of Ithiel de Sola Pool ID - 2471 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - “For two decades after the Second World War,” writes the author, “mankind was devoted, at least in principle, to the concept of a free flow of information across national boundaries.... “In the past two decades, however, there has been a retreat from the free flow of information concept, primarily because of the revolutionary change that has occurred in the international political system....” This study looks at the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and the International Radio and Television Organization (OIRT). AU - Eugster, Ernest CY - Dedham, MA DA - 1983 KW - nationalism non-USA Europe Information Age +nationalism and communication +television +radio information flow Euorpean Broadcasting Union International Radio and Television Organization television, and Europe satellites +aeronautics and space communication nationalism, and television nationalism, and satellite television nationalism, and radio nationalism, and satellites LB - 6770 PB - Artech House, Inc. PY - 1983 ST - Television Programming Across National Boundaries: The EBU and OIRT Experience TI - Television Programming Across National Boundaries: The EBU and OIRT Experience ID - 2055 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Evans writes: “There are four important features of the Industrial Revolution which need to be identified and considered, for they will turn out to be extremely significant for the next great turning point which mankind is rapidly approaching -- the Computer Revolution. The first of these concerns the scale and scope of change: the Revolution brought immense shifts in all aspects of human society, affecting the individual, his family, his neighbours, his domestic and working environment, his clothes, his food, his leisure time, his political and religious ideals, his education, his social attitudes, his life-span, even the manner of his birth and death. The second feature is that these changes took place with great rapidity, remoulding the face of our society in less than a hundred years. Thirdly, once the process of the Revolution was fully under way, its dynamic growth was remorseless, and no power, no man or combination of men, could set it back against its course.... “Finally, and perhaps the most interesting of the four points, hardly anyone -- certainly no one who could do anything about it -- foresaw its momentous coming.. Only the gallantly misguided Luddites, who feared a loss of affluence from the coming of the machines, seemed to have any glimmering of insight into what was about to happen.” This work might be read in conjunction with other works that talk about communication and a “second industrial revolution.” It is interesting view of how some (in 1979) saw the computer before the spread of personal computers or the Internet. AU - Evans, Christopher CY - New York DA - 1979 KW - computers preservation communication revolution history, and new media computers communication revolution, and second industrial revolution history history +computers and the Internet Luddism Industrial Revolution change, acceleration of history, break with second industrial revolution communication revolution computer revolution change LB - 7790 PB - Viking Press PY - 1979 ST - The Micro Millennium TI - The Micro Millennium ID - 2148 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work parallels work on American film censorship by such writers as Frank Walsh, Gregory Black, and Stephen Vaughn. It discusses efforts to censor specific films and themes -- e.g., drug addition, racism in South Africa, Canadian history, and more. AU - Evans, Gary CY - Toronto DA - 1991 KW - law law censorship and ratings non-USA regulation +motion pictures +television censorship, and motion pictures censorship, and Canadian motion pictures regulation, and motion pictures Canada censorship motion pictures, and censorship Canada, and film censorship LB - 9710 PB - University of Toronto Press PY - 1991 ST - In the National Interest: A Chronicle of the National Film Board of Canada from 1949 to 1989 TI - In the National Interest: A Chronicle of the National Film Board of Canada from 1949 to 1989 ID - 2338 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - John Grierson was a central figure in the Canadian documentary film movement and during World War II he attempted to rally Canadian through a national propaganda agency, the National Film Board. This book examines Grierson's work during the war. AU - Evans, Gary CY - Toronto DA - 1984 KW - regulation censorship and ratings public relations advertising law law censorship and ratings non-USA +motion pictures censorship censorship, and Canada Canada propaganda censorship, and Canadian motion pictures regulation, and Canadian motion pictures regulation motion pictures, and censorship Canada, and film censorship Grierson, John, and censorship advertising and public relations Grierson, John LB - 11600 PB - University of Toronto Press PY - 1984 ST - John Grierson and the National Film Board: The Politics of Wartime Propaganda, 1939-1945 TI - John Grierson and the National Film Board: The Politics of Wartime Propaganda, 1939-1945 ID - 2512 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - When evangelist Dwight L. Moody on the eve of the twentieth century, he was one of the most widely recognized people of nineteenth-century America. He had been a Chicago shoe salesman who had never gone beyond the fourth grade. Yet he invented a system of using mass media that latter-day evangelists such as Billy Graham inherited and perfected. Evensen focuses on four years during the 1870s when Moody created a connection between mass media and evangelism. Moody began this bond in Great Britain in 1873 and then moved to America, to Brooklyn, New York, Philadelphia, Boston, and Chicago. Newspapers, suffering from economic depression and in need of circulation, helped to turn Moody’s city-wide crusades into communal spectacles. Critics accused Moody of using man-made machinery to aid his revivals but Moody responded that it was better to advertise than to minister to empty churches. The urban press helped to make Moody into a celebrity and turn his revivals into civic entertainment of unprecedented size. Evensen’s work demonstrates how this popular and important evangelist helped to created modern media culture. AU - Evensen, Bruce J. CY - New York DA - 2003 KW - +books, periodicals, newspapers religion values religion, and mass media newspapers, and religion religion, and newspaper news and journalism audiences audiences, and religion religion, and audiences newspapers news LB - 28700 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 2003 ST - God's Man for the Gilded Age: D. L. Moody and the Rise of Modern Mass Evengelism TI - God's Man for the Gilded Age: D. L. Moody and the Rise of Modern Mass Evengelism ID - 2529 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Evensen uses the 1926 heavyweight championship fight between Jack Dempsey and challenger Gene Tunney to examine how journalists, advertisers, and public relations people hyped this sporting event and turned it into a spectacle of major proportions. Nationwide, perhaps 39 million people listened to the fight on radio. This well-written book is informative no only on the boxers and the details of their world, but it is insightful about the way modern media helped to create a celebrity culture in sport. AU - Evensen, Bruce J. CY - Knoxville DA - 1996 KW - celebrity news and journalism +radio newspapers +books, periodicals, newspapers radio, and sports sports, and newspaper sports, and radio sports, and news news, and sports celebrity culture values, and sports values values, and news advertising advertising and public relations public relations advertising, and sports sports, and advertising public relations, and sports sports, and public relations advertising, and news news, and advertising public relations, and news news, and public relations news, and celebrity culture celebrity culture, and news sports news LB - 28730 PB - University of Tennessee Press PY - 1996 ST - When Dempsey Fought Tunney: Heroes, Hokum, and Storytelling in the Jazz Age TI - When Dempsey Fought Tunney: Heroes, Hokum, and Storytelling in the Jazz Age ID - 2622 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Evensen, a former Middle East correspondent, writes that his interest in "the relationship between policymaking, the press and the public in the construction of the Truman administration's Cold War Palestine policy began in the spring of 1983" when he was "based in West Jerusalem working out of the Binyanei Haooma, the Israeli convention center, that served as headquarters for news bureaus serving much of the Western world." Using a wide range of archival materials as well as published sources, Evensen examines the interaction between the Truman administration and the press in the formulation of a policy regarding Palestine. The author is especially insightful in explaining how reporters construct their narratives of news events. This book grew out of Evensen's doctoral thesis at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. It is part of Greenwood Press's Contributions in America History series (No. 144), Jon L. Wakelyn, Series Editor. AU - Evensen, Bruce J. CY - Westport, CT DA - 1992 KW - nationalism news and journalism +nationalism and communication +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers newspapers, and foreign policy presidents and new media Truman, Harry Truman administration Truman, Harry, and newspapers non-USA news, and values values, and news news, and Middle East Middle East news, and Palestine Palestine Palestine, and news Israel news, and Israel Israel, and news Truman administration, and Israel Truman administration, and Palestine audiences audiences, and newspapers news values LB - 28740 PB - Greenwood Press PY - 1992 ST - Truman, Palestine, and the Press: Shaping Conventional Wisdom at the Beginning of the Cold War TI - Truman, Palestine, and the Press: Shaping Conventional Wisdom at the Beginning of the Cold War ID - 2623 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Everson, George CY - New York DA - 1949 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories +television biography Farnsworth, Philo T. LB - 6780 PB - Norton PY - 1949 ST - The Story of Television: The Life of Philo T. Farnsworth TI - The Story of Television: The Life of Philo T. Farnsworth ID - 2056 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Ewen’s history recounts the rise of the public relations industry and the social forces that drove public relations in the first half of the century. It provides an account of how corporate America viewed government and the individual during historic political eras and how the public relations industry responded with programs designed to create positive public opinion or influence government action. Ewen focused on the view of public relations within the industry and within large business enterprises. Public relations, he said, grew out of a need to influence the opinion of an increasingly alienated public and hostile government. --Phil Glende AU - Ewen, Stuart CY - New York DA - 1996 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations propaganda advertising public relations advertising propaganda media effects journalism community democracy news and journalism public relations news public relations, and history of advertising democracy and media Glende, Phil news, and public relations public relations, and news critics public relations capitalism capitalism, and public relations media effects, and public relations Bernays, Edward Lee, Ivy propaganda, and World War I World War I, and propaganda Creel, George war World War I LB - 9230 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Basic Books PY - 1996 ST - PR! A Social History of Spin TI - PR! A Social History of Spin ID - 2290 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The Ewens discuss the rise of media development and the resulting changes in American society. Their focus is on the trade-offs -- loneliness, the loss of traditional skills, and alienation versus the abundance of goods and the improvements in communication systems and education. The Ewens write that “As capitalism has evolved a consumption-oriented mass culture, social, economic, and political power have become increasingly coordinated and consolidated. To a large extent, the rise of modern management, communications, production, and distribution has been dependent on the appropriation and mobilization of technical and organizational capacities by a ruling, monopoly-capitalist class, administered by an emergent sector of professional/managerial intelligentsia. This increased coordination at the top levels of society has entailed increasing fractionalization throughout the remaining, popular majority. In this systemic, organizational inequity, the appeal of advertising, for example, must be understood in a cultural context in which the social status, employment, and even survival of people are separated from customary networks of skill and association. In a world of strangers, survival is to a large extent a matter of appearance and surface impressions.” (265) --Wayne Hayes Composed of five different essays Channels of Desire: Mass Images and the Shaping of American Consciousness probes the history of America’s consumer and media-based culture. The first essay, “The Bribe of Frankenstein,” provides a short history of mass communication technology from the printing press in the fifteenth century to early filmmaking in the beginning of the twentieth century. The Ewens most interesting section focuses on how the lack of literacy of the populace benefited the church, because it gave clergy complete control over interpretation of the word of God. The second essay, “Consumption as a Way of Life,” details how goods went from being created in the home, to manufactured by industrial means; this development gave women more leisure time, so full-service department stores sprung up to help women spend their time. Brimming with goods, as well as services such as hairdressers, nurseries, and post offices, department stores were elaborate buildings dedicated to consumption. Also, a history of mail-order catalogs is included in this section. “City Lights: Immigrant Women and the Rise of the Movies,” (the third essay) explores the role of the cinema in the lives of both young and old women. Because movies were silent, they appealed to non-English speakers. Film watching was one of the few urban activities that immigrant women allowed their daughters to engage in. By teaching immigrants the rules of the new world, while also easing the transition from the old, early silent films played a crucial role in the assimilation of a generation. At over one hundred pages long, “Fashion and Democracy” is the most detailed and compelling essay in the book. In fact, this essay should have been expanded and turned into its own book. The Ewens examine the rise of fashion in America, with a strong focus on the history of ready-to-wear clothing--specifically blue jeans (whose stitching was inspired by horse blankets)and women’s fashion and undergarments. Women did not wear underwear until the 1850s, because it was considered to be a garment worn by disreputable women. Channels of Desire ends with an essay on America’s image culture in general. The Ewens focus on three forms of this culture: choice, violence, and ignorance. Choice is an illusion, they believe, because we are merely given the superficial choice to choose between different consumer objects and media products. Our newspapers have too strong a focus on violence (no new insights there) and the news coverage of first Iraq war sugarcoated the war and did not show the real violence, they believe. Americans are obsessed with celebrity and fitness, therefore we are truly ignorant and we choose poor leaders because of it (Ronald Reagan). Overall, the Ewens rely too heavily on secondary sources-- autobiographies, newspaper articles, magazine articles, other historians’ books -- and not enough on primary sources. Their only primary source seems to be advertisements. And, the book feels disjointed (not surprising since it is a series of five essays). However, Channels of Desire is very well written. It aspires to McLuhanesque brilliance, but never quite gets there. --Hallie Lieberman AU - Ewen, Stuart AU - Ewen, Elizabeth CY - New York DA - 1979 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations propaganda advertising values Hayes, Wayne public relations advertising capitalism capitalism, and advertising critics values, and capitalism values, and advertising values Lieberman, Hallie critics critics, and capitalism critics, and advertising LB - 1640 PB - McGraw-Hill PY - 1979 ST - Channels of Desire: Mass Images and the Shaping of the American Consciousness TI - Channels of Desire: Mass Images and the Shaping of the American Consciousness ID - 38 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 1978 work deals with television, cinema, and the harmful effects of pornography. AU - Eysenck, Hans J. AU - Nias, D. K. B. CY - London DA - 1978 KW - values Christianity sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence Catholic Church +motion pictures and popular culture pornography media effects media effects, and pornography pornography, and harmful effects Catholics, and pornography pornography, and Catholics +television television, and pornography violence violence, and pornography pornography, and violence television, and violence motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and motion pictures critics LB - 22710 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Maurice Temple Smith PY - 1978 ST - Sex, Violence and the Media TI - Sex, Violence and the Media ID - 996 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Fallows argues that celebrity journalism in Washington relies on crisis coverage that does a disservice to true democratic government. Fallows says political crisis coverage is easy but often irrelevant. This kind of reporting always misses the stories that really matter because celebrity journalists are reporting on politics not policy. This practice has widespread applications, he argues, because journalists throughout the country aspire to or emulate this model of journalism. The journalism itself, he says, relies heavily on speculation and “horse-race” reporting and does not examine policy. --Phil Glende James Fallows writes that “This book is an attempt to explain why the values of journalists have changed, how their current practices undermine the credibility of the press, and how they affect the future prospects of every American by distorting the processes by which we choose our leaders and resolve our public problems.” (6) Fallows believes that journalists, not the news, are becoming more and more important. Those who are best paid and well-known are the journalists least likely to cover news as reporters traditionally have done. Entertainment has become a more important factor than hard reporting. Furthermore, instead of clarifying the news for the public, members of the media make the news harder to understand by choosing to present public life as a contest among scheming political leaders, all of whom the public should view with suspicion, the news media help bring about that result. “The more prominent today’s star journalists become, the more they are forced to give up the essence of real journalism, which is the search for information of use to the public.” (7) Profits and salability have become the main priorities of editors. They do not focus on a proper journalistic coverage of events anymore but on how those events can make the most profit for newspapers or broadcasting networks. Therefore they do not give enough attention to important events or give too much attention to events that are of minor importance. When journalists are busy covering the news they are already busy looking at what will happen afterwards and move on to the next item before the previous is properly covered. Furthermore, according to Fallows, they have developed the strange habit of wanting to predict the news, something that is unnecessary. Fallows thinks that it is not too late for journalism to recover itself. However, it has to make a choice whether it wants to cover the news like it used to do or whether it wants to offer people entertainment. The latter option can be quite dangerous. Since journalists are the only ones who can show the people what happens in the world, they have to do it in a sincere way. But now more and more people are not interested in the news anymore which results in the fact that journalists can show whatever they want. This can threaten democracy as a whole. Although reclaiming journalism’s standards is not impossible, a great deal of work remains to be done. -- Pieter Van Den Berg AU - Fallows, James CY - New York DA - 1996 KW - entertainment, and journalism entertainment celebrity news and journalism community democracy news and journalism journalism television democracy and media critics television, and news celebrity culture, and news journalism, and celebrity celebrity culture television, and celebrity culture celebrity culture democracy, and journalism journalism, and entertainment news, and entertainment entertainment, and journalism Van Den Berg, Pieter Glende, Phil news LB - 9240 PB - Random House PY - 1996 ST - Breaking the News: How the Media Undermine American Democracy TI - Breaking the News: How the Media Undermine American Democracy ID - 79 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author served on the CARA under a one-year fellowship program. He was interviewed by Jack Valenti in December, 1969, and worked on CARA during 1970-71(?). He was 26 at the time, and had just completed a M.A. in film history from the University of California. He says he was at odds with other CARA members. He provides good information on the early members of CARA and how CARA worked. He concludes that "the rating system must be either drastically overhauled or abolished completely." AU - Farber, Stephen CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1972 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation self-regulation Production Code Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) X-rated films censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) values religion law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures classification, and origins of rating system (U. S.), and origins of rating system (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) Production Code, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and Production Code (motion pictures) CARA CARA, and members CARA, and Production Code (motion pictures) X-rating, and motion pictures LB - 20260 PB - Public Affairs Press PY - 1972 ST - The Movie Rating Game TI - The Movie Rating Game ID - 845 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is in the Foundation of History Library Series. AU - Febvre, Lucien Paul Victor (Geoffrey Nowell-Smith and David Wootton, eds. AU - Gerard), trans. by David CY - London DA - 1976 KW - values print printing non-USA Hayes, Wayne +books, periodicals, newspapers printing press books values, and printing press values LB - 2120 PB - N. L. B. PY - 1976 ST - The Coming of the Book: The Impact of Printing, 1450-1800 (L'apparition du livre) TI - The Coming of the Book: The Impact of Printing, 1450-1800 (L'apparition du livre) ID - 300 ER - TY - EDBOOK A4 - Evans), (with assistance of Stephanie Carbone and Linda AB - This book examines media rating systems in 31 countries, five of which are discussed in some detail: Australia, Germany, Great Britain, Sweden, and the United States. The work also discusses criticism of the MPAA's rating system from several perspective including industry officials, the ACLU, researchers, parental and health organizations. It argues for a rating system that is independent from the political and economic forces that create entertainment. It also urges rating symbols that are descriptive rather than evaluative. AU - Federman, Joel CY - Studio City, CA DA - 1996 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality V-chip, and television sex sexuality censorship and ratings rating systems (non-USA) rating system (U. S.) music sound recording music motion pictures motion pictures violence media effects violence media violence language video games law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification non-USA motion pictures and popular culture +television rating system (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) television, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and television video games, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and video games music, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and music Mosk, Richard CARA CARA, and critics rating system (U. S.), and controversies Australia Sweden Great Britain Germany Australia, and rating system (U. S.) Sweden, and rating system (U. S.) Great Britain, and rating system (U. S.) Germany, and rating system (U. S.) Australia, and rating system (U. S.) violence violence, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and violence sex, and rating system (U. S.) language, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and sex rating system (U. S.), and language V-chip media effects rating system (U. S.), and media effects media effects, and rating system (U. S.) television, and V-chip motion pictures, and V-chip LB - 27240 PB - Mediascope, Inc. PY - 1996 ST - Media Ratings: Design, Use and Consequences TI - Media Ratings: Design, Use and Consequences ID - 1279 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This annotated bibliography pulls together social science research on the effects of video games. Since in 1996, video games were comparatively new -- although already a tremendously lucrative business -- empirical studies on this subject were not as plentiful as research than had been done on the effects of television violence. AU - Federman, Joel AU - Carbone, Stephanie AU - Chen, Helen AU - eds., William Munn comp. and CY - Studio City, CA DA - 1996 KW - social science research media effects media violence violence media effects video games video games, and sex video games, and violence media effects, and video games +bibliographies bibliographies, and video games media effects, and bibliographies social science research, and video games violence, and social science research violence, and video games violence, and media effects bibliographies, annotated LB - 27460 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Mediascope, Inc. PY - 1996 ST - Social Effects of Electronic Interactive Games: An Annotated Bibliography TI - Social Effects of Electronic Interactive Games: An Annotated Bibliography ID - 1301 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Color’s influence has long been viewed as mysterious. It has “astonishing power,” according to a recent account, and its “effects on each of us are vast, but most of us don’t have a clue that they are even happening.” The authors observe that "because it was easier to color-correct a drawing than a photograph, more than 90 percent of book covers before the 1960s were hand-drawn. Electronic scanners changed everything. They provided the ability to scan in an original transparency, remove any unwanted color in specific areas, and produce a perfect four-color film ready for platemaking in a matter of minutes, without any of the telltale brushmakrs that had often been visible in hand-corrected color." (200) This work cover the use of color in many different design areas. Chapters are devoted to Pigment and Light, Color Myths and Biases, Health, Psychology, Interior Environments, Architecture and Landscape Design, Advertising and Marketing, Fashion and Textile Design, Culture and Society, Color Order Systems, and Pushing the Envelope. AU - Fehrman, Kenneth R. and Cherie Fehrman CY - Upper Saddle River, N. J. DA - 2000, 2004 KW - censorship avant garde context art , color freedom color, and freedom color, and 1960s art, and color color, and art avant garde, and color color, and avant garde censorship, and color color, and censorship censorship and ratings color, and prejudice against sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, context context, and color color, and design advertising and public relations advertising, and color color, and advertising color, and psychology color, and health color, and culture advertising LB - 32440 PB - Prentice Hall PY - 2000 ST - Color: The Secret Influence TI - Color: The Secret Influence ID - 2901 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book argues that in 1983 the world was at the threshold of a new era in computing. "Knowledge is power, and the computer is an amplifier of that power," they write. "We are now at the dawn of a new computer revolution. Business Week featured it as 'the second computer age.' We view it as the important computer revolution, the transition from information processing to knowledge processing, from computers that calculate and store data to computers that reason and inform. Artificial intelligence is emerging from the laboratory and is beginning to take its place in human affairs." (1) The great challenge to American leadership in this field, the authors believed, was Japan, a country that had set as its national goal to dominate artificial intelligence by the late 1990s. The Japanese "aim not only to dominate the traditional forms of the computer industry but to establish a 'knowledge industry' in which knowledge itself will be a salable commodity like food and oil. Knowledge itself is to become the new wealth of nations." (2) The authors argue that "America needs a national plan of action, a kind of space shuttle program for the knowledge systems of the future." (3) They seek to trace the origins of this field in United States and British research, explain the Japanese plan for a Fifth Generation of computers, and describe "America's weak, almost non-existent response to this remarkable Japanese challenge." To fail to meet this challenged would be to "consign our nation to the role of the first great postindustrial agrarian society." (3) AU - Feigenbaum, Edward A. AU - McCorduck, Pamela CY - Reading, MA DA - 1983 KW - computers Reagan administration nationalism artificial intelligence and biotechnology computers and the Internet strategic computing initiative Reagan administration, and artificial intelligence presidents and new media education computers, and education education, and computers military communication military communication, and strategic computing initiative supercomputers artificial intelligence Japan non-USA Japan, and supercomputers computers, and chips computer chips digital media McCorduck, Pamela Feigenbaum, Edward computers, fifth generation fifth generation computers Japan, and artificial intelligence computers, and Japan artificial intelligence, and Japan information storage Great Britain Great Britian, and computers knowledge v. information nationalism and communication computers LB - 33900 PB - Addison-Wesley Publishing Company PY - 1983 ST - The Fifth Generation: Artificial Intelligence and Japan's Computer Challenge to the World TI - The Fifth Generation: Artificial Intelligence and Japan's Computer Challenge to the World ID - 3028 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book details Japan's large effort in creating artificial intelligence, setting out its weaknesses and strengths. This work was excerpted in High Technology (June 1983), and in Tom Forester, ed., The Information Technology Revolution (1985). At the time of publication, Feigenbaum was a professor of Computer Science at Stanford, and McCorduck was a journalist. AU - Feigenbaum, Edward and Pamela McCorduck CY - Reading, MA DA - 1983 KW - R & D computers nationalism presidents, and new media values research and development war communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution materials materials +future and science fiction values religion war non-USA +military communication Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration microelectronics +computers and the Internet +nationalism and communication +artificial intelligence and biotechnology Japan supercomputers strategic computing initiative microcomputers microelectronics revolution chips, computer, micro computers, fifth generation computers and society Reagan administration, and computers supercomputers future chips, computer computer chips computers Japan, and supercomputers Japan, and artificial intelligence LB - 3210 PB - Addison-Wesley PY - 1983 ST - The Fifth Generation: Artificial Intelligence and Japan's Computer Challenge to the World TI - The Fifth Generation: Artificial Intelligence and Japan's Computer Challenge to the World ID - 1713 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Felix, Edgar CY - New York DA - 1931 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins television, and technology LB - 10870 PB - McGraw-Hill PY - 1931 ST - Television TI - Television ID - 2449 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is written for a popular audience and has neither bibliography nor notes. It does provide an accessible introduction to the history plastic and manifestations in American culture. Three areas are of particular interest for those interested in communication. Chapter 3, “Celluloid Heroes,” discusses celluloid’s early development from John Wesley Hyatt’s patent in 1870 and his effort to create a substitute for ivory billiard balls, to its initial uses in photography by George Eastman, to the development of moving pictures and newsreels. Later in the book, the author talks about plastic’s use in making vinyl records and its impact on the recording industry. Students of radio, radar, and the latter-day Strategic Defense Initiative may also find the author’s brief treatment of Adoph Hitler’s claim that the Germans had invented a “secret weapon” that could bring down airplanes with a beam of electronic energy. AU - Fenichell, Stephen CY - New York DA - 1996 KW - corporations SDI photography World War II phonograph motion pictures Hitler, Adolf materials war non-USA material culture plastics +sound recording sound recording, and vinyl records celluloid +motion pictures and popular culture newsreels newsreels, and celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid Hyatt, John Wesley strategic defense initiative (SDI) death rays Hitler, Adolf, and death rays +radio radar automobiles, and plastics cellophane, and motion picture film motion pictures, and cellophane +photography and visual communication photography, and celluloid celluloid, and motion pictures celluloid, and photography Du Pont phonograph, and plastics plastics, and World War II World War II, and plastics death rays, and Germany, materials automobiles corporations news transportation news and journalism LB - 12320 PB - HarperCollins Publishers PY - 1996 ST - Plastic: The Making of a Synthetic Century TI - Plastic: The Making of a Synthetic Century ID - 2579 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Ferguson attempts to give "a reasonably comprehensive introduction to primary and secondary sources in the history of technology." He views the history of technology as part of cultural history. There is much in this annotated bibliography of interest to those interested in the history and social impact of communication technologies. Among the headings are "General Works"; "General Bibliographies and Library Lists"; "Biography"; "Government Publications and Records"; "Manuscripts"; "Periodical and Serial Publications"; "Technology and Culture," and more. Among the subject fields covered are Transportation, from shipping to air and space travel; Energy Conversion, including lighting; the Electrical and Electronic Arts, including power generators, motors, and electronic computers; Materials and Processes, including paper and printing; glass and ceramics; Mechanical Technology, including timekeeping; military technology; and the "Process of Invention and Innovation." Although published in 1968, this work is an invaluable reference. See also the annual updates published in Technology and Culture. This series began in 1964 and compiles recent scholarship in the history of technology each year. See also the annotated index for the first 25 volumes of Technology and Culture (1959-1984), edited by Barton C. Hacker and published in Technology and Culture, 32, AU - Ferguson, Eugene S. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1968 KW - R & D computers Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories time and timekeeping research and development war inventions innovation materials timekeeping, and clocks war +bibliographies bibliographies, and technology bibliographies, and printing bibliographies, and electricity bibliographies, and primary collections bibliographies, and timekeeping bibliographies, transportation inventors bibliographies, and computers +transportation +electricity +computers and the Internet +books, periodicals, newspapers electronic media timekeeping +aeronautics and space communication materials lighting motors +biography bibliographies, annotated glass ceramics inventions, and process of +military communication satellites LB - 11230 PB - Society for the History of Technology and MIT Press PY - 1968 ST - Bibliography of the History of Technology TI - Bibliography of the History of Technology ID - 2484 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 402-page work is divided into twelve chapters: 1) The Technique Available; 2) Camera Equipment; 3) Glass-Shots; 4) Mirror-Shots; 5) In-the-Camera Matte Shots; 6) Bi-Pack Contact Matte Printing; 7) Optical Printing; 8) Travelling Mattes; 9) Aerial-Image Printing; 10) Rear Projectioon; 11) Front Projection; 12) Miniatures. A substantial bibliography (403-17) and Index follow. AU - Fielding, Raymond CY - New York DA - 1972 KW - projection motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture special effects motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and motion pictures 16mm, and special effects special effects, and 16mm projection, and motion pictures projection, and special effects special effects, and projection special effects, and travelling mattes special effects, aerial-image printing special effects, and optical printing special effects, and miniatures 16mm LB - 27950 OP - 1965 PB - Hastings House PY - 1972 ST - The Technique of Special Effects Cinematography TI - The Technique of Special Effects Cinematography ID - 1347 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - An anthology from The Journal of the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers. The collection is divided into three parts. Part I, “Autobiographical Reminiscences,” has pieces by C. Francis Jenkins (“History of the Motion Pictures,” written in 1920), W. K. L. Dickson, Louis Lumière, and several others. Part II, “Historical Papers -- Motion Pictures,” covers recorded sound, animated cartoons, early movie projectors, “The Historical Motion-Picture Collections at George Eastman House,” the history of nitrocellulose film base, the history of studio lighting, early amateur motion pictures, and Norman O. Dawn’s work with special effects. Part III, “Historical Papers -- Television,” has four essays on the evolution of television and television recording. They were published in 1948, 1954, and 1955. --SV This early history of American movies is divided into two parts. The first consists of autobiographical reminiscences by prominent film pioneers, the second of historical papers on motion pictures prepared by engineers and scholars. A prominent place in the development of film’s artistic evolution is given to technological innovation. D.W. Griffith, to take one example, owed as much to portable cameras and improved emulsions as he did to his talent, in the estimation of the authors. They point out that no other medium of artistic expression places so many technological impediments between film maker and viewing public. This necessitates long apprenticeships and collaborative creativity. --Gordon Jackson AU - Fielding, Raymond, ed. and Intro. CY - Berkeley DA - 1967 KW - Lumiére, Louis Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories special effects non-USA motion pictures motion pictures, and technology +motion pictures television motion pictures, amateur motion pictures, and studio lighting motion pictures, and sound cartoons, animated motion pictures, and nitrocellulose film base Eastman, George autobiography Jenkins, Charles Francis Dickson, W. K. L. Edison, Thomas television, and recording motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and Norman O. Dawn Dawn, Norman O., and special effects motion pictures, and technological innovations +sound recording cartoons television, and history of Jackson, Gordon motion pictures, and portable cameras Griffith, D. W., and portable cameras cameras, portable cameras Griffith, D. W. LB - 6220 PB - University of California Press PY - 1967 ST - A Technological History of Motion Pictures and Television TI - A Technological History of Motion Pictures and Television ID - 2005 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Fielding maintains that new technology brings about new forms of motion pictures, new styles, new ways of doing business: “… the artistic evolution of the film has always been intimately associated with technological change, just as it has, in less noticeable fashion, in the older arts. Just as the painter’s art has changed with the introduction of different media and processes, just as the forms of symphonic music have developed with the appearance of new kinds of instruments, so has the elaboration and refinement of film style followed from the introduction of more sophisticated machinery.” [p. viii] This work is an anthology from The Journal of the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers. The collection is divided into three parts. Part I, “Autobiographical Reminiscences,” has pieces by C. Francis Jenkins (“History of the Motion Pictures,” written in 1920), W. K. L. Dickson, Louis Lumiere, and several others. Part II, “Historical Papers -- Motion Pictures,” covers recorded sound, animated cartoons, early movie projectors, “The Historical Motion-Picture Collections at George Eastman House,” the history of nitrocellulose film base, the history of studio lighting, early amateur motion pictures, and Norman O. Dawn’s work with special effects. Part III, “Historical Papers -- Television,” has four essays on the evolution of television and television recording. They were published in 1948, 1954, and 1955. --SV This early history of American movies is divided into two parts. The first consists of autobiographical reminiscences by prominent film pioneers, the second of historical papers on motion pictures prepared by engineers and scholars. A prominent place in the development of film’s artistic evolution is given to technological innovation. D.W. Griffith, to take one example, owed as much to portable cameras and improved emulsions as he did to his talent, in the estimation of the authors. They point out that no other medium of artistic expression places so many technological impediments between film maker and viewing public. This necessitates long apprenticeships and collaborative creativity. --Gordon Jackson AU - Fielding, Raymond (ed. and intro.) CY - Berkeley DA - 1967 KW - theater stage Lumiére, Louis fame fame celebrity celebrity culture words vs. images actors acting ref, secondary motion pictures motion pictures, and technology motion pictures photocopied television motion pictures, amateur motion pictures, and studio lighting motion pictures, and sound cartoons, animated motion pictures, and nitrocellulose film base Eastman, George autobiography Jenkins, Charles Francis Lumiére, Louis Dickson, W. K. L. Edison, Thomas television, and recording motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and Norman O. Dawn Dawn, Norman O., and special effects motion pictures, and technological innovation sound recording cartoons Jackson, Gordon motion pictures, and portable cameras Griffith, D. W., and portable cameras cameras, portable censorship and ratings acting, and cameras cameras, and acting motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures images vs. words motion pictures, and new art form electricity lighting mercury vapor electric light lighting, and Cooper Hewitt lighting, and mercury vapor motion pictures, and lighting motion pictures, and Cooper Hewitt lighting acting, and lighting lighting, and acting motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and celebrity motion pictures, and fame fame, and motion pictures celebrity, and motion pictures celebrity culture lighting, and flame carbon arcs cameras censorship ref, book Griffith, D. W. special effects LB - 1320 PB - University of California Press PY - 1967 ST - A Technological History of Motion Pictures and Television: An Anthology from the Pages of the Journal of the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers TI - A Technological History of Motion Pictures and Television: An Anthology from the Pages of the Journal of the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers ID - 3427 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a richly illustrated history special effects technology in motion pictures through the early 1980s. It uses specific movies – King Kong (1933), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), Star Wars (1977), Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977), Blade Runner (1982), Tron (1982), and many others – to discuss innovations in this field. Chapter 21 is devoted to “Simulation,” and speculates that “the time is upon us when the computer will be able to take on graphic tasks of a wholly different order, including the simulation of reality.” (233) A brief concluding chapter also ponders the future of special effects as seen in 1984. The work contains a brief one-page bibliography, a Glossary, and Index. AU - Finch, Christopher CY - New York DA - 1984 KW - illustrations computers photography simulations Lucas, George +future and science fiction context computers +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and special effects context, and special effects special effects +computers and the Internet computers, and motion pictures motion pictures, and computers computers, and special effects special effects, and computers illustrations future, and movie special effects motion pictures, and simulations simulations, and motion pictures Lucasfilm group, and special effects special effects, and Lucasfilm group cameras, and special effects animation motion pictures, and animation special effects, and film stock special effects, and matting systems special effects, and visual effects +photography and visual communication future cameras LB - 19550 PB - Abbeville Press PY - 1984 ST - Special Effects: Creating Movie Magic TI - Special Effects: Creating Movie Magic ID - 789 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Sections headings include “Broad Historical Works”; “Communications” (which includes various media such as telegraphy, radio, radar, sonar, microwaves, and many more); “Power” (e.g., lighting, electrochemistry, motors, generators, etc.); and “Miscellaneous.” AU - Finn, Bernard S. CY - New York DA - 1991 KW - networks lighting +electricity microwaves sonar radar +radio +bibliographies bibliographies, and electricity telegraph motors generators networks, electrical lighting, electrical electricity, and history of bibliographies, annotated radio, and bibliographies telegraph, and bibliography radar, and bibliography microwaves, and bibliography motors, and bibliography generators, and bibliography LB - 4930 PB - Garland Publishing, Inc. PY - 1991 ST - The History of Electrical Technology: An Annotated Bibliography TI - The History of Electrical Technology: An Annotated Bibliography ID - 1880 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This short work (48 pages), by then Curator of the National Museum of History & Technology at the Smithsonian Institute, gives a helpful introduction to this topic. It is nicely illustrated with a map of the cable network worldwide in 1973. AU - Finn, Bernard S. CY - London DA - 1973 KW - non-USA +telegraph telegraph, submarine telegraph, submarine (maps) global communication cable, submarine cable, submarine (maps) cable cable, Atlantic cable, transatlantic LB - 5210 PB - Science Museum PY - 1973 ST - Submarine Telegraphy: The Grand Victorian Technology TI - Submarine Telegraphy: The Grand Victorian Technology ID - 1908 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Finnegan explores how Farm Security Administration photographs circulated within three different 1930s pictorials, and submits for analysis evidence from the social welfare journal Survey Graphic, the photography annual U.S. Camera, and popular magazine Look. Finnegan claims that during the early years of the photography project, Roy Stryker and the FSA photographers created a visual narrative about rural poverty called the “tenancy story” which emphasized the chronic poverty affecting mostly farm tenants, sharecroppers, and migrant workers. Finnegan traces the tenancy story through the periodicals and examines how the photographs derived multiple and diverse meanings from the accompanying captions and text. -Michele Kroll AU - Finnegan, Cara A. CY - Washington, D. C. and London DA - 2003 KW - reform Roosevelt, Franklin D. photography Kroll, Michele +photography and visual communication photography, documentary photography, and New Deal Roosevelt, Franklin, and photography presidents, and new media Farm Security Administration, and photography photography, and Farm Security Administration Stryker, Roy photography, and reform reform, and photography Roosevelt, Franklin administration photography, and magazines magazines, and photography magazines LB - 28840 PB - Smithsonian Books PY - 2003 ST - Picturing Poverty: Print Culture and FSA Photographs TI - Picturing Poverty: Print Culture and FSA Photographs ID - 2633 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Fischer attempts to assess how the telephone affected personal and social life, and to use the telephone to gain insight into “modernity.” The opening chapter reviews contemporary thinking about technology and modern life. One point made is that religious leaders and other conservatives looked on modern technology -- automobiles, electric lights, radio, movies, etc. -- as threatening people moral fiber; they feared such conveniences would make people soft. In this opening chapter, Fischer discusses and critiques such other authors who have written about technology and society as Albert Borgmann, Siegfried Giedion, Stephen Kern, Joshua Meyrowitz, Malcolm Willey and Stuart Rice, and others. Fischer points out that people used the telephone to further their own needs and desires (did not the telephone also create desires?). To put the telephone’s influence in context, the author makes comparison with the automobile. “Chapter 2 presents a brief, nontechnical history of the telephone in North America. Chapter 3 explores the various ways that the telephone industry, especially AT&T, marketed its service to households, exploring the manner in which the industry understood or misunderstood subscribers’ use of the telephone. Chapter 4 tracks the diffusion of the telephone across the United States, assessing the factors that encouraged or retarded its spread. It also contrasts the telephone’s diffusion in rural as opposed to urban areas and in the working as opposed to the middle class. Chapter 5 further examines diffusion but at the level of the local community and the household. It recounts the response to the telephone in Antoch, Palo Alto, and San Rafael and then uses census data to determine which households in those towns adopted the telephone in which years. In most of these studies we use the automobile as a comparative benchmark. “Chapter 6 employs a variety of evidence, from etiquette manuals to counts of advertisements, to chart how the telephone became an accepted part of everyday life. Chapter 7 looks at social change in our three towns, focusing on localism: Did residents become less involved in and less attached to their towns as the half-century passed? Chapter 8 looks more closely at individuals, asking how they reacted to the telephone and how they used it in their personal lives. In that context the chapter also analyzes the differences between men and women in regard to the telephone. Chapter 9 outlines telephone history from 1940 and summaries the findings and implications of this study.” AU - Fischer, Claude S. CY - Berkeley and Los Angeles DA - 1992 KW - technology entertainment nationalism corporations corporations entertainment, home women, and new media women modernism modernity modernism home entertainment gender home, and new media home values home, and information technology networks information technology +telephones +transportation transportation, and automobiles automobiles AT & T technology and society values, and technology information technology, and home networks, and telephones +nationalism and communication telephones, and localism values, and telephones telephones, and automobiles Meyrowitz, Joshua Kern, Stephen Giedion, Siegfried Borgmann, Albert Willey, Malcolm Rice, Stuart telephones, and etiquette modernity values, and technology values, and new media telephones, and values home, and telephones telephones, and home telephones, and gender gender, and telephones women, and telephones sexuality LB - 5330 PB - University of California Press PY - 1992 ST - America Calling: A Social History of the Telephone to 1940 TI - America Calling: A Social History of the Telephone to 1940 ID - 1918 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is part of the Sloan Technology Series, and is written for a broad public. The development of modern television was perhaps not as dramatic as the creation of the first airplane flight or the invention of the atomic bomb. TV resulted from the work of many people over many years. By the mid-1930s, a "different magic box [from FM radio] had appeared, one that offered more -- much more -- than static-free radio. At first, it was called visual listening, or audiovision, or telectroscopy, telephonoscope, or hear-seeing. It was also called raduo and electric vision and radiovision. Finally, it acquired a name that looked like it might stick. They called it television." This work begins with nineteenth-century attempts at "seeing at a distance," and its final chapter deals with "The Digital Future: Smart Television." AU - Fisher, David E. And Marshall Jon Fisher CY - Washington, D.C.; and San Diego DA - 1996 KW - corporations corporations corporations corporations corporations corporations corporations corporations corporations Federal Communications Commission (FCC) advertising, and public relations censorship and ratings propaganda public relations materials regulation digitization law non-USA regulation patents Great Britain Germany +television advertising Alexanderson, Ernst F. W. Armstrong, Edwin AT & T Baird, John Logie BBC Great Britain Great Britain, and television Bell Laboratories broadcasting, television cathode rays color, and television television, and color RCA CBS NBC American Broadcasting Company digital media television, and digital television, commercial television, electronic Fransworth, Philo T. FCC regulation, and television General Electric Company Iconoscope Jenkins, Charles Francis Kinescope television, mechanical television, and motion pictures Nipkow disk television, and outdoors patents, and television +radio Titanic Sarnoff, David selenium vacuum tubes Westinghouse Corporation Zworykin, Vladimir color broadcasting materials ABC LB - 6790 PB - Counterpoint; and Harcourt and Brace PY - 1996 ST - Tube: The Invention of Television TI - Tube: The Invention of Television ID - 2057 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Fishman, Robert CY - New York DA - 1977 KW - +future and science fiction future utopianism urban studies LB - 8940 PB - Basic Books PY - 1977 ST - Urban Utopias of the Twentieth Century TI - Urban Utopias of the Twentieth Century ID - 2261 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Fiske argues that television works to support society's dominant ideology. “In this book," he writes, "I work with a definition of television as a bearer/provoker of meanings and pleasures, and of culture as the generation and circulation of this variety of meanings and pleasures within society.” Television tends to separate the family from the rest of the world. “‘The world’ becomes something that is potentially disruptive to the family, so the news constructs essentially negative and threatening versions of ‘out there,’ sitcoms enact the weekly contest between the forces that attempt to disrupt the family and the ‘nature’ that holds the family together." Fiske notes that some researchers (e.g., Ells) argue that "television’s effect is to ‘isolate’ the family viewer from the world, to center him/her in the home, and to construct a subjectivity that is entirely familial.” Television can become a companion for women and the elderly. Some might listen to the TV rather than watch it because as research has shown, Fiske says, "many women alone in the house during the day had the television on because the sound of its voices made them feel less lonely...." For the elderly, the is an important form of companionship. "This is another way in which television differs from film, which has to cater for only a single mode of watching and does not have to complete for the viewer’s attention," Fiske says. AU - Fiske, John CY - London DA - c1987, 1988 KW - entertainment entertainment, home women, and new media television, and home television, and values media effects journalism home entertainment news and journalism home, and new media home women values +television values, and television television, and family television, and ideology women, and television television, and women television, and culture critics, and television (notes) critics home, and television values, and television news, and television television v. motion pictures media effects, and television news LB - 9720 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Routledge PY - 1987 ST - Television Culture TI - Television Culture ID - 2339 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work has a couple of entries from Henri Matisse commenting on the use of color. AU - Flam, Jack D., trans. CY - London DA - 1973 KW - censorship photography painting law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures color motion pictures, and color censorship, and color color, and censorship Matisse, Henri, and color +photography and visual communication photography, and color painting, and color color, and painting LB - 17960 PB - Phaidon Press, Ltd. PY - 1973 ST - Matisse on Art TI - Matisse on Art ID - 705 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work surveys censorship in newspapers, magazines, motion pictures, radio, television, and the Internet. AU - Foerstel, Herbert N. CY - Westport, CT DA - 1998 KW - computers values motion pictures law censorship and ratings censorship values values, and censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +books, periodicals, newspapers +radio +television +computers and the Internet censorship, and motion pictures censorship, and newspapers censorship, and magazines censorship, and television censorship, and radio censorship, and Internet LB - 2670 PB - Greenwood Press PY - 1998 ST - Banned in the Media: A Reference Guide to Censorship in the Press, Motion Pictures, Broadcasting, and the Internet TI - Banned in the Media: A Reference Guide to Censorship in the Press, Motion Pictures, Broadcasting, and the Internet ID - 355 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book provides a history of sex in motion pictures. The work is interesting on the increasing use of sex in mass media during the latter half of the twentieth century. Erotic depictions of the body became far more common after World War II. Advertising had exploited nudity throughout the century and continued to do so. Nude, or semi-nude, photographs multiplied. In this area, the Europeans took the lead. During the 1960s, Scandinavian publishers used new technology that produced high quality photolithographic color prints at lower prices to produce the first widely obtainable color photographs of male and female genitalia. Over the next twenty years European publishers turned out billions of copies of magazines featuring sexually explicit pornography. AU - Ford, Luke CY - New York DA - 1999 KW - classification censorship self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality CARA photography censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) sexuality pornography sexuality news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines lithography law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and X-rating motion pictures, and X-rated films +photography and visual communication color color, and pornography +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines, and nudity nudity magazines, and color nudity magazines, and pornography photography, and nudity nudity, and photography color, and nudity nudity, and color censorship, and color photography, and pornography pornography, and photography photolithography lithography, photo color, and photolithography LB - 17980 PB - Prometheus Books PY - 1999 ST - A History of X: 100 Years of Sex in Film TI - A History of X: 100 Years of Sex in Film ID - 707 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Forester has collected numerous articles in this work. Each has an abstract and a Guide for Further Reading. Interesting pieces include Forester’s Introduction; chapter 3 on “The Telecommunications Explosion” (which has essays by John S. Mayo, Duane L. Huff, Robert Kahn and Martin L. Ernst, and Martin Mayer), and the essays from Part Four: “Implications for Society.” AU - Forester, Tom, ed. and intro. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1985 KW - technology computers surveillance nationalism magnetic recording law, and privacy law labor communication revolution materials materials magnetic tape communication revolution, and second industrial revolution censorship and ratings non-USA home, and new media home radio computers and the Internet computers, personal computers office, and information technology home, and information technology labor information technology general studies information age communication revolution second industrial revolution telecommunications technology and society computers computers, and software computers, and supercomputers supercomputers artificial intelligence Japan computers, chips artificial intelligence, social impact networks artificial intelligence, myth of myth videotex radio, cellular cable personal computers computers, personal information technology and home information technology and children and computers computers, and children automation finance health medicine labor privacy computers, and crime data protection encryption developing nations long waves long wave theory labor, and new media +artificial intelligence and biotechnology +computers and the Internet children long wave theory labor +nationalism and communication Japan, and new media home, and new media materials office children, and media LB - 500 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 ST - The Information Technology Revolution TI - The Information Technology Revolution ID - 1446 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This collection by Forester has essyas from contemporary publications and from more scholarly outlets. Forester writes that “in the past the human race has tended to adapt naturally occurring materials and minerals for its use. Now science and technology is giving humans the ability to design the materials they require.... The new materials technology could therefore represent an entirely new way of going about things, and as such it will present a major new challenge not only to managers, designers, and entrepreneurs but to governments worldwide.” Forester discusses ceramics and plastics (in 1979 the annual output of plastics in the U.S. exceeded steel for the first time), and semiconductors and cement. “Transistors, integrated circuits, and the chip itself only came about after material scientists learned how to process silicon from common sand.... What’s more, entirely new materials like gallium arsenide -- formed by combining gallium with arsenic ... are threatening to replace silicon as the main constituent of semiconductors.” AU - Forester, Tom, ed. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1988 KW - technology computers superconductivity materials, and silicon nationalism transistors, and integrated circuits fiber optics communication revolution materials +future and science fiction fiber optics non-USA materials general studies materials revolution communication revolution information age ceramics plastics concrete transistors integrated circuits silicon gallium arsenide technology and society superconductors future Japan optical fibers nanotechnology materials revolution, and space +computers and the Internet Japan, and supercomputers +nationalism and communication nationalism, and computers semiconductors LB - 510 PB - MIT Press PY - 1988 ST - The Materials Revolution: Superconductors, New Materials, and the Japanese Challenge TI - The Materials Revolution: Superconductors, New Materials, and the Japanese Challenge ID - 1447 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a collection of previously published articles and chapters. Chapter 1 (“The New Technology,” pp. 3-64) has articles by Gene Bylinsky (“Here Comes the Second Computer Revolution”); Phillip H. Abelson and Allen L. Hammond (“The Electronics Revolution”); Robert N. Noyce (“Microelectronics”); William G. Oldham (“The Fabrication of Microelectronic Circuits”). Chapter 9 (“The Information Society?”) has essays by Daniel Bell (“The Social Framework of the Information Society”); Joe Weizenbaum (“Once More, the Computer Revolution”); and Bell’s “A Reply to Weizenbaum.” Other chapter titles in this book include: Part I: “The Microelectronics Revolution”: chapter 2 (“The Microelectronics Industry”); chapter 3 (“Applications of the New Technology.” Part II: “Economic and Social Implications” includes chapter 4 (“The Impact in Industry”); chapter 5 (“The Revolution in the Office”); chapter 6 (“The Consequences for Employment”); chapter 7 (“Industrial Relations Implications”). In Part III (“The Microelectronic Age”), chapter 8 is on “The Social Impact of Computers.” AU - Forester, Tom, ed. and intro. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1980, 1981 KW - R & D entertainment computers materials, and silicon microprocessing entertainment, home transistors, and integrated circuits silicon law, and privacy law labor research and development war communication revolution home entertainment materials +computers and the Internet communication revolution, and second industrial revolution capitalism war government home, and new media home surveillance paper office, and information technology home, and information technology microprocessors microelectronics labor information technology Information Age general studies microelectronics electronic media communication revolution information age computers home labor, and new media second industrial revolution transistors integrated circuits Silicon Valley +military communication artificial intelligence microprocessors microprocessors, and consumers microprocessors, and industry automation information technology and paper paperless revolution word processing information processing computers, chips microelectronics, and government government, and microelectronics labor and communication microelectronics, and labor urban studies artificial intelligence, social impact privacy surveillance +artificial intelligence and biotechnology government home, and new media office, and new media labor capitalism, and new media materials office LB - 520 N1 - See also: office PB - MIT Press (originally Oxford, Eng.: Basil Blackwell Publisher) PY - 1980 ST - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society TI - The Microelectronics Revolution: The Complete Guide to the New Technology and Its Impact on Society ID - 1448 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book was journalist Henry James Forman's controversial popularization of the Payne Fund Studies. Forman oversimplied the Studies. What much of the public came to know about this social science research came from Forman's book. AU - Forman, Henry James CY - New York DA - 1933 KW - context censorship and ratings children motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and social science Payne Fund Studies context, and social science context, and Payne Fund Studies children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children media effects media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and critics children, and media LB - 13500 PB - Macmillan Company PY - 1933 ST - Our Movie Made Children TI - Our Movie Made Children ID - 520 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is part of Praeger's Media and Society Series, J. Fred MacDonald, general editor. This work is useful for those interested in learning more about how religion is portrayed in motion pictures and on television. Forshey discusses, for example, Franco Zeffrelli's television presentation, Jesus of Nazareth. AU - Forshey, Gerald E. CY - Westport, CT DA - 1992 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations values motion pictures values +motion pictures and popular culture +television motion pictures, and religion television, and religion advertising, and religion television, and General Motors Zeffirelli, Franco, and Jesus of Nazareth religion, and motion pictures religion, and television values advertising religion LB - 26830 PB - Praeger PY - 1992 ST - American Religious and Biblical Spectaculars TI - American Religious and Biblical Spectaculars ID - 1245 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 154-page book appeared shortly after President Ronald Reagan's March 23, 1983, speech announcing the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI). The work argues that building a shield against nuclear attack is a good idea and the technology, which the work attempts to explain, makes such a shield possible. The work was produced by the Fusion Energy Foundation which had supported beam defense since 1977. AU - Foundation, Scientific Staff of the Fusion Energy CY - Fallbrook, CA DA - 1983 KW - lasers military communication nationalism and communication lasers strategic defense initiative (SDI) aeronautics and space communication x-rays lasers, x-rays plasma beams Reagan, Ronald Reagan, Ronald, and SDI particle beams beam weapons nationalism Reagan administration SDI LB - 30 PB - Aero Publishers, Inc. PY - 1983 ST - Beam Defense: An Alternative to Nuclear Destruction TI - Beam Defense: An Alternative to Nuclear Destruction ID - 2 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book examines the growing fascination with entertainers. Fowles notes that this fascination grew rapidly between 1870 and 1920. The rise of cities populated with recent immigrants and also people who came from farms and villages helps to explain the appearance of a celebrity culture. Technology played an important role. The telegraph and railroad helped to build a national following for actors, actresses, and baseball players. "Then something cataclysmic happened," Fowles writes. The "pace of the technological distribution of star images turned furious with the advent of motion pictures. It was this technology, above all others, that ushered in the age of the star." AU - Fowles, Jib CY - Washington, D. C. DA - c1992 KW - celebrity photography photography and visual communication news newspapers news, and photography celebrity culture news, and celebrity culture values values, and journalism journalism, and celebrity journalism, and public relations public relations, and journalism photojournalism celebrity culture, and journalism public relations, and celebrity culture critics celebrity culture, and photography news and journalism motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture,and motion pictures transportation transportation, and celebrity culture railroads, and celebrity culture sports, and new media sports telegraph telegraph, and celebrity culture journalism motion pictures public relations railroads LB - 28880 PB - Smithsonian Institution Press PY - 1992 ST - Starstruck: Celebrity Performers and the American Public TI - Starstruck: Celebrity Performers and the American Public ID - 2637 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Fowles criticizes mass communication research that has too easily concluded that violence shown on television and other mass media have harmful effects. He critiques the work of two leading proponents of the view that violence on television causes anti-social behavior – Leonard Eron and George Gerbner. Fowles is also critical of the position taken by such professional and scientific organizations as the American Medical Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the American Psychological Association. Too often they have accepted conclusion without doing firsthand research. “Television violence deserves a much better reputation among people,” Fowles writes. It “survives because of viewers’ preferences – not because of what people say they want but because of what they actually view. People who truly want to understand the role of television violence need to critically examine the role of this content, in its many guises, in their own lives.... Perhaps, to give television violence its due, we need first to respect ourselves more fully, to have greater regard for the complex, semiviolent creatures that we are.” AU - Fowles, Jib CY - Thousand Oaks, CA DA - 1999 KW - fear critics violence +television media effects social science research social science research, and critics television, and violence violence, and television violence, and social science research Gerbner, George Eron, Leonard American Medical Association, and violence American Academy of Pediatrics, and violence American Psychological Association, and violence television, and critics v-chip catharsis theory children children, and TV violence violence, and children children, and violence fear, and media effects media effects, and fear race, and TV violence audiences audiences, and TV violence children, and media critics American Academy of Pediatrics American Medical Association American Psychological Association race self-regulation LB - 28920 PB - Sage Publications, Inc. PY - 1999 ST - The Case For Television Violence TI - The Case For Television Violence ID - 2641 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Fox traces the evolution of modern American advertising from its roots in the 1870s to the 1970s. The major historical argument is given away in the title; Fox argues that advertising primarily reflects American values rather than creating them. To make this assertion Fox must show that a cultural trend (such as the 1960s counterculture) was underway prior to a change in advertising philosophy (such as the creative revolution of the 1960s). Fox’s evidence for the latter part of the argument is the most well-documented. He relies heavily on advertising trade journals (primarily Advertising Age). Using them, Fox details the cyclical nature of advertising styles which are primarily of two types: the hard sell ad and the more subtle, image creating ad. These styles come and go largely because, after awhile, the American public stops paying attention to one or the other. --Mark Tremayne AU - Fox, Stephen CY - New York DA - 1984 KW - photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations communication revolution media effects communication revolution values advertising +television values, and advertising Tremayne, Mark graphics revolution +books, periodicals, newspapers +photography and visual communication advertising, and values media effects, and advertising LB - 9730 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - William Morrow PY - 1984 ST - The Mirror Makers: A History of American Advertising and Its Creators TI - The Mirror Makers: A History of American Advertising and Its Creators ID - 2340 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work offers a short biography (1-25) of filmmaker Russ Meyer, who became known as "king of the nudies" with such movies as The Immoral Mr. Teas (1959). The work offers a filmography and a good annotated bibliography about Meyer and his work, including articles discussing the censorship of his films and their historical signficance in the history of sex and the cinema. AU - Frasier, David K. CY - Jefferson, N.C. DA - 1990 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories motion pictures sexuality bibliographies bibliographies, annotated sexuality, and bibliographies Meyer, Russ biography censorship and ratings motion pictures, and censorship LB - 34650 PB - McFarland & Company, Inc. PY - 1990 ST - Russ Meyer -- The Life and Films: A Biography and a Comprehensive Illustrated and Annotated Filography and Bibliography TI - Russ Meyer -- The Life and Films: A Biography and a Comprehensive Illustrated and Annotated Filography and Bibliography ID - 3103 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book considers the nature of cinema as seen by the author around 1915 to 1918. Freeburg discusses similarities and differences between cinema and the stage, spectacle, painting, sculpture, and novels. "When we examine the photoplay as an art medium we discover that it inherits something from each of the elder arts, and yet differs essentially from them all." (1) A movie, he says, is not a "novel in celluloid." (4) Silent cinema used words, Freeburg writes, and in fact moves were “so full of words that we must spend one third, or half, our time reading words, and the remainder of the time appreciating pictures. And our interests are so divided that we are impressed neither by the literature nor by the pictures.” (166) The subtitle used in the photoplay "bears a strong resemblance to the chapter heading of a novel" (173) Yet at the same time, the "chapter of a novel are logical divisions which have not corresponding parts in the photoplay." (173) Chapter IX is entitled "Words on Screen" (166-77). The good movie maker needed to realize that the photoplay was “first and last a picture play.” (178) Freeburg said the movie’s appeal is more to the emotions than to the intellect, but that it does appeal to the intellect in that people are fascinated with novelty and learning new things. “The intellectual appeal of the photoplay is slight compared with its emotional appeal. The momentary, flashing nature of the exhibition and the psychology of crowd give the spectator little opportunity or desire to exercise his intellectual faculties. Yet he has certain intellectual experiences while seeing a photoplay. The fundamental one is the satisfaction of curiosity. We constantly desire new material to add to our store of knowledge. We crave novelty. The average American scans his newspaper with bated breath. The recognition of a thing as new is an intellectual process. Our judgment declares a thing new by comparing it with the old which we already possess. Then the new itself becomes old and the adventure of the mind must begin again. Only yesterday the motion picture itself was a kind of novelty….” (18) Cinema is new in its ability to use nature, to create the illusion of the supernatural, to reverse the laws of nature, and to apparently breathe life into inanimate objects. (87) For "the first time in the history of narrative representation, nature herself may be made to play an important role." (4) "The cinematograph," he writes, "is the great magician of the twentieth century which permits us to see with our physical eyes the things our forbears since the world began saw only in their imagination." (p. 81) The author discusses the visual effect of cinema (11), the visual and the human body (12), films and novelty (18), and cinema and history (82). Freeburg writes that “…And, in any particular case it is an advantage or disadvantage, it is certain that the cinematograph may present to our eyes, to our sense of wonder, many things which formerly were presented only to our imagination.” (82) Freeburg considers the camera and “metamorphosis” (82). The camera “materializes the startling metamorphosis of myth makers.” (83) It provides the illusion of ghosts and visions (84-85), and with it “the laws of nature may be reversed or set aside.” (87) Reprinted as The Art of Photoplay Making? (New York: Macmillan Company; Arno Press & the New York Times, 1918; 1970). AU - Freeburg, Victor Oscar CY - New York DA - 1918 KW - theater stage history words vs. images motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space ref, secondary theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magic motion pictures, and special effects cinema of attractions images vs. words cameras motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology photography motion pictures motion pictures, and history history and new media history, and motion pictures audiences motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and psychology media effects motion pictures, and media effects media effects, and motion pictures photocopied motion pictures, and magic special effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and special effects modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing space and time ref, secondary theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magic motion pictures, and special effects cinema of attractions cameras motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures ref, book advertising and public relations special effects LB - 690 PB - Macmillan PY - 1918 ST - The Art of Photoplay Making TI - The Art of Photoplay Making ID - 3364 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The book recounts a series of 1992 Internet break-ins masterminded by a young “cracker” (i.e., a hacker with bad intentions)known as “Phantom” or “Infomaster.” The Phantom broke into computer systems at NASA, Los Alamos, MIT, the National Institute of Health, Oregon State, the University of Texas, and many other places. Freedman recounts these break-ins in detail. AU - Freedman, David H. and Charles C. Mann CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) computers surveillance law, and privacy law privacy +computers and the Internet computers, and privacy privacy, and computers computer hackers MIT NASA computers LB - 7810 PB - Simon & Schuster PY - 1997 ST - The Strange Case of the World’s Biggest Internet Invasion TI - The Strange Case of the World’s Biggest Internet Invasion ID - 2150 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Freedman, a psychology professor at the University of Toronto, says that he "systematically" read and reviewed "every single scientific study" he "could find that dealt with the question whether exposure to film and television violence causes aggression." He concludes that exposure to media violence does not cause "children or anyone else to become aggressive or to commit crimes." Nor does this media effects research "support the idea that it causes people to be less sensitive to real violence." As for the many organizations -- the American Medical Association, the American Psychiatric Association, the National Institute for Mental Health, and others -- that have concluded that media violence has harmful effects, especially for children, Freedman argues they have been misled by committees dominated by so-called "experts" who have a vested interest in finding harmful effects. Freedman acknowledges that the Motion Picture Association of America funded his research, although he maintains that the MPAA in no way influenced his conclusions. He speculates that the MPAA offered him support because his views were already well known. --SV Freedman’s book must have come as a great shock to the section of the American academic community that studies how viewing media violence affects aggressive behavior. In his book “Media Violence and its Effect on Aggression,” he refutes every major study conducted during the last fifty years that sought, or claimed, to prove that watching violent media content made adults and children more aggressive. He states that every important study to date on the connection between the two issues is flawed in at least one significant way. The most common problem concerns sample sizes that are too small or don’t represent the particular community of study. But an equally common issue has to do with the difference between correlation and causality. Freedman points out that one issue can be correlated with another issue without the existence of a direct causal link. The best example is the one he states about how eating carrots has been shown to decrease the consumer’s chances of suffering a heart attack. While it may be true that people who eat carrots do suffer fewer heart attacks, carrot eaters may live significantly healthier lives than non-carrot eaters. They might suffer fewer heart attacks because they live better, not necessarily because they eat carrots. His book makes it difficult, to nigh-on impossible, to assess the field of media violence research and the link to aggression with anything but complete skepticism. When the studies did have adequate sample sizes, they failed to adequately account for all variables that could lead adults and children to become more aggressive. One study connected the abuse of a Bobo doll to the fact that children watched videos of adults abusing Bobo dolls. While the study said that the children’s behavior is proof that watching violent content causes aggression, they failed to account for the fact that the children may have viewed the video as an instructional one on how to treat a Bobo doll. In that case, imitation would cause of the abuse of the Bobo doll instead of aggression. Other studies fail to support their own hypothesis and some studies even support the exact opposite hypothesis. One study found that children were more aggressive after watching Sesame Street. Another study found that people living in a town without television reception were more aggressive than people living in a town with television reception. A third study found that people who watched violent programming were less aggressive than those that didn’t. Freedman discusses several other alternatives that could cause the correlation between violent television viewing and aggression. The two most plausible reasons have to do with the socio-economic status of the parent or parents and the active, but not violent, content of the programs in question. Children from poor households, whether single or two parent, tend to have more time on their hands and be more aggressive by nature. Violent programs tend to have a lot of action as well as violence. It is the action that is triggering the aggression, Freedman states, not the violence. --Patrick Wright AU - Freedman, Jonathan L. CY - Toronto DA - 2002 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) media research syntheses, and social science research syntheses journalism, and social science research social science research, and journalism sexuality pornography news and journalism children television television, and violence violence, and television social science research social science research, and violence violence, and social science research violence, and pornography pornography, and violence media effects media effects, and TV violence media violence, meta-analyses social science research, and literature review social science research, and meta-analysis violence, and children children, and media children, and media violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures social science research, and press coverage press coverage, and social science research violence, and press coverage journalism, and media violence critics journalism media effects research, and critics motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and media effects media effects, and motion pictures violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence media effects research, and MPAA MPAA, and media effects research media violence motion pictures MPAA press Wright, Patrick LB - 10 PB - University of Toronto Press PY - 2002 ST - Media Violence and Its Effect on Aggression: Assessing the Scientific Evidence TI - Media Violence and Its Effect on Aggression: Assessing the Scientific Evidence ID - 56 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Although Richard Fried’s The Russians Are Coming! (1998) is not explicitly about the relationship between mass communications and Cold War history, it does in fact argue for the primacy of print and visual media in the rhetorical maintenance of the Cold War. Fried explains in his introduction that he is less interested in hard-line, “official” Cold War rhetoric than he is in the rhetoric of anti-Communism as it appeared in peoples everyday lives. With this premise in mind, Fried’s book is about how typical citizens in post-war America turned to public pageantry to affirm that the “American Way of Life” was politically and morally superior to Communism. As this study eventually demonstrates, Cold War pageantry often depended on the manipulation of mass media for its effectiveness, a manipulation that meant pageant organizers were complicit with mass media outlets in constructing the Communist “other.” One of the most compelling examples of how Cold War pageants were designed and executed for the sake of the mass media is the “Day Under Communism” staged in Mosinee, Wisconsin on May Day, 1950. Fried explains that this was an elaborate pageant designed to show what America would look like if Communists took over. There were various events scheduled throughout the day, such as the arrest of the town’s nuns and the switching of the movie theaters feature from an American film to Communist propaganda. As Fried shows, the scope of the Day Under Communism was defined largely by how it would play in the media: “The media transfigured the pageant. Their omnipresence altered the target audience from local to national, and thus performance too. Newspapers received an exact schedule of events, but to avoid crowds the public did not. The mayor’s arrest was rerun until cameramen were satisfied. At Red Square, newsreel men stirred the crowd into raising its fists.”(80) What all these examples suggest is that the media had a key role in the Mosinee pageant. Fried in fact argues that because the day was staged for maximum media exposure, it ironically meant that it was a one-shot affair; although organizers hoped hundreds of small American towns would follow Mosinee’s example, the handful that did try saw disappointing results because the media was generally not in attendance. As the example of Mosinee shows, the rhetoric of everyday anti-Communism depended both on the imagination of the organizers, and the willingness of the media to “transfigure” this imagination. In addition to an exploration of Mosinee’s Day Under Communism, Fried examines other American pageants meant to promote the American Way of Life in the face of the Communist threat. For example, he discusses the Freedom Train, which was loaded with artifacts representing American values and which traveled from town to town, gathering ideological support for, among other things, American foreign policy. But the very nature of the pageant--a small train that had been hyped for weeks before coming to a given town--meant that only a fraction of the towns population got to actually go inside the train: “In Charlotte, North Carolina, some 100,000 citizens came to the exhibit but only 8,416 got in. In Los Angeles, 400,000 lined up but fewer than 30,00 got aboard.” (40) In order to maximize the social and political impact of the Freedom Train, then, Fried shows how organizers turned to mass media to advertise the exhibit across the nation. In late 1946, before the physical exhibit had even been put together, the idea was put to “forty-two leaders of mass media. . . . It required a full media blitz and the talents of those present to reach the millions who would never board the train.” (32-3) The success of the Freedom Train thus depended not on the public actually viewing the contents of the train, but on the mass media coverage that figured the exhibit as a symbol of American freedoms and values. As the examples of Mosinee and the Freedom Train attest, Cold War pageantry was successful in mustering public support for the governments campaign against Communism, but such pageants were only as effective as the mass media outlets that promoted them. Fried's study reminds one, then, that while the specter of Communism was often a rhetorical construct fashioned by fearful Americans, this construct reached the public at large through the mass media, which meant that Communism’s perceived threat perhaps gained more currency than its actual one. The Russians Are Coming! is thus a powerful reminder of the medias power to transform pageantry into social reality. --Steve Belletto AU - Fried, Richard M. CY - New York DA - 1998 KW - nationalism advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations motion pictures Belletto, Steve nationalism and communication nationalism, and pageantry television +motion pictures and popular culture newsreels nationalism, and newsreels advertising, and nationalism nationalism, and advertising patriotism, and advertising advertising, and patriotism advertising patriotism news news and journalism LB - 1420 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1998 ST - The Russians Are Coming! The Russians Are Coming!: Pageantry and Patriotism in Cold-War America TI - The Russians Are Coming! The Russians Are Coming!: Pageantry and Patriotism in Cold-War America ID - 230 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 153-page book (the text runs 114 pages) is a well-researched case history of one technological innovation, celluloid. Celluloid first appeared in the 1860s, although it revolutionary nature became apparent only later after subsequent innovations in plastics technology. In terms of the quantity sold, celluloid was not one of the major materials of the late nineteenth century. Its historical importance lies, Friedel believes, partly in the fact that it was the first artificial plastic, and it played an important role in demonstrating “the expansion of man’s material capabilities.” Friedel makes clear that the original inventors of celluloid did not at first understand its potential. John Wesley Hyatt, for example, was attempting to make a better billiard ball. During celluloid’s first years it became identified with the “artificial” and the “imitative,” and was associated with “cheapness” in the way plastics in general were often seen. With celluloid’s application to photography and cinematography, though, it began to shed its association with imitation and artificiality. Friedel makes clear that celluloid revolutionized photography and made possible motion pictures. But he devotes relatively few pages (90-96) to celluloid and photography/cinema. His study, instead, attempts to place celluloid in the larger context of American and British technology and innovation, as well as the development of a plastics industry. AU - Friedel, Robert CY - Madison DA - 1983 KW - Eastman Kodak photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations motion pictures inventions innovation materials cinema motion pictures celluloid film cinematography non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and celluloid celluloid plastics +photography and visual communication Hyatt, John Wesley Eastman, George Kodak Great Britain Great Britain, and celluloid Marey, E. J., and celluloid cameras, and celluloid film, and celluloid materials revolution, and celluloid inventors and innovation advertising, and celluloid bakelite Celluloid Manufacturing Company cinematography, and celluloid celluloid, and motion pictures celluloid, and cinematography celluloid, early uses Parkes, Alexander photography, and celluloid celluloid, and photography Spill, Daniel Xylonite, advertising cameras materials advertising Marey, Étienne Jules materials revolution LB - 12440 PB - University of Wisconsin Press PY - 1983 ST - Pioneer Plastic: The Making and Selling of Celluloid TI - Pioneer Plastic: The Making and Selling of Celluloid ID - 2591 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This well-illustrated work offers an accessible account of the invention of electric lighting. The authors attempt to engage readers in the process of invention and with regard to the electric light, it was a complex process. “There is clearly something to be said for trying to understand this process better, not just because it has been one of the most important agents for change in the last two centuries, but because it is a part of the human adventure,” they write. Beyond this goal, they also have two other objectives. One is to give “a truer and richer story based on a more faithful reading of the evidence, as opposed to the usual perpetuation or arbitrary inversion of myth.” The other “is an experiment in archival historiography.” The work is grounded in the Thomas A. Edison Papers and it tries “to rely exclusively on the contemporary archival record of the activities surrounding the electric light’s development from 1878 to 1882.” AU - Friedel, Robert and Paul Israel (with Bernard S. Finn) CY - New Brunswick, NJ DA - 1986 KW - lighting innovation materials patents generators electric lighting +electricity electric lights lighting, and electricity Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and electric light electric lights, and vacuum electric lighting, and arc lights electric lighting, and carbon carbon, and electric lights Clarke, Charles, and electric lights lighting, gas generators, and electric lights electricity, and generators electric lighting, and lamps inventions inventors electric lights, and inventors Menlo Park electric lights, and Pearl Street electric lights, and patents patents, and electric lights electric lights, and press vacuum, and electric lights electric lights, and Francis Upton electric lights, and Charles Clarke electric lights, and John Kruesi electric lights, and Grosvenor Lowrey Edison, Thomas, and archives archives, and Thomas Edison archives, and electric lights electric lights, and archives materials archives LB - 2310 PB - Rutgers University Press PY - 1986 ST - Edison's Electric Light: Biography of an Invention TI - Edison's Electric Light: Biography of an Invention ID - 319 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This brief, 32-page work offers a introduction to the work of Michael Faraday and James Clerk Maxwell, and to the development of electromagnetism. Others who find brief mention here include William Thomson, Lord Kelvin, Heinrich Hertz, Ludwig Boltzmann, and Henry Rowland. Work on electromagnetism led to the development of radio during the late 1890s and the twentieth century. In addition to radio, research in this area also laid a foundation for microwave, radar, fiber-optics, advances in the generation of power and its transmission, and lasers. The work is amply illustrated with pictures. AU - Friedel, Robert D. CY - New York DA - 1981 KW - illustrations fiber optics materials fiber optics non-USA +electricity electromagnetism illustrations optical fibers radar microwaves lasers Faraday, Michael Maxwell, James Clerk Thomson, William Kelvin, Lord Hertz, Heinrich Boltzmann, Ludwig Rowland, Henry +radio +telegraph engineering LB - 12310 PB - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. PY - 1981 ST - Lines and Waves: Faraday, Maxwell and 150 Years of Electromagnetism TI - Lines and Waves: Faraday, Maxwell and 150 Years of Electromagnetism ID - 2578 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The text of this work runs 504 pages plus additional pages for the index, appendix, and bibliography. This technical history of color photography has little information on the social implications of this development. This work is aimed at a reader with a background in science and substantial working knowledge of photographic processes. AU - Friedman, Joseph S. (with Introduction and Appendix by Lloyd E. Varden) CY - London and New York DA - 1944, 1968 KW - photography +photography and visual communication color, and photography photography, and color photography, and color (scientific process) color color, and history of color LB - 1560 PB - The Focal Press PY - 1944 ST - History of Color Photography TI - History of Color Photography ID - 1552 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The individuals who built the movie industry became a new elite. But many Americans viewed them as amoral. Anti-Semitism permeated disputes over who would control movies. AU - Friedman, Lester D. CY - New York DA - c1982 KW - context +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Jews motion pictures, and anti-Semitism context, and anti-Semitism motion pictures, and actors' status LB - 13230 PB - Ungar PY - 1982 ST - Hollywood's Image of the Jew TI - Hollywood's Image of the Jew ID - 495 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work, copyrighted by the Club of Rome, attempts to assess the significance of microelectronics. Observing that the National Academy of Sciences in the United States has compared the arrival of modern electronics to a "second industrial revolution" of perhaps greater import than the first industrial revolution, the authors of this volume ask if such statements are exaggerated. They conclude that they are not. "We are inclined to accept that the impact of the integrated circuit is revolutionary. No other single invention or discovery since the steam engine has had a broad impact on all the sectors of the economy. Even the availability of electric power merely gave a further, if powerful, impulse to the process of mechanisation initiated by steam power.... the first Industrial Revolution enormously enhanced the puny muscular power of man and animals in production; the second will similarly extend human mental capacity to a degree which we can hardly envisage now." A primary concern of this book is how the microelectronics revolution will affect the Third World, which has been unable to take advantage of many benefits coming from the first industrial revolution. Another question involves whether industrialized society can assimilate these impending changes or will they hasten the breakdown of society. The authors note that microelectronics could lead to unemployment as well as create a better society for workers. Essays in this volume include: Alexander King's "Introduction: A New Industrial Revolution or Just Another Technology?"; Thomas Ranald Ide, "The Technology"; Ray Curnow and Susan Curran, "The Technology Applied"; Bruno Lamborghini, "The Impact of the Enterprise"; John Evans, "The Worker and the Workplace"; Günter Friedrichs, "Microelectronics and Macroeconomies"; Juan F. Rada, "The Third World Perspective"; Frank Barnaby, "Microelectronics in War"; Klaus Lenk, "Information Technology and Society"; Alexander King, "Microelectronics and World Interdependence"; and Adam Schaff, "Occupation versus Work." AU - Friedrichs, Günter and Adam Schaff, eds. CY - Oxford, Eng. DA - 1982 KW - R & D computers nationalism microprocessing transistors, and integrated circuits labor research and development war communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution archives digital media digitization Third World communication revolution, and second industrial revolution capitalism war non-USA office, and information technology microelectronics libraries labor information technology libraries, and information storage Information Age +computers and the Internet microelectronics revolution Third World, and microelectronics second industrial revolution Industrial Revolution +military communication information processing automation labor, and microelectronics microprocessors integrated circuits transistors miniaturization information storage +nationalism and communication microelectronics, and history of labor office, and new media nationalism, and new media military, and new media digital divide nationalism, and microelectronics capitalism, and new media communication revolution materials office LB - 4370 N1 - See also: office PB - Pergamon Press PY - 1982 ST - Microelectronics and Society: For Better or for Worse: A Report to the Club of Rome TI - Microelectronics and Society: For Better or for Worse: A Report to the Club of Rome ID - 1825 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Fukuyama believes that revolutionary changes are underway in biology and information technology. He argues that while the information society has enhanced freedom and equality, it has had a darker side. The information age has signaled a shift from Industrial society, and that shift began during the mid-1960s. The period from then until the 1990s has been “marked by seriously deteriorating social conditions in most the industrialized world.” Changes have included rising crime rates and social disorder, and the “decline of kinship as a social institution.” While the decline in kinship has been underway for more than two centuries, Fukuyama argues that this trend accelerated sharply during the last half of the twentieth century. Fertility, marriages, and births fell in most of Europe and in Japan. Divorce and out-of-wedlock births soared. Trust in institutions declined. This change in social values since the mid-twentieth century the author calls the “Great Disruption.” Fukuyama argues that the change from an industrial to an information society, and the erosion of values are “intimately connected, and that with all of the blessings that flow from a more complex, information-based economy, certain bad things also happened to our social and moral life. The connections were technological, economic, and cultural. The changing nature of work tended to substitute mental for physical labor, thereby propelling millions of women into the workplace and undermining the traditional understandings on which the family had been based. Innovations in medical technology like the birth control pill and increasing longevity diminished the role of reproduction and family in people’s lives. And the culture of intensive individualism, which in the marketplace and laboratory leads to innovation and growth, spilled over into the realm of social norms, where it corroded virtually all forms of authority and weakened the bonds holding families, neighborhoods, and nations together.” This work is divided into three parts. Part One discusses the Great Disruption and its causes. Part Two considers more general questions about the nature of social order and its evolution in times of change. Part Three asks “Does Capitalism Deplete Social Capital?” AU - Fukuyama, Francis CY - New York DA - 1999 KW - technology nationalism women, and new media preservation communication revolution information technology history, and new media community communication revolution, and second industrial revolution censorship and ratings change non-USA history history, break with capitalism capitalism, and values values technology and society information age Industrial Revolution second industrial revolution crime change, acceleration of women Japan Europe Australia Canada crime Denmark Great Britain nationalism and communication Finland France Germany Italy Korea Ireland networks Netherlands New Zealand home information technology, and home information technology, and family information technology, and office birth control Spain Weber, Max children home, and new media nationalism, and new media children, and new media community, and new media communication revolution democracy children, and media LB - 11780 PB - Free Press PY - 1999 ST - The Great Disruption: Human Nature and the Reconstitution of Social Order TI - The Great Disruption: Human Nature and the Reconstitution of Social Order ID - 2525 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This fine study examines the way in which people in small towns experienced motion pictures and how those experiences helped to create movie fan culture. This work is interesting on advertising and motion pictures as it is on the origins of celebrity culture in America. AU - Fuller, Kathryn H. CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1996 KW - celebrity audiences advertising, and public relations theaters propaganda public relations censorship and ratings children law censorship and ratings censorship celebrity culture audiences +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture, and motion pictures motion pictures, and actors' status advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising censorship, and motion picture advertising advertising children, and media LB - 12730 PB - Smithsonian Institution Press PY - 1996 ST - At the Picture Show: Small-Town Audiences and the Creation of Movie Fan Culture TI - At the Picture Show: Small-Town Audiences and the Creation of Movie Fan Culture ID - 451 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The essays in this collection have good information on the development of photojournalism. Changes in the technology of photography during the nineteenth century are covered. So, too, are technological changes that made photo essays possible and led to the rise of Life magazine. For example, Estell Jussim’s essay, “The Tyranny of the Pictorial,” makes the following observations about the period from the 1860s to the 1880s: “The period of transition from wood engravings based on photography to the success of halftone engravings of photographs capable of newspaper and magazine publication began with Stephen Horgan’s crude ‘Shantytown’ in 1880. Although crusading special artists had preceded him as reporters for news publications, Jacob Riis probably deserves the credit for establishing photojournalists as recorders of scientific fact. Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst knew how to exploit photography to increase the circulation of their sensationalist journals. Undoubtedly, it was the Spanish-American War that gave photojournalists their first major opportunity to prove their worth, since it coincided with Stephen Horgan’s ingenious solutions to the problems of the stereotype and the screened halftone as applied to the cylindrical newspaper presses. “The need to document the social evils perpetrated by ruthless economic practices of monopolies fueled the use of the camera for reform. Increasing reliance on the camera for documentation of all kinds encouraged the belief that photography was a reliable witness to truth. At the same time, the turn of the century saw critics voicing their suspicions that the profligate and ubiquitous use of photographic images was having a detrimental influence on rational discourse. The cultivated public had its doubts, calling the threat to literature ‘the tyranny of the pictorial,’ while the masses thoughtlessly responded to every sensation.” AU - Fulton, Marianne, ed. CY - Boston DA - 1988 KW - R & D journalism nationalism photography newspapers research and development war journalism news and journalism +military communication news and journalism non-USA +photography and visual communication news news, and transmission of photographs news transmission Germany +photography and visual communication photojournalism Riis, Jacob Luce, Henry Life Daguerre, Louis daguerreotype photography, and news news, and photography photography, and Mexican War photography, and Civil War Gardner, Alexander cameras Jussim, Estelle photography, and photo essay Germany, and photo essay photography, and Associated Press Cooper, Kent news, and wire photos (origins) photography, and wire photos journalism, and photography photography, and reform military, and photography +nationalism and communication nationalism, and photography photography, and Spanish-American War newspapers, and photographs Shantytown (1880) Jussim, Estelle journalism LB - 9750 PB - Little, Brown PY - 1988 ST - Eyes of Time: Photojournalism in America TI - Eyes of Time: Photojournalism in America ID - 2342 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Gabler’s 700-page Disney biography uses numerous sources to describe conversations, events and situations, often telling the story from both protagonist and antagonist points of view. Gabler set out to “understand Walt Disney, one of the most emblematic of Americans” because to understand him is to “understand much about the country in which he lived and so profoundly affected.” (xx) In Chapter 1: The Disneys lived everywhere from Canada to Florida, in cities and on farms, as farmers, miners and realtors, but first and foremost as pioneers. Walt, the youngest son of Elias and Flora Disney, mostly grew up in Chicago, Marceline, MO, and Kansas City. Marceline proved to be the most important hometown for Walt, even though he only lived there for a few years when he was very young: “More things of importance happened to me in Marceline than have happened since or are likely to in the future” (13). Walt (as he is called throughout the book) was raised in a setting that could not have been more American. A strict and sober but hard working father, a loving mother and the sense of belonging to a community, in Chicago and Kansas City but mostly in Marceline. His strict father and the feelings that Marceline evoked in Walt were the most important factors that drove him into his imaginary world of drawing, sketching and animation. After he worked for the Red Cross in France for a year, at age seventeen, he returned to Kansas City to become a cartoonist. Chapter 2: It didn’t take Disney long to start his own company. Animation was a new field and money was tight as assignments were scarce. Walt, not a good businessman, went bankrupt several times but persisted he had a dream and that was what mattered. Chapter 3: Disney eventually traded rural Kansas City for overwhelming environment of Los Angeles, where he and his brother Roy started out with making “shorts” that featured adventures of a (real life) young girl against animated backgrounds: Alice’s Wonderland. They manage to sell them, but money remained tight. The Disney brothers manage to start their own business but due to naiveté in his business and contract deals, Walt slowly changed. Setbacks and employee betrayals make him suspicious and somewhat bitter, making him seek refuge in his own imaginary world. Chapter 4 discusses the birth of Mickey Mouse who was born out of anger on a train ride from New York to LA after Walt has been conned by Charles Mintz, who owned the rights to Disney’s shorts that feature Oswald the Rabbit. Mintz set up his employees against Disney, offering them better pay Disney’s back. Mickey Mouse saved the Disney studio, however, because of the implementation of sound in the cartoons, a novelty for animation. Disney thrived as the mouse and its merchandise become hugely popular. Chapter 5: Mickey “civilizes” over the years from a mischievous mouse into a decent, well-dressed “middle class character”, which evokes a negative response among critics, who called Disney “boring.” Donald Duck was brought on the stage to be Mickey’s counterpart and adversary, and this move turned out to be golden. As Disney’s popularity rose, Walt was treated almost as a divine being by his workers, a development which helped to turn the studio into a cult-like work environment. Walt doesn’t consider himself to be a boss, which only adds to his status. Chapter 6: But money was still tight (and remained so well into the 1950s), so in order to create more revenue, Disney made a full-length animated movie: Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Because of Disney’s desire for perfection, it takes years of heavy lending and mortgaging while living on the brink of poverty, but when the movie is finally finished, it is a huge success, not only cinematographically but also commercially. Snow White merchandise earned the company enough to get out of its financial difficulties, at least for a time. Chapter 7: While Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck meant the start of Disney merchandizing, Snow White meant the definitive breakthrough for the commercialization of animation. The studio turned to creating Bambi and Pinocchio, but war was around the corner. Chapter 8: As Disney grew bigger, Walt became more disengaged with the drawing and the workers as the company grew to 1,200 employees in 1940. His dream was outgrowing him and he had trouble staying in control and maintaining his desired level of perfection. World War II and the rise of labor unions made him desperate: all he wanted was quality, but all he got was worker’s strikes. Labor unrest eventually led to the destruction of Walt’s “perfect haven” as strikers and non-strikers failed to work together as amicably as they had earlier. During World War II, Disney made propaganda films for the government, but due to his poor business skills, he lost money. Nonetheless, some of his movies and shorts were hugely successful, mainly the short The New Spirit, that carries a message across to the people that they have to pay their taxes in order to support the US war effort. Chapter 9: After the war, Disney picked up on regular production, planning to release several films per year but his efforts were plagued with financial troubles once again. Disney also lost himself in anti-Communist politics of the postwar and as the popularity of animations waned, the studio starts to focus more on live-action films instead of cartoons. Disney retreated in his own world, he developed a love for miniature trains. Then, Disney released the company-saving animated film Cinderella. Chapter 10: Never failing to amaze, Walt drafted a new and even bigger idea while toying with his trains: Disneyland. It would become a life-sized imaginary world and from that point on, he only lived for his theme park. It was modeled after Marceline and was supposed to be an image of the small town America not unlike the town he loved and grew up in. The theme park opened in 1955. Chapter 11: Disneyland became so popular that even Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev insisted that he and his wife be allowed to visit it in 1959. But Walt was already looking beyond his theme park: he wished to build an actual city. This so-called Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow (EPCOT) never saw the light of day, however, because Walt died before he could complete the plans and without him, no one knew how to continue the project. It was eventually erected as a permanent international fair, but not as the city Disney intended it to be. --Bart Nijman AU - Gabler, Neal CY - New York DA - 2006 KW - Nijman, Bart motion pictures corporations Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories motion pictures motion pictures and popular culture Disney, Walt biography, and Walt Disney Walt Disney Studio values values, and Disney Cold War, and Disney Disney, and Cold War Disney, and politics Disneyland modernism modernism, and Disney Disney, and modernism Disney, and populism television television, and Disney children and media children, and Disney Disney, and children war World War II World War II, and Walt Disney Disney, and World War II Disney, and new technology war, and popular culture popular culture, and war Cold War, and popular culture children Cold War Disney popular culture capitalism capitalism, and Walt Disney propaganda propaganda, and World War II World War II, and propaganda World War II, and Walt Disney Disney, Walt, and World War II Disney, Walt, and propaganda propaganda, and Walt Disney biography modernity LB - 33000 PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 2006 ST - Walter Disney: The Triumph of American Imagination TI - Walter Disney: The Triumph of American Imagination ID - 44 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This well-written book discusses the many ways that real life has come to reflect motion pictures and other forms of popular culture spread by mass media. This insightful book is a good introduction to celebrity culture in the United States. AU - Gabler, Neal CY - New York DA - 1998 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising motion pictures journalism Hollywood news and journalism +motion pictures and popular culture media effects public relations media literacy media literacy, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media literacy news news, and motion pictures motion pictures, and reality motion pictures, and critics Hollywood, and critics LB - 25780 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 1998 ST - Life the Movie: How Entertainment Conquered Reality TI - Life the Movie: How Entertainment Conquered Reality ID - 1170 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Part of this work discusses photocopying and the Xerox corporation. AU - Gabor, Andrea CY - New York DA - 1990 KW - corporations corporations corporations xerography duplicating technologies duplicating technologies Xerox Corporation photocopying Carlson, Chester Deming, W. Edwards Ford Motor Company General Motors Corp. capitalism LB - 5690 PB - Times Books, Random House PY - 1990 ST - The Man Who Discovered Quality: How W. Edwards Deming Brought the Quality Revolution to America-- the Stories of Ford, Xerox, and GM TI - The Man Who Discovered Quality: How W. Edwards Deming Brought the Quality Revolution to America-- the Stories of Ford, Xerox, and GM ID - 1954 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The opening chapter of this book offers a brief, but good, history of microfilming starting with John Dancer in 1839. It covers the explosion in microfilm acquisitions between 1950 and 1970. Chapter 6 deals with “Micrographics & Government Publication.” Most of the book is addressed to librarians with such chapters as “Microformats and Associates Library Collections,” “Computer Output Microfilm,” “Serials in Microform,” “Monographs in Microform,” and so forth. AU - Gabriel, Michael R., and Dorothy P. Ladd CY - Greenwich, CT DA - 1980 KW - computers nationalism microfilm archives computers microfiche, microfilm, microform libraries libraries, and information storage information storage information storage +duplicating technologies +information storage microfilm, and history of microfilm, and libraries libraries microform microfilm, and computers +nationalism and communication microfilm, and government publications Dancer, John microfiche microform, and computer-output computers, and microform +computers and the Internet +information storage nationalism, and microfilm libraries, and microfilm LB - 5700 PB - JAI Press Inc. PY - 1980 ST - The Microfilm Revolution in Libraries TI - The Microfilm Revolution in Libraries ID - 1955 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Chapter 7 is entitled “Learning to Live with Transparency: The Evolution of a Reconnaissance Satellite Regime.” AU - Gaddis, John Lewis CY - New York DA - 1987 KW - R & D USSR nationalism photography research and development war war non-USA reconnaissance photography, and satellites +photography and visual communication +aeronautics and space communication satellites reconnaissance, satellite satellites, and reconnaissance Cold War Soviet Union +photography and visual communication +nationalism and communication photography, satellite satellites, and photography +military communication nationalism, and satellites military, and satellites Cold War, and satellites LB - 7610 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1987 ST - The Long Peace: Inquiries Into the History of the Cold War TI - The Long Peace: Inquiries Into the History of the Cold War ID - 2130 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This study of color's influence on culture is an important and substantial book. In this work, Gage notes, "several themes return repeatedly, such as the feeling that verbal language is incapable of defining the experience of colour, or the notion from Antiquity to Matisse of an 'Orient' which was an exciting and dangerous repository of coloured materials and attitudes. These two themes were constantly interrelated in the belief that the rational traditions of Western culture were under threat from insidious non-Western sensuality.... How artists and thinkers in the West negotiated these dangers is a theme of great interest and one which I hope will make my readers look at the traditions of Western art and psychology in a rather different way." (10) Among the informative parts of this work is the author's discussion of the "morality of colour." (204-09). AU - Gage, John CY - Boston DA - 1993 KW - censorship avant garde World War I Kandinsky, Wassily context art , color freedom color, and freedom color, and 1960s art, and color color, and art avant garde, and color color, and avant garde censorship, and color color, and censorship censorship and ratings color, and prejudice against sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, context context, and color color, and 1960s materials color, and materials materials, and color Cezanne, Paul, and color color, and Paul Cezanne color, and chemistry color, and dyes color, and Vincent van Gogh van Gogh, Vincent, and color color, and Greeks color, and Impressionism color, and Middle Ages Matisse, Henri, and color color, and Henri Matisse color, and Wassily Kandinsky Kandinsky, Wassily, and color color, and Claude Monet Monet, Claude, and color color, and Isaac Newton Newton, Isaac, and color color, and oil painting color, and van Rijn Rembrandt color, and Renaissance color, and Georges Seurat color, and World War I World War I, and color color, and sensation Jung, Carl, and color color, and Carl Jung Barthes, Roland, and color color, and Roland Barthes color, and philosophy color, and literature color, and painting color, and music Goethe, J. W. von, and color color, and J. W. von Goethe Gauguin, Paul, and color color, and Paul Gauguin Kant, Immanuel, and color color, and Immanuel Kant color, and James Joyce Joyce, James, and color Lichtenstein, Roy, and color color, and Roy Lichtenstein color, and Frank Stella Stella, Frank, and color color, and Ludwig Wittgenstein Wittgenstein, Ludwig, and color color, and Richard Wagner Wagner, Richard, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and morality color, and Bauhaus Bauhaus, and color Eugene Delacroix, and color color, and Eugene Delacroix light, and color color, and light Rembrandt, and color Barthes, Roland lighting Bauhaus war LB - 32470 PB - A Bulfinch Press Book, Little, Brown and Company PY - 1993 ST - Color and Culture: Practice and Meaning from Antiquity to Abstraction TI - Color and Culture: Practice and Meaning from Antiquity to Abstraction ID - 2906 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this nicely illustrated (in color) 224-page book, John Gage focuses primarily on the use of color in art during the 20th century. "Since many artists in the twentieth century, notable Matisse (1869-1954) and Kandinsky (1866-1944), at a time when the radical reshaping of modern art called for manifestos and extensive verbal commentary, have been remarkably articulate about their approach to colour, I have drawn more heavily on them than on the pre-modern painters I looked at in my earlier books; and this means that I give here greater prominence to recent art than in those earlier studies. I have also extended the discussion into two new areas: to non-European art, where it seems to me that some colour issues are articulated more clearly than in the European tradition; and to media other than painting and sculpture -- film, performance and other multi-media works -- where there are new issues at stake and new ways of approaching the old ones. This book is concerned with the history of colour, but is not itself a history; rather, each chapter develops a theme from physics, or chemistry, or psychology, or linguistics, for example, which is intended to pinpoint that discipline's relationship with art. Although it begins with physics and chemistry, and works through physiology, colour is primarily a psychological phenomenon. Hence, the issues raised are unlikely to be resolved, but instead will be successively reinterpreted and exemplified through the creative ingenuity of artists. I hope by the end of this survey to have conveyed some sense of this endless creativity." (11) AU - Gage, John CY - London DA - 2006 KW - censorship avant garde Kandinsky, Wassily context art , color freedom color, and freedom color, and 1960s art, and color color, and art avant garde, and color color, and avant garde censorship, and color color, and censorship censorship and ratings color, and prejudice against sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, context context, and color color, and 1960s materials color, and materials materials, and color Cezanne, Paul, and color color, and Paul Cezanne color, and chemistry color, and dyes color, and Vincent van Gogh van Gogh, Vincent, and color color, and Greeks color, and Impressionism color, and Middle Ages Matisse, Henri, and color color, and Henri Matisse color, and Wassily Kandinsky Kandinsky, Wassily, and color color, and Claude Monet Monet, Claude, and color color, and Isaac Newton Newton, Isaac, and color color, and oil painting color, and van Rijn Rembrandt color, and Renaissance color, and Georges Seurat color, and sensation color, and philosophy color, and literature color, and painting color, and music Goethe, J. W. von, and color color, and J. W. von Goethe Gauguin, Paul, and color color, and Paul Gauguin color, and Frank Stella Stella, Frank, and color color, and Richard Wagner Wagner, Richard, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and morality color, and Bauhaus Bauhaus, and color Eugene Delacroix, and color color, and Eugene Delacroix light, and color color, and light Rembrandt, and color lighting ref, secondary color, and film film, and color color, and psychology color, and sensation ref, secondary Bauhaus film LB - 40220 PB - Thames & Hudson PY - 2006 ST - Color in Art TI - Color in Art ID - 4120 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Gage writes that "It may seem curious that a phenomenon which is a primary sensory experience for most of us, and has attracted so many commentators from so many points of view, is far from being understood as a whole. ... The difficulties inherent in attempting to quantify sensations have meant that 'colour' -- the subjective outcome of an objective process of stimulation -- has rarely been considered in a comprehensive way. Since Newton the science and art of colour have usually been treated as entirely distinct, and yet to treat them so is to miss many of the most intriguing aspects." (11) This work's 21 chapters cover many prominent artists and theorist. Gage's own theoretical approached is laid out in the first three chapters (Part I). "The first, Context of Colour, proposes that an art-historical approach to colour offers the best opportunity for a unifying vision, because of the close engagement of practising artists and craftworkers in colour-perceptions, as well as because many of their works have survived to be analysed by technical methods which are daily increasing in precision and scope." (8) 8/9 "The second chapter, Colour and Culture, seeks to illustrate the historical contingency of colour-perceptin, particularly as they are exemplified in colour-language. (9) "The third, Colour as Art and Its Literature, is intended to lay out various factors intrinsic to a study of colour in the visual art of the West -- from the technological constraints, to theories accessible to artists and craftworkers, to colour-iconography and its modern interpretation, to viewing-conditions, and on to the language of colour-analysis itself. In this sense, it works in the opposite direction to the immanent method of deconstruction, which starts from the 'text' immediately present to the reader. It adopts the view that, although historiography inevitably works backwards from the present to the past, history as it is experienced does not. And it is one of the tasks of the historian to reconstitute the original order of events." (9) Gage says that by van Gogh's time experimental psychology had begun to change what people had previously assumed about bright colors. “Yet it was one of the important achievements of thee experimental psychology of van Gogh’s time to have shown that a love of strong, saturated ‘primary’ colours was not the preserve of primitives or of children, but was also common among educated European adults (see p. 250); and this was a line of research which went hand-in-hand with the development of a new range of bright synthetic pigments and dyes. It was these psychological as well as technological developments that lay behind what has always been recognized as the enormously expanded interest in highly contrasting hues that marks the visual expression of twentieth-century Western culture, and which has sometimes been characterized, rather misleadingly, as the emancipation of colour in the modern world.” (31) During the latter half of the nineteenth century, color-study had "deepened and ramified" the "traditional mystery" of color "to the point where it could become a central preoccupation of painters seeking new means of expression." (249) Experimental psychology was changing the way people thought about color. "A series of studies carried out in the Leipzig psychological laboratory of Wilhelm Wundt in the 1890s and early years of this century [20th century] was directed towards establishing colour-aesthetics on an empirical basis by means of controlled experiments with many subjects. In an early study of 1894, Jonas Cohn had already discovered that most of his subjects (who were all educated men) preferred combinations of highly saturated colours, and particularly saturated complementaries, and he noted that this preference had hitherto been regarded as peculiar to primitives and the uncultivated. In a series of experiments of 1910-11, F. Stefãnescu-Goangã came to the conclusion that the feelings produced in his subjects by colours were the direct effect of sensory perception, rather than the result of associations, which were secondary phenomena. This work tended towards the view that colour-sensations themselves could be free of associative elements -- could be more abstract." (250) Just how much artists were aware of this research is unclear, Gage says, "but what is clear is that, in the early development of abstraction, painters interested in colour were experimenting in very much the same way as the psychologists; they used analogous experimental procedures, and sometimes came to very similar conclusions." (250) In a section entitled "Kandinsky's grammar of colour" (250-53), Gage quotes Kandinsky as saying that "Generally speaking, colour directly influences the soul." (Kandinsky quoted, 252) With regard to women and color, Gage writes that "the widespread perception that women are more discriminating than men in their use of colour may be linked to the relative rarity of colour-deficiencies in female vision." (33) AU - Gage, John CY - Berkeley DA - 1999 KW - illustrations censorship avant garde Kandinsky, Wassily context art , color freedom color, and freedom color, and 1960s art, and color color, and art avant garde, and color color, and avant garde censorship, and color color, and censorship censorship and ratings color, and prejudice against sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, context context, and color color, and 1960s materials color, and materials materials, and color Cezanne, Paul, and color color, and Paul Cezanne color, and chemistry color, and dyes color, and Vincent van Gogh van Gogh, Vincent, and color color, and Greeks color, and Impressionism color, and Middle Ages Matisse, Henri, and color color, and Henri Matisse color, and Wassily Kandinsky Kandinsky, Wassily, and color color, and Claude Monet Monet, Claude, and color color, and Isaac Newton Newton, Isaac, and color color, and oil painting color, and van Rijn Rembrandt color, and Renaissance color, and Georges Seurat color, and sensation color, and philosophy color, and literature color, and painting color, and music Goethe, J. W. von, and color color, and J. W. von Goethe Gauguin, Paul, and color color, and Paul Gauguin color, and Frank Stella Stella, Frank, and color color, and Richard Wagner Wagner, Richard, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and morality color, and Bauhaus Bauhaus, and color Eugene Delacroix, and color color, and Eugene Delacroix light, and color color, and light Rembrandt, and color lighting ref, secondary color, and film film, and color color, and psychology color, and sensation ref, secondary color, and light light, and color light color, and experimental psychology media effects color, and media effects media effects, and color women women, and color color, and women illustrations color, and illustrations illustrations, and color painting Bauhaus film LB - 41310 PB - University of California Press PY - 1999 ST - Color and Meaning: Art, Science, and Symbolism TI - Color and Meaning: Art, Science, and Symbolism ID - 4230 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Fred Gaisberg recalls his work with Emile Berliner and subsequent work in the development of the gramophone and sound recording. See also Jerrold Northrop Moore’s biography of Gaisberg, A Voice in Time (1976). AU - Gaisberg, F. W. CY - New York DA - 1942 KW - corporations corporations Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories non-USA Russia +sound recording Italy +sound recording +autobiography Berliner, Emile Gaisberg, Fred gramophone phonograph Columbia Phonograph Company Italy, and sound recording Russia, and sound recording sound recording, and Russia Western Electric Company LB - 2560 PB - Macmillan Company PY - 1942 ST - The Music Goes Round TI - The Music Goes Round ID - 1649 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Chapters in this work deals with the following themes: Synchrony, Coal and Chaos, The Electric World Map, Poincare's Maps, Einstein's Clocks, and The Place of time. AU - Galison, Peter CY - New York DA - 2003 KW - time timekeeping clocks Einstein, Albert Poincaré, Jules Henri space (spatial) geography maps +electricity time and timekeeping LB - 28860 PB - W. W. Norton & Company PY - 2003 ST - Einstein's Clocks, Poincaré's Maps: Empires of Time TI - Einstein's Clocks, Poincaré's Maps: Empires of Time ID - 2635 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this beautiful and richly illustrated book, Gallo divides chapters chronologically, starting in 1789 through 1970. The text discusses major developments in Europe and America with representative posters for each period. Examples of nudity, depictions of women, theater at the turn-of-the-century, motion pictures, war propaganda, are a few of the many themes here. With regard to cinema, Gallo says: “Thanks to movies, people became very much visually oriented at the beginning of the twentieth century. Posters, which were becoming increasingly popular as a means of advertising, had already come to rely on design and colors rather than words to communicate their message. Films accentuated this evolution toward efforts to create immediate visual impact.” Carl Arturo Quintavalle’s essay runs separately from Gallo’s text. (pp. 297-315). At new edition of Gallo's work appeared in 2001 (New York: W. W. Norton). AU - Gallo, Max CY - Feltham, Middlesex, England DA - 1974 KW - audiences photography women, and new media advertising and public relations propaganda public relations advertising sexuality non-USA women theaters propaganda posters nudity +motion pictures +photography and visual communication posters, and history of posters, and color color, and posters advertising, and posters motion pictures, and posters theaters, and posters nudity, and posters (1900) posters, and nudity (1900) posters, and motion pictures posters, and theater posters, and advertising propaganda, and posters women, as depicted in posters color advertising color LB - 1450 PB - Hamlyn PY - 1974 ST - The Poster in History, with an Essay on The Development of Poster Art by Carl Arturo Quintavalle (trans. by Alfred and Bruni Mayor) TI - The Poster in History, with an Essay on The Development of Poster Art by Carl Arturo Quintavalle (trans. by Alfred and Bruni Mayor) ID - 1541 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This thought-provoking book argues that the flood of new communication technologies that entered the USSR during the 1980s -- computers, email, faxes, cellular phones, VCRs, and more -- overwhelmed leaders attempts to control information and played a central role in bringing about the collapse of the Soviet empire. Other writers who have considered this possibility include Scott Shane, Dismantling Utopia (1994), and Manuel Castells, End of Millennium (1998). AU - Ganley, Gladys D. CY - Norwood, NJ DA - 1996 KW - R & D computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) USSR nationalism email magnetic recording research and development war magnetic tape freedom law censorship and ratings war non-USA +television +telephones telephones, and Soviet Union information technology +nationalism and communication +military communication Soviet Union, and collapse of Soviet Union, and information technology information technology, and Soviet Union censorship freedom of expression, Soviet Union Gorbachev, Mikhail telephones, cellular (USSR) facsimile, and Soviet Union electronic mail, Soviet Union computers, and Soviet Union television, and VCRs (USSR) information technology, and Soviet Union Soviet Union +computers and the Internet computers electronic mail electronic media +duplicating technologies Soviet Union Russia telephones, cellular television, and VCRs VCRs, and Soviet Union nationalism, and VCRs nationalism, and audio cassettes nationalism, and video cassettes censorship, and new media VCRs facsimile LB - 2220 PB - Ablex Publishing Corp. PY - 1996 ST - Unglued Empire: The Soviet Experience With Communications Technologies TI - Unglued Empire: The Soviet Experience With Communications Technologies ID - 1615 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book provides an informative account of the possible political and social impact of the VCR. The path for the VCR was prepared by audiocassettes and an opening chapter discusses how these tape recorders penetrated various cultures. The authors discuss how governments apparently cannot stop the spread of VCRs and sometimes do not try for economic reasons. They also note the importance of black markets and immigrants in the spread of VCRs. The authors write: "The means of control thus far instituted by even the most restrictive governments do not appear to be commensurate with the threat posed by VCRs and videocassettes to the information monopolies claimed by many nations. Where controls have been rather rigorously attempted, they have usually been ineffective. This is true even in those countries where information suppression is a high art, such as the USSR and the countries of Eastern Europe. Not even the death sentences imposed by the Islamic government of Iran have stopped the free flow of banned videocassettes on that country’s black market. The result is that, at least for the time being, a sort of de facto global media decentralization has been effected.” AU - Ganley, Gladys D. and Oswald H. Ganley CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1987 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) USSR nationalism Europe, Eastern magnetic recording audio tape video cassettes materials materials videotape magnetic tape community democracy law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA +nationalism and communication +motion pictures +sound recording VCRs Soviet Union, and new media Eastern Europe, and new media democracy and media audio cassettes video cassettes global communication Soviet Union nationalism, and VCRs nationalism, and audio cassettes nationalism, and video cassettes censorship, and new media Eastern Europe Europe LB - 8830 PB - Center for Information Policy Research, Harvard University PY - 1987 ST - Global Political Fallout: The First Decade of the VCR 1976-1985 TI - Global Political Fallout: The First Decade of the VCR 1976-1985 ID - 2250 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 375-page book begins by providing a historical survey of photography up through the early 20th century. Chapter 14, "Photo-Telegraphy," (360-67) discusses three methods of sending photographs over electrical wires (telegraph or telephone). One is the methods devised by Arthur Korn in Berlin. (360-62). It took about ten to twelve minutes to send a picture by this method (362). The example given is a picture somewhat blurry. A second method which involved a carbon process was known as the Belin's method (362-64). It provided a sharper picture that possible with the Korn method as the lines were closer together. However, the transmission time was much longer -- twenty-two minutes to send a picture. (364) A third method was more commonly used by British papers. (364-67) This "third methods, which is due to Mr Thorne Baker of the Daily Mirror, is one which, owing to its simplicity and dispatch, is likely to come to the front. It is known by the name of the Telectograph process, and has been in use since July 1909, for transmitting pictures from Manchester to London, and also from Paris to London." (364) This process was also cheaper. "The telephone lines need then only be held until the operation of receiving the picture is completed," this book explains, "when the telectograph method is employed, so the expense incurred by holding the lines until the photograph has been developed is avoided." (366) Other topics covered in this work's 15 chapters include: "Animated Photography," "Röntgen-Ray Photography," "Lenses," "Art in Photography," "Photography in Natural Colours," "Book Illustrations" (and there are color plates illustrating this field), "Astronomical Photography," and "Micro-Photography and Projection Apparatus." AU - Garrett, A. E. CY - London DA - 1911 KW - objectivity Lippmann process journalism illustrations magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary color color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures photography and visual communication color, and Lumiere process color, and Lippmann process Lippmann process, and color Lumiere process, and color color, and chromoscope illustrations illustrations, and color photography cameras cameras, and lenses photography, and objectivity objectivity, and photography cameras cameras, and lenses Autochrome, and color photography color, and Autochrome non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and photography photography, and Great Britain telegraph telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph telephones, and photography photography, and telephone electricity electricity, and photography photography, and electricity Korn, Arthur, and telephotograph seeing at a distance modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity photography, and Belin's method photography, and telectograph process telectograph process, and photography telectograph process, and newspapers newspapers, and telectograph process microphotography photography, and microscope photography, and microphotography photography, and X-rays photography, and Rontgen-ray motion pictures motion pictures, and photography photography, and motion pictures news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism photography, and telescopes photography, and astronomy books, periodicals, newspapers books, and photography photography, and books ref, book books telephones LB - 16400 PB - Kegan Paul, Trench, Trûbner & Co., Ltd. PY - 1911 ST - The Advance of Photography: Its History and Modern Applications TI - The Advance of Photography: Its History and Modern Applications ID - 3793 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Garrett, Gerald CY - London DA - 1994 KW - +radio wireless communication Marconi, Guglielmo Faraday, Michael LB - 5880 PB - Institute of Electrical Engineers PY - 1994 ST - The Early History of Radio: From Faraday to Marconi TI - The Early History of Radio: From Faraday to Marconi ID - 1973 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a laudatory biography of Daniel A. Lord, the primary architect of the motion picture industry's Production Code, adopted in 1930. Lord, who taught at St. Louis University, was also a prolific writer. This work discusses Lord's role in Pope Pius XI's 1936 encyclical on motion picture entertainment. AU - Gavin, Thomas F., S. J. CY - Boston DA - 1977 KW - self-regulation Production Code values Christianity Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Pope Pius XI motion pictures values religion non-USA biography Lord, Daniel A. Production Code (motion pictures) Catholic Church Pope Pius XI, and 1936 encyclical Lord, Daniel A., and Pope Pius XI Pope Pius XI, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Pope Pius XI Pope Pius XI, and Daniel Lord critics values LB - 13010 PB - Daughters of St. Paul PY - 1977 ST - Champion of Youth: A Dynamic Story of a Dynamic Man, Daniel A. Lord, S. J. TI - Champion of Youth: A Dynamic Story of a Dynamic Man, Daniel A. Lord, S. J. ID - 476 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book, and the author's subsequent work, Research and Relevant Knowledge: American Research Universities since World War II (Oxford University Press, 1993) provide a history of research universities in the United States and their sources of support. While research in communication technology is not the focus of the author's work, his research does provide context for developments in this area. AU - Geiger, Robert L. CY - New York DA - 1986 KW - R & D nationalism research and development war +military communication government science research and development research and development, and government support scientific research, and government support nationalism, and research and development +nationalism and communication military, and universities government, and universities LB - 10950 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1986 ST - To Advance Knowledge: The Growth of American Research Universities, 1900-1940 TI - To Advance Knowledge: The Growth of American Research Universities, 1900-1940 ID - 2456 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book, and the author's earlier work, To Advance Knowledge: The Growth of American Research Universities, 1900-1940 (Oxford University Press, 1986) provide a history of research universities in the United States and their sources of support. While research in communication technology is not the focus of the author's work, his research does provide context for developments in this area. AU - Geiger, Robert L. CY - New York DA - 1993 KW - R & D nationalism World War II research and development war war science research and development research and development, and government support scientific research, and government support +nationalism and communication nationalism, and research and development +military communication military-industrial complex military, and research and development military, and universities World War II, and research and development LB - 10960 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1993 ST - Research and Relevant Knowledge: American Research Universities since World War II TI - Research and Relevant Knowledge: American Research Universities since World War II ID - 2457 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Roland Gelatt’s work is a detailed and comprehensive history of the phonograph and records industry, from Edison’s first invention of a cylindrical apparatus with a stylus and tin foil sheets recording and reproducing sounds. The technology evolved along with the many proposed uses, from office dictation and voice recordings to, eventually, operatic and symphonic vocals and music. Gelatt calls the phonograph an invention, an industry and a musical instrument. The book recounts early technological developments and patents of various types of talking machines and phonographs. Inventors and distributors had different views of the phonograph that were often laced with tradition. Edison saw it as an office machine; others such as the Victor and Columbia phonograph and records sales firms, boasted of partial operatic recordings of sketchy comparison to the concert hall that in time were transformed into double-sided 78 rpm packages of full-length works that sounded just like the original performances and, at the time of the book’s publication, 33 1/3 LP albums. Conductors and artists persevered through the early days of numerous delays producing four-minute segments and playing individual parts into a horn to get the best sound possible with the limitations of recording in the early 20th century. Gelatt’s history includes marketing of phonographs and recording products in America and Europe. American companies had European branches that were sometimes able to sell more products for a particular genre such as opera than their American parents. Opera was the staple at first because it could be reproduced more effectively. But as engineers developed the disc technology from thick wax discs to unbreakable records with a shellac gloss and microphone recordings that allowed the buying public to listen to whatever it wanted. Prices and content varied because of intense competition for artists coupled with changes in disc technology and consumer demand. The most enjoyment for me came from tracing the development of phonographs and production of records with different labels because of my own familiarity with RCA Victor and “His Master’s Voice,” Red Seal and Okeh labels, one-sided and two-sided 78s and the orchestras and conductors who made recordings right up to 1955. I own a one-sided Columbia record of the William Tell Overture where the solo artist plays a xylophone rendition and several 78 rpm packages including Sir Thomas Beecham conducting Mozart’s Jupiter Symphony. My 75th anniversary album of the Boston Symphony Orchestra includes Karl Muck’s finale of Tchaikovsky’s Fourth Symphony and an interview with a member recalling the task of blowing his part into a horn and running back to join the orchestra. It’s wonderful that Gelatt could do a thorough history of a medium still was evolving at the time of publication. He touches on the development of radio and magnetic tape that threatened to compete with the phonograph. An updated edition including cassettes, 8-tracks, music videos and CDs would be welcome, if someone would write it. -Steven Dean Schmitt The author claims that this is the “first comprehensive history of the phonograph.” Gelatt provides a solid narrative and a useful timeline. Chapter 17 deals with the impact of the microphone. AU - Gelatt, Roland CY - Philadelphia DA - 1955 KW - entertainment entertainment, home References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps labor home entertainment home, and new media home timelines +sound recording office, and information technology home, and information technology public address systems information technology +sound recording phonograph microphones timelines, and sound recording information technology, and home information technology, and office office, and phonograph timelines office Schmitt, Steven Dean LB - 5470 PB - J. B. Lippincott Company PY - 1955 ST - The Fabulous Phonograph: From Tin Foil to High Fidelity TI - The Fabulous Phonograph: From Tin Foil to High Fidelity ID - 4178 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work gives a solid introduction to the history of photography. Among the topics discussed are the camera obscura, early attempts to capture images by such people as Thomas Wedgewood and Nicephore Niepce, Louis Daguerre and daguerreotypes, William Talbot, the collodion process, dry plate photography, film and photography, roll-film cameras, and more. AU - Gernsheim, Helmut CY - New York DA - 1965 KW - photography materials collodion +photography and visual communication Eastman, George, and cameras photography, and wet collodion process Talbot, William Fox daguerreotype Daguerre, Louis heliography Niepce, Joseph Nicephore Wedgewood, Thomas camera obscura photography, and history of cameras Eastman, George photography, dry plate photography, and film cameras, roll-film materials Eastman, George LB - 9760 PB - Grossett & Dunlop PY - 1965 ST - A Concise History of Photography TI - A Concise History of Photography ID - 2343 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The 21 chapters in this book cover several topics including "Immortal Portraits," "The Photographer as Stage Manager," "'Fine Art' Photography," "The Nude before the Camera," "Reportage and Documentation," "Push-Button Photography," and other themes such as naturalistic and impressionistic photography, "The New Objectivity," and "The Influence of Surrealism." Gernsheim notes that some photographs of nudes in the 19th century equaled the best paintings but that photographs of nudes encountered more trouble from such groups as the Society for the Suppression of Vice than did paintings. (100) The author quotes Bernard Shaw on nudity and photography: "'The camera can represent flesh so superbly that if I dared, I would never photograph a figure without asking that figure to take its clothes off.... It is monstrous that custom should force us to display our faces ostentatiously, however worn and wrinkled and mean they may be, whilst carefully concealing all our other parts, however shapely and well preserved....'" (Shaw quoted, 101) He also quotes Shaw's famous remark: "'The photographer is like the cod, which produces a million eggs in order that one may reach maturity'...." (Shaw quoted, 116) Gernsheim points out that Thomas Annan took photographs of Glasgow slums between 1868 and 1877, in some way anticipating Jacob Riis's later photographs in "How the Other Half Lives." (108-10) He also notes that although "Photo-interviews with celebrities are ... very much a feature of modern newspapers," this trend started much earlier. "Few people are aware that the first one took place as long ago as 1886 when Nadar interviewed the great scientist M. E. Chevreul on the even of his hundredth birthday. A good beginning to the conversation was the centenarian's opening remark: 'I was an enemy of photography until my ninety-seventh year, but three years ago I capitulated.'..." (112) Gernsheim says that W. B. Northrop in With Pen and Camera: Interviews with Celebrities (London), published "a remarkable book of illustrated interviews with celebrities ... in 1904." (114) This work (231-47) has short biographies of the photographers whose works are illustrated in this book. It also contains a brief section (248-51) describing the different photographic process discussed. AU - Gernsheim, Helmut CY - London DA - 1962 KW - objectivity photography materials collodion +photography and visual communication photography, and wet collodion process Talbot, William Fox daguerreotype Daguerre, Louis heliography camera obscura photography, and history of cameras Eastman, George photography, dry plate photography, and film cameras, roll-film materials ref, secondary non-USA Great Britain photography, and non-USA photography, and Great Britain Great Britain, and photography non-USA, and photography biography biography, and photographers photography, and biography photography, and processes lithography photography, and art photography, and amateurs sexuality sexuality, and photography photography, and sexuality photography, and nudity nudity, and photography objectivity, and photography photography, and objectivity photography, and impressionism impressionism, and photography photography, and surrealism photography, and Society for Suppression of Vice quotations quotations, and Bernard Shaw on nude photos Riis, Jacob photography, and celebrity culture celebrity culture, and photography celebrity culture, and origins quotations, and Shaw on photographers as cod ref, book celebrity nudity LB - 39020 PB - Fabor and Faber Limited PY - 1962 ST - Creative Photography: Aesthetic Trends 1839-1960 TI - Creative Photography: Aesthetic Trends 1839-1960 ID - 4001 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - These are remarks by Dr. John H. Gibbons, Assistant to the President for Science and Technology, National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., delivered March 22, 1995. Gibbons gives four reasons why we should pursue space science: 1) it has practical applications that are essential to our lives; 2) it can make us “better stewards of our planet”; 3) it gives us “phenomenal insights into the nature of the Universe”; and 4) “cooperation in space offers us a new vision of global cooperation.” Gibbons provides an interesting quotation from Apollo 8 astronaut Bill Anders, upon his first view of earth from space: “Looking at the Earth and seeing it floating like -- I thought, since it was Christmas time -- a little Christmas tree ornament against an infinite black backdrop of space ... it seemed so very finite. It was this view of the fragility and finiteness of the Earth that is the impression, frankly, that I hold more in my head than any other.” AU - Gibbons, John H. CY - [Washington, D. C.?] DA - March 22, 1995 KW - technology remote sensing Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) space communication +aeronautics and space communication space science satellites remotely sensed data environment, and space science environment addresses technology and society OTA rocketry LB - 8760 PB - [National Science and Technology Council?] PY - 1995 ST - The New Frontier: Space Science and Technology in the Next Millennium TI - The New Frontier: Space Science and Technology in the Next Millennium ID - 1662 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Gibbons was Assistant to President Clinton for Science and Technology, and former head of the Office of Technology Assessment. Gibbons was a physicist by training who earlier worked at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee. This volume is a collection of Gibbon’s speeches, articles, and essays between 1972 and 1997. Gibbons says that his “belief that technology and enlightened governance can transform the world for the betterment of all, especially future generations, should be apparent in these collected writings.” This collection covers a wide range of technologies, some of which are related to communication. The work is divided into two parts. Part One covers 1972 to 1992 and entitled “Energy, Environment, Science, and Society.” Among the entries in this section are “The Federal Government’s Role in Advancing Technology,” and “Governing in a Technology-Driven Age: Progress and Problems.” Part Two covers 1992 to 1997 and is entitled “Adviser to the President.” Among the entries here are “Biotechnology: Opportunity and Challenge,” “National Security Writ Large: A New Role for Science and Technology in a Changing World,” “National Information Infrastructure,” and “The New Frontier: Space Science and Technology in the Next Millennium.” Then Vice President Al Gore wrote the Foreword for this volume. AU - Gibbons, John H. CY - Woodbury, NY DA - 1997 KW - R & D computers Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism Clinton, William Jefferson +military communication presidents, and new media values progress future and science fiction computers Clinton Administration Gore, Al government Clinton administration, and technology Clinton, Bill, and new media Gore, Al, and new media National Information Infrastructure (NII) research and development computers and the Internet +nationalism and communication nationalism, and new media nationalism, and computers OTA government, and research and development progress, and technology +aeronautics and space communication satellites computers, high performance +artificial intelligence and biotechnology future, and new technology future Clinton, Bill LB - 12700 PB - American Institute of Physics PY - 1997 ST - This Gifted Age: Science and Technology at the Millennium TI - This Gifted Age: Science and Technology at the Millennium ID - 2616 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Modern photojournalism began in Germany, and Gidal maintains that he was part of its creation. “Modern photojournalism began in full force in Germany in 1928 and 1929, although its visible harbingers can be established a few years earlier. It reached fruition in 1933 and 1934, above all in Germany. Subsequently it expanded and joined up with its most important representatives in Paris, Amsterdam, London, and New York–in flight from the psychological repression and physical persecution in Nazi Germany.” AU - Gidal, Tim CY - New York DA - 1973 KW - journalism photography news and journalism news news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers news and journalism cinema motion pictures celluloid news and journalism non-USA +motion pictures magazines Germany +photography and visual communication photojournalism cameras photography, and Germany Germany, and photojournalism motion pictures, and 32mm film film, 32-mm magazines, and photojournalism +books, periodicals, newspapers film magazines, and photography news, and photography journalism, and photography Germany photojournalism, and origins journalism materials LB - 9770 PB - Macmillan PY - 1973 ST - Modern Photojournalism: Origin and Evolution, 1910-1933 TI - Modern Photojournalism: Origin and Evolution, 1910-1933 ID - 2344 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 723-page work offers context for communication media. Parts I and II (“Anonymous History” and “Springs of Mechanization”), give an extended outline of the book. Part VI (“Mechanization Encounters the Household”) talks about innovations in electrical power and how they affected cooking, vacuum cleaning, refrigeration, and more during the 1940s. AU - Giedion, Siegfried CY - New York DA - 1948, 1970 KW - home entertainment entertainment, home home entertainment home, and new media home home, and information technology information technology general studies information technology and home +electricity electricity, and home home, and electricity LB - 530 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1948 ST - Mechanization Takes Command: a contribution to anonymous history [sic] TI - Mechanization Takes Command: a contribution to anonymous history [sic] ID - 1449 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Portions of this book offer an accessible explanation of the often counterintuitive world of miniaturization, and how this is bringing a revolution in communication and economics. Gilder says that in "an age when men can inscribe new worlds on grains of sand, particular territories are fast losing economic significance." (355) AU - Gilder, George CY - New York DA - 1989 KW - computers microprocessing transistors, and integrated circuits quantum physics communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution capitalism microelectronics +computers and the Internet miniaturization microelectronics revolution transistors integrated circuits microprocessors quantum physics, and communication capitalism, and microelectronics revolution capitalism capitalism, and new media capitalism, and computers materials LB - 8840 PB - Simon and Schuster PY - 1989 ST - Microcosm: The Quantum Revolution in Economics and Technology TI - Microcosm: The Quantum Revolution in Economics and Technology ID - 2251 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work, which discusses pictorial photography, a term that was not much used before 1890, (63) comments on photographing nudes. "The study of the full figure is not quite so difficult but the nude figure is the hurdle over which many aspiring pictorialists have their tumbles. Many workers seem to have a mania for making pictures of the nude figure and few of the pictures are ever of any use pictorially, for various reasons. The draped, or partially draped, figure is far simpler to handle and when used in a woodland setting is very interesting, in most cases being used as a white spot which is placed at the pleasure of the worker and, when used in the middle ground of the picture, is far enough from the camera not to require great effort in posing." (124) AU - Gillies, John Wallace CY - New York DA - 1923 KW - ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography, pictorial sexuality sexuality, and photography photography, and sexuality photography, and nudity quotations quotations, and photographing nudes ref, book photography LB - 39430 PB - Falk Publishing Company, Inc. PY - 1923 ST - Principles of Pictorial Photography TI - Principles of Pictorial Photography ID - 4041 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. These ten essays examine media that were new in the eighteenth, nineteenth, and early twentieth centuries. The expore "momemts of transition when each new medium was not yet fully defined, its significance in flux...." They attempt to put these media into their "specific material and historical environment" and explain the "ways in which habits and structures of communication are naturalized or normalized." (viii) Most of the writers in the volume are women scholars. Contents of this book include: What’s new about new media? / Geoffrey B. Pingree and Lisa Gitelman -- Zograscopes, virtual reality, and the mapping of polite society in eighteenth-century England / Erin C. Blake -- Heads of state: profiles and politics in Jeffersonian America / Wendy Bellion -- Children of media, children as media: optical telegraphs, Indian pupils, and Joseph Lancaster’s system for cultural replication / Patricia Crain -- Telegraphy’s corporeal fictions / Katherine Stubbs -- From phantom image to perfect vision: physiological optics, commercial photography, and the popularization of the stereoscope / Laura Burd Schiavo -- Sinful network or divine service: competing meanings of the telephone in Amish country / Diane Zimmerman Umble -- Souvenir foils: on the status of print at the origin of recorded sound / Lisa Gitelman -- R.L. Garner and the rise of the Edison phonograph in evolutionary philology / Gregory Radick -- Scissorizing and scrapbooks: nineteenth-century reading, remaking, and recirculating / Ellen Gruber Garvey -- Media on display: a telegraphic history of early American cinema / Paul Young. Other books in this series include: Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds., Democracy and New Media (2003); and David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition (2003) AU - Gitelman, Lisa AU - Pingree, Geoffrey B. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 2003 KW - nationalism Great Britain non-USA photography phonograph sound recording Edison, Thomas telegraph motion pictures telegraph, and motion pictures motion pictures, and telegraph telegraph, optical optical telegraph Zograscopes books, periodicals, newspapers phonograph audiences, and new media telephones virtual reality cyberspace presidents and new media nationalism and communication Jefferson, Thomas, and new media Jefferson, Thomas women women, and new media audiences LB - 33820 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 ST - New Media, 1740-1915 TI - New Media, 1740-1915 ID - 3020 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Gitlin gives a perceptive analysis of the relationship between television and the student left during the Vietnam War. Chapter 8, "Contracting Time and Eclipsing Context," is interesting on the ways in which television can distort events, extracting them from their historical settings and giving them new meanings. AU - Gitlin, Todd CY - Berkeley DA - 1980 KW - time and timekeeping Vietnam War time television, and war television, and values preservation journalism history, and new media news and journalism war history values geography news history +television television, and Vietnam War television, and 1960s values, and television television, and news news, and television history, break with history, and television time space (spatial) television, and reform television, and student protest Vietnam War Vietnam War, and television LB - 6860 PB - University of California Press PY - 1980 ST - The Whole World Is Watching: mass media in the making & unmaking of the new left TI - The Whole World Is Watching: mass media in the making & unmaking of the new left ID - 2064 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Tracing the history of striptease from its origins in American concert saloons (1850s) and dime museums (1880s) to its golden era on nightclub stages (1950s), Jessica Glasscock, a professional writer and sometime historian, argues that striptease was an important element of mainstream theater during the late-nineteenth century to the mid-twentieth. Although striptease is considered seedy in the twenty-first century, its origins were not considered as disreputable. The striptease (the word originated in the 1920s) involves “four actions: revealing, arousing, amusing, and doing all of these on a stage (p.8).” Each decade, of course, had its own definition of what was revealing. In the 1800s to the early 1900s, the lack of a corset was considered revealing, and performing in flesh-colored stockings even more revealing. By the 1950s, women had to be topless and in a g-string to draw in men, and even then some had to go further. Today, totally nude clubs are the norm. Glasscock relies on a variety of sources: autobiographies of the striptease artists, New York Times articles railing against the indecency of the stripteaser, vaudeville historians’ accounts, reviews of the striptease shows, and records from court cases where strippers and produces were held on charges of indecency. The history of striptease is tied in with vaudeville (less indecent) and burlesque (more indecent) shows. Britain Lydia Thompson is considered the founder of burlesque, and her shows featured songs, puns, dancing women, cross-dressing women, and sexual innuendo. She is considered the first “mass-consumable sex symbol in American culture” because she increased her fame through selling “cabinet photos” of herself and her troupe. Vaudeville shows were marketed to women and children, therefore they were sold as not as sexual as burlesque, when in reality, they were nearly as indecent. They featured “skirt dancers” who swished their skirts around and lifted their legs, while performing a variety of different dances like the cancan. Another way of legitimizing striptease was the tableaux vivant, or living art, a form of entertainment that involved women wearing fleshings, flesh colored stockings, while standing as statues in poses that were supposed to duplicate famous works of art. Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. also attempted to sanitize striptease for the masses with his Ziegfeld Follies, a vaudeville show which premiered in 1907. This was an Americanization of the French Folies Bergere, and it was known for the lavish costumes of the dancers and featured a number of musical acts, tableau vivants, and comedy sketches. Follies girls were slimmed down versions of the earlier burlesque girls. Several imitators of Ziegfeld came to the fore, and these less-classy revues were targeted by the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice. Following Ziegfeld, the Minsky brothers created racier productions in the burlesque field, performed at Broadway theaters, and they also claim to have invented striptease; they did invent the term. At this time, stripteasers were considered superstars and they received top billing. One of the biggest stars was Gypsy Rose Lee, who attempted to achieve success in mainstream movies, but only succeeded in b-movies. In 1937 reformers in New York attempted to connect burlesque performances with sex crimes and the city {refused to renew burlesque theater licenses when they expired on May 1, 1937 (p.119).” A law went into effect that no theater could use the term “burlesque” to describe their entertainment, nor the term “Minsky.” However, the shows went on, just with different names. Striptease performances migrated from Broadway and other legitimate theaters to nightclubs in the late 1930s. As striptease progressed into the 1950s, stars had to get gimmicks. One famous star of the 1950s, Blaze Starr set a couch on fire during her performances, and others. The gimmicks wore thin, and stripteasers were reduced to simply stripping off their clothes. By the 1960s, striptease had evolved to what it still is today; lap dances and close contact with customers became the draw, as opposed to elaborate stage shows. -Hallie Liberman AU - Glasscock, Jessica CY - New York DA - 2003 KW - Lieberman, Hallie sexuality women sexuality, and women women, and sexuality sexuality, and striptease sexuality, and burlesque LB - 33270 PB - Harry Abrams PY - 2003 ST - Striptease: From Gaslight to Spotlight TI - Striptease: From Gaslight to Spotlight ID - 85 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The authors describe themselves as information technology "enthusiasts." They seek a middle ground in dealing with information technology. To leave "IT to grow uncontrolled is the path to putting democracy in jeopardy, trampling over people's rights, placing more power in the hands of corporations and governments, dehumanizing society, and subjugating the majority of us to an insensitive machine intelligence. Nevertheless, to move to the opposite extreme, and seek to destroy or ban IT development and applications, is to deny progress, deprive us of immensely valuable facilities, cause chaos in areas of social and economic organization which have grown dependent on the technology, and make many of our heavily urbanized communities both ungovernable and incapable of self-maintenance." The book is divided into three parts. The first, chapters 1-4, give an overview of current (1992) IT developments and set out major issues. The second, the following six chapters, considers such global issues as "technology transfer, the role of big business, the impact of people inside the information technology industry, poverty and the Third World, gender and racial discrimination, and the experiences and attitudes of the general public." Part 3 deals with ethics (when, for example, do ethical concerns make intervention appropriate) and a Bill of Rights for the IT age. Each chapter begins with a brief summary of its content. At the time this book appeared, Glastonbury was at the University of Southampton in the Department of Social Work Studies, and LaMendola was vice president of Colorado Trust. AU - Glastonbury, Bryan and Walter LaMendola CY - New York DA - 1992 KW - ethics computers corporations corporations, multinational women, and new media law, and privacy law preservation history, and new media Third World community democracy non-USA women values surveillance race political economy information technology history +computers and the Internet privacy democracy and media history, of information technology Third World, and new media values, and information technology Bill of Rights, for information technology surveillance global communication multinational corporations women, and information technology race, and information technology ethics, and information technology information technology, and consumers ethics Bill of Rights LB - 4580 PB - St. Martin's Press PY - 1992 ST - The Integrity of Intelligence: A Bill of Rights for the Information Age TI - The Integrity of Intelligence: A Bill of Rights for the Information Age ID - 1845 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In September, 1941, a U. S. Senate subcommittee of the United States Senate’s Interstate Commerce Committee, headed by the Senator Burton K. Wheeler of Montana, accused the major movie studios and their producers of making anti-German propaganda films. At the hearings, several major studios were mentioned as were specific motion pictures (including a few in which future President Ronald Reagan appeared). Some senators pointed to the fact that the major studios were controlled by Jews. The hearings eventually petered out and were largely forgotten after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor later that year. This work has numerous clippings of press accounts that covered these hearings. AD - Doheny Library, School of Cinema - Television Collection, University of Southern California, Los Angeles AU - Gledhill, Donald, ed. CY - Hollywood, CA DA - 1941 KW - government hearings government hearings +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and government motion pictures, and 1941 Senate hearing motion pictures, and preparedness motion pictures, and anti-Semitism motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and critics LB - 15600 PB - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences PY - 1941 ST - Press Clipping File on the Senate Sub-Committee War Film Hearings: Volume I, August 1 through October 15, 1941 TI - Press Clipping File on the Senate Sub-Committee War Film Hearings: Volume I, August 1 through October 15, 1941 ID - 568 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book covers the underground press of the 1960s. It mentions some of the technologies that helped to make the underground press possible -- cold-type offset printing is but one example. Such duplicating technologies as the mimeograph is another. The work discusses the Underground Press Syndicate and Liberation News Service. AU - Glessing, Robert J. CY - Bloomington, IN DA - 1970 KW - underground newspapers underground media values print values communication revolution journalism communication revolution news and journalism reproduction revolution printing printing press newspapers news +books, periodicals, newspapers printing, cold-type offset newspapers, underground underground press Underground Press Syndicate Liberation News Service obscenity, and underground publications graphics revolution reproduction revolution (1960s) +duplicating technologies mimeograph obscenity offset printing printing, and offset censorship and ratings LB - 17640 PB - Indiana University Press PY - 1970 ST - The Underground Press in America TI - The Underground Press in America ID - 683 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work, which discussed juvenile delinquency and mass media, was cited by U. S. Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas in Roth v. United States, 354 U. S. 476 (1957), a case that changed the was the court interpreted obscenity. In this case, Douglas cited research on juvenile delinquency and from the Kinsey Report to argue that literature was not a major sexual stimulant. AU - Glueck, Sheldon & Eleanor CY - New York DA - 1952 KW - U. S. Supreme Court Roth case (1957) Douglas, William O. motion pictures censorship and ratings children law censorship and ratings censorship juvenile delinquency censorship, and juvenile delinquency Douglas, William, and Roth v. U. S. (1957) Roth v. U. S. (1957) Supreme Court (U. S.), and Roth v. U. S. (1957) children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children Supreme Court (U. S.) children, and media LB - 16710 PB - Harper & Brothers PY - 1952 ST - Delinquents in the Making: Paths To Prevention TI - Delinquents in the Making: Paths To Prevention ID - 619 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Godfried details the more than 50-year history of WCFL, an AM radio station operated in Chicago by the Chicago Federation of Labor, and affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. Godfried argues that the story of WCFL demonstrates an effort by organized labor to “contest the influence of mass media and mass culture on the working class and to use the mass media and culture in the interest of workers.” Godfried’s research extends far beyond WCFL, and he provides considerable detail about the use of mass media by organized labor, including efforts to use shortwave radio, FM radio, television, advertisements and sponsored public affairs programming on commercial and non-commercial stations. His strength is in the generous detail on the history of WCFL, especially in its first 20 years. And he attempts to explain why a radio station operated by organized labor became increasingly centrist and corporatist even during one of the most radical periods in labor history. He begins with a survey of the literature about early efforts by organized labor to use mass media, such as film and the labor press, for communications. WCFL was launched when radio was in its infancy, and hundreds of commercial and non-commercial stations began broadcasting over loosely regulated airwaves in the 1920s. Despite lackluster support from the AFL, the CFL, under the leadership of John Fitzpatrick, its president, and Edward N. Nockels, its secretary, began operating WCFL “to counter the propaganda of capitalist media” and “to shape working-class culture and consciousness.” Godfried argues that the early history of WCFL is also a history of the early struggle for centralized commercial control of the airwaves through a system of government-allocated broadcast licenses. Already by 1926, the Commerce Department maintained that all broadcast wavelengths in the Chicago area were taken, but a federal judge ruled in a suit brought by Zenith Corp. that the department did not have the authority to refuse a license. The city of Chicago granted the CFL permission to use Navy Pier for broadcasting and in July 1926, WCFL began broadcasting four hours a night Tuesday through Saturday. Nockels used the CFL’s publication Federation News to argue for support of the new station and he also used it as an incentive for a union assessment to pay for the station. Godfried provides a detailed account of the battle involving the Federal Radio Commission as the government sought to develop a system of frequency allocations. He also documents the struggle that followed to maintain the viability of the station and the conflict within organized labor about the station’s role and its funding. He describes the evolution of entertainment programming on the station and its complete turn, by 1946, to programming designed to maximize profits by delivering a working class audience to advertisers. --Phil Glenda AU - Godfried, Nathan CY - Urbana DA - 1997 KW - Glende, Phil labor +radio labor, and radio radio, and labor labor, and WCFL (Chicago) labor, and AM radio LB - 1040 N1 - See also: office PB - University of Illinois Press PY - 1997 ST - WCFL, Chicago's Voice of Labor, 1926-78 TI - WCFL, Chicago's Voice of Labor, 1926-78 ID - 192 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a collection of articles that E. L. Godkin wrote for The Nation during the previous thirty years. It includes his piece on "Chromo-Civilization." In this piece, which appeared in the Nation (Sept. 24, 1874), Godkin used the term “chromo-civilization” to denounce a “pseudo-culture” that had been created by “common schools, magazines, newspapers, and the rapid acquisition of wealth.” (Relections and Comments, p. 203) The essays in this book include: -Peace.--Culture and war.--The comparative morality of nations.--The "comic-paper" question.--Mr. Froude as a lecturer.--Mr. Horace Greeley.--The morals and manners of the kitchen.--John Stuart Mill.--Panics.--The odium philologicum.--Professor Huxley’s lectures.--Circumstantial evidence.--Tyndall and the theologians.--The church and science.--the church and good conduct.--Role of the universities in politics.--The Hopkins university.--The South after the war.--Chromo-civilization.--"The short-hairs" and "the Swallow-tails".--Judges and witnesses.--"The debtor class."--Commencement admonition.--"Organs."--Evidence about character.--Physical force in politics.--"Court circles."--Living in Europe and going to it.--Carlyle’s political influence.--The evolution of the summer resort.--Summer rest.--The survival of types.--Will Wimbles. AU - Godkin, Edwin Lawrence CY - New York DA - 1895 KW - metaphors emotion decadence color in literature color, and research on color color color, in history color, and theory color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations censorship and ratings media effects color, media effects media effects, and color color, and sensuality sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Harper's Bazaar chromo-civilization color, and chromo-civilization metaphors, and color as green fruit color, as intellectual green fruit Godkin, E. L., and chromo-civilization chromo-civilization, and E. L. Godkin news and journalism journalism, and E. L. Godkin journalism LB - 41690 PB - C. Scribner's Sons PY - 1895 ST - Reflections and Comments TI - Reflections and Comments ID - 4267 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this book Vicki Goldberg explores the social history of photography from the mid-1800s up to the 1990s. The themes she covers are: photographs as evidence, extending scientific knowledge, their use in social control, as political tools, in fame and celebrity, as social icons, to promote social reform, and as political catalysts. While this book gives a comprehensive overview of the history of photography, Goldberg relies primarily on secondary sources. A key point that Goldberg makes is that, “ All photographs, including documentary photographs, are open to interpretation -- perhaps one should say vulnerable to interpretation -- when text or context is changed” (p. 96). Along these lines, she discusses how individual differences matter in how people interpret images. She writes, “The meaning of photographic images has always been elusive; it is only becoming more so. People of different background, cultures, and psychological mind-sets respond differently to the same images even before the presenting medium puts a spin on the picture and even if the photograph is pristine and unmanipulated” (p. 259). The question this raises is whether any photograph is ever “pristine” or “unmanipulated” in some way. Goldberg has an MFA from New York University and has written several other books: Light Matters (2005); Margaret Bourke-White: A Biography (1987); and editor of Photography in Print: Writings from 1816 to the Present (1988). --Jill Hopke Goldberg examines photographic images that have become a part of "our communal memory bank" and others less familiar that have also deeply marked our lives. She argues photographic technology has been changing people's minds and rearranging the way we live since its inception. Photography can be used by government to spy on its citizens. Conversely, citizens can use it to reform government. It can look into the human body, create celebrities, boost morale in times of war, and be used as record of one's ancestry. One of her most interesting chapters is on “Icons.” --Robert Pondillo This text examines photography’s influence on a number of different realms ranging from policy-making to war. Goldberg writes with a style that maintains a high level of interest in the reader, and also conveys the sense that the influence of photography transcends mere physical accomplishment and can have an impact on our soul, our mind, our emotions, and out psyche. Goldberg examines many of the “famous” images in the history of photography such as the Nixon and Khrushchev debate in 1959. Goldberg gives the history and context of this and other photographs. For example, the photographs of the Earth taken from the Apollo 8 were not only influential at the moment, but they helped signify a change in our perspective of where we fit in this universe and may well have helped launch the Ecology movement. An important subtext to the power of photography is the notion that the picture represents truth and reality. Goldberg indicates that the rise of the photograph was coupled with the philosophical movement of realism and was initially taken as being more real than other representations of people, places, and events. However, as humanities’ relationship with photography grew and became more complex, the boundaries of what was real and what was not, what was simply accepted and what was not, began to change. Photographs revealed that they could spawn revolutions, alter the course of wars, influence powerful governments decision-making, and capture a bit of our soul and our spirit. --Michael Boyle Goldberg writes that the "photograph is a highly efficient means of cultural communication; it has the advantages of credibility, easy mass distribution, and instant convertibility into a symbol. Since visual imagery is more readily abstracted than sensations of touch, smell, sound, or taste, the mind is accustomed to using images as ideas (which is apparently what happens in dreams). People cherish photographs, and the culture relies ever more heavily on them, in part because they are so readily converted." --SV AU - Goldberg, Vicki CY - New York DA - c1991, 1993 KW - celebrity photography public relations advertising law, and privacy law preservation history, and new media history surveillance propaganda photography, and decontextualization photography and visual communication iconography icons history photography and visual communication photography, and culture icons iconography photography, and history history, and photography photographs, and separated from context surveillance, and photography photography, and surveillance privacy celebrity culture, and photography photography, and celebrity photography, and reform history, break with propaganda, and photography photography, and reality Pondillo, Robert celebrity culture photography, and truth photography, and bias Boyle, Michael news and journalism public relations Hopke, Jill advertising and public relations LB - 1570 PB - Abbeville PY - 1991 ST - The Power of Photography: How Photographs Changed Our Lives TI - The Power of Photography: How Photographs Changed Our Lives ID - 13 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work by a well-known historian who was part of the Lyndon B. Johnson administration, has information on Jack Valenti, who was an assisted to Johnson before he left the White House in 1966 to become president of the Motion Picture Association of America. Goldman thought Valenti had been an effective assistant to Johnson and that Valenti had been underestimated by many. AU - Goldman, Eric F. CY - New York DA - 1969 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti LB - 19700 PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 1969 ST - The Tragedy of Lyndon Johnson TI - The Tragedy of Lyndon Johnson ID - 804 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Goldman, Eric Frederick CY - New York DA - 1956 KW -, television context LB - 28240 PB - Knopf PY - 1956 ST - The Crucial Decade: America, 1945-1955 TI - The Crucial Decade: America, 1945-1955 ID - 2853 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The 222-page annotated bibliography covers research from the major industrialized nations on sensors for use with industrial robots that was done largely from 1972 to 1984. The Introduction notes that "In 1981 Robotics Bibliography was published containing over 1,800 references on industrial robot research and development, culled from the scientific literature over the previous 12 years. It was felt that sensors for use with industrial robots merited a section and accordingly just over 200 papers were included. "It is a sign of the increased research into sensors in production engineering that this bibliography on both the contact and non-contact forms has appeared less than three years after that first comprehensive collection of references appeared." (vii) There are five broad categories in this volume: 1) General Literature on Sensors (covering Literature Reviews and Bibliographies, Conferences, Researc Review and Projections, General Papers, Reviews, Books, and Reports); 2) Non-Contact Sensors; 3) Contact Sensors; 4) General Vision Sensor and Tactile Sensor Technology; 5) Operational Application Sensors. This work forcues on scientific and engineering research and is geared for people working in those areas. AU - Gomersall, Alan CY - Berlin, Heidelberg, New York, Tokyo DA - 1984 KW - bibliographies bibliographies, annotated artificial intelligence and biotechnology bibliographies, and artificial intelligence labor labor, and robotics robotics artificial intelligence, bibliographies sensors sensors, bibliographies non-USA LB - 33840 PB - IFS (Publications) Ltd., U. K. PY - 1984 ST - Machine Intelligence: An International Bibliography with Abstracts of Sensors in Automated Manufacturing TI - Machine Intelligence: An International Bibliography with Abstracts of Sensors in Automated Manufacturing ID - 3022 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This informative work deals with the Hollywood studio system which influence movie making during the 1930s and 1940s. Gomery discusses the star system and also covers the distribution and exhibition of films. This work is especially helpful in explaining the economic context of movie entertainment. AU - Gomery, Douglas CY - New York DA - 1986 KW - +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and actors' status studio system motion pictures, and studio system motion pictures, and exhibition motion pictures, and distribution motion pictures, and star system star system, and motion pictures LB - 13080 PB - St. Martin's Press PY - 1986 ST - The Hollywood Studio System TI - The Hollywood Studio System ID - 482 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Gomery stresses the impact of social, economic, and technological factors on the industry’s revenue. This book is an extension of his earlier work, The Hollywood Studio System (New York, 1986). Shared Pleasures is divided into three parts. The first describes the growth of movie theaters from the 1890s to the mall multiplex of the early 1990s. Part 2 looks at alternative types of specialized theaters such as art theaters and those catering to ethnic groups. Part 3, is entitled “Technological Transformations.” Chapters 10-14 are devoted to “Sound,” “Color and Wide-Screen Images,” “Movies on Television,” “Cable Television’s Movie Channels,” “Home Video,” and “Epilogue.” Part I is “Business History,” and Part II is “Alternative Operations” (theaters for blacks, ethnic and art cinema). This work give a solid account of the coming of sound, color movies, wide-screen systems, 3-D films, and cable. It is based on collections in the Wisconsin Historical Society, periodicals, and secondary literature. Gomery offers a good account of cinerama and cinemascope as well as Panavision and Eastman Color. The material about movies on TV and cable is a good introduction but moves more toward description the closer the author approaches the present. AU - Gomery, Douglas CY - Madison DA - 1992 KW - entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) audiences entertainment, home magnetic recording home entertainment magnetic tape home, and new media home motion pictures motion pictures, and technology motion pictures motion pictures, and sound color motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and widescreen television television, and motion pictures cable, television television, and cable television, and cable motion pictures motion pictures, and 3-D motion pictures, and home video VCRs motion pictures, and theaters theaters African Americans, and motion pictures motion pictures, and art cinema Cinerama CinemaScope Panavision Eastman Color motion pictures, and technological innovations +sound recording cable home video, and motion pictures home, and VCRs African Americans LB - 6230 PB - University of Wisconsin Press PY - 1992 ST - Shared Pleasures: A History of Movie Presentation in the United States TI - Shared Pleasures: A History of Movie Presentation in the United States ID - 2006 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - “Put simply, I have in these pages attempted to tell, in general terms, the story of The Communications Revolution, with emphasis upon its growth and development in the United States of America,” Gordon says. He uses a chronological approach to discuss personalities, inventions, and events. This work seems very broad with relatively little discussion of how various inventions may have altered society. Gordon devotes considerable attention to the press, photography, radio, movies, and television (with some discussion of cable). Yet he provides only the most cursory mention of the transistor and no discussion of such things as computers or photocopying. This book is similar to a textbook. Its bibliography is thin and rather general. AU - Gordon, George N. CY - New York DA - 1977 KW - photography transistors integrated circuits democracy and media democracy news and journalism motion pictures communication revolution innovation general studies communication revolution inventions inventors press photography and visual communication radio motion pictures and popular culture +television television, and cable transistors LB - 540 PB - Hastings House PY - 1977 ST - The Communications Revolution: A History of Mass Media in the United States TI - The Communications Revolution: A History of Mass Media in the United States ID - 1450 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Gordon’s book describes the events surrounding the creation of the first transatlantic cable from Great Britain to the United States. The idea of a transatlantic cable had been around since the advent of the telegraph, but Cyrus Field was the first one to make it a reality. Field organized a team of experts in fields as diverse as shipping and navigation to figure out how to take strands of copper wire and secure them at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean. In his team, Field recruited Samuel Morse, famed inventor of one of the first telegraph machines and the coded system of dots and dashes that helped revolutionize the telegraph and bears his name to this day. In all, Field and his team need four tries covering about ten years before they could produce a fully functioning transatlantic cable that could was reliable and efficient regarding the speed of transmission. In the process, they encountered a multitude of hardships, including financial trouble, budgetary and time increases that far exceeded anything projected, bad weather, and even suspected sabotage. But the book tries to make the situation more dramatic than it may have been when compared to every other major human manufacturing endeavor. Every human accomplishment has come with trials and tribulations. When taken from a business perspective, it comes as no surprise that an attempt to bridge the Atlantic Ocean with a new invention is going to cost more than expected. From a navigational perspective, a year-long trip across the Atlantic is going to encounter some rough weather. Even the problems with the cable had more to do with retrieval than broken lines, which could be spliced together and reset with little difficulty. In the end, Field and his team helped create a whole new world of communication. His success with the transatlantic cable spawned a myriad of other submarine cable connections from Europe to as far as India. In fact, the techniques his team developed regarding seamanship and submarine cable laying are used to this day. --Patrick Wright AU - Gordon, James Steele CY - New York DA - 2002 KW - Wright, Patrick telegraph electricity non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and transatlantic cable transatlantic cable telegraph, and transatlantic cable Field, Cyrus Morse, Samuel capitalism capitalism, and transatlantic cable transatlantic cable, and capitalism LB - 11620 PB - Harper Collins PY - 2002 ST - A Thread across the Ocean: The Heroic Story of the Transatlantic Cable TI - A Thread across the Ocean: The Heroic Story of the Transatlantic Cable ID - 14 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author maintains that "one of the most important developments in the history of Japan's writing system has been the invention of character-capable word processing technology which has enabled characters to be handled electronically, thereby solving what had seemed an intractable problem for machine production of documents. The nature of the Japanese script, in particular the use of a large set of kanji (Chinese characters), for a long time worked against office automation, to the extent that Japan did not experience a successful typewriter era as did the west. With the unveiling of the first word processor in 1978 came a sense of liberation from the constraints imposed by the writing system in company offices and, a few years later, in homes and universities as well. So great was the change that one commentator hailed this technology as worthy of an Order of Cultural Merit." The traces the changes in writing from hand-written manuscripts to the computer, and then considers the cultural consequences of word processing and its implications for international communication. AU - Gottlieb, Nanette CY - Richmond Surrey, Great Britain DA - 2000 KW - computers nationalism writing labor computers non-USA Japan Japan, and word processing +nationalism and communication nationalism, and word processing nationalism, and computers +computers and the Internet Japan, and typewriters +typewriters typewriters, and Japan computers, and word processing computers, and Japan office, and word processing office, and Japan writing, and Japan Japan, and writing writing, and word processing office LB - 3160 PB - Curzan Press PY - 2000 ST - Word-Processing Technology in Japan: Kanji and the Keyboard TI - Word-Processing Technology in Japan: Kanji and the Keyboard ID - 404 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book, in its fifth edition, is a text and has no underlying thesis or argument. However, it is excellent for studying the structural relationship between the mass media and the state. Graber has chapters on media law, regulation and licensing, ownership patterns, journalistic practice, new media issues and other topics. Each section contains a discussion of the historical background and evolution of the press. Graber engages the debate over the press’s role as policy maker. She illustrates how the government and the press are seemingly interlinked. Almost all political communication takes place in the mass media environment. Graber does not believe that there are major problems with this situation, though some abuses may occur. Her textbook style of writing seems to minimize arguments of other authors. The book is a reference for legal and historical analysis of the mass media and it is valuable for that reason. --Rob Rabe AU - Graber, Doris A. CY - Washington, DC DA - 1997 KW - nationalism References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps democracy and media democracy news and journalism law press +nationalism and communication reference works law press, and government LB - 9420 PB - Congressional Quarterly Press PY - 1997 ST - Mass Media and American Politics TI - Mass Media and American Politics ID - 2309 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is part of Twayne’s American Thought and Culture Series (Lewis Perry, editor), and it is a useful synthesis on the 1940s. On television, Graebner writes that “even before 1950 the medium ... had raised ethical problems reminiscent of 1930s European fascism .... In short, as television was presented and interpreted in the late 1940s, the medium took on certain fascist like characteristics.” Graebner discusses such inventions as computers (e.g., anxieties over calculating machines). He also considers the reasons for America’s “culture of anxiety,” the myth of classlessness in America (in this connection, readers might wish to read about this topic in Steven Ross’s Working-Class Hollywood), and the Frankfurt School. Graebner uses films from the 1940s to document American culture. AU - Graebner, William CY - Boston DA - 1991 KW - computers motion pictures computers war non-USA myth general studies +television +computers and the Internet +motion pictures and popular culture Frankfurt School myth, of classlessness in America culture of anxiety fascism World War II culture labor computers, and values LB - 550 N1 - See also: office PB - Twayne Publishers, a Division of G. K. Hall & Co. PY - 1991 ST - The Age of Doubt: American Thought and Culture in the 1940s TI - The Age of Doubt: American Thought and Culture in the 1940s ID - 1451 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book attempts to demonstrate, through historical analysis, that the subject of literacy and its subsequent influence on Western culture and society is not as simple and straightforward as if oft-represented in historical and critical examinations. Throughout this text, Graff demonstrates the complexities of the influence of literacy and how it is actually utilized by a culture. Literacy is often held up as a standard of technological and cultural advancement, a benchmark for each culture. Yet, Graff argues, literacy has existed for more than 5,000 years, yet its influence only took great hold when it was used properly. Graff argues that complex African and New-World cultures have existed and prospered without the full-fledged notion of literacy. Inherent in this argument is the distinction between oral and written cultures and histories. Graff sums this argument by saying: “For certain uses of language, literacy is not only irrelevant, but it is a positive hindrance.” (2) Ultimately, literacy can be an important and useful tool for a culture that can result in tremendous technological and cultural advancements. As Graff indicates, “whether, and to what extent, these will in fact develop depends apparently on concomitant factors of ecology, intersocietal relations, and internal ideological and social structural responses to these.” ( 2) The important consideration in any examination of the influence of literacy understanding the complexities of its influence, that it did not solely on its own have a great impact but worked in concert with other social and cultural factors. Graff closely examines the intricacies of literacy’s influence, explaining why it blossomed when it did, and detailing its journey through such European nations such as France, Germany, and England, as well as in the United States. --Michael Boyle AU - Graff, H. J. CY - Bloomington, IN DA - 1987 KW - values print archives non-USA Boyle, Michael print culture +books, periodicals, newspapers literacy print culture, and literacy values, and print culture print v. oral culture +information storage values LB - 1570 PB - Indiana University Press PY - 1987 ST - The Legacies of LIteracy: Continuities and Contradictions in Western Culture and Society TI - The Legacies of LIteracy: Continuities and Contradictions in Western Culture and Society ID - 245 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The authors maintain that urban studies and policy-making have failed to give telecommunication the central place it deserves. Often glib metaphors (“the virtual community,” “virtual city,” “wired city,” the “third wave”) are used to describe the changes in communications. The authors argue that such “approaches are far too simplistic,” and that “the effects of telecommunications on cities seem to be far more ambiguous and complex than many would have us believe.” The authors’ approach is interdisciplinary and international, and attempts “to avoid the pitfalls of the extremes of optimism and pessimism, or crude technological or social determinism, and of the simple recourse to some all-explaining grand metaphor.” An informative Introduction surveys changes in telecommunications between 1981 and 1996. At the beginning of that period, “telecommunications were virtually synonymous with one service -- the basic telephone or Plain Old Telephone Service.” Since that time, “radical technological and regulatory changes has been a constant feature.” The authors outline four new types of telecommunications infrastructures that have emerged: 1) systems of wireless and mobile communications that connect computers and telephones by radio signals to telephone networks that are fixed; 2) broadband cable networks; 3) a new generation of satellite infrastructures; and 4) microwave systems. The book tries to show how such developments affect city life and urban development. The authors contend that “the end of the long post-war boom in western capitalist society has triggered a massive restructuring which has radically altered cities.” Urban areas “are being restructured from internally integrated wholes to collections of unit which operate as nodes on international, and, increasingly, global economic networks.” The authors employ the term “telematic” to refer to infrastructures and services “which link computer and digital media equipment over telecommunications links. Telematics are providing the technological foundations for rapid innovation in computer networking and voice, data, image and video communications,” they maintain. One result of telecommunications and telematic when combined with the relaxation of media regulation, has been “the emergence of truly global culture and media industries.” In chapter 2, the authors show how many current ways of viewing cities are obsolete and neglect the impact of telecommunications. In chapter 3, they criticize four theoretical approaches used to consider urban-telecommunications relationships: technological determinism, futurism and utopianism, urban political economy, and “the social construction of technology.” Chapter 4 deals with urban economics. Chapter 5 treats changes in social and cultural life. Chapter 6 considers the urban environment, while chapter 7 examines urban transportation. Chapter 8 is about the physical form of urban areas, while chapter 9 deals with governing cities and urban planning. A concluding chapter attempts an overall assessment. This book has a useful “Guide to Further Reading” for each chapter, and a good bibliography. The authors are lecturers at the University of Newcastle. AU - Graham, Stephen and Simon Marvin CY - London and New York DA - 1996 KW - technology computers space (spatial) and communication +aeronautics and space communication technology and society censorship and ratings office labor communication revolution digitization law capitalism non-USA office office, and new media office virtual reality geography infrastructure general studies telecommunications Great Britain urban studies metaphors virtual communities virtual city wired city third wave +telephones regulation infrastructure wireless communication mobile communication computers +radio cable, broadband television, cable satellites infrastructure, and satellites microwaves global communication digital media telematics political economy communication revolution transportation space (spatial) cable +computers and the Internet computers, and cities +television aeronautics and space (spatial) communication digital media, and cities telematics capitalism, and new media technological determinism LB - 560 N1 - See also: office PB - Routledge PY - 1996 ST - Telecommunications and the City: Electronic Spaces, Urban Places TI - Telecommunications and the City: Electronic Spaces, Urban Places ID - 1452 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Grant, who was Canadian and a critic of American cultural imperialism, reflects on the relationship between technology and power in North America. He notes that “we have become the heartland of the wealthiest and powerful empire that has yet been. We can exert our influence over a greater extent of the globe and take a greater tribute of wealth than any previously. Despite our limitations and miscalculations, we have more compelling means than any previous for putting the brand of our civilisation deeply into the flesh of others.” (15) He argues that “Imperially we turn out to the rest of the world bringing the apogee of what Europeans first invented, technological civilisation.” (16) On the United States, he said that it was “the only society which has not history (truly its own) from before the age of progress. English-speaking Canadians, such as myself, have despised and feared the Americans for the account of freedom in which their independence was expressed, and have resented that other traditions of the English-speaking world should have collapsed before the victory of that spirit....” (17) Six essays appear in this volume and are entitled: “In Defence of North America”; “Religion and the State”; “Canadian Fate and Imperialism”; “Tyranny and Wisdom”; “The University Curriculum”; and “A Platitude.” In the chapter on the university curriculum, he comments on the consensus in America, that “one finds agreement between corporation executive and union members, farmer and suburbanite, cautious and radical politician, university administrator and civil servant, in that they all effectively subscribe to society’s faith in mastery.” (113) AU - Grant, George CY - Toronto DA - 1969 KW - nationalism imperialism non-USA Canada political economy +nationalism and communication cultural imperialism anti-Americanism Canada, and anti-Americanism capitalism, and cultural imperialism capitalism LB - 2070 PB - House of Anasi PY - 1969 ST - Technology and Empire: Perspectives on North America TI - Technology and Empire: Perspectives on North America ID - 295 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Essays in the volume include: Carroll Pursell, “Introduction: Reclaiming Technology for the Humanities”; Gary Edgerton, “Digital Color Imaging and the Colorization Controversy: Culture, Technology, and the Popular as Lightning Rod”; David Hochfelder, “Electrical Communication, Language, and Self”; Roger D. Launius, “NASA Retrospect and Prospect: Space Policy in the 1950s and the 1990s.” AU - Gray, Chris Hables, ed. CY - Malabar, FL DA - 1996 KW - technology National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) cybernetics photography values preservation history, and new media history general studies history, and technology digital media color +photography and visual communication +electricity technology and society NASA space communication +aeronautics and space communication artificial intelligence cyborgs, medical culture, and technology +artificial intelligence and biotechnology culture cyborgs technology and society values, and technology digitization values satellites rocketry LB - 570 PB - Krieger Publishing Company PY - 1996 ST - Technohistory: Using the History of American Technology in Interdisciplinary Research TI - Technohistory: Using the History of American Technology in Interdisciplinary Research ID - 1453 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Chapter 24 in this book (334-45) "Colored, Stereoscopic and Talking Motion Pictures," has an essay written by L. T. Troland (of the Technicolor Motion Picture Corporation) entitled "The Technicolor Process" (336-44). Troland, who one of the inventors of this process, also taught psychology at Harvard University. Here he discusses Technicolor, the camera used, the method of exposing and then finishing the negative, the Technicolor positive, the manufacturing of Technicolor's single-coated postive, and the projector and lighting needed to show the film. Troland says that the Technicolor camera "differs from the black and white camera in certain details of its mechanism, particularly in the fact that the film is pulled two picture frames instead of one for each stroke of the shuttle." (338) In the final pages of this chapter (344-45), Gregory discusses 16mm film, 3D film, sound movies, and sending motion pictures over the radio (an early vision of television, perhaps). AU - Gregory, Carl Louis CY - New York DA - 1927 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland ref, secondary ref, secular ref, book color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects motion pictures, and talking movies sound recording motion pictures, and 3-D 3-D, and motion pictures color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor Technicolor cameras cameras, and Technicolor lighting lighting, and Technicolor Technicolor, and cameras Technicolor, and lighting 16mm film motion pictures, and 16mm 16mm, and motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color 16mm 3-D LB - 40060 PB - Falk Publishing Company PY - 1927 ST - Motion Picture Photography TI - Motion Picture Photography ID - 4104 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - A general overview of railway history from 1830 to 1960. This book considers both business aspects and social impacts. Though detailed in some cases, the work tends toward anecdotal evidence interspersed with commentary from contemporaries. Directed more towards a popular audience, the author does not footnote or name sources. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Gregory, Stanley CY - London DA - 1969 KW - non-USA Wolf, Nicholas Great Britain +transportation railroads Great Britain, and railroads railroads, and Great Britain LB - 1910 PB - Ginn and Company, Ltd. PY - 1969 ST - Railways and Life in Britain TI - Railways and Life in Britain ID - 279 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Lee Grieveson’s book Policing Cinema deals with the policing of the American movie industry by the government, both local and state, between 1906 to 1917. Grieveson places the efforts of reformers to control motion picture content within the larger contexts of the time. The early part of the 20th century was, of course, a time of greater regulation by government of the American economy and later life. The Progressives of the time helped break trusts, create food and workplace safety laws among actions. They believed that the government had a role in promoting good morals and positive lifestyles. Movies, and specifically nickelodeons, were viewed with concern by the moral and political leaders for their possible corruptive effect on the lower classes in American society. Anxieties about race, class and gender also played an important role in leaders’ concerns about the movies and their influence on the people of America. Legal cases and legislative acts are among the important sources Grieveson used. --Ryder Kouba Among the films Grieveson discusses are James Boys in Missouri (Essanay, 1908) and Night Riders (Kalem, 1908). At issue was what constituted obscenity and immorality, and also what portrayal of history might be consider immoral. The lawyers who fought these charges maintained that movies were depictions of the "American historical experience" and thus could not be censored as immoral or obscene. Grieveson writes of the case involving these films: "Chief Justice James H. Cartwright dismissed these claims in the Illinois Supreme Court in early 1909. It was the purpose of the law, Justice Cartwright asserted, 'to secure decency and morality in the moving pictures business, and that purpose falls within the police power.' Notions of 'decency,' 'immorality,' and 'obscenity' were central to this power, and although it is 'doubtless true,' Cartwright noted, that there are differences as to what is immoral and obscene, 'the average person of healthy and wholesome mind knows well enough what "immoral" and "obscene" mean and can intelligently apply the test to any picture presented to him.' Cartwright's logic assumed a universal subject of moral judgment. "Even though the ordinance focused solely on moving pictures, Cartwright noted, it did not necessarily license other immoral representations; furthermore, there is something specific to the regulation of moving pictures -- 74/75 the audience. 'On account of the low price of admissions,' Cartwright claimed, nickel theaters 'are frequented and patronized by a large number of children, as well as by those of limited means who do not attend the productions of plays and dramas given in the regular theaters. The audiences include those classes whose age, education and situation in life especially entitle them to protection against the evil influence of obscene and immoral representations.' He thus concluded that exhibition of the pictures 'would necessarily be attended with evil effects upon youthful spectators.' A concern about the effects of moving pictures on children and those rather enigmatically characterized as 'of limited means' that had animated the development of reform concern in early 1907 and led to the establishment of the police censor board was central also to the establishment of the board's constitutionality. Discourse creates institutions that come, in turn, to sustain those discourses. Important precedents were set here, paving the way for the proliferation of municipal and state censor boards from this moment on. "Responding also to the claim that the films depicted 'experiences connected with the history of the country,' Cartwright suggested that it did not follow that they were 'not immoral' since they 'necessarily portray exhibitions of crime.' Representations of history in moving pictures -- at least if they portray 'crime,' that central motor force of history -- could be immoral and obscene and could thus have damaging effects on those of 'limited means' and on the children of an urban immigrant population who were seen to be the most frequent moviegoers. Of course, the representation of the history of the United States -- or, for that matter, the immorality of elites -- to those groups had critical ideological import The representation of criminal events in moving pictures was of a different order from their depiction on the stage. For Justice Cartwright clear distinctions needed to be drawn between moving pictures and historical and theatrical accounts. Even though it is almost certain that the two films under consideration -- like The Unwritten Law -- replayed historical actuality through fictional conventions, that they were only retrospectively discursively positioned as straightforward representations of historical actuality, the decision took that positioning at its word and disallowed it." "Untangling the complicated layers of this case is important to our understanding of the interaction between regulatory forces and the film industry at this moment. Allying cinema on the one hand with the theater and on the other with nonfictional discourse -- the at least ostensibly nonfictional discourse of history -- seemed to offer a way for Block to circumvent the powers of the police censor board. Yet these alliances were de- 75/76 nied by the state Supreme Court amid fears about the effects of films on audiences. Film was, this suggested, distinct from the theater and from history and uniquely a target for regulatory concern principally because it could have damaging effects on vulnerable (and potentially dangerous) audiences. The audience base for cinema meant that it could not simply represent controversial real-life events. Cartwright's concerns can be situated clearly in the context of the anxieties about 'sensational' films such as The Unwritten Law and the effect of moving pictures and nickel theaters on children, and indeed on those of 'limited means,' that emerged so forcefully in early 1907. Legal discourse is a cultural text, evidently enmeshed with the shared knowledge of the culture traced out in this chapter." (Grieveson, Policing Cinema, 74-76) --SV AU - Grieveson, Lee CY - Berkeley DA - 2004 KW - censorship and ratings censorship, and Chicago Chicago, and movie censorship motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures theaters, and motion pictures theaters theaters, and audiences children and media children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children theaters, and children children, and theaters values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values race, and motion pictures motion pictures, and race motion pictures, and Chicago motion pictures, and Chicago censorship motion pictures, and Block v. Chicago Block v. City of Chicago case (1909) censorship, and Block v. Chicago censorship, and Mutual case motion pictures, and Mutual case Kouba, Ryder James Boys in Missouri (1908) Night Riders (1908) censorship Chicago, and movie censorship children race LB - 41610 PB - University of California Press PY - 2004 ST - Policing Cinema: Movies and Censorship in Early Twentieth-Century America TI - Policing Cinema: Movies and Censorship in Early Twentieth-Century America ID - 3478 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book was one of several feminists works during the late 1970s an early 1980s that denounced pornography in motion pictures and other mass media. AU - Griffin, Susan CY - New York DA - c1981 KW - women, and new media sexuality motion pictures women feminism law censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture pornography women feminists women, and pornography feminists, and pornography pornography, and women pornography, and feminists censorship censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship feminists, and censorship censorship, and feminists LB - 22590 PB - Harper & Row PY - 1981 ST - Pornography and Silence: Culture's Revenge Against Nature TI - Pornography and Silence: Culture's Revenge Against Nature ID - 986 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work speculates on what life might be like a half century in the future. Grimshaw wrote that "in the houses of the wealthy, and in the clubs, the opera is 'wired on,' just as hot and cold water, warm and cold air, electricity, and other conveniences are in the same way 'laid on.' In fact, the celebrated preachers are heard by those who prefer to stay at home; every one may sit in his or her chair and get the utterances of the most distinguished orators as well as of the most celebrated singers and musicians." AU - Grimshaw, Robert CY - New York DA - 1892 KW - entertainment entertainment, home +future and science fiction values home, and new media home home, and information technology information technology future +radio information technology, and home home, and new media home entertainment religion, and new media religion LB - 11130 PB - Practical Publishing Co. PY - 1892 ST - Fifty Years Hence: What May Be in 1943: A Prophecy Supposed to be Based on Scientific Deductions by an Improved Graphical Method TI - Fifty Years Hence: What May Be in 1943: A Prophecy Supposed to be Based on Scientific Deductions by an Improved Graphical Method ID - 2474 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Chapter 15, "A Look to the Future," examines movie making and desktop technologies, multimedia, compositing, morphing, interactive media, virtual reality, and improved definition television. AU - Gross, Lynne S. AU - Ward, Larry W. CY - Belmont, CA DA - 1994 KW - computers corporations corporations corporations television, and digital special effects motion pictures +future and science fiction digitization computers +motion pictures and popular culture +television multimedia media convergence digital communication motion pictures, and digital media television, and digital media +computers and the Internet computers, and media convergence computers, and digital media digital media digital media, and computers AT&T Bell Laboratories virtual reality motion pictures, and vitual reality video games video games, and virtual reality HDTV television, and high definition (HDTV) motion pictures, and computers computers, and motion pictures special effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and special effects motion pictures, and desktop technologies motion pictures, and morphing motion pictures, and future future motion pictures, and compositing motion pictures, and HDTV motion pictures, and interactive media LB - 27360 PB - Wadsworth Publishing Company PY - 1994 ST - Electronic Moviemaking TI - Electronic Moviemaking ID - 1291 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Lawrence Grossman argues that a new political system is taking shape. Electronic communications are enabling people to have a far greater impact on the political process. There is more access to information, more direct communication between citizens and the government and among citizens themselves. The “electronic republic” will reduce traditional barriers of time and distance and allow for bottom-up democracy. Grossman’s book is designed as a guide to make this transition smooth and to minimize disruptions or constitutional problems. Grossman believes that we are entering a third stage of political development. The electronic republic has evolved out of the representative democratic model that grew up since the eighteenth century. The electronic republic will be more like the direct democracy of the past. Technology will allow informed decisions to be made nearly instantaneously and without mediation. Also, more sophisticated means of measuring public opinion will be created that allow political and business leaders to devise legislation or business practices that enjoy wide support. The key factor is removing the current system of mass media, which Grossman believes is biased to the left and ultimately provides a barrier to democratic progress. Grossman lists several potential problems with the electronic democracy. First, public opinion is easily mislead and sometimes irrational. Sound government requires informed judgment and critical perspective. Also, money has the capacity to distort the system. It is difficult to provide something resembling equal access to the system, especially considering Supreme Court rulings that make campaign finance reform difficult. However, Grossman believes optimistically that these and other problems will be solved in time. --Rob Rabe AU - Grossman, Lawrence K. CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - computers nationalism interactivity journalism community democracy computers news and journalism media +computers and the Internet Rabe, Rob democracy and media democracy, and Internet electronic republic McLuhan, Marshall interactive media media convergence +television electronic media +nationalism and communication nationalism, and new media television, and democracy computers, and democracy news, and bias news LB - 9430 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - Viking Penguin Books PY - 1995 ST - The Electronic Republic: Reshaping Democracy in the Information Age TI - The Electronic Republic: Reshaping Democracy in the Information Age ID - 2310 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In early 1958, President Eisenhower asked Eric Johnston to call a bipartisan conference of opinion leaders in an effort to convince Americans to support greater foreign aid to other nations. The goal was "to inform a broad group of citizen leaders about Mutual Security, with the hope that they in turn would carry the facts to ever-widening groups of citizens." (3) Among those who attended were Eisenhower, Richard Nixon, Harry Truman, Adlai Stevenson, Lyndon Johnson, and John Foster Dulles. James M. Rosenau in National Leadership and Foreign Policy devotes Chapter 2 (42-90) to this conference and Johnston's role in organizing it. Eric Johnston said in his remarks that the conference was "the beginning, only a beginning. It is a moment in which we might plant seeds. The seeds, if we wish to plant them, will need our devoted care and cultivation in the days, the months, and the years ahead." (21) AU - Growth, Committee for International Economic CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1958 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) nationalism Eisenhower administration community addresses motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and community Johnston, Eric, and community community, and motion pictures community, and Eric Johston motion pictures, and Cold War Cold War, and motion pictures capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism values, and motion pictures addresses speeches motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising advertising advertising, and motion pictures MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric, and capitalism capitalism, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and anticommunism democracy democracy, and capitalism capitalism, and democracy nationalism and communication motion pictures and nationalism presidents and new media Eisenhower, Dwight D. motion pictures, and Dwight Eisenhower Eisenhower, Dwight D., and motion pictures capitalism Cold War freedom MPAA war advertising and public relations values LB - 35120 PB - Committee for International Economic Growth PY - 1958 ST - Foreign Aspects of U. S. National Security: Conference Report and Proceedings TI - Foreign Aspects of U. S. National Security: Conference Report and Proceedings ID - 3152 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Mars and Minerva is an excellent history of how the First World War affected universities and colleges in the United States. Gruber focuses primarily on major research universities rather than liberal arts colleges, comprehensive universities or normal schools. Within the universities she spends a majority of the book dealing with professors rather than administrators, students or alumni. The main thrust of Gruber’s work is why professors supported the war with such vigor and what actions professors took to support the government. For evidence she uses a few examples for each argument she is trying to make. As mentioned above, almost all of her examples come from major research institutions (Michigan, Wisconsin, Columbia etc.), which leads one to wonder what was happening at less notable colleges. Gruber argues that professors, particularly those in history were unsure of their role in society, as well as their usefulness. Thus, to make themselves valuable to society and create a role for themselves they started to support the war fully and unconditionally. Gruber also does a decent job of looking at how professors in different disciplines joined the war effort, though she does largely focus on history (because, as she argues, historians were more likely to be vociferous supporters of the government). Lastly, while she devotes a healthy portion of her book to the militarization of the American campus, Gruber does not examine student opinion particularly closely, nor how students learned about the war (student newspapers? Professors proselytizing?). --Ryder Kouba AU - Gruber, Carol CY - BatonRouge DA - 1975 KW - Kouba, Ryder propaganda war World War I World War I, and propaganda propaganda, and World War I World War I, and universities media effects World War I, and media effects media effects, and World War I LB - 32940 PB - Louisiana State University Press PY - 1975 ST - Mars and Minerva: World War I and the Uses of Higher Learning in America TI - Mars and Minerva: World War I and the Uses of Higher Learning in America ID - 35 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This well-researched book based on several primary collection in the National Archives and elsewhere, begins with a chapter on "Mobilizing Science and Technology for War." The following chapter considers "Nuclear Energy and the Atomic Bomb." Of interest to those interested in possible origin of the strategic defense initiative during the Ronald Reagan administration, is chapter 3 which deals with "Electric Weapons: Radar and the 'Death Ray.'" Grunden notes that the British government had been approached repeatedly during the early 1930s by a variety of “death ray merchants,” and in early 1935, H. E. Wimperis, who was director of scientific research in the Air Ministry, decided to investigate whether electromagnetic waves could create a beam powerful enough to destroy enemy planes. With the help of Robert Watson Watt, a superintendent at the Radio Research Station in Slough, and others, those doing the investigation concluded that the best technology at the time could not begin to generate enough power to operate such a weapon. Wimperis passed these conclusions on to Henry T. Tizard, the Chairman of the Aeronautical Research Committee. The Tizard Committee concluded that a death ray was not possible but that using radio waves to detect aircraft was very promising. Eventually this line of thinking led to the development of radar. Grunden notes that Japan also conducted research to build a ray weapon. Grunden's final chapters deal with "Aeronautical Weapons: Rockets, Guided Missiles, and Jet Aircraft"; Chemical and Biological Warfare"; and an Epilogue on "The Impact of World War II on Science in Japan." AU - Grunden, Walter E. CY - Lawrence, KS DA - 2005 KW - R & D death rays nationalism SDI presidents and new media research and development war war non-USA computers Japan strategic defense initiative (SDI) Japan, and strategic defense initiative nationalism and communication military communication death rays, and Japan Japan, and death rays death rays, and Great Britain Great Britain, and death rays research and development war World War II, and research and development research and development, and World War II radar Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Franklin D., and radar Roosevelt, Franklin D., and research and development Tizard committee Great Britain ref, book Roosevelt, Franklin administration World War II LB - 39050 PB - University Press of Kansas PY - 2005 ST - Secret Weapons and World War II: Japan in the Shadow of Big Science TI - Secret Weapons and World War II: Japan in the Shadow of Big Science ID - 4004 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author notes that the economic and technological character of film "differs from most other commodities in that it tends to be infinitely exportable. (5) The opening chapter examines the nature of film, economically and technologically. Chapter 2 looks at quotas set up by European nations to protect themselves from being overwhelmed by the influx of American movies after World War II. The next two chapters examine American movies in Europe and European films in the United States. Chapters then follow that cover the American film industry's foreign policy, including the work of the Motion Picture Export Association. Guback notes that a new style of film -- one that had characteristics of both traditional American and European films, began to emerge. the last chapter looks at co-production trends in the European film industry. Guback notes that as television’s over-the-air programming offered viewers for free the kind of family entertainment that had been the staple of Hollywood’s Production Code, many Americans asked, should they pay for it in the theaters? Foreign movies, with their “fresh (and flesh) appeal,” provided exhibitors a chance to win back the millions of former theater-goers who had been stolen by TV. (71) AU - Guback, Thomas H. CY - Bloomington, IN DA - 1969 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) motion pictures censorship and ratings motion pictures, and Europe foreign films motion pictures, and foreign films non-USA Europe Europe, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Europe capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign markets globalization motion pictures, and globalization Motion Picture Export Association MPAA foreign films sexuality foreign films, and sexuality sexuality, and foreign films global communication LB - 31430 PB - Indiana University Press PY - 1969 ST - The International Film Industry: Western Europe and America since 1945 TI - The International Film Industry: Western Europe and America since 1945 ID - 2885 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - These essays grew out of the National Academy of Engineering’s Symposia (NAE) on Technology and Society Priorities, held in conjunction with the NAE’s 1984 annual meeting. Essays include: John S. Mayo, “The Evolution of Information Technologies”; Melvin Kranzberg, “The Information Age: Evolution or Revolution?”; Harlan Cleveland, “The Twilight of Hierarchy: Speculations on the Global Information Society”; Anne Wells Branscomb, “Property Rights in Information”; Walter S. Baer, “Information Technologies in the Home” (see filed under “Guile, Bruce R.”); and Theodore J. Gordon, “Computers and Business.” AU - Guile, Bruce R., ed. CY - Washington, D.C. DA - 1985 KW - computers nationalism labor communication revolution law communication revolution, and second industrial revolution capitalism non-USA home, and new media home office office, and information technology home, and information technology information technology general studies information age communication revolution information technology and home second industrial revolution copyright computers capitalism information technology and office hierarchy global communication +nationalism and communication office, and new media home, and new media nationalism, and new media capitalism, and new media +computers and the Internet LB - 590 PB - National Academy Press PY - 1985 ST - Information Technologies and Social Transformation TI - Information Technologies and Social Transformation ID - 1455 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In the introduction, Alan Trachtenberg discusses the political and social focus of Guimond’s work. “The book is political and social history as much as photographic criticism–indeed its method will be familiar as a traditional American studies interdisciplinary approach. Solidly grounded in historical event, American Photography and the American Dream moves freely and unselfconsciously from picture to text to context, from biography to editorial decision making to picture analysis, and in its predominantly narrative mode seeks to locate its photographic texts in a social and political relation to the propositions of the Dream. Thus the book addresses what Guimond calls ‘mainstream’ culture. Political and aesthetic avant-garde photography is not part of the story. Organizing his story as a reconstructed debate between liberal and conservative, or Left and Right, versions of the American Dream, Guimond seeks to politicize photography, to view mainstream images as arguments about the idea of America: is the nation happy or discontent, true to its hegemonic ideals of equality and opportunity (the conventional terminology of the Dream), or is it betraying them? ‘Obviously the Dream,’ Guimond writes, ‘has been very elastic.’ Its terminology and imagery have been deployed both to celebrate and to condemn, to blame the poor and disadvantaged as responsible for themselves or to side with the losers against the rich, the comfortable, the smug, and the institutions they control. The very same Dream has served to exclude and restrict and at the same time to denounce all exclusions and restrictions, to contrast realities with promises.” Guimond devotes space to an examination of the photographs of the Farm Security Association. --SV Guimond looks for reflections of the American dream in samples of photography that came before the nation’s attention between 1899 and 1990. He proceeds on the premise, shared by all of his photographers, that words and statistics are not alone sufficient to convey the reality of American life during this period. Photographs provided a sense of the texture and everyday drama of life. Guimond is much concerned with the disparity between the image of the American dream put forward by those with an interest in its promulgation and the far less glamorous and satisfying reality of American life. His photographers, in each instance, attempt to find the reality behind the surface stereotypes attaching themselves to their subjects. Guimond has a clear social criticism agenda brought in with the stalking horse of historical analysis of American photography. This approach falls within the multi-disciplinary approach of American Studies. --Gordon Jackson Guimond’s book chronicles the movement of photography and art in America from the late 1890s through the 1980s and how it served, in many ways, as a counter expression from the concept of the American Dream. The American Dream has served as a source of inspiration and hope for millions of American, especially new immigrants arriving in America, that they can become financially successful in the profession of their dreams if they work hard. The photographers and artists in Guimond’s book present a different America than the one portrayed in concepts of the American Dream. These artists present real America and feature real Americans. For example, Francis Benjamin Johnston took pictures of the studying conditions of segregated schools across the south. Lewis Hine shot pictures of children slaving in factories and American workers in deplorable conditions, such as working the mines. Roy Stryker helped promote two different styles of American photography: documentary work and “autumn” pictures. Unlike mainstream photography, documentary style photos shoot subjects up close where it looks like the photographer and the subject have a relationship of some sort. “Autumn” pictures are shot, obviously, in the fall when scenic landscapes of leaves changing color with white clouds and blue skies overhead are meant to portray the abundance and fertility of the American Dream. These black-and-white images (at least how the book portrays them) gave Americans a different vision of the America promoted in the mainstream press. This one was darker, bleaker and more industrial with a focus on decay, struggle and the machine’s oppression of man. By the end of the book, photographers are using American greed and prosperity to frame homelessness and poverty that contrast the image of ‘high-flying’ 1980s culture. --Patrick Wright AU - Guimond, James CY - Chapel Hill DA - 1991 KW - journalism nationalism photography magazines books, periodicals, newspapers journalism film cinema motion pictures celluloid news and journalism photography and visual communication film photography and visual communication photojournalism nationalism and communication Farm Security Administration, and photography photography, and Great Depression magazines photography, and magazines photography, and documentary photography, and New Deal Tugwell, Rexford G. Bourke-White, Margaret Life nationalism, and photography journalism, and photography photography, and reform photography, and reality photography, and bias Jackson, Gordon journalism materials Wright, Patrick capitalism capitalism, and photography photography, and capitalism LB - 9790 PB - University of North Carolina Press PY - 1991 ST - American Photography and the American Dream TI - American Photography and the American Dream ID - 15 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book chronicles the development of television broadcasting industry in China in from 1958 to early 1990s, including the use of broadcasting technology, production of television sets, structure of television management, and the incorporation of the technology in an age of communist political ideologies and social movements. The book also includes a brief description of television in Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macao. -- Amy Cbu AU - Guo, Zhenzhi CY - Beijing, China DA - 1997 KW - nationalism imperialism Asia ideology cultural imperialism communism non-USA +television television, and history of China China, and television television, and China television, and Taiwan Taiwan Taiwan, and television Hong Kong television, and Hong Kong Hong Kong, and television +nationalism and communication nationalism, and television communism, and television television, and communism Chu, Amy television, and communism (China) television, and Macao ideology, and television television, and ideology cultural imperialism, and China LB - 510 PB - Wen hau yi shu chu ban she: Xin hua shu dian jing xiao PY - 1997 ST - History of Television in China (Zhongguo dianshi shih) TI - History of Television in China (Zhongguo dianshi shih) ID - 139 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work originally appeared in 1970 under the title Mesures du Temps et de l'Espace and was translated by Diana Dolan. It is a richly illustrated work (both in color and black and white) about clocks and watches. The author begins with the fourteenth century, deals with the inventions and discoveries of the Renaissance. Chapters are then devoted to the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, to "The Marine Chronometer," and to "Decorative Clocks." Part Two of this book deals with "Ancient Measuring Instruments," including terrestrial and celestial globes, to astrolabes, sundails, hour glasses, and topographical instruments. AU - Guye, Samuel and Henri Michel CY - New York DA - 1971 KW - illustrations time and timekeeping time timekeeping, and clocks non-USA geography illustrations timekeeping illustrations, and clocks time space (spatial) timekeeping, history of LB - 10970 PB - Praeger Publishers PY - 1971 ST - Time & Space: Measuring Instruments from the 15th to the 19th Century TI - Time & Space: Measuring Instruments from the 15th to the 19th Century ID - 2458 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Haas, Christina CY - Mahwah, N.J. DA - 1996 KW - writing new media new media, and writing writing, and new media literacy literacy, and new media literacy, and technology new media, and literacy LB - 90 PB - Lawrence Erlbaum Associates PY - 1996 ST - Writing Technology: Studies on the Materiality of Literacy TI - Writing Technology: Studies on the Materiality of Literacy ID - 98 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this brief 127-page book, Habermas discusses the concept of how human nature will look in a futuristic world where technology has altered the landscape of what it means to be human. His book is not so much a discussion of the future of human behavior, what most people might commonly consider the definition of human nature. At best, it is a philosophical discussion about how to maintain the dignity and honor of a human life when the biology around human life can be manipulated to serve existing humans or create children that could be ‘tailor-made’ to fit parents’ preferences for certain talents and traits. The two most obvious points of discussion as it concerns technology and human life are stem cell research and eugenics and these are the two issues that Habermas focuses on directly. He postulates that humans could reduce the dignity of human life when they destroy embryos for non-procreation means and use genetic research to design their offspring. Although he rarely, if ever, mentions stem cell research by name, it is clearly in the crosshairs of his argument regarding science and embryos. He acknowledges that the goal of medical science is to improve the lives of those already living, but he wonders what will happen in a society where such goals are met at the expense of the unborn. A more dangerous outcome of science is the use of eugenics to create ‘model’ children for parents. In Habermas’ view, future technology would allow parents to ‘program’ their fertilized eggs and embryos to make their children prodigies at anything the parents wished them to be, from sports to painting to music. But the process of ‘creating’ children denies them the freedom to determine their own lives, according to Habermas, and that ability to self-determine one’s future is one of the greatest assets of being human. Although the writing can be a bit more academic than necessary, Habermas’ arguments are solid and thorough. But there are two glaring issues that he fails to address. The most obvious is the idea of human cloning. One could extrapolate a bit about this in his discussion of human embryos, but it would help his case if he stated it directly. The more subtle issue concerns parental manipulation of their children. Habermas is concerned with how a parent could use genetic manipulation to make their offspring conform to the parent’s ideals of what a child should become. But many parents engage in this same manipulation of their children during the course of the child’s life. They push them into activities and possibly careers that are of little interest to the child. It is difficult to see how this post-birth manipulation is better and somehow more ‘dignified’ than eugenics. But the whole point of Habermas book is the emphasis on human dignity and moral freedom. He believes that people have a moral obligation to keep human life sacred regardless of genetic and technological advances. It is hard to argue against that idea, even if one doesn’t agree with his definitions and beliefs. --Patrick Wright AU - Habermas, Jûrgen CY - Cambridge, UK DA - 2003 KW - biotechnology Wright, Patrick Habermas, Jûrgen artificial intelligence and biotechnology Habermas, Jûrgen, and eugenics Habermas, Jûrgen, and abortion Habermas, Jûrgen, and stem cells Habermas, Jûrgen, and artificial intelligence Habermas, Jûrgen, and biotechnology eugenics, and Jûrgen Habermas eugenics, and Jûrgen Habermas abortion, and Jûrgen Habermas stem cells, and Jûrgen Habermas artificial intelligence, and Jûrgen Habermas biotechnology, and Jûrgen Habermas values values, and Jûrgen Habermas values, and artificial intelligence values, and biotechnology artificial intelligence and biotechnology, and values abortion eugenics LB - 33060 PB - Polity PY - 2003 ST - The Future of Human Nature TI - The Future of Human Nature ID - 57 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Habermas, writing in 1962, saw modern capitalism and technology destroying the public sphere of news and information that had emerged during the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries. Then, the information networks formed by trading systems between merchants entailed exchange of news--a development of the press--which informed of things like “wars, harvests, and taxes,” transportation and trade. These were increasingly made public as news itself became a commodity. First in Great Britain over the course of the eighteenth century and then on the Continent in subsequent years, the press became the organ by which public debate was waged, and the notion of public opinion as an important political consideration emerged. In the late-nineteenth and twentieth centuries, this literary-cultural world was replaced. “The public sphere in the world of letters was replaced by the pseudo-public or sham-private world of culture consumption . (159-61) “The bourgeois ideal type assumed that out of the audience-oriented subjectivity’s well-founded interior domain a public sphere would evolve into a world of letters,” Habermas wrote. But by 1962, “instead of this, the latter [i.e. the public sphere] has turned into a conduit for social forces channeled into a conjugal family’s inner space by way of a public sphere that the mass media have transmogrified into a sphere of cultural consumption.” (162) Commercialization had had a negative effect on modern media, especially television and radio. “To be sure, at one time the commercialization of cultural goods had been the precondition for rational-critical debate; but it was itself in principle excluded from the exchange relationships of the market and remained the center of exactly the sphere in which property-owning private people would meet as ‘human beings’ and only as such. Put bluntly: you had to pay for books, theater, concert, and museum, but not for the conversation about what you had read, heard and seen and what you might completely absorb only through conversation. Today the conversation itself is administered. Professional dialogues from the podium, panel discussions, and round table shows--the rational debate of private people becomes one of the production numbers of the stars in radio and television, a salable package ready for the box office.” (164) Improvements in technology during the nineteenth century such as faster printing made possible by steam power and then electricity, and by the telegraph accelerated the infusion of consumption into the public forum of newspapers and books by requiring a large capital base even while reaching more and more readers. This trajectory only continued with the arrival of electronic media during the twentieth century. AU - Habermas, Jürgen (trans. by Thomas Burger) CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1962, 1991 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations community democracy democracy and media public sphere capitalism capitalism, and news democracy, and capitalism capitalism, and democracy +telegraph +telephones +radio public sphere, and television television, and public sphere radio, and public sphere public sphere, and radio advertising advertising, and democracy advertising, and public sphere public sphere, and advertising democracy, and public sphere public sphere, and democracy television LB - 1480 PB - MIT Press PY - 1962 ST - The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere TI - The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere ID - 236 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book examines the rise of motion pictures as a art form in the United States and how during the 1950s and 1960s, some critics treated cinema (and especially foreign films) with almost religious solemnity. By the mid-1970s several cultural and economic forces "joined to deflate cinephilia." As studios searched for the next blockbusters, moviemaking "became crassly commercial." Changes in distribution practices meant that fewer motion pictures companies were willing to gamble on foreign movie makers. A younger generation of film goers were generally apathetic to foreign pictures. Also the increasingly sexually explicit nature of American commercial films robbed foreign films of excitment that had grown from a belief that they treated sex with more openness. The author treats such films critics as Pauline Kael, Susan Sontag, Andrew Sarris, Theodore Dreiser, and others. AU - Haberski, Raymond J., Jr. CY - Lexington DA - 2001 KW - law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and critics motion pictures, as art Kael, Pauline Dreiser, Theodore, and motion pictures Sarris, Andrew Sontag, Susan, and motion pictures art, and censorship censorship, and art art LB - 21100 PB - University Press of Kentucky PY - 2001 ST - It's Only a Movie! Films and Critics in American Culture TI - It's Only a Movie! Films and Critics in American Culture ID - 911 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Haddow begins: “The new military and trade alliances that the United States entered into after World War II made American culture into a vastly more exotic and far-flung network of cultural contacts than it had been at any other time in the past. Containing the Soviets required military bases in strategic locations and encouraged trade with all the nations bordering the USSR. “Internationalism was promoted by the interests of large corporations and, more generally, the allure of a world becoming smaller through trade, travel, and the new communication technologies. Americans did not just try to bring the world home -- they also attempted to Americanize other nations....” Haddow talks about the use of cinerama to project images of American cities into Yugoslavia and Afghanistan. Chapter 8 is entitled “Sputniks and Splitniks.” AU - Haddow, Robert H. CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1997 KW - R & D nationalism exhibitions nationalism imperialism public relations advertising motion pictures research and development war war non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +nationalism and communication +military communication cultural imperialism propaganda culture, exporting abroad (U.S.) Cold War motion pictures, and cinerama Cinerama Yugoslavia, and American culture Afghanistan, and American culture exhibitions, and Cold War (U.S.) Sputnik satellites nationalism, and motion pictures +aeronautics and space communication culture Yugoslavia motion pictures, and nationalism motion pictures, and foreign policy advertising and public relations Afghanistan LB - 2230 PB - Smithsonian Institution Press PY - 1997 ST - Pavilions of Plenty: Exhibiting American Culture Abroad in the 1950s TI - Pavilions of Plenty: Exhibiting American Culture Abroad in the 1950s ID - 1616 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - An informative book written for a broad public, although it is often slow reading and bogs down in discussing the complicated relationships between many governmental agencies. AU - Hafner, Katie and Matthew Lyon CY - New York DA - 1996 KW - R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) computers corporations corporations corporations email Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) Advanced Research Projects Agency time and timekeeping time time research and development war digitization computers war Internet computers and the Internet Internet, and history of ARPANET ARPA AT&T Bolt Beranek and Newman Cerf, Vint digital media computers, digital computers, history of Crocker, Steve Crowther, Will DARPA military communication military, and computers computers, and military Department of Defense, U.S., and Internet Heart, Frank Honeywell Corp. military-industrial complex IBM Kahn, Robert Licklider, J.C.R. Lincoln Laboratory, and Internet Internet, and Lincoln Laboratory Internet, and MIT NASA RAND Corporation Roberts, Larry, and Internet Internet, and Stanford Research Institute telecommunications Taylor, Bob, and Internet Internet, and UCLA computers, and time-sharing time sharing, and computers electronic mail Department of Defense, U. S. electronic media LB - 7820 PB - Simon & Schuster PY - 1996 ST - Where Wizards Stay Up Late: The Origins of the Internet TI - Where Wizards Stay Up Late: The Origins of the Internet ID - 2151 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is aimed at those interested in the technology of Technicolor and the the history of dye transfer printing. The work also treats Eastman Kodak. AU - Haines, Richard W. CY - Jefferson, NC and London DA - 1993 KW - technology corporations corporations dyes dyeing photography women, and new media women technology and society materials cinema motion pictures celluloid +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color +sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sound recording +photography and visual communication cameras cameras, and motion pictures film Technicolor Eastman Kodak Cinemascope celluloid technology, and motion pictures motion pictures, and technology women, and motion pictures color, and women women, and color motion pictures color, and Eastman Kodak color, and Technicolor color, and dye transfer printing dye transfer printing Cinerama, and color CinemaScope, and color materials LB - 27940 PB - McFarland & Company, Inc. PY - 1993 ST - Technicolor Movies: The History of Dye Transfer Printing TI - Technicolor Movies: The History of Dye Transfer Printing ID - 1346 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - David Hajdu’s book The Ten-Cent Plague is an examination of the comic book industry and its relation to society as a whole between its creation, in the late-nineteenth century, and the its nadir in the 1950s. Hajdu focuses, in the later chapters especially, on EC Comics, its owner William Gaines, and their battles with the censor-seeking government and general public. Hajdu wants us to reject censorship on the grounds of free speech. While the book is about comics, readers may be disappointed by the lack of pictures, particularly given the numerous detailed descriptions Hajdu gives of various comic book covers and scenes. Perhaps legal, cost or publisher considerations dissuaded him from providing the reader with more pictures (he does include a few, but most are of people). Hajdu’s sources are varied, from contemporary news accounts, personal letters and documents to present-day interviews. With his primary sources he also makes use of large block quotes quite often, however they are generally well-chosen and full of helpful knowledge. Some readers may find that he uses too many anecdotes, however. Despite such minor criticisms, overall this is an informative book. --Ryder Kouba AU - Hajdu, David CY - New York DA - 2008 KW - Kouba, Ryder comic books books, periodicals, newspapers values children and media values, and comic books comic books, and values children, and comic books censorship and ratings comic books, and censorship censorship, and comic books comic books, and William Gaines Gaines, William, and comic books censorship children LB - 33070 PB - Farrar, Straus and Giroux PY - 2008 ST - The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic Book Scare and How It Changed America TI - The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic Book Scare and How It Changed America ID - 59 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work notes that Silicon Valley and its imitators in many other cities have brought "industrial renaissance through high-technology job creation," but that little research has been done on this phenomenon. The book attempts to pull together what is known. It is an extended version of a special issue of the journal Built Environment. Hall's opening chapter is new, and analyzes the expanding literature on long waves of economic development. Since the beginnings of the Industrial Revolution, these waves have come roughly every 55 years and have been characterized by the rise of new, innovative industries. Halls suggested in 1985 that we were coming to the end of a fourth wave and that the emerging fifth wave raises questions about its nature and geographical patterns. There follow papers based on research at Berkeley on the American experience. Annalee Saxenian's "The genesis of Silicon Valley," argues that Frederick Terman's was the dominating presence in the creation of this area. Terman encouraged research, won government contracts, and set the tone for what followed. Essays that follow include: Ann R. Markusen, "High-tech jobs, markets and economic development prospects: Evidence from California"; Peter Hall, Ann R. Markusen, Richard Osborn, Barbara Wachsman, "The American computer software industry: economic development prospects"; and Marshall M. A. Feldman, "Biotechnology and local economic growth: the American pattern." Marc A. Weiss's "High-technology industry and the future of employment" argues that emphasis should be placed on preserving jobs that now exist because high technology is unlikely to be a panacea. Weiss coordinated some of the papers for California Governor Jerry Brown. The next three chapters deal with the British experience: Ray Oakey, "High-technology industry and agglomeration economics"; Michael Breheny, Paul Cheshire, Robert Langridge, "The anatomy of job creation? Industrial change in Britain's M4 Corridor"; and Tony Taylor, "High-technology industry and the development of science parks." The final chapter by Hall and Markusen, "High technology and regional - urban policy," contrasts British pessimism and with American optimism on the impact of these new technologies. AU - Hall, Peter and Ann Markusen, eds. CY - Boston DA - 1985 KW - technology computers materials, and silicon silicon communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution materials materials computers values religion non-USA microelectronics labor Great Britain +computers and the Internet Silicon Valley Great Britain technology and society microelectronics revolution Terman, Frederick +artificial intelligence and biotechnology biotechnology Kondratieff, Nikolai Kondratieff cycles geography, and new media computer chips, silicon Japan labor, and Silicon Valley semiconductors software computers, and software automation, and unemployment geography, and new media environment, and new media M4 corridor, and Great Britain Great Britain, and M4 corridor automation chips, computer computer chips environment geography labor, and new media LB - 4350 N1 - See also: office PB - Allen & Unwin PY - 1985 ST - Silicon Landscapes TI - Silicon Landscapes ID - 1823 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This excellent work was the product of two men, Hall, a geographer, and Preston, who was the “Research Officer.” Preston did the basic research and first draft for most chapters except numbers 8 and 13, and part of numbers 6 and 9. This work discusses five Kondratieff waves. Nikolai Kondratieff was a Soviet economist, whose papers were published in the mid-1920s. Although he was not the first to use the idea of “long waves,” he used them to explain why capitalism experienced major economic crises at about half-century intervals. The authors use the idea of “Kondratieff waves” to discuss the history new information technology (NIT). They have a dual purpose: first, they wish to “throw greater light on the precise nature of the innovative process and its historical contribution to the creation of new industrial traditions, particularly the impact of major new technological systems on economic and social development. Second, their main purpose “is to understand the changing geography of innovation.” One of this work’s strengths is its comparative account of NIT in the U.S., Britain, Germany (and Europe), and Japan. The authors see five Kondratieff waves. 1) The first was pre-1846, during which time Britain was virtually the only industrial nation. 2) Part Two deals with 1846 to 1895, “the mechanical age.” Here the authors discuss the first electrical innovations-- the telegraph, emerging cable industry, and the telephone. These inventions used weak electrical current. This section discusses not only the U.S. but also the telephone in Europe. In this second Kondratieff wave, Britain “was increasingly challenged by Germany and the USA.” 3) The “electrical age,” from 1896-1947, was an era that utilized high voltage electricity. Prior to 1914, electricity stimulated other inventions and was used primarily in electrical lighting, in tram systems, and in factories. It is “after World War II, that we find the largest absolute growth in the scale of electrical industries.” This section treats many developments related to NIT, some non-electric such as the typewriter. Also covered are batteries, motors, dictation machine, calculating machines, radio broadcasting, and television. In this third Kondratieff, Germany and the USA took the lead over Britain, and “by its end, the United States was indisputably world industrial leader.” 4)The fourth Kondratieff wave, “the electronic age,” runs in this account from 1948 to 2003. Here considered are the transistor (the “core technology”), the computer, other advances in telecommunications, the consumer electronics sector, office technology, semiconductors. The authors write about international developments in the USA, Britain, and Japan. During this period, the United States “retained its leadership but was increasingly challenged by a relative newcomer, Japan,” and observation made in 1988. 5) The fifth Kondratieff wave runs from 2004 into the future, and the authors speculate on the convergence of information technology, the new role of the state, and other significant implications for society of this new world. Long wave theory as set out in this work has influenced other writers including Peter J. Hugill (Global Communications since 1844: Geopolitics and Technology [1999]). AU - Hall, Peter Geoffrey, and Paschal Preston CY - London and Boston DA - 1988 KW - computers nationalism transistors, and integrated circuits labor communication revolution Industrial Revolution materials +future and science fiction communication revolution, and second industrial revolution capitalism war non-USA +transportation office, and information technology media information technology general studies geography Kondratieff cycles long wave theory Kondratieff, Nikolai information age communication revolution Great Britain Japan Germany Europe Industrial Revolution second industrial revolution +electricity +telegraph +telephones electricity, and high voltage World War II electricity, and electric lighting electricity, and factories electricity, and street cars transportation, and electric trams typewriters batteries motors dictating machines sound recording, and dictating machines calculating machines +radio +television computers transistors electronic media integrated circuits semiconductors information technology and office telecommunications microelectronics media convergence +nationalism and communication sound recording, and dictating machines +sound recording +computers and the Internet capitalism, and new media future, and new media, office future materials military communication office LB - 600 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - Unwin Hymn PY - 1988 ST - The Carrier Wave: New Information Technology and the Geography of Innovation, 1846-2003 TI - The Carrier Wave: New Information Technology and the Geography of Innovation, 1846-2003 ID - 1456 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - From the spring of 1976 to the fall of 1978, three laboratories competed in a feverish race to clone a human gene for the first time, a feat that ultimately produced the world's first genetically engineered drug - the life-sustaining hormone insulin. Invisible Frontiers gives us a behind-the-scenes look at the three main groups at Harvard University, the University of California-San Francisco, and a team of upstart scientists at Genentech, the first company devoted to the use of genetic engineering in the creation of pharmaceuticals. When the dust had settled, one scientist had won a Nobel Prize, many others had become biotech's first millionaires, and the key technologies were in place that set the stage for the human genome project. Hall pulls together the scientific, social and political threads of this story - rivalries between labs, the contest of egos, the influence of commerce on university research, the public worries about where genetic engineering would lead, and the specter of government regulation. --Wayne Hayes AU - Hall, Stephen S. CY - New York DA - 1987 KW - religion values genetics Hayes, Wayne +artificial intelligence and biotechnology genetic engineering values, and genetic engineering LB - 1660 PB - Atlantic Monthly Press PY - 1987 ST - Invisible Frontiers: The Race to Synthesize a Human Gene TI - Invisible Frontiers: The Race to Synthesize a Human Gene ID - 254 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is based largely on interviews conducted by the author who began writing about science five years before this work appeared. It attempts to reach a non-specialized audience. It does not attempt to give “a definitive history of science,” nor to be “a rhetorical treatise on recombinant DNA, nor does it argue one way or another whether it is glorious or ominous.” The author tries to “give a feel for science as it unfolds, haphazardly, during a historic period in the biological sciences, and it is a cautionary tale in the sense that any human enterprise, of which biology is surely one, nothing is ever quite as anticipated.” AU - Hall, Stephen S. CY - New York DA - 1987 KW - genetics +future and science fiction +artificial intelligence and biotechnology future DNA genetic engineering Gilbert Group Rutter-Goodman Group UCSF-City of Hope Group Eli Lilly & Company Efstratiadis, Argiris Genetech Gilbert, Walter Harvard Biological Laboratories Swanson, Robert Riggs, Arthur LB - 2180 PB - Atlantic Monthly Press PY - 1987 ST - Invisible Frontiers: The Race to Synthesize the Human Gene TI - Invisible Frontiers: The Race to Synthesize the Human Gene ID - 1501 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Hallin notes that members of the media had “extraordinary freedom to report the war in Vietnam without direct government control: it was the first war in which reporters were routinely accredited to accompany military forces yet not subject to censorship, and it was a war in which the journalists clearly did not think of themselves simply as ‘soldiers of the typewriter’ whose mission was to serve the war effort.” He contends that reporting on Vietnam was influenced by several factors including a reliance on official sources; focus on the U.S. President, which usually encouraged support for foreign policy; preoccupation with immediate development to the exclusion of context; and the lack of interpretation or analysis. While most American got news about Vietnam between 1964 and 1972 from television, Hallin argues that it is difficult to measure how such information affected public opinion. Yet it is likely that TV influenced strongly the public’s perception of events. As a visual medium, television showed “the raw horror of war” in a way that print media could not. Television often focused more on conflict and the negative than did print. Early on “television coverage was lopsidedly favorable to American policy in Vietnam....Later television’s portrayal of the war changed dramatically, and there seems little doubt that it must have contributed to the growing feeling of war-weariness in the later years of the war. But television’s turnaround on the war was part of a large change, a response to as well as a cause of the unhappiness with the war that was developing at many levels, from the halls of the Pentagon, to Main Street, USA and the fire bases of Quang Tri province.” --SV Daniel Hallin begins with the premise that the media’s perception of the Vietnam War ultimately prevailed over the government’s, but that both perceptions were subjectively constructed. Hallin notes the idea that the Vietnam War marked the “coming of age” of American media, especially television, and his study is engaged in explaining the shift from the nationalist reportage of World War II to a more distrustful coverage characteristic of Vietnam. Although Hallin concedes it would be impossible for a single volume to attempt a comprehensive study of all media coverage in Vietnam, he does offer a representative sampling by first exploring New York Times reportage, and then shifting his focus to the ultimately more-influential television news. In chapter one, Hallin demonstrates that prior to the Gulf of Tonkin incident, it was relatively easy for the president to control foreign affairs news for two main reasons. First, there existed a certain “bipartisan consensus” that identified foreign policy with national security, thus making it difficult to question the official word from on high. Secondly, Hallin argues, professional journalism itself was interested in “objectively” reporting the “official” news, which meant delivering the governments version of events to the public (24-5). Hallin offers a case study of this sort of journalism when he explicates the New York Times coverage of the Gulf of Tonkin incident, which reflected “precisely how the administration wished its action to appear, as a positive but limited reply forced upon the president by the actions of the enemy.” (70) There was of course no mention of policy change, and Hallin notes the report used “official” sources, focused on the word of the president, and resisted interpretation and analysis. With the Vietnam War, however, the official version of events became troubled as reporters were given unprecedented access to the war front and were free from the sort of routine governmental censorship that marked reportage during World War II. In chapter two, Hallin explores in more detail the impact of Cold War ideology on foreign news reportage: “It was an age of ideological consensus, and this was true above all in foreign policy. The world view of the Cold War dominated American thinking about international affairs so totally during these years that it became not merely dangerous but virtually impossible for most Americans to question or to step outside of it. Americans simply knew no other language for thinking or for communicating about the world.” (50) While this sort of ideological framework is useful for understanding the position of the media vis-a-vis the government in the years before Vietnam, statements such as this tend to simplify the complex rhetorical realities of the Cold War, thereby suggesting that all behavior may be explained by citing anti-Communist anxieties. After Hallin discusses the initial coverage of Vietnam in newspapers--particularly the New York Times – he shifts his focus to the “War on Television, 1965-1973.” He notes that because television is a visual medium, it is inherently suited to showing the “raw horror” of war, a capacity that suggests it would portray war more negatively than print media. Hallin offers a corrective to this assumption, however, as he argues that television reportage was not any more objective than print media, and that it was subject to the same social, political, and economic forces that the newspapers were. Thus Hallin challenges the view that television coverage of Vietnam was an uncensored look at the war, and in fact uses this premise to argue that over the course of the war “television’s portrayal of the war changed dramatically, and there seems little doubt that it must have contributed to the growing feeling of war-weariness in the later years of the war.” (110) In order to chart this shift, Hallin performs detailed content analyses of the network coverage of Vietnam from 1965 to 1973, analyses that show by the latter years of the war, television news grew increasingly hostile to the official government view of the war. In his conclusion, Hallin explores the idea that American media “lost” the Vietnam War by leaking sensitive information to the public. While Hallin acknowledges various well-known leaks that the government claimed harmed national security, he ultimately concludes that “it is not clear that [the outcome of the war] would have been much different if the news had been censored, or television excluded, or the journalists more inclined to defer to presidential authority.” (213) Despite his speculation that the military outcome would have remained the same if the media had retained their pre-Gulf of Tonkin “objective” stance, Hallin ends his study with an insistence on the political importance of the press as the fourth branch of government. The “Uncensored War” is a useful study for anybody wanting to understand the basic interactions between the government and the media during the Vietnam War, with particular attention to early New York Times reportage and network television coverage. --Steve Belletto AU - Hallin, Daniel C. CY - Berkeley DA - 1986, 1989 KW - Vietnam War Vietnam War public relations advertising propaganda objectivity journalism news and journalism law censorship and ratings censorship news and journalism war non-USA Belletto, Steve television Vietnam War television, and war propaganda, and Vietnam War Vietnam War, and propaganda Vietnam War, and news news, and Vietnam War television, and Vietnam War Vietnam War, and television journalism, and Vietnam War Vietnam War, and journalism journalism, and objectivity objectivity, and Vietnam War news +television television, and news television, and Vietnam War Vietnam War news, and television censorship, and Vietnam War television, and journalism television, and news television, and war news, and television journalism, and television journalism military communication public relations advertising and public relations LB - 1430 PB - University of California Press PY - 1986 ST - The 'Uncensored War': The Media and Vietnam TI - The 'Uncensored War': The Media and Vietnam ID - 231 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work, which appeared during the energy crisis of the 1970s, attempts "to describe the overall pattern of technology: what technology is, what its effects are on everyday life, how it is changing our world, and the problems its brings." The author has tried to achieve this goal in non-technical language. "The chief duties of society in managing technology are plain enough," Hamilton writes. They include preventing "over-population and all its attendant hazards; to keep peace; to supply the world's people with food and water and other basic requirements; and to control the effect of Man on his surroundings. Up to now," he concludes, "effort has not matched need in any of these areas." Hamilton argues that "one major task will be to limit growth," a large task since previous generations "have worshipped economic growth and productivity. The whole ethos of the industrial world and all its development have been based on growth." The author suggests additional readings in a short bibliography. AU - Hamilton, David CY - London DA - 1973 KW - technology information processing energy computers USSR preservation communication revolution communication revolution history, and new media energy non-USA history progress technology and society +general studies oil energy crisis plastics ceramics nuclear energy +transportation +aeronautics and space communication urban studies environment history, break with +television information revolution postindustrial society automation +computers Great Britain Third World Industrial Revolution Japan values satellites Soviet Union labor +computers and the Internet materials Information Age LB - 11770 PB - Faber and Faber Ltd. PY - 1973 ST - Technology, Man and the Environment TI - Technology, Man and the Environment ID - 2524 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book examines the making of Oliver Stone movie, Natural Born Killers (1994). The marketing strategy for Natural Born Killers exploited the violence and the fact that it had been originally rated NC-17. Stone adopted a variety of styles for effect, using black-and-white, color, video, slow motion, Super -8, and 16mm animations. The movie, billed as a satire, “had its own rules,” the director said. It targeted 18-24 year-old-males who “had grown up on a diet of tabloid news, video games, and MTV.” One goal was to use the underground and alternative media to help create “cult” status for the film by the time it was released. Promoters also tried to connect the story in Natural Born Killers to recent real-life media circuses: the Menendez brothers trial for murdering their parents; the Tonya Harding ice skating scandal; the Rodney King beating by Los Angeles police; and most sensationally, O.J. Simpson’s arrest for the murder of his ex-wife. Stone insisted on including snippets from media coverage of these events in his movie. In the end, Stone --whose contract with Warner Bros. required him to come in with no less than a R rating – made at least five revisions on Natural Born Killers for the movie industry's Classification and Ratings Administration (CARA)and cut five minutes from the original picture. He and the others who worked on the movie believed that the changes “completely destroyed the whole pace and rhythm of the film.” Infuriated by the “intense hypocrisy” of the rating procedure, they considered CARA nothing less than “a de facto censorship board.” AU - Hamsher, Jane CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories sexuality advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Natural Born Killers motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures nudity, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising language motion pictures, and language nudity CARA, and nudity motion pictures, and nudity Stone, Oliver public relations, and Oliver Stone Stone, Oliver, and public relations autobiography LB - 26340 PB - Broadway Books PY - 1997 ST - Killer Instinct: How Two Young Producers Took on Hollywood and Made the Most Controversial Film of the Decade TI - Killer Instinct: How Two Young Producers Took on Hollywood and Made the Most Controversial Film of the Decade ID - 1217 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The first two chapters of this book deal with the nature of film audience research. Chapter 1 is entitled “The Development and Nature of Film Audience Research,” and Chapter 2 is called “Some Problems with Film Audience Research.” Chapter 12 deals with “The Effects of the Movies.” The author notes (in 1950) that an educational institution subsidized the Payne Fund Studies which "constitutes practically the only attempt so far to gain insight into movies’ social effects.” AU - Handel, Leo A. CY - Urbana DA - 1950 KW - technology children photography values censorship and ratings values +motion pictures media +photography and visual communication +motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences media effects and motion pictures media effects Payne Fund Studies children, and media effects audiences motion pictures, and media effects values, and motion pictures technology and society children media effects, and children children, and media LB - 1580 N1 -; PB - University of Illinois Press PY - 1950 ST - Hollywood looks at its audience: A report of film audience research TI - Hollywood looks at its audience: A report of film audience research ID - 1554 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Written in 1967, this book is an informative, popular introduction to a complex subject. The author also published A Dictionary of Electronics. Handel argued that electronics will likely “alter our world even more profoundly than the Industrial Revolution.” He defined “electronics” as “the technique of marshaling free electrons for the transmission of images, the recording and reproduction of sound, the storing and treatment of information, and the automatic control of industrial processes. It has become the nerve system of modern power and the brain of modern society.” This revolution gave rise to radar, television, magnetic tape recording, and computers. “On the debit side we see electronics sharpening the weapons of war, invading the privacy of the citizen, corrupting the mass media.” A chapter on cybernetics attempted to show how this new technique could be applied to government. Chapter 3 (“The Growth of Electronics”) and chapter 4 (“The Revolution in Communications”) are particularly interesting as are chapter 5 (“The Universal Eye”), chapter 6 on computers (“Faster Than Thought”), and chapter 13 (“The Continuing Revolution”). AU - Handel, S. CY - Baltimore DA - 1967 KW - R & D computers nationalism magnetic recording second industrial revolution communication revolution recording law, and privacy law preservation war research and development military communication archives history, and new media materials materials magnetic tape computers communication revolution, and second industrial revolution war government history recording, and tape recorders +sound recording magnetic tape recording surveillance sound recording, and magnetic tape libraries libraries, and information storage Information Age history general studies electronic media Industrial Revolution second industrial revolution history, break with communication revolution +information storage information processing radar +television magnetic recording, and tape magnetic tape recording sound recording, and magnetic tape +computers and the Internet computers, history of privacy cybernetics government, and cybernetics cameras surveillance recording, and sound +nationalism and communication government +artificial intelligence and biotechnology +computers and the Internet +military communication military, and electronics privacy, and electronic media LB - 620 PB - Penguin Books PY - 1967 ST - The Electronic Revolution TI - The Electronic Revolution ID - 1458 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work explores the history and consequences (intended and unintended) of the microelectronics revolution. Hanson (like Arthur C. Clarke) observes that microprocessors were being put into almost every piece of equipment. The ramifications of such innovations cannot be predicted. The author notes that "in fact, the revolutionaries of Silicon Valley cannot be fully aware of what they are doing because they can never foresee all the ways in which each new generation of digital devices will be put to work by creative users. The first microprocessor was intended for use in a Japanese calculator, nothing more. By 1980 the industry had delivered more than ten million microprocessors, and a complete listing of all the way in which they are used would fill a telephone book. This explosion of applications was neither intended nor expected....." Hanson's opening chapter begins with Thomas Edison. Chapter Two looks at World War II and the origins of electronic computers. Chapter Three considers solid state research and the early semiconductor industry. Chapter Four deals with the rise of Silicon Valley and the rise of a new "priesthood." Chapters Five and Six explore the manufacture of computer chips and microchips. Chapter Seven places Silicon Valley in an international context. Chapter Eight explains how the microelectronics revolution has affected consumers and the arrival of the home computer. Chapter Nine treats telecommunications. Chapter Ten discusses the microprocessor and "the hidden costs of automation." Chapter Eleven is about electronic warfare and "electronic warriors." Chapter Twelve concludes by considering artificial intelligence and the future of Silicon Valley. The notes to each chapter of this book have an informative one- or two-paragraph discussion of sources for theme covered. AU - Hanson, Dirk CY - Boston DA - 1982 KW - R & D entertainment computers corporations materials, and silicon nationalism microprocessing entertainment, home photography transistors, and integrated circuits research and development war communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution home entertainment materials +future and science fiction war home, and new media home World War II +photography and visual communication computers and the Internet computers, personal computers patents home, and information technology microelectronics information technology +computers and the Internet +military communication +artificial intelligence and biotechnology microelectronics revolution microprocessors Silicon Valley future Edison, Thomas World War II, and computers World War II, and research and development solid state integrated circuits computer chips information technology, and consumers personal computers computers, personal information technology, and home experts telecommunications general studies communication revolution automation, and microelectronics revolution AT & T Bell Laboratories transistors Colossus De Forest, Lee cybernetics +electricity electronic media General Electric Company IBM semiconductors Noyce, Robert patents, and microelectronics photolithography Tesla, Nikola Texas Instruments Company Turing, Alan Univac Weizenbaum, Joseph Westinghouse Corporation Wiener, Norbert Eniac Enigma bibliographies, and microelectronics revolution bibliographies, and military communication bibliographies, and artificial intelligence +nationalism and communication automation home, and new media +bibliographies digital media digitization silicon home, and computers electronic warfare military, and electronic warfare warfare, electronic materials labor LB - 3680 PB - Little, Brown and Company PY - 1982 ST - The New Alchemists: Silicon Valley and the Microelectronics Revolution TI - The New Alchemists: Silicon Valley and the Microelectronics Revolution ID - 1756 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The opening chapter of this book provides a useful history of movie technology. It deals with changes in film, sound technology, the use of color film, wide screen movies, and television. Page 51 attempts to summarize “present-day [1971] practice.” A solid introduction to this topic. AU - Happé, L. Bernard CY - New York DA - 1971 KW - +motion pictures motion pictures, and technology +motion pictures motion pictures, and technological innovations motion pictures, and sound motion pictures, and widescreen motion pictures, and television color motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and television +television television, and motion pictures LB - 6250 PB - Communication Arts Books, Hastings House PY - 1971 ST - Basic Motion Picture Technology TI - Basic Motion Picture Technology ID - 2008 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work focuses on the work of John Grierson, an important influence the development of documentary filmmaking and the use of film for social commentary. AU - Hardy, Forsyth, ed. and comp. CY - London DA - 1946, 1966 KW - underground cinema Grierson, John motion pictures 16mm sound recording motion pictures, and 16mm underground media underground films motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and history of motion pictures, and avant-garde films underground films, and motion pictures 16mm 16mm, and avant-garde films documentaries motion pictures, and documentaries television videotape magnetic recording magnetic recording, and documentaries cinéma vérité cameras cameras, 16mm 16mm cameras documentary films, and 16mm motion pictures, and 16mm motion pictures, and documentaries lighting lighting, and 16mm cameras lighting, and portable cameras sound recording sound recording, and 16mm cameras 16mm cameras, and sound recording color color, and 16mm film news and journalism television television, and 16mm cameras television news, and 16mm cameras photography and visual communication Great Britain non-USA non-USA, and documentary filmmaking Great Britain, and documentary filmmaking television, and videotape videotape, and television television, and videofreex sound recording, and 16mm 16mm, and sound recording photography magnetic tape LB - 34690 PB - Faber and Faber, Ltd PY - 1946 ST - Grierson on Documentary TI - Grierson on Documentary ID - 3107 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The authors examine iconic photographs in the United States. They write: "Instead of seeing visual practices as threats to practical reasoning or as ornamental devices that may be a necessary concession to holding the attention of a mass audience, we believe they can provide crucial social, emotional, and mnemonic materials for political identity and action." (14) "To put it baldly, we believe that photojournalism is an important technology of liberal-democratic citizenship." (18) AU - Hariman, Robert AU - Lucaites, John Louis CY - Chicago DA - 2007 KW - democracy photography and visual communication photojournalism nationalism and communication news and journalism history and new media words v. images images v. words LB - 42930 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 2007 ST - No Caption Needed: Iconic Photographs, Public Culture, and Liberal Democracy TI - No Caption Needed: Iconic Photographs, Public Culture, and Liberal Democracy ID - 4376 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book contains essays by archaeologists and professional photographers on how photography has strengthened and enriched archaeology. The work is slanted toward archaeologists who are amateur photographers (as opposed to those who can hire professional photographers). The work is divided into four parts and ten chapters. Part I, “General Purposes,” has two chapters. Elmer Harp, Jr. attempts a “brief consciousness-raiser” in “The Objectives of Archaeological Photography.” He notes, for example, that archaeological research “can be aided immeasurably by a bird’s-eye view and aerial photography.” Martin L. Scott discusses “Sensitive Materials, Photographic Equipment, and Permanence of the Photographic Record.” His chapter considers not only camera equipment but also how best to preserve photographic records. Part 2, “Expedition Planning and Exploration,” has three chapters. Otis Imboden, Jr. and Jack N. Rinker deal with “Photography in the Field.” Harp contributes a chapter on aerial photography in archaeological research, and Rinker writes about “Environmental Analysis by Air Photo Interpretation.” Part 3, “In the Field,” has three chapters: “An Experiment in Multispectral Air Photography for Archaeological Research,” by J. N. Hampton; “Elevated and Airborne Photogrammetry and Stereo Photography,” by Julian H. Whittlesey; and “Underwater Photography and Photogrammetry,” by Donald M. Rosencrantz. Part 4, “In the Laboratory,” has a chapter by David Sanger on “Laboratory Photography.” Two appendices follow including “Communication, Photography, and the Archaeologist,” by Peter Deckert. AU - Harp, Elmer, Jr., ed. CY - Albuquerque DA - 1975 KW - photography preservation history and new media preservation new media history, and new media cinema motion pictures celluloid +photography and visual communication photography photography, and archaeology archaeology archaeology, and photography history, and photography new media, and history preservation, and photography photography, and historic preservation cameras cameras, and lenses cameras, and lighting film photography, aerial +aeronautics and space communication history materials LB - 12110 PB - University of New Mexico Press PY - 1975 ST - Photography in Archaeological Research TI - Photography in Archaeological Research ID - 2558 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Each chapter in this insightful book deals with a different facet of American society and culture. Chapters 14-17 deal especially with visual communication. Chapter 14, “Iconography and Intellectual History: The Halftone Effect,” draws on Estelle Jussim’s work. The use of half tone was “an iconographical revolution of the first order, and should be treated with careful attention. The single generation of Americans living between 1885 and 1910 went through an experience of visual reorientation that had few earlier precedents, although it would be matched by some twentieth-century experiences. The one earlier parallel that seemed to possess even greater scope and capacity for influence took place almost four centuries before, with the introduction of printing as a new code for transmitting verbal information....” Harris notes that intellectual historians have done little with visual processing because it has been perceived as “artistically suspect, commercially tainted, technically cumbersome, and intellectually isolated....” The book’s remaining chapters deal with “Color and Media: Some Comparisons and Speculations,” “Pictorial Perils: The Rise of American Illustrations,” and “Designs on Demand: Art and the Modern Corporation.” “Color and Media” (chapter 15) looks at the use of and criticism of color in 1) prints, and the illustration in books and magazines; 2) the arrival of color in motion pictures; and 3) the coming of color television. Harris is especially interested in the contemporary reactions to these advances. Although Harris admits that this “survey may possess more interest than the destination,” he does have interesting things to say: e.g., his discussion of the first Technicolor films (efforts to make color films appeared as early as 1894; first color feature film dates from 1921), and the impact that sound technology had on color in film. Harris notes that by 1920, 80 percent of Hollywood’s features were being tinted, in a variety of colors. Prior to World War II, only a minority of films were in full color, though. Only about one percent of homes had color TV in 1961 when NBC began to broadcast all its programs in color. By 1963, 60,000,000 homes had TVs but only 1.2 million had color sets. The percentage of color sets rose from three percent in 1963 to 33 percent by 1969. “By the early seventies, eight years after the boom began, color dominated all network broadcasting,” Harris observes. AU - Harris, Neil CY - Chicago DA - 1990 KW - illustrations photography preservation communication revolution news and journalism books, periodicals, newspapers history, and new media news and journalism history television television, and color motion pictures magazines iconography icons history photography and visual communication culture color half tones history, break with communication revolution Jussim, Estelle icons iconography prints illustrations motion pictures, and color television, and color magazines, and color Technicolor television, and color (NBC) television, and color sets (1960s) capitalism, and art art, and capitalism color, and history of color, and television color, and motion pictures books, and color color, and books color, and magazines books, periodicals, newspapers capitalism color art books graphics revolution television motion pictures and popular culture television, and color ref, book LB - 1590 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1990 ST - Cultural Excursions: Marketing Appetites and Cultural Tastes in Modern America TI - Cultural Excursions: Marketing Appetites and Cultural Tastes in Modern America ID - 3649 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Harris, W. S. CY - Harrisburg, PA; and New York DA - 1905, 1971 KW - +future and science fiction television, and history of +television television, and origins future LB - 6900 PB - The Minter Company; and Arno Press PY - 1905 ST - Life in a Thousand Worlds TI - Life in a Thousand Worlds ID - 1974 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Television, semiotics, and culture are considered here. Hartley notes that news "is a social and cultural institution among many others, and it shares their characteristics in important ways. It is, literally, made of words and pictures, so comprising a specially differentiated sub-system within language... it nevertheless enjoys a privileged and prestigious position in our culture's hierarchy of values." AU - Hartley, John CY - London DA - 1982 KW - television, and values journalism news and journalism values news +television news, and television television, and culture semiotics values, and television values, and news news, and values LB - 6910 PB - Routledge PY - 1982 ST - Understanding News TI - Understanding News ID - 1975 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Harvey’s opening chapter on “Modernity and Modernism” is insightful. Chapter two deals with “Postmodernism.” Harvey has intelligent things to say about the role of modern mass communication in postmodernism -- especially television. “There has been a sea-change in cultural as well as in political - economic practices since around 1972,” he writes. “This sea-change is bound up with the emergence of new dominant ways in which we experience space and time. “While simultaneity in the shifting dimensions of time and space is no proof of necessary or causal connection, strong a priori grounds can be adduced for the proposition that there is some kind of necessary relation between the rise of postmodernist cultural forms, the emergence of more flexible modes of capital accumulation, and a new round of ‘time- space compression’ in the organization of capitalism. “But these changes, when set against the basic rules of capitalistic accumulation, appear more as shifts in surface appearance rather than as signs of the emergence of some entirely new postcapitalist or even postindustrial society.” Harvey offers definitions of modernism and postmodernism, and is good on modernism and history. He also discusses Nietzsche, modernism, and modernism’s inclination to place “art and aesthetic sentiment ... beyond” considerations of “good and evil.” This observation is useful in considering the struggle between morality and artistic creativity in censorship battles relating to books and films during the twentieth century. AU - Harvey, David CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1989 KW - time and timekeeping time preservation modernism modernity modernism communication revolution history, and new media communication revolution, and second industrial revolution history geography history general studies postmodernism modernity +television television, and post-modernism history, break with history, and television space (spatial) time postindustrial society capitalism history, and modernism history, and post-modernism visual communication second industrial revolution capitalism, and postmodernism communication revolution LB - 630 PB - Basil Blackwell, Inc. PY - 1989 ST - The Condition of Postmodernity: An Enquiry into the Origins of Cultural Change TI - The Condition of Postmodernity: An Enquiry into the Origins of Cultural Change ID - 1459 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book provides a sort of counterpoint to Where Wizards Stay Up Late and Inventing the Internet each of which focus primarily on the military “wizards” who designed what later became the Internet. Instead of that story, the Haubens focus on the way “Netizens” reshaped the Internet and made it more democratic. The story deals with the creators of Usenet–two graduate students at Duke University. Usenet was explicitly designed as an Arpanet-like network for non-Arpanet users. It grew exponentially after its inception in 1979. --Mark Tremayne This book examines the growing popularity of the Internet and Usenet as a means of political communications worldwide. The Haubens believe that a new online culture is emerging, and that people taking part in this global discussion are making use of communications to enhance democratic principles. The Internet and Usenet are examples of “bottom-up” information providers where each user can communicate directly to the others, bypassing the traditional “top-down” media and government sources. This enables a greater debate and exchange of information, thus strengthening direct democracy. The book also traces the history of the development of the Internet out of the IPTO projects of the 1950s and 1960s. Most of the projects that led to advances in computing and networking systems came from this Department of Defense program that sponsored research at top universities and laboratories across the nation. The authors pay particular attention to the role of the individual programmers. As the Unix-based coding programs evolved, each researcher had access to the source code and the potential to create flexible new applications and debug existing problems. The authors consider this the source of the network’s democratic and communitarian nature. The ARPANET, which later evolved into the Internet, was devised to allow these researchers to share information freely, and the technology, according to the Haubens, created a forum for unlimited debate and discussion. The book argues that this trend has continued as more and more people get online. The authors rely heavily on the comments of online users from around the world. It is clear that many people use the Internet and Usenet to gather news and information, to discuss important issues, to organize political or social movements, and to share each other’s culture. It is also clear that the traditional media have been forced to shift some resources to online reporting. Ultimately, according to the Haubens, direct participatory democracy is enabled in ways that were not possible in the past. The book is a good example of the kind of celebratory attitude that many people have about the Internet and technology in general. It is possible to question, though the authors of this book never do, the extent of this change. Increased discussion of political issues does not automatically mean that democracy is enhanced. There are questions of access to the technology. One can also debate the methods by which “news” on the Internet is produced. The sources that most people look to for accurate news and information are often the same sources that produce newspapers, radio and television broadcasts, and magazines. The book, however, is useful for understanding elements of online culture. Certainly, engaging in this global discussion and relying heavily on the Internet or Usenet for information represents a fundamental change in human communication and creates a platform for a debate of unprecedented scope. --Rob Rabe AU - Hauben, Michael and Ronda Hauben CY - Los Alamitos, CA DA - 1997 KW - R & D computers ARPA research and development war journalism community democracy community news and journalism war news Internet +computers and the Internet democracy and media Internet, and history of Tremayne, Mark public sphere Usenet ARPANET +military communication Rabe, Rob news, and Internet community, and Internet democracy, and Internet military, and computers military, and Internet LB - 9070 PB - IEEE Computer Society Press PY - 1997 ST - Netizens: On the History and Impact of Usenet and the Internet TI - Netizens: On the History and Impact of Usenet and the Internet ID - 2274 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This short, 43-page work came from two lectures Havelock delivered in October, 1978, at Innis College at the University of Toronto. There were sponsored by the Harold Innis Foundation. Havelock, then an emeritus professor at Yale, had taught ancient philosophy, Latin poetry, and Greek drama. He had been an acquaintance of Innis, although not a close friend. The memoir has two chapters. The first, “A Man of His Times,” is a corrective to Donald Creighton’s 1957 biography, Harold Adams Innis: Portrait of a Scholar, which portrayed Innis as some of an “ivory tower” thinker. Havelock recalled Innis during the Great Depression and World War II as willing to recruit “expert economists for public service” and as an “empiricist and realist” who when he saw Great Britain’s peril during the war “was ready to jettison academic principle in a good cause.” Innis, Havelock argues, “was a man of his time.” Havelock revises Creighton in suggesting that Innis was not always totally committed to scholarship but was also attracted to, and sought, power. Havelock also makes interesting observations about the way in which Innis’s World War I service later influenced his interactions with university colleagues. Chapter two is entitled “The Philosophical Historian,” and in it Havelock explores Innis’s later thinking and similarities to his own work. Innis’s “later style is aphoristic and disconnected,” Havelock said, and “it slips around and between the conclusions that his interpreter would wish to formulate. He hungrily reads and obsessively excepts a vast mass of historical source materials, some primary, most of it secondary, frequently repeating himself from paper to paper, book to book....” Havelock notes that as applied to the ancient world, Innis’s view about spacial control are related to military and secular aspects of culture while temporal control relates more to maintaining oral traditions and the institutions of religion. For Innis, the “shape of the technology conditions the way in which power is exercised,” Havelock observed. “Of all the technologies observable at work in the historical process, it is the technology of communication which is paramount, in its control over the political process, that is, over space and time.” Marshall McLuhan provided a brief, two-page preface to this work entitled “The Fecund Interval.” AU - Havelock, Eric A. CY - Toronto DA - 1982 KW - nationalism time and timekeeping writing time history and new media preservation power history information storage history, and new media non-USA history Innis, Harold McLuhan, Marshall political economy present mindedness history, break with communication, and empire +nationalism and communication Innis, Harold, and nationalism nationalism, and Harold Innis time space (spatial) power, and temporal bias power, and spactial bias alphabet, and technology writing, and technology alphabet LB - 470 PB - Harold Innis Foundation, University of Toronto PY - 1982 ST - Harold A. Innis: A Memoir TI - Harold A. Innis: A Memoir ID - 135 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Live Television Drama, 1946-1951 is an intensive study of the unique period of television history when the medium was dominated by dramatic theater acted live. Hawes not only conducted dozens of interviews with producers, actors, and writers from this period, but he also drew on the archives of the three major networks: NBC, CBS and ABC. Hawes’ wealth of source material is one of the books greatest strengths, and he puts it to good use to show that during these six years, there was little sense that television was a low-brow medium, since many of the periods top writers and playwrights had scripts converted for live drama. Before Hawes explores the actual live drama that was broadcast between 1946 and 1951, he first establishes the social and political situation in which these dramas were produced. Hawes first stresses the fact that World War II had a great impact on the early television industry: “By 1944 the turning point was reached in the war, and businesses began contemplating what they would do when it ended. NBC president Niles Trammel told the FCC that the television industry would create jobs for many thousands of men and women in radio manufacturing plants and studios.” (12) By the end of World War II, then, the television industry had a steady supply of people who were at least partially trained in the technical aspects of mass communications, a phenomenon that Hawes suggests allowed for the fertile growth and programmatic experimentation after 1946. Hawes also points out that raw materials, notably copper wiring, were not readily available following the war, so production fell behind technology. Hawes speculates that if production had kept up with technology, the era of black-and-white television could have ended as early as 1951. After Hawes offer some background history, he outlines the live drama programming of the three networks in a straight narrative fashion. The study is essential for anyone who needs a very detailed, day-to-day account of how a live drama was conceived and executed during this period. Hawes exploits all his primary research to give a nuanced account of such programs as Kraft Television Theatre and Ford Theatre. Hawes charts the interest in providing high-quality dramatic programming, but then explains how this interest was eclipsed by network competition and the need to create formats more congenial to a variety of advertisers. Despite the artistic merit of many of these shows, Hawes suggests that live drama simply could not compete with the diversity and excitement viewers demanded by 1951. Though this book’s value is in its meticulous descriptions of studio architecture, technical equipment and the personalities of the people involved, it lacks a comprehensive discussion of the social impact of live television drama. Although it gestures towards such a context at various places, Hawes’ study might be best read in conjunction with a work such as Hal Himmelstein’s Television Myth and the American Mind (1994), which is interested in the social and political ramifications of television programming. That said, as an informational resource, Live Television Drama, 1956-1951 is hard to beat--the last two hundred pages consist of lists and descriptions of BBC productions relevant to American television as well as all the CBS and NBC television drama between 1946-1951, a compendium that is in and of itself invaluable to the serious student of American television history. --Steve Belletto AU - Hawes, William CY - Jefferson, NC DA - 2001 KW - corporations corporations corporations corporations television, and war television, and values values color war Belletto, Steve +television values, and television television, and new technology television, and copper wiring color television television, and color television, and live programs NBC ABC CBS World War II World War II, and television television, and World War II values LB - 1440 PB - McFarland PY - 2001 ST - Live Television Drama, 1946-1951 TI - Live Television Drama, 1946-1951 ID - 232 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This history of cellulose begins with a useful Chronology (17-26). In chapter 12, “Plastics Pioneering,” the author discusses the invention of celluloid (see esp. 222-38). These is also some discussion of this work of photography and motion pictures. The work also has several appendices dealing with statistics about cellulose-based products. AU - Haynes, Williams CY - Garden City, NY DA - 1953 KW - corporations corporations photography References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps motion pictures Hyatt, John Wesley materials cinema motion pictures celluloid film Eastman Kodak war cellulose materials celluloid collodion camphor Eastman Kodak Company film, origins of motion pictures, and celluloid +photography and visual communication photography, and celluloid celluloid, and photography celluloid, and motion pictures Hyatt, John Wesley, and celluloid celluloid, and origins plastics plastics, and cellulose paper paper, and cellulose cellulose, and paper rayon World War I World War I, and cellulose World War II World War II, and cellulose +timelines timelines, and cellulose timelines, and celluloid statistics paper, and cellulose cellulose, and paper paper LB - 2280 PB - Doubleday & Company, Inc. PY - 1953 ST - Cellulose: The Chemical that Grows TI - Cellulose: The Chemical that Grows ID - 316 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - These are the memoirs of Will Hays, who was president of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America (MPPDA) from 1922 until 1945. Hays, who was from Indiana, rose to prominence as chairman of the National Republican Party. He served in President Warren Harding’s cabinet as Postmaster General. Hays did much to bring motion pictures into mainstream respectability in the United States. He was an elder in the Presbyterian church, and his name, of course, became synonymous with movie censorship. But Hays’s conservatism was also tied to capitalism and he saw movies as “international salesmen” for American business. Hays was also an innovator with regard to new media. In addition to ushering movies into respectability, as Postmaster General he promoted air mail, radio, and truck delivery. In Indiana, he had used newsreels to promote the Republican Party during the 1910s. AU - Hays, Will H. CY - Garden City, NY DA - 1955 KW - self-regulation Production Code Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising values Production Code (motion pictures) values religion law censorship and ratings censorship memoirs autobiography +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Will Hays Hays, Will H. censorship, and Will Hays censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship public relations, and Will Hays motion pictures, and public relations Production Code (motion pictures) Hays, Will H., and Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code, and Will Hays public relations public relations, and motion pictures LB - 13380 PB - Doubleday & Company, Inc. PY - 1955 ST - The Memoirs of Will H. Hays TI - The Memoirs of Will H. Hays ID - 509 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This very solid book details how the major world powers have tried to exploit telecommunications to their advantage. Starting with the spread of the telegraph in the U.S., Britain, and France, Headrick then moves forward to consider the trans-Atlantic cable, cables to India and Australia, from Russia to Japan. Chapters 1-6 deal with cables. Beginning with chapter 7, Headrick considers “The Beginnings of Radio, 1895-1914.” The focus remains on cables and radio through the end of World War II. The final chapter is on “Telecommunications, Information, and Security.” This fine work provides valuable information in a straightforward manner and complements such other studies as Emily Rosenberg’s Spreading the American Dream. AU - Headrick, Daniel R. CY - New York DA - 1991 KW - R & D USSR surveillance nationalism imperialism Asia public relations advertising research and development war war non-USA +telephones surveillance Spain radio national security general studies +nationalism and communication +military communication cable +telegraph telegraph, global global communication India Australia cable, and India cable, and Australia radio World War II World War I Great Britain France cable, transatlantic cable, transpacific telecommunications Russia Japan cable, and Japan cable, and Russia cable, submarine telegraph, and diplomacy diplomacy, and telegraphy wireless communication +radio telegraph, wireless Marconi, Guglielmo Spanish-American War World War I, and cables World War I, and radio cryptography World War I, and cryptology cable, and Latin America radio, and Great Britain radio, and shortwave cable, and technology (1920s) cable, and intelligence propaganda surveillance espionage World War II Soviet Union radio, and Germany radio, and France telephones, and ITT China cipher machines expansion, American national security, and communication naval warfare, and communication cable, Atlantic Germany cultural imperialism +radio public relations non-USA advertising and public relations LB - 640 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1991 ST - The Invisible Weapon: Telecommunications and International Politics, 1851-1945 TI - The Invisible Weapon: Telecommunications and International Politics, 1851-1945 ID - 1460 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Headrick, Daniel R. CY - New York DA - 1988 KW - technology R & D nationalism technology and society research and development war cultural imperialism war non-USA +nationalism and communication +military communication World War I technology transfer imperialism cultural imperialism culture LB - 2240 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1988 ST - The Tentacles of Progress: Technology Transfer in the Age of Imperialism, 1850-1940 TI - The Tentacles of Progress: Technology Transfer in the Age of Imperialism, 1850-1940 ID - 1617 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Headrick, Daniel R. CY - New York DA - 1981 KW - R & D nationalism research and development war cultural imperialism war non-USA imperialism +nationalism and communication +military communication imperialism, and Europe cultural imperialism, and Europe telegraph telegraph, submarine cultural imperialism culture LB - 2250 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1981 ST - The Tools of Empire: Technology and European Imperialism in the Nineteenth Century TI - The Tools of Empire: Technology and European Imperialism in the Nineteenth Century ID - 1618 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work describes the Kitchen Debate in 1959 in Moscow between Vice President Richard Nixon and Soviet primier Nikita Khrushchev. The meeting was recorded by an Ampex color videotape machine and played back immediately on a color television at the exhibit. (167-68). AU - Hearst, William Randolph, Jr. AU - Considine, Bob AU - Conniff, Frank CY - New York DA - 1960, 1961 KW -, television videotape color color, and videotape color, and television television, and color videotape, and color magnetic recording, and color Nixon, Richard Nixon, Richard, and Kitchen Debate Nixon, Richard, and color videotape Khrushchev, Nikita Khrushchev, Nikita, and Kitchen Debate Presidents and new media magnetic tape magnetic recording LB - 32550 PB - Avon Book Division, The Hearst Corporation; McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc. (1961) PY - 1960 ST - Khrushchev and the Russian Challenge (aka Ask Me Anything -- Our Adventures with Khrushchev) TI - Khrushchev and the Russian Challenge (aka Ask Me Anything -- Our Adventures with Khrushchev) ID - 2913 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book, supported by a grant from the Sloan Foundation, focuses on the "intense race to build the laser that took three years." The race, won by Ted Maiman, took place during the early 1960s. AU - Hecht, Jeff CY - New York DA - 2005 KW - lasers beam weapons strategic defense initiative (SDI) military communication Bell Laboratories death rays Gould, Gordon, and lasers masers radar lasers, and Ted Maiman SDI LB - 40 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 2005 ST - Beam: The Race to Make the Laser TI - Beam: The Race to Make the Laser ID - 3 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Richard D. Heffner, who studied to become an American historian, chaired the movie industry's Classification and Rating Administration from 1974 until 1994. He considered himself to be a Jeffersonian liberal and this collection of documents reveals his admiration for not only Jefferson but Franklin D. Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, and other liberal American presidents. AU - Heffner, Richard D. CY - New York DA - 1965 KW - +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Heffner, Richard, and Am. history Heffner, Richard LB - 19070 OP - 1952 PB - New American Library PY - 1965 ST - A Documentary History of the United States: An Expanded Edition TI - A Documentary History of the United States: An Expanded Edition ID - 754 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Richard Heffner, who chaired the movie industry's Classification and Rating Administration from 1974 until 1994, described himself as a Jeffersonian liberal and began his work at CARA strongly opposed to any kind of censorship. He feared what Tocqueville called the "tyranny of the majority" and this edition of Tocqueville's work offers insight into Heffner's approach to freedom of expression. AU - Heffner, Richard D. CY - New York DA - 1956 KW - Tocqueville, Alexis de +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Heffner, Richard, and Am. history Heffner, Richard Heffner, Richard, and Alexis de Tocqueville Heffner, Richard, and tyranny of majority Tocqueville, Alexis de, and Richard Heffner LB - 19080 PB - Penguin Books PY - 1956 ST - Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America: Specially Edited and Abridged for the Modern Reader TI - Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America: Specially Edited and Abridged for the Modern Reader ID - 755 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book reprints many of the interviews Heffner conducted over the years on his public television program "The Open Mind." The interviews are broken down in to several categories: Power and Politics, The Law, The Media, Race, Women's Issues, Medicine, Popular Culture and the American Scene. The interviewees include Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, Oliver Stone, Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., Dan Rather, Bill Moyers, Mario Cuomo, Donald Rumsfeld, Rudolph Giuliani, and others. AU - Heffner, Richard D. CY - New York DA - 2003 KW - Classification and Rating Administration CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner CARA CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and background Heffner, Richard +television television, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and television Heffner, Richard, and The Open Mind Heffner, Richard, and politics censorship and ratings censorship LB - 28800 PB - Carroll & Graf Publishers PY - 2003 ST - A Conversational History of Modern America (edited by Marc Jaffe) TI - A Conversational History of Modern America (edited by Marc Jaffe) ID - 2657 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work attempts to provide a general historical overview of human sexuality, primarily in the United States, from the 1960s through the late 1990s. The theme is the “Sexual Revolution,” and the United States was “its epicenter.” The even larger message of this book, the author writes, “is that the Sexual Revolution, far from being a pop-cultural epoch book ended between the mid-sixties and the late seventies, is in fact part of a permanent continuum of revolutionary events that has scarcely begun.” Heidenry’s point of view is plainly stated. His book is “a call to arms against the ancien régime of an oppressive church-state morality fueled by a dishonest, even barbarous sexual tyranny that men continue to impose on women in every culture, in every generation. Something resembling peace on earth can be achieved only when all women, in every country of the world, are sexually free at last.” The author does offer some discussion of new communication technologies that aided the Sexual Revolution. For example, he discusses (briefly) photolithographic color-printing techniques during the 1960s that improved picture quality in pornographic magazines. He mentions also Super 8 mm porn movies, the growth of video arcades and peep shows, the growth in video recording in the mid- and late-1970s and the impact it had on 35mm and 8 mm films, and how videocassettes and local video stores helped erode pornography’s power base. Rather than endnotes which give the precise location of quotations and other information, the book has a “Sources and Acknowledgments” section which lists books and articles used for each chapter. AU - Heidenry, John CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - technology video cassette recorders (VCRs) homosexuality media effects magnetic recording photography women, and new media video rentals video cassettes sexuality sexuality sexuality values media effects media violence violence news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers sexuality videotape magnetic tape cinema motion pictures celluloid film women feminism media effects law censorship and ratings news and journalism 8mm films 8mm 35mm +motion pictures and popular culture censorship obscenity pornography technology and society motion pictures VCRs video cassettes magazines, and photolithographic color-printing color color, and photography color, and photolithographic color-printing photography and visual communication photography, and color photography, and pornography photography, and photolithographic color-printing censorship, and pornography women women, and pornography values values, and pornography 8mm film 35mm film film, 8mm film, 35mm homosexuality, and pornography pornography, and homosexuality feminism, and pornography pornography, and children gender Guccione, Bob Flynt, Larry Playboy Penthouse magazines Hefner, Hugh Kinsey, Alfred C. Masters, William H. motion pictures, and pornography motion pictures, and art films violence and media motion pictures, and violence communication effects peep shows video arcades video stores Meese Commission anti-pornography, Kinsey Institute anti-pornography crusade video media effects LB - 12160 PB - Simon & Schuster PY - 1997 ST - What Wild Ecstasy: The Rise and Fall of the Sexual Revolution TI - What Wild Ecstasy: The Rise and Fall of the Sexual Revolution ID - 2563 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 622-page work covers the history of the influential Reader's Digest. Heidenry notes that William L. White, who was the son of the journalist William Allen White, traveled to the Soviet Union with Eric Johnston, who at the time was president of the U. S. Chamber of Commerce. White wrote a two-part "Report on the Russians," the latter half of which was published in 1945. AU - Heidenry, John CY - New York DA - 1993 KW - nationalism magazines nationalism and communication democracy capitalism Johnston, Eric Reader's Digest Johnston, Eric LB - 35070 PB - W. W. Norton & Company PY - 1993 ST - Their Was the Kingdom: Lila and DeWitt Wallace and the Story of the Reader's Digest TI - Their Was the Kingdom: Lila and DeWitt Wallace and the Story of the Reader's Digest ID - 3147 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Heins is an ardent advocate of censorship and aligned with the American Civil Liberties Union. She explores a broad range of censorship efforts including motion picture ratings and efforts to label music lyrics. She argues that laws against obscenity in entertainment and art are "a foolish, archaic, and unfair departure from the principles of free speech." She opposes efforts by government and private pressure groups "to mandate standards of content or taste, or to tell Americans what we may see, read, and enjoy in the realm of art or entertainment." With regard to censorship, "artistic expression ... should have the broadest possible defintion." She devotes chapters to motion pictures, music lyrics, and pornography. AU - Heins, Marjorie CY - New York DA - 1993 KW - values sexuality values obscenity motion pictures law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures censorship, and music censorship, and music obscenity, and media blasphemy, and media pornography pornography, and censorship censorship, and pornography values, and censorship values, and music lyrics values, and motion pictures critics ACLU values LB - 3190 PB - The New Press PY - 1993 ST - Sex, Sin, and Blasphemy: A Guide to America's Censorship Wars TI - Sex, Sin, and Blasphemy: A Guide to America's Censorship Wars ID - 407 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Heins is a ardent opponent of censorship and supporter of the American Civil Liberties Union. In this book she surveys a wide range of efforts that have been made to suppress or regulation communications related to indecency. She writes that the "argument here is not that commercial pornography, mindless media violence, or other dubious forms of entertainment are good for youngsters or should be foisted upon them. Rather, it is that, given the overwhelming difficulty in even defining what it is we want to censor, and the significant costs of censorship to society and to youngsters themselves, we ought to be sure that real, not just symbolic, harm results from youthful pursuit of disapproved pleasures and messages before mandating indecency laws, Internet filters, and other restrictive regimes. Perhaps there are better ways to socialize children -- among them training in media literacy and critical thinking skills, comprehensive sexaulity education, literature classes that deal with difficult topics rather than pretending they do not exist, and inclusion of young people into journalism and policymaking on this very issue of culture and values. In all of these areas, youngsters who are economically and educationally deprived are likely to benefit most from additional sources of information and ideas." (11-12) This work has ten chapters. One is devoted to filtering technologies such as the v-chip. Heins' last chapter deals with "Media Effects." In this chapter, she offers a critique of social science research showing that violence in mass media has harmful effects on children. "Part of the problem has been that the issue of media effects is too often posed in 'either/or' terms. Statistical correlations between exposure to films classified as violent by experimenters in a laboratory setting and subsequent behavior deemed aggressive by the experimenters are said to prove that all or a great percentage of children imitate what they see in the media." She debunks social science research that argues that catharsis theory -- "the therapeutic or 'drive reduction' effect of entertainment" -- has been discredited. (228) AU - Heins, Marjorie CY - New York DA - 2001 KW - computers classification children video cassette recorders (VCRs) self-regulation Federal Communications Commission (FCC) CARA magnetic recording Aristotle television, and V-chip social science research censorship and ratings values sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence violence Internet magnetic tape First Amendment regulation education comic books freedom censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification media effects media effects, and critics social science research, and critics +motion pictures and popular culture censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship rating system (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) ACLU children children, and media effects media effects, and children children, and violence violence, and children media effects, and catharsis theory catharsis theory, and media effects Aristotle, and media effects media effects, and Aristotle critics +television television, and media effects television, and violence violence, and television media effects, and television censorship, and television censorship, and cable television law, and censorship law, and indecency censorship, and indecency FCC First Amendment, and media censorship, and Hicklin test +books, periodicals, newspapers censorship, and books books, and censorship censorship, and music lyrics +radio radio, and censorship censorship, and radio pornography pornography, and censorship censorship, and pornography Miller v. California censorship, and Miller case education, and censorship censorship, and education Reno v. ACLU comic books, and censorship censorship, and comic books children, and comic books Meese Commission +computers and the Internet censorship, and Internet Internet, and censorship v-chip censorship, and technological filters censorship, and v-chip VCRs values values, and children children, and values media literacy children, and media literacy media literacy, and children motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) classification, and critics Aristole, and cathasis theory books rating system (U. S.), and Internet catharsis theory children, and media LB - 3290 PB - Hill and Wang PY - 2001 ST - Not in Front of the Children: "Indecency," Censorship, and the Innocence of Youth TI - Not in Front of the Children: "Indecency," Censorship, and the Innocence of Youth ID - 417 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 68-page report was published by the National Coalition Against Censorship. It is designed for teachers, parents, policymakers, librarians, and others interested in the Internet, censorship, intellectual freedom, and education. The work is organized by individual filters and those Internet filters discussed include: America Online Parent Controls, Bess, ClickSafe, Cyber Patrol, Cyber Sentinel, CYBERsitter, Family Click, I-Gear, Internet Guard Dog, Net Nanny, Net Shepherd, Norton Internet Security, Safe Server, Safe Surf, Smart Filter, SurfWatch, We-Blocker, WebSENSE, and X-Stop. This report notes shortcomings in most, if not all, of these filters. The work contains a "Bibliography of Tests and Studies," which includes websites. Appendix A is "Blocked Sites by Subject: Artistic and Literary; Sexuality Education; Gay and Lesbian Information, Political Topics/Human Rights; Censorship." AU - Heins, Marjoire (director) and Christina Cho (writer) CY - New York, NY DA - 2001 KW - entertainment computers classification self-regulation homosexuality entertainment, home CARA censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) libraries lesbianism archives home entertainment gays education computers law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship home, and new media home +computers and the Internet censorship, and filters censorship, Internet filters computers, and filters filters, and Internet rating system (U. S.), and Internet filters critics ACLU ACLU, and Internet filters +information storage information storage, and Internet filters libraries, and Internet filters computers, and education education, and computers education, and Internet filters home, and Internet filters +bibliographies bibliographies, and Intenet filters gays, and Internet filters lesbians, and Internet filters LB - 3460 PB - Free Expression Policy Project, National Coaltion Against Censorship PY - 2001 ST - Internet Filters: A Public Policy Report TI - Internet Filters: A Public Policy Report ID - 434 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This Encyclopedia is one of several reference works put out by Routledge that relate to communication technology (Radio, Television, Advertising, Journalism are among the others). This work has many contributors with a good percentage of them coming from Great Britain and Europe as well as the United States. Several broad categories in this two-volume work relate to communication. The include: Communications; Computers; Electronics and Electrical Engineering; Energy and Power; Film, Cinema, Photography; Homes; Materials; Space; Transportation; Television, Radio, Audio Recording; and Warfare. AU - Hempstead, Colin A., ed. AU - William E. Worthington, Jr., assoc. ed. CY - New York and London DA - 2005 KW - technology R & D reference works ethics entertainment computers entertainment, home dyeing discs, compact references, statistics, timelines, maps bibliographies artificial intelligence sound recording sound recording, audio biotechnology electricity batteries electricity, and batteries computers and the Internet cameras cameras, 35mm digital media cameras, digital cameras, Polaroid chromotography cameras, and lens materials time and timekeeping color photography and visual communication photography photography, and color color, and photography clocks clocks, atomic clocks, quartz ceramics video games networks computers, and supercomputers supercomputers dyes electronics motion pictures genetic engineering information theory integrated circuits Internet lasers microphones loudspeakers nanotechnology photocopying research and development plastics radar radio radio, AM radio, FM rockets satellites aeronautics and space communication sonar values values, and technology technology, and values ethics, see values telephones television color, and television television, and color videotape videotape, and television television, and videotape compact discs (CDs) television, and DVDs DVDs transistors HDTV television, and high definition vacuum tubes war global positioning systems (GPS) fax machines telephones, long distance telephones, digital lighting satellites, and remote sensing artificial intelligence and biotechnology home and new media home entertainment CDs electronic media ethics home duplicating technologies rocketry technology and society magnetic tape magnetic recording computers facsimile global communication LB - 33010 PB - Routledge PY - 2005 ST - Encyclopedia of 20th-Century Technology TI - Encyclopedia of 20th-Century Technology VL - 2 volumes ID - 2939 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Hendricks discusses how early moving pictures were innovative in their treatment of history. He considers the film Execution of Mary, Queen of Scots (1895) and how it used stop-motion substitution. This technique allowed for the appearance on screen of a real beheading. It is also an early example of how film was able to manipulate time. (See especially 137-40.) AU - Hendricks, Gordon CY - New York DA - 1966 KW - history history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space ref, secondary ref, book motion pictures time and timekeeping motion pictures, and stopping time motion pictures, and Execution of Mary,Queen of Scots motion pictures LB - 6320 PB - The Beginnings of the American Film PY - 1966 ST - The Kinetoscope: America’s First Commercially Successful Motion Picture Exhibitor TI - The Kinetoscope: America’s First Commercially Successful Motion Picture Exhibitor ID - 3429 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Herbst notes that polls often have a symbolic significance. “Quantitative data from polls and surveys are numerical symbols which have proven to be powerful, multilayered ones when used in political discourse. On one level, numbers have the ‘magical’ quality [Ernest] Cassirer alluded to: They are precise, elegant, and above all, scientific. Numbers enable objectivity, and objectivity is one road to enlightenment.” (38) She discusses ways in which public opinion is defined. “In general, the various meanings of public opinion can be sorted into four definitional categories: Aggregation, Majoritarian, Discursive/Consensual, and Reification....Today we tend to think of public opinion as the aggregation of anonymously expressed opinions....This approach [majoritarian] is also aggregation-oriented, but does not treat all opinions equally: It assumes that minority opinion is less significant than majority opinion...The definitions in the third category [consensual] all emphasize the role of communication in the public opinion process. In order for people to know when they have stepped outside the bounds of acceptable behavior, they must understand the extent of these bounds....A fourth category of definitions assumes pubic opinion to be a fiction or a reification. Writers such as Walter Lippmann believed that public opinion is a projection of media or elite opinion,” Hebst says. (44-46) Journalists have come to treat opinion surveys as news while power brokers often use them for leverage. “Polls are used symbolically today by presidents, members of Congress, interest groups, and others wishing to gain political advantage and public support. Yet journalists no longer use polls in his manner, because the norms of journalism have changed so dramatically since the mid-nineteenth century. Today, survey results are quite intentionally treated by reporters and editors as news, although poll data are sometimes used to punctuate a particular theme in a news story.” (87) Herbst doubts that polls have led to more political participation or improved the quality of public discussions about important issues. “Quantitative opinion data are everywhere, but have they made political discourse more ‘democratic’ or more substantively ‘rational’? It seems, from his discussion, that the use of numbers to describe popular feeling has not encouraged political involvement or enhanced political discourse in any significant way. Even though opinion polls are valuable to political candidates, journalists, and presidents--both instrumentally and symbolically--their impact on political expression has not been as dramatic as early pollsters once had hoped.” (175) AU - Herbst, Susan CY - Chicago DA - 1993 KW - mathemathics journalism community democracy news and journalism polling newspapers news democracy and media polling polling, and history of +television newspapers, and polling democracy, and television television, and democracy numeracy mathematics, and politics democracy, and polling LB - 9820 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1993 ST - Numbered Voices: How Opinion Polling Has Shaped American Politics TI - Numbered Voices: How Opinion Polling Has Shaped American Politics ID - 2349 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Hendershot examines the history of censorship efforts since the 1950s aimed at safeguarding children from violence, sexism, racism, and commercialism on television. By focusing on what censorship and regulation are and how they work -- rather than on whether or not they should exist -- Hendershot shows how adults use these processes to reinforce their own ideas about childhood innocence. --Robert Pondillo AU - Herdershot, Heather CY - Durham, NC DA - 1998 KW - television, and values law law censorship and ratings values regulation media +television censorship, and television regulation, and television television, and censorship values, and television media literacy Pondillo, Robert censorship LB - 9350 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - Duke University Press PY - 1998 ST - Saturday Morning Censors: Television Regulation Before the V-Chip TI - Saturday Morning Censors: Television Regulation Before the V-Chip ID - 2302 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Herman provides some discussion of how such theorists as the Frankfurt School viewed the relation between technology and culture. For Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer sound film, television, cartoons, and advertising degraded culture. For Walter Benjamin, technology changed experience into "a never-ending series of shocks to the individual's consciousness." Benjamin believed that photography and other forms of mass reproduction destroyed the uniqueness of art. Herbert Marcuse, though, held some hope that technology might eventually bring capitalism's downfall. AU - Herman, Arthur CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - preservation history, and new media non-USA +motion pictures history +television +motion pictures Frankfurt School motion pictures, and Frankfurt School Adorno, Theodor Horkheimer, Max Benjamin, Walter Marcuse, Herbert capitalism, and technology history, idea of decline +duplicating technologies capitalism LB - 11300 PB - The Free Press PY - 1997 ST - The Idea of Decline in Western History TI - The Idea of Decline in Western History ID - 2490 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Herman and Chomsky describe the media as purveyors of propaganda, with information filtered through a set of assumptions about what should be reported as news. They believe that news content is determined by what information media organizations are given and by the biases through which news events are viewed and reported. These biases are determined by official sources and there is pressure on the media to view news in conformance with these biases. Chapter 1 is entitled “A Propaganda Model,” and Chapter 2 is “Worthy and Unworthy Victims.” --Phil Glende This book, co-written with Edward S. Herman, is Noam Chomsky’s major work on the mass media. In it, the authors propose a propaganda model of the press and use it to predict basic news coverage of political events in Latin America, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia. They compare and contrast news coverage from various sources about similar events taking place in different parts of the world. The examples show how some events are highlighted or ignored, depending on how they fit into the preconceived image of the situation. The propaganda model is based on five major elements, or filters as they are called in the book. The first is that the size, ownership, and profit orientation of the mass media determine its purpose and agenda. This argument is familiar to readers of Ben Bagdikian and Robert McChesney. Second, the mass media depends on advertising for revenue and profit, and therefore applies itself to benefiting advertisers and business concerns, and to creating a public atmosphere that is supportive of corporate endeavors. The mass media is unlikely to be critical of the corporate agenda or engage in meaningful analysis of corporate behavior. Next, the mass media is reliant on official sources of information, including government, public relations agencies and think tanks. By “objectively” reporting these expert and official sources, the mass media presents a very narrow and one-sided perspective. Fourth, when members of the mass media overstep the bounds of propriety, they are often subject to flak from media observers and monitors. This criticism often takes the form of complaints about liberal bias or loss of objectivity, and is itself very selective and biased. Last, all coverage is filtered through the rhetoric of anticommunism. The cold war ideology of global struggle between communism and freedom is applied uncritically to every situation. In recent years, this rhetoric has lessened, but you can still see certain code words like “terrorism” being used in this way. Herman and Chomsky turn to many examples of media coverage that is predicted by this model. They show that coverage of elections in Latin America, for example, depends on the interests of American business or government agencies. Pro-American leaders are called democratic and opponents are called leftists or communists. Chomsky and Herman also discuss what they call worthy and unworthy victims. Here victims of human rights abuses are given different treatment, or ignored entirely, depending on who they are and who was responsible for the abuse. Again, certain patterns of coverage emerge. The book also contains a lengthy analysis of news coverage of the Vietnam War, or wars as they say. They completely discredit the idea that the press was critical of the war and responsible for bringing it to an end. In fact, the press was an active supporter of the war and almost always framed the issues in pro-military or pro-government ways. The implications of this kind of news coverage for democracy and active deliberation by the public are discouraging. Chomsky and Herman, in fact, argue that the United States is really an oligopoly and that the democratic process is an illusion, or manufactured consent. They do, however, believe that the system can be reformed to reflect a more democratic value structure. The press is not controlled by a totalitarian regime and there is room to overcome self-censorship and institutional bias. Chomsky writes at great length about these ideas in other works. --Rob Rabe AU - Herman, Edward S., and Chomsky, Noam CY - New York DA - 1988 KW - nationalism advertising, and public relations Vietnam War propaganda advertising public relations advertising journalism community democracy Cold War law censorship and ratings censorship news and journalism war non-USA values news propaganda democracy and media critics Glende, Phil values, and media political economy news, and mass media news, and corporate bias Rabe, Rob Chomsky, Noam news, and capitalism capitalism, and news public relations news, and public relations public relations, and news +nationalism and communication news, and nationalism news, and anticommunism Cold War, and news news, and Cold War news, and government Vietnam War, and news news, and Vietnam War democracy, and news bias news, and censorship censorship, and news capitalism military communication LB - 9250 PB - Pantheon Books PY - 1988 ST - Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of Mass Media TI - Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of Mass Media ID - 2292 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Herman and McChesney argue that media companies and others in related fields are working to maintain market position in the rapidly changing and still unpredictable field of digital technology. The phone companies, the cable companies, the software companies and the mass media conglomerates are joining forces to make sure that each can claim a portion of the market. With that sort of control in place, they say, it seems probable that without some intervention, the digital world will be determined by the business elite who can control the research, the marketing, the applications and the public expectations of the technology. Chapter 4 (106-35) is entitled “Global Media, the Internet, and the Digital Revolution.” --Phil Glende The authors raise four major points: 1) A striking trend of the past decade has been the accelerated development of a global commercial media system which increasingly shapes the direction and content of national media. 2) This global commercial media system is dominated by some TEN US-based transnational media conglomerates, with another thirty to forty very large, mostly North America and Western European firms occupying niche and regional markets. 3) The global media system is an indispensable component of the globalizing market economy as a whole. 4) This global media system has fundamental structural flaws that limit its service to democracy and even stand as a barrier to the development of meaningful self-government. The author maintain that the defense of globalization and commercialization rests largely on the argument that despite limitations, the market, competition and the need to satisfy audiences ultimately compels the commercial media to “give the people what they want.” A second defense of the status quo and globalization-commercialization process depends on the rise of professionalism and rules of objectivity. A third justification goes under the name of “active audience” analysis, and contends that the power of media firms is exaggerated, as audiences routinely interpret corporate message in ways that suit their own needs, not those of media proprietors or advertisers. A fourth argument claims that the new communications technologies have conquered the scarcity problem and provide new possibilities for competitive communication, thereby removing the monopoly power threat from the continuing expansion of the media giants. Finally, it is necessary to support the media status quo because, it is said, there are no viable alternatives to the developing commercial system. (189-97) Herman and McChesney see several problems with using the market as the basis of a system of mass communication. First, the market treats audiences as consumers, not citizens, so that serving a public sphere function is outside its purview. Second, although the market treats audiences as consumers rather than as citizens, it does not make consumers “sovereign” in the sense of allowing them a choice in what is offered. Third, being funded by advertisers, the media service audiences on advertisers’ terms. Fourth, there is rarely full competition and this system may be subject to serious monopolistic restrains. (190-91) --Amy Chu AU - Herman, Edward S., and Robert W. McChesney CY - London DA - 1997 KW - computers corporations corporations, multinational advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations journalism community democracy news and journalism non-USA values news political economy +computers and the Internet Glende, Phil global communication multinational corporations democracy and media critics news, and corporate bias values, and media +telephones cable, television cable McChesney, Robert digital media capitalism, and digital media capitalism, and news digital media, and capitalism digitization Chu, Amy advertising, and media advertising, and corporate bias advertising capitalism LB - 9260 PB - Cassell PY - 1997 ST - The Global Media: The New Missionaries of Corporate Capitalism TI - The Global Media: The New Missionaries of Corporate Capitalism ID - 2293 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work offers insight into the duplicating processes available during the mid-1950s, from carbon paper and its substitutes, to stencils to photocopying and facsimile transmissions. The text, which devotes 22 short chapters to each of these processes, runs from pages 78-173. The remainder of the work consists of advertising, which is in itself interesting. AU - Herrmann, Irvin A. CY - New York DA - 1956 KW - computers photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations print office labor materials +computers and the Internet writing printing printing press +photography and visual communication office, and information technology information technology Information Age +duplicating technologies carbon paper facsimile stencils photocopying information technology, and office advertising, and duplicating technologies typewriters duplicating technologies, and gelatin hectograph information processing punch cards writing, and signature machines data transmission computers, and punch cards typewriters, and automatic printing, contact photography, and office duplicating technologies, and stencils duplicating technologies, and carbon paper duplicating technologies, and gelatin hectograph duplicating technologies, and carbon paper substitutes duplicating technologies, and impression stamps cameras, and duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and cameras advertising cameras computers computers, and punch cards writing machines office materials LB - 5710 N1 - See also: office PB - Office Publications Company PY - 1956 ST - Manual of Office Reproduction: Reproduction Processes Systems Duplicating Imprinting Methods TI - Manual of Office Reproduction: Reproduction Processes Systems Duplicating Imprinting Methods ID - 1956 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book, published in 1997, argues that two generations of children who grew up playing five generations of video games now live in the United States. “This is not a small group of people. This is not a subculture. This is 50 million adults whose memory and imagination have been colored by Atari, Nintendo, and Sega, the same way that the memory and imagination of previous generations were tinted by television, cinema, and vinyl records,” writes Herz.(1) She has two goals: trace the history of videogames as they have evolved from the first game produced in 1961 at MIT up to 1997; and “to trace their radiation into our patterns of thought.” (3) This work provides a 10-page timeline. Herz also devotes a chapter to the military-industrial complex, and to the work of such companies as Lockheed Martin. She notes that often Hollywood has been more successful in innovative work than have military designers seeing accurate simulations of battlefield conditions. She writes that “most of the technology that’s now used in videogames had its origins in military research. When you trace back the patents, it’s virtually impossible to find an arcade or console component that evolved in the absence of a Defense Department grant.” (204-05) This 230-page book has no notes or bibliography, but does have a three-page index. AU - Herz, J. C. CY - Boston DA - 1997 KW - R & D computers children corporations military-industrial complex corporations timelines motion pictures research and development war Lockheed Martin Co. censorship and ratings war +computers and the Internet video games +military communication Lockheed Martin, and video games video games, and Lockheed Martin military-industrial complex, and video games video games, and history of media effects media effects, and video games video games, and media effects +motion pictures and popular culture video games, and motion pictures motion pictures, and video games video games, and Atari CD-ROMs, and video games video games, and CD-ROMs video games, and Magnavox Odyssey games video games, and Mortal Kombat video games, and Nintendo video games, and Sega timelines, and video games children children, and media children, and video games video games, and children children, and media effects video games, and military CD-ROMs References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps LB - 250 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Little, Brown and Company PY - 1997 ST - Joystick Nation: How Videogames Ate Our Quarters, Won Our Hearts, and Rewired Our Minds TI - Joystick Nation: How Videogames Ate Our Quarters, Won Our Hearts, and Rewired Our Minds ID - 114 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book was written to show journalists how better to use geographic information systems (GIS). The author provides ten case studies: 1) the Miami Herald's coverage of Hurricane Andrew in 1992; 2) the San Diego Union-Tribune's reporting on demographic change in southern California; 3) the Charlotte Observer's reporting on school busing; 4) the Providence Journal's investigation of the effects of lead poisoning on children; 5) the Philadelphia Inquirer's mapping of bars and fatal drunk driving accidents; 6) the Washington Post's stories on the 2000 presidential election and disqualified ballots in Florida; 7) the San Jose Mercury's reporting on the danger of mud slides; 8) the Dallas Morning News' coverage of public housing near toxic waste sites; 9) the Columbus Dispatch's account of unfair assessments of property in central Ohio; and 10) use of Internet mapping services by the Chicago Tribune and the Times in northwestern Indiana. Herzog provides two appendices, one that offers story ideas using GIS and one indicating how to finding free maps layers and other relevant information. AU - Herzog, David CY - Redlands, CA DA - 2003 KW - computers news and journalism aeronautics and space communication news, and satellites satellites, and news journalism, and satellites satellites, and journalism news, and maps visual communication news, and graphics computers and the Internet news, and computers journalism, and computers computers computers, and news computers, and journalism news, and computer-assisted reporting geographic information systems, see GIS news, and GIS GIS, and news television television, and news news, and television television, and GIS GIS, and television television, and graphics books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and graphics newspapers, and GIS GIS, and newspapers newspapers, and illustrations references, statistics, timelines, maps newspapers computers and the Internet journalism news satellites LB - 32990 PB - ESRI Press PY - 2003 ST - Mapping the News: Case Studies in GIS and Journalism TI - Mapping the News: Case Studies in GIS and Journalism ID - 2937 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is the first book to focus specifically on Harold Innis that focuses on his work dealing with communication and history. Although the work is not a biography, per se, it does deal with Innis's early life and career as an economic historian and political economist. Most of Heyer's 102-page text deals with the last decade of Innis's life when his work elaborated "on three related themes": first, Innis developed "an outline for the study of what is now referred to as communication history or media history, a field for which he remains the definitive cartographer." Second, he elaborated "several key theoretical concepts for the study of communication and culture, such as medium, time-bias and space-bias, the oral tradition, and the monopoly of knowledge." Finally, Innis suggested "how his approach to hihstory and perspective that recent commentators have referred to as 'medium theory' can inform a critique of culture and technology in the contemporary world." (xii-xiii) Heyer divides this book into seven chapters: 1) The Road to Political Economy; 2) From Fur to Fish; 3) Political Economy Inspires Communication Studies; 4) The 'History of Communications' Project; 5) Time, Space, and the Oral Tradition; 6) Monopolies of Knowledge and the Critique of Culture; and 7) An Enduring Legacy. The work has two appendices. Appendix A (103-11) is William J. Buxton essay "Harold A. Innis's 'History of Communications' Manuscript." Appendex B (113-21) is J. David Black, "The Contributions of Mary Quayle Innis." A Select Bibliography (123-28) follows. This work is part of Rowman and Littlefield's Critical Media Studies Series. AU - Heyer, Paul CY - Lanham, MD DA - 2003 KW - Chicago, IL nationalism time and timekeeping writing time history and new media preservation power history information storage history, and new media non-USA history Innis, Harold McLuhan, Marshall political economy present mindedness history, break with communication, and empire nationalism and communication Innis, Harold, and nationalism nationalism, and Harold Innis time space (spatial) power, and temporal bias power, and spactial bias alphabet, and technology writing, and technology alphabet Buxton, William Canada Chicago School materials LB - 34570 PB - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. PY - 2003 ST - Harold Innis TI - Harold Innis ID - 3096 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 159-page book is divided into three parts. Part One, "What Is Photojournalism?" considers the origins of this field and discusses the technology that made it possible. Part Two concerns "The Editor," and Part Three is about "The Photographer." Hicks begins by explaining that there is "a fundamental difference in the acts of eye and mind by which words and pictures are read." (4) The goal of the photojournalist is reached when "the values" of pictures and words "are equal and in balance, for then the single expressive statement has maximum impact." (5) Drawing on an earlier work by Roger Fry, Vision and Design (1920, 1924), Hicks says that pictures can reveal much more detail that the eye can often see in real life, especially if an event is experienced under great stress. "In a photograph," Hicks writes, "as in a memory image, emotion can be felt and, at the same time, seen dispassionately." (11) Later, Hicks quotes from Susanne K. Langer's Philosophy in a New Key (1942), who said that "the correspondence between a word-picture and a visible object can never be as close as that between the object and its photography." (11) And again from Langer: "The 'elements' that the camera represents are not the 'elements' that language represents. They are a thousand times more numerous.... [An] incredible wealth and detail of information is conveyed by the portrait ... That is why we use a photograph rather than a description on a passport or in the Rogues' Gallery.... Photography ... has no vocabulary.... there are no items that might be called, metaphorically, the 'words' of portraitures." (11, n. 12) [emphasis in original text] In Hicks' views, words and pictures do not "supplement" one another but rather they "complement" one another. (20) Hicks is somewhat vague about just when newspapers began to use photographs on a regular and mass scale. He notes that probably the first halftone was the pictures of Shantytown in the New York Daily Graphic in 1880, and then in 1886, Le Journal Illustre published eight photographs in an eight-page interview with a French scientist, Marie-Eugene Chevereul. (23) He then comments that "an effective alliance with the halftone plate and the high-speed press, was laid on the doorstep of the twentieth century," but that "it was to be some years before these influences were translated into action." (24) The newspaper photograph was for some time "a novelty," used to brighten up "the newspaper or magazine page." Then, he discusses the appearance of a rotogravure section in the New York Times in 1914, eighteen years after the paper had "pioneered" a Sunday supplement section with halftone illustrations. (25) Hicks argues that Germany, in particular, sparked a "renascence" after World War I and that there was a great expansion in camera use during the post-World War I period, to largely to the popularization of photography. Portable cameras, specifically the Leica, was "a masterpiece of basic design." (29) This small camera became "practically an added organ" to the photography's body (30) and it set up "a vitally different relationship ... between the photographer and the world about him." (31) The photographer could be much less obtrusive in taking pictures. Also, by "combining large lens and small negative size, the Leica could preserve, in picturing a scene or situation in existing light, the quality of naturalism so often destroyed by the artificial illumination of flash or flood. This held true even after the appearance in 1929 of the flashbulb, welcome advance though it was over the quick magnesium flare." (31) AU - Hicks, Wilson CY - New York DA - 1952 KW - journalism illustrations words vs. images magazines, and photography images vs. words magazines photography ref, secondary news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines illustrations, and newspapers illustrations, and magazines magazines, and illustrations newspapers, and illustration non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and illustrated journalism photojournalism news, and photojournalism newspapers, and photojournalism photojournalism, and newspapers photojournalism, and cameras cameras, and portable news, and portable cameras cameras, and Leica non-USA Germany Germany, and photojournalism photojournalism, and Germany photojournalism, and non-USA non-USA, and photojournalism photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving newspapers, and half tones half tones, and newpapers lighting lighting, and photography photography, and lighting photography, and flashbulbs lighting, and flashbulbs ref, book cameras news LB - 39380 PB - Harper & Brothers Publishers PY - 1952 ST - Words and Pictures: An Introduction to Photojournalism TI - Words and Pictures: An Introduction to Photojournalism ID - 4037 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Ivy Lee played a key role in the evolution of “public relations,” changing the direction from fraud, hoax, distortion and stunts to factual information. Lee believed that as business must understand the public, so the public must understand business, and he assumed the role of providing the adjustment of relations between public and business. His thinking can be summarized as follows: “1) Lee believed in individual liberty and felt that economic freedom as expressed in some form of capitalism was most conducive to growth and progress. 2) He believed in democracy where the people were the government and public opinion the final law. 3) He accurate assessed the growing conflict between the individual freedom necessary for industrial success and the power of public opinion in a mass society. 4) He realized that the individual whose activities had public consequence, especially the businessman, must make his actions circumspect in order to preserve his freedom in a mass society. 5) He saw that where individuals, groups, and masses come into conflict, channels of communication must be opened to provide information necessary for them understand each other and find solutions.” (9) --Amy Chu AU - Hiebert, Ray Eldon CY - Ames DA - 1966 KW - ethics Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising values ethics community democracy Chu, Amy public relations biography Lee, Ivy capitalism, and public relations values, and public relations public relations, and values professionalization, and public relations public relations, and professionalization ethics, and public relations public relations, and ethics democracy, and public relations public relations, and democracy values capitalism professionalization LB - 1700 PB - Iowa State University Press PY - 1966 ST - Courtier to the Crowd: The Story of Ivy Lee and the Development of Public Relations TI - Courtier to the Crowd: The Story of Ivy Lee and the Development of Public Relations ID - 258 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This solidly researched book offers an excellent account of the emergence of the modern relationship between the presidency and the press. Hilderbrand sees President William McKinley as important in creating this new relationship. McKinley took an active leader in trying to mold public opinion regarding foreign affairs. McKinley had to respond to changes in newspaper publishing reflected in the papers of William Randolph Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer. The White House began tracking press accounts and the beginnings of the press secretary's function can be said to have begun with McKinley. Theodore Roosevelt was innovative in his use of press releases. In terms of personality, TR was also well-suited to the new media environment of the early twentieth century. William Howard Taft, however, was more rooted in nineteenth-century views about the proper relationship between the White House and the press corps, and as a result, he did not fare well. Woodrow Wilson was much more attuned to new media. He originated the press conference and one of the highlights of this work is that Hilderbrand learned an archaic brand of shorthand used by reporters to recover Wilson's early press conferences. Wilson also established the first large-scale government propaganda agency, the Committee on Public Information, during World War I. It attempted to exploit virtually all of the new media then available -- motion pictures, newsreels, photography, posters, and other forms of visual communication, print sources, and more. This work was a Supplementary Volume to The Papers of Woodrow Wilson, Arthur S. Link, Editor. AU - Hilderbrand, Robert C. CY - Chapel Hill DA - 1981 KW - Wilson, Woodrow Roosevelt, Theodore presidents and new media McKinley administration Roosevelt, Theodore administration Taft, William Howard administration Wilson, Woodrow administration Spanish-American War World War I war McKinley, William, and newspapers news and journalism Roosevelt, Theodore, and newspapers Taft, William Howard, and newspapers Wilson, Woodrow, and newspapers propaganda Wilson, Woodrow, and mass media Wilson, Woodrow, and propaganda Committee on Public Information World War I, and propaganda propaganda, and World War I Spain McKinley, William Taft, William Howard LB - 28750 PB - University of North Carolina Press PY - 1981 ST - Power and the People: Executive Management of Public Opinion in Foreign Affairs, 1897-1921 TI - Power and the People: Executive Management of Public Opinion in Foreign Affairs, 1897-1921 ID - 2624 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Hill reports on the official record of the National Committee on Education by Radio, a group devoted to increasing the presence of educational radio from 1930 to 1941, as broadcasting matured into a largely commercial enterprise. As the authorized version of events involving the committee, the book provides an uncritical look at the strategy and concerns of one of the major organized opposition forces during the era when the Federal Communications Commission was established. --Phil Glende AU - Hill, Frank Ernest CY - New York DA - 1942 KW - Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulation education community democracy law regulation +radio radio, and education education, and radio democracy and media FCC regulation, and radio National Committee on Education by Radio Glende, Phil democracy, and radio censorship and ratings LB - 9270 PB - J.J. Little & Ives Co. PY - 1942 ST - Tune In for Education: Eleven Years of Education by Radio TI - Tune In for Education: Eleven Years of Education by Radio ID - 2294 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Hill, Kevin A. and John E. Hughes CY - Lanham, MD DA - 1998 KW - computers community democracy community +computers and the Internet democracy and media cyberpolitics public sphere cyberspace democracy, and Internet community, and Internet LB - 9080 PB - Rowman & Littlefield PY - 1998 ST - Cyberpolitics : Citizen Activism in the Age of the Internet TI - Cyberpolitics : Citizen Activism in the Age of the Internet ID - 2275 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Hilmes divided the essays in this well-organized book into four categories: “Broadcasting Begins, 1919-38”; “Transitional Decades, 1938-60”; “NBC and the Classic Network System, 1960-85”; and “NBC in the Digital Age, 1985 to the Present.” The first category explores the rise of networks, their mutual battles and collaborations, the public interest of programming and class conflicts. The second part deals with the creation of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), World War II, and race representation. The next part goes into satire, Star Trek, sex, and children’s programming. The fourth and final part is dedicated to the rise of digitalization in the world of broadcasting. --Bart Nijman AU - Hilmes, Michele, ed. CY - Berkeley DA - 2007 KW - future Nijman, Bart television television, and NBC nationalism sexuality television, and values media effects media violence violence community democracy censorship and ratings television, and culture cable television television, and cable aeronautics and space communication satellites global communication television, and satellites nationalism and communication democracy and media metaphors information superhighway children, and media violence, and video violence, and media television, and sex values, and television cable children nationalism, and television nationalism, and satellites violence, and television television, and violence democracy, and cable television future and science fiction women women, and television television, and women sexuality, and television television, and sexuality television, and censorship censorship, and television television, and science fiction science fiction, and television digital media digital media, and television television, and digitization censorship science fiction values LB - 33030 PB - University of California Press PY - 2007 ST - NBC: America’s Network TI - NBC: America’s Network ID - 49 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Hilmes assembled a history of radio broadcasting and argues that the structure of commercial television management and the form of commercial television content was modeled after the broadcasting industry that developed beginning in the early 1920s. She argued that radio had a nationalizing effect on the general audience, not only by providing a shared content experience and direction for mass consumption but also by providing what amounted to a national standard of pronunciation. This came at a time when film was making the transition to sound, when many second-generation immigrants were learning how to speak from their parents and the mass culture, and when rural Americans were moving to urban centers, especially from the South to the North. --Phil Glende Hilmes looks at the way radio was programmed in the United States from 1920s through the coming of commercial television. Her focus is on how radio programming influenced and was influenced by the cultural influences of the early twentieth century. Her central thesis discusses how the programs of the first radio network, -- NBC --dealt with popular understandings of race, ethnicity, and gender in the United States, and how it helped build the "imagined community" of the 1920s. Hilmes explores "Amos 'n' Andy" and its negations of racial tensions and "The Rise of the Goldbergs" and its concern for ethnic assimilation. She talks about and reflects upon "influential narratives" of the housewife-targeted daytime radio serials and argues these much-disparaged shows (by men!) provided a space for women to discuss conflicted issues of gender in a Post-Victorian, but nonetheless, patriarchal society and culture. She reflects upon early radio experimentation which developed and "gradually naturalized" the framework of structures and practices that also influenced programs. Hilmes also explores industry censorship from the point of view of the network's Standards and Practices Department, and considers the culturally homogenizing role of radio advertising for the U.S. The final chapter traces radio's contribution to World War II (i.e., recruiting women for war, containment marginal voices against the war), including the organization of the Office of War Information (OWI) and its internal squabbles. The book is multi-focused, ambitious and has quite a broad sweep, which is one of its few problems. Although Hilmes admits she was forced to leave out much in the book, Radio Voices is still satisfying, and very well realized. --Robert Pondillo AU - Hilmes, Michele CY - Minneapolis DA - 1997 KW - OWI nationalism corporations corporations ethnicity women, and new media advertising, and public relations race propaganda public relations law law censorship and ratings censorship war World War II women +radio +nationalism and communication Glende, Phil advertising, and radio radio, and immigrants women, and radio ethnicity, and radio World War II, and radio Office of War Information (OWI) NBC Pondillo, Robert advertising nationalism, and radio race, and radio radio, and race regulation, and radio censorship, and radio radio, and censorship radio, and ethnicity regulation LB - 9280 PB - University of Minnesota Press PY - 1997 ST - Radio Voices: American Broadcasting, 1922-1952 TI - Radio Voices: American Broadcasting, 1922-1952 ID - 2295 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In Television Myth and the American Mind, Hal Himmelstein argues that the television industry and its products disseminate and perpetuate archetypal American myths. In order to advance this basic thesis, Himmelstein takes a cultural studies approach based on seminal works such as Roland Barthes’ Mythologies (1957), which argue that ideologies or mythologies can be embedded into seemingly-innocuous cultural artifacts like commercials or television news programs. Using a cultural studies framework, then, Himmelstein analyzes a number of different television products--from adventure shows to commercial spots--to demonstrate how television has helped shape an American mythology. Himmelstein frames his study around “six well-ordered and potent ideological constructs that pervade television programs”: 1) The sanctity of the “ordinary” American family; 2) The triumph of personal initiative over bureaucratic control and inefficiency of the state; 3) One’s gain at another’s expense; 4) The elevated status of quiet authority in the status hierarchy of power and social control; 5) The celebration of celebrity; 6) The mystification of history and the deflection of questions of social structure into the “persona” (10-11) After establishing these six mythic categories, Himmelstein proceeds to analyze various types of television programs in order to show how these categories are created or reinforced--whether intentionally or not. The greatest strength of Himmelsteins study, in fact, is that he examines both how television programs are conceived and constructed by the industry, and how they are finally received by the American public. It is this complex of industry intention and the publics mythological appropriation, Himmelstein argues, that makes television such a powerful social and cultural force. Himmelstein is at his best when analyzing specific case studies that exemplify his cultural theories. In a chapter called “Advertising: The Medium Is the Mirage,” for example, he examines a 1984 Kodak television spot spearheaded by the well-known J. Walter Thompson advertising agency. This ad, called “America,” featured a man on a motorcycle riding through the American landscape encountering different types of people from Native Americans to Vietnam veterans to small children coming home from school. As Himmelstein argues, this spot exploits several of the American myths cited above in order to urge the viewer to buy Kodak film. As the soundtrack to the spot, “Because Time Goes By,” reminds the viewer, such “Americannes” is fleeting at best, and must therefore be captured on film (68-90). Himmelstein deconstructs this spot to show that the what is essentially American about the spot is that it is composed of myths which have been likewise sustained by other forms of mass media. As Himmelstein moves into a discussion of television entertainment, then, he wants his reader to understand that the line between advertisements and other types of television programming is not as distinct as one may suppose. If advertisements are designed to evoke or inculcate certain American mythologies, then it makes sense that successful television shows would function in a similar fashion. Himmelstein examines a number of programs as “case studies” of various programming types, from Suburban--Middle-Landscape Comedy (Leave it to Beaver) and “The Self-Reflexive Comedy-Drama: Television Topicality and the Class Struggle” (All In the Family) to “Television News” and “The TV Talk Show.’ For each of these types, Himmelstein takes paradigmatic examples and deconstructs them to expose the myths that govern them. In one such example, the first episode of Leave It to Beaver (1957), Himmelstein shows that the program deliberately reinforces such values as the invulnerability of the adult and the authority of institutions, values Himmelstein codes as American mythologies. Himmelstein employs a similar “test case” strategy for the other program categories he explores in the book. In his conclusion, Himmelstein suggests that through an awareness of these mythologies, it is possible for one to cultivate a critical stance with regard to the medium of television: “The critical viewer who sees ‘the fraudulence of a proposition in advertising,’ or the controlling myth of eternal progress in prime-time soap opera, or the over importance attached to the heroic splendid performer--whether athlete, politician, or electronic preacher--is not likely to buy that product or complacently stand outside the centers of capitalist power as the correct ideological positions are circumscribed for him or her.” (386) It is this push toward a greater media literacy that is perhaps the greatest value of Himmelsteins book – it helps one develop a vocabulary for identifying and negotiating the structural myths present in contemporary American television. --Steve Belletto AU - Himmelstein, Hal CY - Westport, CT DA - 1994 KW - family entertainment celebrity nationalism entertainment, home advertising, and public relations television, and values propaganda public relations values preservation home entertainment history, and new media celebrity culture home, and new media home Belletto, Steve television +nationalism and communication nationalism, and television nationalism, and myth television, and nationalism television, and myth myth, and television myth, and nationalism celebrity culture, and television television, and celebrity history, and television television, and history home, and television family, and television values, and television television, and family television, and home Barthes, Roland advertising advertising, and television television, and advertising values history news and journalism myth LB - 1450 PB - Praeger PY - 1994 ST - Television Myth and the American Mind TI - Television Myth and the American Mind ID - 233 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Richard F. Hirsh “deals with technological stagnation and how it contributes to industrial decline.” His subject is the electric utility industry and its problems. He maintains “that a long and successful history of managing a conventional technology set the stage for the industry’s deterioration in the late 1960s and 1970s. After improving steadily for decades, the technology that brought unequalled productivity growth to the industry appeared to stall, making it impossible to mitigate the difficult economic and regulatory assaults of the 1970s. Unfortunately, most managers did not recognize (or did not want to believe) the severity of technological problems, and they dealt instead with financial and public relations issues that appeared more controllable. Partly as a result, the industry found itself in the 1980s challenged by the prospects of deregulation.” (ix) This book is aimed at historians, readers who wish to learn more about the history of business strategy, and people involved in business management. The text of this work runs 198 pages followed by a six-page “Bibliographic Note” section, and substantial endnotes (205-66). AU - Hirsh, Richard F. CY - London and New York DA - 1989 KW - technology corporations corporations corporations electricity technology and society technology and values values, and technology capitalism industrial revolution networks, electrical Edison, Thomas electric utilities regulation, and electricity Insull, Samuel electricity, and nuclear power progress, and technology technology, and progress Westinghouse Electric Company regulation networks progress values LB - 29660 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1989 ST - Technology and Transformation in the American Electric Utility Industry TI - Technology and Transformation in the American Electric Utility Industry ID - 2713 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Hixson notes that during the late 1950s, many Hollywood executives were not enthusiastic about trying to send more movies to the Soviet Union, doubting that they would make any profits. Eric Johnston, president of the MPAA, explained to the White House that the producers might be more enthusiastic if they were told that what they were doing was "an important contribution to American policy." (155) On Jan. 29, 1958, the State Department announced that Johnston would lead the movie industry in negotiating "the sale and purchase of U. S. and Soviet theatrical motion pictures." (155) The USSR agreed to begin exhibiting ten U. S. pictures including Roman Holiday, The Old Man and the Sea, and Oklahoma, while the U. S. agreed to market seven Soviet movies including The Idiot, Don Quixote, and Swan Lake. (155) AU - Hixson, Walter L. CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) nationalism Eisenhower administration community addresses motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and community Johnston, Eric, and community community, and motion pictures community, and Eric Johston motion pictures, and Cold War Cold War, and motion pictures capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism values, and motion pictures addresses speeches motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising advertising advertising, and motion pictures MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric, and capitalism capitalism, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and anticommunism Johnston, Eric, and Production Code democracy democracy, and capitalism capitalism, and democracy nationalism and communication motion pictures and nationalism presidents and new media Eisenhower, Dwight D. motion pictures, and Dwight Eisenhower Eisenhower, Dwight D., and motion pictures capitalism Cold War freedom MPAA war advertising and public relations values LB - 35100 PB - St. Martin's Press PY - 1997 ST - Parting the Curtain: Propaganda, Culture, and the Cold War, 1945-1961 TI - Parting the Curtain: Propaganda, Culture, and the Cold War, 1945-1961 ID - 3150 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The authors write: “The complex interactions of technology and culture have produced three distinctive information ages: classical, modern, contemporary. In the classical age we shall explore how the rise of literacy, culminating in its alphabetic form, enabled the classifying potential in natural language to emerge in symbiotic evolution with the technology of writing. The result was a twin birth: of information itself and of the first information age.... “In the modern age, commencing with the rise of printing during the Renaissance, typographic literacy did not so much spur the emergence of a new mentality as overwhelm the old one. The surfeit of books and information generated by the print revolution contributed directly to the overburdening and rupture of traditional forms of classification. In turn, this rupture helped clear the way for new, more abstract means of managing information. These means, which we shall designate collectively as ‘the analytical vision of knowledge,’ derived from the technology of numeracy, from the newly emerging, symbolic language of mathematics. The modern information age culminated in the eighteenth century with the first of the great modern encyclopedias.... “Our contemporary information age also has its roots in numeracy. But in the nineteenth century, the mathematical imagination soared into abstract universes far beyond the fantasies of the early theorists who had first devised the idiom. The analytical vision became increasingly attenuated from the material world it purported to map, until the tie finally snapped. Torn from its philosophical foundations, analysis became pure technique, the manipulation of arbitrarily designated symbols according to fixed, logical rules. The pure technique of analysis has fabricated a new home for itself in the electronic circuits of the digital computer, engendering our contemporary information technology and idiom. These, in turn, have fostered a new form of knowing based on the idea of emergence, which describes how certain complex, natural systems continually adapt themselves to their environment. Unlike the analytical vision, this new form of knowing is expansive rather than reductive and open-ended rather than closed. At its heart lie the twin principles of electronic computing, ‘power’ and ‘play,’ which define our contemporary information age just as surely as wisdom and knowledge did its predecessors.” This work ends with an informative bibliographic essay. AU - Hobart, Michael E. and Zachary S. Schiffman CY - Baltimore DA - 1998 KW - mathemathics computers print preservation communication revolution history, and new media digitization history history general studies information age communication revolution literacy alphabet writing printing history, break with numeracy digital media electronic media computers +computers and the Internet computers, and numeracy mathematics, and communication communication, and mathematics information v. knowledge LB - 650 PB - The Johns Hopkins University Press PY - 1998 ST - Information Ages: Literacy, Numeracy, and the Computer Revolution TI - Information Ages: Literacy, Numeracy, and the Computer Revolution ID - 1461 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Hobbs, Vicki M. CY - Lancaster, PA DA - 1997 KW - education community democracy +television distance education television, and education television, interactive democracy and media education, and television education, and new media LB - 6920 PB - Technomic Publishing PY - 1997 ST - Virtual Classrooms: Educational Opportunity through Interactive Television TI - Virtual Classrooms: Educational Opportunity through Interactive Television ID - 1976 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book grew out of a course the author taught at New York University's Department of Cinema Studies. Hoberman writes: "I first read Siegfried Kracauer's From Caligari to Hitler in the late 1960s as an undergraduate at the State University of New York in Binghamton. Then, I imagined writing something that would be called From Strangelove to Wallace or Reagan or Worse -- and I imagine The Dream Life is a belated version of that." (viii) The text of this work runs 409 pages and discusses several films from the 1960s and early 1970s. A section called "Source Notes" (410-33) is used instead of the more traditional endnotes. AU - Hoberman, J. CY - New York and London DA - 2003 KW - Johnson, Lyndon motion pictures motion pictures, and politics Johnson, Lyndon Johnson, Lyndon, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Lyndon Johnson presidents and new media Nixon, Richard Nixon, Richard, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Nixon Kennedy, John F. Kennedy, John F., and motion pictures motion pictures, and John F. Kennedy television television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television LB - 30630 PB - The New Press PY - 2003 ST - The Dream Life: Movies, Media and the Mythology of the Sixties TI - The Dream Life: Movies, Media and the Mythology of the Sixties ID - 2824 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a fine intellectual history of several writers during the early twentieth century who were critics of modernism. AU - Hoeveler, J. David, Jr. CY - Charlottesville DA - 1977 KW - cultural change modernity cyberspace culture context cultural change, early 20th cultural change, and critics modernism, and critics modernism critics LB - 12870 PB - University of Virginia Press PY - 1977 ST - The New Humanism: A Critique of Modern America, 1900-1940 TI - The New Humanism: A Critique of Modern America, 1900-1940 ID - 464 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is part of the Twayne American Thought and Culture Series. It offers an introduction to post-modern thought during the 1970s. AU - Hoeveler, J. David, Jr. CY - New York DA - c1996 KW - cultural change cyberspace culture context context, 1970s cultural change, and 1970s postmodernism LB - 12880 PB - Twayne Publishers PY - 1996 ST - The Postmodernist Turn: American Thought and Culture in the 1970s TI - The Postmodernist Turn: American Thought and Culture in the 1970s ID - 465 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This examination of modern American literature considers the clash between Victorianism and modernism. American writers during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries lived in a world that had been transformed by technology. AU - Hoffman, Frederick John CY - Chicago DA - [c1963] KW - cultural change values modernity cyberspace culture context cultural change, early 20th Victorianism modernism LB - 12920 OP - 1951 PB - Regnery ST - The Modern Novel in America TI - The Modern Novel in America ID - 469 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book deals with American literature during the 1920s and considers the clash between Victorian values and modernism. The writers of the 1920s lived in a world that had been radically changed by technology. AU - Hoffman, Frederic John CY - New York DA - [1962] KW - cultural change values modernity cyberspace culture context cultural change, early 20th cultural change, 1920s Victorianism modernism LB - 12930 OP - 1955 PB - Collier Books ST - The Twenties: American Writing in the Postwar Decade TI - The Twenties: American Writing in the Postwar Decade ID - 470 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Anti-Intellectualism in American Life examines the place of intellect in American society throughout history. Hofstadter is particularly interested in the democratization of education and the tension between excellence and access. Hofstadter argues that anti-intellectualism were consequences of the democratization of education in the United States, particularly vocational and Progressive education during the early twentieth century. Hofstadter argues that educational institutions have undercut themselves by becoming vocational; they are not inculcating a love of learning and an appreciation for academic subjects and life. If schools are not inculcating respect for academic values then fat chance of it happening through other means. Moreover, he saw anti-intellectualism as being part of American history due, in large part, to the primacy of evangelical Protestant groups. Evangelicals favored emotion and saving souls rather than theological musings and reason. Business also played a role in the anti-intellectual attitudes of Americans. The vast resources of America called for men with practical and/or technical skills. Many business leaders accomplished their success without formal education which also helped devalue it in the eyes of the public. While Hofstadter points out the long tradition of anti-intellectualism in American life, he also notes the periods of history when intellectuals were held in high regard, namely Revolutionary America and the Progressive era. Men like Woodrow Wilson and Theodore Roosevelt were able to rise the pinnacle of American politics despite being intellectuals, which provides hope for the future of American culture. While it is important to remember that Hofstadter wrote Anti-Intellectualism in American Life in the wake of McCarthyism, he surprisingly deals very little with the Red Scare, instead focusing on earlier portions of American history. Hofstadter does a reasonably good job of comparing American attitudes to those held by Europeans. However a discrete section devoted to that might be preferable to having comparisons sprinkled throughout the work. --Ryder Kouba AU - Hofstadter, Richard CY - New York DA - 1963 KW - Kouba, Ryder education values religion democracy anti-intellectualism education, and anti-intellectualism democracy, and anti-intellectualism religion, and anti-intellectualism values, and anti-intellectualism Darwinism, and anti-intellectualism Byran, William Jennings censorship and ratings censorship, and anti-intellectualism anti-intellectualism, and censorship anti-intellectualism, and education anti-intellectualism, and values anti-intellectualism, and religion anti-intellectualism, democracy anti-intellectualism, and science censorship Darwin, Charles LB - 33230 PB - Afred A. Knopf PY - 1963 ST - Anti-Intellectualism in American Life TI - Anti-Intellectualism in American Life ID - 80 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author describes this work as “a panorama of the emergence of man as the only literate animal species and a preview to the liquidation of illiteracy on a world scale as a prelude to the unification of mankind.” The book is nicely illustrated (the author also describes his work as “a picture-book about picture-making”), both in black-and-white and in three-color photogravure. The book is particularly informative about the coming of paper and the development of different kinds of printing presses. Early chapters deal with the development of calendars and the alphabet. Subsequent chapters are entitled: “Printing, Paper and Playing Cards,” “Standardisation, Stereotype and Isotype,” “Art, Anatomy and Advertisement,” “Back to Comenius from the Comics,” “Serving Time, Saving Time and Showing Time,” and “The Internationlisation of Free Speech.” AU - Hogben, Lancelot CY - New York DA - 1949 KW - illustrations Asia photography advertising, and public relations time and timekeeping propaganda public relations print geography timekeeping, and clocks non-USA +photography and visual communication printing press paper timekeeping cartoons comic books advertising alphabet writing calendars color cartography linotype stereotyping +duplicating technologies literacy photography, and history of printing printing, and block printing, and Korea Korea printing, and China China China, and printing Korea, and printing photography, and color color, and photography sound writing writing, sound presses presses, linotype presses, rotary illustrations materials sound recording LB - 11630 PB - Chanticleer Press PY - 1949 ST - From Cave Painting to Comic Strip: A Kaleidoscope of Human Communication TI - From Cave Painting to Comic Strip: A Kaleidoscope of Human Communication ID - 2514 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The purpose of this book, the author says, is to make readers better viewers and listeners. "The thoughts all cluster about the two words 'seeing' and 'hearing.'" (v) The goal is to make judgments, "To know what pictures are good, what are bad; what music is good, what demoralizing; which statues and buildings to approve; what poetry to hold to, -- these are accomplishments which mark the man or the woman of culture." (vi) After an opening chapter about "Audiences," are devoted to architecture, sculpture, painting, etching, poetry, music, criticism, and applause, with related chapters on such themes as "The Language of Form,"The Language of Action," "The Language of Line," "The Language of Color," "The Language of Word," "The Language of Tone." In the chapter "The Language of Color," Holden writes that "Color is assuredly, if considered by itself, a very subtle language, yet it is none the less definite." (65) She goes on to say that "Form without color has its distinct province of power, as is seen in architecture and sculpture. Crude color the ancients added to form, but in a subordinate way, the end being decoration, which is for from being the highest use of color." (66) She notes that for contemporary artists in 1896, "color is growing to be a more simple language, and the keynote of their theme is that 'The sun paints true.'" (67) She writes that "Cabalistic, myterious meanings have always hovered about certain colors...." (69) However, the "three primary colors have among most nations had simple meanings, intimately connected with man and his surroundings. Red -- the color of blood, of life -- has always had an intensely human meaning. 'Red for love,' the old song says. It carries with it an element of emotion, of passion. Blue is the color of the sky, impenetrable. Men's 69/70 heads have always somehow been among the stars. Mentality is cold and apparently boundless....'blue is cold; it is an intellectual color, the color of mind.' The yellow, the flame-color. Among all peoples, legends and myths cluster about the gift of fire to man; but more can be read in the Promethean legend than the physical power of fire.... It makes for itself a Pentecost. The Christian use of the color in church decorations at Eastertide is thus explained." (69-70) Holden also observes that "Combinations of tones are tolerated today which would have been harshest discord to the ears of the last century, - nay, even were to Wagner's early critics. In color the same thing is true." (71) Holden says that painters must use color in different ways. "Far more is expected of color to-day than every before. The time is fast going when a painter can satisfy his audience by daubing the invariable dark brown into his shadows, as if he were working in black and white...." (90) AU - Holden, Florence P. CY - Chicago DA - 1896 KW - emotion decadence ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color color, and inadequacy of language color, in history color, and theory color, and language color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and poetry values values, and color color, and values color, and decadence decadence, and color media literacy color, and audiences audiences, and color audiences media effects media effects, and color color, and media effects color, and red color, and blue color, and yellow ref, book LB - 39820 PB - A. C. McClurg and Company PY - 1896 ST - Audiences: A Few Suggestions to Those Who Look and Listen TI - Audiences: A Few Suggestions to Those Who Look and Listen ID - 4080 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This interesting work offers insight into how people viewed computers during the mid-1960s. The authors note that already 10,000 computers have been made and have “become accepted as an indispensable tool in scientific research....” Chapter 2 deals with the history of computing and is entitled “From the abacus to the desk calculator.” Chapter 3 has a pretty good survey of “The pioneers of automatic computing.” Chapter 5 discusses “Analog computers.” Chapters 6-11 then deal with digital computers. The final chapter, number 13, discusses “Future computers” and tries to anticipate what was to come. Hollingdal and Tootill write: “The word miniaturization was coined about twenty years ago to describe the process of reducing the size of the early radar equipment. If the reader dislikes this piece of jargon, let us warn him now; worse is to follow. The advent of transistors and printed wiring about ten years later allowed a spectacular advance in miniaturization....” The first two chapters on the history of computing are fine, and the last chapter is useful, too. The remaining chapters tend to be more technical, although still aimed at the general reader. AU - Hollingdal, S. H. and G. C. Tootill CY - Baltimore DA - 1965 KW - computers transistors, and integrated circuits materials materials +future and science fiction +computers and the Internet electronic media computers, analog analog media digital media future miniaturization transistors radar computers, history of computing, before computers computers calculating machines digital v. analog digitization LB - 7830 PB - Penguin Books PY - 1965 ST - Electronic Computers TI - Electronic Computers ID - 2152 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book examines precursors to the telegraph, focusing mostly on two different optical telegraph systems that were employed in Europe for the half-century prior to the development of the electrical telegraph. Holzmann and Pehrson wrote this book in part to commemorate the bicentennial of the initial deployment of an optical telegraph system in Sweden in 1794. Before the eighteenth century had expired, several European nations, most notably France and Sweden, had fully operational communication systems in place. Holzmann and Pehrson begin with a historical overview of large-scale information communication systems. Tracing the idea of a communication network back into antiquity, the authors discuss the rather wide variety of beacons, torch or fire, mirror, flag and other relay networks and messenger and rider systems mentioned in ancient and medieval texts. Fire beacons are mentioned in Homer’s Illiad, the books of Isaiah and Jeremiah and by Herodotus and Thucydides; a torch or lantern signal is used by Patriots in 1775 to warn citizens of the approach of the British—“one if by land, two if by sea.” There are dozens of such visual systems. The authors devote a substantial chapter to the optical telegraph of Claude Chappe. Chappe attempted several different systems, including the use of large panels, and shutters, before settling on a semaphore telegraph, which he successfully tested with the aid of two brothers in 1793. Less than a year after his test, the first line, from Paris to Lille was opened. Telegraph stations were built about six miles apart, usually on hills or in clearings. The semaphore itself, called the regulator, was about fifteen meters in size, allowing for relatively easy visibility between stations. A code for letters and numbers allowed for the transmission of words and sentences. By 1805, the year of Chappe’s death, a network of stations had been established throughout much of France. A letter or number could be transmitted from Paris to Toulon, separated by 475 miles, in about 12 minutes. This network continued to grow, so that by 1846 all the major French cities were linked, and lines were extended into Italy, Spain, Belgium, the Netherlands and the western German states. The authors devote another substantial chapter to Abraham N. Edelcranz, the designer and builder of the optical telegraph system in Sweden. Upon hearing of Chappe’s experiments in France, Edelcranz began experiments on a system of his own design, a ten-shutter device which also employed relay stations stretched out across the countryside. By the middle of 1795 Edelcranz had a system in operation from Stockholm to Vaxholm, a distance of about thirty five miles. Over the course of the next two decades, the system was expanded so that it covered most of southern Sweden and was employed by the military during Sweden’s war with Russia in 1808. Edelcranz died in 1821, but his system remained in operation well into the 1860s, existing side-by-side with electrical telegraphs, serving to link areas where the wires of the electrical system could not be laid. The remainder of this book consists of a number of translated documents, including Edelcranz’s 1796 treatise on telegraphs, which contains both theory and Edelcranz’s design for the Swedish system, and some of the initial letters written to Gentleman’s Magazine in 1794. There is also a chapter on the protocols and procedures used by optical telegraph operators, including a rather lengthy list of penalties and punishments meted out for mistakes or fraudulent messages. Also of interest is the author’s too brief chapter on optical telegraph systems in other nations. Germany, Norway, England, Spain and the United States all developed some system of optical telegraph. In the United States, the authors point to an optical telegraph system between Boston and Martha’s Vinyard in 1801, one in San Francisco between 1849 and 1853, and a line between New York and Philadelphia in the 1840s, but the evidence present is slim. --David Henning AU - Holzmann, Gerald J. and Björn Pehrson CY - Los Alamitos, CA DA - 1995 KW - data processing non-USA telegraph telegraph, optical France Sweden Chappe, Claude Edelcranz, Abraham networks optical telegraph Henning, David France, optical telegraph Sweden, and optical telegraph Spain Great Britain Norway Germany bibliographies, and data networks Hooke, Robert networks data networks, early semaphore system telescopes bibliographies Europe Europe, and telegraph LB - 4030 PB - IEEE Computer Society Press PY - 1995 ST - The Early History of Data Networks TI - The Early History of Data Networks ID - 1791 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book discusses the effort of the American government to bring women into the work place during World War II. Honey says that the "predominant media portrayal of women war workers was that they were young, white, and middle-class; furthermore, that they entered the labor force out of patriotic motives and eagerly left to start families and resume full-time home-making. As historians have studied the war period, it has become clear that this image is almost completely false. Contrary to popular belief, the women who entered war production were not primarily middle-class housewives, but working-class wives, widows, divorcees, and students who needed the money to achieve a reasonable standard of living. Most of them had prewar experience in the labor force....” Probably fewer than ten percent of women who worked in war plants had gone to college and more than half had not graduated from high school. Many, if not most, of these women hoped to keep their jobs after the war ended, although many were replaced as male soldiers returned home. AU - Honey, Maureen CY - Amherst DA - 1984 KW - nationalism women, and new media public relations advertising motion pictures community democracy war home, and new media home World War II women values propaganda home, and information technology information technology +nationalism and communication propaganda women, and World War II World War II, and women propaganda, and women information technology, and home values, and propaganda +books, periodicals, newspapers +radio democracy and media posters propaganda, and posters posters, and women World War II, and propaganda propaganda, and World War II radio, and propaganda propaganda, and radio motion pictures, and propaganda advertising and public relations military communication LB - 9830 PB - University of Massachusetts Press PY - 1984 ST - Creating Rosie the Riveter: Class, Gender, and Propaganda during World War II TI - Creating Rosie the Riveter: Class, Gender, and Propaganda during World War II ID - 2350 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book was originally published in London in 1899. Hopwood begins in his opening chapter by discussing "Persistence of Vision and Continued Perception of same Object." Although fascinated with the topic of persistence of vision, he confines himself in the remaining book "strictly to the description and history of apparatus for producing the illusion of motion."(xi) The author offers an explanation for what he means by "Living Picture." "If we consider it merely as a view presenting the illusion of motion, then we must go back to the early years of this dying century and attribute its origin to Plateau's Phenakistoscope. If we restrict our definition to views of photographic origin, Wenham's experiments in 1852 fulfilled our requirements forty-six years ago. Should it be required that the photographic record be a true analysis of motion, then thirty-four years have passed since Du Mont indicated the methods of chrono-photography. Finally, if it be suggested that the picture must last a definite and somewhat lengthy period, the images being secured at short intervals and in a very restricted space of time, we are compelled to admit the Living Picture as a phenomenon of recent growth; but it must not be forgotten that many views of one action, procured by photography and repeated for as long a period as required, were prepared far earlier than any date which may be termed recent. And, further, it must not be ignored that the different stages quoted above led insensibly one to the other; 225/226 each step was founded on the labours of previous workers or at least rested on the same basis. No! emphatically No! There is not, there never was, an inventor of the Living Picture. Say that it grew from an infinitely small germ, as unlike its present form as the butterfly is unlike the egg from which it evolves; say that many minds have each contributed, and still are contributing their mite towards the realisation of that perfection yet to be attained; say that the Living Picture is the work of nineteenth-century civilised man -- and the statement will be as true as any generalisation can be. So far as a single inventor can be named, Plateau must be recognised as the originator of the pictorial method of producing an illusion of motion by means of persistence of vision. This in a double sense for while the Phenakistoscope was the forerunner of all machines in which a rapidly moving picture was momentarily viewed (and this definition includes machine so late in time as Edison's Kinetoscope), yet Plateau's 'Diable soufflant' was the first step toward all those forms of apparatus in which a picture is momentarily viewed while stationary. True the picture was not stationary, but the principle of differential speed between image and shutter was established." (225-26) This has two appendices. Appendix I is a "Chronological Digest of British Patents" relating to moving pictures (235-53). Appendix II is an Annotated Bibliography, arranged chronologically by year of publication, from 1825 to 1898. (254-65). AU - Hopwood, Henry V. CY - New York DA - 1899, 1970 KW - journalism ref, secondary modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures non-USA motion pictures, non-USA non-USA, and motion pictures motion pictures, and origins motion pictures, and persistence of vision Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Great Britain motion pictures, and patents Phenakistoscope motion pictures, and Phenakistoscope bibliographies motion pictures, and bibliographies bibliographies, and motion pictures motion pictures, and chrono-photography chrono-photography, and motion pictures ref, book LB - 16370 PB - Arno Press & the New York Times PY - 1899 ST - Living Pictures: Their History, Photo-Production and Practical Working TI - Living Pictures: Their History, Photo-Production and Practical Working ID - 3790 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work deals with consumerism in the age of the Industrial Revolution and the rise of mass media. Concern about a society fixated with self-gratification and self-realization is not a recent issue. Social surveys conducted by state bureaus from the 1870s gathered data from low- and middle-income groups of families about incomes and expenditures, with the reports containing more than simple statistics. Moralistic judgments were made about how families were spending their money: the purchase of alcohol was alluded to, if not directly cited; in studies from the late nineteenth century; later, attendance at movies was regarded as frivolous. Gradually, however, the middle-class researchers who gathered the data stopped passing judgment. By the 1930s the business of analysis and interpretation passed to sociologists. What became evident from a review of the literature of such studies was an increased expenditure for entertainment and leisure items with each passing decade. From the newspapers and magazines of the past comes commentary about some of the social survey research; the evolution of how the media interpreted the data is also revealing. A society that had prized frugality, thrift, and self-denial had been transformed to one in which household or personal budgets could be made flexible in order to afford amenities. --James Landers AU - Horowitz, Daniel CY - Baltimore and London DA - 1985 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations newspapers media effects values media mass media general studies Industrial Revolution advertising consumerism values, and advertising mass media, and consumerism Landers, James media effects, survey research newspapers, and advertising news and journalism news LB - 9840 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: media See also: mass media See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Johns Hopkins University Press PY - 1985 ST - The Morality of Spending: Attitudes toward the Consumer Society in America, 1875-1940 TI - The Morality of Spending: Attitudes toward the Consumer Society in America, 1875-1940 ID - 2351 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In late 1971, the History of Electrical Technology Group - Society of the History of Technology pointed to the need to identify and save sources related to electrical history and also recommended that the Smithsonian Institution, which already had a large collection of electrical artifacts, be the coordinating center of such an undertaking. Thus the Smithsonian's Division of Electricity and Nuclear Energy helped to establish an Archive for the History of Electrical Science and Technology to 1) encourage and coordinate preservation of manuscripts and artifacts, and 2) to maintain a national inventory of such primary materials related to electrical history. The inventory in this 116-page book is built around holdings identified in the National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections. AU - Hounshell, David A., comp. CY - Washington, D. C. DA - [1973] KW - primary sources archives primary sources preservation history, and new media history +electricity +archives +bibliographies electricity, and history of history, and electricity electricity, and bibliographies electricity, and archives primary sources archives, and electricity bibliographies, and electricity LB - 3910 PB - Smithsonian Institution, Division of Electricity and Nuclear Energy ST - Manuscripts in U. S. Depositories Relating to the History of Electrical Science and Technology TI - Manuscripts in U. S. Depositories Relating to the History of Electrical Science and Technology ID - 1779 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Howeth, Linwood S. CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1963 KW - U. S. Navy R & D research and development war government war +military communication U. S. Navy, and electronics military, and electronics LB - 6020 PB - Government Printing Office PY - 1963 ST - History of Communications-Electronics in the United States Navy TI - History of Communications-Electronics in the United States Navy ID - 1986 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is divided into three chapters -- 1) Hollywood and the Studio; 2) Hollywood on Location; and 3) Hollywood in Cyberspace. The first period, "the era of mass production," runs from the 1920s through the 1950s. The second. "the era of dispersed production," goes from the 1960s to the 1990s. The third, the "digital and infotainment age," from the 1990s forward. These divisions make good sense and as one looks at the infusion of new technologies into movie making, it is understandable why the censorship reflected in the Production Code of 1930 collapsed during the 1960s. Hozic is insightful in discussing the impact of digitization on movie making, and the new relationship that has developed between Hollywood and the military. She notes that Hollywood's economic imperatives, the fantasy worlds created by this business, and Hollywood's association with the military have inscribed "war and violence into the very economy of the entertainment industry." (137) She notes that such movies as Steven Spielberg's Saving Private Ryan have revived the public's affection for people in the military. "Computer companies, such as Silicon Graphics, whose income and research and development once largely depended on the Department of Defense, are increasingly turning to Hollywood in search of projects, ideas and funding. Even the moribund artificial intelligence projects, brainchildren of the Cold War, are being revived by demand from the entertainment sector. The diminishing influence of the Gunbelt economy and the rise of Siliwood -- the mix of Silicon Valley and Hollywood -- will quite likely change not just the balance of power within Hollywood but the position of Hollywood in both the American and globan economy in general." (141) AU - Hozic, Aida A. CY - Ithaca & London DA - 2001 KW - R & D nationalism entertainment computers special effects, digital special effects, and digitization nationalism imperialism entertainment, home photography special effects simulations projection motion pictures research and development war media effects media violence home entertainment Hollywood digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema digitization cultural imperialism consumerism computers law censorship and ratings censorship war 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movie +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality Hollywood, and digital movies digital movies, and Hollywood media convergence Hollywood, and media convergence media convergence, and digitial movies censorship, and new media censorship, and digital technology digital technology, and censorship cultural imperialism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and cultural imperialism +military communication military communication, and motion pictures motion pictures, and military +nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures military, and digital movies violence violence, and motion pictures military, and violent movies violence, and military special effects, and digital media military, and special effects simulations, and military simulations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and simulations military, and simulations consumerism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism LB - 27900 PB - Cornell University Press PY - 2001 ST - Hollyworld: Space, Power, and Fantasy in the American Economy TI - Hollyworld: Space, Power, and Fantasy in the American Economy ID - 1342 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Hubbell, Richard CY - New York DA - 1949 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins seeing at a distance LB - 6930 PB - Putnam PY - 1949 ST - 4000 Years of Television: The Story of Seeing at a Distance TI - 4000 Years of Television: The Story of Seeing at a Distance ID - 2044 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a popular history of hard-core filmmakers Jim and Artie Mitchell. Although the work does not have a bibliography or notes, it does contain useful information on the pornographic film industry. The author does provide some discussion of the early history of stag films, or blue movies, and the rise of magazines such as Playboy that featured nudity. The discussion is derivative from early works on these topics. More original is the discussion of the post-1960s. The work discusses how such theaters as the Screening Room, Sutter Cinema, and the O’Farrell in San Francisco played an important role in the exhibition of hard-core films during the 1970s.(110) Such theaters spread into many other cities by the end of the decade. (202) The author provides some information about the technology of some hard-core movies such as Behind the Green Door (1973?) which was filmed in 16 mm and cost the Mitchell brothers about $60,000. (198-200) By the early 1990s, this work notes, if one invested more than $30,000 on a pornographic videotape, it was unlike they would make their money back. By and large, though, this work is about personalities, with an occasional observation about the technology of the porn industry. AU - Hubner, John CY - New York DA - 1992 KW - audiences photography theaters sexuality +photography and visual communication values motion pictures cinema motion pictures celluloid film law censorship and ratings 16mm +motion pictures and popular culture photography and visual communication Mitchell brothers 16mm film film, and 16mm pornography censorship censorship, and pornography motion pictures, and porn theaters obscenity pornography, and censorship values values, and pornography theaters, and motion pictures theaters, and pornography LB - 12170 PB - Doubleday PY - 1992 ST - Bottom Feeders: From Free Love to Hard Core: The Rise and Fall of Counterculture Heroes Jim and Artie Mitchell TI - Bottom Feeders: From Free Love to Hard Core: The Rise and Fall of Counterculture Heroes Jim and Artie Mitchell ID - 2564 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume has articles (e.g., George Elliott, George Steiner, and Ernest van de Haag) written by social, legal, and political conservatives in the aftermath of the 1970 Report by the President Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. They warned that pornography dehumanized society, eroded self-restraint, undermined democratic government, and, when disseminated through mass media, could even destroy civilization. The 1970 Report of the President Commission on Obscenity and Pornography argued that pornography and erotica were essential harmless and that restrictions imposed on them by society should be loosened. AU - Hughes, Douglas A., ed. CY - New York DA - 1970 KW - conservatives archives primary sources sexuality motion pictures mass media First Amendment media effects crime freedom law censorship and ratings censorship pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and crime crime, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment pornography, and George Elliott pornography, and George Steiner pornography, and Ernest van de Haag LB - 22410 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - St. Martin's Press PY - 1970 ST - Perspectives on Pornography TI - Perspectives on Pornography ID - 969 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Hughes writes that "Of the great construction projects of the last century, none has been more impresssive in its technical, economic, and scientific aspects, none has been more influential in its social effects, and none has engaged more thoroughly our constructive instincts and capabilities than the electric power system. A great network of power lines which will forever order the way in which we live is now superimposed on the industrial world." (from the opening paragraph of the Introduction). This infrastructure took form between 1880 and 1930. This work is an excellent comparative study of the spread of electrical networks in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in the United States, Germany, and Britain. Hughes gives a good account of Thomas Edison’s construction of the first network in the Pearl Street section in New York City’s financial district during the early 1880s. He notes that Edison was not content with isolated inventions such as the electric light, but rather concentrated on systems of invention. Edison gained patents on scores of inventions related to the electric light. Hughes contends that Britain lagged behind the United States and Germany in building an electrical network because the latter two countries provided more favorable environments for business investment. In New York, Edison had to deal with local officials to gain permission to open city streets and for other construction necessities. In London, permission frequently had to be obtained from Parliament. --SV Hughes looks at the social history, and to some degree the technical history, of the process by which the networks of electrical power were put into place in the industrialized nations between 1880 and 1930. This was an uneven process that varied from one nation and locality to another, depending upon a variety of cultural, political and economic factors. Hughes focuses on the United States, Germany and England, and especially on Chicago, Berlin and London. The three cities vary substantially as to these cultural, political and economic factors, and demonstrate that electrification was hardly a matter of immediate and sweeping change once the technology was made available. London, a very old city that had thoroughly weathered the first industrial revolution, was locked into a conservative cast of mind that presented difficulties for the new technology. Newer cities, Chicago and Berlin were much more receptive, though their political climates varied considerably. Berlin had the benefit of honest and civic-minded politicians; Chicago did not, but fortunately found itself under the ministrations of an unusually competent autocrat, Samuel Insull. Overall, Hughes sees this process of electrification to have been a conservative one once it gathered the momentum of size in terms of both the physical networks themselves and the capital investment. Once the initial skirmish between direct and alternating currents had played itself out, very little dramatically new technology found its way into the process. --Gordon Jackson AU - Hughes, Thomas P. CY - Baltimore DA - c1983 KW - technology technology and society labor non-USA office office, and new media office networks lighting Great Britain Germany +electricity networks, electrical Great Britain, and electricity Germany, and electricity Europe, and electricity Edison, Thomas capitalism Industrial Revolution lighting, electrical electricity, and history of Europe Great Britain Germany infrastructure, and electricity electricity, and infrastructure Jackson, Gordon networks, large-scale technological determinism technical systems technology and society, and theory context context, new media late 19th context, new media early 20th Jackson, Gordon infrastructure LB - 4970 PB - Johns Hopkins University Press PY - 1983 ST - Networks of Power: Electrification in Western Society, 1880-1930 TI - Networks of Power: Electrification in Western Society, 1880-1930 ID - 8 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Hughes offers a good overview of a century of technological development, although his coverage of the late-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries is superior to his treatment of the later period. Of particular interest are his Introduction (“Technological Torrent”), chapter 7 on “The Second Discovery of America,” chapter 8 on “Tennessee Valley and Manhattan Engineer District,” and the last chapter (no. 9), “Counterculture and Momentum.” -- SV This study of the century of American invention, described by Hughes as roughly 1870 to 1970 is a gripping book that straddles the border between popular and academic history. Hughes seeks to place the history of technology squarely in the center of mainstream American history, rather than a separate niche of inquiry. As he says, the history of technology in the United States is the study of the nation involved in its “most characteristic activity.” The history of technology, for Hughes, is American history. During these years, inventors and “experts” of various kinds unleashed a dramatic reorientation of American life around new products and technologies, including many that fall under the heading of mass communication. Hughes’s discussion of technological enthusiasm, the stunning optimism and forward thinking that overcame most Americans, is helpful for understanding why people were so quick to adopt the new products and, more interestingly, place so much faith in the scientist to resolve economic and social problems. The careers of America’s foremost inventors and scientists have been studied nearly as much as the inventions and innovations themselves. What Hughes tries to do in this volume is to look at the breadth of the “technological century” and place it the context of political, economic, and social change that made America modern. Scholars looking for information on people like Edison, Sperry, Insull, and the Wright Brothers will not be disappointed. He describes their work adequately. What makes the book more interesting is how he presents the material. The Wright Brothers, for example, are presented within the context of the rise of the military-industrial complex rather than as heroic and visionary inventors. Insull is depicted in the context of the way his electrical grid changed people’s lives. The book is based on the idea of systems, which Hughes believes is the greatest accomplishment or legacy of the period covered in the book. It is not the individual invention, but the invention of a system of inventing that attracts his scholarly eye. Fordism and Taylorism are presented as more than just ways of doing business, but instead as a reorientation of American life. The other dominant theme in the book is the rise of gigantic engineering project, like the TVA and the Manhattan Project, that join government, academia, and the business community. The social effects of the TVA, he argues, are probably greater than the economic costs or physical changes to the landscape. A final interesting thread in the book is a running discussion of the effect of technological enthusiasm on modern art and architecture. The rise of the machine had an enormous impact on the subject matter and philosophy of modern art, more or less forcing a total reexamination of the very purpose and meaning of art. Communications scholars will possibly be disappointed in the lack of material narrowly focused on the rise of mass communications technology. The invention and spread of radio gets some ink here, but other technologies that we know have changed communication profoundly are absent. However, the book is valuable for communication history because of its examination of the rise of systems, like the electric grid which enabled almost all of mass communication technology, and the idea of technological enthusiasm itself, which played a role in how people adapted to and made use of new communication technology in their daily lives. -- Rob Rabe AU - Hughes, Thomas P. CY - New York DA - 1989 KW - technology atomic power innovation war general studies +electricity Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) atomic energy technology and society inventions counterculture World War II Rabe, Rob technology, and systems technological determinism LB - 660 PB - Viking PY - 1989 ST - American Genesis: A Century of Invention and Technological Enthusiasm, 1870-1970 TI - American Genesis: A Century of Invention and Technological Enthusiasm, 1870-1970 ID - 1462 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This substantial work is written by a historical geographer. Hugill says that “the primary idea informing this book is that human history, at least for the last 500 years, has been subject to some interesting regularities and that these regularities have been somewhat controlled by the technologies that involve the movement of ideas, goods, people, and information.” This “book stands as a rather elaborate footnote” to Hugill’s earlier work, World Trade since 1431: Geography, Technology, and Capitalism (1993). Hugill begins in 1844 with the appearance of the “first user friendly” telegraph, and his work ends in 1945 when the United States assumed hegemony over Great Britain in communication. A concluding chapter (no. 8) deals with developments from 1945 to 1971, and considers innovations in telecommunications such as submarine telephony beginning in 1956, and satellite communication, which gave Americans dominance. The author attempts to explain how and why the U.S. surpassed Britain, and why after World War I that even though America assumed military superiority, it still lagged behind the British in communications. The years from 1918 to 1945 were a transition period. “This work focuses on the switch from British to American leadership and contributes to discussions about two key geostrategic and geopolitical questions: Why did Germany lose the two-phase war of transition from 1914 to 1945, and why was the transition from British to American hegemony so slow?” While Hugill says that he recognizes the significance of one-way communication (e.g., movies), he is concerned primarily in this book with two-way communication. “Four telecommunications technologies are clearly important,” Hugill writes: “telegraphy, telephony, radio, and radar.” He deals with each in turn, and in the process also discussions such other communications - related topics as air power, television, and satellites. This work is informed by theoretical perspectives set out in the opening chapter. It is “rooted in the two macrotheoretical perspectives of world-systems and long waves,” the author explains. With regard to long-wave theory, Hugill builds on the work of Brian Berry, whose book Long-Wave Rhythms in Economic Development and Political Behavior appear in 1991, and Peter Hall and Paschal Preston’s The Carrier Wave (1988). Hugill also relates is research to Harold A. Innis’s theories set out in Empire and Communication (1950), and The Bias of Communication (1951). AU - Hugill, Peter J. CY - Baltimore DA - 1999 KW - R & D corporations post office nationalism corporations Kondratieff, Nikolai corporations research and development war cultural imperialism materials materials war non-USA radio Great Britain +nationalism and communication +military communication +telegraph telegraph submarine telegraph, transatlantic telegraph, transpacific imperialism Great Britain +telephones telephones, and satellites telephones, and transatlantic +aeronautics and space communication +television television, and satellites World War I World War II air power Bell Telephone Company cable, coaxial geopolitics wireless communication, and global global communication Kondratieff waves long-wave theory Innis, Harold Berry, Brian Hall, Peter Preston, Paschal radar Marconi Company Great Britain, and postal system RCA telecommunications wireless communication radio, and shortwave Telstar telecommunications, and satellites vacuum tubes telegraph, wireless Kondratieff cycles cable wireless telegraphy +radio Bell Laboratories cable, Atlantic cable, transatlantic geography Marconi, Guglielmo satellites military, and new media nationalism, and new media +postal service LB - 2260 PB - The Johns Hopkins University Press PY - 1999 ST - Global Communications since 1844: Geopolitics and Technology TI - Global Communications since 1844: Geopolitics and Technology ID - 1619 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book seeks to reexamine what the recording industry had become by the mid-1990s as it entered "a post industrial phase." The author's primary focus is economic because he believes the most important changes in the industry have been economic. Technology, too, has had a central place in the industry's development. Hull writes that "there is no particular Marxist or other critique of the industry. With due respect to those who prefer a cultural or social perspective, there are other publications which do that and such a perspective is not particularly helpful in understanding how and why the industry functions the way it does. Economics is the key to the importance of the recording industry as an entertainment medium of mass communication. Economics is the key to understanding how the three income streams in the industry (the sale of recordings, music publishing, and live appearances) have dominated by the recording interests and how those streams are interrelated. Therefore, the primary perspective here is economic. The three parts of the book examine 1) the industry overall, its relation to other media and its three primary parts, or income streams; 2) the production and marketing functions in detail, including record retailing; 3) the legal structures of copyright law that are so critical to the recording industry, as well as several related laws of significance." Several themes run through these pages: 1) the dominant factor in the music business is the recording industry. 2) New technology has given more people the ability to make recordings and earn money from them, and also have made music more accessible to a larger number of people. 3) Although the industry is concentrated in a half dozen large multinational firms, diversity of music is increasing and a broader public is being served than ever before. 4) Finally, lrge-scale global economic considerations fuels changes in the industry. AU - Hull, Geoffrey P. CY - Boston DA - 1998 KW - discs, compact advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations propaganda advertising public relations print +sound recording law compact discs (CDs) CDs sound recording, and music recording piracy music +sound recording sound recording, and music industry music industry, and corporate structure (1990s) sound recording, and albums compact discs (CDs) copyright, and recording industry intellectual property +radio sound recording, and music videos music videos piracy, and recording industry sound recording, and piracy print media, and sound recording recording studios SoundScan, and recording industry copyright print media print culture public relations, and recording industry advertising, and recording industry advertising LB - 3920 PB - Allyn and Bacon PY - 1998 ST - The Recording Industry TI - The Recording Industry ID - 1780 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The book, published in 1967, is good on motion pictures censorship worldwide. It provides an international context against which to understand developments in the United States where the system of self regulation under the motion picture industry's Production Code had, by 1967, collapsed. AU - Hunnings, Neville March CY - London DA - 1967 KW - motion pictures context law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA context, and legal censorship, foreign motion pictures, and foreign censorship motion pictures, and British censorship, new LB - 13160 PB - George Allen & Unwin, Ltd PY - 1967 ST - Film Censors and the Law TI - Film Censors and the Law ID - 490 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book provides a history of moral regulation in the United States and Great Britain from the late seventeenth century to the late twentieth century. Hunt maintains that often the most powerful force for moral regulation comes from the middle class rather than from those who hold government power. He examines the work of vice societies and such opponents of vice as Anthony Comstock. Chapters 3 and 4 deal with changing dynamics of moral regulation in Great Britain and the United States during the late-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries as emphasis shifted from sexual purity to social hygiene. Chapter 5 is entitled "Sexual Purity, Maternal Feminism and Class in Late Victorian Britiain, and the concluding chapter is "Retradtionalising Moral Regulation: Making Sense of Contemporary Moral Politics." Conceptually, Hunt draws on such writers as Michel Foucault. AU - Hunt, Alan CY - Cambridge, Eng. DA - 1999 KW - values law censorship and ratings religion sexuality children and media religion women pornography women, and pornography pornography, and women feminism, and pornography feminism pornography, and feminism Great Britain censorship, and Great Britain non-USA Great Britain, and censorship vice societies Society for Reformation of Manners children and media censorship, and children children, and censorship Comstock, Anthony censorship, and print media censorship, and non-print media self-regulation censorship, and self-regulation Foucault, Michel children censorship LB - 30570 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1999 ST - Governing Morals: A Social History of Moral Regulation TI - Governing Morals: A Social History of Moral Regulation ID - 2820 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - . “At no time in history has so large a proportion of humanity rated love so highly, thought about it so much, or displayed such an insatiable appetite for word about it,” wrote Hunt in 1959. It was “a safe guess that never before have so many of the plays, novels, and stories of an era centered about, or at least included, themes of love and sex. And this is true not only of fiction. The news media are crammed with reports of the romances, marriages, infidelities, and quarrels of the famous; in the love affairs of the celebrities, millions of the obscure live out their own dreams.” Hunt made only slight connection between these attitudes and modern media. During the 1950s, erotic materials, either in magazines, home movies and other forms of recording, and even on television became much more readily available in people’s homes. AU - Hunt, Morton M. CY - New York DA - 1959 KW -, sexuality sexuality, and news media news and journalism context home and new media sexuality, and home home, and sexuality television television, and sexuality sexuality, and television values home LB - 32100 PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 1959 ST - The Natural History of Love TI - The Natural History of Love ID - 2880 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Hunter wrote extensively on the history of papermaking. Many of his earlier books were published on expensive, handmade paper. This informative volume draws material from many of Hunter’s earlier works and was published in commercially affordable format. The book has more than 160 illustration, a bibliography that divides works on into three categories: Oriental, Occidental, and Watermarks. It also has a lengthy “Chronology of Paper and Allied Subjects” (311-74), covering the years from 2700 B.C. to 1942. AU - Hunter, Dard CY - New York DA - 1943 KW - illustrations Asia paper materials papermaking timelines, and papermaking references, statistics, timelines, maps China China, and papermaking bibliographies, and papermaking printing printing, block Egypt Egypt, and block printing India India, and papermaking non-USA Japan Japan, and papermaking Korea Korea, and papermaking papyrus paper, and papermaking machines parchment patents, and papermaking inventions, and papermaking paper, and watermarks illustrations paper, and wood pulp bibliographies inventions patents print timelines LB - 28650 PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 1943 ST - Papermaking: The History and Technique of an Ancient Craft TI - Papermaking: The History and Technique of an Ancient Craft ID - 1058 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Hunter, James Davison CY - New York DA - 1991 KW - values religion censorship and ratings sexuality violence children and media law books, periodicals, newspapers democracy freedom women motion pictures television children LB - 30580 PB - Basic Books PY - 1991 ST - Culture Wars: The Struggle to Define America TI - Culture Wars: The Struggle to Define America ID - 2819 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Portrait of a Decade chronicles the history of the Farm Security Administration photography project from its inception in 1935 to its demise in 1943. Although Hurley devotes a large portion of the book to the photographers' biographies, their field work, and the mounting bureaucracy playging the project, he emphasizes that "the focus is on the personality of Roy Stryker." (viii) He begins his study by examining Stryker's formative years as a youth in Colorado, and later as a student at Columbia University under the tutelage of economics professor Rexford Guy Tugwell. When Tugwell moved to Washington and created the Historical Section -- Photographic as part of the Resettlement Administration's Information Division, he hired Stryker to direct the unit. Hurley contends that although Stryker was not a photographer, he was an ardent proponent in using photography as a tool to educate the public about rural poverty, and hired photographers Walker Evans, Dorothea Lange, and Arthur Rothstein, among others, to document the widespread suffering brought on by the Great Depression. After the Resettlement Administration was transferred into the Department of Agriculture and renamed the Farm Security Administration, Hurley notes that Stryker instructed his photographers to focus on the success of the New Deal relief programs, resulting in photographs that depicted a more positive image of rural America. Hurley's last two chapters address the use of FSA photographs in the print media, Stryker's dispute with Congress regarding the validity of the photography project during the early years of World War II, and his resignation from government work in 1943. --Michele Kroll AU - Hurley, F. Jack CY - Baton Rouge DA - 1972 KW - reform Roosevelt, Franklin D. photography Kroll, Michele +photography and visual communication photography, documentary photography, and New Deal Roosevelt, Franklin, and photography presidents, and new media Farm Security Administration, and photography photography, and Farm Security Administration Stryker, Roy photography, and reform reform, and photography Roosevelt, Franklin administration photography, and magazines magazines, and photography Lange, Dorothea Rothstein, Arthur Evans, Walker Tugwell, Rexford G. magazines LB - 28930 PB - Louisiana State University Press PY - 1972 ST - Portrait of a Decade: Roy Stryker and the Development of Documentary Photography in the Thirties TI - Portrait of a Decade: Roy Stryker and the Development of Documentary Photography in the Thirties ID - 2642 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Huston discuss his career in motion pictures, including his movie Reflections in a Golden Eye, about a homosexual army officer starring Marlon Brando and Elizabeth Taylor. Huston talks about how he used a special coloring technique in filming this movie to give the picture a golden tint. AU - Huston, John CY - New York DA - 1980 KW - motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality , motion pictures motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and John Huston motion pictures, and homosexuality Reflections in a Golden Eye (1967) color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures LB - 32650 PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 1980 ST - An Open Book TI - An Open Book ID - 2869 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Hutchinson, Thomas H. CY - New York DA - 1946 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins LB - 10730 PB - Hastings House PY - 1946 ST - Here is Television: Your Window on the World TI - Here is Television: Your Window on the World ID - 2436 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work covers the history of the poster in Europe and America. It devotes two early chapters to posters in France from 1860-1900 and in Britain and the U.S. during the same period. Then comes “The New Century, 1900-1913,” and “The First World War 1914-1919.” There follows a chapter on the 1920s, one on “The vintage[sic] Thirties in Europe,” one on “Propaganda, 1939-1946,” and “The Poster International 1947-1967” (short sections are given to individual countries). The final chapter deals with “New Trends.” The virtue of this work is that it discusses many artists and gives the reader an idea of what happened not only in the United States but in Europe. Its drawback stems from its broad coverage -- nothing much is covered in depth. AU - Hutchison, Harold F. CY - New York DA - 1968 KW - posters, late 19th century photography public relations advertising communism war non-USA World War II World War I propaganda posters +photography and visual communication posters, and history of posters, and France (late 19th century) posters, and Great Britain posters, and United States posters, and Europe (1930s) propaganda, and posters posters, international World War I, and posters World War II, and posters posters, and propaganda posters, and Europe posters, and France Europe Great Britain France Europe, and posters Great Britain, and posters France, and posters posters, and communism communism, and posters posters, and United States advertising and public relations LB - 1610 PB - Viking Press, A Studio Book PY - 1968 ST - The Poster: an illustrated history from 1860 [sic] TI - The Poster: an illustrated history from 1860 [sic] ID - 1557 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Huxley writes abou the influence of "mescalin, the active principle of peyote" on perception. Among the influences were the ways in which one perceives colors. "The change which actually took place in that world was in no sense revolutionary. Half an hour after swallowing the drug I became aware of a slow dance of golden lights. A little later there were sumptuous red surfaces swelling and expanding from bright nodes of energy that vibrated with a continuously changing, patterned life. At another time the closing of my eyes revealed a complex of gray structures, within which pale bluish spheres kept emerging into intense solidity and, having emerged, would slide noiselessly upwards, out of sight. But at no time were there faces or forms of men or animals. I saw no landscapes, no enormous spaces, no magical growth and metamorphosis of buildings, nothing remotely like a drama or parable. The other world to which mescalin admitted me was not the world of visions; it existed out there, in what I could see with my eyes open. The great change was in the realm of objective fact. What had happened to my subjective universe was relatively unimportant. "I took my pill at eleven. An hour and a half later, I was sitting in my study, looking intently at a small glass vase. The vase contained only three flowers -- a full - 16/17 blown Belle of Portugal rose, shell pink with a hint at every petal's base of a hotter, flamier hue; a large magenta and cream-colored carnation; and, pale purple at the end of its broken stalk, the bold heraldic blossom of an iris. Fortuitous and provisional, the little nosegay broke all the rules of traditional good taste. At breakfast that morning I had been struck by the lively dissonance of its colors. But that was no longer the point. I was not looking now at an unusual flower arrangement. I was seeing what Adam had seen on the morning of his creation -- the miracle, moment by moment, of naked existence." (16-17) Huxley continues: "Visual impressions are greatly intensified and the eye recovers some of the perceptual innocence of childhood, when the sensum was not immediately and automatically subordinated to the concept. Interest in space is diminished and interest in time falls almost to zero," he writes. (25) "Mescaline raises all colors to a higher power and makes the percipient aware of innumerable fine shades of difference, to which, at ordinary times, he is completely blind. It would seem that, for Mind at Large, the so-called secondary characters of things are primary." (27) Huxley believed that "humanity at large will ever be able to dispense with Artificial Paradises seems very unlikley. Most men and women lead lives at the worst so painful, at the best so monotonous, poor and limited that the urge to escape, the longing to transcend themselves if only for a few moments, is and has always been on of the principal appetites of the soul. Art and religion, carnivas and saturnalia, dancing and listening to oratory -- all these have served, in H. G. Wells's phrase, as Doors in the Wall. And for private, for everyday use there have always been chemical intoxicants...." (62) AU - Huxley, Aldous CY - New York DA - 1954 KW - censorship avant garde ref, secondary context art color freedom color, and freedom color, and 1960s art, and color color, and art avant garde, and color color, and avant garde censorship, and color color, and censorship censorship and ratings color, and prejudice against sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, context context, and color color, and 1960s color, and sensation color, and drug culture values values, and color color, and values media effects color, and media effects media effects, and color quotations quotations, and color as artificial paradise Huxley, Aldous metaphors metaphors, and articial paradise metaphors, and Doors in the Wall ref, book LB - 39760 PB - Harper & Brothers PY - 1954 ST - The Doors of Perception TI - The Doors of Perception ID - 4074 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book contains a number of interesting observations. For example, Iles compares the flame to electricity: "Flame, the old time servant, is individual; electricity, its successor and heir, is collective. Flame sits upon the hearth and draws a family together; electricity, welling from a public source, may bind into a unit all the families of a vast city, because it makes the benefit of each the interest of all." (259) AU - Iles, George CY - New York DA - 1900 KW - motion pictures electricity cameras photography color color, and photography photography, and color electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity electricity, and community community, and electricity community LB - 41620 PB - Doubleday and McClure PY - 1900 ST - Flame, Electricity and the Camera: Man's Progress from the First Kindling of Fire to the Wireless Telegraph and the Photography of Color TI - Flame, Electricity and the Camera: Man's Progress from the First Kindling of Fire to the Wireless Telegraph and the Photography of Color ID - 4260 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This Sourcebook is divided into five sections and published in three volumes. Volume I: Part 1 -- Historical Documents. Arranged in reverse chronological order. Part 2 -- Vision Statements and Position Papers. In alphabetical order by source. Part 3 -- Program and Project Descriptions. Alphabetically by source. Volume II: Part 4 -- Reports. Alphabetically by source. Volume III: Part 5 -- Pending Legislation. By bill number. This version of the Sourcebook, the first to be published in three volumes, “is designed to document policy development for information infrastructure and to serve as a compact reference for planners and policymakers in all sectors.” Its creators hope that the sourcebook will continue to elicit documents that might have been missed. AU - Information Infrastructure Project, John F. Kennedy School of Government CY - [Cambridge, MA] DA - 1994 KW - nationalism References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps labor office office, and new media office infrastructure information technology Information Age +nationalism and communication reference works, instrastructure infrastructure Information Infrastructure Project (Harvard) infrastructure, and information information technology, and infrastructure reference works LB - 8700 PB - Information Infrastructure Project, ... John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University PY - 1994 ST - Information Infrastructure Sourcebook: Version 4.0 (3 Volumes) TI - Information Infrastructure Sourcebook: Version 4.0 (3 Volumes) ID - 2239 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Inglis, Andrew F. CY - Boston DA - 1990 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins LB - 10740 PB - Focal Press PY - 1990 ST - Behind the Tube: A History of Broadcasting Technology and Business TI - Behind the Tube: A History of Broadcasting Technology and Business ID - 2437 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book was a special report from the Commission on Freedom of the Press. Inglis begins by saying that "the movies are entering a new phase in their development as a mature organ of mass communication." She then examines past efforts to regulate film technology, and the self-regulation that the movie industry adopted. The book ends with recommendations for making film socially and artistically responsible, and more central to national and international life. Following this work, a series of technological, legal, and leadership changes helped to open the screen to a wider range of entertainment. AU - Inglis, Ruth A. CY - Chicago DA - 1947 KW - self-regulation Production Code PCA Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) First Amendment freedom law values religion law censorship and ratings regulation Production Code (1930) +motion pictures +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship freedom of the press motion pictures, and freedom regulation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and self-regulation Production Code Administration (PCA) Hays, Will H. Johnston, Eric Breen, Joseph censorship Hutchins Commission Commission on Freedom of the Press motion pictures, and First Amendment First Amendment, and motion pictures motion pictures, and freedom LB - 6260 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1947 ST - Freedom of the Movies: A Report on Self-Regulation from The Commission on Freedom of the Press TI - Freedom of the Movies: A Report on Self-Regulation from The Commission on Freedom of the Press ID - 2009 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book contains the first three chapters of a large History of Communication that Innis wrote before his death in 1951. Marshall McLuhan notes in his Foreword to the 1972 edition of this book that Innis "saw media, old and new, not as mere vertices at which to direct his point of view, but as living vortices of power creating hidden environments that act abrasively and destructively on older forms of culture." Innis devotes chapters to Egypt, Babylonia, “The Oral Tradition and Greek Civilization,” and to “The Written Tradition and the Roman Empire.” The final two chapters treat “Parchment and Paper,” and “Paper and the Printing Press.” -SV Innis believed that communication “occupies a vital place” in the history of civilization and the media of communication can be classified along two dimensions – time and space. The more “permanent” the medium the greater the stability across time, the less permanent but more easily transported allow for greater spread of communication across space. “Media that emphasize time are those that are durable in character, such as parchments, clay and stone. The heavy materials are suited to the development of architecture and sculpture. Media that emphasize space are apt to be less durable and light in character, such as papyrus and paper. The latter are suited to wide areas in administration and trade. The conquest of Egypt by Rome gave access to supplies of papyrus, which became the basis of a large administrative empire. Materials that emphasize time favour decentralization and hierarchical types of institutions, while those that emphasize space favour centralization and systems of government less hierarchical in character. Large-scale political organizations such as empires must be considered from the standpoint of two dimensions, those of space and time, and persist by overcoming the bias of media which overemphasize either dimension. They have tended to flourish under conditions in which a civilization reflects the influence of more than one medium and in which the bias of one medium toward decentralization is offset by the bias of another medium toward centralization.” --Mark Tremayne AU - Innis, Harold A. CY - Oxford DA - 1950, 1972 KW - R & D nationalism time and timekeeping time print preservation materials research and development war cultural imperialism history, and new media materials news and journalism war non-USA history geography general studies +nationalism and communication time space (spatial) imperialism Innis, Harold Tremayne, Mark cultural imperialism Egypt Rome Babylonia printing presses printing press paper parchment Greece McLuhan, Marshall +military communication nationalism, and new media military, and new media, history, break with history, and printing history, and newspapers newspapers, and history printing printing, and history newspapers, history materials newspapers news LB - 9850 PB - Clarendon Press PY - 1950 ST - Empire and Communication TI - Empire and Communication ID - 2352 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Marshall McLuhan wrote the Introduction to the 1964 edition of this work. McLuhan notes Innis’s influence in his own The Gutenberg Galaxy (1962). Of Innis’s work, McLuhan says that “each sentence is a compressed monograph.” The Bias of Communication is a collection of revised papers that had been published elsewhere. The volume begins with “Minerva’s Owl,” which was Innis’s presidential address to the Royal Society of Canada in 1947. There follows “The Bias of Communication,” a paper originally presented at the University of Michigan in April, 1949, and “A Plea for Time,” which was delivered at the University of New Brunswick in 1950. Then “The Problem of Space,” and “Industrialism and Cultural Values,” the latter being a paper read at the 1950 annual meeting of the American Economic Association in Chicago. “Technology and Public Opinion in the United States” was given at the University of Michigan in April, 1949. Finally, “‘A Critical Review’” contains extracts from a paper given at the Conference of Commonwealth Universities in Oxford in July, 1948. Two appendices follow: D. Q. Innis’s “A Note of Communication and Electromagnetic Resources in North America,” and “Adult Education and Universities.” AU - Innis, Harold A. CY - Toronto DA - 1951, 1964 KW - technology advertising, and public relations time and timekeeping time propaganda public relations print communication revolution journalism timekeeping, and clocks news and journalism non-USA time space (spatial) technology and society communication revolution printing +books, periodicals, newspapers Catholic Church +telegraph writing Pulitzer, Joseph Egypt Greece Germany Great Britain calendars timekeeping Byzantine Empire Bible advertising Industrial Revolution news newspapers McLuhan, Marshall values LB - 11700 PB - University of Toronto Press PY - 1951 ST - The Bias of Communication TI - The Bias of Communication ID - 2521 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work was the last book written by the Canadian political economist, Harold A. Innis. It was originally published in 1952 by the University of Toronto Press. In this, the 2004 edition, James W. Carey contributes an Introduction. Innis covers the following topics: 1) The strategy of culture; 2) Military implications of the American constitution; 3) Roman law and the British Empire; 4) The Press, a neglected factor in the economic history of the twentieth century; and 5) Great Britain, the United States, and Canada. AU - Innis, Harold A. CY - Lanham, MD DA - 2004 KW - nationalism time and timekeeping writing time history and new media preservation power history information storage history, and new media non-USA history Innis, Harold McLuhan, Marshall political economy present mindedness history, break with communication, and empire nationalism and communication Innis, Harold, and nationalism nationalism, and Harold Innis time space (spatial) power, and temporal bias power, and spactial bias alphabet, and technology writing, and technology alphabet history, and present mindedness Wiener, Norbert military communication news and journalism Great Britain Canada LB - 34590 OP - 1952 PB - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. PY - 2004 ST - Changing Concepts of Time TI - Changing Concepts of Time ID - 3098 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Innis delivered this 48-page monograph as the Stamp Memorial Lecture at the University of London. Although he was concerned primarily with the newspaper press, he does discuss other media (e.g., radio, cinema, the use of electricity). Innis concentrated “on the period in which industrialization of the means of communication has become dominant through the manufacture of newsprint from wood and through the manufacture of the newspaper by the linotype and the fast press.” He also considers the increased speed brought to communication by electricity. He discussed the dramatic decline in the cost of newsprint during the last quarter of the nineteenth century. Other changes that transformed newspapers included faster presses, the introduction of the linotype in 1886, and methods of reproducing illustrations -- “zinco and the half tone facilitated reproduction of photographs after 1880.” During the early 1890s, the multi-color rotary press with pictures was introduced, and by 1900 almost all American daily newspapers were illustrated. Newspapers, fearing increased costs of newsprint, began to organize in the late 1890s, and with their control of publicity were able reduce or abolish tariffs on newsprint and mechanical pulp from Canada. With the increased production of low-priced newsprint, the per capita consumption of paper in the United States increased from 25 pounds in 1909, to 41 pound in 1920, to 59 pounds in 1930. Newspaper circulation increased substantially. With the appearance of radio as a competitor for advertising, newspaper turned increasingly to advertising for revenue. Innis offered several disparaging observations about journalism and the news. For example, according to Escott, the journalist “increasingly seems to think that his duty to his paper requires the discovery of a new crisis or a new era.” The modern press, Innis believed, emphasized crisis and discontinuity, and much of the responsibility for this characteristic of news (especially after 1900) fell to the influence of advertising. Running parallel to this development was the increased use of illustrations and photographs (particularly during World War I). Cinema, “which at its central roots sprang from the methods of discontinuity,” also contributed to a sense of disjointedness. Publishers appealed more and more to the lowest common denominator with tabloids, gossip and stories about movies stars, and with increased use of feature stories. Comics became the “lifeblood of the entire syndicate business.” The influence of editorial writers declined. Coverage of foreign news was poor. While in Europe in the early twentieth century, the book still dominated culture, in the United States the situation was different. “By the newspaper, democracy had completely expelled the book from the normal life of the people.” Innis commented on radio. No doubt thinking of Franklin D. Roosevelt, he said that radio tended to favor the individual candidate over the party or group in politics. He believe that the introduction of radio during the 1920s, combined with expansion and innovation in the press, made public opinion unstable. Innis was dubious about the impact of new communication technology on public opinion. “Technological advance in communication implies a narrowing of the range from which material is distributed and a widening of the range of reception in which large numbers receive, but are unable to make, any direct response. Those on the receiving end of material from a mechanized central system are precluded from participation in healthy, vigorous, and vital discussion. Instability of public opinion which follows the introduction of new inventions in communication designed to reach large numbers of people is exploited by those in control of the inventions.” The emphasis on “simplicity,” he argued, also make governing more complex. In general, the “disequilibrium created by the lumpy character of technological change in communication strikes at the heart of the economic system and has profound implications for the study of business disturbance.” Innis argued here (and elsewhere in his private papers) that “rapid extensions of communication facilities” led to greater instability and greater “savagery” in war. In this lecture, he indicates that he drew on Sir Liddell Hart for this insight. Innis concluded by contending that “freedom of the press as guaranteed by the Bill of Rights in the United States has become the great bulwark of monopolies of time.” AU - Innis, H. A. [Harold Adams] CY - London DA - [1952] KW - technology nationalism photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations public opinion print printing preservation +nationalism and communication motion pictures communication revolution linotype journalism news and journalism history, and new media materials community democracy freedom news and journalism non-USA newspapers news history general studies press radio +motion pictures and popular culture +electricity linotype machines newspapers, and illustrations newspapers, and photography newspapers color, and multi-color rotary press Canada paper newsprint political economy Bill of Rights freedom of the press Europe comic books democracy and media communication revolution technology and society Zinco half tones history, and newspapers color +photography and visual communication paper, and wood pulp printing press, and electricity electricity, and printing press news, and electricity electricity, and news advertising, and newspapers newspapers, and advertising news, and crises news, and advertising journalism, and crises news, and motion pictures motion pictures, and discontinuity democracy, and new media comic books nationalism, and radio radio, and nationalism public opinion, and new media Hart, Lindell Innis, Harold, and Lindell Hart journalism Innis, Harold advertising materials LB - 670 PB - The Athlone Press ST - The Press: A Neglected Factor in the Economic History of the Twentieth Century TI - The Press: A Neglected Factor in the Economic History of the Twentieth Century ID - 1463 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume is an outgrowth of the Club of Rome’s Tokyo Conference in October 1982. Pages 1-29 offer a brief history of communication and civilization from the development of language through solid state technology and Claude Shannon’s information theory. Koji Kobayashi, Chairman of Nippon Electric Company, wrote in the Foreword: “The Club of Rome, thrust into the limelight in 1972 by its first report, The Limits of Growth, has become well-known as an international group studying the future of mankind and the shape of modern civilization. Although the club holds meetings annually, it was not until the 1979 Berlin Conference that microelectronics was put on the agenda. As one with a long career in the electronics industry, I was a little taken aback by the idea that progress in my field might create problems of global proportions for mankind. After listening to the discussions at the conference my dismay was intensified: Most of the participants were pessimistic about the microelectronic future, believing it would create unemployment and deprive people of purposeful lives.” During the 1960s, Kobaysahi became interested in the future of knowledge and information industries. He concluded that developments in electronics “would bring about an integration of computers and communications and that information would become as important a resource for human civilization as material or energy resources.” Hiroshi Inose, Professor of Engineering at the University of Tokyo, and Dr. John R. Pierce, Professor of Engineering Emeritus of the California Institute of Technology, presented the results of the Tokyo Conference which considered the current and future cultural and social ramifications of information technologies. Discussions were of a trilateral nature. The Americans and the Japanese were enthusiastic about microelectronics and other new information technology. The Europeans were relatively late getting into these areas and skeptical about their benefits. The developing nations lacked an industrial base but wanted the industrialized nations to transfer their technology. AU - Inose, Hiroshi and John R. Pierce CY - New York DA - 1984 KW - computers information theory communication revolution labor +future and science fiction Third World non-USA Information Age general studies Club of Rome Shannon, Claude Nippon Electric Company electronic media information processing information age microelectronics communication revolution Japan Europe future labor, and microelectronics +computers and the Internet Third World, and new media LB - 680 N1 - See also: office PB - W. H. Freeman and Company PY - 1984 ST - Information Technology and Civilization TI - Information Technology and Civilization ID - 1464 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - “The deepest and truest secrets of color effect are … invisible even to the eye, and are beheld by the heart alone,” wrote this influential theorist in the Bauhaus school in Weimar, Germany. “The essential eludes conceptual formulation.” AU - Itten, Johannes (trans. by Ernest van Haagen) CY - New York DA - 1961, 1973 KW - censorship avant garde context art , color freedom color, and freedom color, and 1960s art, and color color, and art avant garde, and color color, and avant garde censorship, and color color, and censorship censorship and ratings color, and prejudice against sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, context context, and color color, and 1960s color, and sensations color, and light color, and technology color, and language color, and communication color, and psychology color, and Bauhaus School Bauhaus School, and color Bauhaus LB - 32860 PB - Van Nostrand Reinhold Company PY - 1961 ST - The Art of Color: The Subjective Experience and Objective Rationale of Color TI - The Art of Color: The Subjective Experience and Objective Rationale of Color ID - 2923 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The text of this book runs 185 pages. Every other page has a picture of a print (black and white only) and then a page discussing that print. This work complements Ivins’ earlier book on Prints and Visual Communication. AU - Ivins, William M., Jr. CY - New York DA - 1967 KW - photography non-USA +photography and visual communication prints LB - 1620 PB - Da Capo Press PY - 1967 ST - Notes on Prints TI - Notes on Prints ID - 1558 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This seminal book is a thoughtful work that encourages readers to think about the importance of visual communication in new ways. Ivins argues that “the pervasion of ways of making printed pictures -- in other words of making exactly repeatable pictorial statements” in the first half of the fifteenth century was a development of profound historical importance, rivaling (and perhaps surpassing) Gutenberg’s invention of printing with movable metal type in significance. Prints added a visual component to communication and that they were exactly the same provided a powerful new way of transmitting knowledge. Before, when one had to rely primarily on words, descriptions of art and nature were often highly imprecise. But making prints themselves was also imprecise. Often the engraver did not have first-hand experience with the object he represented. His rendering was at best an approximation which did not reveal the subtleties of a work of art or of nature. “Thus whenever we read a book, especially about art, archaeology, or aesthetic theory, written prior to about [sic] the beginning of the first world war, it is well to ask ourselves to what extent the writer had both a dependable memory and a first hand acquaintance with the objects he referred to, to what extent he knew them through representations, and what sort of reproductions he depended on.” All this changed with photograph. “With the nineteenth century we come to a period in which the printed picture may be said to have come of age....The most important single development in the century was the discovery and exploitation of photography and photographic process....” Ivins said that “There have been many revolutions in thought and philosophy, in science and religion, but I believe that never in the history of men has there been a more complete revolution than that which has taken place since the middle of the nineteenth century in seeing and visual recording. Photographs give us visual evidence about things that no man has ever seen or ever will see directly. A photograph is today accepted as proof of the existence of things and shapes that never would have been believed on the evidence of a hand-made picture.... Photography, although the first tentative steps towards it were taken in the eighteenth century, did not play any important role until the middle of the [nineteenth] century, after which it brought a catastrophic revolution, the extent of which is not even today fully recognized.” Continuing, Ivins said “I have an idea that a very good argument could be put up for the claim that it is through photography that art and science have had their most striking effect upon the thought of the average man of today.” Not only has photography “vastly extended the gamut of our visual knowledge, but through its reproduction in the printing press, it has effected a very complete revolution in the ways we use our eyes and, especially, in the kinds of things our minds permit our eyes to tell us.... The photograph in its way did as much for the study of art as the microscope had done for the study of biology.” Estelle Jussim, in Visual Communication and the Graphic Arts ( 1974), attempted to revise Ivins's interpretation, particularly regarding the ability of photographs to capture reality without bias. Jussim also suggested that a different vocabulary would make Ivins’s thesis more appropriate. AU - Ivins, William M., Jr. CY - Cambridge DA - 1953 KW - wood engraving photography seeing at a distance print preservation modernism communication revolution history, and new media materials non-USA history visual communication printing printing press photography and visual communication iconography icons history communication revolution visual communication, and new way of seeing Gutenberg, Johann printing press printing block printing iconography icons history, break with woodcuts art museums photography and visual communication, and art photography and visual communication, and science visual communication, and science engraving photography and visual communication, and reality Jussim, Estelle books, periodicals, newspapers new way of seeing prints visual communication materials LB - 1630 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1953 ST - Prints and Visual Communication TI - Prints and Visual Communication ID - 1559 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book, which has about 150 illustrations, discusses the evolution of the use of pictures in newspapers in Great Britain and Europe prior to the widespread us of photographs. The work has ten chapters. Chapter 8 deals with the Illustrated London News and Chapter 9 discusses how the illustrated newspaper was produced prior to 1885. Chapter 10 covers artists who helped establish the illustrated press and the rise of pictorial journalism in Venice, Germany, and the Low Countries. The work ends (362-63) with a list of cities worldwide that have illustrated newspaper in 1885. Six publications are listed for New York City (Harper's Weekly, Harper's Bazaar, Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, Spirit of the Times, The Daily Graphic, and Illustrirte Zeitung (printed in German). In Washington, D.C. there was the Illustrated Washington Chronicle. Several other cities in Europe, Australia, Canada, and South America are listed. AU - Jackson, Mason CY - London DA - 1885 KW - wood engraving journalism illustrations ref, secondary news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving critics critics, and pictorial journalism newspapers, and illustrations illustrations, and newspapers newspapers, and artists art, and newspapers words vs. images images vs. words critics, and illustrated newspapers critics newspaper illustrations, origins Great Britain non-USA Great Britain, and illustrated newspapers non-USA, and illustrated newspapers Illustrated London News illustrations illustrations, and newspapers ref, book art magazines photography LB - 39440 PB - Hurst and Blackett, Publishers PY - 1885 ST - The Pictorial Press: Its Origin and Progress TI - The Pictorial Press: Its Origin and Progress ID - 4042 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Contrary to Gregory Black, Jacobs argues that Will Hays was "actively" concerned over the bad publicity generated by the Payne Fund Studies (page 107). Jacobs' work not only give an account of this episode but is also informative about women in motion pictures between 1928 and 1942, and the ways in which movie censors in the Production Code Administration dealt with gender issues. AU - Jacobs, Lea CY - Madison DA - 1991 KW - women, and new media women Payne Fund Studies law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship women, and motion pictures censorship, and women motion pictures, and women Breen, Joseph, and women Hays, Will H., and women Hays, Will H., and public relations Payne Fund Studies, and Will Hays Hays, Will H., and Payne Fund studies censorship, and state censorship, and self-regulation, Hays, Will H. Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. LB - 20320 PB - University of Wisconsin Press PY - 1991 ST - The Wages of Sin: Censorshop and the Fallen Woman Film, 1928-1942 TI - The Wages of Sin: Censorshop and the Fallen Woman Film, 1928-1942 ID - 850 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work, published in 1970, is a collection of essays by directors and other film makers discussing such topics as the use of cameras, color, and sound. As Stanley J. Solomon writes in his piece, "Modern Uses of the Moving Camera," "what is happening is not merely a change in technique but an essential transformation in the approach to visual expression." (92) AU - Jacobs, Lewis (selected, arranged, and introduced by) CY - New York DA - 1970 KW - technology corporations corporations , motion pictures color cameras motion pictures, and cameras motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures photography technology and society materials materials cinema motion pictures celluloid non-USA motion pictures and popular culture photography and visual communication cameras, and motion pictures film Technicolor Eastman Kodak Cinemascope celluloid EIsenstein, Sergei technology, and motion pictures motion pictures, and technology color, and Eastman Kodak color, and Technicolor technological determinism media literacy motion pictures, and media literacy media literacy, and motion pictures LB - 36630 PB - Farrar, Straus & Giroux PY - 1970 ST - The Movies as Medium TI - The Movies as Medium ID - 3296 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Long before television became the major medium for marketing to kids, children were both encouraged to be salesmen cultivated as consumers by the advertising industry. Far from being a fully top-down formulation, however, adolescent consumer culture was shaped by its participants and accompanied by dramatic shifts in social and economic contexts. Children both fit and mocked their gendered consumption roles, families dropped Victorian hierarchies in favor of more democratic relationships and consumption patterns and the economic ups and downs of the early twentieth century forced the middle-class public to constantly re-evaluate their spending habits. Evolving ideas on parenting strategies, spending and saving philosophies and advertising’s place in popular culture made for a complex mix of praise and critics of consumer culture from parents, magazines, experts and advertisers and children themselves. --Dale Erlandson AU - Jacobson, Lisa CY - New York DA - 2004 KW - consumerism advertising and public relations education children and media advertising, and schools advertising, and education education, and advertising values values, and advertising advertising, and values children, and advertising advertising, and children education, and values values, and education critics critics, and advertising critics, and education education, and critics advertising, and critics capitalism capitalism, and education education, and capitalism education, and consumerism consumerism, and education children, and consumerism consumerism, and children children, and education education, and children Erlandson, Dale advertising children LB - 32970 PB - Columbia University Press PY - 2004 ST - Raising Consumers: Children and the American Mass Market in the Early Twentieth Century TI - Raising Consumers: Children and the American Mass Market in the Early Twentieth Century ID - 40 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work contains essays on the social impact of the Industrial Revolution. Included in this collection is John G. Cawelti's "America on Display: The World's Fairs of 1876, 1893, 1933." AU - Jaher, Frederic Cople CY - New York DA - 1968 KW - values Industrial Revolution values, and Industrial Revolution World Fairs values LB - 2150 PB - Free Press PY - 1968 ST - The Age of Industrialism in America: Essays in Social Structure and Cultural Values TI - The Age of Industrialism in America: Essays in Social Structure and Cultural Values ID - 303 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - William James quoted a passage from W. R. Clay's The Alternative: A Study in Psychology (1882) regarding the meaning of the term "the specious present." James referred to the specious present as “a saddle-back, with a certain breadth of its own, on which we sit perched, and from which we look in two directions into time.” (609) AU - James, William CY - New York DA - 1890, 1918 KW - space and time time and timekeeping quotations quotations, and specious present time, and psychology specious present ref, secondary LB - 42830 PB - Henry Holt and Company PY - 1890 ST - The Principles of Psychology TI - The Principles of Psychology VL - 2 volumes ID - 2585 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this book, Jean-Noël Jeanneney presents a manifesto in response to Google’s 2004 declaration that the company over a six-year period would “digitize some 15 million printed volumes, or around 4.5 billion pages” (p. 3). His book is, in a sense, a call to arms to European governments and cultural institutions to respond to the “challenge” presented by Google through the development of its Google Book Search (formerly called Google Print for Libraries or Google Library). He raises concerns that this commercial project will prioritize Anglo-Saxon cultural knowledge and works published in English, noting that less than three percent of all works published in the United States each year are translations of material that originally appeared in other languages (p. 8). He writes from the perspective of being the president of the Bibliothèque nationale de France (a position he held from 2002 to 2007). He argues that governments and public institutions, as well as librarians and archivists must play a central role in the development of digital information systems, writing “The Enemy is clear: massive amounts of disorganized information. The progress of civilization can be defined, among other things, as the reduction of the forces of chance in favor of thinking that is enriched by organized knowledge” (p. 70). Furthermore, he posits that how information is organized matters as a reflection of cultural priorities. Jeaneney presents this critique of Google as a challenge for European nations to develop digitization programs and search engines of their own, which, he argues, will better serve the cultural and social needs of Europe because, according to Jeanneney, “there can be no universal library” (p. 5). He sees such a project as serving both an “industrial” and a “cultural” function. He writes that a pan-European digitization project would be “responding to the essential question of how we can make our cultural wealth available, have it intelligently selected and usefully organized into a corpus” (p. 77). --Jill Hopke AU - Jeanneney, Jean-Noël CY - Chicago DA - 2007 KW - reading Google computers Hopke, Jill digital media books, periodicals, newspapers information storage history and new media democracy computers and the Internet democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy digital media, and information storage Google, and digital books information storage, and digital media non-USA non-USA, and digital media Europe, and digital media Europe Europe, and information storage books, and digital media digital media, and books books, and reading digital media, and reading reading, and digital media books, and computers computers, and books books computers history LB - 33200 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 2007 ST - Google and the Myth of Universal Knowledge: A View from Europe TI - Google and the Myth of Universal Knowledge: A View from Europe ID - 75 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Jenkins, Charles Francis CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1929 KW - television, and history of +radio +motion pictures +television television, and origins LB - 6960 PB - Jenkins Laboratories PY - 1929 ST - Radio Movies, Radiovision, Television TI - Radio Movies, Radiovision, Television ID - 2067 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Jenkins here predicts that when “radio service to the eye shall have a comparable development with radio service to the ear, a new era will indeed have been ushered in, when distance will no longer prevent our seeing our friend as easily as we hear him.” Sending moving pictures “is not a visionary, or even a very difficult thing to do; speech and music are carried by radio, and sight can just as easily be so carried.” Jenkins was confident in 1925 that the ability to “control ... light at distant points” would be “the next great advance in electricity,” and this work was devoted to helping researchers and engineers achieve this goal. Jenkins’ Table of Contents is arranged alphabetically by technology and topic: e.g., “Amstutz Machines,” “Color by Radio,” “Lens Disc Machine,” “Sending Machines,” “Talking Machine,” “Zinc Etching,” etc. AU - Jenkins, Charles Francis CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1925 KW - photography motion pictures journalism news and journalism television, and history of +photography and visual communication news news, and transmission of photographs news transmission +television television, and origins +photography and visual communication news, and wire photographs photography, and electricity +radio radio, and photography television, and early technology radio, and early technology +electricity radio vision radio, and television radio, and motion pictures motion pictures, and early technology LB - 6990 PB - Jenkins Laboratories PY - 1925 ST - Vision by Radio, Radio Photographs, Radio Photograms TI - Vision by Radio, Radio Photographs, Radio Photograms ID - 2070 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The subtitle of this work is indicative of the author's focus. It is a discussion of moving pictures and their possibilities written near the birth of this new medium. Jenkins discusses commercial applications beginning on page 45. AU - Jenkins, C. Francis CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1898 KW - television, and history of +motion pictures +television television, and origins Jenkins, Charles Francis LB - 11120 PB - C. Francis Jenkins PY - 1898 ST - Animated Pictures: An Exposition of the Historical Development of Chronophotography, its Present Scientific Applications and Future Possibilities, and of the Methods and Apparatus Employed in the Entertainment of Large Audiences by means of Projecting Lanterns to Give the Appearance of Objects in Motion TI - Animated Pictures: An Exposition of the Historical Development of Chronophotography, its Present Scientific Applications and Future Possibilities, and of the Methods and Apparatus Employed in the Entertainment of Large Audiences by means of Projecting Lanterns to Give the Appearance of Objects in Motion ID - 2473 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. As the editors explain, the "essays in this volume capture something of the complexity and disagreement in current discourse about the politics of cyberspace. Some contributors offer us front-line perspectivs on the impact of emerging technologies on politics, journalism, and civic experience. What happens when we reduce the transaction cost for civic participation, or increase access to information, or expand the arena of free speech? Other contributors place our shifting understanding of citizenship in historical context, suggesting that notions of cyberdemocracy and online community must grow out of older models of civic life. Still others expand this conversation to consider the global flow of information and to test our American conceptions of cyberdemocracy against developments in other parts of the world. How, for example, do new media operate in Castro's Cuba, or in post-apartheid South Africa, or in the context of multicultural debates on the Pacific Rim? Some contributors examine specific sites and practices, describing new forms of journalism or community organizing. Some voices here are deeply skeptical; other are optimistic. For some writers the new technologies endanger our political culture; for others, they promise civic renewal. "Most of the papers on which these chapters are based originated in series of public forums and conferences hosted by MIT from 1998 to 2000 under the title 'Media in Transition.' Funded by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation and organized by the MIT Communications Forum, these events aimed to nourish a broad civic conversation about the political impact of new media technologies. The essays have been revised for this book." (ix-x) Contributors to the volume include Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, Lloyd Morrisett, Benjamin R. Barber, Michael Schudson, Philip E. Agre, Doug Schuler, Amitai Etzioni, Roger Hurwitz, Ira Magaziner, David Winston, Nolan A. Bowie, Adams Clayton Powell III, Cristina Venegas, Andrew Jakubowicz, Ashley Dawson, John Hartley, Christopher Harper, Robert Huesca and Brenda Dervin, Ingrid Volkmer, Ellen Hume, David Sholle, and Peter Walsh. AU - Jenkins, Henry AU - David Thorburn, eds. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 2003 KW - computers democracy news and journalism cyberspace civic journalism digital media journalism, and digital media democracy, and digital media freedom computers and the Internet democracy, and computers democracy, and Internet democracy, and cyberspace globalization non-USA Cuba South Africa race hypertext, and journalism journalism, and hypertext networks networks, and digital media Commons, John Africa citizenship Internet, and citizenship citizenship, and Internet journalism, and citizenship citizenship, and digital media digital media, and citizenship community democracy, and community community, and new media digital divide gatekeeping information v. knowledge regulation, and Internet news, and time democracy, and technology values regulation hypertext Internet journalism news censorship and ratings global communication LB - 33830 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 ST - Democracy and New Media TI - Democracy and New Media ID - 3021 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book was published in an electronic format in 1987. Jenkins was the editor of the Thomas A. Edison Papers. AU - Jenkins, Reese CY - Baltimore DA - c1975, 1987 (electronic format) KW - photography +photography and visual communication photography, and new technology Eastman, George photography, and roll film photography, and dry plate photography, and amateur LB - 12720 PB - Johns Hopkins University Press PY - 1975 ST - Images and Enterprise: Technology and the American Photographic Industry, 1839-1925 TI - Images and Enterprise: Technology and the American Photographic Industry, 1839-1925 ID - 2618 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Menlo Park: The Early Years: April, 1876 - December, 1887 , Volume 3. The Wizard of Menlo Park: 1878, is Volume 4 in this series. AU - Jenkins, Reese, et al., eds. CY - Baltimore DA - c1989 - KW - primary sources archives primary sources Edison, Thomas archives primary sources primary sources, and Thomas Edison Menlo Park LB - 12730 PB - Johns Hopkins University Press PY - 1989 ST - The Papers of Thomas A. Edison TI - The Papers of Thomas A. Edison ID - 2619 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a history of the American postal system from 1775 to 1844, from the beginning of the American Revolution to the commercialization of the telegraph. “Though the postal system suffered several setbacks during the 1830s, it remained the linchpin of the American communications infrastructure until the following decade when, with the advent of commercial telegraphy, it lost its preeminent position in the transmission of information relating to commerce and public affairs.” Contemporaries in the early nineteenth century compared the postal system’s importance to the printing press, compass, electricity, and thought of it as Tocqueville described it as that “great link between minds” that “‘penetrates’ into the ‘heart of the wilderness,’ bringing enlightenment to palace and hovel alike.” Some contemporaries said that it annihilated time and space. John is particularly good in discussing the Post Office Act of 1792, which he believes had a profound influence in facilitating the flow of information. The Act gave newspapers favorable postal treatment, thus accelerating the growth of the press; it forbade public officials from using the postal service as a means of surveillance over citizens; and by giving Congress the power to decide where post offices would be located it hastened postal service west of the Appalachians. The act greatly increased the spread of newspapers and government documents, and gave Americans even in the backwoods greater access to public information than existed in many of the most affluent parts of France. Of the Post Office Act of 1792, John writes: “So far reaching were the implications of this landmark piece of legislation that it is worth considering whether the single most revolutionary era in the entire history of American communications may well have taken place in the half-century preceding the commercialization of the electric telegraph in 1844.” While this statement is highly debatable in light of subsequent developments in American communication, this book is nevertheless a first-rate history of the American postal system. AU - John, Richard R. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1995 KW - post office nationalism time and timekeeping time democracy and media democracy labor communication revolution journalism news and journalism office office, and new media office geography press newspapers news +nationalism and communication +postal service +telegraph newspapers communication revolution +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and nationalism nationalism, and newspapers nationalism, and postal system press, and postal system infrastructure Tocqueville, Alexis de space (spatial) time LB - 2300 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1995 ST - Spreading the News: The American Postal System from Franklin to Morse TI - Spreading the News: The American Postal System from Franklin to Morse ID - 1623 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book deals "with the theory, construction, and practical working of ... various classes of optical instruments" that could be used in 1909 by photographers. The opening chapter deals with "The Camera," followed by a chapter on "The Lens." Chapter 3 is "The Formation of the Image on thee Screen, and Apparatus Connected with It," and Chapter 4 is on "Sensitometers." Chapter 5 is on "Colour Photography" and covers three-color photography, Lippmann's color photography, Ives' "Photochomoscope," and Lumiere's Autochrome Process. Chapter 6 is "The Formation of the Image on the Plate," and the last chapter, Chapter 7 is on "The Optical Lantern." This work has a beautiful color Autochrome photograph of two women opposite the title page. This three-color process required 5 seconds exposure time in the open air. The work has several black-and-white photographs and also illustrations of cameras. There are at least two other color plates in this work in addition to the one opposite the title page. At the end of the work there are a number of interesting advertisements for camera equipment. AU - Johnson, George Lindsay CY - London DA - 1909 KW - objectivity Lippmann process illustrations photography ref, secondary color color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures photography and visual communication color, and Lumiere process color, and Lippmann process Lippmann process, and color Lumiere process, and color color, and chromoscope illustrations illustrations, and color photography photography, instantaneous photography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and photography cameras cameras, and lenses photography, and objectivity objectivity, and photography Cameras Kinematograph motion pictures, and Kinematograph illustrations illustrations, and color photography Autochrome, and color photography color, and Autochrome non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and color photography color photography, and Great Britain ref, book motion pictures LB - 16390 PB - Ward & Co. PY - 1909 ST - Photographic Optics and Colour Photography: Including the Camera, Kinematograph, Optical Lantern, and the Theory and Practice of Image Formation TI - Photographic Optics and Colour Photography: Including the Camera, Kinematograph, Optical Lantern, and the Theory and Practice of Image Formation ID - 3792 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Chapter 1 is entitled “The Meanings and Methods of Intelligence,” and Chapter 7, the book’s last chapter, is “An Assessment of American Intelligence.” A few other pages discuss satellite photography, imagery, and related subjects. This is the author’s third book on U.S. intelligence. A Season of Inquiry (1985) and America’s Secret Power (1989) were earlier works, the former is “about the beginning of a new era for American intelligence ushered in by a series of spy scandals” and accusation in 1975 by government investigators that the CIA was conducting espionage against American citizens. This most recent book has a good deal of information on spy satellites, information processing, and their impact on the Cold War. The notes are also useful for finding related literature on satellites. --SV This is an account of the U.S. intelligence establishment in the post-World War II era. Johnson discusses the dramatic growth of this arm of government from modest beginnings in the early war period to a multi-billion dollar operation at the height of the Reagan administration’s Cold War efforts. Technological advancement is a significant part of the story, in particular satellites and the use of ever-more-powerful cameras. The evolving political climate in which the intelligence community must operate is discussed, as is the political tension that exists within the community itself. Aside from secondary sources, Johnson relies primarily on information released by intelligence agencies and interviews with key figures in the community, many of whom he knows from his days as an aide on the House and Senate Intelligence Subcommittees. At the time of the book’s publication, he was at the University of Georgia. --Gordon Jackson AU - Johnson, Loch K. CY - New Haven DA - 1996 KW - R & D USSR surveillance Central Intelligence Agency Soviet Union, and space photography law, and privacy law research and development war Cold War war non-USA reconnaissance +aeronautics and space communication +military communication satellites satellites, and photography +photography and visual communication reconnaissance, and satellites satellites, and reconnaissance Soviet Union intelligence, military military, and satellites Soviet Union, and satellites Cold War, and satellites Jackson, Gordon privacy privacy, and surveillance CIA satellites, and privacy privacy, and satellites LB - 7630 PB - Yale University Press PY - 1996 ST - Secret Agencies: U. S. Intelligence in a Hostile World TI - Secret Agencies: U. S. Intelligence in a Hostile World ID - 2132 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Johnson provides a useful overview of the underground press during the 1960s. He considers four categories of underground newspapers: 1) African American papers; 2) New Left publications; 3) special-interest papers; and high-school underground newspapers. He also mentions that some foresaw "a network of short-range pirate radio stations, outside FCC jurisdiction," although this theme is not developed. Of interest, too, is the emergence of underground press services such as the Underground Press Syndicate and the Liberation News Service. Johnson devotes a couple of pages to the technology that made the growth of underground papers possible. During the 1950s, papers such as Beatitude in San Francisco and Combustion in Toronto were mimeographed. The development of cold-type offset printing made it possible to produce more graphically sophisticated publications. The process was first used in Middletown, NY in 1956, and later spread rapidly giving papers much greater circulation possibilities. Such publications as the San Francisco Oracle exploited offset reproduction and made an art-form of newspaper graphics. Johnson notes that Supreme Court rulings that liberalized obscenity laws aided the growth of underground publications, too. AU - Johnson, Michael L. CY - Lawrence DA - 1971 KW - underground newspapers underground media print values communication revolution journalism communication revolution news and journalism reproduction revolution printing printing press newspapers news +books, periodicals, newspapers printing, cold-type offset newspapers, underground (1960s) underground press Underground Press Syndicate Liberation News Service obscenity, and underground publications graphics revolution reproduction revolution (1960s) +duplicating technologies mimeograph obscenity news, and Underground Press Syndicate news, and Liberation News Service censorship and ratings LB - 11380 PB - The University Press of Kansas PY - 1971 ST - The New Journalism: The Underground Press, the Artists of Nonfiction, and Changes in the Established Media TI - The New Journalism: The Underground Press, the Artists of Nonfiction, and Changes in the Established Media ID - 2498 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This address was delivered to the Iowa State Education Association, Nov. 5, 1948, in Des Moines, Iowa. In it, Johnston (then president of the MPAA) that "the democratic world at the moment is not winning in the struggle against international communism.." Communism "is on the ascendancy. It has stepped up in momentum." (2) He goes on to say that "the democratic world is sicker than we thought. The task of helping it to its feet is more formidable than we thought." (9) He proposes "a vast extension of 'partnership capitalism'," which meant "American private capital and business genius in partnership with the capital, the manpower and the resources of other countries." (10) He urged a "permanent World Economic Development Corporation." (10) Americans, he says, "are a daring people, a reckless people, a determined people, a courageous people" and that "this is a time for trumpets to resound to the uttermost parts of the earth: to rally men everywhere who believe in the righteousness of freedom and the nobility of man...." (11) AU - Johnston, Eric CY - New York DA - [1948] KW - Truman administration Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) addresses, Eric Johnston self-regulation community addresses motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and community Johnston, Eric, and community community, and motion pictures community, and Eric Johston motion pictures, and Cold War Cold War, and motion pictures capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism values, and motion pictures addresses speeches motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising advertising advertising, and motion pictures MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric, and capitalism capitalism, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and anticommunism Production Code, and decline of Johnston, Eric, and Production Code democracy democracy, and capitalism capitalism, and democracy Truman, Harry democracy capitalism Cold War freedom MPAA Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) war advertising and public relations values LB - 35050 PB - Motion Picture Association of America ST - Ideology for Democracy TI - Ideology for Democracy ID - 3145 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this piece, originally published in Screen Writer, probably during the late 1940s or early 1950s, Johnston (then president of the MPAA) discusses the impact of American movies abroad and answer critics who say that Hollywood movie makers have been irresponsible and projected a poor image of the U. S. In notes that John Ford's movie Grapes of Wrath was pirated and shown in Yugoslavia under the title "The Paradise That Is America" as communist propaganda about poverty in the U. S. Johnston says that actually audiences there were more impressed that even poor people owned their own automobiles. (6) Johnston says that "the good among motion pictures far exceeds the bad." (7) AU - Johnston, Eric CY - New York DA - nd KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) addresses, Eric Johnston self-regulation community addresses motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and community Johnston, Eric, and community community, and motion pictures community, and Eric Johston motion pictures, and Cold War Cold War, and motion pictures capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism values, and motion pictures addresses speeches motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising advertising advertising, and motion pictures MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric, and capitalism capitalism, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and anticommunism Production Code, and decline of Johnston, Eric, and Production Code democracy democracy, and capitalism capitalism, and democracy capitalism Cold War freedom MPAA Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) war advertising and public relations values LB - 35060 PB - Motion Picture Association of America ST - Report from Europe TI - Report from Europe ID - 3146 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Eric A. Johnston, who was then president of the Motion Picture Association of America, says "this is a book about America's new role as a world power." (11) He connects American power to the growth of capitalism. "Our is a Capitalism for the many and not for the few," he said. (22) He goes on to argue that "we will either organize the world or it will be organized without us and against us." (37) He devotes two chapters to Joseph Stalin and the Soviet Union (75-121). Chapter 7 is entitled "America Invincible." Johnston was qualified in his support of the New Deal. He does say here that "social legislation isn't Socialism." (152) He concludes his book by saying: "The world needs a monumental program of industrialization. That's true in South America, true in China, true in India -- true anywhere you look around the world. (215) "To undertake and underwrite such a program on a businesslike basis is a part of our responsibility as a world leader." (215) And, he said, "I believe we may have been elected to world leadership for life." (217) AU - Johnston, Eric CY - New York DA - 1948 KW - Truman administration Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) addresses, Eric Johnston self-regulation nationalism community addresses motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and community Johnston, Eric, and community community, and motion pictures community, and Eric Johston motion pictures, and Cold War Cold War, and motion pictures capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism values, and motion pictures addresses speeches motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising advertising advertising, and motion pictures MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric, and capitalism capitalism, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and anticommunism Production Code, and decline of Johnston, Eric, and Production Code democracy democracy, and capitalism capitalism, and democracy Truman, Harry democracy capitalism nationalism and communication capitalism, and nationalism capitalism, and democracy motion pictures, and nationalism Cold War freedom MPAA Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) war advertising and public relations values LB - 35090 PB - E. P. Dutton & Company, Inc. PY - 1948 ST - We're All In It TI - We're All In It ID - 3149 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book was published when Eric Johnston was President of the United States Chamber of Commerce. He makes an energetic defense of American capitalism and the Horatio Alger myth. He says that the "American economic setup has been predominantly private capitalist. It must remain predominantly private capitalist. But that does not arbitrarily exclude the utilization of state power and state economy for specific purposes." (34) He goes on to offer qualified criticism of the New Deal and to say that "we believe in the middle way: the way of realistic adjustment between old-style laissez-faire capitalism and current economy." (37) He says that the "main evil of the New Deal period ... was its spirit of vendetta and class warfare -- its refusal to explore and exploit areas of agreement." (75) He calls for the expansion of capitalism. "We are only at the foothills of production, with mountains still to climb." (116) He sees future competition between the U. S. and USSR. "Russia and the United States will represent two extremes, and their inevitable competition for world markets will have about it something truly titanic. One is history's greatest democratic capitalist society, the other the greatest collectivist society ever known; one is people's capitalism at its best, the other state capitalism at its strongest." (229) In 1945, Johnston became President of the Motion Picture Association of America. AU - Johnston, Eric CY - Garden City, N. Y. DA - 1944 KW - Truman administration Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) addresses, Eric Johnston self-regulation nationalism community addresses motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and community Johnston, Eric, and community community, and motion pictures community, and Eric Johston motion pictures, and Cold War Cold War, and motion pictures capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism values, and motion pictures addresses speeches motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising advertising advertising, and motion pictures MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric, and capitalism capitalism, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and anticommunism Production Code, and decline of Johnston, Eric, and Production Code democracy democracy, and capitalism capitalism, and democracy Truman, Harry democracy capitalism nationalism and communication capitalism, and nationalism Cold War freedom MPAA Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) war advertising and public relations values LB - 35130 PB - Doubleday, Doran and Company, Inc. PY - 1944 ST - America Unlimited TI - America Unlimited ID - 3153 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Mass communication historians might overlook this book, thinking that it belongs in the field of art history or visual culture studies. However, Real Fantasies turns out to be a must read for anyone interested in the history of advertising, magazines, and the rise of the modern in mass culture and mass communication. Johnston uses Steichen’s commercial photography for products like Welch’s grape juice, Pond’s cold cream, Kodak film, and Jergens lotion to illustrate dramatic changes in advertising and style in the 1930s and 1940s. In addition to being smartly written, Real Fantasies is one of the best available studies of why advertising looked like it did in the middle of the 20th Century. It is somewhat less successful in discussing the effect of the new advertising on women and other readers. Chapter 2, “The Age of Corporate Patronage: Advertising Accelerates the Demand for Photography,” and Chapter 3, “From Reality to Fantasy in Early Photographic Advertising” are the highlights of the book and trace the debate over “realism” in ads and the question of using illustrations or photos. In the early 1920s, roughly 15 percent of magazine ads employed photographs. By 1930, the number was around 80 percent. According to Johnston, advertising based on photographic images was “overtly manipulative and persuasive” in its intent because it created a “mythology of social ideals and aspirations” that dominated the business vocabulary of the period. Realistic images, even if artful and “modern” in style, caught the eye of readers and drew them into the pages in a way not possible with illustrations. Johnston is one of the many scholars who has made good use of the J. Walter Thompson collection at Duke University. Using agency records, she was able to study how the images were constructed and, more importantly, how the photographs were crafted into powerful advertisements, usually aimed at women. Steichen became adept at producing lush and alluring photos in the studio, but it was the people at J. Walter Thompson who transformed them into powerful magazine advertisements. Real Fantasies is nicely illustrated, which is a boon for those interested in Steichen or art photography of the period. Read alongside Roland Marchand’s classic Advertising the American Dream, also from UC Press, Real Fantasies can tell us a great deal about the rise of mass advertising, the role of photography in creating “consumer fantasies,” and the way women in particular experienced advertisements in what were arguably the most important years for the historical development of consumer culture. -- Rob Rabe AU - Johnston, Patricia CY - Berkeley DA - 1998 KW - Rabe, Rob advertising and public relations +photography and visual communication advertising, and photography photography, and advertising Steichen, Edward, and photography Steichen, Edward, and advertising advertising, and Edward Steichen photography, and Edward Steichen +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines magazines, and advertising magazines, and photography photography, and magazines advertising, and magazines women women, and advertising advertising, and women color color, and advertising advertising, and color Thompson, J. Walter Company advertising, and J. Walter Thompson advertising photographyJ. Walter Thompson Company corporations photography LB - 28940 PB - University of California Press PY - 1998 ST - Real Fantasies: Edward Steichen's Advertising Photography TI - Real Fantasies: Edward Steichen's Advertising Photography ID - 2671 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a reprint of a cyclopaedia published in 1911. It offers definition of terminology and insight into the state of photography during the first decade of the 20th century. AU - Jones, Bernard E., ed. CY - London and New York DA - 1911; 1973 KW - photography References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps +photography and visual communication reference works reference works, photography dictionaries dictionaries, photography photography, and reference works photography, and dictionary LB - 280 OP - 1911 PB - Cassell and Company, Ltd.; Arno Press PY - 1973 ST - Cassell's Cyclopaedia of Photography TI - Cassell's Cyclopaedia of Photography ID - 117 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This was Jones’ first published novel. He was a Commander in the British Navy during World War II, and worked at different times as a radio operator, bricklayer, and market gardener. He lived in Cornwall, England at time of publication. This novel was later made into a motion picture: Colossus: The Forbin Project (1971). This story pictures the computer as a sinister creation, a common theme in popular culture (e.g., “Hal” in 2001: A Space Odyssey [1968] and “Sky Net” in Terminator 2: Judgement Day [1991]). A scientist named Forbin creates a “super-computer” named Colossus, “as big as a large town, buried somewhere in the Rocky Mountains.” The defense of the United States and entire free world is turned over to this machine. Once on line, it is discovered that the Soviet Union has a similar supercomputer. The two machines link up and together take on a independent life of their own, their intelligence and power growing at an accelerating rate. Ultimately (at least in the movie), things end with the computer being in control. In the movie version, the president is portrayed by a John F. Kennedy look-alike (a play on the Kennedy/McNamara enthusiasm for technocratic solutions to problems). AU - Jones, D. F. CY - New York DA - 1966 KW - computers science +future and science fiction community democracy +computers and the Internet computers, and popular culture computers, and motion pictures democracy and media critics future science fiction computers, and science fiction computers future, and computers supercomputers science fiction, and computers motion pictures, and computers motion pictures LB - 7840 PB - G. P. Putnam's Sons PY - 1966 ST - Colossus TI - Colossus ID - 2153 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work has 19 chapters, many dealing with technical topics such as control of light, use of gelatin, "the Plate," lenses, finishing the negative, and printing in silver. It also has two chapters dealing with color and one on "Instantaneous Photography and the Photography of Motion." "We generally regard about the tenth of a second as the longest exposure that we should call instantaneous, and there is a good reason for this, because it is about the shortest period for which it is possible for us to see anything." (276) This work notes that by 1913, it was possible to photograph almost anything. "Essayists have sometimes set themselves to catalogue the uses of photography. That may have been worth doing a generation ago, but to-day one might as well attempt to set down all the purposes that can be served by writing or printing. We can photograph everything that we can see, and many things that we cannot see or ever hope to see. As a method of recording, therefore, photography surpasses the observing power of human vision in the universality of its applicability, and it surpasses it also in its truthfulness, because it is free from personality or bias." (264) Chapter 16 deals with "Truth and Error in Photography" and considers the question of whether a photograph can lie. (264-75) This book has a number of black-and-white photographs and also a color plate of a rainbow opposite the title page. AU - Jones, H. Chapman CY - Philadelphia DA - 1913 KW - objectivity Lippmann process illustrations photography ref, secondary color color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures photography and visual communication color, and Lumiere process color, and Lippmann process Lippmann process, and color Lumiere process, and color color, and chromoscope illustrations illustrations, and color photography photography, instantaneous photography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and photography cameras cameras, and lenses photography, and objectivity objectivity, and photography ref, book motion pictures LB - 16380 PB - J. B. Lippincott Company PY - 1913 ST - Photography of To-Day: A Popular Account of the Origin, Progress and Latest Discoveries in the Photographer's Art, Told in Non-Technical Language TI - Photography of To-Day: A Popular Account of the Origin, Progress and Latest Discoveries in the Photographer's Art, Told in Non-Technical Language ID - 3791 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - R. V. Jones was Assistant Director of Intelligence (Science) during World War II, and was closely involved in assessing the technological capabilities of Nazi Germany and in the development of British and Allied technology, including such innovations as radar. Jones comments on such matters as the effort during the 1930s to develop a death ray that could stop airplane and automobile engines. There were numerous press reports that such scientists as Marconi, Tesla, and other were working on such an invention. Jones concluded that such reports were exaggerated and that such a device was not likely to have been developed during the late 1930s and early 1940s. AU - Jones, R. V. CY - London DA - 1978 KW - R & D military communication non-USA Great Britain nationalism and communication Tizard, Henry Great Britain, and radar radar radar, and Great Britain death rays Great Britain, and death rays research and development Great Britain, and research and development war war, and Great Britain Great Britain, and war World War II Great Britain, and World War II World War II, and Great Britain World War II, and research and development photography and visual communication surveillance surveillance, and photography photography, and surveillance photography, and reconnaissance photography, and World War II World War II, and radar World War II, and photography autobiography biography, autobiography, oral histories nationalism photography LB - 70 PB - Hamish Hamilton PY - 1978 ST - Most Secret War TI - Most Secret War ID - 6 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The emergence of a new forms of media are often followed by predictions that they will solve many problems. Close on the heels of these predictions come Huxleyan warnings that the new medium will transform society and turn its users into zombies. The pattern that has played out for film, radio and television is now well underway for the Internet. Hailed by many (notably Vice President Al Gore) as an “information superhighway” that will connect all citizens to the world’s accumulated knowledge, the Internet has also come under attack as an escapist medium for people who prefer the virtual to the real. Contributing to this debate, but avoiding most (although not all) of the popular clichés is CyberSociety, edited by Steven Jones. The book is a collection of nine essays, all exploring the “virtual” world. At the beginning, Jones states the premise of the book: that “social formations” or “cultures” are emerging among Internet users. Jones seeks to help readers understand these social formations. One problem immediately faced when attempting to understand “Cyberspace” is its inherent lack of stability. The words and images available can change hourly and the technology is upgraded almost daily. What was “hot” yesterday has been replaced today. It is often said that the Internet reinvents itself every six months. CyberSociety was published in 1995, and most of the articles are based on research conducted in the early 1990s. Jones identifies newsgroups as one of the two (the other is e-mail) most used features of the Internet. Three of the nine chapters focus on it. But in the last 2 years, traffic on the world wide web has dwarfed newsgroup usage. The web is not really mentioned in the book. Despite the ephemeral nature of “virtual reality,” much of theoretical ground covered by the authors remains useful. Cheris Kramarae, Ted Friedman, Elizabeth Reid, and Mary Fuller and Henry Jenkins each have a unique take on virtual reality games. Kramarae provides a feminist perspective on this popular new diversion. While some claim women have equal power in virtual reality, she points out that the software was created by men, and primarily for men. Sexual simulations like “Virtual Valerie” and games like “Comanche Maximum Overkill” are two examples cited by Kramerae. Furthermore, she warns of a retreat from the problems in the real world, in favor of distraction in the virtual world. Elizabeth Reid’s chapter provides an interesting counterpoint to Kramerae. Reid’s focus is on-line gaming, in particular, text-based fantasy games often referred to as MUDs (Multi-User Dimensions). She explored a common sense hypothesis that without the nonverbal cues available to us in face-to-face conversation, users might be unable to communicate effectively, and would only exchange sparse, unemotional messages. Reid found the opposite. MUD environments are, in her words, “extremely culturally rich” and often “highly emotionally charged.” Users have discovered ways of overcoming the textual limits of computer-mediated communication. Two other essays on game-playing focus not on the interaction between users, but on one player’s interaction with the computer. As Ted Friedman points out, these kinds of games make it difficult to define the categories of author, reader, and text. The cultural theorist’s insistence that no text exists until it is engaged by the reader (user) becomes a circular argument when the reader is responsible for creating at least part of the text. Friedman says we have no “software theory” with which to analyze these texts, but here he may be overlooking a body of literature from another field. Education scholars have been working on just such interactive multimedia theory for at least a decade. Much of their work centers on the nonlinear nature of hypertext, but Friedman dismisses hypertext as a “transitional genre.” An important point about computer-mediated communication (and one not addressed anywhere else in the book) is missed here. Message producers limited by linear texts have to decide which information, which perspectives, which angles to include in their presentations. This necessarily constrains the communication process. The message is often tailored then to the lowest common denominator and possible perspectives on a topic are stripped away for clarity’s sake. A nonlinear text, while still finite, can be designed so users with diverse interests and backgrounds can navigate the text according to their needs. Two chapters in this volume are particularly useful and transcend the technological details of cyberspace. Each addresses the concept of “community.” Nancy Baym argues that “communities” in a very real sense, have emerged in these virtual landscapes. Baym lists four criteria necessary for a group of people to be considered a community: creative expression; public identity; creation of relationships; and creation of public norms. In Baym’s analysis of one newsgroup (set up for soap opera fans) she found evidence of each. Users expressed emotion by use of computer symbols (also knows as “emoticons”). While anonymity is often used on-line, Baym found that real identities are often given. Baym found evidence of deep, ongoing relationships and the existence of group norms, most often in the form of reminders and even scolding for posting violations (wrong headings on messages, messages off topic, etc.). In his chapter, editor Steven Jones also addresses the notion of community in cyberspace. In this setting, the social construction of reality takes on new meaning. Jones argues that computer-mediated communication is socially produced space. Jones asks whether the cyberspace user is mass-mediated, a mass mediator, a public figure, or private individual engaged in special interrelation. We might further ask, are Internet users creating a virtual “public,” or are they just the audience for a new mass medium? The answer, in part, might be “both.” Certainly, many of on-line participants are “social actors.” But not addressed in CyberSociety are the large number of virtual voyeurs, or “lurkers.” This subgroup of users is not socially engaged at all, but merely an “audience” for the rest. So should we be confident or concerned about the future of communication? CyberSociety does not take a position on this question, but one piece of advice is offered by one contributor. Cheris Kramerae, who is perhaps the most critical of the “cyber-world,” advises us, especially in times of change, to “watch, listen, analyze, and make interventions when we can.” CyberSociety makes contributions in these areas. --Mark Tremayne AU - Jones, Steven, ed. CY - London DA - 1995 KW - computers nationalism sexuality women, and new media sex Internet +future and science fiction community democracy computers women +computers and the Internet Tremayne, Mark democracy and media critics virtual reality cyberspace women, and the Internet women, and computer games computer games community, and Internet +nationalism and communication public sphere, and Internet community public sphere future, and computers electronic mail email Internet, and sex sex, and Internet future electronic media LB - 9100 PB - Sage Publications PY - 1995 ST - CyberSociety: Computer-Mediated Communication and Community TI - CyberSociety: Computer-Mediated Communication and Community ID - 2277 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Tony Jones covers several points in this book. These include: 1) The struggle in Great Britain over the loss of the prestige of GMT or Greenwich Mean Time. As the science and the physics outdated the astronomical devised GMT, politicians still tried to preserve its heritage as much as possible. 2) There were several key developments in the creation of time based on the atom. Sodium, Hydrogen and later Ammonia molecules were all original ideas to base time, but each had various drawbacks. Cesium with its exceptional predictability proved to be the best atom to use in time keeping and by using beams of it, the accuracy and stability of timekeeping have reached levels unheard of in the pre-atomic era. 3) The development of atomic time has helped with advances to other forms of measurements, namely length and mass, and helped with its precision. GPS technology was one of the great by-products of this work. 4) The field of development is far from over for atomic time. Mercury, Indium and ytterbium are all possibilities of atoms that can be used to further improve accuracy of timekeeping. Ytterbium seems to have tremendous potential as a future timekeeper, but has many drawbacks such as its expensive and exists only in small quantities. Jones sets out his thesis in his Preface: “The fact that such clocks and the accuracy they bring are now commonplace is a sign of the upheaval in timekeeping that took place during the twentieth century. It could be called a revolution. When the century began, timekeeping was firmly in the hands of astronomers, where it had rested for millennia. By the century’s end timekeeping was controlled by physicists, and astronomers were relegated to a supporting but not insignificant role. If we were to place dates on the revolution we could say it began in 1955, with the operation of the world’s first successful atomic clock, and was all but complete by 1967 when the atomic second finally ousted the astronomical second as the international unit of time.” (ix) --Jason Karnosky AU - Jones, Tony CY - Philadelphia DA - 2000 KW - Karnosky, Jason timekeeping non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and timekeeping timekeeping, and atomic clocks timekeeping, and astronomy astronomy, and timekeeping materials materials, and timekeeping timekeeping, and materials timekeeping, and physics astronomy time and timekeeping LB - 11630 PB - Institute of Physics Publishing PY - 2000 ST - Splitting the Second: The Story of Atomic Time TI - Splitting the Second: The Story of Atomic Time ID - 16 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work stands as one of best history of the motion picture industry and censorship written during the 1970s. It provides solid information on court cases as well as major development in movie history. Jowett also mentions technological changes in the industry, although this theme is not central to this work. AU - Jowett, Garth CY - Boston DA - 1976 KW - U. S. Supreme Court self-regulation Production Code Supreme Court (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) context values religion law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and history context, and history motion pictures, and state censorship motion pictures, and local censorship motion pictures, and federal censorship censorship, local censorship, state censorship, federal Production Code, and decline of censorship, and states censorship, and Supreme Court (U. S.) Supreme Court (U. S.), and censorship LB - 13140 PB - Little, Brown and Company PY - 1976 ST - Film: The Democratic Art TI - Film: The Democratic Art ID - 488 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Children and the Movies provides a history of the Payne Fund Studies (PFS), as well as an analysis of their place in mass communications research. To compliment the authors’ assessment that these studies have been too much denigrated and too long overlooked, the book also includes some unfinished materials that never made it into the published works. Much of the book focuses on why the PFS were so ill-received in their time, the main culprit being the tensions between academic researchers who found surprisingly little negative effects of movie watching on society and the direction of Rev. William H. Short, head of the Motion Picture Research Council that had commissioned the studies as a base for projected advocacy work against the film industry. While the researchers had originally been targeted for having a resume of anti-movie work, they broke with the advocates who promoted and popularized their research with an absolute, nonacademic anti-movie slant. The authors also argue that changing standards of research meant much of the Payne Fund work was outmoded by the time it was published and consequently ignored by the academic community for its discredited research methods as well as its perceived bias. Both interpretations of the studies are incorrect, the authors argue, and the PFS are worthy of reexamination for the pioneering research they contain and as a historical document of communications research and political pressures of the early 1900. --Dale Erlandson This work points out the Payne Fund Studies were the most comprehensive social science examination of the movies and that they deserve to be held in higher regard. Included in this work is Paul Cressey's study, "The Community -- A Social Setting for the Motion Picture," which was to be part of the Payne Fund Studies but not published. Children and the Movies presents a thoughtful, fair-minded re-evaluation of the Payne Fund Studies. --SV AU - Jowett, Garth S. AU - Jarvie, Ian C. AU - Fuller, Kathryn H. CY - New York DA - 1996 KW - children audiences theaters media effects censorship and ratings children motion pictures and popular culture Payne Fund Studies motion pictures, and social science motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects motion pictures bibliographic essay, and Payne Fund Studies bibliographies children and media children, and media effects media effects, and children Erlandson, Dale bibliographies, and Payne Fund Studies LB - 12690 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1996 ST - Children and the Movies: Media Influence and the Payne Fund Controversy TI - Children and the Movies: Media Influence and the Payne Fund Controversy ID - 60 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author of this book was in the Photometry and Colorimetry Section of the National Bureau of Standards when this book was written. Judd writes that "a whole new science has been developed, largely since the turn of the century, applying to many ... color problems. This is the science of visual psychophysics. The key to color problems of the future is to be found in visual psychophysics mixed with a liberal sprinkling of common sense. This book is an attempt to present visual psychophysics in terms that are practically useful." (vii) AU - Judd, Deane B. CY - New York DA - 1952 KW - art ref, secondary advertising and public relations advertising, and new art form advertising, and psychology color color, and advertising advertising, and color art, and advertising advertising, and art color, and psychophysics psychophysics, and color ref, book advertising LB - 39030 PB - John Wiley & Sons, Inc. PY - 1952 ST - Color in Business, Science, and Industry TI - Color in Business, Science, and Industry ID - 4002 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work considers the use of pornography by women. Juffer focuses on printed material, but also discusses pornography and cable television, video recorders, and the Internet. Pornography remains a controverial issue as one considers whether women are victims or agents. Juffer moves away from this debate and urges giving more emphasis to pronography and erotica in the daily lives of women. How do women find pornography and then use it, and how does this change porn's relationship to the home? How do advertising and marketing experts create categories of pornography designed to appeal to women? Juffer argues that women’s use of erotica can empower them, and at the same time, reinforce conservative values. She examines adult television channels, erotic literature, sex manuals, sex on the Internet, masturbation, and more. AU - Juffer, Jane CY - New York DA - 1998 KW - entertainment computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) entertainment, home magnetic recording women, and new media sexuality home entertainment magnetic tape law home, and new media home women values regulation home, and information technology information technology +computers and the Internet +television cable television television, and cable pornography women, and pornography women, and Internet women, and television values, and media regulation, and cable television VCRs VCRs, and pornography information technology, and home cable home, and new media home, and pornography values, and pornography values, and women pornography, and home pornography, and women censorship and ratings LB - 7000 PB - New York University Press PY - 1998 ST - At Home with Pornography: Women, Sex, and Everyday Life TI - At Home with Pornography: Women, Sex, and Everyday Life ID - 2071 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Jussim writes that this work “is the result of an interdisciplinary investigation into the nature and practice of visual communication manifested in the graphic arts practices of nineteenth-century America. It is hoped that these explorations will augment present knowledge about how photography came to dominate visual media, and what changes this dominance created in human thought and perception. The focus is sharply on two scientific questions: with the advent of photography, what alterations occurred in the capacities of visual media for artistic expression and information transfer; and what, if any, changes occurred in our perceptions of the characteristics of ‘artistic expression’ and ‘information transfer’ as an outcome of learning to interpret ‘Nature’ through photography as it became the dominant visual communications medium.” (italics in original text). The author builds on William Ivins, Jr.’s Prints and Visual Communication (above) as well as Marshall McLuhan’s Understanding Media. This book is slow reading. In attempting to revise Ivins, Jussim suggests a different vocabulary (e.g., where Ivins used “syntax” and Jussim suggests such terms as “channel,” “code,” “message”). Chapters are devoted to Howard Pyle (1853-1911) (chapter 5); William Hamilton Gibson (1850-1896) (chapter 6); and Frederic Remington (1861-1909) (chapter 7). Jussim makes a strong case against Ivins’ assertion that photography is an unbiased account of reality. Photographs reflect the biases of the person making the picture, just at the text reflects the assumptions of its author. AU - Jussim, Estelle CY - New York and London DA - 1974 KW - graphic design photography +photography and visual communication graphic arts, and 19th century photography, and new way of seeing photography, and change in thought and perception photography, and artistic expression photography, and information transfer Ivins, William, Jr. McLuhan, Marshall Pyle, Howard Remington, Frederic Gibson, William Hamilton graphic arts photography, and bias LB - 1650 PB - R. R. Bowker Company: A Xerox Education Company PY - 1974 ST - Visual Communication and the Graphic Arts: Photographic Technologies in the Nineteenth Century TI - Visual Communication and the Graphic Arts: Photographic Technologies in the Nineteenth Century ID - 1561 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work appeared on the second anniversary of the release of the Meese Commission's Final Report (1986). It argues that there was a "wealth of misinformation and confusion ... generated by the pornography industry prior to the Report's release." This work tries to set the record straight about the Final Report and to explain "what action, if any, was ever taken on all those recommendations made to the federal government" by the Meese Commission. The Reagan administration's National Obscenity Enforcement Unit attempted to implement the recommendations. It also had an Obscenity Law Center that served as a clearinghouse that coordinated anti-pornography efforts across the United States. AU - Justice, United States Department of CY - Washington, D.C. DA - 1988 KW - presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality values obscenity Meese Commission pornography pornography, and Meese Commission pornography, and opponents pornography, and legal obscenity, and pornography pornography, and obscenity obscenity, and legal Reagan administration, and pornography pornography, and Reagan administration censorship and ratings law LB - 23740 PB - U. S. Government Printing Office PY - 1988 ST - Beyond the Pornography Commission: The Federal Response TI - Beyond the Pornography Commission: The Federal Response ID - 1036 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Despite the cultural pervasiveness of sound, there was no artistic practice outside music identified primarily with aurality. Western culture has privileged music as the art of sound. Another problem exists in merely thinking about sound within a culture that so readily and pervasively privileges the eye over the ear. “There is no history of self-described and autonomous art in the way one might think of the history of sculpture, no façade of a purposeful unity and linear continuity, no ongoing biographical intrigues and libidinal exchanges of influence. As a historical object, sound cannot furnish a good story or consistent cast of characters nor can it validate any ersatz notions of progress or generational maturity,” this work suggests. (2) --Amy Chu Emily Thompson in her review of this work says that the essays assembled “are fascinating and frustrating. Fascinating because they open up for exploration a realm of culture too long neglected by scholars, the realm of sound. Frustrating because the analyses included here do not consider as fully as they might the various technologies that inspired and generated the sounds created by the artists whose work is considered.” [Technology and Culture, 35 (April 1994), p. 425]. AU - Kahn, Douglas and Gregory Whitehead, eds. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1992 KW - technology values radio +sound recording +radio values, and sound recording technology and society wireless communication values, and radio radio, and avante garde Chu, Amy LB - 5480 PB - MIT Press PY - 1992 ST - Wireless Imagination: Sound, Radio, and the Avant-Garde TI - Wireless Imagination: Sound, Radio, and the Avant-Garde ID - 1933 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This autobiography by Technicolor, Inc. president Herbert T. Kalmus has a good deal of information on Kalmus's life and the way in which he and others worked to build Technicolor. Technicolor's first laboratory was an old railway car. (33) The name for this process came to Kalmus, he says, when he added "color" to the word "technique" (something he knew would be needed to realize the dream of making color movies). (11) Most of Kalmus's account deals with business decisions and his relations with various financial backers and Hollywood moguls. One does not get the sense that he considered so much how audiences might reaction psychologically to color (as, for example, his employee Leonard Troland did) but rather his focus was on producing a product that was appealing and acceptable to movie makers and movie goers. Kalmus does reproduce a letter from one of his associates, Kay Harrison, who complimented Kalmus for holding "a mirror up to nature" [my emphasis] and bringing color in to the lives of audiences. (Kay Harrison, quoted, 114) Klamus does note that color could "heighten drama" (47) facial expression. Kalmus writes that "I argued that the purpose of most motion pictures is to tell a story and that people are the means of telling that story and that faces and expression are of greatest importance in the telling. I felt that it was precisely there, in the beauty and expression of human faces, that Technicolor did its most useful work." (53) Many doubters of color movies during the 1910s and 1920s argued that it tired and distracted the eye, took "attention from acting and from the expression on the face of the actor," and blurred and confused "the action. In short, it is felt that color militates against the simplicity and directness which motion pictures derive from the unobtrusive use of black and white." (52) There were other concerns. "Too much light was required for color photography," and "actors would refuse to work under such intense light. Actors and actresses, for their part, were terrified of a new technology that might not flatter them, indeed, might end their careers." (3) And, many believed it was too expensive to film in color. (3) Kalmus does comment on a disagreement he had with Troland during the 1920s on how best to promote Technicolor, some discussed also in Fred Basten's book Glorious Technicolor (1980, p. 38). Troland, a Harvard psychologist and expert on optics and visual stimulation, urged appealing to basic emotion such as sex, comedy, and patriotism to reach a wide audience. Kalmus preferred a more high-brow approach that involved making short subjects called Great Events that could be shown with feature-length movies. In all, twelve Great Events short films were produced. (63) Technicolor's first feature-length color film was The Toll of the Sea, filmed in May, 1922. The star of this was an American-born Chinese actress who "was radiant in color as the girl who drowns herself in the sea." On the set of the film, however, many of the actors did not take the picture seriously because they doubted it would ever make the big screen. "Color was too new and too experimental," Kalmus writes. (43) Not until David Selznick's The Garden of Allah, which starred Marlene Deitrich, Basil Rathbone, and Charles Boyer, were big stars "willing to risk themselves in the medium of color." Some actors no doubt saw careers being destroyed by sound movies that thought color films might have the same effect on their careers. Kalmus discusses other Technicolor films. La Cucracha (1934) was the "first non-cartoon picture to reach teacher screens that had been photographed in studio conditions with the new Technicolor three-strip camera and with prints made by the new Technicolor three-color imbibition process." (96) Chapter Ten (121-33) is devoted to Gone With the Wind (1939). In Chapter Twelve (147-59), Kalmus discusses several people who were responsible for helping to development Technicolor. Here he gives attention to the Harvard psychologist Leonard Troland. References to Troland appear scattered throughout this work but here (150-51) Kalmus offers a more extended account of him: "I have among my possessions six small prints on paper and one transparency which were made by Leonard Troland in the year 1916. These were shown to me around 1919, according to a note in my files. They represent the earliest work on the project to develop a monopack, a single film with three layers of emulsion -- in contrast to the line we were following at the time of exposing each of the primary colors on different lengths of film. This work resulted in one of the earliest, most important and most ingenious Technicolor patents, applied for September 9, 1921 and issued December 6, 1932 as Reissue Patent #18680. Much research and the interruption of World War II were to prolong the development of the monopack, but I had total faith in its viability. (150) "Before Troland became Technicolor's research director, he had been a student in Dan Comstock's physics classes and then an instructor at Harvard University in the Department of Psychology and the author of many scientific papers and books on that subject. His heart was very much in his teaching and research, and I considered it most fortunate that I was able to entice him away when we were still in the pilot stage, with everything in a state of 150/151 semi-operation. His enthusiasm and curiosity led him to cast his lot with us, and he became indefatigable in his work on behalf of Technicolor, rejoicing with us at every step forward. He was, as well, a cherished companion, able as he was to switch from a discussion of the latest phase of our laboratory work to almost any subject on a list of wide interests, and endowed with a very keen sense of humor. (150-51) "In 1932, with a younger Technicolor research man, Troland went on a photographing expedition to the famous astronomical observatory near the summit of Mount Wilson. Climbing on the cliffs in an attempt to photograph the scene from exceptional angles, Troland fell from a height and was killed. Everyone in te Technicolor family considered him a friend; all mourned his loss." (151) Kalmus then follows with a discussion of patents: "The patents awarded to Technicolor were the matrix, the situation, within which Technicolor developed; they were not Technicolor itself. Other companies were working on the same product. None achieved the success of Technicolor, and many were rendered obsolete by Technicolor. Of the five eventual different Technicolor processes, none depended on basic patents; all depended on the solution of stubborn technical and engineering problems. The patents, in a way, simply marked the path of development and problem-solving over the years. (151) "In addition to the 139 patents applied for during the period from 1914 to 1933, 170 patents were assigned to Technicolor during the years 1933 to 1961 by staff in the research department and the laboratory." (151) AU - Kalmus, Herbert T., with Eleanore King Kalmus CY - Absecon, NJ DA - 1993 KW - Kalmus, Herbert history history historical preservation ref, secondary biography, autobiography, oral histories motion pictures and popular culture timelines timelines, and Technicolor motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor history, and motion pictures historical preservation, and color motion pictures color, and Technicolor dye transfer Technicolor, and dye transfer process cameras Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color history and new media history, and Technicolor Technicolor, and history nationalism and communication Technicolor, and patriotism patriotism, and Technicolor color, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color acting acting, and facial expression color, and facial expression acting, and color color, and critics critics critics, and color movies Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and Herbert Kalmus Technicolor, and patents Troland, Leonard, and death Troland, Leonard, and patents quotations quotations, and mirror up to nature actors nationalism patriotism LB - 40780 PB - MagicImage Filmbooks PY - 1993 ST - Mr. Technicolor TI - Mr. Technicolor ID - 4175 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work discusses Huston's career up to 1978 including his film Reflections in a Golden Eye about a homosexual Army officer. The movie starred Marlon Brando and Elizabeth Taylor. Huston used a special coloring technique in filming this movie to give the picture a golden tint, but when the movie did not do well at the box office, Warner Bros. restored the movie to normal Technicolor. AU - Kaminisky, Stuart CY - b DA - Houghton Mifflin Company KW - motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality , motion pictures motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and John Huston motion pictures, and homosexuality Reflections in a Golden Eye (1967) color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures Technicolor LB - 32710 OP - 1978 PB - Boston ST - John Huston: Maker of Magic TI - John Huston: Maker of Magic ID - 2918 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book contains twenty essays about historical writing including Hazel Hertzberg's piece of "The Teaching of History" in which she talks about the impact of affluence and television on creating a "now" generation of post-World War II youth who were often obvious to history. AU - Kammen, Michael, ed. CY - Ithaca DA - 1980 KW - present mindedness television television, and history history, and break with advertising, and history history, and advertising time presentism history, and presentism history, as linear children and media history and new media media effects media effects, and television Hertzberg, Hazel W. advertising children history advertising and public relations time and timekeeping LB - 32080 PB - Cornell University Press PY - 1980 ST - The Past Before Us: Contemporary Historical Writing in the United States TI - The Past Before Us: Contemporary Historical Writing in the United States ID - 2891 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Phyllis Kaniss’s main argument is that the metropolitan news media work to create a sense of identity because of commercial self-interest. Their readers, viewers, and listeners are increasingly suburban and interested in news about their local area. The metropolitan media, out of economic necessity, need to create a regional identity that is, in some case, largely symbolic. AU - Kaniss, Phyllis CY - Chicago DA - 1991 KW - nationalism journalism community democracy news and journalism values radio newspapers news +nationalism and communication +television television, and local news +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and local news +radio radio, and local news democracy and media values, and news news, local LB - 9860 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1991 ST - Making Local News TI - Making Local News ID - 2353 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Entries in this volume include the Introductory essays by Kaplan (“‘Left Alone in America’: The Absence of Empire in the Study of American Culture”), and Pease (“New Perspectives on U.S. Culture and Imperialism”). Other contributors include Michael Rogin (“‘Make My Day!’: Spectacle as Amnesia in Imperial Politics [and] The Sequel”) and May Yoko Brannen (“‘Bwana Mickey’: Constructing Cultural Consumption at Tokyo Disneyland”). Taken as a whole, the tone of this collection is very ideological. AU - Kaplan, Amy and Donald E. Pease, eds. CY - Durham DA - 1993 KW - nationalism corporations imperialism corporations non-USA +nationalism and communication cultural imperialism Disneyland, Tokyo popular culture culture Disney Rogin, Michael Brannen, May Yoko Pease, Donald LB - 2270 PB - Duke University Press PY - 1993 ST - Cultures of United States Imperialism TI - Cultures of United States Imperialism ID - 1620 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Perhaps most noteworthy is Lars Ingelstam’s essay, “The sensation of the century,” pp. 12-29. The title of this work is a metaphor for the global telecommunication system. The essays in this volume, translated from Swedish by Robert Clark, attempt to answer such questions as how has this global system developed historically? Of what importance is it to industrial society? What impact does it have on national and international politics? What meaning does it have for the way people think about themselves, and what impact does this system have on social, economic, and intellectual life? The translation here is adequate. The essays are more speculative and theoretical than grounded in historical research. AU - Karlsson, Magnus & Lennart Sturesson, eds. CY - Stockholm DA - 1995 KW - non-USA general studies metaphors telecommunications global communication Sweden LB - 700 PB - Carlsson Bokförlag PY - 1995 ST - The World’s Largest Machine: Global Telecommunications and the Human Condition TI - The World’s Largest Machine: Global Telecommunications and the Human Condition ID - 1466 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The main theme of this thought-provoking work “is that broad changes are occurring to the law, to what it is and how it works, and that these changes are linked to the appearance of new methods of storing, processing, and communicating information. We are the first society in history to have the ability to communicate electronically. Because of various qualities of electronic communication that will be described below, the control of information, the organization of information, and the movement of information are no longer the same as they once were. This will have a considerable impact on an institution, such as the law, whose foundation is the processing of information but whose goals, values, capabilities, and modes of operation are tied to the older methods of communicating.” Chapter 1 is “The Erosion of Precedent and the Acceleration of Change.” Chapter 2: “Law, Media, and Conflict.” Chapter 3: “Freedom of Expression: Rights and Realities.” Chapter 4: “Legal Doctrines and Information: The Medium Has a Message.” Chapter 5: “The Legal Profession.” Chapter 6: “Law and the Modern Mind: Orientations and Perspectives.” Chapter 1 has an excellent discussion of how various media affect the way we experience the past. Chapter 3 has an interesting discussion of new media and their impact on freedom of expression. There “will be a realization that total control of public information is an anachronistic concept.... As technological abilities increase, law simply cannot be expected to successfully control the movement of information, as it has done in the past.” Chapter 4 contains a good treatment of new media and copyright, obscenity, and privacy. Note especially the discussion here as Katsh uses Joshua Meyrowitz’s No Sense of Place to comment on the pervasiveness of electronic media. “The ‘guests’ received by a child through electronic media no longer can be stopped at the door to be approved of by the masters of the house.... Electronic messages seep through walls and leap across great distances.” (Meyrowitz quoted) AU - Katsh, M. Ethan CY - New York DA - 1989 KW - computers surveillance interactivity values law, and privacy preservation values communication revolution archives history, and new media law freedom censorship and ratings law history home, and new media home libraries libraries, and information storage Information Age history general studies law electronic media, and law electronic media +information storage information processing change, acceleration of history, break with freedom of expression history, and electronic media digital media communication revolution information age privacy copyright obscenity children, and media Meyrowitz, Joshua interactive media +computers and the Internet change children digitization digital media, and law law, and digital media history, and digital media digital media, and history home, and electronic media children, and electronic media censorship and ratings LB - 710 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1989 ST - The Electronic Media and the Transformation of the Law TI - The Electronic Media and the Transformation of the Law ID - 1467 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Ethan Katsh writes: “We live in an era of historically significant transitions, of rapid and deep change occurring in institutions, in practices, in perspectives, and in values.... “The principal thesis of this book is that change is linked to our use of new information technologies. These new information technologies are particularly relevant to law because law is oriented around information and communication.... Katsh considers four ways in which print and electronic environments differ: "(1) methods of distributing information (electronic networks versus physical transportation), (2) methods of working with information (actively interacting with machines in addition to reading and writing), (3) methods of graphical and nontextual expression and communication, and (4) new modes of organizing information (hypertext versus linear modes of organization)." Such changes affect the work and lives of not only lawyers or courts but citizens who depend upon the law, groups influenced by the law, and persons whose work is on the margins of the law. These changes create "new patterns of interaction and new relationships between the state, citizens, groups, and institutions. They involve computer use at a level beyond the common applications of word processing, databases, and spreadsheets. They do not simply accelerate tasks we are already engaged in but encourage us to think and act in new ways. “The first of these differences between the print and electronic environments concerns the national and international communications links that are rapidly being established and that will make telephone and television, our current electronic means for sending words and pictures great distances, seem fairly primitive by comparison." Second, this new technological environment means that users interactions with machines will be different from readers interactions with books and the static printed page. Third, the electronic culture is altering the relation between word and image. "One of the subtle effects of print was to change how words and images were used. Print, while providing us with many beautiful books of art, tended to support text more than images. It was easier and cheaper to print text than images, particularly colorful images. Partly because of this, the print world of law is a largely imageless world. In the legal worlds of print, ‘fine print,’ and ‘black letter law,’ there is little other than text. The electronic media, however, are a force that encourages the visual, that deals with color as easily as it deals with black and white, and that allows more opportunities for multidimensional communication. As a consequence, the image will begin to play a new role in our culture. As law succumbs to this force, it learns to communicate in new ways and to represent conflict and relationships in new ways. Finally, these new electronic media make it possible to organize information more flexibly than is the case with print. "Books and text encouraged linear modes of organization and analysis and the division of knowledge into discrete disciplines and categories. Indexes and tables of contents provided access to information that had been ‘bound’ and was physically located in a single place. Placing information in electronic form makes possible new forms of organization and new modes of using information.” AU - Katsh, M. Ethan CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - computers print culture surveillance interactivity law, and privacy print print culture preservation communication revolution archives history, and new media materials materials digital media law freedom censorship and ratings law non-USA analog media history home, and new media home reading libraries libraries, and information storage information storage information storage Information Age history general studies law electronic media, and law information storage information processing change, acceleration of history, break with freedom of expression history, and electronic media communication revolution information age privacy copyright information delivery interactive media reading writing nonprint media global communication telephones television words vs. images graphics revolution reading, nonlinear hypertext information storage computers and the Internet change electronic media children digitization digital media, and law law, and digital media history, and digital media digital media, and history home, and electronic media children, and electronic media print v. digital analog v. digital children, and media images vs. words LB - 720 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1995 ST - Law in a Digital World TI - Law in a Digital World ID - 1468 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book, which with Index runs 411 pages, is a nicely illustrated history of home movie technology in the twentieth century. Kattelle had four goals in writing this book. First, he wanted to set out the most important developments in amateur movie technology. Second, he discussed the major inventors, scientists, corporations, and others involved in this technology. Third, he sought to give readers a history of the most important organizations and literature that was available to aided the amateur film maker. Finally, he covered the work of some of the best amateurs. While Kattelle discusses European and Japanese technologies imported to America, his focus is on the United States and does not attempt to provide a history of amateur movie making in other countries. The work has sixteen chapters. Early sections begin with the history of photography and motion pictures, deal with George Eastman, Eastman Kodak, Bell & Howell, and other competitors. Chapter 12 cover “The Coming of Video.” Chapter 13 is informative on “The Literature of Amateur Motion Pictures,” and covers such publications as American Photography, Moving Picture Age, Modern Photography, Popular Photography, and other periodicals. Chapter 14 looks at “Amateur Organizations” for the home movie maker. There are also fifteen appendices with such interesting information as a 1952 list of 16mm and 8mm camera and projector manufacturers, films prices for amateur equipment between 1935 and 1975, a compilation of motion picture film formats, and more. The book contains more than 300 black-and-white pictures of amateur home movie equipment. AU - Kattelle, Alan D. CY - Nashua, NH DA - 2000 KW - illustrations entertainment Zapruder, Abraham video cassette recorders (VCRs) corporations entertainment, home magnetic recording photography World War II References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps projection Japan home entertainment materials magnetic tape cinema motion pictures celluloid film color war non-USA home, and new media home motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and amateurism 16mm motion pictures, and 16mm motion pictures, and new technology motion pictures, and 8mm film 8mm 16mm film, and World War II World War II, and 16mm film motion pictures, and home movies cameras motion pictures, and amateur photography and visual communication cameras, battery driven Bell & Howell camera obscura cameras, and motion pictures motion pictures, and cameras Eastman, George Eastman Kodak Edison, Thomas film, and gauges Fuji Film kinetoscope color, and cameras cameras, and color color, and film film, and color cameras, and lenses lenses Polaroid projectors, and motion pictures motion pictures, and projectors sound recording sound recording, and cameras cameras, and sound recording 8mm, and Super 8 Super 8 motion pictures, and home home movies home movies, and history of VCRs videotape 16mm, and Victor Alexander Zapruder film cameras, and home timelines timelines, and home movie equipment amateur film making home, and amateur movies film, and acetate-based Japan, and home movie equipment Europe, and home movie equipment sound recording sound recording, and home movies illustrations home home, and new media Europe materials cameras 16mm film LB - 27910 PB - Transition Publishing PY - 2000 ST - Home Movies: A History of the American Industry, 1897-1979 TI - Home Movies: A History of the American Industry, 1897-1979 ID - 1343 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The first edition of this book came out in 1911 under the German title Die Erscheinungsweisen der Farben und ihre Beeinflussung durch die individuelle Erfahrung. A second edition appeared in 1930 under the title Der Aufbau der Farbwelt. The author was at one time a professor of psychology and education and director of the psychological laboratory at the University of Rostock. This volume was translated from the German and abridged by R. B. MacLeod and C. W. Fox. The work examines color primarily from the point of view of psychology. One section (131-35) does examine "Colour-Constancy and Photography." AU - Katz, David CY - London DA - 1935 KW - ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color non-USA non-USA, and color color, and inadequacy of language color, in history color, and theory color, and psychology Germany color, and Germany Germany, and color photography and visual communication color, and photography photography, and color ref, book photography LB - 39090 PB - Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co. Ltd. PY - 1935 ST - The World of Colour TI - The World of Colour ID - 4008 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Katz's thesis is that "the technology of sound recording, write large, has profoundly transformed modern musical life." (1) He maintains that it is crucial to understand "that recorded sound is mediated sound. It is sound mediated through a technology that requires its users to adapt their musical practices and habits in a variety of ways." (2) Katz contends that he is not an advocate of "technological determinism," or what some writers have called "hard determinism." (3) The influence of recording technology depends on human decisions and actions. Recorded music differs from live music in several ways. "When performed live, musical sound is fleeting, evanescent. Recordings, however, capture these fugitive sounds, tangibly preserving them on physical media.... Once musical sound is reified -- made into a thing -- it becomes transportable, salable, collectable, and manipulable in ways that have never before been possible. And like Billy Pilgrim in Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five, recorded music comes unstuck in time. No longer temporally rooted, recorded music can be heard after it was originally performed and repeated more or less indefinitely. The dead can speak to the living; the march of time can be halted." These "distinctive aspects of recorded sound have encouraged new ways of listening to music, led performers to change their practices, and allowed entirely new musical genres to come into existence." (5) This work is divided into eight chapters. Chapter 1 examines the characteristics of sound recording and how the experience of listening to the phonograph is unique. The remaining chapters look at the effects of the phonograph. Chapter 2 deals how the phonograph was used in early 20th century America to disseminate classical music and improve culture. Chapter 3 examines how recording influence jazz. Chapter 4 explains how sound recording increased the use of vibrato by classical violinists. In chapter 5, Katz looks at how the phonograph influenced avant-garde musicians in Europe during the 1920s and 1930s. Chapter 6 looks had how hip-hop DJ use turntables. Chapter 7 examines aesthetic and ethical issues involved in digital sampling. The final chapter discusses the Internet and its influence on those who listen to music. -SV Mark Katz has set a difficult task for himself: convincing the reader in less than 200 pages that recording technology has influenced the composition of music and “modern musical life.” Is he fully convincing? No. However, he provides a compelling case that certain forms of music have been affected by technology. Even today, we retain the three-minute pop song as a holdover from the days of 78-rpm records that held three and a quarter minutes of music per side. Naturally, such time constraints did affect composition. Perhaps his strongest case is that the popularity of violin vibrato was due to recording technology. When records and cylinders were invented, people were used to experiencing music live and in person; they were accustomed to watching the expressions and flourishes of the performers. The transition to listening to music on a record, therefore, was difficult. Because the audience no longer saw performers, vibrato made up for that lack of visual through its expressive flourishes. Also, Katz says that vibrato hid musical errors that were easily detected on recordings. And, vibrato allowed violinists to project their sound more clearly onto recordings. Katz isn’t a technological determinist, though. He believes that we shape recording technology as much as it shapes us. To bolster this argument he uses the case of Grammophonmusik , an experimental form of music written for phonograph records in the 1930s; however, he admits that there is more writing about this type of music then there are actual recordings of it, and although he quotes extensively from essays written by the creators of this form, he is unable to get any information on the actual performances. Grammophonmusik was a poor example for humans’ shaping of recording technology; his chapter on DJ battles and turntablism is much stronger because it is evident that he has witnessed these performances and has firsthand experience with them. And, he explains that the DJs don’t talk during the performances, they let the records do the talking; therefore, using recorded media as musical instruments. Overall, he seems to rely on secondary sources too much; however, he does provide some interesting analysis of phonograph advertisements. His qualitative research on college students’ feelings about mp3s doesn’t say anything we didn’t already know: it is not as much fun to collect mp3s as it is to collect records. Because he chooses not to bog down his book with unnecessary scholarly jargon, Capturing Sound is a valuable contribution to the field of sound recording scholarship. -Hallie Lieberman AU - Katz, Mark CY - Berkeley DA - 2004 KW - technology computers music discs, compact sound recording digital media duplicating technologies radio radio, and sound recording phonograph advertising advertising, and phonograph phonograph, and advertising compact discs (CDs) digital media, and compact discs (CDs) sound recording, and music music, and technology music, and phonograph music, and compact discs (CDs) music, and digital media motion pictures motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures audiences sound recording, and audiences audiences, and sound recording MP3 sound recording, and MP3 digital media, and MP3 technological determinism music, and Internet computers and the Internet values values, and digital sampling history and new media microphones sound recording, and microphones microphones, and sound recording music, and microphones microphones, and music home and new media sound recording, and jazz sound recording, and race race race, and sound recording magnetic recording sound recording, and magnetic tape home, and phonograph CDs history home Lieberman, Hallie advertising and public relations technology and society LB - 32880 PB - University of California Press PY - 2004 ST - Capturing Sound: How Technology Has Changed Music TI - Capturing Sound: How Technology Has Changed Music ID - 18 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 156-page books offers nine essays by eight different authors on the impact of electronic communication on publishing, scholarship, and information storage. It provides a perspective on how changes in communication were seen from the vantage point of the early 1980s. This work has two goals. One is “to provide up-to-date information about the most important new electronically based technologies which are already being used, or about to be used in the generation, storage and retrieval of information (in particular word processors, video and optical digital discs and videotex) and to assess their impact on the communication of scholarly research information, business information, and information for the general public.” A second objection is to point out major issues involved with the great changes then underway in the communications environment. (5) Among the essays included are Rex Winsbury’s “The scope of electronic publishing”; Mary Katzen’s “The impact of new technologies on scholarly communication”; David J. Brown’s “Electronic document delivery systems”; Robert Barrett’s “Prospects for the optical disc in the office of the future”; and Maurice B. Line’s “The production and dissemination of information: some general observations.” AU - Katzen, May, ed. CY - London DA - 1982 KW - R & D computers microprocessing publishing labor new media research and development libraries archives computers non-USA information storage publishing, and new media new media, and publishing microprocessors books, and electronic publishing computers and the Internet computers, and publishing computers, and information storage information storage, and electronic publishing research, and new media discs, optical computers, and word processing office, and electronic media Great Britain Great Britain, and information storage Great Britain, and electronic publishing libraries, and new media libraries, and optical discs libraries, and electronic publishing office books, periodicals, newspapers books LB - 310 PB - Frances Pinter (Publishers) Ltd. PY - 1982 ST - Multi-Media Communications TI - Multi-Media Communications ID - 120 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The first 54 pages of this 130-page book discusses the early history of celluloid in Great Britain, the United States, and Europe. The work discusses such topics as the Parkesine process and the manufacture of cellulose nitrate, the Parkesine Company, Daniel Spill, John Wesley Hyatt and his basic celluloid patent in 1870, the British Xylonite (an early name for celluloid) Company, and celluloid’s early uses which included dentures, toothbrushes, combs, collars, and cuffs. Hyatt’s patent, of course, had come from an attempt to find a substitute for ivory billiard balls by using a cellulose-nitrate composition. Eventually, celluloid came to play a major role in photography. The author does not see much future for celluloid and notes in 1963 that celluloid had become “a symbol of an age that has passed.” Still, 20,000 tons of the material was produced each year then, this compared to 40,000 tons per year during the late 1920s. The second part of this book deals with other plastic products that emerged from the early production of celluloid -- e.g., semi-synthetic plastics, the first synthetic resins, and thermoplastics. The final chapter deals with the second century of plastic production. The work also contains a chronology of 100 important dates in the production of plastics. AU - Kaufman, M. CY - London DA - 1963 KW - photography References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps motion pictures materials cinema motion pictures celluloid film non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +photography and visual communication photography photography, and celluloid Xylonite celluloid plastics materials revolution Hyatt, John Wesley Spill, Daniel celluloid film, and celluloid Parkes, Alexander timelines Great Britain Great Britain, and celluloid France France, and celluloid timelines, and plastics timelines, and materials LB - 12240 PB - Plastics Institute; distributed by Iliffe Books Ltd. PY - 1963 ST - The first century of plastics: celluloid and its sequel TI - The first century of plastics: celluloid and its sequel ID - 2571 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Martin Scorsese based his controversial 1988 movie, The Last Temptation of Christ, on Nikos Kazantzakis’s 1955 novel by the same title. Kazantzakis book was also controversial, so controversial in fact, that the Greek Orthodox Church excommunicated him, and he was not allowed to be buried in Greece after his death in 1957. His intellectual odyssey had taken him from the ideas of Henri Bergson to Greek Orthodoxy to Frederich Nietzsche, then to Buddha and Lenin, and finally back to Christianity. Along the way, he had written another well-known novel, Zorba the Greek (1946) (also made into a movie in 1963). In The Last Temptation of Christ, Kazantzakis portrayed a human Jesus who was constantly tempted by evil and who occasionally succumbed to the sins of the flesh. Only by showing this constant struggle, Kazantzakis believed, could Christ’s rejection of evil be meaningful. In the book, as Jesus was nailed to the cross, he was tempted by Satan in the guise of a female angel. She showed him how his human life could have unfolded. He would have fathered children with Mary Magdelene. Later, he would be confronted by Judas Iscariot who berated him as a coward and traitor to God. Although Jesus admitted that he at first “lost courage and fled” crucifixion, at the end of Kazantzakis’s story, he realized his mistake and chose to accept his fate on the cross thus overcoming temptation. All “turned out as it should, glory be to God!” AU - Kazantzakis, Nikos CY - New York DA - 1955, 1960 KW - values novels motion pictures Hollywood values religion +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion Last Temptation of Christ (1988) Kazantzakis, Nikos novels, and motion pictures motion pictures, and anti-religion LB - 24340 PB - Simon & Schuster, Inc./Touchstone Books PY - 1955 ST - The Last Temptation of Christ TI - The Last Temptation of Christ ID - 1080 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Keane’s book is a philosophical and historical inquiry into the nature of freedom and democracy in the West. He traces the evolution of the press back to English Common Law and the battles of seditious libel trials. To Keane, there are several philosophical problems with the traditional understanding of freedom of the press when you apply it to the modern, technological age. Most essential, he argues that the important freedom is the opportunity to have access to modern media to speak if you want to. The majority of this book is based on the British system of state ownership and heavy regulation. Keane outlines the basic arguments made by free market proponents against this system. He also summarizes the positions of those who support reform of the system. In either case, Keane makes an effort to point out the way that democratic access to the media will be endangered by these proposals. He is particularly concerned about any deregulation that would make the press more like the American model. He is concerned about global concentration of ownership and the increasingly restricted access and narrow viewpoints. In response to these concerns, Keane proposes a new model of “public service media” that would minimize the unhealthy or restrictive aspects of regulation, but would also keep in mind the basic principle that the goal is a democratic system. He argues that such a system would allow for research and growth in the field of technology, competitiveness in the world marketplace, and ensure that people get the high-quality news and information that they need to be citizens in a democracy. --Rob Rabe AU - Keane, John CY - Cambridge, UK DA - 1991 KW - community democracy freedom law law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA regulation media democracy and media deregulation regulation, and press critics media, and news Great Britain Rabe, Rob freedom of the press censorship, and press regulation, and press LB - 9440 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - Polity Press PY - 1991 ST - The Media and Democracy TI - The Media and Democracy ID - 2311 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book has a brief discussion of Jack Valenti's role in the LBJ administration. AU - Kearns, Doris CY - New York DA - 1976 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Johnson, Lyndon presidents, and new media Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures LB - 19810 PB - Harper & Row PY - 1976 ST - Lyndon Johnson and the American Dream TI - Lyndon Johnson and the American Dream ID - 813 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The articles in this book attempt to assess the interrelationships between science, technology, and U. S. foreign policy, and begins by quoting Winston Churchill who prophecied that "the empires of the future are the empires of the mind." How nations support and use science and technology, the editor writes, will "profoundly influence international relations" in the future. (11) This work contains ten essays by different authors. 1) Simon Ramo discusses "The Foreign Dimension of National Technological Policy" (pp. 12-21) 2) Ian M. Ross writes about "Telecommunications" (22-45) and considers the advantages of digital transmission over analog media. 3) J. Fred Bucy deals with "Computer Sector Profile" (46-78) and covers, among other topics, developments relating to software and artificial intelligence. Bucy notes that "although the potential applications of AI are numerous and exciting, much work remains to be done in refining the generic rules of logic (i.e., how the human mind learns and reasons) and in transferring this knowledge to the computer system for each field of application." (56) 4) Hans Mark's chapter "Areospace" (79-109) offers a historical survey of aviation and space exploration from before World War II military communication through the space shuttle. 5) Arden L. Bement, Jr.'s essay, "Materials Sector Profile," (110-64) notes that materials science in 1985 was in "transition" (111) and that this field and engineering were "burgeoning -- so much so, that it is difficult to distinguish between future developments and near-term applications." (113) Bement the importance of research and development in the area of materials and the importance that this field has to foreign relations. In the following chapter, Edward A. Frieman writes about "The Energy Sector" (165-90), and observes that "the world today [1985] is entering the second decade of a new energy regime following the Arab oil embargo of 1973 and the economic shock of the oil price explosion." (185) Frieman sees energy policy closely bound up with energy technology, but concludes that "energy planning has fallen into disrepute, and much of the apparatus for examining these issues is being dismantled. The base of support for R & D in energy-related technology has also been whittled away. The world survived the major economic dislocation of the energy-related shocks of the 1970s, but perhaps not as well as some would like to believe." (190) 6) Ralph W. F. Hardy writes about "Biotechnology: Status, Forecast, and Issues" (191-226) and says that many describe biotechnology as "an infant to be king technology," and view it "as the next major technological opportunity." (191) He discusses new developments in biotechnology and related ethical concerns. He considers the impact on health care products and on agriculture. He emphasize the importance of developing world leadership in this area and it potential impact on international relations. Goverment support for research and development in this area will be important. 7) Richard N. Cooper and Ann L. Hollick consider "International Relations in a Technologically Advanced Future." (227-65) Among the "key technological developments" (230) they consider are energy, new materials, computers, telecommunications, aviation and aerospace, and biotechnology. They attempt to assess the likely future political, social, and economic implications of these technologies, and their significance of national policy. The two concluding essays in this work are C. W. Robinson's "Technological Advances -- Their Impact on U. S. Foreign Policy Relative to the Developing Nations" (266-84), and Bobby Inman's "Technology and East-West Relations" (285-92). This work grew from collaboration between the National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, and Council on Foreign Relations. AU - Keatley, Anne G., ed. CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1985 KW - technology R & D computers computers technology and society materials, and silicon Reagan administration Reagan, Ronald Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism nationalism and communication artificial intelligence and biotechnology capitalism research and development computers, and nationalism nationalism, and computers materials nationalism, and materials materials, and nationalism foreign relations, and technology technology, and foreign relations aeronautics and space communication OTA satellites biotechnology telephones telephones, and foreign relations telephones, and nationalism nationalism, and telephones transistors digital media digital media, and foreign relations computers, and software computers, and hardware space shuttle silicon semiconductors presidents and new media Reagan, Ronald, and technology Reagan administration, and technology Reagan administration, and foreign relations foreign relations, and Reagan administration Cold War Cold War, and technology values values, and biotechnology computers and the Internet Reagan administration space communication war LB - 33180 PB - National Academy Press PY - 1985 ST - Technological Frontiers and Foreign Relations TI - Technological Frontiers and Foreign Relations ID - 2958 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Keil looks at what sorts of constraints and potentialities imposed upon the ability to tell a story in a movie by the film medium itself. He focuses particularly on the task of editing, and how refinements in those techniques led to amplification of narrative scope. He distinguishes the editing-based style of American film making from the European version, which has more of a “deep-staging aesthetic.” This fundamental difference sent the two schools of movie-making in divergent directions. --Gordon Jackson AU - Keil, Charlie CY - Madison DA - 2001 KW - motion pictures non-USA Jackson, Gordon +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and silent films motion pictures, and editing motion pictures, and narrative motion pictures, and Europe Europe, and motion pictures Europe cinematography motion pictures, and staging indepth motion pictures, and crosscutting motion pictures, and short scales LB - 1520 PB - University of Wisconsin Press PY - 2001 ST - Early American Cinema in Transition: Story, Style and Filmmaking, 1907-1913 TI - Early American Cinema in Transition: Story, Style and Filmmaking, 1907-1913 ID - 240 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - A study of the impact of railway developments on English and Scottish cities in the nineteenth century. This work considers a wide variety of effects, but most obviously concentrates on the building of railway termini and the subsequent impact on urban centers and suburbs. Discusses at length the give and take between railway companies and municipal authorities. Also devotes considerable time to urban social costs. Provides both a general overview reconstructed from Parliamentary papers--particularly through committees set up on question of railway construction--as well as city-by-city case studies with inter-city comparisons. Source material draw almost exclusively from Parliamentary papers devoted to negotiations over land purchases and clearances. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Kellet, John R. CY - London DA - 1969 KW - urban studies non-USA Wolf, Nicholas Great Britain +transportation railroads Great Britain, and railroads railroads, and Great Britain Scotland Scotland, and railroads railroads, and Scotland urban studies, and railroads railroads, and urban studies LB - 1920 PB - Routledge & Kegan Paul PY - 1969 ST - The Impact of Railways on Victorian Cities TI - The Impact of Railways on Victorian Cities ID - 280 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The United States media bought wholeheartedly into the information that the George H. W. Bush administration gave them in 1991. Frequently, the new wires would report on Iraqi intentions to invade Saudi Arabia based on U.S. government sources, when there may not have been strong evidence to actually support these reports. “Crucially, the major newspapers, news magazines, and television networks did not criticize Bush’s deployment or debate whether it was wise to send so many U.S. troops to Saudi Arabia in the first place,” Kellner says. “The alternative press argued against the deployment and for a UN peacekeeping force to be sent to the area, rather than a massive U.S. military force, but this position got almost n hearing in the mainstream media. ... Yet there were many oppositional voices to the Bush administration’s policies that were simply excluded from the mainstream media, thus precluding serious debate over the proper U.S. response to Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait. But the mainstream media only draw on an extremely limited repertoire of voices and privilege the same administration officials and top Democratic Party leaders, thus freezing significant views our of public policy debates.” The United States and the Bush administration may have played the media by masking their true reasons for going to war with Iraq so quickly. The chief of these reasons may have been to liven up the economy, Kellner argues. “In the light of the complex economic, political, and military logic of war, most of Bush’s official rationale, which vacillated from week to week, was mere ideological camouflage for the real reasons for the military deployment, which had to do with the economic and political interests of a small group who planned to benefit from the war and had little to do with the lofty principles in the name of which the war was executed. The Gulf war was thus a media propaganda war in which the Bush administration managed to cover over the key reasons for U.S. intervention.” ABC, CBS and NBC were all owned by corporations whose interests, Kellner asserts, were best served by supporting a war in the Middle East. Therefore mainstream media helped to hype the war in cooperation with the government. “Many GE board members sit on the boards of other corporate media like the Washington Post and are connected with U.S. government agencies and oil corporations as well. ABC’s board of directors is involved with oil companies and the defense industries, and CBS also has connections with big oil and the defense industries. Greg LeRoy pointed out in an August 4, 1991, Houston Post article that ‘The chair of Capital Cities/ABC-TV sits on the board of Texaco. And CBS’s board includes directors from Honeywell and the Rand Corp. NBC is owned by general Electric, the same GE that had aircraft engines in more than 20 different types of combat aircraft serving in the Gulf.’ Hence, there were strong corporate forces connected to the ‘Big Three’ TV networks which would benefit from a war in the Middle East.” --Michael Shefky The Gulf war was presented to the public as the ‘perfect war’. New technologies made the U.S. superior to its enemies and live broadcasting made people part of this demonstration of modern warfare. New military equipment could make the army more purposeful thereby limiting civilian casualties to a minimum. This was not the case, however. Nevertheless, the American public never heard the numbers about civilian casualties nor did they hardly ever get to see images of American atrocities. And if they did, the media presented it as Iraqi propaganda. Saddam Hussein was portrayed as a modern version of Adolph Hitler, and antiwar organizations did not get any media attention. When the conflict was already over by February 1991 and Iraqi troops were retreating from Kuwait, Bush started a ground war because Iraq had not met the deadline set by the U.S. This violent and unnecessary bloodshed was also presented by the media as an inevitable finale to a major American victory which brought peace back to the middle-east and confirmed the role of the U.S. as a world leading country. According to Kendell however this war was not glorious at all and it is a disgrace that the American people were so mislead. -- Pieter Van Den Berg AU - Kellner, Douglas CY - Boulder, CO DA - 1992 KW - corporations corporations corporations corporations public relations advertising NBC journalism news and journalism war non-USA Shefky, Michael television propaganda propaganda, and television propaganda, and news news, and propaganda television, and propaganda television, and news CNN CNN, and propaganda ABC, and propaganda NBC, and propaganda CBS, and propaganda Gulf War (1991) propaganda, and Gulf War (1991) Gulf War (1991), and propaganda news, and corporate bias capitalism, and news capitalism, and war television, and war television, and propaganda news capitalism advertising and public relations military communication CBS Van Den Berg, Pieter ABC LB - 2100 PB - Westview Press PY - 1992 ST - The Persian Gulf TV War TI - The Persian Gulf TV War ID - 54 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author explains the purpose of this volumes is to present "a study of methods of investigation of delinquents and their treatment, together with such suggestions for the prevention of criminality as has resulted from it." (vii) She presents a brief section on color preferences of delinquents. Subjects were presented with 21 different pieces of colored silk arranged on cardboard and asked to rank their preferences as to first and second. "For students the first choice was red and the second blue; for white criminals, the first was blue and the second pink; for negroes, the first was purple and the second heliotrope and dark blue. The object was to determine if criminal classes wore bright colors because they had a taste for them. For white criminals this does not appear true. Some explanations for variations between taste and habit are: Brighter colors attract more attention and this is essential for prostitutes. Brighter fabrics and mixed colors are cheaper than solid blacks, grays, etc., for cheapness and show often go together. Prostitutes of the lower grades wear much cast off clothing and here no choice is exerted.... For negroes, choice of color was almost uniform, for purple and its shades were almost invariably chosen. A child-like pleasure was shown in making selections from the bright fabrics, even by most hardened criminals. Explanation for their choice lies more in desire for contrast and ornament, than in economic conditions, although as a matter of fact, they, too, cannot afford shades which represent their choice." (67) AU - Kellor, Frances A. CY - New York DA - 1901 KW - psychology ref, secondary color color, and psychology psychology, and color critics critics, and color color, and criminals women women, and color color, and women color, and criminals color, and Frances Kellor ref, book LB - 39540 PB - Macmillan Company PY - 1901 ST - Experimental Sociology: Descriptive and Analytical: Delinquents TI - Experimental Sociology: Descriptive and Analytical: Delinquents ID - 4052 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Kelly argues that the world of biological life and that of artificial intelligence is converging at the end of the twentieth century. “The realm of the born -- all that is nature -- and the realm of the made -- all that is humanly constructed -- are becoming one. Machines are becoming biological and the biological is becoming engineered.” According to Kelly, “our future is technological; but it will not be a world of gray steel. Rather our technological future is headed toward a neo-biological civilization.” Man-made things are coming to behave in an increasingly lifelike fashion, while living things are increasingly being engineered. “The wholesale transfer of bio-logic into machines should fill us with awe. When the union of the born and the made is complete, our fabrications will learn, adapt, heal themselves, and evolve. This is a power we have hardly dreamt of yet. The aggregate capacity of millions of biological machines may someday match our own skill of innovation. Ours may always be a flashy type of creativity, but there is something to be said for a slow, wide creativity of many dim parts working ceaselessly. “Yet as we unleash living forces into our created machines, we lose control of them. They acquire wildness and some of the surprises that the wild entails. This, then, is the dilemma all gods must accept: that they can no longer be completely sovereign over their finest creations. “The world of the made will soon be like the world of the born: autonomous, adaptable, and creative but, consequently, out of our control. I think that’s a great bargain,” Kelly writes. At the time this book was published, Kelly was executive editor of Wired, and previously had been publisher and editor of Whole Earth Review, and editor of SIGNAL, which dealt with digital tools and ideas. AU - Kelly, Kevin CY - Reading, MA DA - 1994 KW - computers surveillance Darwinism values law, and privacy law communication revolution genetics +future and science fiction digitization machines human nature +artificial intelligence and biotechnology future control revolution machines, and humans communication revolution Brand, Stewart change chaos complexity computers Darwin, Charles evolution digital media sound recording, and digital audio tape encryption environmentalism game theory genetic engineering Gould, Stephen Jay networks Kauffman, Stuart miniaturization natural selection human nature, postdarwinism privacy cybernetics swarms, and swarm systems Toffler, Alvin Neumann, John von Wiener, Norbert Wilson, E. O. Vernadsky, Vladimir +sound recording environment sound recording, and digital +computers and the Internet values, and biotechnology future, and biotechnology values LB - 2170 PB - Addison-Wesley Publishing Company PY - 1994 ST - Out of Control: The Rise of Neo-Biological Civilization TI - Out of Control: The Rise of Neo-Biological Civilization ID - 1457 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - A copy of this unauthorized, illustrated version of the 1970 Report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography, is located in the Meese Commission records in National Archives II. AU - Kemp, Earl, ed. CY - San Diego, CA DA - 1970 KW - illustrations sexuality motion pictures mass media media effects crime pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and supporters pornography, and crime crime, and pornography reports illustrations reports, unauthorized LB - 22360 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Greenleaf Classics, Inc. PY - 1970 ST - Illustrated Presidential Report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography TI - Illustrated Presidential Report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography ID - 964 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Kempner, Stanley, ed. CY - Atlanta DA - 1965 KW - +television television, and scientific background television, and technology LB - 7020 PB - Television Encyclopedia Press PY - 1965 ST - History of Television: Scientific Background TI - History of Television: Scientific Background ID - 2073 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This stimulating book discusses the origins of pornography in Western society, and especially in the United States. The idea of "pornography" is of rather recent origins, dating sometime between 1755 and 1857. In the early nineteenth century, guidebooks, museums, and fiction began to deal with Pompeii, the remains of which had been unearthed a century earlier. Kendrick is good in discussing the development of obscenity law in England and the United States, starting with the Hicklin case in 1857, and Anthony Comstock and the Comstock Law in the late-nineteenth century. His discussion of the unraveling of this legal structure that underlay censorship is perceptive. He covers the Ulysses case and later, the overturning of the Hicklin test in the 1957 U. S. Supreme Court ruling, the Roth-Alberts decision. The concern over pornography paralleled the rise of photography and pulp fiction, the latter made possible by cheaper paper and technology that made printing faster. The author could have done more in connecting concerns over pornography with these technological changes. The final chapter, "The Post-Pornographic Era," is especially disappointing in its failure to connect adequately concerns over pornography in the 1970s and 1980s with the rise of new media -- VCRs, cable television, camcorders, and the like. AU - Kendrick, Walter CY - New York DA - 1987 KW - U. S. Supreme Court Roth case (1957) photography Supreme Court (U. S.) sexuality values context freedom censorship and ratings law censorship and ratings non-USA values pornography museums motion pictures photography and visual communication pornography censorship +books, periodicals, newspapers television values, and pornography Comstock, Anthony Alberts v. California Campbell, Lord John obscenity law First Amendment sexuality, and mass media Hicklin test pornography, and Pompeii Pompeii, and pornography museums, and pornography Roth v. U. S. (1957) Ulysses and censorship children children, and media obscenity pornography obscenity, and censorship censorship, and obscenity Regina v. Hicklin law Supreme Court (U. S.), and obscenity obscenity, and context, and obscenity context, and censorship context, and pornography pornography, defined Alberts case LB - 9870 PB - Penguin Books PY - 1987 ST - The Secret Museum: Pornography in Modern Culture TI - The Secret Museum: Pornography in Modern Culture ID - 2354 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Horror is a fear of the deadness and of the past. Both fears are reflected in mid-eighteenth century Gothic architecture. By the mid-nineteenth century, these images were staples of scary entertainment. "Scary entertainment, as we know it today,,” Kendrick says, “showed its first stirrings in he middle of the eighteenth century, when deadness and pastness began to acquire the eerie aura they possess yet more powerfully 250 years later." This form of entertainment “has grown steadily since, until it now includes virtually every inhabitant of Western Europe and the industrialized Americas. Increasingly, this potential audience has been urban, secular, cut off from any religious or ethnic tradition." There is no way of knowing how many horror novels were published during the peak of the movement. A Gothic Bibliography (1941) listed more than 2,000 titles published in the United States and Western Europe between 1790 and 1820, not including reprints and new editions. The novel Udolphos helped the development. Scary entertainment has withstood changes in writing, context, and media. "By about 1930, scary entertainment had amassed its full inventory of effects. It had recognized its history, begun to establish a canon, and even started rebelling against the stultification canons bring.” Horror short stories continued to flourish and spawned “a score of subtypes, including science-fiction and fantasy tales; adaptations would proliferate on radio and later on television. But the primary vehicle of the late-twentieth century fright film got off to a surprisingly slow start. Before 1930, horrid movies hardly claimed a shelf in the genres warehouse, by 1940, they owned the place." (199) Excessive gore is taken to be the hallmark of the last two decades of horror movies, according to Kendrick. "The wellspring of horror remains, as it was the eighteenth century, the fear of death or rather the fear of being dead, of the bodies losing form, turning slimy, melting away. This source shows no sign of abatement; it seems so self-evident and natural that it has come to be regarded as eternal, part of universal human inheritance." (260) --Amanda Novak AU - Kendrick, Walter M. CY - New York DA - c1991 KW - fear theater motion pictures media effects media violence violence Novak, Amanda +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and horror +books, periodicals, newspapers books, and horror theater, and horror horror media effects media effects, and horror media effects, and fear violence, and horror entertainment books fear, and media effects LB - 1840 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Grove Weidenfeld PY - 1991 ST - The Thrill of Fear: 250 Years of Scary Entertainment TI - The Thrill of Fear: 250 Years of Scary Entertainment ID - 272 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work gives an informative account of the homefront during World War I. AU - Kennedy, David CY - New York DA - 1980 KW - public relations advertising war propaganda World War I propaganda, and World War I World War I, and propaganda advertising and public relations LB - 1670 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1980 ST - Over Here: The First World War and American Society TI - Over Here: The First World War and American Society ID - 255 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Kennedy writes: “Computers, more than any other technology, evidence the trend toward augmenting or displacing human intelligence with machinery. Today the world’s computer population represents the capacity to make untold billions of mechanical decisions every second, decision that, individually, are incredibly specialized and stupid, but in concert are changing the way we think and work. Of this capacity, the predominant share resides in the Western industrialized countries, industrial capitalism’s domain, and capitalism’s share would be even larger if not for the pitched economic and political rivalry between capitalist and centrally planned economies. The industrial capitalism that demands mechanical intelligence is today its pre-eminent employer. “... The modern world has reached the point where industrialization is being directed squarely at the human intellect. “Historically, industrialization has been accompanied by a precipitous cultural transformation, a reordering of the social classes and their relation....” AU - Kennedy, Noah CY - London DA - 1989 KW - computers communication revolution values human nature +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology values, and computers communication revolution computers, and cultural transformation automation human nature, and computers computers, and human nature computers capitalism, and computers labor capitalism LB - 7850 N1 - See also: office PB - Unwin Hyman PY - 1989 ST - The Industrialization of Intelligence: Mind and Machine in the Modern Age TI - The Industrialization of Intelligence: Mind and Machine in the Modern Age ID - 2154 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book covers "a formative period in commercialization of the phonograph: the first commercial recordings went on the market in 1890. Early in the twentieth century, after trials with cylinder, flat discs that turned at 78 revolutions per minute became the dominant form in which recorded sound reached the public. During the '78 rpm era' that this book describes, a small number of the many companies that made records overwhelmingly dominated music recording and distribution. Around the time of World War II, on the other hand, a whole series of new forces -- a long, bitter struggle between music publishers and broadcasters, the strike of the American Federation of Musicians against the record companies, recording in radio studios, the advent of acetate disc cutters and magnetic tape -- helped independent companies proliferate, and from a groundswell of major postwar culture changes, radio disk jockeys and the independent record companies produced the rock-and-roll revolution. "From 1890 to 1945, the era of the phonograph's rise and decline as the dominant medium of popular recorded sound, the historian can readily document, in a way that is not possible thereafter, the give-and-take between the record business and major social patterns in the United States," the author maintains. This documentation is made possible by trade journals such as Talking Machine World and Phonograph Monthly. Kenney considers three interrelated processes: the political economy of culture, the reception by audiences of phonographs and sound recordings, and how commercial recordings created meaning. The author argues that sound recordings stimulated and preserved "collective memories." The phonograph record, Kenney says, "'froze' past performances as engraved sound pictures; 78 rpm records offered American memories of memories." It was "at the juncture of social repetition and collective memory," he writes, that "the phonography played a more important cultural role from 1890 to 1945 than the discourses on either recorded sound or on memory have recognized." The book has nine chapters devoted to the following themes: Chapter 1 looks a how audiences used recorded music. Chapter 2, entitled "The Coney Island Crowd," deals with the phonograph and other popular recordings prior to the Great War of 1914-18. Chapter 3, "His Master's Voice," considers the Victor Talking Machine Company. Chapter 4 discusses "foreign" and "ethnic" recordings. Chapter 5 treats women and sound recording from 1890 to 1930. Chapter 6 deals with race records, including rhythm and blues. Chapter 7 talks about southern hillbilly records. Chapter 8 is about hit records during the Great Depression. The final chapter attempts to place popular recorded music within the context of national culture. AU - Kenney, William Howland CY - New York DA - 1999 KW - tape recording, magnetic magnetic recording recording tape recording women, and new media race preservation history, and new media war World War II World War I women recording, and tape recorders tape recording recording sound recording history sound recording phonograph women, and sound recording African Americans, and sound recording sound recording, and ethnicity sound recording, and foreign recording Victor Talking Machine Company his master's voice sound recording, and audience reception audiences, and sound recording sound recording, and 78 rpm political economy history, and sound recording history, and phonograph radio recording industry World War II, and sound recording World War I, and sound recording Great Depression, and sound recording sound recording, and acetate disc cutters audiences history, and sound recording women, and sound recording race, and sound recording African Americans LB - 3800 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1999 ST - Recorded Music in American Life: The Phonograph and Popular Memory, 1890-1945 TI - Recorded Music in American Life: The Phonograph and Popular Memory, 1890-1945 ID - 1768 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This excellent, intellectually stimulating book considers the impact of new communication technologies on thought and culture primarily in Europe and America leading up and including World War I. While new developments in communication form a foundation for this work, it is much more than just a history of new inventions. Kern discusses the writings of futurists, scientists and philosophers (e.g., Einstein, Proust, William James, others). Chapters are arranged topically and explore how thinking changed about: “The Nature of Time,” “The Past,” “The Present,” “The Future,” “Speed,” “The Nature of Space,” “Form,” “Distance,” “Direction,” “Temporality of the July Crisis,” and “The Cubist War.” One finds in this work consideration of clocks and the adoption of standard time, the telegraph, photography, the phonograph, the telephone, the bicycle, automobiles, airplanes (including aerial bombing in World War I), the microphone, cinema, the wireless (see the discussion of the sinking of the Titanic), and electricity. AU - Kern, Stephen CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1983 KW - literature space (spatial) and communication photography +radio aeronautics and space communication time and timekeeping values time sexuality preservation present mindedness new media motion pictures modernity innovation history, and new media +future and science fiction context timekeeping, and clocks law censorship and ratings censorship war history geography +sound recording public address systems history general studies time space (spatial) change, acceleration of World War I future James, William Einstein, Albert Proust, Marcel present history, and media history, break with +transportation bicycles cubism telegraph timekeeping +photography and visual communication phonograph +telephones automobiles aerial bombing microphones +motion pictures and popular culture wireless communication +electricity Titanic history, idea of clocks timekeeping, and standard time inventions change future automobiles airplanes +aeronautics and space (spatial) communication Victorianism modernism literature, and sexuality sexuality, and literature context, and sexuality new media, and sexuality sexuality, and new media censorship, and sexuality context, late 19th context, early 20th LB - 730 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1983 ST - The Culture of Time and Space, 1880-1918 TI - The Culture of Time and Space, 1880-1918 ID - 1469 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book contains 35 essays by different authors on entertainment practices and distribution networks throughout the world. Authors include David Levy, John P. Welle, Charles O'Brien, Renaud Chaplain, Begoòa, Pierre-Emmanuel Jacques, Pierre Véronneau, Luis Alonso García, Rashit M. Yangirov, Richard Abel, Gregory A. Waller, Michael Hammond, Pelle Snickars, Martin Loiperdinger, Gunnar Iversen, Ivo Blom, Paul C. Spehr, Richard Ward, Nicholas Dulac, Rudmer Canjels, Pierre Chemartin and André Gaudreault, Jonathan Auerbach, Ian Christie, Marta Braun and Charlie Keil, Janelle Blankenship, Tony Fletcher, Wolfgang Fuhrmann, Joseph Garncarz, Anke Mebold, Martina Roepke, Ansje van Beusekom, Wanda Strauven, Viva Paci, Rixt Jonkman, André Habib, François Jost, and Giovanna Fossati and Nann Verhoeff. AU - Kessler, Frank AU - Nanna Verhoeff, eds. CY - Eastleigh, UK DA - 2007 KW - home home ref, secondary color motion pictures Pathé Pathécolor color, and Pathé motion pictures, and color color, and silent films color, and motion pictures non-USA Great Britain France France, and Pathé Great Britain, and Pathé Great Britain, and color films Great Britain, and color Great Britain, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Great Britain motion pictures, and France color, and bias against motion pictures, and orthochromatic film color, and orthochromatic film color, and black-and-white film nationalism and communication color, and nationalism nationalism, and color silent film advertising, and Pathé advertising, and color films color, and Kinemacolor Kinemacolor motion pictures, and Kinemacolor Kinemacolor, and Pathé Pathé, and Kinemacolor motion pictures, and distribution Germany Germany, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Germany Spain Portugal Portugal, and motion pictures Spain, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Spain motion pictures, and Portugal Russia Russia, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Russia home and new media home, and motion pictures motion pictures, and home censorship and ratings Russia, and movie censorship censorship, and Russia film film, and 17.5 mm home, and home movies advertising advertising and public relations censorship nationalism LB - 41760 PB - John Libbey Publishing PY - 2007 ST - Networks of Entertainment: Early Film Distribution, 1895-1915 TI - Networks of Entertainment: Early Film Distribution, 1895-1915 ID - 4274 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book provides a useful introduction into journalism that fell outside the mainstream of American reporting. Kessler cover several group including women, African Americans, the utopian press, the foreign-language press, the socialist press, anarchist writing, and more. The work focuses primarily on print culture. In this book Kessler argues that marginalized groups throughout American history have created alternative spaces for dialogue, outside of the conventional “marketplace of ideas,” that have thrived “on the fringes of American society” (20). She posits that these outlets have served the following overall functions: 1. Provide access to the public sphere for marginalized populations, such as African Americans, feminists, and political radicals, who have traditionally been excluded from the “marketplace of ideas.” In her words, the individuals behind alternative press outlets, when “denied access to the mainstream media marketplace, started marketplaces of their own. This was, many of the participants believed, the only way their voices could be heard” (15). 2. To educate communities who were underserved by the mainstream press, such as non-English or English as a second language speakers. She furthermore argues that these types of media outlets (in the case of non-English publications) contributed to the Americanization of immigrant populations. 3. To campaign for the political rights of disenfranchised populations, such as African Americans before and after the Civil War and women seeking suffrage. Kessler examines several categories of alternative press publications: those of African Americans, utopians and communitarians, immigrants, populists, anarchists, socialists, and communists, and finally war resisters. She argues that all media producers shared key characteristics. She writes, “All held views or believed in ideas that diverged from the mainstream political, economic, social, and cultural climate of their times. All wanted, to some degree, to effect social change” (16). Kessler examines the intersection of the First Amendment rights of free speech and the practicalities of access to the “marketplace of ideas.” She makes an important point when she stresses that the alternative “marketplaces of ideas,” what we would today refer to as “counter public spheres,” often “mirrored” the structures of the broader society and the mainstream media. Kessler also addressed the 1947 Hutchins Commission, headed by then University of Chicago chancellor Robert Maynard Hutchins. The Commission was a key moment in the history of U.S. media and setting up a public service standard for the press, which was later applied to broadcast media. It helped to define what “print culture” could be in service of larger social goals. The first main function of the alternative press within print culture was to provide access for marginalized groups to both the means of production and information not available in the mainstream press. On the whole, the alternative press historically has had little impact on mainstream political thought and debate, Kessler argues. “In their role as external communicators, dissident journals attempted to perform two major functions: educate the ‘unconverted” public by presenting a forum for ideas generally ignored by the conventional press, and persuade the unconverted that their cause was righteous and worth supporting. Here the dissident press encountered its greatest obstacle, for, in general, it was read by those who were already supporters, not by those whom it wanted to convert… both large- and small-circulation dissident publications were rarely read by those in power or those who had the power to effect change.” (158) -Jill Hopke AU - Kessler, Lauren CY - Beverly Hills, CA DA - 1984 KW - OWI women, and new media journalism community democracy news and journalism non-USA books, periodicals, newspapers alternative press newspapers, and African American newspapers, and foreign language press foreign-language press African Americans, and press Douglass, Frederick women women, and press Office of War Information (OWI) socialism, and press newspapers, and socialism newspapers, and women anarchists, and press democracy and media democracy, and alternative press newspapers news socialism alternative press underground press underground media Hutchins Commission Hutchins, Robert socialism, and journalism journalism, and socialism Hopke, Jill African Americans LB - 1710 PB - Sage Publications PY - 1984 ST - The Dissident Press: Alternative Journalism in American History TI - The Dissident Press: Alternative Journalism in American History ID - 19 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - A 117-page text provides an overview of its subject, although one perhaps too technical for the average reader (e.g., topics include: Charles Xavier Thomas and the Arithmometer, The Tatalisator, and the HP-35 Scientific Calculator). A Chronology (pp. 118-31) recounts major developments in this field. AU - Kidwell, Peggy A., and Paul E. Ceruzzi CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1994 KW - reference works illustrations computers References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps digitization timelines illustrations +computers and the Internet computers, history of timelines, and digital computers illustrations, and digital computers digital media computers +timelines LB - 7860 PB - Smithsonian Institution Press PY - 1994 ST - Landmarks in Digital Computing: A Smithsonian Pictorial History TI - Landmarks in Digital Computing: A Smithsonian Pictorial History ID - 2155 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This collection of nineteen essays and research reports is aimed at those people who are interested in how the Internet is being used. The work has three goals: 1) to reveal what scientists are learning about social behavior on the Internet; 2) to encourage research on design, applications, and polices; and 3) to suggest how research on electronic communication can be a contribution to social science. "What makes the Internet special," write the volume's editor, Sara Kiesler, "is not the technology per se but the social interactions its is inspiring. Every day the Internet supports thousands of experiments in friendship and group formation; in discussion, decision making, publication, and political debate and mobilization; in the creation of advice and social support networks; in geographically distributed teamwork; in business cooperation and coordination; in creating new markets and running existing markets; in digitizing and distributing old forms of information exchange such as library services; and even in crime." AU - Kiesler, Sara, ed. CY - Mahwah, NJ DA - 1997 KW - computers nationalism sexuality community democracy pornography +computers and the Internet democracy and media community, and Internet democracy, and Internet capitalism, and Internet pornography, and Internet education, and Internet +nationalism and communication capitalism community education nationalism, and Internet LB - 11090 PB - Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Publishers PY - 1997 ST - Culture of the Internet TI - Culture of the Internet ID - 2470 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - A good account of the ways in which the telegraph and the railways grew together simultaneously, yielding the development of communications networks in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Britain. The author covers the technological aspects of both land lines and underwater cables, along with transmitting advancements. Legislative aspects also receive coverage, as well as some of the social impacts from telegraphy such as police force coordination. Research is based on industry papers, Parliamentary papers, journals, Public Record Office manuscripts, private papers, and late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century histories. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Kieve, Jeffrey CY - Newton Abbot (UK) DA - 1973 KW - non-USA Wolf, Nicholas Great Britain +telegraph Great Britain, and telegraph telegraph, and Great Britain railroads, and Great Britain Great Britain, and railroads telegraph, and railroads railroads, and telegraph railroads transportation LB - 1930 PB - David Charles, Ltd. PY - 1973 ST - The Electric Telegraph: A Social and Economic History TI - The Electric Telegraph: A Social and Economic History ID - 281 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Kilpatrick writes that his book is "about the obscenity racket and about the law of obscenity censorship as that law has emerged from courts and legislative bodies since Anthony Comstock's day. The book attempts to report upon what Associate Justice William Douglas has termed 'the battle between the literati and the Philistines,' and I have approached the conflict not as a partisan but as a sort of war correspondent. "No one who has studied at first hand the fruits of mail-order obscenity, or waded through hundreds of prurient paperbacks and magazines, can remain wholly nonpartisan toward the efforts of the postal inspectors, the decent-literature committees, and other groups seeking to combat the waves of filth now pouring across America. There is a social evil in commercial pornography, and I am sympathetic toward the effort to combat it. "At the same time no writer or newspaperman, dedicated to the vital principles of a free press, can remain wholly nonpartisan toward the devoted labors of the American Civil Liberties Union, the American Book Publishers Council, and the many other organizations that are genuinely apprehensive about the excesses of censorship. There is a danger in censorship, too, and I believe the press ought to be guarded against it." (v) The author goes on to consider the Roth case in 1957 in which the U. S. Supreme Court changed the way it interpreted obscenity, and he discusses the state of motion picture censorship -- both by the movie industry through the MPAA, and also at the state and local levels. The author notes that by 1960, black-and-white, 16mm "stag films" had become affordable to "thousands of adolescents, to whom movie projection equipment is no real problem." (18) AU - Kilpatrick, James Jackson CY - Garden City, NY DA - 1960 KW - U. S. Supreme Court self-regulation Roth v. U. S. (1957) law censorship and ratings freedom court cases law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and legal motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases , court cases Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and freedom court cases, and harmful Roth case (1957) court cases, and Roth obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.) Supreme Court (U. S.), and Roth v. U.S. (1957 motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and Roth case (1957) Alberts case law freedom censorship and ratings motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and local censorship motion pictures, and state censorship pornography motion pictures, and pornography 16mm cameras pornography, and 16mm cameras 16mm cameras, and pornography ACLU obscenity Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) Supreme Court (U. S.) 16mm 16mm, and pornography censorship LB - 36590 PB - Doubleday & Company, Inc. PY - 1960 ST - The Smut Peddlers TI - The Smut Peddlers ID - 3292 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work recounts how Soviet authorities altered and destroyed photographs in an effort to falsify history and eliminate the memory of people deemed enemies of the state and communism. The Commissar Vanishes looks at the retouching and editing of photography during the Stalinist period of Soviet Union. This retouching worked hand in hand with Stalin’s systemic purges. Just as a person was found to have committed crimes against the state, images were altered to reduce or eliminate record of that person’s existence. Perhaps even more impressive was the editing or adding of Stalin into important Soviet pictures. Stalin’s image was almost always retouched in order to reduce blemishes, and Stalin had himself inserted in scenes with Lenin or in other places during the early years of the revolution to help foster his cult of personality. This retouching came in the form of cropping, blacking out, or airbrushing, techniques more commonly associated with the present day and computer technology. However, in many cases this work was top-notch and skilled, systematically removing or adding people in such ways as to make pictures look like no change had been made. Still, much of the work was unsophisticated. Sometimes people’s images were crudely blacked out, perhaps to add humiliation to the punishments those purged had already received. King’s piece is an impressive compilation, ranging from those excluded Soviets, to Stalin’s retouching and additions. The last section focuses on some of the crudest work. King provides analysis of the retouching and offers suggestions on to why it was done. The sheer scope of photos covered here displays the importance of King’s work and helps prove that Stalin’s cult was in many ways a fraud and that people who were eliminated can still be remembered. --Jason Karnosky AU - King, David CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - USSR photography preservation history, and new media law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA history photography and visual communication propaganda photography, and propaganda Stalin, Josef photography, and Soviet Union Soviet Union, and photography Soviet Union history, and photography history, and falsification censorship, and photography photography, and censorship Soviet Union, and censorship nationalism and communication nationalism, and photography photography, and nationalism Karnosky, Jason non-USA non-USA, and Soviet Union nationalism LB - 1690 PB - Henry Holt & Company PY - 1997 ST - The Commissar Vanishes: The Falsification of Photographs and Art in Stalin’s Russia TI - The Commissar Vanishes: The Falsification of Photographs and Art in Stalin’s Russia ID - 81 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work, with index, runs 558 pages and was first published in 1915 by Longmans, Green, and Co., in London and New York. Chapter 11 is about "The Microphone." Chapter 22 deals with "The Telephone and Governments," and was written before World War I began in August, 1914. Appendix A (pp. 530-38) has data on development in cities and countries worldwide as of January 1, 1914. AU - Kingsburg, J[ohn] E. CY - New York DA - 1915, 1972 KW - corporations nationalism corporations corporations materials non-USA telephones nationalism and communication telephone exchanges Great Britain, and telephones telephones, and Great Britain Great Britain Bell, Alexander Graham switchboards, and telephones Carty, J. J., and telephones telephones, and J. J. Carty batteries telephones, and batteries Edison, Thomas telephones, and Thomas Edison telephones, and nationalism nationalism, and telephones Wheatstone, Charles Western Union telephones, and telegraphs Western Electric Company microphones materials telephones LB - 30 OP - 1915 PB - Arno Press PY - 1915 ST - The Telephone and Telephone Exchanges: Their Invention and Development TI - The Telephone and Telephone Exchanges: Their Invention and Development ID - 94 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Kinsey, Alfred C., et al. [Wardell B. Pomeroy, Clyde E. Martin, Paul H. Gebhard] CY - Philadelphia DA - 1953 KW - Kinsey, Alfred C. , sexuality Kinsey Institute women women, and sexuality sexuality, and women LB - 29210 PB - Saunders PY - 1953 ST - Sexual Behavior in the Human Female TI - Sexual Behavior in the Human Female ID - 2693 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Kisseloff, Jeff CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories television, and history of +television television, and origins oral histories oral histories, television LB - 7030 PB - Viking Press PY - 1995 ST - The Box: An Oral History of Television, 1920-1961 TI - The Box: An Oral History of Television, 1920-1961 ID - 2074 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work includes a history of “cyberspace,” by which the author means the Internet. Kitchen traces the evolution of the Net from 4 nodes in 1969 (ARPANET) to 4 million nodes by the end of 1994. The rest of the work focuses on who has access to the new technology (the information “elite”) and how new cultural and political groupings are forming as a result of geographic barriers breaking down. --Mark Tremayne AU - Kitchin, Rob CY - New York DA - 1998 KW - computers nationalism cyberspace ARPA community democracy geography Internet +computers and the Internet Tremayne, Mark cyberspace (spatial), history of Internet, and history of ARPANET space (spatial) +nationalism and communication democracy and media virtual reality cyberspace (spatial) nationalism, and Internet LB - 9090 PB - John Wiley & Sons PY - 1998 ST - Cyberspace : The World in the Wires TI - Cyberspace : The World in the Wires ID - 2276 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is translated, with an Introduction, by Goeffrey Winthrop-Young and Michael Wutz. It was first published in 1986, in Berlin by Brinkmann & Bose. AU - Kittler, Friedrich A. CY - Stanford, CA DA - 1986, 1999 KW - photography +photography and visual communication motion pictures cinema motion pictures celluloid non-USA +sound recording +photography +motion pictures and popular culture typewriters film gramophone Germany LB - 10 OP - 1986 PB - Stanford University Press PY - 1986 ST - Gramophone, Film, Typewriter TI - Gramophone, Film, Typewriter ID - 92 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - One of the longest running utopias in nineteenth century America, the Oneida community was a strange mix of Christianity, communism, spoon-making, and free love. Spencer Klaw -- a journalist who has written for The New York Times as well as published two other books on medicine in America and the Brahminshas written a riveting account of the community from its inception in 1848 to its dissolution in 1880, a result of its founder’s abdication of the Oneidan community. Luckily for Klaw, John Humphrey Noyes believed that the Oneida community was going to have its place in history, so Noyes documented everything in his books, the community newsletter (which detailed such information as why members were inferior lovers, etc.), as well as a newspaper that was distributed nationally. Drawing from these sources, as well as autobiographies of Noyes’ children, diaries of Noyes’ friend Francis Wayland-Smith, Noyes’ and other community members’ letters and newspaper articles, Klaw makes the case that the Oneida community was “perhaps the most successful attempt ever made (the Shakers excepted) to build a society in which men and women could live together as brothers and sisters, sharing with absolute equality the fruits of their common labor (p.7).” Evidence of their success? The fact that the community outlasted most other utopias in the mid-1800s, the inhabitants claimed (in their letters and memoirs) to be relatively happy, and the success of their industry; Oneidans were able to support themselves through the manufacture of: spoons, animal traps (for black bears, otters, moose, etc.), travel bags, palm-leaf hats, slippers, and many other items. But what truly made this community unique was its sexual practices. Noyes founded Oneida on the premise of Biblical Communism, a way of life that combined the tenets of communism (equal pay, equal amounts of work, no money (in the early years)), with the practice of communal marriage. Oneida wasn’t the first utopic community Noyes’ founded. The first was a community in Putney, Vermont, that was communistic but had no overt free love culture. Communal marriage was practiced in the later years of this community, but it was practiced in secret, a secret that eventually came out which was one of the reasons why the community disbanded and Noyes’ established the Oneida community in New York. Communal marriage meant that all members of the community were shared sexually with all other members, as long as they had gotten permission from Noyes himself before the “interviews” (as the sexual liaisons were called) occurred. If couples came to Oneida already married, they must still agree to share themselves with the community. But the really scandalous rule was that Noyes must be the first person to have sex with the newly introduced adolescent girls of the community. When a girl reached puberty, Noyes would be her first “husband” and teach her in the ways of love (this sometimes lasted for months). When a boy reached puberty, older women (those past menopause) would have sex with him until he learned to control his ejaculation. The men at Oneida practiced a form of sexual control called male continence which entailed refraining from ejaculation during the sexual act; they were not allowed to “pull out” and ejaculate; they were supposed to curtail the ejaculation. They also practiced the rule of ascending fellowship: young people (even after the initiation period) had to have older people as sexual partners. Noyes believed that communal marriage would lead to an eradication of the boredom of monogamy, and that it did, but during the end of the experiment, ironically, the young people rebelled and demanded the right to get married and practice monogamy. Ultimately, Klaw makes a convincing case that the Oneida experiment led to a greater equality between the sexes and achieved some success. However, he does not offer any substantial comparisons to other utopias of the mid-nineteenth century, so his case is not strong enough that Oneida was the most successful of these experiments. -Hallie Lieberman AU - Klaw, Spencer CY - New York DA - 1993 KW - Lieberman, Hallie sexuality women women, and sexuality sexuality, and women sexuality, and Oneida Community Oneida Community children and media sexuality, and children children, and sexuality Noyes, John Humphrey Oneida Community, and John Humphrey Noyes children LB - 33280 PB - Allen Lane; Penguin Press PY - 1993 ST - Without Sin: The Life and Death of the Oneida Community TI - Without Sin: The Life and Death of the Oneida Community ID - 86 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is the third edition enlarged of the author's early book Colour-Music (1926?, 1930). The works ten chapters deal with the following themes: 1) Past and Present Proposals; 2) Painting and Colour-Music; 3) Music and Colour-Music; 4) Psychology and Colour-Music; 5) The Problem of Colour Harmony; 6) A Theory of Colour-Music Based on the Theory of Sound-Music; 7) Colour-Music as an Independent Art; 8) The Art of Stage Lighting and the Art of Light; 9) Instruments: Past and Present; and 10) Conclusion. In the chapter dealing with "Psychology and Colour-Music" (48-60), Klein writes that "Psychologists have carried out certain investigations, as a result of which the conclusion has been reached that colours unquestionably posses what is known as 'emotive value.'" (48) Klein takes exception to the work of M. Luckiesh who argued that colour-music could "only evolve with the assistance of 'fundamental experimental data,' obtained by psychologists 'well-versed in physics, physiology, and psychology.'" (48; italics in original text) Klein says "the artist evolves the structure of his art from his inner imagination, by his practice of creating a technical tradition for his followers. Therefore, he supplies the 'data' for the psychologist, and not the psychologist for him." (49) There is discussion in this chapter of what moods or reactions different colors (crimson, scarlet, deep orange, yellow, yellow-green, green, blue-green, blue, violet-blue, violet, purple) elicit. For example, drawing on the research of N. A. Wells (who is quoted): "'The hues in which red predominates induce a mood-reaction of an exciting character.'" (Wells quotes, p. 53) AU - Klein, Adrian Bernard CY - London DA - 1937 KW - color, and psychology of color, and history of advertising, and color color, and emotions color, and dictionary of painting color, and painting color, and architecture color, and literature color, and dance color advertising color music color color, and music lighting color, and lighting color, and M. Luckiesh Luckiesh, M., and color color, and red advertising and public relations LB - 42080 PB - The Technical Press, Ltd. PY - 1937 ST - Coloured Light: An Art Medium TI - Coloured Light: An Art Medium ID - 4306 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Klein, who earlier wrote Colour-Music: The Art of Light, says of this work, Colour Cinematography, that it "is an attempt to make a broad survey of the territory which the pioneers have explored up to 1936. We are now in a position for the first time to forget experimentation, and to make use of colour as a contribution towards an end -- and that end, we should always remember, is the making of a good film." (ix; italics in original text) AU - Klein, Major Adrian Bernard CY - London DA - 1936 KW - color, and psychology of color, and history of advertising, and color color, and emotions color, and dictionary of painting color, and painting color, and architecture color, and literature color, and dance color advertising color music color color, and music lighting color, and lighting motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures color, and cameras color, and movie cameras cameras cameras, and color color, and beam-splitting systems advertising and public relations LB - 42090 PB - Chapman & Hall, Ltd. PY - 1936 ST - Colour Cinematography TI - Colour Cinematography ID - 4307 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book has seven chapters. Chapter two describes pre-World War II science. Chapter three examines the Office of Scientific Research and Development (OSRD) as well as science and scientists during World War II. Chapter four compares the legislative agendas of Vannevar Bush and Harley Kilgore. Chapter five uses political sociology to analyze the National Science Foundation’s (NSF) legislative history. Chapter six discusses the impact of a five-year delay in passing NSF legislation on government research policy making. The author compares American research policy making to approaches in other countries. Chapter seven deals with post-1950 efforts to create federal research policy agencies with broader policymaking and coordination mandates than those possessed by the NSF. Starting with Vannevar Bush’s The Endless Frontier (1945), the author examines populist and elitist visions for a postwar research policy agency. He argues that the structure of American government led to the creation of “a fragmented and uncoordinated system for federal research policymaking.” The writing in this administrative history could be more accessible. The author used the Vannevar Bush Papers at the Library of Congress; the Kilgore Papers at the University of West Virginia, Morgantown; the Alexander Smith Papers at Princeton; the Franklin D. Roosevelt Papers at Hyde Park; and collections at the Hagley Museum and Library, Wilmington, DE. AU - Kleinman, Daniel Lee CY - Durham and London DA - 1995 KW - R & D NSF +military communication archives war science general studies World War II research and development scientific research, and government support National Science Foundation (NSF) Office of Scientific Research and Development Bush, Vannevar Kilgore, Harley political sociology research policy, U.S. World War II, and research and development research and development, and government support primary sources LB - 740 PB - Duke University Press PY - 1995 ST - Politics on the Endless Frontier: Postwar Research Policy in the United States TI - Politics on the Endless Frontier: Postwar Research Policy in the United States ID - 1470 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book resulted from a series of lectures by the author. The last chapter, “Technology Becomes a World Power,” has some discussion, as well as excerpts from earlier sources (e.g., 1900, 1904, 1909), on the radio and flying. The final pages also discuss computing under “automation.” AU - Klemm, Friedrichge CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1954, 1959, 1964 KW - technology computers preservation history, and new media history general studies technology and society +radio +aeronautics and space communication +computers and the Internet calculating machines automation history, and technology radio, and aeronautics labor LB - 11550 OP - 1954 [German edition]; 1959 [first English edition] PB - MIT Press PY - 1954 ST - A History of Western Technology (Translated by Dorethea Waley Singer) TI - A History of Western Technology (Translated by Dorethea Waley Singer) ID - 1471 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this book, Barbara Klinger deals with audience reception and interpretation of Hollywood film fare from the 1980s to the early twenty-first century through the use of new media technologies (remote controls, VCR, DVD, and the Internet). She proposes an extension of the concept of “public film cultures” to the private space of the home, which she labels “home film cultures.” Such diverse “home film cultures” are influenced by viewers’ multiple identities, as well as by societal and cultural factors. According to Klinger, two key elements of film viewing in the in the home are: remediation and assimilation. She discusses the link between traditional viewing venues and those afforded by new media technologies. Furthermore, Klinger employs Raymond Williams’ concept a “signal system,” which is “a ‘deep cultural form’ that marks the ‘practical social organization’ of the arts by defining the manner in which they are presented to the public” (p. 19). The book includes five case studies: the development of the “home theater,” video collection practices, present-day “classic” cinema viewing via cable television, young adults patterns of “repeat viewings” of their favorite films, and the Internet as a platform for video shorts (in pre-YouTube terms). In her chapter on the revival of “classic” Hollywood films through cable television networks such as A&E and AMC, Klinger argues that “classic” films (from the 1920s through 1960s) viewed within a contemporary context help to rewrite our collective vision history and concepts of the “nation.” Classic cinema plays into what Fredric Jameson referred to as “selective memory” in that they forefront some aspects of history while minimizing others and presenting a particular vision of national history. She argues that audience reception is multifaceted and complex. At the same time, she concludes that home viewing, in part, serves to reinforce the commercial and cultural success of mainstream Hollywood blockbuster films. --Jill Hopke AU - Klinger, Barbara CY - Berkeley DA - 2006 KW - nationalism home history computers children Hopke, Jill motion pictures home and new media computers and the Internet VCRs television cable, and television television, and cable television, and satellites aeronautics and space communication audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and VCRs DVDs motion pictures, and DVDs Williams, Raymond Jameson, Frederic nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures history and new media history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history history, and home theater theaters audiences, and theaters theaters, and audiences theaters, and multiplex motion pictures, and Internet Internet, and motion pictures theaters, and home home, and theaters children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures children, and VCRs children, and DVDs children, and Internet Internet, and children children, and home movies children, and cable children, and satellite TV motion pictures, and blockbusters media effects media effects, and children media effects, and home home, and media effects children, and media effects magnetic recording magnetic recording, and video tape magnetic recording, and home movies VCRs, and VHS magnetic recording, and VHS digitization digital media digital media, and motion pictures digital media, and home movies home, and digital media digital media, and home remote control television, and remote control remote control, and television democracy democracy, and motion pictures democracy, and home movies motion pictures, and democracy cable children history home Internet video cassette recorders (VCRs) LB - 33010 PB - University of California Press PY - 2006 ST - Beyond the Multiplex: Cinema, New Technologies, and the Home TI - Beyond the Multiplex: Cinema, New Technologies, and the Home ID - 45 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Without tobacco, the history of the United States might look very different. The plant, and the crops that it spawned, helped create the financial foundation for what would become the United States. It helped spur the founding fathers to revolt from England, created part of the economic groundwork for the American Civil War, and served as a tension-easing way for American troops to relax during every major American war, including World War II. Even today, it provides thousands of jobs for Americans and funds federal and state taxes to the tune of billions of dollars every year. But the American relationship with tobacco has been an uneasy alliance. In “Ashes to Ashes…,” Richard Kluger documents the history of tobacco from the time when Columbus and his sailors discovered natives smoking and ingesting this new substance through 1993, when the Environmental Protection Agency classified nicotine, the addicting substance in tobacco, as a substance that is lethal to man. In the process, Kluger shows how the tobacco industry has been trying to stay one step ahead of social and medical opponents since colonists starting smoking cigars, chewing tobacco, and eventually smoking cigarettes. Although it is easy to see the recent bans on indoor smoking in the United States and in such nations as Ireland as recent events, communities and individuals have railed against the evils of tobacco since the very beginning. Some early colonists viewed it as an “Indian vice” and affront to God. Later opponents believed that smoking was a ‘slippery slope’ that led children to lives of debauchery and crime. But the majority of the book is dedicated to the shell game the tobacco industry has played with the American consumer. The ‘nut’ they want to hide, in this case, is the fact that smoking cigarettes, and even cigarette smoke, can kill. The ‘shells’ are the millions the industry spends in advertising trying to convince Americans, and now global consumers, that they are better off smoking than not smoking. In the beginning, it wasn’t as difficult because people believed tobacco could cure disease and serve as a panacea to many physical and mental ills. As the medical tied turned during the last 400 years, the industry has used clever gimmicks, cartoon characters, famous celebrities, movie characters, catchy jingles, snobby names and even athletic sponsorships to get people to smoke. As their position rejecting the negative effects of cigarettes became more and more tenuous, the industry started to see the writing on the wall and diversify. First, they started expanding into other industries, such as a later example when tobacco giant R.J. Reynolds bought snack-maker Nabisco. When that proved to be only a modest success generally, they started expanding into overseas markets, where government health agencies and regulations are a bit more relaxed. In the end, Kluger makes the case that the tobacco industry has dodged social, medical and governmental bullets long enough to become a billion-dollar, industrial leviathan. -Patrick Wright AU - Kluger, Richard CY - New York DA - 1996 KW - Wright, Patrick advertising and public relations public relations, and tobacco advertising, and tobacco advertising, and Philip Morris Philip Morris, and advertising advertising public relations LB - 32950 PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 1996 ST - Ashes to Ashes: America’s Hundred-Year Cigarette War, the Public Health, and the Unabashed Triumph of Philip Morris TI - Ashes to Ashes: America’s Hundred-Year Cigarette War, the Public Health, and the Unabashed Triumph of Philip Morris ID - 37 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Rerun Nation examines the development of reruns on American television and its influence on culture. Kompare begins with the beginnings of cultural standardization in the late-nineteenth century in the printing industry, but, as the title implies, the main focus of the book is on the television industry. Kompare focuses largely on the legal aspects of reruns and the development of networks, independent stations and cable television. He spends a little time discussing how viewers felt about reruns. His timeline ends in 2005 with DVDs, unfortunately for him, he missed out on the rise of the Internet television (e.g., Hulu). For sources Kompare has a mix of primary and secondary, including numerous academic dissertations. It is unclear how much television Kompare actually watched since no one show is discussed in length, nor are there specific ratings numbers. While the viability of reruns in the market is a cornerstone of his argument, he could have presented more raw Nielsen numbers. --Ryder Kouba AU - Kompare, Derek CY - New York DA - 2005 KW - Kouba, Ryder television television, and DVDs television, and VCRs television, and cable cable television television, and reruns television, and values values, and television television, and culture radio motion pictures motion pictures, and television radio, and television television, and radio television, and motion pictures FCC television, and FCC FCC, and television censorship and ratings television, and censorship censorship, and television cable censorship values LB - 33050 PB - Routledge PY - 2005 ST - Rerun Nation: How Repeats Invented American Television TI - Rerun Nation: How Repeats Invented American Television ID - 53 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - E. J. Wall, who translated this book from the German, begins by observing that "Never within the last twenty years has there been so much interest displayed by photographers generally in photography in natural colors, as at the present time. This is undoubtedly due in great measure to the advances which have been recently made in the discovery of new sensitisers, and also to the much greater attention that has been paid to the preparation of suitable light-filters, and the publication of definite formulae for making them." (5) König begins explaining the state of color photography. "The problem of photography in natural colors," he writes, "is almost as old as photography itself. Not satisfied with the results obtained, the followers of the black art soon wanted to fix the image projected by the lens, not only in its luminosity, but also in all the splendor of its color; and it was not long before various methods were known, which rendered possible more or less completely the preparation of photograms in color. "We shall see that the principles of color photography were discovered long ago, and that actually new discoveries have not been made for a long time. If photography in natural colors has been more to the front of late, it is not due to the discovery of a new method, but rather to improvements in known processes -- so much so that now there are no insurmountable difficulties in the practice of it." (11) König explains the scope of his book. "This work is intended as a practical text-book, and therefore a complete treatise on the various methods in which the problem has been attacked would be out of place; so we must confine out attention only to the most important and most interesting methods. To those who are deeply interested in the history of color photography, the following works are recommended: Eder's Geschichte der Photographie; Three-Color Photography, by Hûbl; and A Handbook to Photography in Colors, by Bolas, Tallent, and Senior. "The methods for making photograms in natural colors fall into to classes -- the direct and indirect." (11) Among the methods discussed are the "Lippmann Process," "Joly's or M'Donugh's Process," and "Lumiere's Starch Grain Process." AU - König, E. CY - London DA - [1906] KW - Lippmann process photography ref, secondary color color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures photography and visual communication color, and Lumiere process color, and Lippmann process Lippmann process, and color Lumiere process, and color color, and chromoscope ref, book motion pictures LB - 16300 PB - Hazell, Watson & Viney, Ld. ST - Natural-Color Photography TI - Natural-Color Photography ID - 3783 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This novel, a work of fiction, offers an example of one way in which popular writers (and popular culture) view the so-called information revolution. Koontz paints a dark, troubling picture of the possibilities for abuse. His story is about a man (Michael Ackblum, aka Spencer Grant) whose father was a gifted artist and a mass murderer who killed Michael’s mother and 41 other women. Spencer meets by chance a mysterious woman (Elli) in a bar and falls in love with her. Elli is on the run from a secret government agency headed by a high treasury official. Pursuing Elli is a criminally insane agent named Roy who believes he has the duty to terminate people who are not perfect. Roy and his secret agency have access to a supercomputer (“Mother”) which can access virtually every data bank as well as spy satellites. Elli is an expert computer hacker and her husband was a computer genius who helped design “Mother.” He also was the son of the Deputy Secretary who had his son killed when the son learned of his father’s evil plans. Because Elli witnessed the killing, she too, has been marked for death. Spencer Grant also has worked in a police department where he learned to manipulate the law enforcement’s computer system. He has gradually changed his identify by altering multiple data bases. Roy also meets a beautiful, gold digging computer genius who has quietly collected files on most power government leaders and who, like Roy, is a cold-blooded killer. She gains tremendous wealth and power from this secret knowledge. The novel ends with her forcing the leading candidate for president to marry her. Plans call for her to then have her President-husband assassinated and for her to stand for election. Roy has computer files manipulated to destroy a policy chief whom he disliked, having his property seized without due process under drug seizure laws. Koontz is trying to show in this novel how the new information technology could be used to create a new fascist state -- a state where people’s files can be altered and falsified, casting them into a nightmare world beyond their control. AU - Koontz, Dean CY - New York DA - 1994 KW - computers literature community democracy +computers and the Internet democracy and media computers, and popular culture critics computers science fiction, and new media literature, and new media science fiction, and computers computers, and science fiction computers, and literature computers, and popular culture future and science fiction future science fiction LB - 7870 PB - Random House PY - 1994 ST - Dark Rivers of the Heart TI - Dark Rivers of the Heart ID - 2156 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Theodore Koop spent World War II as a special assistant to Byron Price, director of the Office of Censorship, and Weapon of Silence is an “insider” history of that wartime agency and its activities overseeing and coordinating various censorship programs. The Office of Censorship was most well known for its code of voluntary censorship under which American newspapers and radio journalists enforced a deceptively simple system of self-censorship with little or no government oversight. However, as Koop explained, the agency also monitored the mails for potentially dangerous material and tracked some international radio broadcasts to make sure no strategic information was inadvertently released. Readers of Michael Sweeney’s Secrets of Victory will already be familiar with the most exciting aspects of the Office of Censorship’s history. However, Koop provides an inside view of the agency’s operation that does not come through Sweeney’s text. Here we learn how Price and his assistants fended off calls for stronger censorship, how weather reports became highly protected secrets, how the president’s travel schedule was tightly guarded, and how the atomic bomb project was hidden in plain view from the world. We also read about the controversy surrounding the Chicago Tribune’s Midway story of 1942 that disclosed the fact that the United States had broken the Japanese naval code. Koop paints a picture of the Office of Censorship as highly professional, eternally vigilant, and always keeping the public’s right to know as the highest priority. The congratulatory tone and unhidden admiration of Byron Price get a little bit thick over nearly 300 pages, but on the other hand it is not unreasonable to expect Koop to use the book to justify and laud the OC. Although there are no footnotes, it is apparent that the book is based on first hand observations and discussions with other participants in the Office of Censorship, including Price himself. The most interesting parts of this account are the chapters on radio and the atomic bomb. World War II was the first conflict in which the unique problem of censoring radio broadcasting became apparent. Koop outlines some of the internal debate within the Office of Censorship and the military over how to censor this new medium that is both instantaneous and able to cross borders with ease. Both the seriousness and the humor involved in censoring radio are made clear through numerous examples and anecdotes. The secrecy shrouding the development of the atomic bomb is described as the agency’s greatest success. Patrick Washburn has published an excellent article about this in Journalism Monographs, which is much more scholarly and supercedes this book in terms of analysis, but Koop’s account gives the reader some feeling for the pride many in the OC felt over this important duty. The book as a whole serves as a ringing endorsement of voluntary civilian control over wartime censorship of the mass media and an argument against military secrecy. Journalists, and Americans more broadly, can be trusted to use information wisely. The final chapter, “Censorship and the Atomic Age,” is a prophetic warning against military censorship of information about atomic weapons. As Koop pointed out, “secrecy begets secrecy.” It is hard to imagine that he would have found comfort in subsequent government information policy regarding nuclear weapons and other military adventures. -- Rob Rabe AU - Koop, Theodore F. CY - Chicago DA - 1946 KW - Rabe, Rob military communication +radio war World War II radio, and World War II World War II, and radio propaganda Germany radio, and Germany Germany, and radio World War II, and censorship censorship, and World War II radio, and propaganda propaganda, and radio World War II, and propaganda propaganda, and World War II Office of Censorship, and Byron Price Price, Byron, and Office of Censorship freedom non-USA censorship LB - 28900 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1946 ST - Weapon of Silence TI - Weapon of Silence ID - 2667 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work discusses Hollywood and propaganda during World War II. The authors discuss several motion pictures made during this era, although their research was completed before the Production Code Administration files became available to scholars. The work is built on other archival sources, though. AU - Koppes, Clayton R. and Gregory D. Black CY - Berkeley DA - 1987 KW - OWI nationalism nationalism public relations advertising war World War II propaganda +motion pictures +motion pictures motion pictures, and propaganda propaganda, and motion pictures World War II, and propaganda +nationalism and communication World War II, and motion pictures Hollywood nationalism, and motion pictures Office of War Information (OWI), and motion pictures Office of War Information (OWI) advertising and public relations military communication LB - 9880 PB - University of California Press PY - 1987 ST - Hollywood Goes to War TI - Hollywood Goes to War ID - 2355 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is Volume 3 in Scribner's History of the American Cinema (Charles Harpole, ed.). The focus of this book "is the silent feature as public spectacle, one part of a filmgoing experience that left its mark on an entire generation." Chapters are devoted to content, production practice, industrial organization, and key creative personalities. Chapter 5 is on "Technology," although this volume does not deal with the technology of talking pictures (that topic is covered in Volume 4 of this series). Motion-picture technology developed during this era largely at an "incremental" pace. Chapter 5 covers five aspects of this topic: "manufacture of raw stock, studio machinery, laboratory equipment, material required for film exchange operations, and theater apparatus." AU - Koszarski, Richard CY - New York DA - 1990 KW - audiences corporations corporations women, and new media advertising, and public relations seeing at a distance propaganda public relations modernism materials cinema motion pictures celluloid cinematography law censorship and ratings law censorship and ratings women theaters regulation +motion pictures motion pictures, and theaters film +motion pictures motion pictures, and silent movies motion pictures, and raw stock motion pictures, and studio machinery motion pictures, and laboratory equipment motion pictures, and film exchanges motion pictures, and theaters (silent) audiences, and motion pictures advertising, and motion pictures Bell & Howell censorship, and motion pictures regulation, and motion pictures cinematographers film stock motion pictures, and lighting theaters, and motion pictures women, and motion pictures new way of seeing advertising audiences censorship children, and media children motion pictures, and advertising materials LB - 9510 PB - Charles Scribner's Sons PY - 1990 ST - An Evening's Entertainment: The Age of the Silent Feature Picture, 1915-1928 TI - An Evening's Entertainment: The Age of the Silent Feature Picture, 1915-1928 ID - 2318 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is interesting not only for what it says about the content of German radio propaganda during World War II, but also for the information it provides about role radio played in Nazi society. The authors estimate that Germany had about 15.3 million radio sets at the start of the war and that that number rose to slightly more than 16 million by 1941. Only the United States had more radio listeners. Chapter 2, “The German Home Radio,” discusses how radio was organized in Germany and methods of transmission. Chapter 4, “Radio Warfare and the Battle for Credibility,” talks about penalties imposed for listening to foreign broadcasts and Nazi efforts to jam foreign stations. The book also provides insight into how the Nazis view radio – as a potential instrument of power but also (as early as 1933) as a technology that allowed foreign enemies and decadent music such as jazz into German homes. AU - Kris, Ernst AU - Speier, Hans CY - London DA - 1944 KW - entertainment entertainment, home shortwave radio public relations advertising home entertainment Hitler, Adolf war non-USA home, and new media home +radio Germany Germany, and Nazi radio radio, and propaganda propaganda, and German radio radio, shortwave shortwave radio, and Nazi Germany propaganda radio, and the home Hitler, Adolf, and radio Goebbels, Josef, and radio Great Britain Great Britain, and radio BBC World War II World War II, and Nazi radio World War II, and propaganda home, and radio military communication LB - 12510 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1944 ST - German Radio Propaganda: Report on Home Broadcasts during the War TI - German Radio Propaganda: Report on Home Broadcasts during the War ID - 2598 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - While this book does not deal specifically with new media technology, Kristeva, a literary theorist and psychoanalyst, does make interesting observations about the influence of color. Picking up on the ideas of Henri Matisse, Kristeva maintained that “it is through color … that revolutions in the plastic arts come about.” Color, she wrote, “escapes censorship.” (220-21) AU - Kristeva, Julia CY - New York DA - 1980 KW - media effects color color, and linguistics color, and plastic arts color, and art LB - 30620 OP - 1977 (Editions du Seuil) PB - Columbia University Press PY - 1980 ST - Desire in Language: A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art TI - Desire in Language: A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art ID - 2823 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - “It is through color,” the literary theorist and psychoanalyst Julia Kristeva maintained, “that revolutions in the plastic arts come about.” She also wrote that "color ... escapes censorship," and "color is the shattering of unity." AU - Kristeva, Julia (Thomas Gora, Alice Jardine, and Leon S. Roudiez, trans.) CY - New York DA - 1980 KW - censorship semiotics law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures color motion pictures, and color censorship, and color color, and censorship art, and semiotics semiotics, and art art LB - 17970 PB - Columbia University Press PY - 1980 ST - Desire in Language: A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art TI - Desire in Language: A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art ID - 706 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 145-page book devotes chapters to three Canadian intellectuals – Henry Grant, Marshall McLuhan, and Harold A. Innis – who represented different perspectives on technology. The chapter on Grant is entitled “Technological Dependency” and the author calls Grant “the Nietzsche of the New World.” Grant’s Christianity and his classical Canadian nationalism provided “critical insights into the nihilism of technological society.” Chapter 3, “Technological Humanism: The Processed World of Marshall McLuhan,” considers McLuhan’s effort “to break the spell cast upon the human mind by electronic technologies.” Finally, Kroker treats Innis’s work on communications and empire within the context of “technological realism.” The author, who was the founding editor of the Canadian Journal of Political and Social Theory and Cultural Texts, specializes in cultural theory and North American intellectual history. He maintains that “Canada’s principal contribution to North American thought consists of a highly original, comprehensive, and eloquent discourse of technology.” Kroker believes that because of historical circumstances and by accident of geography Canada is fated “to be forever marginal to the ‘present-mindedness’ of American culture.” Recalling the insights of these Canadian thinkers is “a way of seeking to recover a voice by which to articulate a different historical possibility against the present closure of the technological order,” Kroker writes. AU - Kroker, Arthur CY - New York DA - 1984 KW - technology nationalism imperialism preservation non-USA history technology and society Innis, Harold McLuhan, Marshall Grant, Henry Canada cultural imperialism +nationalism and communication technological humanism technological realism technology, and popular culture technology, and resistance to technology, and social influence of technology and society, and history of cultural imperialism, and Canada culture cultural studies culture, and resistance to technology culture, and technology culture, exporting abroad (U.S.) technology, and values values values, and information technology values, and media values, and new media values, and technology values, and popular culture history history, break with history and new media history, and media Canada technological determinism LB - 11970 PB - St. Martin's Press PY - 1984 ST - Technology and the Canadian Mind: Innis/McLuhan/Grant TI - Technology and the Canadian Mind: Innis/McLuhan/Grant ID - 2544 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In the opening chapter, Kuhn justifies her methodology which uses case histories. This study of film censorship was originally a doctoral thesis, which may account for the heavy theoretical emphasis and arcane language in this first chapter. The author explains the scope of her work: “The title of this book suggests a rather diverse set of concerns. But the point of entry for this inquiry into cinema, censorship and sexuality is quite specific: the story begins with the birth of film censorship in Britain. It proceeds eventually to a consideration of how institutions and practices of film censorship were involved in the constitution of cinema as a public sphere of regulation. Along the way, institutions, discourses and practices which might at first sight appear to have little or nothing to do with the censorship of films are drawn into the investigation. And in the process, the concept of censorship itself is subjected to critical scrutiny and redefinition.... “The years between 1909 and 1925 are important because they constitute a period of uncertainty -- even of struggle -- over the means by which cinema was to be understood, defined and regulated. The entire period, in fact, may be regarded as an extended moment of risk. During these years not only were the forces at work in film censorship more exposed, more in danger, than they would ever afterwards be, but the institution of cinema was itself in process of becoming. As an industry, cinema was beginning to establish itself as a social and economic force to be reckoned with; while as a form of representation it was developing conventions which would privilege highly specific approaches to cinematic narration and ultimately secure lasting dominance for the fiction feature film.” AU - Kuhn, Annette CY - New York DA - 1988 KW - law censorship and ratings law censorship and ratings non-USA values regulation +motion pictures censorship, and Great Britain censorship censorship, and motion pictures regulation, and motion pictures Great Britain values, and motion pictures children, and media children LB - 9900 PB - Routledge PY - 1988 ST - Cinema, Censorship and Sexuality, 1909-1925 TI - Cinema, Censorship and Sexuality, 1909-1925 ID - 2357 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 239-page bibliography has 268 annotated entries plus several hundred other entries that are not annotated (there are about 1,700 references total). The Abstract explains the purpose of this work: "Solar radiation has a profound effect on the human organism. This effect might be transformed by artificial illumination. The aim of this bibliography is to bring together in a comprehensive form by existing knwledge regarding the normal physiological and psychological effects of light and colour, including the following topics: Effects of solar radiation on the skin; physiological effects of daylight and artificial illumination entering the eye; preferences for light, colour and visual patterns; the impact of culture and personality; light and colour in the built environment. Amongst others, the review indicates artificial light might cause stress-like reactions, if it is intense, if the spectrum considerably deviates from that of natural daylight, or if it is flickering and glaring. The bibliography was compiled at the Environmental Pyschology Unit, Lund Institute of Technology, with financial support from the Swedish Council for Building Research. It constitutes a CIE TC 3.5 sub-committee report." AU - Küller, Rikard CY - Stockholm DA - 1981 KW - color bibliographies Sweden non-USA media effects social science research home and new media materials home LB - 31160 PB - Swedish Council for Building Research PY - 1981 ST - Non-Visual Effects of Light and Colour: Annotated Bibliography TI - Non-Visual Effects of Light and Colour: Annotated Bibliography ID - 2836 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Kurtz, Edwin B. CY - Iowa City DA - 1959 KW - education television, and history of +television television, and origins television, educational education, and television LB - 10750 PB - State University of Iowa Publishing PY - 1959 ST - Pioneering in Educational Television, 1932-39 TI - Pioneering in Educational Television, 1932-39 ID - 2438 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In reading Media Circus, there is no need to ask questions, just listen to the person tell you what went down. Kurtz’s treatment on what is wrong, and what went wrong with newspaper reporting, is fun to read. He throws out some interesting claims, backed up with numerous quotations gathered from personal interviews and newspaper articles. In Media Circus, Kurtz details how the media dropped the ball in the HUD scandal, the Savings &Loan crisis, as well as devoted too much uncritical attention to the likes of Donald Trump and Al Sharpton. Essentially, the media’s focus on celebrity led to less reliance on “actual” important news, further alienating the newspaper from audiences that turned more to television. An additional topic relevant to this, which Kurtz details nicely, are the racial and gender tensions within news organizations. This often comes to a head, as through the Norplant example at the Philadelphia Inquirer, as reporters of different ethnic backgrounds brought differing views to the forefront. Kurtz concludes with an impassioned chapter detailing the steps necessary for newspapers to bring back readership and regain their standing. It basically comes down to newspapers going back to basics – pursuing the difficult stories, connecting with the community, and setting the agenda, rather than following it. --Michael Boyle AU - Kurtz, Howard CY - New York DA - 1993 KW - entertainment, and journalism celebrity values news and journalism news news and journalism entertainment celebrity culture news and journalism Boyle, Michael critics values, and newspapers +books, periodicals, newspapers entertainment, and news news, and entertainment journalism, and entertainment entertainment, and journalism celebrity culture, and journalism journalism, and celebrity news, and celebrity celebrity culture, and news television, and celebrity journalism values television LB - 1590 PB - Random House PY - 1993 ST - Media Circus: The Trouble with American Newspapers TI - Media Circus: The Trouble with American Newspapers ID - 247 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This large book provides a good introduction to thinking about and development of artificial intelligence. Pages 465 to 483 offer a detailed chronology from prehistoric times to speculation into the twenty-first century. AU - Kurzweil, Raymond CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1990 KW - computers References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps +future and science fiction values timelines human nature +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology timelines, and artificial intelligence values, and artificial intelligence human nature, and artificial intelligence future future, and computers +timelines future, and artificial intelligence LB - 7880 PB - MIT Press PY - 1990 ST - The Age of Intelligent Machines TI - The Age of Intelligent Machines ID - 2157 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is an intelligently written speculation about computer and human intelligence in the twenty-first century. By 2019, Kurzweil predicts, we will have computers that are the equal of human beings in intelligence. Increasingly humans and artificial intelligence will be melded. Life expectancy will increase, many of the maladies of aging -- memory loss, hearing impairment, poor eyesight -- will be offset by micro-computers. We are living in an age in which computing power is accelerating exponentially. This book has an excellent “Time Line” (261-80) and a solid bibliography. It is more readable than Kurzweil’s earlier book, The Age of Intelligent Machines (1990). By 2009, the author maintains, it will be possible to purchase a computer for about $1,000 that can perform one trillion calculation per second; computers will be embedded in jewelry and clothing; business will be increasingly conducted with virtual personalities. By 2019, the $1,000 will buy a computer that is comparable to the human brain in its computing ability. Three-dimensional virtual-reality will be projected through glasses and contact lenses. Virtual reality will be increasingly realistic; people will have relationships with automated personalities. In 2029, a $1,000 computer will have the computing power of about 1,000 human brains. Computers will claim to have consciousness and it will be difficult to distinguish human from machines. By 2099, human and computer intelligence will have merged with no clear distinction between humans and machines. AU - Kurzweil, Raymond CY - New York DA - 1999 KW - computers microprocessing References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps +future and science fiction +timelines +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology future timelines, and computers timelines, and artificial intelligence microprocessors virtual reality bibliographies, and artificial intelligence bibliographies, and computers computers +bibliographies future, and computers future, and artificial intelligence LB - 7890 PB - Viking PY - 1999 ST - The Age of Spiritual Machines: When Computers Exceed Human Intelligence TI - The Age of Spiritual Machines: When Computers Exceed Human Intelligence ID - 2158 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is an introductory work that attempts to cover a broad time period in 180 pages of text. It has no notes, but does have a bibliography and index. Lacy writes: “It will be the purpose of this book to examine various systems of communication that society has evolved, from human speech to the computer and the satellite, to consider the effects of each on our society, and to give thought to appropriate public policy. Geographically, attention will narrow from humankind in considering language, to Western Europe with respect to print, and to the industrialized West, particularly the United States, in discussion of the newer media. The treatment will necessarily be brief and suggestive rather than detailed or definitive, but perhaps it may be useful in opening areas for discussion.” AU - Lacy, Dan CY - Champaign DA - 1996 KW - technology computers communication revolution non-USA general studies oral communication language +computers and the Internet satellites information age Europe, Western information age electronic media communication revolution technology and society Europe +aeronautics and space communication LB - 780 PB - University of Illinois Press PY - 1996 ST - From Grunts to Gigabytes: Communications and Society TI - From Grunts to Gigabytes: Communications and Society ID - 1474 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Although the author does not delve in any detailed with the connection between American expansion and new communication technologies of the late nineteenth century, this work nevertheless is predicated on the assumption that American expansion was closely tied to increased production and the Industrial Revolution. Commercial interests, a belief in the superiority of the American political system, a fear of European encroachment in Latin America and China, and a tradition of territorial expansion combined to produce an empire for the United States. From the purchase of Alaska to the cession of Spain’s Pacific Ocean colonies, the American expansion created opportunities. The key events and issues pertaining to foreign policy are interpreted; the personalities of the important decision makers are profiled. --James Landers AU - LaFeber, Walter CY - Ithaca DA - 1963 KW - R & D nationalism research and development war war +nationalism and communication +military communication American expansion Landers, James LB - 9910 PB - Cornell University Press PY - 1963 ST - The New Empire: An Interpretation of American Expansion, 1860-1898 TI - The New Empire: An Interpretation of American Expansion, 1860-1898 ID - 2358 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - LaFollette, Marcel C. CY - Chicago DA - 1991 KW - R & D +military communication research and development values science scientific research, and government support values, and science science, and popular culture science, and society research and development, and government support LB - 8900 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1991 ST - Making Science Our Own: Public Images of Science, 1910-1955 TI - Making Science Our Own: Public Images of Science, 1910-1955 ID - 2257 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In chapter 4, “the Invention of Invention,” Landes discusses clocks and printing. “The clock was the greatest achievement of medieval mechanical ingenuity. Revolutionary in conception, it was more radically new than its makers knew. This was the first example of a digital as opposed to an analog device: it counted a regular, repeating sequence of discrete actions (the swings of an oscillating controller) rather than tracked continuous, regular motion such as the moving shadow of a sundial or the flow of water.” Several factors explain why Europeans cultivated invention, “this pleasure in new and better”: One was Judeo-Christianity esteem for manual labor. Second, Judeo-Christianity subordinated nature to man, which departed sharply “from widespread animistic beliefs and practices that saw something of the divine in every tree and stream.” Third, Judeo-Christians had a linear conception of time whereas other cultures believed time to be cyclical. Fourth, Landes stresses the market. “Enterprise was free in Europe. Innovation worked and paid, and rulers and vested interests were limited in their ability to prevent or discourage innovation.” AU - Landes, David S. CY - New York DA - 1998 KW - time and timekeeping time print innovation materials materials digitization timekeeping, and clocks non-USA printing printing press general studies inventions clocks printing, and writing timekeeping digital media sundials Judeo-Christianity time capitalism analog media analog v. digital media LB - 790 PB - W. W. Norton & Company PY - 1998 ST - The Wealth and Poverty of Nations: Why Some Are So Rich and Some So Poor TI - The Wealth and Poverty of Nations: Why Some Are So Rich and Some So Poor ID - 1475 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Landes writes: “...the invention of the mechanical clock in medieval Europe....was one of the great inventions in the history of mankind -- not in a class with fire and the wheel, but comparable to movable type in its revolutionary implications for cultural values, technological change, social and political organization, and personality.” Part I is entitled “Finding Time,” and has the following: Chapter 1 (“A Magnificent Dead End”), Chapter 2 (“Why Are the Memorial Late?”), Chapter 3 (“Are You Sleeping, Brother John?”), Chapter 4 (“The Greatest Necessity for Every Rank of Men”). Part II is entitled “Keeping Time.” Chapter 21 is on “The Quartz Revolution." AU - Landes, David S. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1983 KW - illustrations time and timekeeping time communication revolution digital media digitization timekeeping, and clocks non-USA timekeeping clocks, mechanical clocks, quartz communication revolution time clocks illustrations illustrations, and clocks timekeeping, and digital media digital media, and timekeeping LB - 2020 PB - The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press PY - 1983 ST - Revolution in Time: Clocks and the Making of the Modern World TI - Revolution in Time: Clocks and the Making of the Modern World ID - 1598 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work has several observations about the social impact that new technologies have had on the pornography industry. The author goal “is to illustrate the various social and technological developments over the last 50 years that have made it possible for a former stripper and now pornography entrepreneur to wind up in an unabashedly positive front-page article in the Wall Street Journal.” Lane discusses the use of color nude photographs first in such magazines as Playboy and later in Penthouse. He considers how technological advances related to telephones, cable television, computers, and the Internet have made sexually explicit materials pervasive in American culture and have also undercut the power of local communities to enforce their own obscenity standards. Such innovations as video tape recorders and camcorders have taken the sale of porn off of Main Street and brought it directly into people’s homes. New technologies have also made it easier to produce and distribute pornography. Lane sees a positive side to the growing business of pornography. While censors race to limited the supposedly harmful effects of explicit sexual materials, “Congress and various state legislatures have overlooked the role that the pornography industry is playing in making the Internet a faster and more economically viable medium for all businesses.” AU - Lane, Frederick S. III CY - New York and London DA - 2000 KW - computers Clinton, Bill video cassette recorders (VCRs) Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Federal Communications Commission (FCC) magnetic recording photography women, and new media video rentals presidents, and new media Reagan administration sexuality sexuality sexuality values motion pictures news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines information technology home entertainment magnetic tape cinema motion pictures celluloid film regulation entertainment Clinton Administration censorship and ratings children law censorship and ratings censorship cable 8mm films 8mm 16mm home home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture +photography and visual communication values, and media VCRs videotape pornography pornography, and new media +telephones telephones, and pornography +television television, and cable television, and pornography cable television, and pornography pornography, and cable television pornography, and telephones +computers and the Internet pornography, and the Internet pornography, and computers motion pictures, and pornography entertainment, home home entertainment revolution video stores satellites satellite television, and pornography women women, and pornography information technology, and home ACLU censorship, and pornography censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Meese Commission 16mm film 8mm film film, 8mm film, 16mm cameras cameras, 16mm cameras, 8mm camcorders obscenity obscenity, and pornography children, and media Clinton, William Jefferson Comstock, Anthony Dworkin, Andrea FCC FTC Playboy Penthouse Hustler Flynt, Larry Hefner, Hugh Internet Internet, and pornography Miller v. California MacKinnon, Catharine Attorney General’s Commission on Pornography Reagan, Ronald, and pornography virtual reality cameras, Web cams cyberspace home, and pornography home, and new media home, and VCRs home, and cable television home, and Internet home, and satellite television pornography, and camcorders camcorders, and pornography pornography, and defenders values +aeronautics and space communication materials Reagan, Ronald LB - 12260 PB - Routledge PY - 2000 ST - Obscene Profits: The Entrepreneurs of Pornography in the Cyber Age TI - Obscene Profits: The Entrepreneurs of Pornography in the Cyber Age ID - 2573 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The first seven chapters of this book (there are ten chapters total) were previously published in a variety of journals. The author’s interests appear to run more toward literary and educational theory than toward history. As important as television is to our culture, Lanham writes, “we failed to notice that the personal computer had presented itself as an alternative to the printed books, and the electronic screen as an alternative to the printed page. Furthermore, in the last three or four years, that alternative page has been enhanced so that it can present and manipulate images and sounds almost as easily as words. And it can do all this in 16.7 million colors. The long reign of black-and-white textual truth has ended. The nature and status of textual discourse have been altered. This movement from book to screen promises a metamorphosis comparable in magnitude, if not in hype, to broadcast TV.” Lanham sees the current debate over the virtues or harms inherent in electronic media as reintroducing an old controversy between rhetoricians and philosophers that dates back to classical Greece. “As I suggest here,” he writes, “the whole Aristotelian basis of literary criticism is undermined by electronic expression, and so prestructuralist literary theory is similarly transformed.” One of the most interesting chapters (apparently not previously published) is entitled “Elegies for the Book” (chapter 8). “It is clear by now, I hope, why the debate about the social harm or benefit of electronic technology has been so muddled. It involved the basic positions of our cultural world as soon as the argument opened in classical Greece, and has done so again ever since McLuhan precipitated it back onto the popular cultural agenda. As a result, when people talk about the baneful influence of electronic technology, often they are really talking about something quite different, about a cultural debate which technology has reintroduced. The deepest debates about TV, about the decline of the book, about the computer as Big Brother or little one, are usually variations on the long-standing debate between rhetoricians and the philosophers. Since the premises of the two camps differ radically, the contenders always talk past each other.” In chapter 8, Lanham discusses Marshall McLuhan and his ideas about the return to oral (as opposed to written) culture. He then discusses subsequent writers who have predicted the marginalization of the book in our culture. These include: O. B. Hardison’s Disappearing Through the Skylight (1989); Alvin Kernan’s The Death of Literature (1990); Jay David Bolter’s Writing Space: The Computer, Hypertext, and the History of Writing (1991); George P. Landow’s Hypertext: The Convergence of Contemporary Critical Theory and Technology (1992); and Gregory Ulmer’s Teletheory: Grammatology in the Age of Video (1989). Lanham says that “unlike most humanists discussing technology, I argue an optimistic thesis. I think electronic expression has come not to destroy the Western arts and letters, but to fulfill them. And I think too that the instructional practices built upon the electronic word will not repudiate the deepest and most fundamental currents of Western education in discourse but redeem them....” In his optimism, Lanham argues a similar case to that present in later books by Mitchell Stephen’s The rise of the image the fall of the world (1998) and Janet Murray’s Hamlet on the Holodeck (1997). AU - Lanham, Richard A. CY - Chicago DA - 1993 KW - computers print nonprint media community democracy computers nonprint culture print culture +television television, and culture electronic media democracy and media print media v. electronic media +books, periodicals, newspapers McLuhan, Marshall oral v. written culture books, decline of +computers and the Internet books color color, and computers computers, and color oral culture print culture LB - 7050 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1993 ST - The Electronic Word: Democracy, Technology, and the Arts TI - The Electronic Word: Democracy, Technology, and the Arts ID - 2076 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book, written in 1987, attempts to trace the origins and growth of video cassette recorder. Lardner argues that "today the superiority of the Japanese in the home VCR field is so overwhelming that no American manufacturer even bothers to try making such a product; instead, all the big American electronics companies -- RCA, Zenith, General Electric, and the rest -- buy Japanese-made VCRs and add their nameplates to them." (11) Lardner gives space to Motion Picture Association of America President Jack Valenti's campaign against VCRs and his plan for charging royalties for VCRs use. The work also discusses Congress's efforts to deal with the problems of piracy and copyright possed by the VCR. The text of this work runs 328 pages. A"Sources" section (pp. 329-32) gives only barest listing of sources used in each of the 23 chapters (there are no footnotes or endnotes in the traditional sense). The book does have an index. AU - Lardner, James CY - New York DA - 1987 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) General Electric Company entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) MPAA U. S.Congress corporations corporations corporations entertainment, home VCRs non-USA Japan Japan, and VCRs VCRs, and Japan motion pictures motion pictures, and piracy motion pictures and VCRs VCRs, and motion pictures VCRs, and movie piracy Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and VCRs Valenti, Jack, and movie piracy magnetic recording Betamax VCRs, and Betamax law copyright, and VCRs VCRs, and copyright VCRs, and intellectual property intellectual property, and VCRs law, and copyright copyright, and law home and new media home, and VCRs home entertainment revolution, and VCRs VCRs, and home entertainment Home Recording Rights Coalition JVC (Victor Company of Japan) Japan, and Victor Company of Japan Kroft, Stephen, and VCRs Matsushita Electric Industrial Company Morita, Akio, and VCRs MPAA, and VCRs VCRs, and MPAA RCA, and VCRs General Electric Company, and VCRs Zenith, and VCRs Sony, and VCRs Japan, and Sony copyright law VCRs, and Universal v. Sony court cases, and VCRs VCRs, and court cases U.S. Supreme Court, and VCRs U. S. Congress, and VCRs VCRs, and U.S. Supreme Court VCRs, and U.S. Congress Universal Pictures, and VCRs Universal v. Sony, and VCRs video rentals VCRs, and rentals copyright court cases home entertainment home intellectual property Sony Corporation MPAA RCA Congress, U. S. U. S. Supreme Court Universal Pictures Zenith LB - 29860 PB - W. W. Norton & Company PY - 1987 ST - Fast Forward: Hollywood, the Japanese, and the Onslaught of the VCR TI - Fast Forward: Hollywood, the Japanese, and the Onslaught of the VCR ID - 2742 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Larner, Edgar CY - New York DA - 1928 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins LB - 7060 PB - D. Van Nostrand Co. PY - 1928 ST - Practical Television TI - Practical Television ID - 2077 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Originally published in 1927 in London under the title Propaganda Technique in the World War, Harold Lasswell’s classic study remains insightful and fresh to this day. Lasswell (1902-1978), who was a University of Chicago professor, systematically explains the methods of propaganda used in war. He elucidates how propaganda can help mobilize a citizenry to war. Propaganda is, in fact, a necessary component of victory. Lasswell begins Propaganda by explaining that his book is not overly driven by theory. He is informed by theories but does not rely on them. This explains why the book is still cherished by advertising professors. Theories come and go, but well-written history, informed by timeless logic, lasts for decades. Relying on letters, biographies House of Common’s records, U.S. Congressional Records, and popular articles, he tells the story of how propaganda operated during World War I. Propaganda was so important to America that Woodrow Wilson proofed the propaganda and decided on the themes that it would address. The Germans, who were slow to recognize the significance of modern propaganda, nevertheless came understand that it played a significant part in their defeat during World War I. In effective propaganda, the enemy country, Lasswell says, should be depicted as vile and despicable, as satanic. Atrocities (real or imagined) committed by its leaders need to be invoked because it is easier to hate a person than an entire nation. Only after these propaganda techniques are used, can a nation mobilize behind the war effort. Propaganda during World War I was aimed at specific groups, with a focus on providing different messages for different religious groups (Jews, Catholics, Protestants). Each group felt that they were fighting for their god and their beliefs. Also, high status and low status people received different propaganda because they were swayed by different appeals. Overall, Lasswell’s book transformed the conception of war as simply a battle of military might, into a duel in the psychological minefield. -Hallie Lieberman AU - Lasswell, Harold D. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1971 KW - propaganda war World War I propaganda, and World War I World War I, and propaganda non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and World War I World War I, and Great Britain France Germany Germany, and propaganda propaganda, and Germany France, and propaganda propaganda, and France World War I, and Germany World War I, and France France, and World War I Germany, and World War I media effects Lasswell, Harold media effects, and Harold Lasswell propaganda, and Harold Lasswell Lieberman, Hallie LB - 32930 PB - MIT Press PY - 1971 ST - Propaganda Technique in World War I TI - Propaganda Technique in World War I ID - 33 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Lastra places technological change in the film industry in the larger context of changes in communication technology going back to the early nineteenth century. He argues that there is nothing inherent, or essential, in the technology that inevitably dictates it will shape social change. Rather, pragmatic, historical and contingent factors are always the determinative factors. The book looks at the phenomenon of modernity, which it defines as temporal and spatial displacement, and seems to conclude that film is the quintessential modern industry. Mostly secondary sources are used. --Gordon Jackson AU - Lastra, James CY - New York DA - 2000 KW - technology technology and society motion pictures modernism modernity modernity modernism Jackson, Gordon +motion pictures and popular culture +sound recording motion pictures, and sound sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity modernity, and motion pictures technological determinism motion pictures, and technological determinism LB - 1530 PB - Columbia University Press PY - 2000 ST - Sound Technology and the American Cinema: Perception, Representation, Modernity TI - Sound Technology and the American Cinema: Perception, Representation, Modernity ID - 241 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Although this work as a whole is of marginal value, its pages on privacy consider what should be respected in this realm relative to information technology. AU - Laver, Murray CY - Cambridge, Eng. DA - 1989 KW - surveillance law, and privacy law general studies information age privacy LB - 810 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1989 ST - Information technology: agent of change TI - Information technology: agent of change ID - 1477 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In 1937 the Rockefeller Foundation provided a grant to Princeton University for the purpose of studying the role of radio and its effect on listeners in the United States. An Office of Radio Research was created with Paul Lazarsfeld serving as the director. From this project came one group of studies that related radio to other media, especially newspapers and books. Lazarsfeld's book grew out of discussions of the first progress report from these studies. This 354-page book deals with the educational aspects of radio, why people choose to listen to the radio, how radio affects the reading of newspapers and books, and how radio promotes reading. -- Jeanie Geurink AU - Lazarsfeld, Paul F. CY - New York DA - 1940 KW - Geurink, Jeanie +radio +books, periodicals, newspapers radio, and newspapers newspapers print culture newspapers, and radio radio, and print culture print culture, and radio social science research, and radio radio, and Rockefeller Foundation media effects radio, and media effects media effects, and radio reading reading, and radio radio, and reading news print social science research news and journalism LB - 29020 PB - Duell, Sloan & Pearce, Inc. PY - 1940 ST - Radio and the Printed Page: An Introduction to the Study of Radio and Its Role in the Communication of Ideas TI - Radio and the Printed Page: An Introduction to the Study of Radio and Its Role in the Communication of Ideas ID - 2680 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Leach maintains that "From the 1890s on, American corporate business, in league with key institutions, began the transformation of society into a society preoccupied with consumption, with comfort and bodily well-being, with luxury, spending and acquisition, with more goods this year than last, more next year than this. American consumer capitalism produced a culture almost violently hostile to the past and to tradition, a future-oriented culture of desire that confused the good life with goods. It was a culture that first appeared as an alternative culture--or as one moving largely against the grain of earlier traditions of republicanism and Christian virtue--and then unfolded to become the reigning culture of the United States. It was the culture that many people the world over soon came to see as the heart of American life." Leach argues that the rise of consumer culture had important implications for public life and democracy. "Indeed, the culture of consumer capitalism may have been among the most nonconsensual public cultures ever created, and it was nonconsensual for two reasons. First, it was not produced by "the people" but by commercial groups in cooperation with other elites comfortable with and committed to making profits and to accumulating capital on an ever-ascending scale. Second, it was nonconsensual because, in its mere day-to-day conduct (but not in any conspiratorial way), it raised to the fore only one vision of the good life and pushed out all others. In this way, it diminished American public life, denying the American people access to insight into other ways of organizing and conceiving life, insight that might have endowed their consent to the dominant culture (if such consent were to be given at all) with real democracy." AU - Leach, William CY - New York DA - 1993 KW - nationalism photography women, and new media advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations propaganda advertising preservation new media news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers history, and new media materials community democracy history values magazines lithography lighting iconography icons history general studies advertising department stores +electricity color, and department stores values, and department stores women women, and department stores consumerism new media, and department stores department stores, and new media magazines, and department stores capitalism, and American culture history, break with democracy and media critics public sphere values, and capitalism Industrial Revolution +nationalism and communication advertising, and icons icons, and newspapers advertising, outdoor electricity, and spectacles lithography, color color, and lithography posters advertising, and glass glass +photography and visual communication public relations advertising, and electric signs electricity, and electric signs lighting, fluorescent and neon capitalism color history, break with capitalism, and history history, and capitalism democracy and media public sphere public sphere, and capitalism democracy, and capitalism materials LB - 9930 PB - Pantheon Books PY - 1993 ST - Land of Desire: Merchants, Power, and the Rise of a New American Culture TI - Land of Desire: Merchants, Power, and the Rise of a New American Culture ID - 2059 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - While technology is not the focus of Lears' book per se, it does provide context to the changing cultural landscape in American between 1880 and 1920. These were years when the United States was transformed by the Industrial Revolution and Lears examines the opposition to modernism during this period. AU - Lears, T. J. Jackson CY - New York DA - c1981 KW - cultural change advertising, and public relations values propaganda public relations modernity cyberspace culture consumerism context cultural change, late 19th cultural change, early 20th modernism modernism, and critics antimodernism Victorianism advertising consumption LB - 12850 PB - Pantheon Books PY - 1981 ST - No Place of Grace: Antimodernism and the Transformation of American Culture, 1880-1920 TI - No Place of Grace: Antimodernism and the Transformation of American Culture, 1880-1920 ID - 463 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Lears writes that in early 20th century in the United States corporate advertising "brought a disembodiment of abundance imagery, as the carnivalesque celebration of fleshly excess was streamlined into an exaltation of industrial efficiency, and the process of productivity became a model for the organization of everyday life. Even then, older counter tendencies survived in the margins of the commercial vernacular. But on the whole, twentieth century advertising iconography redefined the source of abundance from the fecund earth to the efficient factory.” AU - Lears, T. J. Jackson CY - New York DA - 1994 KW - photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations values religion values religion +photography and visual communication lithography iconography icons advertising general studies capitalism, and culture values, and advertising chromolithography iconography lithography, chromo color +electricity photography, and advertising religion, and capitalism consumerism posters capitalism LB - 9980 PB - Basic Books PY - 1994 ST - Fables of Abundance: A Cultural History of Advertising in America TI - Fables of Abundance: A Cultural History of Advertising in America ID - 2363 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book has been written for anyone interested in learning about the information revolution regardless of their technical expertise. “Communications is in the midst of a revolution,” Lebow writes. “It is one of those revolutions where you know something important is happening even though you cannot tell exactly what it is. Understanding these developments involves a knowledge of not only technological inventions, but of entrepreneurship and litigation, the “three-stranded fabric” out of which communication history evolved. In considering the years from the 1840s to the present, the major change in communication “has been to replace transportation by electricity as the vehicle for transferring information from one place to another. The overall effect has been to bring people and events together without requiring their physical presence....” Lebow begins with Samuel Morse (“The American Leonardo”) and moves (in Part II) to wireless and radio broadcasting. Part III deals with the computer, the transistor, the computer chip, and ARPANET. Part IV discusses digitalization, media convergence, and the information infrastructure of the twenty-first century. AU - Lebow, Irwin CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - R & D computers discs, compact ARPA transistors, and integrated circuits +military communication values labor communication revolution materials materials compact discs (CDs) CDs values religion law office office, and new media office sound recording, and discs media general studies communication revolution information age Morse, Samuel wireless communication +radio computers transistors computer chips, computer ARPANET Internet research and development +transportation +electricity capitalism law digital media media convergence infrastructure +sound recording compact discs (CDs) sound recording, and compact discs (CDs) networks +telephones +television +telegraph +computers and the Internet chips, computer computer chips digitization LB - 820 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - IEEE Press [The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.] PY - 1995 ST - Information Highways and Byways: From the Telegraph to the 21st Century TI - Information Highways and Byways: From the Telegraph to the 21st Century ID - 1478 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Lebow writes that “digital transmission first hit the big time in the early 1980s with the introduction of the compact disc. Although it had been used with increasing frequency in various specialized applications during the thirty years or so prior to the coming of the CD, it remained well behind its analog predecessor as a factor in the commercial market. “The speed by which the digital CD relegated the analog record to a historical curiosity was nothing short of spectacular. But to communications engineers this marketplace success was no more spectacular than the way the CD system became the long-sought blockbuster application of Claude Shannon’s information theory. Many of us found it ironic that these first mass-produced embodiments of Shannon’s theory were found in our living rooms instead of in more conventional communications environments.” This work also discusses telephone and radio communication, and offers a cogent history of audio recording. In addition, Lebow discusses digital communication and its connection with computers. This book is a volume in the IEEE Press's Understanding Science & Technology Series. AU - Lebow, Irwin CY - New York DA - [1998] KW - computers information theory discs, compact information theory materials materials compact discs (CDs) CDs analog media sound recording, and discs +telephones +radio +sound recording sound recording, and compact discs (CDs) compact discs (CDs) Shannon, Claude information theory, and Claude Shannon sound recording, and digital sound recording, and analog digital media digital media, and compact discs (CDs) general studies +computers and the Internet analog v. digital digitization LB - 5360 PB - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. ST - Understanding Digital Transmission and Recording TI - Understanding Digital Transmission and Recording ID - 1921 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is one of several works written by feminists during the late 1970s and early 1980s attacking pornography, arguing that it degraded women and led to sexual discrimination. These works appeared at a time when technological innovations such as cable television and satellite TV (and soon VCRs) were making pornography much more available to a wider public. AU - Lederer, Laura, ed. CY - New York DA - 1980 KW - women, and new media sexuality motion pictures women feminism law censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture pornography women feminists women, and pornography feminists, and pornography pornography, and women pornography, and feminists censorship censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship feminists, and censorship censorship, and feminists LB - 22600 PB - Morrow PY - 1980 ST - Take Back the Night: Women on Pornography TI - Take Back the Night: Women on Pornography ID - 987 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 276-page work is based on the author's 1978 Ph. D. thesis at the University of Michigan. By 1979, the American global media hegemony had a half-century history. The American communication system, dominated by commercialization and free enterprise, stood in contrast to the then two other major communication systems: the communist-controlled system in the Soviet Union, and the public-authority system in Great Britain. “Hollywood motion pictures, broadcasting, news agencies, news magazines, advertising, media professionalism and ideology, and most recently satellite communications – all have been and continue to be under American dominance.” (23-24) Third World nations (supported by UNESCO) were attempting to alleviate the domination of Western news-gathering and dissemination by approving “a work plan for the biennium 1977-1978 to study (1) the concept of ‘free and balanced flow of information”; (2) the processing of news from international news agency sources; and (3) the content of imported television programs, the reasons for such importations, and their social and technical implications.” (24) In this work, “media imperialism” refers to: (1) television program exportation to foreign countries; (2) foreign ownership and control of media outlets; (3) transfer of the “metropolitan” broadcasting norms and institutionalization of media commercialism at the expense of “public interest”; and (4) invasion of capitalistic world views and infringement upon the indigenous way of life in the recipient nations. (68) --Amy Chu AU - Lee, Chin-Chuan CY - Beverly Hills, CA DA - 1979 KW - USSR nationalism communism Marx, Karl imperialism Asia United Nations Marxism journalism satellites Third World news and journalism non-USA Chu, Amy +television cultural imperialism +nationalism and communication television, and cultural imperialism cultural imperialism, and televison nationalism, and television Third World, and television television, and Third World Ph.D. thesis theses +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and cultural imperialism Canada Great Britain Soviet Union Soviet Union, and cultural imperialism Canada, and cable television Taiwan Taiwan, and cultural imperialism Taiwan, and television television, and Taiwan China China, and television China, and cultural imperialism Marxism, and cultural imperialism UNESCO news, and cultural imperilism political economy capitalism, and cultural imperialism news capitalism LB - 1690 PB - Sage Publications PY - 1979 ST - Media Imperialism Reconsidered: The Homgenizing of Televison Culture TI - Media Imperialism Reconsidered: The Homgenizing of Televison Culture ID - 257 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Lee, Robert CY - New York DA - 1944 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins LB - 10760 PB - Essential Books PY - 1944 ST - Television: The Revolution TI - Television: The Revolution ID - 2439 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work was one of the first books on movie censorship to use the Production Code Administration Files, which contains material on about 20,000 motion pictures. It exams "eleven 'tough cases'" -- the films Dead End, Gone With the Wind, The Outlaw, The Postman Always Rings Twice, The Bicycle Thief, Detective Story, A Streetcar Named Desire, The Moon Is Blue, The French Line, Lolita, and Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? The work also provides information about Will H. Hays, Joseph Breen, Geoffrey Shurlock, and Eric A. Johnston. AU - Leff, Leonard J. AU - Simmons, Jerold L. CY - New York DA - 1990 KW - self-regulation Production Code PCA values Production Code (motion pictures) context values religion law censorship and ratings censorship context, and censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Legion of Decency Hays, Will H., abortion Production Code, and abortion motion pictures, and abortion censorship, and motion pictures, Shurlock, Geoffrey Johnston, Eric Hays, Will H. Christianity Catholic Church LB - 15440 PB - Grove Weidenfeld PY - 1990 ST - The Dame in the Kimono: Hollywood, Censorship, and the Production Code from the 1920s to the 1960s TI - The Dame in the Kimono: Hollywood, Censorship, and the Production Code from the 1920s to the 1960s ID - 561 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Leibman explains the scope and subject matter of her book as follows: “The introduction of television significantly transformed American cultural life and reorganized American entertainment and its central genres, an impact felt most strongly from the mid-1950's through the early 1960's. During this time the three major networks established and extended their dominance of the broadcasting structure; the major film studios entered the television production field and became the primary suppliers of television product; production personnel traversed the slippery slope back and forth from the large-screen medium to the small; television viewing reached its most widespread penetration; and schedules, rating practices, and regulatory forces were formalized into a normative process that would last through the cable revolution of the 1980's." Leibman's objective "is to provide insight into the competitive and cooperative strategies of the film and television industries in the late 1950's and early 1960's by conducting a dual examination of the industries’ material and textual practices." In the first half of the work he analyzes the motion picture and TV industries in the contexts of their "structural identities," regulation, and ideas about audiences. In the second half he discusses "a link between these practices and their textual outcomes by analyzing the representation of American family life within one of the decade’s most popular genres, the family melodrama. I do so by organizing the wealth of domestic melodramas produced during this period according to consistent thematic and stylistic preoccupations, then explaining these narrative tendencies as necessitated by the complementary requirements of the film and television industries.” AU - Leibman, Nina C. CY - Austin DA - 1995 KW - entertainment entertainment, home television, and home television, and values home entertainment home, and new media home values home, and information technology information technology +television information technology, and home television, and family values, and television +motion pictures television, and society home, and new media home, and television television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television LB - 9990 PB - University of Texas Press PY - 1995 ST - Living Room Lectures: The Fifties Family in Film and Television TI - Living Room Lectures: The Fifties Family in Film and Television ID - 2364 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Leonard discusses newspaper reading and the growth of national consciousness. In general, this is a highly readable book that has original things to say about newspapers and the nature of news. AU - Leonard, Thomas CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - post office nationalism advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations print sexuality Penthouse news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers journalism community democracy news and journalism reading printing printing press painting newspapers news +nationalism and communication +books, periodicals, newspapers advertising, and newspapers newspapers, and advertising community, imagined community, virtual magazines newspapers, and reading +postal service writing, and printing pencils readers clubs Thoreau, Henry David, and pencils electroplating printing, and electroplating newspapers, and nationalism nationalism, and newspapers painting, as historical source newspapers, and taverns writing advertising community community, and newspapers democracy, and newspapers materials LB - 2290 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1995 ST - News for All: America’s Coming-of-Age with the Press TI - News for All: America’s Coming-of-Age with the Press ID - 1622 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This solidly researched and clearly written work discusses the growth of the press from the colonial period into the early twentieth century. It considers the increasingly powerful role the press played in American political life. He treats Thomas Nast and political cartoons, Joseph Pulitzer, and the muckrakers during the Progressive Era. Leonard discusses the impact of photography and other forms of visual communication on the newspaper press. AU - Leonard, Thomas C. CY - New York DA - 1986 KW - nationalism photography advertising and public relations propaganda public relations advertising print journalism news and journalism war World War I propaganda printing printing press newspapers news +books, periodicals, newspapers +photography and visual communication daguerreotype printers printing stereoscope color Currier and Ives advertising Nast, Thomas cartoons +nationalism and communication newspapers, and nationalism nationalism, and newspapers muckraking penny press propaganda, and World War I World War I, and propaganda Pulitzer, Joseph photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography LB - 10000 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1986 ST - The Power of the Press: The Birth of American Political Reporting TI - The Power of the Press: The Birth of American Political Reporting ID - 2365 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Lessing, Lawrence CY - Philadelphia DA - 1956 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories +television biography Armstrong, Edwin LB - 10840 PB - Lippincott PY - 1956 ST - Man of High Fidelity: Edwin Howard Armstrong TI - Man of High Fidelity: Edwin Howard Armstrong ID - 2446 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is Volume 7 in Scribner's History of the American Cinema series, edited by Charles Harpole. This book is the work of several people. Lev has written chapters that include: Chapter 1 -- The American Film Industry in the Early 1990s; Chapter 2 -- Genres and Production Trends, 1950-1954; Chapter 4 -- Censorship and Self-Regulation; Chapter 5 -- Technology and Spectacle; Chapter 7 -- Hollywood International; Chapter 9 -- The Film Industry in the Late 1950s; and Chapter 10 -- Genres and Production Trends, 1955-1959. Other contributors to the volume include: Janet Wasko, who wrote Chapter 6 (Hollywood and Television in the 1950s: The Roots of Diversification); Victoria O'Donnell, who wrote Chapter 8 (Science Fiction Fims and Cold War Anxiety); Jack C. Ellis, who wrote Chapter 11 (American Documentary in the 1950s); and Greg S. Fuller, who wrote Chapter 12 ('Unquiet Years': Experimental Cinema in the 1950s). Lev's Chapter 5 on technology and spectacle deals with the use of color in films, 3-D, Cinerama, CinemaScope, VistaVision, Todd-AO, and the Widescreen revolution of the 1950s. AU - Lev, Peter CY - New York DA - 2003 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality documentaries , motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures actors, and status of motion pictures, and actors' status Screen Actors Guild television television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and studio system advertising advertising, and television television, and advertising Lights Jubilee motion pictures, and advertising advertising, and motion pictures television, and Warner Bros. Warner Bros., and television electricity color 3-D motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and 3-D motion pictures, and widescreen Cinerama CinemaScope Production Code censorship and ratings military communication military communication, and motion pictures law motion pictures, and law law, and motion pictures motion pictures, experimental motion pictures, documentary documentary films experimental films MPAA capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures Cold War war war, and motion pictures Cold War, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Cold War women women, and motion pictures future and science fiction advertising and public relations sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sexuality future Warner Bros. lighting actors acting LB - 34830 PB - Charles Scribner's Sons' PY - 2003 ST - Transforming the Screen: 1950-1959 TI - Transforming the Screen: 1950-1959 VL - 7 ID - 3125 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This collection of essays, some previously published in journals, considers the connection between new technology and the military. Paul N. Edwards writes about “The Closed World: Systems Discourse, Military Policy and post-World War II US Historical Consciousness,” a piece published in AI and Society, 2 (July 1988). Other essays in this volume include: Douglas D. Noble, “Mental Material: The Militarization of Learning and Intelligence in US Education”; Chris Hables Gray, “The Cyborg Soldier: The US Military and the Post-Modern Warrior”; Dennis Hayes, “The Cloistered Work-Place: Military Electronics Workers Obey and Ignore”; Vincent Mosco, “Strategic Offence: Star Wars as Military Hegemony”; Tom Athanasiou, “Artificial Intelligence, Wishful Thinking and War”; and Les Levidow and Kevin Robins, “Towards a Military Information Society?” AU - Levidow, Les and Kevin Robins, eds. CY - London DA - 1989 KW - R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) computers nationalism corporations corporations Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) SDI World War II Vietnam War presidents, and new media Reagan administration public relations advertising research and development war Lockheed Martin Co. government electronic media education war nationalism and communication military communication artificial intelligence and biotechnology military, and artificial intelligence strategic defense initiative (SDI) computers and the Internet military, and computers virtual reality military, and virtual DARPA Lockheed Space and Missile Company military-industrial complex NASA Reagan administration, and new media Reagan administration, and SDI strategic computing initiative sensors Vietnam War U.S. Air Force, and new media World War II, and new media cybernetics military, and cybernetics warfare, electronic electronic warfare propaganda propaganda, and new media military, and education military-university complex education, and military military, and computers nationalism, and new media Edwards, Paul Noble, Douglas Gray, Chris Hables Hayes, Dennis Mosco, Cincent Athanasiou, Tom Robins, Kevin public relations U. S. Air Force Air Force, U. S. advertising and public relations LB - 2170 PB - Free Association Books PY - 1989 ST - Cyborg Worlds: The Military Information Society TI - Cyborg Worlds: The Military Information Society ID - 305 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work begins with a short history of documentary filmmaking and then moves to interviews with the makers of documentaries in Great Britain (Basil Wright, Lindsay Anderson, Richard Cawston, Tony Garnett and Kenneth Loach), France (Georges Franju, Jean Rouch), Belgium (Henri Storck), and the United States (Willard Van Dyke, Richard Leacock, D. A. Pennebaker, Albert and Dvaid Mysles, Arthur Barron, Frederick Wiseman, Ed Pincus, Michael Shamberg, and David Cort). In this work, French filmmaker Jean Rouch talks about the "essential revolution" (133) brought by 16mm cameras which were cheaper and more mobile. They gave filmmakers greater ability to capture real-life activities. The American documentary maker Richard Leacock recalled that "with the advent of sound, far from being freed, we were paralyzed by the complexity and size of equipment." (195-6) AU - Levin, G. Roy CY - Garden City, N. Y. DA - 1971 KW - underground cinema motion pictures 16mm sound recording motion pictures, and 16mm Rouch, Jean underground media underground films motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and history of motion pictures, and avant-garde films underground films, and motion pictures 16mm 16mm, and avant-garde films documentaries motion pictures, and documentaries television videotape magnetic recording magnetic recording, and documentaries cinéma vérité cameras cameras, 16mm 16mm cameras documentary films, and 16mm motion pictures, and 16mm motion pictures, and documentaries lighting lighting, and 16mm cameras lighting, and portable cameras sound recording sound recording, and 16mm cameras 16mm cameras, and sound recording color color, and 16mm film news and journalism television television, and 16mm cameras television news, and 16mm cameras photography and visual communication Great Britain France Belgium non-USA non-USA, and documentary filmmaking Great Britain, and documentary filmmaking France, and documentary filmmaking Belgium, and documentary filmmaking videofreex television, and videotape videotape, and television television, and videofreex sound recording, and 16mm 16mm, and sound recording photography magnetic tape magnetic recording LB - 34660 PB - Doubleday & Company, Inc. PY - 1971 ST - Documentary Explorations: 15 Interviews with Film-Makers TI - Documentary Explorations: 15 Interviews with Film-Makers ID - 3104 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Chapters one and two deal with the alphabet, “the first digital medium,” and printed authorship. Then chapters 4 through 10 introduce the photochemical- electronic aspects of the information revolution, “and follow their development and surprising results through the telephone, electric lighting, radio, and television to the doorstep of the computer age.” Levinson also considers the phonograph and motion pictures. Chapters are devoted specifically to individual media: photography, telegraphy, telephones, electricity, and radio. Chapters 11 through 15 treat five aspects of the computer revolution: word processing, publishing online, hypertext, its implementation on the World Wide Web, and the roles played by icons and images in these processes. The final four chapters explore the future and examine such questions as: What is the future of paper? Levinson argues for stronger protections for intellectual property in the digital age. Chapter 19 deals with artificial intelligence and its possible threat to humankind. The final chapter is a reflection on human nature and its relationship to information technology. The author, writing in 1997, concludes that he hope this book will call “attention to the uselessness and peril of the Communications Decency Act” of 1996. AU - Levinson, Paul CY - London and New York DA - 1997 KW - computers print culture video cassette recorders (VCRs) magnetic recording photography print communication revolution materials materials magnetic tape future and science fiction law television, and VCRs television, and cable print culture iconography general studies alphabet information age communication revolution photochemical electronic media telephones electricity, and electric lighting +radio +photography and visual communication telegraph electricity word processing information processing Internet World Wide Web icons words vs. images nonprint media artificial intelligence digital media hypertext future paper intellectual property copyright Communication Decency Act, 1996 online publishing computers and the Internet cyberspace authorship print media television, and cable and VCRs VCRs artificial intelligence and biotechnology VCRs television alphabet, and digital media digital media, and alphabet sound recording future, and paper future, and new media +duplicating technologies VCRs +artificial intelligence and biotechnology VCRs television digitization images vs. words LB - 830 PB - Routledge PY - 1997 ST - The Soft Edge: a natural history and future of the information revolution TI - The Soft Edge: a natural history and future of the information revolution ID - 1479 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Levinson became personal friends with Marshall McLuhan about the time he finished his Ph.D. in 1979. He tends to be more optimistic about modern media than others who have been influenced by McLuhan, such as Neil Postman and Joshua Meyrowitz. Levinson sees the Internet "poised to trump" other media "because the Internet is making content of them all.... The evidence and implications of the Internet as this giant medium of media will be among the continuing themes of this book." This work discusses McLuhan's theories. In chapter 3, "Net Content," Levinson considers the well-known phrase "the medium is the message," and argues that McLuhan did not mean to suggest that the content convey by a medium was unimportant. Chapters 11-13 "consider how digital facility with information may be changing our very notion of 'best,' and how it relates to our interconnected conceptions of work, play, and art." Chapter 12 discusses McLuhan's ideas about how technologies that become outmoded also become art forms. In chapter 15, "Spirals of Media Evolution, "the author deals with four questions that McLuhan used to evaluate the influence of any medium: "What aspect of society or human life does it enhance or amplify? What aspect, in favor or high prominence before the arrival of the medium in question, does it eclipse or obsolesce? What does the medium retrieve or pull back into center stage from the shadows of obsolescence? And what does the medium reverse or flip into when it has run its course or been developed to its fullest potential?" AU - Levinson, Paul CY - London and New York DA - 1999 KW - technology computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) science holograms magnetic recording photography advertising, and public relations seeing at a distance propaganda public relations preservation postmodernism modernism sound recording communication revolution journalism magnetic tape community democracy communication revolution, and second industrial revolution law censorship and ratings news and journalism non-USA history values technology and society computers and the Internet computers, personal computers news new way of seeing music media history computers and the Internet new way of seeing, and new media medium is the message history, break with history, and new media television general studies photography and visual communication global village global communication myth technology and culture values, and new media digital media communication revolution second industrial revolution gatekeeping typewriters, and gatekeeping VCRs television, and VCRs advertising alphabet art, and new media +transportation automobiles books, periodicals, newspapers cable television, and cable children, and computers computers, and children cyberspace democracy and media Edison, Thomas DNA Postman, Neil Meyrowitz, Joshua holography hot and cool media Innis, Harold hypertext Internet McLuhan, Marshall media, and quantum physics motion pictures metaphors sound recording music, and electronic media newspapers personal computers computers, personal radio science fiction +telephones McLuhan, Marshall, and tetrad Titanic typewriters writing art children computers regulation digitization future and science fiction future children, and media LB - 4340 PB - Routledge PY - 1999 ST - Digital McLuhan: a guide to the information millennium TI - Digital McLuhan: a guide to the information millennium ID - 1822 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 214-page book offers an accessible account of the cellphone, setting this invention into historical context. Of particular interest is the author's discussion of the impact of digitization on telephone use and how the cellphone has been used in war by journalists and others. The work also has an interesting annotated bibliography (181-214). AU - Levinson, Paul CY - New York DA - 2004 KW - computers cellular telephones telephones telephones home and new media cell phones telephones, and cell phones bibliographies bibliographies, and cellphones bibliographies, and telephones automobiles, and telephones digital media telephones, and digitization computers and the Internet telephones, and computers computers, and telephones radio pornography pornography, and telephones telegraph television television, and cable video phones telephones, mobile radio, and telephones telephones, and radio photography war war, and cell phones cell phones, and war news and journalism journalism, and cell phones cell phones, and journalism blogs weblogs weblogs, and cellphones automobiles home journalism transportation computers LB - 33140 PB - Palgrave Macmillan PY - 2004 ST - Cellphone: The Story of the World's Most Mobil Medium and How It Has Transformed Everything! TI - Cellphone: The Story of the World's Most Mobil Medium and How It Has Transformed Everything! ID - 2951 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work appeared shortly after Iranian religious leaders had issue a death warrant on writer Salman Rushdie. Levy a history of blasphemous libel going back to the fifth century B. C. This work provides a good introduction to efforts through history to censor blasphemous literature, a problem that grew in scope with the appearance of each new method of communication. AU - Levy, Leonard Williams CY - New York DA - 1993 KW - print law censorship and ratings values +books, periodicals, newspapers printing censorship values, and blasphemous libel blasphemy, history of libel, and blasphemy LB - 10010 PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 1993 ST - Blasphemy: Verbal Offense Against the Sacred, from Moses to Salman Rushdie TI - Blasphemy: Verbal Offense Against the Sacred, from Moses to Salman Rushdie ID - 2366 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The essays in this collection vary in quality. Levy's Introduction gives an overview of the book and indicates that this work resulted from his being criticized by a reviewer of an article who claimed that he had not shown the importance of the VCR (why not study toasters, because they are also widely purchased, the reviewer had asked). AU - Levy, Mark R. CY - Newbury Park, CA DA - 1989 KW - entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) entertainment, home magnetic recording home entertainment materials materials magnetic tape home, and new media home VCRs values home, and information technology information technology +television VCRs information technology, and home values, and VCRs home, and VCRs LB - 7080 PB - Sage Publications PY - 1989 ST - The VCR Age: Home Video and Mass Communication TI - The VCR Age: Home Video and Mass Communication ID - 2079 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In many ways this books begins as an in-house history, and in many ways it remains that throughout, but it also contains interesting material on the development of computers through history and the backgrounds of the people at Macintosh in particular. One theme that emerges is that these people saw themselves as developing a form of communication that was as important as the printing press, a device that would alter civilization as we know it. AU - Levy, Steven CY - New York DA - 1994 KW - computers computers +computers and the Internet Macintosh computers, history of computers, and Macintosh computers, and change LB - 7900 PB - Viking PY - 1994 ST - Insanely Great: The Life and Times of Macintosh, the Computer That Changed Everything TI - Insanely Great: The Life and Times of Macintosh, the Computer That Changed Everything ID - 2159 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In 1956, the authors wrote: “Within the last two decades microrecording has referred to something more than the mere materials and processes used to record images in miniature; it is now almost symbolic of the whole process of recording data in such form that the data, ideally, are immediately accessible to the user in the form in which he wants them at a price he can afford and is willing to pay.” This book offers a good account of the state of microfilming in the mid-1950s. Chapters consider “The Microrecording Process,” “Cameras,” “Copies and Copying. Processing. Projection. Enlargement,” “Readers,” “Information Classification and Retrieval,” and “Storage.” Much of this work deals with the technicalities of this process. Pages 67-68 offer a brief history of microrecording, starting with the Franco-Prussian War. AU - Lewis, Chester M., and William H. Offenhauser, Jr. CY - New York DA - 1956 KW - photography office labor archives non-USA office, and information technology microfiche, microfilm, microform libraries information technology libraries, and information storage information storage information storage +duplicating technologies microfilm microfilm, and history of microfilm, and Franco-Prussian War Franco-Prussian War, and microfilm +information storage information storage, and microrecording microrecording libraries libraries, and microrecording libraries, and microfilm miniaturization information technology, and office +photography and visual communication cameras, and microfilm office, and microfilm office France cameras LB - 5720 PB - Interscience Publishers, Inc. PY - 1956 ST - Microrecording: Industrial and Library Applications TI - Microrecording: Industrial and Library Applications ID - 1957 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), writes Lewis, “supervises the regulation of film content solely to protect studio products in the marketplace.” (3) Lewis argues throughout this work that “the political and social utility of film censorship is altogether secondary to its economic function. Like other forms of industrial regulation, content censorship functions to secure the long-term health of the industry as a whole. That the content of so many films has been changed in service of such a corporate agenda reveals just how little art matters in the film business.” (6) Lewis goes on to say that the “policing of images onscreen rarely concerns the images themselves, the morality of immorality of their content. It derives instead from concerns about box office, about how to make a product that won’t have problems in the marketplace.” (7) Lewis examines the censorship of movie content, in the larger contexts of politics, law, and social history, and especially against the background of motion pictures as a very large business. He describes his writing style as “synchronous and elliptical,” and says the book is “structured less like an academic history than a novel.” (9) The book’s seven chapters develop the following themes: “How the Blacklist Save Hollywood”; “Collusion and Conglomeration in the Movie Business”; “What Everyone Should Know about the Motion Picture Code and Ratings”; “Hollywood v. Soft Core”; “Hollywood v. Hard Core”; “Movies and the First Amendment”; and “A Quick Look at Censorship in the New Hollywood.” This book discusses the Motion Picture Rating System in the context of Jack Valenti and the MPAA, but says little about the actual deliberations of the Classification and Rating Administration under the leadership of Richard Heffner between 1974 and 1994. This work is based largely on published sources. It has substantial notes (317-59) but no bibliography. AU - Lewis, Jon CY - New York DA - 2000 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation self-regulation Production Code PCA corporations motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality corporations Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) blacklisting Nixon, Richard National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media censorship and ratings rating system (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) sexuality Nixon administration NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric motion pictures First Amendment regulation freedom values religion law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +motion pictures and popular culture pornography motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and First Amendment First Amendment, and motion pictures motion pictures, and blacklisting blacklisting, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Valenti, Jack Nixon, Richard, and motion pictures Paramount Pictures MPAA rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and motion pictures MPAA, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and MPAA MGM motion pictures, and HUAC HUAC, and motion pictures Hays, Will H. FCC Douglas, William O. Breen, Joseph Production Code Administration (PCA) censorship, and PCA Brennan, William capitalism, and censorship censorship, and capitalism values, and censorship values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values values capitalism HUAC LB - 2140 PB - New York University Press PY - 2000 ST - Hollywood v. Hard Core: How the Struggle over Censorship Saved the Modern Film Industry TI - Hollywood v. Hard Core: How the Struggle over Censorship Saved the Modern Film Industry ID - 302 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is a monograph on the history of Chinese silent film examines the period from 1896 to 1936. It begins with the introduction of silent films from the Europe and the United States through Hong Kong (a British colony at the time) in 1896. The authors divide their history into six periods: pre-developmental stage, 1896-1904 (early film productions and commercial screenings of movies by foreigners); initial stage, 1905-1921 (earlier experimental productions and organization of production companies); exploring stage, 1922-1926 (burgeoning silent film productions and foreign investments; increasing numbers of movie theaters and competitions; development of newsreel productions, rise of various genres, such as comedy, social-realistic dramas, romance, and even films advocating anti-war ideals; and studies of film theories); developing stage, 1927-1931 (competitions among production studios, their relation to movie theaters and business interests, and the coming of sound films); maturing stage, 1932-1934 (challenges of creativity and finance that production companies encountered, development of Hong Kong film industry, and the emergence of left-wing movement in production); and declining stage, 1935-1936 (influence of sound films and Japanese imperialist aggression, restructure of production companies, and the rise of few production companies as leaders in the industry). -- Amy Chu AU - Li, Suyuan, and Hu, Jubin CY - Beijing, China DA - 1996 KW - nationalism audiences nationalism imperialism Asia theaters motion pictures cultural imperialism non-USA Chu, Amy +motion pictures and popular culture China China, and silent films motion pictures, and China +nationalism and communication nationalism, and motion pictures Japan Japan, and Chinese motion pictures theaters, and China silent films, and China cultural imperialism, and China motion pictures, and cultural imperialism cultural imperialism, and motion pictures LB - 540 PB - Zhong guo dian ying chu ban she PY - 1996 ST - Chinese Silent Film History (Zhongguo wusheng dianying shih) TI - Chinese Silent Film History (Zhongguo wusheng dianying shih) ID - 142 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Employing the concept that film is part of the social organization, and film production reflects economy, politics and culture, this book examines how the Taiwanese film making and its political economy reflect social and political changes during different periods: One period is that of Japanese colonization and post-colonization, and includes the influence of western and Japanese Meiji modernization and shift of political regimes from Japanese colony to the Nationalist Party’s reign. A second period might be labeled authoritarian regime , and reflects the political and cultural ideologies under the threat of communism, and impacts of Taiwan losing status to the film industry, and re-directed objectives in the film industry development in accordance to the economic policy. Finally, there is the post-authoritarian system, marked by diversification of film production and increasing cultural interaction within Mainland China, and Hong Kong. This book also examines and incorporates theories in media cultural studies, and examines the hegemonic powers in media industry. -- Amy Chu AU - Li, Tien-Duo CY - Taipei, Taiwan DA - 1997 KW - nationalism imperialism motion pictures cultural imperialism non-USA Chu, Amy +motion pictures and popular culture Taiwan Taiwan, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Taiwan motion pictures, and new technology (Taiwan) +nationalism and communication nationalism, and motion pictures (Taiwan) Japan Japan, and Taiwan motion pictures Hong Kong Hong Kong, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Hong Kong cultural imperialism, and Taiwan cultural imperialism, and Japan Japan, and cultural imperialism Taiwan, and cultural imperialism cultural imperialism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and cultural imperialism LB - 560 PB - Ya tai tu shu chu pan she PY - 1997 ST - Taiwanese Cinema, Society and History (Taiwan tienying, shehui yu lishih) TI - Taiwanese Cinema, Society and History (Taiwan tienying, shehui yu lishih) ID - 144 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book contains sixteen essays on various aspect of the science and technology of pulp and paper. Libby's introductory chapter, "History of Pulp and Paper," is the most historically oriented piece. AU - Libby, C. Earl, ed. (prepared under the direction of the Joint Textbook Committee of the Paper Industry) CY - New York DA - 1962 KW - materials non-USA paper materials papermaking paper, and wood pulp paper, and cellulose cellulose, and paper papermaking, history of LB - 28280 PB - McGraw-Hill Book Company PY - 1962 ST - Pulp and Paper: Science and Technology: Volume I: Pulp TI - Pulp and Paper: Science and Technology: Volume I: Pulp ID - 895 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This short work (104 pages) argues that if the United States information warfare seriously, "as the world's preeminent information society," it "could increase its lead over any opponent." Failure to exploit this type of warfare could prove a significant disadvantage regardless of whatever other military strength the U. S. might have. Chapters are devoted to "Command-and-Control Warfare"; "Intelligence-Based Warfare"; "Electronic Warfare"; "Psychological Warfare"; "Hacker Warfare"; "Economic Information Warfare"; and "Cyberwarfare." AU - Libicki, Martin C. CY - [Washington, D. C.] DA - Aug. 1995 KW - R & D cybernetics computers nationalism public relations advertising research and development war cyberspace war information technology +military communication nationalism and communication +computers and the Internet information technology, and war propaganda military, and electronic warfare military, and digital media military, and virtual reality military, and cyberspace cyberwarfare public relations advertising and public relations LB - 10940 PB - Center for Advanced Concepts and Technology, Institute for National Strategic Studies, National Defense University PY - 1995 ST - What Is Information Warfare? TI - What Is Information Warfare? ID - 2427 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The essays in this volume deal the issues of regulation of the press in a democratic society. Because the mass media is privately owned, efforts to shape and regulate it are difficult, and raise constitutional issues. The First Amendment protects the press in theory, but other laws protect it as an economic entity. However, because of the vital role that the press plays in a democratic society, it arguably does not have the same rights and protections as other corporations. The debate over how to make these distinctions forms the topic of these essays. One of the more interesting essays, by Stephen Holmes, explores the relationship between money and power. The Supreme Court has essentially declared that money is considered speech, and therefore efforts to regulate expenditures, or concentration of wealth, are unconstitutional violations of the First Amendment. Money that is used to express political ideas is not easily separated from money that limits or denies political expression. This leads then to an essay by Frederick Schauer. He questions who in society should have the power to make this decision. The rules we set up are devised to allocate power. He discusses several political philosophies and decides that we are in a paradoxical situation where there are no concrete answers. Two final essays make the case that it is possible, and even desirable, to regulate the press and media corporations in the interests of enhancing democracy. The press gives up some right to claim exemption because of its unique role. The press must be a tool of democracy rather than its enemy. All of the essays in this book are thought provoking and provide a nice philosophical background for studying these issues. --Rob Rabe AU - Lichtenberg, Judith, ed. CY - New York DA - 1990 KW - journalism community democracy freedom law law censorship and ratings censorship news and journalism regulation democracy and media First Amendment regulation, and press Rabe, Rob regulation censorship, and press news, and democracy Schauer, Frederick news LB - 9450 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1990 ST - Democracy and Mass Media: A Collection of Essays TI - Democracy and Mass Media: A Collection of Essays ID - 2312 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is divided into two parts. Part I deals with "Man's Interaction with Recorded Knowledge," and considers such topics as "The Size of the Body of Recorded Knowledge," "Information Storage, Organization, and Retrieval," and "Man-Computer Interaction in Procognitive Systems." Part II has five chapters devoted to the theme "Explorations in the Use of Computers in Library and Procognitive Functions." --SV Libraries of the Future presents a detailed examination of how information storage and retrieval systems can be best structured and accessed. The author, J.C.R. Licklider, was instrumental in the development of the personal computer. Furthermore, his background before computer science was psychology. This amalgam of both psychology and computer science is quite evident in how Licklider and his colleagues conceptualize the libraries of the future. The basic premise is to use a schema system to organize information so that it is connected in logical and easy to use ways. This system is similar to the schema theory applied to human cognition and organization of information. One of the more interesting aspects of this text is to consider that it was published in 1964 well before the current systems of computer organization were developed. Early concerns were with developing information storage technology and achieving adequate memory. The combination of Lick’s background in psychology and computers is evident in his view of humans and computers as being able engage in a symbiotic-type relationship that both benefit from. --Michael Boyle AU - Licklider, J. C. R. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1965 KW - computers archives +future and science fiction computers libraries libraries, and information storage +information storage libraries future +computers and the Internet libraries, and computers computers, and libraries Boyle, Michael Licklider, J.C.R., and libraries computers, and cognition Licklider, J.C.R. LB - 8850 PB - MIT Press PY - 1965 ST - Libraries of the Future TI - Libraries of the Future ID - 2252 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work notes that in the decade following the Surgeon General 1972 Report on television violence , hundreds of studies appeared – about 90 percent of all the research done up to that time on the topic – making it a “golden age” for social science research on television’s influences on behavior. Government and corporate money poured into research. The National Science Foundation as well as the Ford and Markle Foundations provided funding. The medical establishment and civic organizations became involved as the American Medical Association (AMA), the American Psychological Association (APA), and the National Parent Teachers’ Association( PTA) enlisted in the effort to curb media violence. Liebert and Sprafkin present much data here including the percentage of violent television programs and cartoons through the mid-1980s. They maintain that the television industry attempted to prevent several researchers who were known to have linked viewing screen violence and violent behavior from taking part in the Surgeon General’s Scientific Advisory Committee on Television and Social Behaviorin 1972. AU - Liebert, Robert M. AU - Sprafkin, Joyce CY - New York DA - 1988 KW - television, and media effects Surgeon General social science research media effects media violence censorship and ratings television violence television, and violence violence, and television violence, and social science research social science research, and violence children, and media +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures Surgeon General's Report (1972) television, and Surgeon General's Report (1972) violence, and bibliography +bibliographies bibliographies, and TV violence National Commission on Causes and Prevention of Violence, media effects children National Commission on Causes and Prevention of Violence LB - 20000 OP - 1973, 1982 PB - Pergamon Press PY - 1988 ST - The Early Window: Effects of Television on Children and Youth TI - The Early Window: Effects of Television on Children and Youth ID - 825 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Part I (pp. 1-80), or the first six chapters of this book, deals with “Color.” While the work is not especially analytical, it does mention many early color processes and the attempts to produce color films. It also mentions titles of the early color films, starting with the first efforts virtually at the birth of cinema. Limbacker is good on the films and processes used during the 1930s. Parts Two through Five deal with “Width,” “Depth,” “Sound,” and “The Avant-Garde,” respectively. Informative appendices list early films made in color, wide screen, 3-D, and sound (pp. 265-372). AU - Limbacher, James L. CY - New York DA - 1969 KW - photography motion pictures +motion pictures +photography and visual communication color, and history of color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and processes (1930s) motion pictures, and depth sound recording, and motion pictures +motion pictures color motion pictures, and avant-garde motion pictures, and widescreen motion pictures, and 3-D motion pictures, and sound motion pictures, and early color films listed +sound recording motion pictures, and color LB - 1710 PB - Brussel & Brussel, Inc. PY - 1969 ST - Four Aspects of the Film TI - Four Aspects of the Film ID - 1567 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - On the title page of Lindsay’s book is the following quotation from “Fitzgerald”: ”We are no other than a moving row Of magic shadow-shapes that come and go Round with the sun-illumined lantern held In midnight by the Master of the Show.” Lindsay writes that “the photoplay cuts deeper into some stratifications of society than the newspaper or the book have ever gone, ….” (p. 7) Chapter 12 is entitled “Thirty Differences between the Photoplays and the Stage” (pp. 151-70) Lindsay writes: “But a photoplay of Ghosts came to our town. The humor of the prospect was the sort too deep for tears.” (152) Later, he says: “By alternating scenes rapidly, flash after flash: cottage, field, mountain-top, field, cottage, we have a conversation between three places rather than three persons…. Moving objects, not moving lips, make the words of the photoplay.” (161) Lindsay observes that the movie can hand settings and nature far better than the stage. “…The stage out-of-door scene is at best artificial and little and is generally at rest, or its movement is tainted with artificiality. The waves dash, but not dashingly, the waves flow, but not flowingly. 164/165 The motion picture out-of-door scene is as big as the universe. And only pictures of the Sahara are without magnificent motion.” (164-65) The author contrasts motion pictures with the novel and stage, seeing a closer parallel with short stories and lyical poems. “The photoplay is as far from the stage on the one hand as it is from the novel on the other. Its nearest analogy in literature is, perhaps, the short story, or the lyric poem. The key words of the stage are passion and character; of the photoplay, splendor and speed.” (165) While dramas deal with such themes as pity, revenge, and love, it does so slowly. “On the other hand, the motion picture, though often appearing to deal with these things, as a matter of fact uses substitutes, many of which have been listed. But to review: its first substitute is the excitement of speed-mania stretched on the framework of an obvious plot….” (165) Lindsay believe moving picture to be an important new art form that provided inexpensive entertainment with great potential for education and social usefulness. AU - Lindsay, Vachel CY - New York DA - 1915 KW - theater stage history class children ref, secondary ref, book metaphors metaphors, and movies as open window actors acting actors acting motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel quotations quotations, and motion pictures quotations, and sound recording democracy democracy, and motion pictures motion pictures, and democracy class, and motion pictures, motion pictures, and class audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences motion pictures, and media effects media effects, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures history and new media history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history motion pictures, and printing press duplicating technologies motion pictures, and duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and motion pictures books, periodicals, newspapers materials materials, and celluloid duplicating technologies, and celluloid celluloid, and duplicating technologies books, and duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and books motion pictures, and close ups acting, and close ups color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and movies sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sound recording motion pictures, and talking films phonograph phonograph, and motion pictures motion pictures, and phonograph celluloid acting, and facial expression motion pictures, as open window democracy motion pictures, and democracy democracy, and motion pictures censorship and ratings motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures books censorship motion pictures LB - 41890 PB - Macmillan Company PY - 1915 ST - The Art of the Moving Picture TI - The Art of the Moving Picture ID - 4288 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Arthur Link writes that he doubts Wilson ever said it was “like writing history with lightning.” (p. 267, n. 1) AU - Link, Arthur, ed. CY - Princeton, NJ DA - 1980 KW - history words vs. images photography ref, secondary presidents and new media photography and visual communication motion pictures Wilson, Woodrow Wilson, Woodrow, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Woodrow Wilson Griffith, D. W. history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures images vs. words war motion pictures, and war war, and motion pictures quotations motion pictures, history written with lightning MacKaye, Milton, and Birth of a Nation metaphors motion pictures, as lightning flash ref, book LB - 6460 PB - Princeton University Press PY - 1980 ST - The Papers of Woodrow Wilson: Volume 32, January 1 April 16, 1915 TI - The Papers of Woodrow Wilson: Volume 32, January 1 April 16, 1915 VL - 32 ID - 3443 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Lippmann asserts that we know the world from a series of pseudo-events created for the purpose of communicating some message that generally is not true, and that the further away the event occurs, the less likely it is that we understand it correctly. He argues that news is really not the truth, but some collection of public relations, misinformation, stereotyping and misjudgments. Most people, he said, are not able to make informed judgments about the information they are given to determine whether it is accurate or even relevant. Part 2 of this book is entitled “Approaches to the World Outside”; Part 3 is “Stereotypes.” --Phil Glende In Public Opinion, Walter Lippmann’s basic thesis is that democracy and the press do not fulfill the Enlightenment ideals of a “marketplace of ideas” because individuals do not act as educated and rational actors who make informed decision based on a free exchange of ideas. Instead, he argued that people stereotype the world “beyond their heads” and are easily swayed by propaganda. Interestingly, he focuses on individual differences and argues that people processes and response to messages based on their varying moral codes, stereotypes, and environments. However, this book pre-dates the Magic Bullet Theory by about a decade. According to Lippmann, the Jeffersonian ideals of democracy do not hold up on a large scale and that “democracy” is, in a sense, a myth. In addition, he argues that the press does not fulfill the Enlightenment function of facilitating rational debate and democratic discourse. According to Lippmann, the “manufacture of consent” did not disappear with democratic governance. In his view, at the time he wrote the book (1919) it was more important than ever. Lippmann wrote Public Opinion in the aftermath of the 1918 end of World War I. During the war he had worked writing for United States government propaganda campaigns. Based on this experience, he feared the misuse of propaganda. He argued that the “manufacture of consent” (158) should be used for good and based on research and analysis. He proposed the development of a profession of experts, apart from policymakers, who collect and interpret social data without political bias. Along with the work of Edward Bernays, the ideas put forth by Lippmann formed the basis of the early development of “public relations” to manage and direct public opinion. He viewed journalism as part of this “information work.” -- Jill Hopke AU - Lippmann, Walter CY - New York DA - 1922, 1966 KW - advertising and public relations values propaganda advertising public relations advertising journalism community democracy news and journalism values public relations propaganda news stereotypes pseudoevents values, and media public opinion public sphere Glende, Phil democracy and media critics Hopke, Jill LB - 9290 PB - Macmillan Company PY - 1922 ST - Public Opinion TI - Public Opinion ID - 34 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book brief history depicts how radio and television technology have been utilized for dissemination of information and news under Marxist government. The book also examines the linkage of electronic broadcasting communication and other social activities, and the evolution of electronic journalism and mass communication in relation to other disciplines. -- Amy Chu AU - Liu, Zhijun CY - Beijing, China DA - 1988 KW - nationalism imperialism Asia news and journalism news news and journalism ideology cultural imperialism communism news and journalism non-USA +radio +television China radio, and China China, and radio television, and China China, and television +nationalism and communication China, and electronic media television, and communism television, and ideology ideology, and television radio, and communism radio, and ideology communism, and radio ideology, and radio journalism, and China China, and journalism news, and China news, and communism Chu, Amy cultural imperialism, and China journalism LB - 520 PB - Zhongguo renmin daxue chu ban she PY - 1988 ST - Electronic News Media — Radio and Television (Dianzi xinwen meijie—guanbo yu dianshi) TI - Electronic News Media — Radio and Television (Dianzi xinwen meijie—guanbo yu dianshi) ID - 140 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Is it possible to police the Internet? Who will control the electronic frontier? These are the questions this work seeks to address. The authors explore issues of surveillance, control and privacy online as well the policy and regulation questions of interest to governments. --Mark Tremayne AU - Loader, Brian D. CY - London DA - 1997 KW - computers nationalism law, and privacy law surveillance regulation privacy +computers and the Internet Tremayne, Mark privacy, and Internet privacy, and electronic media surveillance, and electronic media regulation, and Internet +nationalism and communication nationalism, and Internet censorship and ratings LB - 9110 PB - Routledge PY - 1997 ST - The Governance of Cyberspace: Politics, Technology and Global Restructuring TI - The Governance of Cyberspace: Politics, Technology and Global Restructuring ID - 2278 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Long begins her study in the year 1873, the year that the Comstock Law was passed (the first federal anti-obscenity law), “I chose to begin the narrative at the time of the Act’s passage,” she says, “because it marks the birth of the modern movement against vice and the first delineation between the ‘good’ and ‘evil’ sides on the moral battlefield ."(p.11) This law encapsulates her main argument, that the sexual history of New York can be described primarily as a war between moralizers and sexual pioneers. She goes into detail about Anthony Comstock. Comstock worked with the YMCA to form the Commission for the Suppression of Vice, an organization whose goal was to destroy obscene books and magazines. His definition of obscenity was wide, and encompassed naked pictures as well as birth control information and treatments for STDs. His favorite method of seizing obscenity was entrapment, which he used to arrest Margaret Sanger’s husband. Other situations she focuses on include the closing of the burlesque houses and the creation of the Catholic Legion of Decency. This legion developed their own movie rating system to let movie goers know which movies were morally objectionable. She discusses how World Wars’ I and II changed perceptions of sexuality. During World War I, soldiers were given lectures on the dangers of prostitutes (syphilis and gonorrhea) which they promptly ignored. Not long after they came home from the war, women won the right to vote, and this changed the dynamic between the sexes, as women became more independent. WWII brought v-girls to the city, women who dated and had sex with soldiers, but who were not paid for it. They were difficult to distinguish from prostitutes, and the military soon lectured their soldiers about the dangers of v-girls (that they spread STDs). She also focuses on the rise of pulp novels and their cinematic counterpoint, sexploitation films, that were extremely popular in New York City. This led to a similar rise in opposition to the raunchy films and print works. Father Morton A Hill, as well as Francis Spellman and other religious men, tried to restrict sales of sex-themed magazines and books to children, and convinced NYC’s mayor to form a Citizen’s Antipornography Commission. By the 1970s, porn had become chic thanks to the popularity of Deep Throat and some feminists became alarmed and railed against its misogyny. Swinging also became popular at this time, and Plato’s Retreat, a commercial swing club opened in New York. When AIDS appeared in the 1980s, the freewheeling sexual culture was scaled back. Gays were blamed for AIDS and bathhouses were closed. Times Square was cleaned up, and a new rule came into effect: all “sex” stores in the city must carry 60 percent general merchandise, a rule still in effect today. --Hallie Lieberman AU - Long, Kat CY - New York DA - 2009 KW - Lieberman, Hallie censorship and ratings sexuality sexuality, and censorship censorship, and sexuality motion pictures motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures homosexuality homosexuality, and AIDS sexuality, and Margaret Sanger Sanger, Margaret censorship, and obscenity sexuality, and obscenity obscenity, and sexuality Comstock, Anthony war war, and sexuality sexuality, and war sexuality, and World War I World War I World War II sexuality, and venerial disease war, and venereal disease censorship obscenity LB - 36970 PB - Ig Publishing PY - 2009 ST - The Forbidden Apple: A Century of Sex & Sin in New York City TI - The Forbidden Apple: A Century of Sex & Sin in New York City ID - 213 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Although there was often an undercurrent of anti-Semitism that ran through criticism of Hollywood and movie makers during the 1930s, Father Daniel A. Lord, the primary author of the 1930 Production Code, opposes anti-Semitism in this pamphlet. AU - Lord, Daniel A. CY - St. Louis DA - 1939 KW - self-regulation Production Code values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) modernity modernism values religion +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Lord, Daniel A. motion pictures, and critics anti-Semitism Lord, Daniel A., and modernism modernism and critics pamphlets motion pictures, and anti-Semitism Production Code (motion pictures) Lord, Daniel A., and Production Code LB - 15110 PB - The Queen's Work PY - 1939 ST - Dare We Hate Jews? TI - Dare We Hate Jews? ID - 540 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The movie industry 1930 Production had a strong antimodern tone that reflected the views of its main author, Father Daniel Lord. This pamphlet give insight into some of the ideas Lord opposed. He believed the Bible’s account of creation and the fall literally, denounced attacks on faith during the 1920s and early 1930s as "fashionable sin," and roundly condemned Darwinism, secular education, contemporary literature and dance, modern art, marriage outside the Catholic Church, abortion, birth control, and communism. AU - Lord, Daniel A. CY - St. Louis DA - 1929 KW - self-regulation Production Code values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) modernity modernism values religion +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Lord, Daniel A. motion pictures, and critics anti-Semitism Lord, Daniel A., and modernism modernism and critics pamphlets motion pictures, and morality Production Code (motion pictures) Lord, Daniel A., and Production Code LB - 15120 PB - The Queen's Work PY - 1929 ST - Fashionable Sin: A Modern Discussion of an Unpopular Subject TI - Fashionable Sin: A Modern Discussion of an Unpopular Subject ID - 541 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Daniel Lord was the primary author of the movie industry's Production Code of 1930, and a critic of modernism. At the core of Lord's denunciations of the movies and modern education was his Catholic interpretation of post_lapsarian man. The biological interpretation of humankind presumed that “evolution makes man just a more highly differentiated beast and hence obviates the need of a creator and the possibility of an immortal soul and free will.” Evolution destroyed "not only the necessity of morality but its very possibility." AU - Lord, Daniel A. CY - St. Louis DA - 1931 KW - self-regulation Production Code values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) modernity modernism values religion +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Lord, Daniel A. motion pictures, and critics anti-Semitism Lord, Daniel A., and modernism modernism and critics pamphlets motion pictures, and morality Production Code (motion pictures) Lord, Daniel A., and Production Code (motion pictures) Lord, Daniel A., and education LB - 15130 PB - The Queen's Work PY - 1931 ST - Murder in the Classroom TI - Murder in the Classroom ID - 542 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Lord, the primary author of the movie industry's Production Code of 1930, was also a critic of modern life and its rejection of the Catholic Church's teachings. This was one of a series of pamphlets he wrote during the 1920s and 1930s setting out his views about religion and modern life. AU - Lord, Daniel A. CY - St. Louis DA - 1933 KW - self-regulation Production Code values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) modernity modernism values religion +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Lord, Daniel A. motion pictures, and critics anti-Semitism Lord, Daniel A., and modernism modernism and critics pamphlets motion pictures, and morality Production Code (motion pictures) Lord, Daniel A., and Production Code LB - 15140 PB - The Queen's Work PY - 1933 ST - Revolt Against Heaven TI - Revolt Against Heaven ID - 543 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Lord, the primary author of the movie industry's Production Code of 1930, was an opponent of birth control. AU - Lord, Daniel A. CY - St. Louis DA - 1930 KW - self-regulation Production Code values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) modernity modernism values religion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Lord, Daniel A. motion pictures, and critics anti-Semitism Lord, Daniel A., and modernism modernism and critics pamphlets motion pictures, and morality Production Code (motion pictures) Lord, Daniel A., and Production Code (motion pictures) birth control motion pictures, and birth control Lord, Daniel A., and birth control LB - 15150 PB - The Queen's Work PY - 1930 ST - Speaking of Birth Control TI - Speaking of Birth Control ID - 544 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Lord, the primary author of the movie industry's Production Code of 1930, was also a critic of modern life and its rejection of the Catholic Church's teachings. This was one of a series of pamphlets he wrote during the 1920s and 1930s setting out his views about religion and modern life. AU - Lord, Daniel A. CY - St. Louis DA - 1930 KW - self-regulation Production Code values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) modernity modernism values religion +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Lord, Daniel A. motion pictures, and critics anti-Semitism Lord, Daniel A., and modernism modernism and critics pamphlets motion pictures, and morality Production Code (motion pictures) Lord, Daniel A., and Production Code LB - 15160 PB - The Queen's Work PY - 1930 ST - You Can't Live That Way TI - You Can't Live That Way ID - 545 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Daniel Lord was the primary author of the movie industry's Production Code of 1930, but by 1934 he was disillusioned with the way Hollywood had enforced it and argued that movies often betrayed America. AU - Lord, Daniel A. CY - St. Louis DA - 1934 KW - self-regulation Production Code values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) modernity modernism values religion +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Lord, Daniel A. motion pictures, and critics anti-Semitism Lord, Daniel A., and modernism modernism and critics pamphlets motion pictures, and morality Production Code (motion pictures) Lord, Daniel A., and Production Code LB - 15260 PB - The Queen's Work PY - 1934 ST - The Motion Pictures Betray America TI - The Motion Pictures Betray America ID - 548 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Low, Archibald Montgomery CY - New York DA - 1925 KW - future and science fiction television, and history of +television future future, and television television, and origins LB - 7090 PB - International Publishers PY - 1925 ST - The Future TI - The Future ID - 2080 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this brief book (77 pages), Low discusses wireless and its possible future. He devotes a chapter to "Radio Television" (43-63) and writes: "What an excellent invention this will be! It means that a telescopic camera could be attached to an aeroplane and the views seen by thousands in a cinematograph theatre who may have the pleasure of witnessing the finish of a horse-race and knowing without loss of time how much money they have lost. "It would mean that the crew of a ship, a submarine in difficulties, or the passengers in an aeroplane, might be visible to people many miles away. It could not yet occur without their wish, for the transmitting apparatus must first be put into operation." (61) He speculates that color television will be possible. "The question of seeing in colours has hardly yet been considered, but that also will come to us, however great the difficulties may appear to-day." (62) Low's final chapter is deals with "Wireless and War" (64-77). "We shall in the future, see forms of electric death and heat-rays which may materialise not as a direct projection of heat but as some form of oscillation which produces heat only when striking a metallic object. "We have been so often told that power can be transmitted by Radio that we are apt to look upon this statement with contempt. This is quite wrong: power will one day be transmitted by wireless; power can at present be inductively sent over quite 72/73 a large air gap, though the energy available quite cloe to any wireless station is practically negligible to-day. "When motor-cars and ships are controlled or stopped by wireless, it is not the wireless which does the work; the ehterial oscillation merely sends signals to the ordinary operative mechanism. "Much excitement has been caused by the alleged injury of aeroplanes and motor-cars by wireless, but how is it that they can afterwards proceed? Do we forget that the petrol engine has to be restarted, and that, if allowed to fire when a car was in gear, it might be damaged and would probably not operate the moving parts?" (72-73) AU - Low, A. M. CY - New York DA - 1924 KW - wireless communication ref, secondary future and science fiction television, and history of television future future, and television television, and origins radio radio, and television television, and radio wireless wireless, and television television, and wireless notion pictures, and television television, and movie theaters color color, and television television, and color future, and television death rays radio, and death rays LB - 40760 PB - E. P. Dutton & Company PY - 1924 ST - Wireless Possibilities TI - Wireless Possibilities ID - 4173 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Lowenthal details the relationship that Westerners have had to the past, beginning with the Renaissance to the mid-1980’s. He argues that history has become less accessible and more foreign to people since the Renaissance. Through detailing the history of nostalgia, which was originally classified as a disease, and the interest in time travel, he explains our yearning for the past; our desire to capture a past that we have invented and glorified in our minds, a past that most likely never existed. There is no pristine, unspoiled past, he says. All attempts to get at an authentic history cannot present a true past because we never have a full picture of history, even if it is recent history and we are relying on our memory. In fact, remembered pasts are frequently less reliable than written history because we misremember things and glorify events in our lives. He says that many people misremember where they were when they heard the news at seminal moments like when Kennedy was assassinated. They sometimes want so much to be a part of history that they believe they were actually at the event when, in actuality, they were not. People become inspired by the past, the emulate it, or they feel defeated by the accomplishments that came before them. During the Renaissance, humanists were inspired by the past, specifically the work of the Greeks. Lowenthal believes that they were able to be inspired by the Greeks, because the Greeks were distant in time from them. Once the printing press was invented and printed materials became widespread, people were less inclined to see the preceding cultures as infallible because they were able to see the whole story of history, which allowed them to discover that people of the past were fallible and shouldn’t be as intimidating as they believed them to be. Before the Revolutionary War, Americans ignored history because they considered “their country as exempt from decay because eternally youthful (p. 109).” This attitude changed after the Civil War, when Americans idealized the “Colonial or Revolutionary golden age (p. 121).” History attracts us because we share it with others; we connect and bond with others through historical narratives, he says. Writing history as a narrative is very important; in fact, he details the rise of the historical novel and its importance for educating people about history. The invention of photography and film has changed the way we perceive history. We no longer have to rely on our fallible memories. “Films make history both intense and plausible (p. 258),” Lowenthal asserts. But even as technology improves, allowing for a more dynamic presentation of the past, our knowledge of history does not. The past becomes even more like a foreign country because we have too much history, and it overwhelms us. Later in the book, he details how pop relics change the meanings of historical relics (ex: Mona Lisa is now a rock star painting) and how Disneyfied versions of the past serve a purpose: they keep history relevant to a new generation. --Hallie Lieberman AU - Lowenthal, David CY - New York DA - 1985 KW - Lieberman, Hallie history and new media books, periodicals, newspapers history, and books history, and film history, and photography photography photography, and history history, and popular culture history LB - 32890 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1985 ST - The Past Is a Foreign Country TI - The Past Is a Foreign Country ID - 20 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work has good introductory information on such topics as the Payne Fund Studies. AU - Lowery, Shearon A. AU - Fleur, Melvin L. De CY - New York DA - 1988 KW - context censorship and ratings children motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and social science Payne Fund Studies context, and social science context, and Payne Fund Studies children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children media effects media effects, and motion pictures children, and media LB - 13490 OP - 1983 PB - Longman PY - 1988 ST - Milestones in Mass Communication Research: Media Effects TI - Milestones in Mass Communication Research: Media Effects ID - 519 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book provides a history in the development of motion pictures from early twentieth century to the 1990s. The history is presented in seven periods, and starts from the gradually popular use of photography in the Ching imperial court and among elite to the establishment of motion picture industry, and then to the incorporation of motion pictures into Chinese culture and daily life. Along with technological advancement of film making, this book also chronicles the changes and development of various film styles, which reflect the integration of tradition and innovation, and the historical, social and cultural contexts in which these styles are formed. -- Amy Chu AU - Lu, Hongshi and Shu, Xiaoming CY - Beijing, China DA - 1998 KW - Asia photography values motion pictures non-USA Chu, Amy +motion pictures and popular culture China China, and motion pictures motion pictures, and China +photography and visual communication photography, and China China, and photography motion pictures, and new technology (China) values, and motion pictures (China) values LB - 530 PB - Wen hua yi shu chu ban she : Xin hua shu dian jing xiao PY - 1998 ST - Motion Picture History of China (Zhongguo dianying shih) TI - Motion Picture History of China (Zhongguo dianying shih) ID - 141 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is encyclopedic in scope and is richly illustrated with pictures of early typewriters, fax machines, transistor radios, television ads, and much more. The work is divided into three sections. 1) “Communication” deals with words, pictures, the telegraph, wireless telegraphy, telephones. 2) “Entertainment” treats recorded sound, movies, radio, television. 3) “Information” covers calculating machines before computers, computers, software and “beyond computers.” This informative work is of value to students and teachers alike. --SV This work does a historical survey of information technology from printed books and postal systems to computers and digital phone systems and how these technologies have been used and what people thought about them at the time. Particularly noted is how traditional American notions of millennialism have been transmuted into a sense of technological utopia. Some technologies release potent democratic energies, Lubar argues. He seems to think the jury is still out on whether the movies are a force for democracy or primitivism. This work does a historical survey of information technology from printed books and postal systems to computers and digital phone systems and how these technologies have been used and what people thought about them at the time. Particularly noted is how traditional American notions of millennialism have been transmuted into a sense of technological utopia. Some technologies release potent democratic energies, Lubar argues. He seems to think the jury is still out on whether the movies are a force for democracy or primitivism. --Gordon Jackson AU - Lubar, Steven CY - Boston DA - 1993 KW - technology R & D cybernetics computers tape recording, magnetic post office microprocessing magnetic recording recording Federal Communications Commission (FCC) entertainment, home Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) cathode rays ARPA tape recording photography advertising, and public relations transistors, and integrated circuits tape recording robotics censorship and ratings recording propaganda public relations print fiber optics labor research and development war communication revolution news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers home entertainment materials fiber optics regulation digitization government context computers law news and journalism war home, and new media home postal service technology and society science +sound recording +radio printing printing press +duplicating technologies +sound recording office, and information technology home, and information technology +motion pictures and popular culture public address systems media information technology general studies information age communication revolution advertising, and television facsimile typewriters transistors radio, and transistors words telegraph wireless communication telephones entertainment media, and entertainment calculating machines motion pictures +television +computers and the Internet computers, and software artificial intelligence technology and culture telegraph, wireless recording, and sound recording, and phonograph phonograph recording, digital digital media recording, and music +electricity recording, electronic electronic media recording, and 78-rpm records recording, and 45-rpm records recording, and stereo recording, and magnentic recording, and audio cassettes recording, and eight-track tape recording, and radio television, and cable books books, electronic cathode ray tubes regulation FCC optical fibers, and cable optical fibers IBM television, and high definition (HDTV) magazines lasers microphones microprocessors microwaves +photography and visual communication information technology and office information technology and home photocopying photo-engraving photo-offset printing printing, photo-offset robots cyborgs motion pictures, and technology computers, and programming +aeronautics and space communication space communication Titanic Toffler, Alvin scientific research, and government support research and development Univac computers, and Univac Communication Act of 1934 De Forest, Lee Department of Defense, U. S. Advanced Research Projects Agency ARPA DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) facsimile Eniac computers, and Eniac Bell Laboratories World War I World War II cryptology Colossus transistors microprocessors miniaturization +duplicating technologies +telephones +motion pictures +computers and the Internet optical fibers television, and cable and VCRs computers, and Colossus +artificial intelligence and biotechnology DARPA +books, periodicals, newspapers advertising Colossus cryptography +military communication cable, and fiber optics recording Jackson, Gordon Zoopraxiscope Kinetoscope nickelodeons Vitaphone Technicolor color color, and Technicolor context, new media 20th office cable materials DARPA satellites rocketry LB - 840 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - Houghton Mifflin Company PY - 1993 ST - Infoculture: The Smithsonian Book of Information Age Inventions TI - Infoculture: The Smithsonian Book of Information Age Inventions ID - 1480 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - From Stephen Vaughn's review of this work in the American Historical Review (June, 2005): David Lubin, whose earlier works include Picturing a Nation (1994), a study about art and social change in nineteenth-century America, writes from the perspective of an art historian. Shooting Kennedy title refers both to the photographing of the Kennedys and to the president’s assassination. Why was it, he asks, that the Kennedys, who were wealthy, educated, and part of a “rarefied elite,” achieved such popularity? (157) The answer, he contends, lies in images of the Kennedys that derived “their power in good measure from their ability to activate latent memories of other powerful images in the histories of art and popular culture,” (xii) imagery that in our modern information age is “endlessly replicated.” (xiii) While many historians may find Lubin’s approach unorthodox, and while some of his examples work better than others, Shooting Kennedy does gives readers as good sense of American visual culture during the early 1960s and how the Kennedys fit into it. In considering “the impact of images on images,” Lubin takes a “nonlinear approach,” ranging freely “backward and forward in time nonsequentially.” (xii) Pictures of John and Jacqueline Kennedy juxtaposed with movie stars Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, or of young Jackie with a photo of Taylor in the movie National Velvet (pp. 12, 13), or of a youthful Jack sailing with a Winslow Homer’s painting Breezing Up (A Fair Wind) (1876) (pp. 40, 42), or the perverse way in which a snapshot of Lee Harvey Oswald holding a rifle resembles Daniel Chester French’s 1875 statute The Minute Man (pp. 228, 229) make Lubin’s thesis seem plausible. Several of Lubin’s insights are worthy of further development. He devotes considerable attention to Abraham Zapruder’s 8mm home movie of the assassination which he believes laid a foundation for a “new realism” in movie making and journalism during the 1960s. (p. 31) Although the film was not seen in its entirety on television until 1975, color frames from it had appeared in Life in the months following the assassination. These “had a more visceral impact” (164) on viewers, Lubin asserts, than did black-and-white pictures. Many people had portable cameras like Zapruder’s in 1963, but such cameras were only one of many innovations that were transforming communication by this time and their impact has generally been underestimated. The increasing use of color in mass media also deserves more attention. Relatively little research exists on what effects color might have on audiences. It was not just images of violence that appeared more frequently. Photographs in such publications such as Life, Look, and Playboy helped to make life “highly sexualized … for vast number of Americans,” Lubin writes, and amplified the glamour surrounding the nation’s First Family. (quotation,50; also 51) John Kennedy became “the great modern master of the art (or pseudo-art) of making and selling an image,” (139) according to Lubin who argues that Kennedy viewed “the nation’s aesthetic style not as something frivolous and inconsequential but as integral to its cold war initiative.” (133) He turned to the industrial designer Raymond Loewy, for example, to make Air Force One a medium through which to project a “sleek and beautiful American modernity.” (136) One theme that runs through both Shooting Kennedy and Nixon’s Shadow is the power of modern public relations. Clearly, Kennedy benefited from shrewd public relations by others. His image as part “genuine hero, part 007, part Lawrence of Arabia, part Tom Jones,” (141) and yet someone who retained his “ordinary humanity” and embraced common values (157) owed much to his father’s exploitation of Hollywood connections (6) and photojournalism. He was aided, too, by wife with a keen sense of style and by “some brilliant photographers and a willing public.” (139) --Lubin, whose earlier works include Picturing a Nation (1994), a study about art and social change in nineteenth-century America, writes from the perspective of an art historian. Shooting Kennedy title refers both to the photographing of the Kennedys and to the president’s assassination. Why was it, he asks, that the Kennedys, who were wealthy, educated, and part of a “rarefied elite,” achieved such popularity? (157) The answer, he contends, lies in images of the Kennedys that derived “their power in good measure from their ability to activate latent memories of other powerful images in the histories of art and popular culture,” (xii) imagery that in our modern information age is “endlessly replicated.” (xiii) Greenberg, whose work began as a doctoral thesis at Columbia University, examines multiple images of Nixon, some crafted by Nixon himself, others held by a variety of “cultural” constituencies. More than Lubin, he draws on the print sources, but he also makes ample use of documents from popular culture such as films, cartoons, and memorials. (xxvi) While many historians may find Lubin’s approach unorthodox, and while some of his examples work better than others, Shooting Kennedy does gives readers as good sense of American visual culture during the early 1960s and how the Kennedys fit into it. In considering “the impact of images on images,” Lubin takes a “nonlinear approach,” ranging freely “backward and forward in time nonsequentially.” (xii) Pictures of John and Jacqueline Kennedy juxtaposed with movie stars Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, or of young Jackie with a photo of Taylor in the movie National Velvet (pp. 12, 13), or of a youthful Jack sailing with a Winslow Homer’s painting Breezing Up (A Fair Wind) (1876) (pp. 40, 42), or the perverse way in which a snapshot of Lee Harvey Oswald holding a rifle resembles Daniel Chester French’s 1875 statute The Minute Man (pp. 228, 229) make Lubin’s thesis seem plausible. Several of Lubin’s insights are worthy of further development. He devotes considerable attention to Abraham Zapruder’s 8mm home movie of the assassination which he believes laid a foundation for a “new realism” in movie making and journalism during the 1960s. (p. 31) Although the film was not seen in its entirety on television until 1975, color frames from it had appeared in Life in the months following the assassination. These “had a more visceral impact” (164) on viewers, Lubin asserts, than did black-and-white pictures. Many people had portable cameras like Zapruder’s in 1963, but such cameras were only one of many innovations that were transforming communication by this time and their impact has generally been underestimated. The increasing use of color in mass media also deserves more attention. Relatively little research exists on what effects color might have on audiences. It was not just images of violence that appeared more frequently. Photographs in such publications such as Life, Look, and Playboy helped to make life “highly sexualized … for vast number of Americans,” Lubin writes, and amplified the glamour surrounding the nation’s First Family. (quotation,50; also 51) John Kennedy became “the great modern master of the art (or pseudo-art) of making and selling an image,” (139) according to Lubin who argues that Kennedy viewed “the nation’s aesthetic style not as something frivolous and inconsequential but as integral to its cold war initiative.” (133) He turned to the industrial designer Raymond Loewy, for example, to make Air Force One a medium through which to project a “sleek and beautiful American modernity.” (136) One theme that runs through both Shooting Kennedy and Nixon’s Shadow is the power of modern public relations. Clearly, Kennedy benefited from shrewd public relations by others. His image as part “genuine hero, part 007, part Lawrence of Arabia, part Tom Jones,” (141) and yet someone who retained his “ordinary humanity” and embraced common values (157) owed much to his father’s exploitation of Hollywood connections (6) and photojournalism. He was aided, too, by wife with a keen sense of style and by “some brilliant photographers and a willing public.” (139) Lubin, whose earlier works include Picturing a Nation (1994), a study about art and social change in nineteenth-century America, writes from the perspective of an art historian. Shooting Kennedy title refers both to the photographing of the Kennedys and to the president’s assassination. Why was it, he asks, that the Kennedys, who were wealthy, educated, and part of a “rarefied elite,” achieved such popularity? (157) The answer, he contends, lies in images of the Kennedys that derived “their power in good measure from their ability to activate latent memories of other powerful images in the histories of art and popular culture,” (xii) imagery that in our modern information age is “endlessly replicated.” (xiii) Greenberg, whose work began as a doctoral thesis at Columbia University, examines multiple images of Nixon, some crafted by Nixon himself, others held by a variety of “cultural” constituencies. More than Lubin, he draws on the print sources, but he also makes ample use of documents from popular culture such as films, cartoons, and memorials. (xxvi) While many historians may find Lubin’s approach unorthodox, and while some of his examples work better than others, Shooting Kennedy does gives readers as good sense of American visual culture during the early 1960s and how the Kennedys fit into it. In considering “the impact of images on images,” Lubin takes a “nonlinear approach,” ranging freely “backward and forward in time nonsequentially.” (xii) Pictures of John and Jacqueline Kennedy juxtaposed with movie stars Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, or of young Jackie with a photo of Taylor in the movie National Velvet (pp. 12, 13), or of a youthful Jack sailing with a Winslow Homer’s painting Breezing Up (A Fair Wind) (1876) (pp. 40, 42), or the perverse way in which a snapshot of Lee Harvey Oswald holding a rifle resembles Daniel Chester French’s 1875 statute The Minute Man (pp. 228, 229) make Lubin’s thesis seem plausible. Several of Lubin’s insights are worthy of further development. He devotes considerable attention to Abraham Zapruder’s 8mm home movie of the assassination which he believes laid a foundation for a “new realism” in movie making and journalism during the 1960s. (p. 31) Although the film was not seen in its entirety on television until 1975, color frames from it had appeared in Life in the months following the assassination. These “had a more visceral impact” (164) on viewers, Lubin asserts, than did black-and-white pictures. Many people had portable cameras like Zapruder’s in 1963, but such cameras were only one of many innovations that were transforming communication by this time and their impact has generally been underestimated. The increasing use of color in mass media also deserves more attention. Relatively little research exists on what effects color might have on audiences. It was not just images of violence that appeared more frequently. Photographs in such publications such as Life, Look, and Playboy helped to make life “highly sexualized … for vast number of Americans,” Lubin writes, and amplified the glamour surrounding the nation’s First Family. (quotation,50; also 51) John Kennedy became “the great modern master of the art (or pseudo-art) of making and selling an image,” (139) according to Lubin who argues that Kennedy viewed “the nation’s aesthetic style not as something frivolous and inconsequential but as integral to its cold war initiative.” (133) He turned to the industrial designer Raymond Loewy, for example, to make Air Force One a medium through which to project a “sleek and beautiful American modernity.” (136) One theme that runs through Shooting Kennedy is the power of modern public relations. Clearly, Kennedy benefited from shrewd public relations by others. His image as part “genuine hero, part 007, part Lawrence of Arabia, part Tom Jones,” (141) and yet someone who retained his “ordinary humanity” and embraced common values (157) owed much to his father’s exploitation of Hollywood connections (6) and photojournalism. He was aided, too, by wife with a keen sense of style and by “some brilliant photographers and a willing public.” (139) -SV AU - Lubin, David M. CY - Berkeley DA - 2003 KW - underground films Zapruder, Abraham , photography motion pictures color magazines sexuality sexuality, and visual culture Kennedy, John F. Presidents and new media Kennedy, John F., and visual culture 16mm film Zapruder film underground cinema color television videotape television, and videotape 16mm, and Kennedy assassination advertising and public relations public relations Kennedy, John F., and public relations public relations, and John Kennedy advertising underground media magnetic tape magnetic recording 16mm LB - 31680 PB - University of California Press PY - 2003 ST - Shooting Kennedy: JFK and the Culture of Images TI - Shooting Kennedy: JFK and the Culture of Images ID - 2855 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author notes that during the 1960s, photographers found new possibilities with "youth culture," thanks in part to television, avant-garde painting, and color photography. "Though color photography had already made its appearance by the end of the nineteenth century, in general it was regarded as the province of the amateur, not worth the attention of the 'serious' photographer. In the 1960s, color had become so important within the general photographic context that professional photographers were forced to consider its possibilities." (289) AU - Lucie-Smith, Edward CY - New York DA - 1996, 1997 KW - art , color photography art, and color photography, and color color, and art color, and photography context color, and 1960s LB - 32390 PB - Harry N. Abrams, Inc. PY - 1996 ST - Visual Arts in the Twentieth Century TI - Visual Arts in the Twentieth Century ID - 2899 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - “The aim of this book is to present a condensed treatment of the science of color. An attempt has been made to cover as many phases of the subject as possible within the confines of a small volume.” (The text is 405 pages.) The work has some color illustrations. Among the topics Luckiesh treats are color photography, color in lighting, various colored media (dyeing, celluloid, lacquers, etc.). In his Preface, Luckiesh acknowledges help from the management of the National Lamp Works of the General Electric Company. AU - Luckiesh, M. CY - New York DA - 1915, 1921 KW - dyes photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations materials +photography and visual communication +motion pictures +photography and visual communication color, and science of color, and history of photography, and color color, and lighting dyeing motion pictures, and celluloid (color) color, and lacquers General Electric Company advertising, and color +motion pictures color advertising motion pictures, and celluloid color, and lighting color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and advertising materials LB - 1720 PB - D. Van Nostrand Company PY - 1915 ST - Color and Its Applications TI - Color and Its Applications ID - 1568 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume suggests (at least the 1925 edition) that color can be used to manipulate emotions (the potential connection between this theme and advertising is obvious). Luckiesh writes: “In fact, it is one of the aims of the artist to discover the powers of colors and to employ their suggestiveness in his appeals to emotional man. In this respect our final interest in the use of color, as in many other activities, is largely concerned with the psychological effects. In other words, the ultimate object of the various arts lies largely in their influences upon human consciousness. It would be an interesting study to explore the maze of devious highways traversed by that evolving something which is an emotion in the making but this is a field for the psychologist. Investigators in psychology are invading this vast unknown and from this angle it is hoped that our knowledge of the emotional effects of color will some day be greatly extended. “It is the object of this brief work to explore various fields in which color is used, to attempt to sift out the part played by color in arousing emotions and in portraying ideas, and to present discussions and suggestions regarding the possibility of a future art purely or predominantly of color. The wonderful gift of colorvision has made it possible to touch the emotional side of the human organism through color in Nature and through the use of color in such arts as painting, architecture, literature, dancing, and the drama. Exhaustive research in these various fields is not entertained at present but it is the hope that the following brief discussions, combined with a study of color in nature and with the meager data supplied by the physiologist and psychologist, will illuminate the pathway toward a rudimentary dictionary of the language of color.” This book was first copyrighted in 1918; Luckiesh’s Preface is dated Oct. 31, 1916. AU - Luckiesh, M. CY - New York DA - 1925 KW - photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations +photography and visual communication color, and psychology of color, and history of advertising, and color color, and emotions color, and dictionary of painting color, and painting color, and architecture color, and literature color, and dance color advertising LB - 1730 OP - 1918 PB - Dodd, Mead and Company PY - 1925 ST - The Language of Color TI - The Language of Color ID - 1569 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is interesting in two respects: first, it is has beautiful color illustrations, something surely not common for 1923. Second, it offers insight into the use of electricity and color during the early 1920s -- electric signs, posters, etc. The author advocates greater use of color. See the chapter entitled “Electrical Advertising.” AU - Luckiesh, M. CY - New York DA - 1923 KW - illustrations photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations posters +photography and visual communication color, and history of color, and advertising advertising, and color +electricity electricity, and advertising electricity, and electric signs posters, electric posters, and color color advertising illustrations LB - 1740 PB - D. Van Nostrand Company PY - 1923 ST - Light and Color in Advertising and Merchandising TI - Light and Color in Advertising and Merchandising ID - 1570 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work recounts the early history of the electronic computer by a person who worked as an engineer in the early computer industry. The author characterizes the work as "the story of my life, which coincidentally includes the history of the computer industry from its inception through three generations. My early years, when I was bitten by the 'electronic bug,' are traced to The Moore School, University of Pennsylvania, where Drs. J. Presper Eckert and John W. Mauchly initiated the development of ENIAC. After completion of the project, they left to form their own company, the forerunner of the present Sperry Univac Division of the Sperry Rand Corporation. For many of the early years, Univac stood alone in the computer industry. It was commonplace for people to use the name 'Univac' synonymously with 'computer.' Trials, successes, tribulations, and tales about people are all part of the development of the trailblazing, early computer systems." The title of the book comes from the author's hobby as a boy as an amateur radio operator, and his use of Morse code. "The book tells of my evolution from the 'dits' (and 'dahs' of the Morse code) to the 'bits' of information used in the computer." The work has a brief bibliography, glossary, and no index or notes. AU - Lukoff, Herman CY - Portland, OR DA - 1979 KW - computers corporations Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories transistors, and integrated circuits archives digital media war World War II computers libraries libraries, and information storage +computers and the Internet computers, history of ENIAC Univac Eckert, J. Presper Mauchly, John William Sperry Rand Corporation autobiography transistors integrated circuits World War II, and computers +information storage Moore School digitization materials LB - 10980 PB - Robotics Press PY - 1979 ST - From Dits to Bits: A personal history of the electronic computer TI - From Dits to Bits: A personal history of the electronic computer ID - 2459 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work focuses mainly on Europe (as well as the United States to a lesser extent), and the work of two men. J. B. Dancer was an English scientist, inventor, and optical manufacturer, and to him “belongs the credit for making the first microphotograph and for carrying on many of the experiments which made microfilming a practical medium for reproducing manuscripts, printed and pictorial records.” Rene Dagron was a French chemist, portrait photographer and inventor, who established microfilming on a commercial scale. As early as 1858, the American Journal of Photography was suggesting the microfilming of public records to safeguard against destruction. Photographic News, in 1859, said that “the whole archives of a nation might be packed away in a snuff-box.” The earliest example of microphotography on records dates to 1839 when Dancer reduced a 20-inch-long document to an eighth of an inch. In 1852, less than a year after introduction of the collodion process, Dancer made the first collodion microfilm. The Encyclopaedia Britannica (Vol. 14, Oct. 1957) contains an article about Dancer’s microphotography -- pictures so small “that ten thousand single portraits could be included in a square inch.” (Quoted, p. 28). Chapters 5 and 6 cover efforts to deliver mail and other information by way of balloon, dogs, carrier pigeons, and microphotographs. Titles of later chapters include “The Photographic Pigeon Post,” “The Close of the Century: 1870-1900"; “Microfilm Processes”; and “Treatise on Microscopic Photography." --SV Luther provides an informative, if at times over-dramatized, account of the history of microfilm in the nineteenth century. A brief account, Luther’s history focuses on two inventors associated with the pioneering of microfilm (or rather, microphotography as it was known at the time), John Dancer and Rene Dagron. Luther traces their contributions to the technology and relates a thought-provoking incident to the history of mass communicationthe use by Parisians of microfilm and the pigeon post to communicate with the outside world while under siege by the Prussians in 1870-1871. Luther’s account is based on contemporary articles in scientific journals and a handful of biographies. -- Nicholas Wolf AU - Luther, Frederic CY - Annapolis, MD DA - 1959 KW - post office photography microfilm archives non-USA +photography and visual communication microfiche, microfilm, microform libraries libraries, and information storage +duplicating technologies Dancer, John +photography and visual communication miniaturization +information storage libraries, and microfilm microfilm, and history of microfilm, and libraries Franco-Prussian War, and microfilm microfilm, and Franco-Prussian War photography, and microfilm carrier pigeons +postal service postal service, and microfilm Great Britain Europe Wolf, Nicholas France LB - 5730 PB - National Microfilm Association PY - 1959 ST - Microfilm: A History, 1839-1900 TI - Microfilm: A History, 1839-1900 ID - 1958 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The authors argue that National Geographic has provided one of the most important ways in which Americans have learned about life outside their borders. But the photographs in this publication reflect a bias. "The photograph can be seen as a cultural artifact because its makers and readers look at the world with an eye that is not universal or natural but tutored. It can also be seen as a commodity, because it is sold by a magazine concerned with revenues. The features of the photographs, and the reading given them by others, can tell us about the cultural, social, and historical contexts that produced them.” The authors estimate that 37 million people worldwide see each issue of this publication. "Its subscription rate is the third largest for magazines in the United States--following TV Guide and Reader’s Digest. The magazine is used by schools as a teaching tool; it is subscribed to by middle-class parents as a way of contributing to the education of their children; its high prestige value affords it a place on coffee tables; its high-quality printing and binding and its reputation as a valuable reference tool mean that it is rarely thrown away, more frequently finding its way into attics and secondhand bookstores. “It has always been private, but has powerful ties to government; it is a ‘scientific’ institution, yet dependent on the sales and popularity of its magazine; its photographs are realistic, yet highly stylized. Through its long history, the national Geographic Society has strategically deployed realist codes and has fashioned claims to objectivity in order to secure its position as both ‘scientific’ and ‘popular.’” --SV Since early 1960s, the multitude of photographs in National Geographic magazine has played an important role to see the third world of exotic peoples and place. The authors of this volume investigate the process of image selection by photographers, editors and designers of the National Geographic Society. The authors narrate the dilemma and problems the magazine encounter to represent third world cultures and further analyze the elements of images in visualizing cultural difference. Moreover, the authors also turn to look at reader responses to the magazine. Through the interviews with the readers about their reading experience and interpretation of images in the magazine, the volume allows us to think about the ambiguity of photography. From the photographer, the editors and designers to the readers and even the non-Western subjects, the magazine displays “a multitude of gazes” which the authors carefully and critically deconstruct to understand their significance and impact (p. 187-216). As a result, the pleasures of reading, as the authors put it, implies the American readers’ desire to imagine and see the Otherness to identify an American Self. --Huai-Hsuan Chen AU - Lutz, Catherine and Jane Collins CY - Chicago DA - 1993 KW - nationalism photography values photography and visual communication photography and visual communication nationalism and communication books, periodicals, newspapers values, and photography values, and magazines photojournalism photography, and bias audiences, and photography audiences, and magazines audiences nationalism, and magazines nationalism, and photography magazines non-USA photography, and non-USA Chen, Huai-Hsuan LB - 10030 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1993 ST - Reading National Geographic TI - Reading National Geographic ID - 64 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume of essays appears in New Directions for Higher Education, No. 90 (Summer, 1995). The collection focuses on how digital information technologies has transformed libraries and learning over the previous five years. For individual essays, see under the following authors: Donald N.Langenberg, Richard M. Johnson, William Goodrich Jones, Ross Atkinson, Carla J. Stoffle and Karen Williams, Ralph A. Wolff, and Clifford A. Lynch. AU - Lynch, Beverly P., ed. CY - San Francisco DA - Summer, 1995 KW - computers computers libraries information storage digital media education libraries, and new media libraries, and digital media computers and the Internet media literacy computers, and libraries libraries, and computers LB - 29850 PB - Jossey-Bass Publishers PY - 1995 ST - Information Technology and the Remaking of the University Library TI - Information Technology and the Remaking of the University Library VL - 90 ID - 2741 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This brief survey of postmodernism (text 86 pages) touches on communication. The author sees postmodernity encompassing several significant cultural and social changes underway at the close of the twentieth century. Among these developments are globalization, swift technological change, new social movements, and changing political concerns. A new society built around consumers rather than workers and production, is coming into existence. Lyon discusses several theorists including Michel Foucault and Jean Baudrillard. Baudrillard saw electronic mass media radically changing the way we understand reality. Immediate communication over vast distances, taking the form of a montage, differed profoundly from print communication, according to Baudrillard. AU - Lyon, David CY - Minneapolis DA - 1994, 1999 KW - seeing at a distance print print culture postmodernism modernism communication revolution consumerism non-USA new way of seeing global communication electronic media new way of seeing, and electronic media Baudrillard, Jean Foucault, Michel Bell, Daniel postindustrial society postmodernism communication revolution consumers hyperreality Habermas, Jürgen Giddens, Anthony global communication print v. electronic LB - 3950 PB - University of Minnesota Press PY - 1994 ST - Postmodernity TI - Postmodernity ID - 1783 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Lyon challenges two commonly held beliefs about the social impact of information technology (IT). The first is that "a total social transformation is predicted ('information society' is coming); and secondly, this transformation is generally a good and progressive movement." Lyon asks what is wrong with such notions? "I shall argue," he writes, "in different ways, that the main problem is the one-way relationship expressed in the idea of 'social impacts of technology'. For it suggests that technology is somehow 'outside' society, impinging upon it. An alternative views, which I illustrate through the book, is that the 'social' and the 'technological' cannot be separated in this way. New technology is as much a social product as the shape of society is a technological product. There is a constant interplay between 'technology' and 'society.' "The technologically shaped future is mistaken because it fails to take account of at least two factors. For one thing, IT has social origins (in military research for instance) which are seldom laid bare, but which have decisively guided its development. For another, new technology is not always accepted and assimilated passively." AU - Lyon, David CY - Oxford, Eng. DA - 1988 KW - technology computers women, and new media values communication revolution journalism community democracy news and journalism non-USA newspapers news critics newspapers, and automation democracy and media Bell, Daniel information age communication revolution Ellul, Jacques Foucault, Michel gender France Japan progress technology and society women Weizenbaum, Joseph newspapers +computers and the Internet technological determinism sexuality LB - 4430 PB - Polity Press, in association with Basil Blackwell Ltd. PY - 1988 ST - The Information Society: Issues and Illusions TI - The Information Society: Issues and Illusions ID - 1831 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Lyon, David CY - Minneapolis DA - 1994 KW - computers surveillance law, and privacy law digital media digitization computers privacy privacy, and electronic media surveillance, electronic +computers and the Internet privacy, and computers computers, and privacy digital media, and privacy cameras, and surveillance cameras, and privacy privacy, and cameras cameras LB - 12740 PB - University of Minnesota Press PY - 1994 ST - The Electronic Eye: The Rise of Surveillance Society TI - The Electronic Eye: The Rise of Surveillance Society ID - 2620 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The Contents of this volume include: “Surveillance. privacy, and the new technology” by David Lyon and Elia Zureik; “Genetic testing and workplace surveillance: implications for privacy” by Priscilla M. Reagan; “Privacy and surveillance in computer-supported cooperative work,” by Judith A. Perrolle; “High_tech workplace surveillance: what's really new?” by James B. Rule; “Social control and the network marketplace” by Abbe Mowshowitz; “How the marriage of management and computing intensifies the struggle for personal privacy” by Rob Kling and Jonathan P. Allen; “Coming to terms with the panoptic sort” by Oscar H. Gandy Jr.; “Privacy: a concept whose time has come and gone,” by Calvin C. Gotlieb; “Databases as discourse; or, electronic interpellations,” by Mark Poster; “Electric eye in the sky: some reflections on the new surveillance and popular culture,” by Gary T. Marx; “The public surveillance of personal data: a cross-national analysis,” by Colin J. Bennett; and “Surveying surveillance: an approach to measuring the extent of surveillance,” by Simon G. Davies. AU - Lyon, David and Elia Zureik, eds. CY - Minneapolis DA - c1996 KW - computers surveillance, and satellites surveillance law, and privacy law labor medicine satellites genetics digital media digitization computers privacy privacy, and electronic media surveillance, electronic computers and the Internet privacy, and computers computers, and privacy digital media, and privacy cameras, and surveillance cameras, and privacy privacy, and cameras office, and privacy office, and electronic media medicine, and privacy artificial intelligence and biotechnology genetic testing, and privacy privacy, and genetic testing +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and surveillance satellites, and privacy privacy, and satellites office cameras genetic engineering LB - 12750 PB - University of Minnesota Press PY - 1996 ST - Computers, Surveillance, and Privacy TI - Computers, Surveillance, and Privacy ID - 2621 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The authors are journalists who covered advances in gene therapy for about decade before this book appeared. They maintain that they have actually written two books. "On the one hand, it is the tale of what was arguably the most audacious medical experiment in history, the first U. S. government-sponsored attempt to reprogram the genetic code of a living human being. This epic story, which we have re-created with as much attention to nuance and texture as possible, is a chronicle of reach and overreach, persistence and folly, brilliance and bluster. Ultimately, it tracks the halting but irreversible journey of medicine through a once forbidden door. "Our attempt to define what lies on the other side of that door occupies the second half of the book. As scientists begin to apply the principles of gene therapy -- an umbrella term we use here to signify the fruits of molecular medicine in their many forms -- to the understanding, diagnosis, and treatment of various human diseases, the outlines of the golden age of medicine to come are slowly taking shape. We have tried to trace the contours of their fast-approaching millennium and -- because it cannot be ignored -- to consider how the technology will most likely be applied, for better or worse, to a panoply of traits outside those that relate to illness." The authors note that as of 1994, more than sixty experiments involving human beings and gene therapy were underway in the United States, and that similar research was being conducted in other countries. They argue that "the real danger may lie not in overanticipation but in undersurveillance" of such research. "Disturbing signs already exist that the biowizardry of gene therapy is vulnerable to expropriation and misuse, perhaps on a catastrophic scale, by corporate, political, and institutional interests, whose interests may or may not coincide with those of society at large. A movement is afoot to weaken, perhaps emasculate, the agencies charged with controlling the development of gene therapy, and we are in this book that to allow such an effort to prevail would be a grave mistake, in both the short and the long run." Of the many scientific innovations underway, "none will have so powerful and immediate an effect on the human population as those being followed in molecular biology and gene therapy," the authors say. This book is written in a style accessible to a broad public. AU - Lyon, Jeff and Peter Gorner CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - genetics values +artificial intelligence and biotechnology genetic engineering aging AIDS Alzheimer's disease Anderson, William French gene therapy values, and genetic engineering cloning values, and gene therapy DeSilva, Ashanthi DNA Rosenberg, Steven LB - 4160 PB - W. W. Norton & Company PY - 1995 ST - Altered Fates: Gene Therapy and the Retooling of Human Life TI - Altered Fates: Gene Therapy and the Retooling of Human Life ID - 1804 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work examines effort to censor or otherwise repress motion pictures. For example, Lyons covers feminists' anti-pornography efforts during the 1970s and early 1980s, and religious opposition to such films as Martin Scorcese's The Last Temptation of Christ (1988), as well as other movies deemed morally offensive. Lyons is strongly critical of censorship efforts. AU - Lyons, Charles CY - Philadelphia DA - 1997 KW - conservatives values religion sexuality motion pictures Hollywood First Amendment cyberspace culture freedom values law censorship and ratings censorship pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment religion, and motion pictures religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion culture wars Hollywood, and culture wars motion pictures, and culture wars Hollywood, and religion Jesus, and Hollywood images religion LB - 22560 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Temple University Press PY - 1997 ST - The New Censors: Movies and the Culture Wars TI - The New Censors: Movies and the Culture Wars ID - 984 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Lyons, Eugene CY - New York DA - 1966 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories +television biography Sarnoff, David LB - 7110 PB - David Sarnoff: A Biography PY - 1966 ST - David Sarnoff: A Biography TI - David Sarnoff: A Biography ID - 2082 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work has information about camera and motion picture technology. For example, the military found in World War II that light-weight, portable cameras offered advantages and it appropriated 16mm amateur-film equipment on a massive scale. Moreover, during the war many new people had been taught film production and millions had seen firsthand how 16mm movies could be used for educational and training purposes. After the war, a surplus of 16mm cameras encouraged civilians to use this technology. MacCann also considers other development such as the cinéma-vérité movement during the 1950s. MacCann was a Harvard history Ph.D., a film critic for the Christian Science Monitor, and also taught documentary filmmaking and writing at the University of Southern California. AU - MacCann, Richard Dyer CY - New York DA - 1973 KW - libraries OWI nationalism magnetic recording World War II public relations advertising values preservation materials materials magnetic tape education community democracy values religion war 16mm government history motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and 16mm film 16mm film magnetic tape recording magnetic tape recording, video values, and society democracy, and media education, and 16mm film religion, and 16mm film 16mm film, and education 16mm film, and religion nationalism and communication government, and 16mm film public libraries, and 16mm film 16mm film, and public libraries 16mm film, as paperback books television television, and 16mm film history, and new media history, and 16mm film values, and 16mm film World War II, and 16mm film 16mm film, and World War II, propaganda propaganda, and 16mm film Office of War Information (OWI), and 16mm film cinéma vérité, and portable cameras motion pictures, and cinéma vérité values Office of War Information (OWI) propaganda advertising and public relations LB - 18110 PB - Hastings House PY - 1973 ST - The People's Films: A Political History of U. S. Government Motion Pictures TI - The People's Films: A Political History of U. S. Government Motion Pictures ID - 720 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - MacCann argued (in 1962) that since the appearance of transcontinental television in 1951, the American audience for motion pictures had decreased by fifty percent, and the world market had became a major factor in moviemaking. As American pictures had to compete in the United States with foreign productions, filmmakers turned more and more toward "adult" films, many of which are made by independent producers. These developments brought major changes to the established studios which have made fewer and more expensive movies. MacCann saw four changes coming with the so-called "television revolution": 1) greater freedom from censorship; 2) a move away from centralized studio production; 3) freedom from being dominated by the American box office; and 4) less dependence on assembly line production of films. He was ambivalent about these changes, saying that they presented both opportunities and dangers. For example, on the decline of movie censorship, he wrote: "There is nothing in the First Amendment which gives every ten-year-old the constitutional right to see Suddenly Last Summer." MacCann was a Harvard history Ph.D., a film critic for the Christian Science Monitor, and also taught documentary filmmaking and writing at the University of Southern California. AU - MacCann, Richard Dyer CY - Boston DA - 1962 KW - law censorship and ratings +motion pictures +television motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign production censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship values, and motion pictures Hollywood Hollywood, and censorship Hollywood, and television motion pictures, and tv and attendance censorship, and television values LB - 11830 PB - Houghton Mifflin Company PY - 1962 ST - Hollywood in Transition TI - Hollywood in Transition ID - 2530 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This highly informative bibliography, with brief annotations, covers magazine articles about motion pictures written in English over a four decade period. Several categories in this volume pertain to motion picture technology: cameras, color, theaters, lighting, sound, and more. Other related topics include: history, censorship, children and media effects. In addition to the United States, other countries covered include: Great Britain and Ireland, Italy, Germany, Austria, Holland, Switzerland, Denmark, Sweden, Spain, Portugal, Greece, Russia, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Japan, India, China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Ceylon, Africa, Mexico, Cuba, Brazil, Argentina, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada. AU - MacCann, Richard Dyer and Edward S. Perry CY - New York DA - 1975 KW - children audiences Netherlands Asia theaters References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps values sexuality pornography motion pictures media effects lighting color cinematography censorship and ratings children law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA +bibliographies bibliographies, annotated bibliographies, and motion pictures bibliographies, and media effects bibliographies, and children and movies bibliographies, and color bibliographies, and cameras bibliographies, and lighting bibliographies, and censorship bibliographies, and values and movies non-USA, and motion pictures bibliographies, and non-USA movies bibliographies, and audiences bibliographies, and 16mm bibliographies, and theaters bibliographies, and drive-ins media effects, and children children, and media effects law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and bibliographies media effects, and bibliographies children, and bibliographies (movies) color, and bibliographies cameras, and bibliographies lighting, and bibliographies cinematography, and bibliographies censorship, and bibliographies values, and bibliographies audiences, and bibliographies 16mm cameras, and bibliographies theaters, and bibliographies drive-in theaters, and bibliographies reference works bibliographies, and pornography pornography, and bibliographies Great Britain Ireland Italy Germany Austria Holland Switzerland Denmark Sweden Spain Portugal Greece Russia Poland Czechoslovakia Japan India China Taiwan Hong Kong Ceylon Africa Mexico Cuba Brazil Argentina Australia New Zealand Canada values 16mm audiences cameras drive-in theaters children, and media LB - 2760 PB - E. P. Dutton & Company, Inc. PY - 1975 ST - The New Film Index: A Biblography of Magazines Articles in English, 1930-1970 TI - The New Film Index: A Biblography of Magazines Articles in English, 1930-1970 ID - 364 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a study of the American experience with television. While not fully an analysis of cultural and economic collapse, it is the story of a culture industry, the marriage of business and artistry over the past 50 years. The book offers no passionate condemnation of the TV business or hosanna concerning its sociological contribution. It attempts to consider all sides of the TV legacy, which are both its strength and its weakness. --Robert Pondillo AU - MacDonald, J. Fred CY - Chicago DA - 1994 KW - nationalism advertising, and public relations television, and values propaganda public relations journalism news and journalism values news +television +nationalism and communication news, and television advertising, and television values, and television advertising Pondillo, Robert nationalism, and television LB - 9360 PB - Nelson Hall PY - 1994 ST - One Nation Under Television: The Rise and Decline of Network TV TI - One Nation Under Television: The Rise and Decline of Network TV ID - 2303 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Macey provides the reader with a history of timekeeping, watch making and the chorological revolution by connection these themes to literature, philosophy, religion, poetry, arts, science, language, history, society and industrialization. The main purpose of the book is “to provide the reader with a broad spectrum of evidence demonstrating the impact of horology on Western and, in particular, on English life and hence on literature too during the period that traditional critics have neoclassical (or Augustan) and Romantic." --Bart Nijman AU - Macey, Samuel L. CY - Hamden, CT DA - 1980 KW - Nijman, Bart timekeeping time and timekeeping LB - 32900 PB - Archon Books PY - 1980 ST - Clocks and the Cosmos: Time in Western Life and Thought TI - Clocks and the Cosmos: Time in Western Life and Thought ID - 21 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work grew out of five lectures -- the first delivered in March 1959 at Cornell University; the other four given in October 1960 at Fordham University. The volume is short on analysis of the social impact of new communication technology but does have factual information about the use and distribution of such media as books, magazines, photography and the phonograph (the author notes in 1962 that the phonograph and photography are seldom mentioned as part of communication media), radio, movies, theater, television. Chapter VI deals with “The Media of Communication.” Chapter VII treats “Information Machines,” including computers. Included in the data here is a table showing the use of phonograph records. Sales in 1921 were over $105 million but dropped (with a few rises in the 1920s) to $5.5 million in 1933. Only in 1946 did sales surpass the 1921 mark, accelerating to $521 million by 1960. AU - Machlup, Fritz CY - Princeton DA - 1962 KW - computers audiences photography motion pictures news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers news and journalism recording +sound recording Information Age general studies books magazines +photography and visual communication phonograph +radio recording technology +motion pictures and popular culture theaters +television information processing information age +computers and the Internet recording, and phonograph record sales +books, periodicals, newspapers +sound recording recording, and phonograph LB - 900 PB - Princeton University Press PY - 1962 ST - The Production and Distribution of Knowledge in the United States TI - The Production and Distribution of Knowledge in the United States ID - 1486 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work reflects the spirit, if not the influence, of Vannevar Bush, for whom the author worked. Maclaurin was an economist who believed that it was "essential to make science penetrate every aspect of industrial life." This work begins with the early pioneers of radio -- Marconi, De Forest, Fessenden, others -- and then discusses the role of large electrical companies in the development of wireless communication between 1912 and 1921. He then covers patent battles during the 1920s, industrial research on radio and television, and governmental efforts to regulate FM radio and television up to 1941. AU - Maclaurin, W. Rupert CY - New York DA - 1971; 1949 KW - R & D General Electric Company corporations corporations corporations corporations corporations Federal Communications Commission (FCC) +military communication censorship and ratings values materials materials regulation law science regulation radio patents +radio radio, and FM +television regulation, and radio regulation, and television progress science and society Bush, Vannevar vacuum tubes +electricity electricity, and radio AT & T Bell Laboratories de Forest, Lee FCC Fessenden, Reginald General Electric Company Company General Electric Company, and radio Marconi, Guglielmo patents, and radio patents, and television research and development Sarnoff, David Westinghouse Corporation regulation, and FM radio LB - 4410 PB - Arno Press and the New York Times; Macmillan Company PY - 1949 ST - Invention and Innovation in the Radio Industry TI - Invention and Innovation in the Radio Industry ID - 1829 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Although this book is primary devoted to the social and political history of Indiana, the author does briefly discuss motion pictures in the Hoosier state and also the career of Will H. Hays, who had been head to the Indiana State Republican Party, National Republican Party, Postmaster General in Warren Harding's cabinet, and then president of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America (1921-45). Madison says that movie "seemed to be a direct assault on traditional values and way in Indiana." (366). AU - Madison, James H. CY - Indianapolis DA - 1982 KW - Hays, Will. H. motion pictures motion pictures, and Indiana LB - 31140 PB - Indiana Historical Society PY - 1982 ST - Indiana through Tradition and Change: A History of the Hoosier State and Its People, 1920-1945 TI - Indiana through Tradition and Change: A History of the Hoosier State and Its People, 1920-1945 ID - 2833 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - “This book represents a first attempt to define how film and television programs are organized for idea communication in their major areas of use," Madsen writes. "Its central purpose is to provide a source work to which laymen, students and professionals alike may turn to understand how the medium of cinema-television can be effectively utilized to achieve a specific purpose in drama, teaching, and persuasion. And it may, moreover, enable the average viewer to realize on sight when the medium and its message are being manipulated to influence his opinions. The work is divided into four parts: 1) "syntax of cinema-television and the means by which ideas are expressed through techniques unique to the language of the medium." 2) The "basic dramatic forms for cinematic development of plot and character, and the forms and concepts which have evolved in major film and television genres." 3) The "uses of cinema-television in effecting political, social and economic changes." 4) The "proved teaching and research techniques used in schools and industries. This work does not emphasize communication theory. Although written in 1973, it may be of interest to readers who are interested in media effects and media literacy. AU - Madsen, Roy Paul CY - New York DA - 1973 KW - public relations advertising propaganda +motion pictures media +motion pictures +television media effects media literacy motion pictures, and audiences television, and audiences propaganda propaganda, and television propaganda, and motion pictures advertising and public relations LB - 6290 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc. PY - 1973 ST - The Impact of Film: How Ideas Are Communicated through Cinema and Television TI - The Impact of Film: How Ideas Are Communicated through Cinema and Television ID - 2012 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - At the time of this book, Males was a doctoral student in social ecology at the University of California, Irvine, and a writer who had written articles on youth and social issues. He attempts to explode myths about American young people: that they are sexually irresponsible, that drug abuse and suicide among teenagers is widespread, and that welfare programs encourage teenage pregnancy. With regard to modern media, he debunks research that suggests that violence on television causes antisocial behavior among youth. "When examined, media violence research is murkier than its proponents admit. Studies done in laboratories usually show an effect of media violence on aggression; studies done in real-life settings tend to be inconclusive," he argues. AU - Males, Mike A. CY - Monroe, ME DA - 1996 KW - social science research media effects media violence censorship and ratings children television violence media effects children, and television television, and children adolescents, and TV violence social science research, and critics critics media effects, and TV violence children and media LB - 3180 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Common Courage Press PY - 1996 ST - The Scapegoat Generation: America's War on Adolescents TI - The Scapegoat Generation: America's War on Adolescents ID - 406 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Reading is a personal enterprise, traced not only through the norms and technologies of the day but also through the personal histories and preferences of notable readers and writers. The prevalence and persistence of reading as a hobby, an occupation and as a craft as well as the world’s reaction to readers and their works, are a testament to the power the written word confers upon the literate individual. Shared reading experiences reading aloud, being read to or having a guided reading of a pictorial text allow far less freedom to the reader than does reading to oneself. One significant power of reading is the ability to interpret based on personal background knowledge, reading pace, reflection and interpretation and personal taste. All of these are somewhat curtailed in a shared reading experience. Reading aloud as an author further diminishes the power of a reader, giving the author a tyrannical power over his own work contrary to the liberty a reader enjoys with a printed work. Manguel writes: “Reading, then, is not an automatic process of capturing a text in the way photosensitive paper captures light, but a bewildering, labyrinthine, common and yet personal process of reconstruction. Whether reading is independent from, for instance, listening, whether it is a single distinctive set of psychological processes or consists of a great variety of such processes, researchers don’t yet know, but many believe that its complexity may be as great as that of thinking itself.” How we read has changed dramatically over time, both as a product of changing social and technological norms, Manguel says. Reading silently, rather than aloud, has altered not only assumptions about the definition of reading, but also the way we create and mentally process texts; the atmosphere in which we consume texts and share thoughts; and the relationship we have with both the texts we read and those who teach us how to do so. “The ancient writing on scrolls which neither separated words nor made a distinction between lower-case and upper-case letters, nor used punctuation served the purposes of someone accustomed to reading aloud, someone who would allow the ear to disentangle what to the eye seemed a continuous string of signs,” Manguel explains. (48) “But with silent reading the reader was at last able to establish an unrestricted relationship with the book and the words. The words no longer needed to occupy the time required to pronounce them.” (50) The author discusses printing technology and the evolution of reading. The technological changes in reading include not only the invention of the printing press and its near-infinite ramifications, but also evolutions of materials, storage, furniture, size, shape and font to accommodate both advances in available technology and evolutions in the norms, methods and standards of reading. This, in turn, led to new possibilities for where and in what format reading could be practiced and texts could be disbursed in everyday life. “The sudden increase in book production after Gutenberg emphasized the relation between the contents of a book and its physical form. For instance, since Gutenberg’s bible was intended to imitate the expensive handmade volumes of the time, it was bought in gathered sheets and bound by its purchasers into large, imposing tomes usually quartos measuring about 12 by 16 inches, meant to be displayed on a lectern. […] But cheap and quick production led to a larger market of people who could afford copies to read privately, and who therefore did not require books in large type an format, and Gutenberg’s successors eventually began producing smaller, pocketable volumes.” (135) The power of the reader over a text is apparent not only in interpretation but also in physical organization of a writer’s thoughts, enacted in the reader’s choice of where both location and posture to read and of organization of works by subject or alphabetically as libraries do or by a more personal system. On the contrary, readers lose power when books are categorized to appeal to or exclude any genre of reader. Manguel comments on the empowerment of readers, authoritarian governments, and censorship. The power of the reader over a text is apparent not only in interpretation but also in physical organization of a writer’s thoughts, enacted in the reader’s choice of where both location and posture to read and of organization of works by subject or alphabetically as libraries do or by a more personal system. On the contrary, readers lose power when books are categorized to appeal to or exclude any genre of reader. “Authoritarian readers who prevent others from learning to read, fanatical readers who decide what can and what cannot be read, stoical readers who refuse to read for pleasure and demand only the retelling of facts that they themselves hold to be true: all these attempt to limit he reader’s vast and diverse powers. But censors can also work in different ways, without the need of fire or courts of law. They can reinterpret books to render them serviceable only to themselves, for the sake of justifying their autocratic rights.” (288) “Thus, not all the reader’s powers are enlightening. The same act that can bring a text into being, draw out its revelations, multiply its meanings, mirror in it the past, the present and the possibilities of the future, can also destroy or attempt to destroy the living page. Every reader makes up readings, which is not the same as lying; but every reader can also lie, willfully declaring the text subservient to a doctrine, to an arbitrary law, to a private advantage, to the rights of slave-owners or the authority of tyrants.” (289) --Dale Erlandson AU - Manguel, Alberto CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - reading Erlandson, Dale books, periodicals, newspapers reading, and history of reading, and books books, and reading children and media censorship books, and censorship censorship, and reading reading, and censorship democracy democracy, and reading printing press Gutenberg, Johann books print LB - 32910 PB - Penguin PY - 1997 ST - A History of Reading TI - A History of Reading ID - 22 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This challenging, thought-provoking book provides an excellent account of the nature of visual aesthetics and digital media and how it differs from earlier forms of communication. This work resists easy summation. Manovich writes that “today the language of cultural interfaces is in its early stage, as was the language of cinema a hundred years ago. We do not know what the final result will be, or even if it will ever completely stabilize. Both the printed word and cinema eventually achieved stable forms that underwent little change for long periods of time, in part because of the material investments in their means of production and distribution. Given that computer language is implemented in software, potentially it could keep changing forever. But there is one thing we can be sure of. We are witnessing the emergence of a new cultural metalanguage, something that will be at least as significant as the printed word and cinema before it.” (93) Modern-day interfaces between computers and humans provide “radical new possibilities for art and communication,” Manovich argues. (94) AU - Manovich, Lev CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 2001 KW - National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) computers photography seeing at a distance preservation postmodernism modernism motion pictures metaphors archives history, and new media digitization computers history +motion pictures and popular culture +television +computers and the Internet +photography and visual communication virtual reality new media motion pictures, and new media new media, and metaphors metaphors, and new media digital communication digital media digital media, defined digital media, and origins artificial intelligence new way of seeing data storage +information storage NASA new media, and philosophy new media, and linguistics new media, and language screens computers, and screens new media, and time new media, and space World Wide Web transcoding history, break with +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and new way of seeing new way of seeing computers, and new way of seeing +artificial intelligence and biotechnology Internet LB - 28020 PB - MIT Press PY - 2001 ST - The Language of New Media TI - The Language of New Media ID - 1353 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Manring’s text asks us to examine the lingering utility, and in fact popularity, of the blatantly stereotypical figure known as Aunt Jemima. In a post-Civil Rights Movement era, why does the black mammy figure still find a place on the supermarket shelf, placed there in fact by one of the most popular and profitable food manufacturers? Slave in a Box attempts to do two things. First, Manring tries to explain how Aunt Jemima, and the mammy in general, appeals to white audiences nostalgic for a simpler past and taps into a powerful cultural mythology of southern abundance and leisure based on largely invisible slave labor. Here he relies on secondary works on the minstrel and blackface tradition, Southern novels of nostalgia, and writings by proponents of the New South. Readers interested in the book for its focus on advertising history will probably be turned off by its seemingly unending discussion of the mammy as a literary character. Moreover, the heavy reliance on secondary sources suggests that the book is not a tremendously original contribution to that scholarship. More profitable for the historian of advertising and mass communication is the portion of the book which treats the Aunt Jemima campaign itself. Manring employs extensive documentation from the J. Walter Thompson collection at Duke University and it able to piece together a very compelling account of the origins and maintenance of the Aunt Jemima brand in the early years. He argues that James Webb Young, the copywriter and ad executive responsible for the account, brought his southern childhood and mildly racist attitudes into the creation of Aunt Jemima. The character, though clearly stereotypical and mythic, was seen as a way to appeal to a non-threatening past when blacks were servile and loyal and whites were able to enjoy a life of leisure based on the work of their slaves. The mammy figure, oddly enough, was seen as a benign symbol of a better time. Young and others at JWT created an entire fictional biography for the character and used incidents from her “life” to craft a series of interesting advertisements. Aunt Jemima was literally brought to life when women were hired to play her at fairs and trade shows. According to Manring, the Aunt Jemima campaign is one of the most successful ever and the woman, in a somewhat more modern guise, still peers out at us as we pass through the aisles of the supermarket. The book contains a brief discussion of the changes in packaging, branding, and labeling that made Aunt Jemima possible. Other scholars have covered this ground in far more detail; Manring is frankly derivative in this part of his book. However, the book is worth reading for its documentation of the origins and operation of the campaign. It is a good example of using the JWT archive to study the “behind-the-scenes” history of advertising. Less successful, however, is Manring’s attempt to explain the deep cultural power of the mammy figure, the response to (and protest against) the stereotype over the years, or the lasting popularity of the brand in spite of its non-PC image. This is probably one of those books that might have been more successful as a closely edited journal article that narrowly focuses on the brand as an advertising history case study. – Rob Rabe AU - Manring, M. M. CY - Charlottesville DA - 1998 KW - Rabe, Rob race values advertising, and race race, and advertising advertising, and J. Walter Thompson Thompson, J. Walter, and race advertising J. Walter Thompson Company corporations advertising and public relations LB - 28950 PB - University of Virginia Press PY - 1998 ST - Salve in a Box: The Strange Career of Aunt Jemima TI - Salve in a Box: The Strange Career of Aunt Jemima ID - 2672 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This fine study examines the impact of audio cassettes on both the music industry and on society in northern India. “The advent of cassettes has had a dramatic effect on the music industry and popular music throughout most of the developing world. In the industrialized West, sales of prerecorded cassettes now surpass those of records and CDs. However, relatively few recordings are issued in cassette format only, and cassette technology has had little influence on the structure of the music industry in general. In general, cassettes have come to be primarily a convenient alternative format, useful for home taping, and for automobile and portable playing machines. “By contrast, in most of the developing world, cassettes have largely replaced vinyl records. The reasons for this development are obvious. Cassettes and cassette players are cheaper and more durable than records and turntables, and their power requirements are more easily met. Further, the mass production of cassettes is incomparably simpler and cheaper; on a small scale, commercial duplication can even be done with two cassette machines and a patch cord. The low expense of cassette consumption renders the medium accessible to rural and lower-income groups. At the same time, the lower costs of production enable small-scale producers to emerge around the world, recording and marketing music aimed at specialized, local, grassroots audiences rather than at a homogeneous mass market. The net result is a remarkable decentralization, democratization, and dispersal of the music industry at the expense of multinational and national oligopolies. Manuel is interested in how "mass media can serve either to promote or inhibit social awareness and change.” He approaches this topic “with a profound mistrust of media that are controlled by dominant elites rather than by grassroots democratic communities themselves.” --SV Japanese imported cassette players began to show up in India during the 1970s. A cassette culture would grew to the point where illegally pirated tapes would be sold in bazaars across the country. “By the late 1970s cassette players had begun to appear in noticeable quantities throughout much of the country; most of these were Japanese ‘two-in-ones’ (radio cassette recorders) brought by the tens of thousands of guest workers returning from the Gulf states; the numbers of such workers had by this point reached such levels that their remittances, as well as their hand-carried imports, were having noticeable effects not only Arabian Sea areas like Kerala, but throughout much of the hinterland as well. Accordingly, in 1979 GCI had started issuing cassette releases, while offering duplication services to other companies. By this time, pirate cassettes of film-music records became commonplace in bazaars, stimulating demand for players.” (60-61) Although the recording industry at first was largely based on foreign components and companies, now the industry has taken a turn toward the domestic. Only the United States produces more cassettes than India. “Facilities, indeed, have been a among the key factors in the cassette boom. The magnetic tape itself may be wholly imported, or may consist of imported polyester tape coated with magnetic oxide in India; T-series manufactures its tapes with wholly indigenous products. While in 1986, roughly 70 percent of the tapes sold in India were of foreign origin, by 1990 only about 18 percent contained foreign components. At present there are some fifteen tape-coating plants in India, whose production of cassettes, as was noted, is now second only to that of the United States.” (75) The two-way nature of cassettes have allowed for more diversity in Indian culture. There are more options, and more sources from which to take enlightenment. “Cassettes, as we have seen, have led to decentralized grassroots control of a significant sector of the mass media; they have stimulated the revitalization and creative syncretization of a wide variety of traditional musics; they have created opportunities for innumerable singers and artists to be represented on the mass media, in a manner inconceivable in the context of the film music industry; finally, they have facilitated the dissemination of a far greater diversity of topical themes than were present in film music, thus contribution to the ability of diverse Indian communities to affirm, in language, style, and text content, their own social identities on the mass media in an unprecedented manner.” (194) --Michael Shefky AU - Manuel, Peter CY - Chicago DA - 1993 KW - technology CDs tape recording, magnetic nationalism magnetic recording audio tape sound recording Japan materials materials community democracy community non-USA values tape recorders recording music information technology India sound recording sound, and India India, and audio cassettes audio cassettes sound, and audio cassettes democracy and media sound tape recording nationalism and communication sound, and vinyl records information technology, and rich v poor technology and society values, and audio cassettes sound, and music India nationalism, and audio cassettes tape recording community, and sound recording Shefky, Michael Japan, and audio cassettes India, and Japanese audio cassettes recording LB - 5510 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1993 ST - Cassette Culture: Popular Music and Technology in North India TI - Cassette Culture: Popular Music and Technology in North India ID - 1936 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book argues that television often provides misleading information and distorts the meaning of the past. Chapter 3 is entitled “Mass Memory: The Past in the Age of Television,” and chapter 4 is “Culture Without Context.” AU - Marc, David CY - Syracuse DA - 1995 KW - television, and values preservation history, and new media history values history +television television, and history history, break with television, and culture values, and television critics history, and television LB - 7140 PB - Syracuse University Press PY - 1995 ST - Bonfire of the Humanities: Television, Subliteracy, and Long-Term Memory Loss TI - Bonfire of the Humanities: Television, Subliteracy, and Long-Term Memory Loss ID - 2085 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This nicely illustrated history of advertising has considerable material on visual communication. In Chapter 5 (“The Consumption Ethic: Strategies of Art and Style”), Marchand discusses “Advertising and the color explosion.” Chapter 6 is about “Advertisements and Social Tableaux.” With regard to parables in advertising, in chapter 6, the authors examines the parables of the first impression, the democracy of goods, civilization redeemed, and of the captivated child. Chapter 8 is “Visual Clichés: Fantasies and Icons.” Chapter 9 deals with “Advertising in Overalls: Parables and Visual Clichés of the Depression.” --SV Marchand looks at advertisements from American magazines and newspapers of the 1920s and 1930s in an attempt to determine what they tell us about the Zeitgeist of the time. Contrary to the hypothesis with which he began, he finds these ads to be not a perfect mirror of American social reality, but a highly selective reflection of certain aspects of the culture. They reflect not the reality of American life, but life as it ought to be, “life in the millennium.” As such, they show where Americans of the first half of the twentieth century wanted to go as a people, and to some degree where they ended up when they came out on the other side of depression and war. This orientation toward modernity and the future were perhaps the most salient characteristic of the ads of the period. Ad-men of the time very self-consciously saw themselves as pregnant with the future, and it was indeed a dispensation of robust, hearty consumption toward which they pointed the American mind. --Gordon Jackson AU - Marchand, Roland CY - Berkeley DA - 1985 KW - illustrations photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations values modernism modernity modernism community democracy censorship and ratings values +photography and visual communication advertising +electricity +books, periodicals, newspapers color, and advertising color, and history of values, and advertising advertising, and culture metaphors children, and media capitalism democracy and media capitalism, and art advertising, and art color advertising, national children advertising, and color illustrations modernity modernity, and advertising advertising, and modernity Jackson, Gordon advertising, and periodicals LB - 1750 PB - University of California Press PY - 1985 ST - Advertising the American Dream: Making Way for Modernity, 1920-1940 TI - Advertising the American Dream: Making Way for Modernity, 1920-1940 ID - 1571 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work appeared after Marchand’s death in 1997. As with Advertising the American Dream, it is richly illustrated, mostly in black and white, although with some color pictures. Marchand offers a series of case studies of General Motors, General Electric, Metropolitan Life Insurance, Du Pont Chemical, and Ford Motors. The leaders of these companies used visual and rhetorical imagery to capture the public and to create an internal corporate culture. During the 1920s, business statesmanship was emphasized by these corporate giants. During the Depression, turned in a desperate effort to defend capitalism. During World War II, the companies tried to link themselves to small-town America. After the war, their image as a “good neighbor” was replaced with one of a “soulless giant.” --SV Marchand looks at the attempts of American corporations to ingratiate themselves with the American public, from the late nineteenth century to the early post-World War II period. Deemed “persons” for purposes of legal actions by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1886, as they grew larger and more impersonal these corporations faced the charge that they were indeed “soulless” persons. The effort to counteract this perception through advertising and other public relations initiatives is Marchand’s subject. He looks primarily at corporate ads themselves, but also at different kinds of public relations programs aimed either at the corporation’s own workforce or the public at large. He discerns in this corporate imagery a trend initially toward grand institutional themes an effort indeed to establish something on the order of a corporate soul but then during World War II and in its near aftermath toward the more modest objective of neighborliness. --Gordon Jackson AU - Marchand, Roland CY - Berkeley DA - 1998 KW - illustrations corporations corporations photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations propaganda advertising values war World War II values iconography icons +photography and visual communication advertising color, and history of color, and advertising capitalism capitalism and art General Motors Corp. General Electric Company Ford Motor Company Metropolitan Life Insurance Du Pont Chemical metaphors values, and advertising World War II, and advertising +electricity electricity, and advertising iconography public relations color advertising, national advertising, and color illustrations Jackson, Gordon corporations LB - 1760 PB - University of California Press PY - 1998 ST - Creating the Corporate Soul: The Rise of Public Relations and Corporate Imagery in American Big Business TI - Creating the Corporate Soul: The Rise of Public Relations and Corporate Imagery in American Big Business ID - 1572 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book examines the impact of information technology (IT) on two central governments, Great Britain and the United States, from the 1970s to the 1990s. It "challenges the view that information technology will transform government, even bring an end of government. It establishes information technology as a vital, policy-critical feature of contemporary public administration. It demonstrates that not only does information technology shape government; government also selects and shapes information technology. Only by studying this complex two-way interaction over a substantial period of time will the effects on government of the computer revolution be established." The first of the book's eight chapters considers how information technology spread in the various departments of the British and American governments. IT is now deeply rooted in "the tools of government policy, transferring money, authority and information, replacing organisational function and creating new requirements for technical expertise." Chapter 2 deals with how these governments responded to the influx of new technology. Chapter 3-6 looks at how IT has affected policy sectors, particularly taxation and how social security benefits are delivered. These chapters cover much of the civilian sector of government in both nations and they explore the problems that come when massive bureaucracies undertake large, technologically based plans for modernization. Chapter 7 discusses the governments' contracting out IT work. The need for expertise in this area "has drawn new players into government, in the form of huge global private sector computer services providers." Chapter 8 looks at the arguments that believe that IT has radically transforming power. This final chapter maintains that IT "has brought government to the 'ante-postmodernist' era, where information systems form a vital, ever-changing part of the state, but where no overarching transformation can be identified." History suggest that IT's future impact will be more ambiguous that much previous literature suggests. A substantial number of governmental reports in the United States and Great Britain form the primary basis for the book. AU - Margetts, Helen CY - London and New York DA - 1999 KW - computers nationalism corporations corporations censorship and ratings communication revolution community democracy communication revolution, and second industrial revolution law non-USA information technology Great Britain +nationalism and communication +computers and the Internet Great Britain Great Britain, and computers democracy and media information technology, and government second industrial revolution communication revolution information technology, and taxation information technology, and social security IBM IRS nationalism, and information technology regulation, and new media regulation LB - 11420 PB - Routledge PY - 1999 ST - Information Technology in Government: Britain and America TI - Information Technology in Government: Britain and America ID - 2502 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The videotape was first introduced as a practical tool in a crowded Chicago hotel room and changed into a powerful media technology that altered the nation’s sense of reality. Shifting Time and Space chronicles “the metamorphosis of videotape from a media technology that was closely controlled by a handful of television executives, to a popular communications agent which has profoundly altered the way America consumers information and entertainment, transfers information, and exchanges ideas." The adoption of the videotape in the broadcast, non-broadcast, and home video markets changed American culture. These developments “provide evidence that there is a direct relationship between the introduction of a technology into a culture and its impact on that culture," as suggested by Harold Innis, Marshall McLuhan, Eric Havelock, and Neil Postman." --Amanda Novak AU - Marlow, Eugene AU - Secunda, Eugene CY - Westport, CT DA - 1991 KW - entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) corporations corporations Federal Communications Commission (FCC) entertainment, home magnetic recording censorship and ratings new media home entertainment materials materials magnetic tape regulation non-USA home +sound recording +duplicating technologies +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures videotape sound recording, and videotape VCRs television, and videotape motion pictures, and videotape magnetic recording sound recording, and magnetic tape +radio radio, and magnetic recording home entertainment revolution new media, and home Japan Japan, and VCRs Sony Corporation VCRs, and Japan Betamax VCRs, and VHS video cassette recorders (VCRs), and VHS FCC VCRs, and television television, and VCRs camcorders Novak, Amanda Innis, Harold Postman, Neil Havelock, Eric home, and new media cameras LB - 17550 PB - Praeger PY - 1991 ST - Shifting Time and Space: The Story of Videotape TI - Shifting Time and Space: The Story of Videotape ID - 675 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Marschall, Rick CY - New York DA - 1986 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins LB - 10770 PB - Gallery Books PY - 1986 ST - History of Television TI - History of Television ID - 2440 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book tells readers how to use the tape recorder. The authors wrote that “Usefulness was the prime criterion in all of the more than 2500 experiments which led to this work -- usefulness to the school teacher, doctor, businessman, clergyman, or scoutmaster, and in Rotary Clubs, welfare organizations, camps, and homes.... This work is an outgrowth of more than four years of experimentation with tape recordings in schools and colleges, churches, camps, social agencies, playgrounds, and homes.” The work gives a good picture of the different types of tape recorders available in 1955. The pages entitled “Milestones in Magnetic Recording” has useful leads. AU - Marshal, Robert and Mary CY - New York DA - 1955 KW - tape recording, magnetic magnetic recording recording tape recording References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps labor materials materials education timelines tape recorders recording office, and information technology information technology +sound recording tape recording sound information technology, and education information technology, and office timelines, and tape recording +timelines education, and tape recording office, and tape recording office LB - 5520 PB - Greenberg PY - 1955 ST - Your Tape Recorder TI - Your Tape Recorder ID - 1937 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Among the chapters in this book are: 1) "Tracing the Meaning of the Public Individual"; 2) "Conceptualizing the Collective: The Mob, the Crowd, the Mass, and the Audience"; 3) "Tools for the Analysis of the Celebrity as a Form of Cultural Power"; 4) "The Cinematic Apparatus and the Construction of the Film Celebrity"; 5) "Television's Construction of the Celebrity"; 6) "The Meanings of the Popular Music Celebrity: The Construction of the Distinctive Authenticity"; 7) "The System of Celebrity"; 8) "The Embodiment of Affect in Political Culture"; 9) "Conclusion: Forms of Power/Forms of Public Subjectivity." AU - Marshall, P. David CY - Minneapolis DA - 1997 KW - fame celebrity acting ref, secondary celebrity culture fame personality photography, and new art form photography, and psychology photography, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and photography photography, and fame photography, and stars audiences media effects photography, and audiences audiences, and photography media effects, and audiences media effects, and photography photography, and media effects photography, and modernity modernity, and photography photography and modernity new way of seeing fame, and new media television motion pictures television, and celebrity motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and television celebrity, and motion pictures audiences audiences, and celebrity celebrity, and audiences celebrity, and power sound recording, and celebrity celebrity, and music music, and celebrity celebrity, and sound recording actors modernity music photography sound recording LB - 41650 PB - University of Minnesota Press PY - 1997 ST - Celebrity and Power: Fame in Contemporary Culture TI - Celebrity and Power: Fame in Contemporary Culture ID - 4263 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Marshall, Rick CY - New York DA - 1986 KW - +television television, and history of LB - 7150 PB - Gallery Books PY - 1986 ST - History of Television TI - History of Television ID - 2086 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work discusses the critical reaction to rock-n-roll music from the 1953 to 1986. Sexual themes were a concern in much of this music during the 1950s and Elvis Presley was exhibit number one. "Beware Elvis Presley," the Catholic magazine America said. During the 1960s, it was sex and drugs that angered critics of rock music. During the 1980s, parent groups led by Tipper Gore saw rock music as often decadent and they pushed for rating labels on this music. The book is divided into three parts: 1) 1953-62; 2) 1963-73; 3)1974-86. AU - Martin, Linda and Kerry Segrave CY - Hamden, CT DA - 1988 KW - popular culture rock n' roll sound recording censorship and ratings home and new media rock-n-roll critics magnetic tape recording critics, and rock-n-roll Presley, Elvis television television, and Elvis Presley television, and rock-n-roll Beatles, and sound recording sound recording, and Beatles Beatles censorship and ratings Gore, Tipper rating systems, and music labels rating systems, and Tipper Gore home magnetic recording magnetic tape LB - 31800 PB - Archon Books PY - 1988 ST - Anti-Rock: The Opposition to Rock 'n' Roll TI - Anti-Rock: The Opposition to Rock 'n' Roll ID - 2868 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Martin uses the "rich and largely unexplored archives of Bell Canada in Montreal" to study the telephone system's development in Canada, particularly in Ontario and Quebec, "with some reference to the United States," between 1876 to 1920. These years cover the period from the telephone's invention to the system's automation. The author emphasizes political and economic factors in this technology's development, the creation of new occupation for women, and how this contributed to new cultural practices. The author seeks "to show that women make an active contribution to the development of certain technologies." --SV Martin deals with the development of the telephone in Canada and its influence on Canadian culture and society with particular attention given to women as producers and consumers and how the telephone shaped their activities. The work serves as a corrective to misconceptions about women and telephones. Women, according to this view, “have had no part in any element of development of this means if communication except as ignorant and inconsiderate users. This suggests that women passively accepted the telephone system, a common view of women’s relationship to new technologies. Very little thought has been given to the contribution of women to the development of means of communication in general.” (3) Changing forms of communication was difficult, and especially so for women who had little political and economic power and who were subjected to patriarchal values. “It is important to note at the outset that the telephone is not merely a neutral technological instrument whose expansion has occurred naturally,” Martin writes. “It is a means of communications which determines the production and exchange of messages, and is related to the general structuring of the production and exchange of commodities in capitalist society.” (8) This book deals with “the social conditions within which the telephone system expanded” and this technology’s interrelation with women. --Amanda Novak In this book Martin analysis the early development of telephone systems in Eastern Canada, with a focus on the “impact of the telephone on society and social life” (3). She analyzes on the how women both used the system and provided the bulk of the labor that sustained systems in during the era of switchboard systems and operators. Martin focuses on how women’s use of the telephone affected the development of the medium on a broader scale, placing this trajectory within the context of class and gender social dynamics in during the period under study, 1876 to 1920. She argues that rather than acting as passive consumers of new technology, women played an active (though at times indirect) role in the development of the medium. Furthermore, she argues that the influence of women on telephone companies created a unique “culture of the telephone.” (12) While the book was published in 1991 and focuses on the historical development of the telephone as a “new” technology between the years of 1876 and 1920 in Ontario and Quebec, the author does not make connections to present-day “new media. However, the reader can draw parallels in the development of telephonic technology as a “new” medium to the Internet today (such as in the way academics talk about it increasing or decreasing social capital). Some similar concerns arose during the development of telephone technology, such as whether the medium increases social contact with people outside of the home (in the case of upper class women) but could also decrease it by decreasing the need to leave the home to socialize. --Jill Hopke AU - Martin, Michele CY - Montreal and Kingston DA - 1991 KW - entertainment entertainment, home women, and new media labor home entertainment gender non-USA home, and new media home office, and new media office, and information technology home, and information technology networks information technology telephones telephones, and women telephones, and Canada Canada, and telephones networks, and telephones infrastructure systems, technical home women Canada women, and telephones home, and telephones office, and telephones Novak, Amanda labor labor, and telephones labor, and women telephones, and gender gender, and telephones women office Hopke, Jill sexuality LB - 5370 PB - McGill-Queen's University Press PY - 1991 ST - "Hello Central": Gender, Technology, and Culture in the Formation of Telephone Systems TI - "Hello Central": Gender, Technology, and Culture in the Formation of Telephone Systems ID - 23 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Martin, Marcus J. CY - London DA - 1916, 1919 KW - photography journalism news and journalism television, and history of +photography and visual communication news +photography and visual communication +television television, and origins photography, and wireless transmission news, and transmission of photographs LB - 7170 PB - Wireless Press PY - 1916 ST - The Wireless Transmission of Photographs TI - The Wireless Transmission of Photographs ID - 2088 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book attempts to review three federal efforts to control information "in light of the moral principles evident in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution." The author hopes to further national discussion about how citizens want their government to adopt information policies that are in their best interests. The book tries to connect the First Amendment principles of the Founding Fathers in the 18th century, to efforts to control information in the late twentieth century and early twenty-first century. Hansen writes that "during the 1980s, when the U. S. government was not engaged in a declared war with a strong foreign government, threatened by domestic social unrest or facing a national economic depression, the executive branch of the federal government chose to initiate subtle, substantial roadblocks to avenues of access for those seeking government-held information. These efforts included a renewed use of the Foreign Agents Registration and Propaganda Act that was reviewed by Congress for possible amendment several times during the past decade, the successful passage of the Computer Security Act of 1987 and the strict enforcement of media pools during the 1991 Persian Gulf military strike. All three of these government actions in essence controlled and often slowed or significantly interrupted the flow of information, to which some citizens thought they had a right of access." AU - Martin, Shannon E. CY - Westport, CT DA - 1995 KW - R & D computers nationalism presidents, and new media research and development war government community democracy computers +computers and the Internet freedom law censorship and ratings censorship war non-USA Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration Information Age +nationalism and communication +books, periodicals, newspapers +military communication Persian Gulf War (1991) Computer Security Act of 1987 Foreign Agents Registration and Propaganda Act Reagan administration, and information access First Amendment federal government, and information access information access Department of Defense, and information access democracy and media Department of Defense, U.S. censorship, and new media nationalism, and censorship military-industrial complex censorship, and Persian Gulf War (1991) LB - 4470 PB - Praeger PY - 1995 ST - Bits, Bytes, and Big Brother: Federal Information Control in the Technological Age TI - Bits, Bytes, and Big Brother: Federal Information Control in the Technological Age ID - 1835 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book attempts to assess online newspapers and how they relate to the idea of a "newspaper of record." It is of particular interest to lawyers, historians, journalists, and librarians. The authors hope that their "work will provide a case study for evaluating the ways in which the developing digital environment may fundamentally alter the transfer of knowledge within a society, just as the development of writing on paper changed the way we teach and learn about each other." The opening chapters deal with the history of the newspaper and how lawyers, historians, and librarians have looked on this medium as a "public record." Chapter 3 deals with legal definition of "newspapers of record," and important issues that have not been addressed with regard to online publications. Chapter 4 discusses how online papers challenged fundamental assumptions made by scholars and archivists who use newspapers as sources. Chapter 5 examines how online publications are constructed for the public. The final chapter offers recommendations for dealing with online publications. Chapter 4, "Newspapers as Reference Sources," is informative about difficulties in citing and archiving digital sources. Even if the screen of a Web page is captured, the links therein may not be retained. Unlike print sources which change infrequently, and which have a certain stability, online sources may change rapidly. The full text of newspapers, which may be available online for inhouse use, may not be available outside the paper's offices. The authenticity of online publications and how they were created are often more difficult to determine than in the case for print sources. Electronic media also deteriorate rapidly (in historical terms) and data retrieval is often plagued by the fact that information may not be obtainable if stored on technology that has become obsolete. AU - Martin, Shannon E. and Kathleen A. Hansen CY - Westport, CT DA - 1998 KW - print primary sources preservation nonprint media journalism archives history, and new media community democracy law news and journalism history nonprint culture print culture newspapers news libraries law libraries, and information storage history +books, periodicals, newspapers digital media, and law digital media, and history +information storage information storage, and digital media history, break with history, and digital media archives, and electronic preservation electronic preservation law, and digital media libraries, and digital media print culture print media v. electronic media newspapers, and history of newspapers, as history newspapers, online newspapers, and archives newspapers, and public record newspapers democracy and media +archives digital media electronic media information storage, and libraries news, and digital media digitization LB - 4460 PB - Praeger PY - 1998 ST - Newspaper of Record in a Digital Age: From Hot Type to Hot Link TI - Newspaper of Record in a Digital Age: From Hot Type to Hot Link ID - 1834 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This intelligently conceived book focuses on two inventions, the electric light and the telephone. The electric light was "the great late-nineteenth-century medium of the spectacle, dazzling its audiences with novel messages. In much social imagination, it was the premier mass medium of the future." The telephone was "the first electric medium to enter the home and unsettle customary ways of dividing the private person and family from the more public setting of the community." In this engaging book, Marvin discusses the rise of the electrical expert and how such people tried to increase their status by using their knowledge to exclude lay people. Interesting, too, is how the telephone changed social behavior, and how people viewed electricity's possibilities--especially the electric light. Marvin has produced a good intellectual history about how people in the late nineteenth century viewed the telephone and electric lights. The book is based on research in trade journals. The author could have done more to sent out the nature and limits the sources used. --SV This text provides a detailed history of the development and influence that electricity and electronic communication had up to the early 1900s. Marvin’s analysis begins with the initial struggle for legitimation faced by practitioners of electricity: the electricians. Through the acceptance of electricians of a legitimate field, electricity became a formal occupation and its own set of experts developed to deal with the technological expertise required of much of the electronic communication. The formation of organized structures of experts and technological advancements lead to the scientific acceptance of electricians, which ultimately resulted in electricity being pitted in a continual struggle against nature. Electricity was simultaneously feared and revered for what it could offer to humanity. Of particular importance to communication scholars is the role that electricity played in advancing the mass media and interpersonal communication. The development of the telephone did as much to create immediate mass communication and messaging as it did to help change social norms and increase, often reluctantly, community heterogeneity. The bounds of who should talk to whom became blurred by the telephone as people distant both geographically and economically could mingle over the wires. Although Marvin does an excellent job of providing the intricacies of the relationship between humans and electricity, the book slows considerably in the pages devoted to “electric spectacles.” Although these spectacles were important in terms of their social implications , there is repetition in this section. However, a great strength of this text is Marvin’s account of the interconnectedness humans have with electricity tracing its development from influence on individuals and their health to the influence it had on larger social systems including the mass media. --Michael Boyle AU - Marvin, Carolyn CY - New York DA - 1988 KW - home entertainment entertainment, home advertising, and public relations spectacles propaganda public relations home entertainment experts home, and new media home home, and information technology information technology general studies +electricity electricity, and electric lighting +telephones information technology, and home experts, and electricity engineering telephones, and social behavior electricity, and home home, and telephones home, and electricity electricity, and advertising advertising, and electricity home, and telephones home, and electricity electricity, and advertising advertising, and electricity Boyle, Michael spectacles, and electricity electricity, and spectacles advertising LB - 910 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1988 ST - When Old Technologies Were New: Thinking About Electric Communication in the Late Nineteenth Century TI - When Old Technologies Were New: Thinking About Electric Communication in the Late Nineteenth Century ID - 1487 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This collection of sixteen essays is oriented toward biologists and others working in biotechnology. Marx’s introduction, “Heredity, genes and DNA,” is of interest to nonspecialized readers. So, too, are essays by Marx entitled “The prospect of gene therapy for human hereditary diseases,” and Joseph G. Perpich’s “Biotechnology, international competition and regulatory strategies.” “The title of the book has been chosen carefully,” John Kendrew, then president of the International Council of Scientific Unions, explains in the Foreword. A revolution has occurred “in the techniques and practice of biotechnology, but biotechnology is not new.” Kendrew continues: “The revolution that gives this book its name originated in the discovery of radically new ways of altering the genetic makeup of microorganisms in a directed manner. The promise for the future is that these methods can in practice, as well as in principle, be extended to higher organisms -- to plants and animals. And this new power depends on the discoveries of molecular biology: of DNA as the material of heredity; of the genetic code; of the relation between genes and the proteins to which they give rise; of methods of reading the genetic message of sequencing genes; and of the restriction enzymes with which it is possible to cut and splice together sections of DNA in a deliberate fashion. These and the many other elements that make up the subject known as molecular genetics now make it possible to breed microorganisms in order instead of using the hit-or-miss methods of earlier times. “The result has been a vast increase in the potentialities of biotechnology, in effect transforming the whole nature of the subject with many new applications that are becoming important not only in advanced countries, but also in the developing world. Not surprisingly, new potentialities have brought with them new regulatory and ethical problems. “The new biotechnology is already beginning to affect our lives and in the future its influence will be profound. The purpose of this book is to illuminate the scientific background, to describe what has already been achieved, to discuss he ethical problems, and to suggest what the future is likely to hold.” AU - Marx, Jean L., ed. CY - New York DA - 1989 KW - values genetics values science +artificial intelligence and biotechnology biotechnology heredity DNA genetic engineering scientific revolution, and biotechnology values, and biotechnology LB - 2500 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1989 ST - A Revolution in Biotechnology TI - A Revolution in Biotechnology ID - 1643 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - “To the reader who is uninitiated in chromolithography, the subject will seem at first narrow and antiquarian,” Marzio writes. “But, as a student of printing technology can tell you, the opposite is true. Billions of pictures and words were chromolithographed in nineteenth-century America: during the chromo period millions of gallons of colored inks, tons of lithographic stones, and hundreds of printing presses were consumed in the public’s voracious hunger for images in color. The more the printers made, the more the people wanted, and technology forged ahead to meet the demand. At the peak of America’s Victorian age, the mass-produced color lithograph waved unchallenged as the flag of popular culture. Its pervasiveness has led some historians to see the fifty-year period following the Civil War as the ‘chromo-civilization.’ To be sure, the chromolithograph was not a freak development, pursued as a idle pastime -- it was at the core of American life.” This book complements other works such as Neil Harris’ chapter on color in Cultural Excursions (1990) and Marcus Verhagen’s chapter on poster art in turn-of-the-century Paris in Cinema and the Invention of Modern Life (1995). AU - Marzio, Peter C. CY - Boston DA - 1979 KW - photography print community democracy printing printing press printing press lithography +photography and visual communication color, and history of color, and 19th century chromolithography color, and chromolithography printing printing presses, and chromolithography color, and inks (19th century) color, and lithography lithography, color color, and chromo-civilization prints democracy and media color +duplicating technologies posters lithography, chromo printing printing, and chromolithography color LB - 1770 PB - David R. Godine (in association with the Amon Carter Museum of Western Art, Fort Worth) PY - 1979 ST - The Democratic Art: Chromolithography, 1840-1900: Pictures for a 19th-Century America TI - The Democratic Art: Chromolithography, 1840-1900: Pictures for a 19th-Century America ID - 1573 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Mason, Roy, and Lane Jennings CY - Washington, DC DA - 1983 KW - entertainment science entertainment, home home entertainment +future and science fiction home, and new media home home, and information technology information technology future information technology, and home science fiction home, and new media future, and home LB - 8950 PB - Acropolis PY - 1983 ST - Xanadu: Your Home of Tomorrow TI - Xanadu: Your Home of Tomorrow ID - 2262 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Mast, Gerald CY - Indianapolis DA - 1976 KW - Marked ref, secondary motion pictures color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color Kalmus, Natalie Kalmus, Natalie, and Technicolor Technicolor Technicolor, and Natalie Kalmus LB - 41160 PB - Bobbs-Merrill Company, Inc. PY - 1976 ST - A Short History of the Movies TI - A Short History of the Movies ID - 4215 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume by Japanese futurologist Yoneji Masuda was later published under the title of Managing in the Information Society: Releasing Synergy Japanese Style (London: Basil Blackwell, 1999). Masuda gives a glimpse into Japanese thinking about the future. He argues that "the emerging information society will be completely different from industrial society," and that we can anticipate a "Computopia" on this planet, "if only we understand and direct the underlying social forces." In 1980, the author wrote in the Preface of the first edition of this work: "The new societal technology will bring about a transformation in society which, in a double sense, is unprecedented. "First the transformation of society is the result of innovations in societal technology, which, in the past, have always been concerned with physical productivity. Even these rapid expansions of physical productivity brought about a change from the feudalistic self-sustained economic system based on agricultural production to a freely competitive goods economy based on industrial production. Second, the current innovation in societal technology, however, is not concerned with the productivity of material goods, but with information productivity, and for this reason can be expected to bring about fundamental changes in human values, in trends of thought, and in the political and economic structures of society. It will be necessary to build a new paradigm boldly which is free of traditional concepts in order to offer an image of this future information society. This can be done by using the historical analogy and pattern analysis of past societies. Reducing the structure of human society into major components, such as values, trends of thought, innovative technology, the market, economic structure, political systems, I propose to present the pattern of a new concept of each of these components with which to construct an overall picture of the future information society. I will place the major emphasis on a pattern analysis of industrial society, and the historical analogy that applies to the information society." Masuda authored the Japanese Plan for an Information Society: A National Goal Toward the Year 2000 (1971). AU - Masuda, Yoneji CY - Bethesda, MD DA - 1981, 1983 KW - computers nationalism preservation communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution history, and new media +future and science fiction community democracy communication revolution, and second industrial revolution non-USA history microelectronics history +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology +nationalism and communication Japan future future, and Japan communication revolution microelectronics revolution history, break with second industrial revolution Industrial Revolution postindustrial society democracy and media nationalism, and new media LB - 3630 PB - World Future Society PY - 1981 ST - The Information Society as Post-Industrial Society TI - The Information Society as Post-Industrial Society ID - 1753 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This thought-provoking book considers the way our ability to recall history changes with new media. The chapter on the impact of photography and cinema is especially good. Matsuda discusses Maksim Gorky’ reaction to silent cinema: “In July, 1896, six months after the first public showings of the Lumière’s work, a distinguished Paris visitor, Russian poet ... Gorky, recorded a strong reaction to the cinematic image: ‘It is terrible to see this movement of shadows, nothing but shadows, specters and ghosts; one thinks of legends where some evil genius captures an entire town with a perpetual sleep.’ What Gorky notably loathed in the Lumière images was the silence of the screen, and behind his grim description lay the question of the speaking voice. What the cinema evoked for Gorky was not images of life, but figures with lifeless smiles: ‘You see their facial muscles contract, but the laughing never comes out.’ The memory machine was a false witness. Without the voice, the expression on the screen was a mask, the laughing figure a mute mockery of itself.” There is considerably more on the impact of cinema on history in this insightful book. AU - Matsuda, Matt K. CY - New York DA - 1996 KW - theater stage history photography ref, secondary motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and history history, and photography Gorky, Maksim, and silent film ref, book Gorky, Maksim LB - 880 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1996 ST - The Memory of the Modern TI - The Memory of the Modern ID - 3383 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this 90-page book, Matthews, who was a prolific writer and commentator on the stage, comments on the stage actor and fame. Even though moving picture by 1914 had become extremely popular, Matthews is talking about the actor's fame without taking into account the phonograph, photography, and motion pictures. He writes: “David Garrick may have been the greatest actor the world has ever seen; but what is he to-day but a faint memory a name the the biographical dictionaries, and little more. Joseph Jefferson was the most delightful comedian of the English-speaking stage at the end of the nineteenth century; but his fame will fade like Garrick’s, and in a score of years he also will be but a name, and no longer an alert personality sharp in the recollection of all living playgoers. This swift removal to the limbo of the vanisht is the fate of all actors, however popular in their own day, and however indisputable their manifold gifts. “And this fate the actor shares with all performers orators, vocalists, and 46/47 instrumentalists. It a fate from which the practitioners of the other arts are preserved by the fact that their works may live after them, whereas the performers can leave nothing behind them but the splendid recollection that may linger in the memories of those who beheld the performance…. 47/48 “The actors are moved often to repeat the pathetic query of Rip when he returned from his sleep of twenty years, ‘Are we, then, so soon forgot?’ And Jefferson himself answered the question in the affirmative. He told Mr. Francis Wilson that Betterton and Garrick, Kean and Mrs. Siddons, ‘mark milestones in the dramatic pathway, for they lived at a time when literary men wrote sympathetically of the stage, and so their memories are kept alive.’ He thought that Mr. Edwin Booth might be more than a tradition solely because he had founded a club The Players whereby his fame would be kept green. When Mr. Wilson then askt him about himself, the shrewd comedian explained that his own ‘Autobiography’ might serve to rescue him from total oblivion. And he summed up the case and dismisst it finally with the assertion that ‘the 48/49 painter, the sculptor, the author, all live in their works after death, -- but there is nothing so useless as a dead actor! Acting is a tradition. Actors must have their reward now, in the applause of the public, -- or never. If their names live, it must be because of some extraneous circumstance.’ “Other distinguisht actors have phrased the same thought even more forcibly. Delauney, for a third of a century the ideal lover in all the masterpieces of dramatic literature performed at the Theatre Français, used to liken the actor to the painter in Hoffmann’s weird tale, who sat before a blank canvas with an empty brush and yet gave all the touches needed for a true picture. And Lawrence Barrett was fond of repeating an ancedote of Michelangelo. To please some exacting patron or to gratify a whim of his own, the great 49/50 artist, so it is said, once carved a statue of snow. This may have been the final expression of his plastic genius; but it endured only until the sun shone again. Then it melted swiftly into a shapeless lump, and soon it was gone forever, leaving no record of its powerful beauty. ‘And this is what the actor does every night,’ so Barrett was wont to comment; ‘he is forever carving a statue of snow.’” Matthews in the following chapter askes if the the actor’s “has no compensation for the tansitoriness of the fame?” (51) One answer is, as Jefferson said, that the actor has his reward in the adulation of the audience and in pay that is ofter greater than the composer of the play or opera. Actually, Matthews said, the actor is “unduly rewarded with adulation” and overpaid with money for his “real ability.” (53) In his own time, the actor often “has a celebrity denied to other artists.” (54) Most audience members know the names of the “stars” who perform but care little about the author who wrote the play, Matthews said. (55) 55/56 The “actor is but the interpreter of what the author has created. It is the incalculable advantage of the actor that ‘he stands in the suffused light of emotion kindled by the author,’ so Lewes declared, adding that the performer delivering ‘the great thoughts of an impassioned mind, is rewarded as the bearer of glad tidings is rewared, tho he may have had nothing to do with the facts which he narrates.’” (56) Matthews said that the actor also had a second, although less discussed, advantage. If the performer dies with his reputation intact, that reputation can never be truly tested by future generations the way the work of an artists or poet can. (58-63) Matthews concludes this book by saying that the actors of his day or a good as those of earlier times. The modern-day actor, though, must not only use speech to convey the story “but 89/90 also often merely by a gesture or only by a look. Our actors are now less rhetorical and more pictorial, -- as they must be on the picture-frame stage of our modern theater.” (89-90) AU - Matthews, Brander CY - New York DA - 1914 KW - stage fame actors acting acting, and fame actors, and fame fame, and actors stage and theater fame, and live stage acting ref, secondary ref, book critics critics, and theater quotations quotations, and actor's fame quotations, and statues of snow LB - 42020 PB - Charles Scribner's Sons PY - 1914 ST - On Acting TI - On Acting ID - 4300 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This seminal work is one of the most influential books on early twentieth-century American intellectual life. The author examines several avant-garde magazines in the years immediately before the American entry into World War I, and shows that they had already begun to reject many of the basic tenets of late-nineteenth century culture: the belief in the certainty of universal moral values; the inevitability of progress; the importance of established literary culture. Technology, May notes, played a large part in helping to usher in this change, as did scientific research and urban life. --SV May’s intellectual history of the late Victorian and Edwardian periods of American life shows that the demise of nineteenth- century American idealism, commonly attributed simply to World War I’s intervention into history, actually is rooted in the climate of ideas that took hold in the years immediately prior to the war. For May, this idealism has a three-part definition moral consensus, a belief in continual American progress, and a defense of traditional Anglo-Saxon high culture. This was always, he maintained, a tenuous marriage, and in particular the sort of progress engendered by dynamic capitalism always existed in tension with efforts to preserve traditional morality and culture. But the elements did hold together through the Progressive Era. Though Darwinism had been assimilated by the Victorian consensus and placed into the progress category, (onward and upward), the onslaught of insurrectionist ideas that made their way from Europe to America during the fin de siecle e.g. naturalism, aestheticism, vitalism eventually undermined what Santayana called the “genteel tradition.” The exclusionary aspects of the tradition of blacks, immigrants, etc. also played a significant role. --Gordon Jackson AU - May, Henry F. CY - Chicago DA - 1959 KW - technology cultural change technology and society news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers values magazines +books, periodicals, newspapers values, and magazines cultural revolution technology, and culture magazines, and values culture cultural change, early 20th context Jackson, Gordon LB - 10040 PB - Quadrangle Books PY - 1959 ST - The End of American Innocence: A Study of the First Years of Our Own Time 1912-1917 TI - The End of American Innocence: A Study of the First Years of Our Own Time 1912-1917 ID - 2369 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Surveying American movies from the 1930s through the 1950s, May notes what he clearly considers to be a retrogression and retrenchment of the Anglo-Saxon American ideal in the latter period. Depression era movies were notable for the emergence of a political egalitarianism and a cultural liberalism, according to May. This particular constellation of viewpoints was emblematically expressed by Will Rogers, the beneficiary of a communitarian ethos in the Cherokee society in which he was raised, and perhaps the best known American of the early 1930s. The Rogers ethos was a very obvious reaction against the Anglo-Saxon American ideal embodied in corporate America and expressed mythologically as the supremacy of individualism and consumerism. The emerging egalitarianism of the 1930s was curtailed, May believes, by World War II, which required a marshaling of forces around the corporate-consumer ideal, and by the anti-communism that emerged from the collectivism of wartime. What had been seen as egalitarianism came to be viewed during and after the war as subversion. Pockets of bohemian resistance to the wartime cultural hegemony such as film noir developed, and served as a staging ground for the renewed cultural dissent that would begin in the 1960s. --Gordon Jackson AU - May, Lary CY - Chicago and London DA - 2000 KW - values motion pictures Cold War reform capitalism war Jackson, Gordon +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures capitalism motion pictures, and Cold War Cold War, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric values values, and motion pictures reform, and motion pictures motion pictures, and reform motion pictures, and Great Depression World War II World War II, and motion pictures motion pictures, and World War II motion pictures, and corporatism Rogers, Will LB - 1550 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 2000 ST - The Big Tomorrow: Hollywood and the Politics of the American Way TI - The Big Tomorrow: Hollywood and the Politics of the American Way ID - 243 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book considers cinema from the perspective of sociology. Early chapters consider the Elizabethan theater and cinema, and audiences for both theater and cinema. Chapters 4 through 7 deal with children, adolescents, and motion pictures. Chapter 7 considers "Movies and Conduct." There follows a chapter on "The Content of Films," and a chapter on "The Adult and the Cinema." Mayer makes interesting observations about the difference in the way audiences reacted to live theater actors and those who are seen in the movies. He writes: “It is important to contrast here the theatre and the cinema. Sir Max Beerbohm, in a recent broad cast, has given an admirable illustration of their difference. He is speaking of the Edwardian theatre.1" (Here he cites: Cf. ‘The Listerner’, Playgoing by Sir Max Beerbohm, Oct. 11, 1945.)” (Mayer, p. 277) In the following paragraph, Mayer goes on to say: “‘Actors and actresses were certainly regarded with far greater interest than they are nowadays. The outstanding ones inspired something deeper than interest. It was with excitement, with wonder and with reverence, with something akin even to hysteria, that they were gazed upon. Some of the younger of you listeners would, no doubt, interrupt me if they could at this point by asking, “But surely you don’t mean, do you, that our parents and grandparents were affected by them as we are by cinema stars?’ I would assure you that those idols were even more ardently worshipped 277/278 than are yours. Yours after all, are but images of idols, mere shadows of glory. Those others were their own selves, creatures of flesh and blood, there before your eyes. They were performing in our presence. And of our presence they were aware. Even we, in all our humility, acted as stimulants to them. The magnetism diffused by them across the footlights was in some degree our own doing. You, on the other hand, having nothing to do with the performances of which you witness the result. These performances or rather these innumerable rehearsals took place in some faraway gaunt studio in Hollywood or elsewhere, months ago. Those moving shadows will be making identically the same movements at the next performance or rather at the next record; and in the inflexions of those voice enlarged and preserved for you there by machinery not one cadence will be altered. Thus the theatre has certain advantages over the cinema, and in virtue of them will continue to survive.’” (277-78) "Shadow and a living relationship between actor and audience is indeed the formula which defines the structural difference between cinema and theatre. Yet theatrical art -- all art -- is not life. It is rather an interpretation of life. The greater art is, the more intense and deep is its interpretation of life. Art is more than life. It is a symbolic expression of life. Any only symbolic art is real art. [here Mayer cite Cassirer, An Essay on Man (1945)] While, in principle, the cinema may become art -- and there are undoubtedly examples of film classics -- and thus interpret or condense life, yet most films are, to use Sir Max's brilliant formula again -- shadows." (278) AU - Mayer, J. P. CY - London DA - [1946] KW - theater children ref, secondary motion pictures Great Britain, and motion pictures Great Britain, and audiences audiences Great Britain non-USA non-USA, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences theater and stage motion pictures, and theater theater, and motion pictures movie stars actors, and status of motion pictures, and movie stars theater and stage, and stars children and media media effects children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sociology media effects, and children children, and media effects motion pictures, and children quotations quotations, and status of actors audiences, and actors audiences, and movie stars motion pictures, and art quotations, movies as shadows ref, book acting actors Great Britain theater LB - 38610 PB - Faber and Faber, Limited ST - Sociology of Film: Studies and Documents TI - Sociology of Film: Studies and Documents ID - 3960 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This informative book has fourteen chapters that run about 90 pages total. There are also eighteen appendices that list foreign films, distributors, and censorship information (e.g., the Green Sheet and Legion of Decency classifications). Mayer discusses the characteristics foreign film that were successful in the U. S. -- e.g., And God Created Woman, La Dolce Vita, Room at the Top, and Never on Sunday. He shows that between 1961 and 1964, the Roman Catholic Legion of Decency in the U. S. either condemned or rated as morally objectionable in part about one third of the foreign films playing in the U.S. AU - Mayer, Michael F. CY - New York DA - 1965 KW - audiences motion pictures censorship and rating motion pictures, and Europe foreign films motion pictures, and foreign film non-USA Europe Europe, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Europe capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign markets globalization motion pictures, and globalization theaters theaters, and foreign films censorship and ratings censorship, and foreign films foreign films, and censorship Legion of Decency, and foreign films foreign films, and Green Sheet Green Sheet, and foreign films 16mm 16mm films, and foreign films 16mm, and foreign films foreign films, and 16mm Legion of Decency Catholic Church 16mm film censorship global communication LB - 31510 PB - Arco PY - 1965 ST - Foreign Films on American Screens TI - Foreign Films on American Screens ID - 3112 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is the result of papers presented at a conference at the Max-Planck-Institut für Gesellschaftsforschung in Cologne, Germany in November, 1987. Rather than looking at isolated inventions, the contributors attempt to assess the significance of large technical systems: the railway system, electrical power, telephone service, air transportation, and interactive telecommunication such as videotex. The essays provide a comparative perspective, dealing with developments in the United States, France, Germany, and Britain. In treating the impact of large systems, this volume follows the work of one of its editors, Thomas Hughes, and his book Networks of Power (1983) . Essays in this edited collection include: Bernward Joerges, “Large technical systems: Concepts and issues”; Stephen Salsbury, “The emergence of an early large-scale technical system: The American railroad network”; François Caron, “The evolution of the technical system of railways in France from 1831 to 1937"; G. Wolfgang Heinze and Heinrich H. Kill, “The development of the German railroad system”; Louis Galambos, “Looking for the boundaries of technological determinism: A brief history of the U.S. telephone system”; Catherine Bertho-Lavenir, “The telephone in France 1879 to 1979: National characteristics and international influences”; Frank Thomas, “The politics of growth: The German telephone system”; Todd La Porte, “The United States air traffic system: Increasing reliability in the midst of rapid growth”; Maurice Lévy-Leboyer, “The French electrical power system: An inter-country comparison”; and Renate Mayntz and Volker Schneider, “The dynamics of system development in a comparative perspective: Interactive videotex in Germany, France and Britain.” AU - Mayntz, Renate, and Thomas P. Hughes, eds. CY - Bolder, CO; Frankfurt am Main DA - 1988 KW - technology nationalism interactivity magnetic recording preservation networks history, and new media magnetic tape non-USA +transportation history general studies technical systems telephones Germany France Great Britain +electricity +aeronautics and space communication transportation, and air travel interactive media telecommunications videotex technology and society global communication +nationalism and communication history, and technology Hughes, Thomas networks, and large systems LB - 930 PB - Westview Press; Campus Verlag PY - 1988 ST - The Development of Large Technical Systems TI - The Development of Large Technical Systems ID - 1489 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Mazlish argues that “the human ego is undergoing a fourth shock, similar to those administered by Copernicus, Darwin, and Freud. We are now coming to realize that humans are not as privileged in regard to machines as has been unthinkingly assumed.” The author has two theses. The first is that “humans are on the threshold of decisively breaking past the discontinuity between themselves and machines.” It has become difficult to think about humans without machines. Moreover we have come to realize the same scientific ideas help to explain the workings of humans and their machines. Mazlish’s second thesis maintains that human nature is evolving. It is “not fixed, not a kind of Platonic ideal, but is rather an evolving identity, secured in the process of adaptation to ‘nature.’" The book is divided into three sections. Part I has chapters on The Animal-Machine, Automata, and the Industrial Revolution. Part II considers Linnaeus and Darwin, Freud and Pavlov, and Babbage, Huxley, and Butler. Part III has chapters on the Biogenetic Revolution, the Computer-Brain Revolution, and two final chapters “The Beginnings of a Conclusion,” and “The Ending of a Conclusion.” AU - Mazlish, Bruce CY - New Haven DA - 1993 KW - computers Darwinism preservation communication revolution history, and new media genetics computers history machines history general studies history, break with communication revolution information age Copernicus, Nicolaus Darwin, Charles Freud, Sigmund machines, and humans Linnaeus, Carolus Babbage, Charles Huxley, Thomas Industrial Revolution postindustrial society genetic engineering +artificial intelligence and biotechnology +computers and the Internet computers, and human nature LB - 950 PB - Yale University Press PY - 1993 ST - The Fourth Discontinuity: The Co-Evolution of Humans and Machines TI - The Fourth Discontinuity: The Co-Evolution of Humans and Machines ID - 1491 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a history of the role of actors in American culture between 1880 and 1920, a period when motion pictures expanded the opportunities for performers beyond the live stage. Throughout much of history, actors had been held in low regard by much of the public. If they were not the “devil’s minions,” they lacked a moral core, this work notes. AU - McArthur, Benjamin CY - Philadelphia DA - 1984 KW - celebrity religion theater values motion pictures context context, and actors motion pictures, and artors' status theater, and actors' status celebrity culture actors, and status motion pictures, and actors' status theater critics values, and actors acting actors LB - 13240 PB - Temple University Press PY - 1984 ST - Actors and American Culture, 1880-1920 TI - Actors and American Culture, 1880-1920 ID - 496 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - McArthur, Tom, and Peter Waddell CY - London DA - 1986 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories non-USA +television Great Britain biography Baird, John Logie LB - 7120 PB - Hutchinson PY - 1986 ST - The Secret Life of John Logie Baird TI - The Secret Life of John Logie Baird ID - 2083 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - McChesney describes the battle over the future of broadcasting during the period from the adoption of the Radio Act in 1927 to the adoption of the Communications Act in 1934. Contrary to popular belief, McChesney argued, the commercial future of broadcasting was not decided in 1927, with the adoption of rules allocating radio frequencies. Rather, a vigorous, though ill-fated, broadcast reform movement challenged the course of broadcasting during the era. The debate concerned the fundamental political and economic structure of broadcasting itself. It is during this period that the term “public interest, convenience or necessity,” came to be defined in ways that would ensure that the bulk of broadcasting would be for-profit and advertising-driven. --Phil Glende AU - McChesney, Robert W. CY - New York DA - 1993 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations community democracy law regulation regulation, and radio radio +radio Communication Act of 1934 regulation, and radio (1934) democracy and media political economy radio, and capitalism advertising, and radio radio, and advertising Glende, Phil advertising radio, and capitalism capitalism, and radio capitalism censorship and ratings telecommunications Telecommunications Act (1934) LB - 5930 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1993 ST - Telecommunications, Mass Media, and Democracy: The Battle for the Control of U. S. Broadcasting, 1928-1935 TI - Telecommunications, Mass Media, and Democracy: The Battle for the Control of U. S. Broadcasting, 1928-1935 ID - 1978 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - McChesney argues in this new book that not only has the mass media distorted the democratic system in the United States, and in some respects the world, but that it is a significant anti-democratic force. As the corporations that control global media have gotten richer and more powerful, the prospects for real democratic participation have diminished. He does not, however, argue that the mass media is itself responsible for this situation. It is part of a larger problem inherent in globalism and neoliberalism. The mass media is used by the corporate elite to generate profits and at the same time to disenfranchise segments of the population. McChesney traces a brief history of the American mass media and efforts to regulate it. He argues that such efforts have largely failed because of the structure of the American economy. Capitalist business practice shies away from regulation, and in fact in the United States has been able to use the First Amendment as a shield to protect media corporations from regulation or restriction. McChesney argues that the First Amendment guarantees now are used to insulate the corporate mass media from critics and regulators. He places the current media system in the larger framework of neoliberalism, a trend since the late 1970s toward deregulation of ownership and increased economic incentive for big business. The gigantic corporations that control the media are interested foremost in generating profit and providing an attractive environment for advertising. Notions of civic responsibility or adversarial relationships are secondary and somewhat illusionary. It is the core structure, or political economy, of the mass media rather than the content that causes these problems. McChesney addresses the position that the Internet will be a revolutionary political factor. This question is examined in historical context. Each new media that is developed is surrounded by utopian claims. What usually happens instead is that commercialization and narrowly controlled ownership patterns deflate most of these claims as time goes on. McChesney believes that the same thing is true of the Internet. He examines Internet policy making in the United States and documents the growing commercial control of both the physical network itself, and much of the popular content. He does see the Internet as a valuable tool, and documents ways in which critics of the global media are using the Internet to communicate ideas among themselves, organize activism, recruit followers, and spread information. The Internet, like any medium, is neutral and can be used for multiple purposes. In the final segment of the book, McChesney outlines a series of proposals for reinvigorating democracy and reforming the media structure. He argues that this will have to be a political effort, coming from the political left, that taps into public dissatisfaction and disillusionment with the corporate media. He advocates building a nonprofit and noncommercial media alternative, strengthening existing public broadcasting, and increasing regulation of the corporate media, specifically anti-trust enforcement. --Rob Rabe AU - McChesney, Robert W. CY - Urbana DA - 1999 KW - computers corporations corporations, multinational journalism Internet community democracy freedom news and journalism non-USA news political economy democracy and media critics news, and corporate bias multinational corporations First Amendment political economy Rabe, Rob +computers and the Internet capitalism, and Internet Internet, and capitalism democracy, and Internet Internet, and democracy capitalism law LB - 9460 PB - University of Illinois Press PY - 1999 ST - Rich Media, Poor Democracy: Communication Politics in Dubious Times TI - Rich Media, Poor Democracy: Communication Politics in Dubious Times ID - 2313 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The essays in this collection examine the information revolution from a leftist position and argue that rather than invigorating democracy it will provide more tools for corporate and state control and lead to increased globalism. The authors generally believe that information is becoming a more and more useful means of social control. Michael Dawson and John Bellamy Foster discuss virtual capitalism and write that the Internet has essentially become a giant shopping mall and that the vast majority of the users and almost all the money on the Net support the global capitalist system. There is little indication that a more socially equitable system will emerge from the Internet or digital democratic efforts. Noam Chomsky and Edward Herman, in separate essays, revisit the propaganda model and extend it to the online media. They see it as a continuation and extension of the same class war. Nicholas Baran criticizes efforts to privatize and deregulate the Internet further. The technology and network were designed and constructed at mostly public expense, and therefore we should be granted the benefits without high cost or restriction. Ken Hirschkop looks at claims that the Internet is the great democratic medium, and finds instead that, while it may have been more democratic early on, corporate interests now increasingly dominate it. As the amount of web traffic and commerce grows, the incentive for corporate involvement also grows. Ironically, at the time when fewer people were online, a bigger percentage of usage was directed toward political activism. Each of these authors presents a thoughtful discussion of a particular aspect of the Information Age. As a whole, the book is helpful for studying the underlying economic roots of technological development and global capitalism. Information does appear to equal power. None of the authors, however, deny the power of the Internet for the individual user. It does offer useful and power tools for whatever purpose a person wants. --Rob Rabe AU - McChesney, Robert W., Ellen Meiksins Wood, and John Bellamy Foster, eds. CY - New York DA - 1998 KW - computers class corporations corporations, multinational social control journalism Internet community democracy law news and journalism non-USA news political economy +computers and the Internet Rabe, Rob Chomsky, Noam Herman, Edward democracy and media news, and corporate bias global communication multinational corporations democracy, and Internet class, and Internet capitalism, and Internet capitalism Internet, and democracy Internet, and capitalism Internet, and class social control, and new media regulation, and Internet regulation censorship and ratings LB - 9470 PB - Monthly Review Press PY - 1998 ST - Capitalism and the Information Age: The Political Economy of the Global Communication Revolution TI - Capitalism and the Information Age: The Political Economy of the Global Communication Revolution ID - 2314 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is the 25th anniversary update of McCorduck's book which was first published in 1979. Essentially, this book adds an "Afterword" (417-521) that covers the quarter century after the 1979 edition. In this Afterword, the author considers artificial status from its "celebrity status" during the early and mid-1980s, to a "fragmented has-been" by the late 1980s, and they it return to "solid science." While skepticism remain, an important goal for AI scientists was creating a machine that could beat the world champion of chess. The work then covers more challenging goals and the promise of the immediate future. The work concludes with a Timeline on the "Evolution of Intelligence" (523-33) and an updated Bibliography. The original 1979 edition published by W. H. Freeman and Company (San Francisco), had fourteen chapters. In Part I "Beginnings," are chapters 1) Brass for Brain; 2) From Energy to Information; 3) The Machinery of Wisdom; 4) Meat Machines. In Part II "The Turning Point," are chapters 5) The Dartmouth Conference; 6) The Information-Processing Model; 7) Fun and Games." In Part III "Resistance," are chapters 8) Us and Them; 9) L'Affaire Dreyfus. In Part IV, "Realization," are chapters 10) Robotics and General Intelligence; 11) Language, Scenes, Symbols, and Understanding; 12) Applied Artificial Intelligence. In Part V, "The Tensions of Choice," are chapters 13) Can a Made-Up Mind Be Moral? ; and 14) Forging the Gods. AU - McCorduck, Pamela CY - Natick, MA DA - 2004 KW - computers information theory Reagan administration corporations corporations corporations corporations Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) artificial intelligence and biotechnology computers and the Internet strategic computing initiative Reagan administration, and artificial intelligence presidents and new media education computers, and education education, and computers military communication military communication, and strategic computing initiative supercomputers artificial intelligence Bell Laboratories Carnegie-Mellon University, and AI digital media digitization, and AI cybernetics DARPA, and AI Feigenbaum, Edward, and AI information theory Japan Japan, and AI IBM MIT McCarthy, John McCulloch, Warren Minsky, Marvin Newell, Allen Papert, Seymour RAND Corporation robotics Samuel, Arthur Shannon, Claude Simon, Herbert simulations Stanford University Turing, Alan Weizenbaum, Joseph Wiener, Norbert computers, and critics critics timelines timelines, and artificial intelligence references, statistics, timelines, maps DARPA non-USA computers LB - 33880 OP - 1979 PB - A. K. Peters, Ltd. PY - 2004 ST - Machines Who Think: A Personal Inquiry into the History and Prospects of Artificial Intelligence TI - Machines Who Think: A Personal Inquiry into the History and Prospects of Artificial Intelligence ID - 3026 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - "The personal computer, the universal machine, enchants me," the author writes. "Simultaneously it reflects, models, and amplifies the human mind, acts as metaphor, is itself artifact. In a new way, it reveals the inner structure of the most human of properties, our urge to symoblize. If the dynamo broke Henry Adams by raising questions he couldn't answer about power and force, the computer does just the opposite: supplies answers and restores composure. uman thought and deed are magnified, but not disproportionately. At the same time, the computer does not imply that power is constant and growing: it speaks sharply of limits, mocks self-important illusions of control. "Here is the meeting place of the nature and the artificial, the ideal and the material, blurring boundaries with serene disregard. Here is not the bridge between the two cultures so much as the transcendence of them. In other words, here's more than science, it's the new humanities too, since I define humanities as the best and most important artifacts we are fashioning, whether structures to grasp the natural world or those to expredss and shape our own deepest longings. The computer, symbol processor as it is, is the essence of human truth, specific to the species." (284) AU - McCorduck, Pamela CY - New York DA - 1985 KW - computers Reagan administration artificial intelligence and biotechnology computers and the Internet strategic computing initiative Reagan administration, and artificial intelligence presidents and new media education computers, and education education, and computers military communication military communication, and strategic computing initiative supercomputers artificial intelligence computers computers, personal personal computers LB - 33920 PB - McGraw-Hill Book Company PY - 1985 ST - The Universal Machine: Confessions of a Technological Optimist TI - The Universal Machine: Confessions of a Technological Optimist ID - 3030 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - With regard to motion pictures, the most notable essay in this volume is Ellis Hawley's "Three Faces of Hooverian Associationalism: Lumber, Aviation, and Movies, 1921-1930." See under "Hawley, Ellis." AU - McCraw, Thomas K., ed. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1981 KW - context law law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and self-regulation context, and self-regulation regulation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and regulation censorship, and motion pictures censorship, and self-regulation associationalism, Hooverian regulation LB - 13350 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1981 ST - Regulation in Perspective: Historical Essays TI - Regulation in Perspective: Historical Essays ID - 507 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This interdisciplinary study combines history, social anthropology, sociology, and political science. It examines nationalism from several perspectives: classical and contemporary theories, ethnicity and nationalism, how nationalism influences the production of history, the nation-state and nationalism, nationalism in the colonial and post-colonial eras, and neo-nationalism and post-communist nationalism. The author concludes by looking to the future, raising the question why nationalism continues to grow even though its objective, the "nation-state," appears to be declining. "We live in an age of nationalism," McCrone writes, "but one which spends a lot of its energies denying that nationalism exists." It is significant in understanding the author's perspective in this work, McCrone says, to know that he is a Scot, although his book is not about Scottish nationalism. For readers interested in history, chapter 3, "Inventing the Past," deals with history and nationalism. It includes a section on "national iconography." AU - McCrone, David CY - London and New York DA - 1998 KW - post office nationalism photography preservation history, and new media +future and science fiction non-USA +postal service iconography icons history +nationalism and communication history, and nationalism history, invention of iconography, and nationalism iconography icons, and nationalism postal service, and nationalism postage stamps, and nationalism nationalism, and postage stamps +photography and visual communication nationalism, and history nationalism, and iconography nationalism, and poster service future, and nationalism nationalism, and future future LB - 4280 PB - Routledge PY - 1998 ST - The Sociology of Nationalism: Tomorrow's Ancestors TI - The Sociology of Nationalism: Tomorrow's Ancestors ID - 1816 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is part of Smithsonian History of Aviation Series. McCurdy writes of the early vision for the space program: “Since its beginnings, the U.S. space program has been motivated by a highly romantic dream. According to this vision of cosmic exploration, humans would leave the Earth’s surface and explore the universe, just as their ancestors had crossed oceans to investigate foreign lands. Space stations would ring the earth; humans would colonize the Moon and Mars. Rocket scientists would develop spaceships that could move through the void at incredible speeds. Space-age technologies would transform life back on Earth, bringing wealth and power to the nations that controlled the next frontier, and space-age explorers would solve the mysteries of the universe and reveal the mind of God. Much of this could be achieved, according to the vision, before the twenty-first century dawned." The government played an important role in attempting to bring this vision to reality. It created the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and central among its many functions was “the realization of the space faring dream.” Yet McCurdy observes, “some forty years into the venture, the reality of space exploration differs considerably from anticipated events.” The author is good on discussing ways in which science fiction turned into science fact, and on this level, the work is interesting. Much more could be said, though, on the way in which satellite communication and space-based research have changed human relations, expanded knowledge, and enhanced (or undermined) national power. AU - McCurdy, Howard E. CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1997 KW - R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) science nationalism public relations advertising research and development war future and science fiction war space communication propaganda aeronautics and space communication military communication satellites rocketry space travel NASA propaganda, and space program Cold War future science fiction nationalism and communication public relations advertising and public relations LB - 7640 PB - Smithsonian Institution Press PY - 1997 ST - Space and the American Imagination TI - Space and the American Imagination ID - 2133 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is a solid work, based on the financial library of Halsey, Stuart and Company, the manuscript collections at the Edison Laboratory National Monument, and other collections. AU - McDonald, Forrest CY - Chicago DA - 1962 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories networks +electricity biography Halsey, Stuart and Company networks, electrical Edison, Thomas public utilities LB - 4990 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1962 ST - Insull TI - Insull ID - 1886 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This biography of filmmaker Russ Meyer has some information on the camera technology he used. We learned, for example, that at age 14, Meyer received an 8mm movie camera and that he invested in 8mm equipment. (34-5) Meyer took classes at Eastman Kodak and at MGM's School of Motion Picture Photography where he learned about the 35mm Mitchell cameras. (36-7) As a combat photographers during World War II, he documented events "with Speed Graphic 4-by-5-inch still cameras and spring-loaded Eyemo 35mm silent motion picture machines." (41) In the filming of his 1959 movie The Immoral Mr. Teas, Meyer used "color Kodak film stock" and "hooked up with a man named Adrian Mosser, who had just developed a revolutionary liquid gate process that minimized emulsion scratches in 16mm to 35mm blow-ups." (99) The work has a bibliography and notes but the author eschews the traditional endnote format for a more confusing style. AU - McDonough, Jimmy CY - New York DA - 2005 KW - motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality Eastman Kodak motion pictures sexuality Meyer, Russ 8mm color motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures sexuality, and photography sexuality, and Russ Meyer photography and visual culture photography, and sexuality 16mm 35mm Kodak Kodak, and Russ Meyer cameras cameras, 35mm (Mitchell) photography LB - 34640 PB - Crown Publishers PY - 2005 ST - Big Bosoms and Square Jaws: The Biography of Russ Meyer, King of the Sex Film TI - Big Bosoms and Square Jaws: The Biography of Russ Meyer, King of the Sex Film ID - 3102 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This biography deals with one of the most powerful men in Hollywood. It covers Wasserman and the Music Corporation of America, which had among it clients the future U. S. President Ronald Reagan, Wasserman's control of Universal Pictures, and his relationship with Jack Valenti. Valent became president of Motion Picture Association of American in 1966 with Wasserman's backing. The work also chronicles Wasserman formidable political connections with John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others powerful figures in Washington, D. C. AU - McDougal, Dennis CY - New York DA - 1998 KW - music Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation corporations Johnson, Lyndon corporations corporations CARA Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories MCA Valenti, Jack presidents, and new media censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) motion pictures Johnson administration Hollywood law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack, and Lew Wasserman Music Corporation of America (MCA) rating system (U. S.), and Lew Wasserman Johnson, Lyndon, and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and Lyndon Johnson Universal Pictures Universal Pictures, and Lew Wasserman MCA, and Lew Wasserman Hollywood, and politics biography biography, and Lew Wasserman LB - 21180 PB - Crown Publishers, Inc. PY - 1998 ST - The Last Mogul: Lew Wasserman, MCA, and the Hidden History of Hollywood TI - The Last Mogul: Lew Wasserman, MCA, and the Hidden History of Hollywood ID - 919 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The Pulitzer-prize winning book deals with the space race between the United States and the USSR. McDougall sees the launching of Sputnik, and the exploration of space in general, as developments of enormous historical significance. The work is not focused per se on the communication and its consequences, but it is a very readable, informative account of the space and the Cold War. McDougall sees manned-space flight as a major turning point in history, comparable to animal life leaving the sea to live on land. "In A.D. 1961 Homo sapiens, ... left the realm of solids and gases and lived, for 108 minutes, in outer space.... The opening of the Space Age was another cleavage, more sharp than blunt, in natural history. It took an era for marine fugitives to populate the land. But by the end of the 1980s," McDougall predicted, "some human beings will be constantly in space, if only as scientists, soldier-spies, or telephone repairmen. By the middle of the next century human colonies may be populating earth's neighborhood. Of all the analogies contrived to convey the meaning of the Space Age, therefore, the amphibian adventure of the Devonian period is the most provacative." AU - McDougall, Walter A. CY - New York DA - 1985 KW - R & D USSR nationalism Nixon, Richard presidents, and new media preservation Nixon administration research and development war Kennedy administration Johnson administration history, and new media Eisenhower administration war non-USA history space communication research and development history +aeronautics and space communication +military communication +nationalism and communication satellites research and development, and space program research and development, and government support Cold War Soviet Union Sputnik Kennedy, John F. Eisenhower, Dwight D. Nixon, Richard Johnson, Lyndon space race history, break with research and development, and Sputnik Soviet Union, and space rocketry LB - 7650 PB - Basic Books, Inc. PY - 1985 ST -...The Heavens and the Earth: A Political History of the Space Age TI -...The Heavens and the Earth: A Political History of the Space Age ID - 2134 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 229-page book seeks to refute arguments made by such anti-pornography feminists as Catharine MacKinnon. McElroy begins her book by saying: “Pornography benefits women, both personally and politically.” Later she writes: “Sexually correct history considers the graphic depiction of sex to be the traditional and immutable enemy of women’s freedom. Exactly the opposite is true.” Part of the work is written in the first person and recounts the author’s personal experiences and investigation into the world of film pornography. While obviously a large part of this world involves such media as cable television and videotape, the author does not dwell on these topics in any detail. She does discuss pornography and the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, which she visited in 1994. The work has no bibliography and a brief four pages of endnotes. It does have an index. AU - McElroy, Wendy CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) homosexuality media effects magnetic recording photography women, and new media video videotape VCRs values religion sexuality motion pictures violence media violence violence videotape magnetic tape women feminism media effects law censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography pornography pornography, and women women women, and pornography violence and media violence, and pornography feminism, and anti-pornography pornography, and feminism Consumer Electronics Show Consumer Electronics Show, and pornography MacKinnon, Catharine pornography industry National Organization for Women (NOW) NOW obscenity censorship censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship homosexuality, and video video, and homosexuality video, and pornography +photography and visual communication communication effects media effects LB - 12150 PB - St. Martin's Press PY - 1995 ST - XXX: A Woman’s Right to Pornography TI - XXX: A Woman’s Right to Pornography ID - 2562 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Seeing America profiles five female photographers -- Doris Ulmann, Dorothea Lange, Marion Post Wolcott, Margaret Bourke-White, and Bernice Abbott -- working in the documentary tradition during the interwar years. McEuen employs biographical narrative to illustrate how each photographer framed her vision of America by using the camera to express a unique perspective. The book is comprised of an introduction, five chapters devoted to each photographer’s biography, and a conclusion. McEuen’s introduction sets the thematic framework for the rest of the book by contextualizing the role each photographer played in embracing the modern subject. She discusses key issues regarding their use of documentary photography as a vehicle for socially conscious expression, and in using the genre to advance their own agendas. In her subsequent chapters, McEuen probes into each women’s background, providing insight into how early life experiences played a significant role in their choice and portrayal of subjects. Additionally, McEuen considers the discrimination and prejudices the photographers had to contend with in both their personal and professional lives. -Michele Kroll AU - McEuen, Melissa A. CY - Lexington DA - 2000 KW - reform Roosevelt, Franklin D. photography Kroll, Michele +photography and visual communication photography, documentary photography, and New Deal Roosevelt, Franklin, and photography Ulmann, Doris Lange, Dorothea Wolcott, Marion Post Bourke-White, Margaret Abbott, Bernice photography, and reform reform, and photography Roosevelt, Franklin administration biography, and women photographers women women, and photography photography, and women biography LB - 28830 PB - University Press of Kentucky PY - 2000 ST - Seeing America: Women Photographers Between the Wars TI - Seeing America: Women Photographers Between the Wars ID - 2632 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work focuses on American Airlines and the Bank of America and explains how beginning in the 1950s they developed information technology designs that changed the way business was conducted and put their competitors at a disadvantage. AU - McKenney, James L., with Duncan C. Copeland CY - Boston DA - c1995 KW - computers corporations corporations preservation communication revolution history, and new media computers history history general studies capitalism communication revolution computers, and capitalism information age American Airlines Bank of America capitalism, and electronic media history, break with air travel +computers and the Internet capitalism, and computers +aeronautics and space communication transportation LB - 850 PB - Harvard Business School Press PY - 1995 ST - Waves of Change: Business Evolution through Information Technology TI - Waves of Change: Business Evolution through Information Technology ID - 1481 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - McKibben writes that “We believe that we live in the ‘age of information,’ that there has been an information ‘explosion,’ an information ‘revolution.’ While in a certain narrow sense this is the case, in many important ways just the opposite is true. We also live at a moment of deep ignorance, when vital knowledge that humans have always possessed about who we are and where we live seems beyond our reach. An Unenlightenment. An age of missing information.” This interesting book tries to show what kinds of non-related information is jammed together when someone watches television all day. The author recorded everything on 90-plus cable stations for a day or so. He contrasted this TV world with the natural world and shows how television distorts experience and leaves out important experiences that we should have in the real world. Television cultivates a “sense of hipness,” he said. We know at some level that most of what we see is “stupid” but we watch because it gives of a sense of superiority because we know it is stupid. --SV McKibben is concerned primarily with the impact of television. Writing from an environmentalist’s perspective, he laments the loss of contact with the “real world” that is, he says, a product of immersion in television’s virtual reality. The missing information in the title refers to the deep, contextual understanding viewers don’t acquire when subjected to television’s bombardment of unrelated bits of data. --Gordon Jackson AU - McKibben, Bill CY - New York DA - 1992 KW - television, and values preservation history, and new media community democracy history values history +television television and culture history, break with history, and television values, and television democracy and media critics television, and democracy democracy, and television Jackson, Gordon television, and reality television, and virtual reality virtual reality, and television virtual reality LB - 7130 PB - Random House PY - 1992 ST - The Age of Missing Information TI - The Age of Missing Information ID - 2084 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The history of sexuality in twentieth-century western society is not a story of gradual progression to more liberal attitudes and a greater acceptance of sex, notes Angus McLaren, a professor of history at the University of Victoria and author of Impotence: a Cultural History, as well as other books dealing with masculinity. It is more nuanced than that; McLaren says he is “interested in the more complex question of how the lines dividing private and public realms were repeatedly drawn, fought over and redrawn." (p.3) Using the social constructionist framework, McLaren makes the case that sexuality is intimately intertwined with other social concerns such as the jockeying of power in the realms of race, class, and gender. This argument is, of course, nothing new, and is exactly what you would expect a professor writing in the late-1990s to argue, but this is not a theory-heavy book. McLaren has a more holistic argument that “Sexuality has long remained such a sensitive issue…because it was colonized, exploited, and employed as a code word for other concerns." (p.6) In short, societies create sexual “others” to pigeonhole different groups who were threatening, in the view of those in power, to the social order. McLaren employs an eclectic blend of sources: films, Kinsey’s research, marriage manuals, various autobiographies (e.g., Margaret Sanger), other books on the history of sexuality, quantitative studies of venereal disease, abortion and divorce and a host of other secondary sources. He starts his book with World War I and the fear that the war had unleashed a torrent of unbridled sexuality. Some of this fear was based on fact. Soldiers were caught in circle jerks, the British army identified 400,000 cases of venereal disease in their troops, many soldiers visited prostitutes, and some women back home did cheat on their spouses who were at war. But, he argues, “the sexual fears engendered by the war were greatly exaggerated" (p.15) because of the changing society. The fear-mongers were worried that male dominance would weaken because so many men were at war, and that the relations between men and women would be changed by the war. The war did cause more people to discuss sexuality openly (due to all the venereal disease), but it did not suddenly cause a liberalization of mores. He makes similar arguments about sexual panics and revolutions that happened throughout the rest of the twentieth century. They were based partly in truth, but exaggerated by various groups in order to keep other groups down. In one of his best chapters, he discusses the eroticization of marriage by birth control pioneers Marie Stopes and Margaret Sanger, who although helping to liberate women from the chains of pregnancy, inadvertently replaced the dictates of motherhood with the need for absolute sexual fulfillment in order to keep a marriage successful (with the added onerous task of multiple simultaneous orgasms). Like most books on the history of sexuality, McLaren’s includes the requisite sections on Freud, Masters and Johnson, Kinsey, and Hugh Hefner. What makes his book unique, however, is that he unpacks the myths that have been built up around these historical figures, and reveals that Freud was not a promoter of sexual liberation, etc. Also, he makes an interesting point that some of the Nazis’ views on sexuality -- that sterilization should be employed, for example -- were in line with the general philosophies of the time. -Hallie Liberman AU - McLaren, Angus CY - Oxford, UK DA - 1999 KW - Lieberman, Hallie sexuality women sexuality, and women women, and sexuality sexuality, and men sexuality, and prostitution pornography sexuality, and pornography pornography, and history of sexuality, and history of motion pictures, and pornography television, and pornography television motion pictures non-USA non-USA, and sexuality sexuality, and non-USA sexuality, and Margaret Sanger Sanger, Margaret sexuality, and abortion sexuality, and censorship censorship and rating censorship, and sexuality sexuality, and venereal disease sexuality, and Sigmund Freud Freud, Sigmund, and sexuality war war, and sexuality sexuality, and World War I World War I, and sexuality sexuality, and Hugh Hefner Hefner, Hugh sexuality, and Kinsey sexuality, and Masters and Johnson media effects sexuality, and media effects media effects, and sexuality sexuality, and birth control sexuality, and marriage sexuality, and divorce sexuality, and Marie Stopes censorship Freud, Sigmund World War I war LB - 33310 PB - Blackwell Publishers PY - 1999 ST - Twentieth-Century Sexuality: A History TI - Twentieth-Century Sexuality: A History ID - 89 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work contains several statements and addresses from Pope Pius XII on new communications. Among the topics covered are space flight and satellites, technology, and propaganda (which includes the press, cinema, sound broadcasting, and television). An “Exhortation to the Italian Episcopate,” on January 1, 1954, deals with television. Pope Pius XII speculated that television might strengthen family life. Before TV, sporting events and motion pictures required one to leave the home. But television offered “the whole family with an opportunity for honest diversion together, away from bad company and dangerous places.” Pius XII also commented on television’s potential for spreading the gospel. Pages 351-59 (“Sources”) have a helpful list of papal encyclicals and addresses (with dates) on many topics including radio, television, and cinema. This work predates the major 1957 papal encyclical on such modern media as cinema, radio, and television. AU - McLaughlin, P. J. CY - New York DA - 1957 KW - home sound entertainment, home values Christianity television, and home References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps public relations advertising propaganda values motion pictures home entertainment values religion censorship and ratings law censorship and ratings non-USA home, and new media home religion home, and information technology media information technology general studies religion , and new media Catholic Church Vatican Pope Pius XII press motion pictures and popular culture sound, and broadcasting television entertainment and media entertainment, and morality Italy papal encyclicals media convergence information technology and family information technology and home radio censorship, and Catholic Church motion pictures, and values satellites aeronautics and space communication censorship children, and media children entertainment home, and motion pictures home, and new media Pope Pius XII, and new media propaganda, and new media television, and values home, and television timelines timelines, and Catholic Church on media sound recording advertising and public relations LB - 860 PB - Philosophical Library PY - 1957 ST - The Church and Modern Science TI - The Church and Modern Science ID - 1482 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is an examination of what McLuhan termed the “folklore of industrial man.” Present in advertising, entertainment, news, and other forms, McLuhan addressed specific examples of this folklore at work by devoting short analyses that only begin to touch the surface of different examples of folklore. “The various ideas and concepts introduced in the commentaries are intended to provide positions from which to examine the exhibits. They are not conclusions in which anybody is expected to rest but are intended merely as points of departure.” (p.vi) Throughout Mechanical Bride McLuhan details the processes and instances through which man has become “mechanized” and industrialized, via the subtle messages held in cultural objects. Jumping from one example to the next, his commentaries are somewhat similar to Goffman’s analyses of the “hidden” messages contained in magazine advertising. There exists a surface meaning, but the true meaning is latent. Upon further examination, however, one can discover new layers of meaning. Essentially each piece of our culture, whether it be Superman, Coca Cola, or Time magazine, has additional layers of messages and meaning based on their structure, style, or look that McLuhan begins to flesh out and examine more deeply. Although there appears to be minimal organization to the book, the underlying theme persisting through each of Mcluhan’s criticisms is the simplification of history and literature, the commodification of people and status, and the mechanization of humans and their lives. --Michael Boyle McLuhan argued for the value of studying advertisements to become more aware of cultural messages they send and thereby counteract the influence they exert. He presents a series of case studies of advertising campaigns designed to create images to sell products or ideas to consumers. --Phil Glende Marshall McLuhan uses examples from popular culture of the late 1940s and early 1950s to tell a story about industrialization and how it has affected the desires and drives of Americans. The book is divided into chapters that are centered on an ad (usually, but sometimes it is a comic book character or book) that he uses as a jumping off point to discuss how mechanization has affected, sex, education, politics and human nature in general. Drawing on philosophy, art, and literature, he makes the case that popular culture needs to be studied and understood in order for its impact (the dumbing down of culture) to be lessened. Unlike other media critics of the time, McLuhan doesn’t despise popular culture and advertisements, nor does he love them, but he takes them seriously and analyzes them as if they were works of art. The front page of The New York Times is like a cubist painting, he says, and advertisers have replaced professors as repositories of eloquence. Mechanization has sublimated people’s sex drives, leading them to delight in the gore of violent novels and comic books. As sex and technology become intertwined, sex loses what made it so fun to began with: it’s humanity. McLuhan sends out an urgent call that media needs to be rigorously studied, and The Mechanical Bride is an exemplar of accessible, enlightening, intelligent media studies research. Of the modern newspaper, McLuhan says: “But any paper today is a collective work of art, a daily ‘book’ of industrial man, an Arabian Night’s entertainment in which a thousand and one astonishing tales are being told by an anonymous narrator to an equally anonymous audience." (3) McLuhan comments on the impact of newspapers on global understanding and provincialism. “That huge landscape of the human family which is achieved by simply setting side by side disconnected items from China to Peru presents a daily image both of the complexity and similarity of human affairs which, in its total effect, is tending to abolish any provincial outlook." (3) He goes on to say that "Quite independently of good or bad editorial policies, the ordinary man is now accustomed to human-interest stories from every part of the globe. The sheer technique of world-wide newsgathering has created a new state of mind which as little to do with local or national political opinion. So even the frequent sensational absurdity and unreliability of the news cannot annul the total effect, which is to enforce a deep sense of human solidarity.” (3) -Hallie Lieberman AU - McLuhan, Marshall CY - New York: Boston DA - 1951; 1970 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations preservation journalism entertainment news and journalism values media media Glende, Phil advertising values, and advertising media literacy capitalism popular culture mass media Boyle, Michael history, and new media entertainment, and reality critics folklore advertising, and hidden messages news, and folklore history news sexuality sexuality, and technology cultural imperialism non-USA Canada books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and popular culture news and journalism news, and popular culture democracy newspapers, and democracy democracy, and newspapers Lieberman, Hallie LB - 9300 PB - Vanguard Press; Beacon Press PY - 1970 ST - The Mechanical Bride: Folklore of Industrial Man TI - The Mechanical Bride: Folklore of Industrial Man ID - 24 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - There are a number of interesting quotations and observations to be found here, especially in chapter one entitled “Medium is the Message.” In Part II, chapters are devoted to the spoken word, the written word, Roads and Paper Routes, Clocks, Print, Comics, “The Printed Word: The Architect of Nationalism,” the Photograph, Ads, Telegraph, the Typewriter, the Telephone, the Phonograph, Movies, Radio, Television, and “Weapons: War of Icons.” A fascinating combination of keen insights and hot air. AU - McLuhan, Marshall CY - New York DA - 1964 KW - R & D McLuhan, Marshall entertainment nationalism entertainment, home photography advertising, and public relations time and timekeeping propaganda public relations print democracy and media democracy news and journalism labor motion pictures research and development war communication revolution home entertainment materials timekeeping, and clocks war non-USA home, and new media home office printing printing press +sound recording office, and information technology home, and information technology media information technology iconography icons general studies advertising medium is the message clocks timekeeping oral communication words writing +transportation paper printing press comic books +nationalism and communication +photography and visual communication +telegraph typewriters +telephones phonograph +motion pictures and popular culture radio television icons +military communication media convergence communication revolution global communication information age clothing information technology and home information technology and office clocks bicycles automobiles press wheel icons automation icons, and military communication military communication, and icons home, and new media office, and new media nationalism, and print culture +sound recording military, and new media military, and iconography nationalism, and iconography materials hot and cool media LB - 880 PB - McGraw-Hill PY - 1964 ST - Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man TI - Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man ID - 1484 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - McLuhan and Fiore assert that media consumption is lifelong, internalized and processed more or less automatically. They argue that media are pervasive in their personal, political, economic, aesthetic, psychological, moral, ethical and social consequences and that they leave no person untouched, unaffected and unaltered. --Phil Glende AU - McLuhan, Marshall, and Quentin Fiore CY - New York DA - 1967 KW - McLuhan, Marshall advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations consumerism values media medium is the message Glende, Phil advertising media effects values, and media capitalism, and mass media consumers capitalism LB - 9310 PB - Bantam Books PY - 1967 ST - The Medium is the Massage: An Inventory of Effects TI - The Medium is the Massage: An Inventory of Effects ID - 2298 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This was a Marshall McLuhan’s last collaborative book. Using such terms as visual space, acoustic space, and tetrad, McLuhan and Powers explain and assess the impact of technologies on society. According to them, all media forms intensify, make obsolete, retrieve, and reverse something in a culture. AU - McLuhan, Marshall and Bruce R. Powers CY - New York DA - 1989 KW - McLuhan, Marshall communication revolution non-USA general studies global communication global village communication revolution information age medium is the message Third World LB - 870 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1989 ST - The Global Village: Transformation in World Life and Media in the 21st Century TI - The Global Village: Transformation in World Life and Media in the 21st Century ID - 1483 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - “Two major goals have guided my work on this centennial volume of electrical engineering in America,” McMahon writes. “First, I have sought to identify the cluster of engineering values that has gathered around the organizations of professional electrical engineering, namely the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and its predecessor bodies, the American Institute of Electrical Engineers and the Institute of Radio Engineers.” McMahon concentrates, therefore, “on the object that has historically concerned the engineering societies themselves: the state of the profession.” Second, in addition to dealing with professionalism, the author tries to explain “the main currents in the history of the profession, from the rough beginnings in telegraphy before the Civil War and the emergence of an embryonic electric lighting and power industry in the late nineteenth century to the rise of an ubiquitous electronics and the organizational merger of the discipline in the late twentieth century.” Although this book starts with the telegraph, McMahon agues that “the profession took off when electric power emerged as a technical field and an industrial pursuit during the decade prior to the founding of the AIEE in 1884. By the 1910's, when the power industry was well established, radio had entered its second decade of fundamental development, leading to the founding of the Institute of Radio Engineers in 1912. Maturing between the world wars, radio broadcasting gave way in the 1930's to the rise of electronics, as hundreds of new uses were found for the vacuum tube. The final technical events that frame this history rested on the commitment to military scientific and technological research and development made during World War II and after. Among the results of that new departure were the commercialization of nuclear energy in the 1950's and, more momentously, the microelectronics revolution that has channeled the profession’s main interests since midcentury.” AU - McMahon, A. Michal CY - New York DA - 1984 KW - R & D atomic power corporations corporations corporations corporations corporations transistors, and integrated circuits research and development war communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution materials materials war World War II World War I research and development professionalization networks microelectronics +electricity World War II, and research and development research and development, and government support +military communication microelectronics revolution vacuum tubes professionalization, and electrical engineering +telegraph networks, electrical electricity, and history of +radio Institute of Radio Engineers atomic energy transistors integrated circuits +radio engineering, electrical IEEE World War I, and radio electronic media Terman, Frederick Western Union American Institute of Electrical Engineers (see: AIEE) AIEE AT & T Beard, Charles A., and technological revolution communication revolution, and Charles A. Beard Bell Telephone Company Bush, Vannevar Edison, Thomas De Forest, Lee education, and electrical engineering Insull, Samuel networks, electrical research and development, and World War I research and development, and World War II microwaves RCA Ryder, John D. Sarnoff, David Bell Laboratories communication revolution education engineering LB - 5000 PB - IEEE Press [The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.] PY - 1984 ST - The Making of a Profession: A Century of Electrical Engineering in America TI - The Making of a Profession: A Century of Electrical Engineering in America ID - 1887 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work was originally a 366-page Ph.D. thesis in Speech and Theater completed at Ohio State University in 1959. It was published as part of Arno Press's Dissertations in Broadcasting. AU - McMahon, Robert Sears CY - New York DA - (1959), 1979 KW - Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulation law regulation +television FCC regulation, and television Ph. D. thesis theses censorship and ratings LB - 10780 PB - Arno Press PY - 1979 ST - The Federal Regulation of the Radio and Television Broadcast Industry in the United States, 1927-1959: With Special Reference to the Establishment and Operation of Workable Administrative Standards TI - The Federal Regulation of the Radio and Television Broadcast Industry in the United States, 1927-1959: With Special Reference to the Establishment and Operation of Workable Administrative Standards ID - 2441 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Striptease Culture: sex, media, and the democratization of desire is divided into three sections: Cultural sexualization: from pornosphere to public sphere, sexual representation, and the aesthetics of sexual transgression. In the first section, the author, Brian McNair, a reader in film and media studies at the University of Sterling, argues that Western culture in the twentieth and early twenty-first century is riding a second wave of porno-chic; the first, being the 1970’s wave represented by Deep Throat and Behind the Green Door, and other hip and trendy porn films that lent a hint of respectability to the pornographic world. This second wave is represented not by a direct interest in pornography at face value, “but the representation of porn in non-pornographic art and culture; the pastiche and parody of, the homage to and investigation of porn; the postmodern transformation of porn into mainstream cultural artifact for a variety of purposes including…advertising, art, comedy, and education (p. 61).” The appearance of Boogie Nights, The People vs. Larry Flynt, and Madonna’s Sex book are given as examples. In addition, McNair argues that the public sphere (in the Habermas sense) has been sexualized, and a “striptease culture” has developed in which “regular” people, non-celebrities, are baring their innermost sexual secrets on talk shows, reality shows, and documentaries, and politicians are being forced into detailing their sexual lives on TV (Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky). In this section he gives a history of pornography from Aretino’s Sonnets in the 16th century to the early 21st century’s internet porn and lad magazines. The emergence of both a second wave of porno-chic and striptease culture are positive developments, according to McNair, because they allow for formerly repressed groups such as gays and lesbians and women to be represented and discussed in the media and it allows their lives to be seen as normal. Also, striptease culture does not just show the sexuality of those with ideal body types, but also the sexuality of normal people. Porno-chic has been driven by consumer culture, and has led to the public being more comfortable with discussions of sex, which McNair sees as a good thing. He believes that “porno-chic…might be viewed as an index of the sexual maturation of contemporary capitalist societies, rather than a measure of their degeneration into sleaze (p. 87), because as porno-chic expands, there are more public discussions about sexuality. In the second section, McNair argues that the mass media are actually playing a role in causing positive social change and leading to a greater acceptance of women’s sexuality, homosexuality, and more flexible and less patriarchal notions of masculinity. He believes that the media can be a lens through which to study sexuality because they “reveal what sexual and behavioral norms are in a given society at a given moment (p.111),” they describe the ideology of sex and gender, and they disseminate ideas about sex that consumers are able to accept or reject by choosing whether or not to open their wallets. Sex and sexual transgression in art makes up the final section. McNair posits that erotic art is freeing to sexuality and can lead to “the democratization of desire.” He explains that there have been two main eras of sexually transgressive art: modernist and late modernist/ postmodernist. The modernist era was highly influenced by Sade, and can be typified by Man Ray, Bataille, and Picasso. It was a period of misogynistic masculine sexuality that delved into sexual fantasy and the role of disgust in it. Lars Von Trier, Jeff Koons, and David Cronenberg typify the postmodernist/late modernist period. This art critiques patriarchy, and blurs the lines between art and pornography; porn is shown to be beautiful. McNair also discusses gay artists’ influence on the democratization of gay sexuality, using Robert Mapplethorpe and Keith Haring as the main examples. Finally, he examines the rise of the female erotic artists that have shattered the dogmatic notions of femininity and demonstrated that there is no one “right” way for female sexuality to be depicted in art. In this sense it has opened up the conception of what femininity is. Overall, McNair’s thesis is that consumer culture and the media are positive forces that lead to a general acceptance of marginalized groups, as well as the celebration of a wide range of sexual practices. -Hallie Lieberman AU - McNair, Brian CY - London DA - 2002 KW - computers Lieberman, Hallie sexuality women pornography women, and pornography pornography, and women sexuality, and women women, and sexuality pornography, and mainstream media sexuality, and gender sexuality, and homosexuality homosexuality television television, and sexuality sexuality, and television motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures computers and the Internet pornography, and art sexuality, and art Mapplethrope, Robert sexuality, and privacy privacy privacy, and sexuality sexuality, and Internet Internet, and sexuality privacy, and Internet Internet, and privacy Internet motion pictures LB - 33290 PB - Routledge Books PY - 2002 ST - Striptease Culture: Sex, Media, and the Democratization of Desire TI - Striptease Culture: Sex, Media, and the Democratization of Desire ID - 87 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work provides introductions to several areas of communication history. Examples include Chapter 12, “Aeronautics,” by J. A. Bagley; Chapter 13, “Spaceflight,” by John Griffiths; Chapter 14, “Language, Writing, Printing and Graphic Arts,” by Lance Day; Chapter 15, “Information, Timekeeping, Computing, Telecommunications and Audiovisual Technologies,” by Herbert Ohlman; and Chapter 20, “Public Utilities,” by R. A. Buchanan. See under individual author’s in the appropriate topical category. AU - McNeil, Ian, ed. CY - London and New York DA - 1990 KW - graphic design computers photography time and timekeeping space communication print timekeeping, and clocks general studies +aeronautics and space communication space travel aeronautics language writing printing +photography and visual communication graphic arts information age timekeeping calculating machines +computers and the Internet telecommunications audiovisual technology public utilities rocketry LB - 11560 PB - Routledge PY - 1990 ST - An Encyclopaedia of the History of Technology TI - An Encyclopaedia of the History of Technology ID - 1485 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Although the Third World nations had tried to shake off the West’s colonialism by the middle of twentieth century, they continued to fear colonialism because of continuously advancing electronic information technology. In response, they built a “New World Information and Communication Order” through the assistance of UNESCO, to improve global media environment and international information flow in the 1990s. Communication researchers need to devote more attention to this issue. -- Amy Chu AU - McPhail, Thomas L. (translated by Chi-Ron Cheng) CY - Taipei, Taiwan DA - 1994 KW - nationalism imperialism United Nations Third World non-USA Chu, Amy Third World, and new media cultural imperialism colonialism, and new media +nationalism and communication nationalism, and cultural imperialism nationalism, and electronic media UNESCO New World Information Order colonialism LB - 570 PB - Yuan liu chu ban gong si PY - 1994 ST - Electronic Colonialism: The Future of International Broadcasting and Communication (Tiantsi chiming dikuo) TI - Electronic Colonialism: The Future of International Broadcasting and Communication (Tiantsi chiming dikuo) ID - 145 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book sets out the author's views, in non-technical language, about major issues accompanying the "shift from print toward electronics in publishing." The work has seventeen chapters. For example, chapter three examines the book in the context of media history, and chapter four looks as "The Special Place of Books and Writing in Our Culture." Chapter five considers differences between analogy and digital media. Chapter sixteen is entitled "Thinking about the Future." AU - Meadow, Charles T. CY - Lanham, MD and London DA - 1998 KW - computers information theory corporations corporations discs, compact print print culture materials materials education compact discs (CDs) CDs law analog media media convergence Shannon, Claude +books, periodicals, newspapers books, and electronic publishing analog v. digital print v. digital books, and new media CDs +computers and the Internet education, and electronic publishing hypertext Microsoft Corporation +radio +telegraph regulation, and communication +telephones +television books, and television television, and books World Wide Web books regulation censorship and ratings Internet LB - 410 PB - Scarecrow Press, Inc. PY - 1998 ST - Ink into Bits: A Web of Converging Media TI - Ink into Bits: A Web of Converging Media ID - 129 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book offers a survey of interactive media systems that existed in 1970. The work is a "survey and is not intended as an exhaustive text." It introduces readers "to the elements, methods, and problems of interactive systems and is tutorial in tone. It is intended for both users and designers of conversational systems: those who actually operate them as well as those who design the overall systems in which they are used." (x) It is also aimed at librarians, writers, lawyers, teachers, and design engineers. The 422-page work is divided into three parts. "Part I covers the basic elements of interactive systems: the hardware, or mechanical devices used in man-machine communication; computer programming; computer time-sharing; and natural language processing. Part II covers basic systems that are fully interactive programming systems, of significance in themselves but often found as components of larger systems. Finally, in Part III, we consider a representative set of advanced applications and conclude with a summary of the major problems of man-machine communication systems and a preview of what is to come." (xi) The work has both an author and subject index. AU - Meadow, Charles T. CY - New York DA - [1970] KW - information processing computers corporations corporations artificial intelligence and biotechnology computers and the Internet remote sensing information storage information retrieval media convergence computers, analog computers, digital digital media graphic design IBM computer programming computers, and time-sharing Licklider, J. C. R. Bush, Vannevar Fano, R. M. computers Information Age LB - 33910 PB - Wiley-Interscience ST - Man-Machine Communication TI - Man-Machine Communication ID - 3029 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Motion picture critic Michael Medved is strongly critics of the way movies and other popular entertainment portray traditional cultural values in America. During the 1980s, for example, Hollywood revealed an “anticlerical impulse,” he said. He discusses several films with an anti-religious tone. AU - Medved, Michael CY - New York DA - 1992 KW - conservatives self-regulation Production Code values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) motion pictures Mahony, Roger Hollywood consumerism values religion +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and religion values values, and motion pictures conservatives, and motion pictures motion pictures, and value motion pictures, and critics motion pictures, and conservatives Hollywood, and religion Hollywood, and critics Hollywood, and conservatives Production Code, (1992) Mahony, Roger, and production code (1992) Christianity Catholic Church LB - 24300 PB - HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. PY - 1992 ST - Hollywood vs. America: Popular Culture and the War on Traditional Values TI - Hollywood vs. America: Popular Culture and the War on Traditional Values ID - 1077 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is based on several primary collections in the National Archives, Library of Congress, MIT’s Special Collections, and the Naval Historical Center. Its story includes some discussion of radar, sonar, Vannevar Bush, and the role of scientific development during the war. AU - Meigs, Montgomery C. CY - Washington, D.C. DA - 1990 KW - U. S. Navy R & D research and development war government war World War II research and development +military communication radar sonar Bush, Vannevar World War II, and research and development research and development, and World War II U. S. Navy, and communication LB - 6050 PB - National Defense University Press, Fort Lesley J. McNair PY - 1990 ST - Slide Rules and Submarines: American Scientists and Subsurface Warfare in World War II TI - Slide Rules and Submarines: American Scientists and Subsurface Warfare in World War II ID - 1989 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a collection of essays written by film maker Jonas Mekas. He wrote about the revolutionary potential of these media for The Village Voice. In 1964, for example, he predicted that 16mm and 8mm would soon provide “private home cinema” and thus give avant-garde films an entrée into American living rooms. Already by 1965, he wrote, that private individuals were providing “a completely new market” for underground pictures. The following year he proposed using 8mm film to develop an alternative journalism that would expose American involvement in Vietnam, combat Southern racism, and unmask inhumane conditions in prisons and asylums. AU - Mekas, Jonas CY - New York DA - 1972 KW - entertainment underground cinema pornography nationalism entertainment, home underground newspapers underground media underground press underground films journalism law censorship and ratings censorship news and journalism home, and new media home motion pictures motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and underground newspapers newspapers underground newspapers, and motion pictures pornography, and underground films pornography, and underground newspapers censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and morality +nationalism and communication 8mm 8mm film, and newsreels 16mm 16mm films, and newsreels news, and 8mm film news, and underground film home entertainment home, and new media home, and 8mm film 8mm film, and home motion pictures, and home underground films, and home home entertainment, and 8mm film motion pictures, and critics motion pictures, and reform home, and 8mm film home, and 16mm film news 16mm film LB - 18180 PB - Macmillan Company PY - 1972 ST - Movie Journal: The Rise of the New American Cinema, 1959-1971 TI - Movie Journal: The Rise of the New American Cinema, 1959-1971 ID - 727 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Mellerio was one of the first writers to see the growing use of color lithography during the 1890s and that it was a valid movement of avant-garde artists. He believed this movement would have social impact and future influence. This work is reprinted in Phillip Dennis Cate and Sinclair Hamilton Hitchings, The Color Revolution: Color Lithography in France, 1890-1900 (Santa Barbara and Salt Lake City: Peregrine Smith, Inc., 1978), 77-99. Cate provides a biography of Mellerio (pp. 73-74). AU - Mellerios, André CY - Paris DA - 1898 KW - illustrations Chicago, IL photography non-USA photography and visual communication prints lithography lithography, color France France, and color lithography prints, and color lithography Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri de illustrations color, and posters posters prints, and printmaking Bonnard, Pierre Chéret, Jules chromolithography posters, late 19th century posters, and Toulouse-Lautrec posters, and France posters, and France (late 19th century) posters, and color color Chéret, Jules LB - 12090 PB - Publication de L'estampe et l'affiche PY - 1898 ST - La Lithographie originale en couleurs (Original Color Lithography) (translated by Margaret Needham) TI - La Lithographie originale en couleurs (Original Color Lithography) (translated by Margaret Needham) ID - 2556 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This collection of essays grew out of a conference in late March, 1978, at Simon Fraser University devoted to the significance of Harold A. Innis’s work and to research following in the Innis tradition during the generation after his death. Contributors include Donald Creighton (“Harold Adams Innis – an Appraisal”), S. D. Clark (“The Contribution of H. A. Innis to Canadian Scholarship”), William Westfall (“The Ambivalent Verdict: Harold Innis and Canadian History”), Mel Watkins (“The Staple Theory Revisited”), James W. Carey (“Culture, Geography, and Communications: The World of Harold Innis in an American Context”), Horace M. Gray (“Reflections on Innis and Institutional Economics”), Dallas W. Smythe (“Communications: Blindspot of Economics”), Ian Parker (“Innis, Marx, and the Economics of Communications....”), Robin F. Neill (“Imperialism and the Staple Theory of Canadian Economic Development: The Historical Perspective”), Irene M. Spry (“Overhead Costs, Rigidities of Productive Capacity and the Price System”), Arlon R. Tussing (“Implications of Oil and Gas Development for Alaska”), Peter J. Usher (“Staple Production and Ideology in Northern Canada”), Liora Salter (“‘Public’ and Mass Media in Canada: Dialectics in Innis’ Communication Analysis”), Gail Guthrie Valaskakis (“The Other Side of Empire: Contact and Communication in Southern Baffin Island”), Donald F. Theall (“Exploration in Communications since Innis”), David Crowley (“Harold Innis and the Modern Perspective of Communications”), and Paul Heyer (“Innis and the History of Communication: Antecedents, Parallels, and Unsuspected Biases”). AU - Mellody, William H. AU - Salter, Liora AU - Paul Heyer, eds. CY - Norwood, N. J. DA - 1981 KW - nationalism non-USA Innis, Harold communication, and empire Canada Canada, and Harold Innis Carey, James geography, and communications communication, and geography economics, and communications communication, and economics communication, history of political economy nationalism and communication geography LB - 12540 PB - Ablex Publishing Corporation PY - 1981 ST - Culture, Communication, and Dependency: The Tradition of H. A. Innis TI - Culture, Communication, and Dependency: The Tradition of H. A. Innis ID - 2601 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Melosi, Martin V. CY - Glenview, IL DA - 1990 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories networks motion pictures innovation +electricity biography Edison, Thomas networks, electrical phonograph motion pictures and popular culture inventors inventions +sound recording LB - 5010 PY - 1990 ST - Thomas A. Edison and the Modernization of America TI - Thomas A. Edison and the Modernization of America ID - 1888 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this report prepared for the Sloan Commission on Cable Communications, Mendelsohn asserts that cable television technology allowed for the possibility of creating a network to better serve the needs of the working class. He argues that the system must be operated by people with working class backgrounds and interests to establish “legitimacy and authenticity.” He cites three reasons: the emergence of a system operated by “persons of that sub-culture would offer evidence of the genuine and serious concern that the so-called outside world has for working people;” the so-called Neglected Majority would begin to have a voice of its own and the community at large could become acquainted with the “needs, grievances, and problems that are experienced by working status people;” and the existence of such a system would serve as an “alternative career opportunity model to working people who feel themselves to be predestined to follow in the traditional footsteps of their fathers.” --Phil Glende AU - Mendelsohn, Harold CY - np DA - 1971 KW - community democracy reform Glende, Phil labor Sloan Commission labor, and Sloan Commission Sloan Commission, and labor +television television, and cable television, and labor labor, and cable television democracy, and cable television television, and democracy democracy and media reform, and cable television television, and reform LB - 1050 N1 - See also: office PB - np PY - 1971 ST - The Neglected Majority: Mass Communications and the Working Person TI - The Neglected Majority: Mass Communications and the Working Person ID - 193 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The publication of the term “manifest destiny” in 1845 was a reflection of an attitude that the United States inevitably would occupy the continent, from ocean to ocean if not from the arctic north to the tropical south. The question whether this attitude reflected the majority of the population, and politicians, or merely a vocal minority is intriguing. Great public and political debates raged regarding the feasibility, morality, and wisdom of territorial expansion when other nationalities were affected. Absorption of the resident Indian populace was never an important issue, because it was taken for granted that Indians were to be pushed aside. Rather, the orators and essayists were active when the issues were the annexation of Texas, conquest of territory governed by Mexico, potential conquest of Mexico itself, and, eventually, acquisition of territory in the Caribbean and Pacific. Also relevant was an interocean canal. However, the appeal of manifest destiny seems to have been limited. Expansion occurred only after much debate and with trepidation. Quickly, too, expansion ceased: after 1899, the United States acquired no more possessions. What did endure, though, was the belief that America had a special mission to spread democracy to the world. --James Landers Merk argued that technological changes in communication and transportation were of great significance in the spread of manifest destiny. “Of major importance in the growth of Manifest Destiny were technological changes, including those that transformed transportation and communication. The steam engine had come into its own in river, ocean, and land travel. From distant territories to the center of government travel time by water had been sensationally reduced. On land railroads had proved themselves practical. . . . Railroads would, in the near future, bind the Pacific, the Mississippi Valley, and the Great Lakes in one iron clasp. . . . The success of Morse’s magnetic telegraph fired the public imagination. . . . Electricity and steam had annihilated space and time as limitations on God’s will.” The press, especially newspapers, spread ideas about manifest destiny. Merk argued that “a doctrine needs more than a set of favorable conditions to propel it into orbit. It needs means of dissemination to keep it in the air, and in this respect the doctrine of Manifest Destiny was well served. It was disseminated by the agencies of mass propaganda, of which the press was the most important. . . . “[The penny press] was the chief purveyor of Manifest Destiny to the nation. More persistent than even the organs of the Polk administration it spread the doctrine. And its influence extended deep into the interior, where its exciting and well-written editorials were copied widely by journals of lesser rank. Manifest Destiny was a product, thus, of many forces, and the vigor with which it was disseminated was a product of others almost as numerous and powerful.” --SV AU - Merk, Frederick CY - Westport, CT DA - 1963, 1983 KW - nationalism journalism news and journalism newspapers news +nationalism and communication +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and manifest destiny American mission penny press, and manifest destiny +telegraph telegraph, and manifest destiny +transportation transportation, and steam +electricity electricity, and manifest destiny American exceptionalism penny press Landers, James nationalism, and mission nationalism, and new media nationalism, and press nationalism, and transportation nationalism, and Penny Press Penny Press, and nationalism nationalism, and telegraph LB - 10050 PB - Greenwood Press PY - 1963 ST - Manifest Destiny and Mission in American History: A Reinterpretation TI - Manifest Destiny and Mission in American History: A Reinterpretation ID - 2370 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Meyerowitz's essay in this anthology ( “Beyond the Feminine Mystique: A Reassessment of Postwar Mass Culture, 1946-1958") perhaps speaks most directly to the connection between mass media -- especially magazines, motion pictures, and other forms of popular culture -- and society's values. She writes: "When I first began research on the postwar era, I accepted [Betty Friedan's] version of history. But as I investigated the public culture, I encountered what I then considered exceptional evidence—books, articles, and films that contradicted the domestic ideology. I decided to conduct a systematic investigation. This essay reexamines the middle-class popular discourse on women by surveying mass-circulation monthly magazines of the postwar era (1946-1958). The systematic sample includes nonfiction articles on women in ‘middlebrow’ magazines (Reader’s Digest and Coronet), ‘highbrow ‘magazines (Harper’s and Atlantic Monthly), magazines aimed at African Americans (Ebony and Negro Digest), and those aimed at women (Ladies’ Home Journal and Woman’s Home Companion). The sample includes 489 nonfiction articles, ranging from Hollywood gossip to serious considerations of gender. In 1955 these magazines had a combined circulation of over 22 million. Taken together, the magazines reached readers from all classes, races, and genders, but the articles seem to represent the work of middle-class journalists, and articles written by women seem to outnumber ones by men.” Her reassessment of Friedan's “feminine mystique” was "part of a larger revisionist project," she explains. "For the past few years, historians have questioned the stereotype of postwar women as quiescent, docile, and domestic. Despite the baby boom and despite discrimination in employment, education, and public office, married women, black and white, joined the labor force in increasing numbers, and both married and unmarried women participated actively in politics and reform. Just as women’s activities were more varied and more complex than is often acknowledged, so, I argue, was the postwar popular ideology. Postwar magazines, like their prewar and wartime predecessors, rarely presented direct challenges to the conventions of marriage or motherhood, but they only rarely told women to return to or stay at home. They included stories that glorified domesticity, but they also expressed ambivalence about domesticity, endorsed women’s nondomestic activity, and celebrated women’s public success. They delivered multiple messages, which women could read as sometimes supporting and sometimes subverting the 'feminine mystique'.” In contrast to Friedan’s survey, which found magazines praising domesticity, Meyerowitz discovered that many magazine articles praised individual achievement as well. AU - Meyerowitz, Joanne, ed. CY - Philadelphia DA - 1994 KW - women, and new media news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers women feminism magazines +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines, and women magazines, and popular culture women, and magazines women, and popular culture +motion pictures Friedan, Betty feminine mystique women +motion pictures and popular culture women, and motion pictures LB - 10060 PB - Temple University Press PY - 1994 ST - Not June Cleaver: Women and Gender in Postwar America, 1945-1960 TI - Not June Cleaver: Women and Gender in Postwar America, 1945-1960 ID - 2371 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author argues that modern media, especially television, have weakened “the once strong relationship between physical place and social ‘place.’” Meyrowitz contends “that change in behavioral settings is a common element linking many of the trends, events, and movements of the last three decades....Our world may suddenly seem senseless to many people because, for the first time in modern history, it is relatively placeless.” Everyone -- the rich, the powerful, the ordinary -- “are all performing roles in new theaters that demand new styles of drama.” “At this moment in history, we may be witnessing a political revolution of enormous proportions, a revolution that is masked by the conventions of our language and by the form of our traditional ideas. We are moving from an representative government of de facto elites to a government of direct participation with elected ‘administrators.’” Our severance from physical place has returned us to an era not unlike that of the “hunters and gatherers” of an earlier time. The author attempts to combine the insights of sociologist Erving Goffman and Marshall McLuhan. Part II (“From Print Situations to Electronic Situations”) discusses three ways in which electronic media affect the information-systems found in print society. Part III is on “The New Social Landscape,” while Part IV is entitled “Three Dimensions of Social Change.” --SV No Sense of Place extends “the medium is the message” a step further. Meyrowitz uses the arguments of Harold Innis and Marshall McLuhan as building blocks for what he terms medium theory. The basic argument behind medium theory is that the differences in formal features between print and electronic media create different sets of effects both on individual behaviors as well as social situations among other areas. Meyrowitz argues, for example, that television's capacity to present instantaneous information as well as moving pictures makes it a more emotional medium. Furthermore, these differences set it apart from print media that tends to be more deliberate and cognitive. Meyrowitz covers a broad array of areas for which medium differences have implications. He argues that electronic media have closed the divide between men and women, rich and poor, because both of these dichotomies have close to equal access to similar media content due to the nature of electronic media being less discriminating than print. This text is ultimately an important read for any media effects scholar since it puts the focus not on the content differences, but on the formal differences between print and electronic media. This is a difference that is often not considered when examining the implications of the mass media. --Michael Boyle AU - Meyrowitz, Joshua CY - New York DA - 1985 KW - computers audiences surveillance nationalism time and timekeeping time censorship and ratings law, and privacy print preservation nonprint media history, and new media community democracy community law history media information technology history general studies geography space (spatial) microelectronics privacy regulation McLuhan, Marshall theaters history, break with revolution, political +nationalism and communication Goffman, Erving change, acceleration of electronic media information technology, and representative government democracy and media medium is the message print culture nonprint media print culture v. nonprint culture +television change +computers and the Internet +television community, and television television, and community democracy, and television television, and democracy time nationalism, and new media print v. electronic medium theory Boyle, Michael LB - 960 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1985 ST - No Sense of Place: The Impact of Electronic Media on Social Behavior TI - No Sense of Place: The Impact of Electronic Media on Social Behavior ID - 1492 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Glen Mezher originally wrote this manual in 1976, and it was revised in 1978 at the behest of the National Micrographics Association to served as a text on microfilm technology, to help those beginning in this field and as a refresher for more advanced students. AU - Mezher, Glenham C. and Jeffrey H. Turner, eds. CY - Silver Spring, MD DA - 1979 KW - photography microfiche, microfilm, microform archives +photography and visual communication micrographic photography photography, micrographic microfilm +duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and microfilm +information storage information storage, and microfilm LB - 2340 PB - National Micrographics Association PY - 1979 ST - Micrographic Film Technology TI - Micrographic Film Technology ID - 322 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work's attack on social science research relating to crime attracted Will H. Hays to Mortimer Adler. Hays later hired Adler to refute the Payne Fund Studies. AU - Michael, Jerome AU - Adler, Mortimer J. CY - New York DA - 1933 KW - social science research critics +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Adler, Mortimer motion pictures, and social science social science research, and critics critics, and social science motion pictures, and crime media effects LB - 13660 PB - Harcourt, Brace and Company PY - 1933 ST - Crime, Law and Social Science TI - Crime, Law and Social Science ID - 530 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Considerable support existed for the conclusions of the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography when they appeared in 1970. Such writers as Peter Michelson agreed with the Commission and argued that pornography was essentially harmless and could even be considered an art form. AU - Michelson, Peter CY - [New York] DA - 1971 KW - sexuality motion pictures mass media pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and supporters LB - 22280 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Herder and Herder PY - 1971 ST - Aesthetics of Pornography TI - Aesthetics of Pornography ID - 956 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Although most of the 386 entries in this annotated bibliography deal with economics and communication, several references are relevant to the history of new communication technologies. Computers, satellites, television, cable television, and radio are some of the topics covered. The references in this work are strongest on research done during the 1970s. Literature is also listed from the 1960s. AU - Middleton, Karen P. and Meheroo Jussawalla CY - New York DA - 1981 KW - computers fiber optics archives materials materials fiber optics non-USA libraries libraries, and information storage India +bibliographies +television +computers and the Internet +aeronautics and space communication satellites television, and cable cable, television +information storage libraries optical fibers +radio +telephones telecommunications global communication India, motion pictures broadband networks Jussawalla, Meheroo cable India bibliographies, annotated LB - 10660 PB - Pergamon Press PY - 1981 ST - The Economics of Communication: A Selected Bibliography With Abstracts TI - The Economics of Communication: A Selected Bibliography With Abstracts ID - 2429 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Milkman examines the short history of a pro-Roosevelt, pro-labor daily newspaper in New York. The paper, which sustained a daily circulation of about 150,000, was financed by Marshall Field and edited by Ralph Ingersoll, an editor at Fortune, Life and Time. Much of the book details the leftist orientation of news stories and editorials of the paper, which employed columnists such as I.F. Stone. “It was on and around the picket lines that PM did its best work. Any strike in the New York area was covered fully and sympathetically.” Unlike other dailies, PM initially did not accept advertising, out of concern that its editorial freedom would be compromised. The paper was printed on a heavy white stock, used some color earlier than other papers, and was distinguished by its photography and modern graphics, according to Milkman. PM carried a page of radio listings and news each day. “Today’s newspapers all perform this function for television, but before PM no newspapers carried such a guide.” The paper also produced a daily living section, with discussions of housing and educational and health issues. The paper featured “vivid photography” and the work of many graphic artists, including political cartoonist Dr. Seuss. The paper, however, never made a profit, even after agreeing to take advertising. Its last edition was in June 1948. -- Phil Glende AU - Milkman, Paul CY - New Brunswick, NJ DA - 1997 KW - photography advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising reform news and journalism Glende, Phil labor newspapers public relations labor, and newspapers (PM) labor, and public relations +photography and visual communication photography, and reform reform, and photography labor, and photography photography, and labor news LB - 790 N1 - See also: office PB - Rutgers University Press PY - 1997 ST - PM: A New Deal in Journalism, 1940-1948 TI - PM: A New Deal in Journalism, 1940-1948 ID - 167 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Millard, Andre CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - General Electric Company entertainment rock n' roll corporations corporations entertainment, home magnetic recording Western Electric Company Sony Corporation motion pictures home entertainment materials materials General Electric Company Company Edison, Thomas war home, and new media home +sound recording World War I World War I, and sound recording sound recording, and World War I sound recording, and World War II World War II World War II, and sound recording Western Electric Company, and sound recording Victor Talking Machine Company +television +telephones Sony Corporation, and sound recording sound recording, and rock n' roll rock n' roll, and sound recording RCA +radio radio, and sound recording sound recording, and radio +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures NBC magnetic tape sound recording, and magnetic tape home, and sound recording sound recording, and home magnetic tape, and home Philips Corporation, and sound recording General Electric Company, and sound recording Edison, Thomas, and sound recording discs, and sound recording sound recording, and discs Decca Record Company CBS phonograph ABC Bell Laboratories Bell, Alexander Graham, and sound recording Bell, Alexander Graham home corporations LB - 430 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1995 ST - America on Record: A History of Recorded Sound TI - America on Record: A History of Recorded Sound ID - 131 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book began as a 1981 doctoral thesis at Emory University, and after some revision, has been published in Garland's Series of Outstanding Dissertations in Modern European History. (William H. McNeill is the series general editor, and associate editors included Charles and Barbara Jelavich.) The work begins by discussing the literature of "technological lags," and then moves to the development of electrical technology and the British electrical industry. Subsequent chapters cover institutional barriers to the development of English electricity, engineering backwardness as an explanation for British lag, and the development of markets for electricity. The belief that England lagged behind other countries was sometime misleading. For example, the author writes, "the great progress of the British electrical industry during the first decade of the new century was obscured by public discussion of lags in newer technologies." (199) AU - Millard, A. J. CY - New York DA - 1987 KW - corporations corporations corporations electric lighting non-USA +electricity Great Britain Great Britain, and electricity electricity, and Great Britain theses theses, Ph. D. Edison, Thomas Electric Lighting Act of 1882 (GB) electricity, Pearl Street Station electricity, and Westinghouse Westinghouse Corporation electricity, traction Siemens and Halske Company LB - 450 PB - Garland Publishing, Inc. PY - 1987 ST - A Technological Lag: Diffusion of Electrical Technology in England, 1879-1914 TI - A Technological Lag: Diffusion of Electrical Technology in England, 1879-1914 ID - 133 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is a collection of essays by such authors as: Laura Rigal, David Bjelajac, Kenneth John Myers, Alan Wallach, Brigitte Bailey, Angela Miller, David Lubin, Robert H. Byer, David C. Miller, Sarah Burns, Harriet Scott Chessman, Emily Fourmy Cutrer. The book, the editor maintains, “adds to the growing field of iconological studies and both benefits from and contributes to the developing theory of iconology, defined on the author’s opening page. “Recently, W.J.T. Mitchell has refashioned the concept of iconology by centering it in the relation between the visual and the verbal and by closely relating it to ideology. Iconology, for Mitchell, is the study of both ‘what images say’ and ‘what to say about images’ -- the rhetoric of images, in other words. So conceived, iconology offers a touchstone for the chapters in this book, providing a rationale for their focus on imagery as opposed to textuality, which for Mitchell serves primarily as a foil to imagery. Mitchell has led the way in arguing that the visual and the verbal are not in fact distinct ontological categories but distill themselves only in relation to each other. In Iconology: Image, Text, Ideology (1986), he argued that this ongoing process of mutual redefinition, subject as it is to changing social and cultural practices, is a sensitive index of ideology, broadly defined as ‘the structure of values and interests that informs any representation of reality.’ While not all of the authors in this book share Mitchell’s concerns and assumptions, they do consider similar questions and follows “the British tradition by situating American art and literature within its various ideological matrices....” This book seems too theoretical and too little grounded in history, although individual authors do have interesting insights. Miller’s essay is “The Iconology of Wrecked or Stranded Boats in Mid to Late Nineteenth-Century American Culture.” He has an earlier book, Dark Eden: The Swamp in 19th Century American Culture (1989). AU - Miller, David C., ed. CY - New Haven DA - 1993 KW - photography non-USA iconography icons +photography and visual communication icons iconology ideology Great Britain LB - 1780 PB - Yale University Press PY - 1993 ST - American Iconology: New Approaches to Nineteenth-Century Art and Literature TI - American Iconology: New Approaches to Nineteenth-Century Art and Literature ID - 1574 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Although this book has a rather thin and incomplete bibliography of secondary sources, it is obvious that the author has used the PCA Files at the Margaret Herrick Library in Beverly Hills, and also the Warner Bros. Archives at USC (see notes 4 and 5 for chapter four). The endnotes themselves are rather sparse and usually cite only secondary or other published sources. Miller does provide interesting insights. His discussion of efforts to censor films between 1930 and 1934 is one of the most comprehensive in terms of titles covered (chapter 4, pp. 48-83). There are interesting examples throughout of advertisements (no pictures though) that caused problems (e.g., hugees’ The Outlaw). Miller also argues that Hays made a little-known decision in 1942 relating to anti-trust matters which ultimately weakened the Production Code: “Under the advice of the MPPDA’s lawyers, Hays engineered a major change in Production Code enforcement in March 1942. Exhibitors would now be allowed to show films that had not been granted the Seal of Approval. Only producers and distributors could be fined for violating the Code. Though this change would ultimately contribute to the Code’s downfall, its immediate effect was to protect the MPPDA from lawsuits by disgruntled producers who had been denied the Seal of Approval, which is exactly what happened when Howard hugees decided to put The Outlaw into release.” This book contains a helpful Timeline (pp. 262-69) of major events in films censorship from 1925 to 1994. Also there is a useful bibliography arranged by film title of articles pertaining to that film. That this book was published by Ted Turner raises the question of whether Miller is attempting to offer a defense of Turner’s position on TV and movies in a debate then underway (1994) over TV ratings. AU - Miller, Frank CY - Atlanta DA - 1994 KW - self-regulation Production Code PCA advertising, and public relations values religion timelines References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps regulation censorship and ratings advertising propaganda) public relations motion pictures law values religion law censorship and ratings censorship timelines +television regulation Production Code (1930) +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and censorship Hays, Will H. timelines, and motion picture censorship Production Code Administration (PCA) advertising, and motion pictures Breen, Joseph Hughes, Howard regulation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and self-regulation Turner, Ted television, and rating system (U. S.) advertising Production Code (motion pictures) censorship, and motion pictures Hays, Will H., and censorship Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and The Outlaw LB - 6300 PB - Turner Publishing, Inc. PY - 1994 ST - Censored Hollywood: Sex, Sin & Violence on Screen TI - Censored Hollywood: Sex, Sin & Violence on Screen ID - 2013 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This collection of papal encyclicals from Pope John Paul II contains pronouncements about modern communications and technology. AU - Miller, J. Michael, Ed. and Intro. CY - Huntington, IN DA - 1996 KW - values Christianity values archives primary sources cyberspace culture values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church Catholic Church non-USA primary sources papal encyclicals Pope John Paul II Pope John Paul II, and 1995 encyclical Pope John Paul II, and Evangelium Vitae Catholic Church, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholic Church motion pictures, and censorship Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures television, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and television +radio radio, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and radio culture of death, and Pope John Paul II Catholic Church, and modern media Catholic Church, and culture of death Pope John Paul II, and 1987 encyclical Pope John Paul II, and Sollicitudo Rei Socialis LB - 20730 PB - Our Sunday Visitor, Inc. PY - 1996 ST - The Encyclicals of John Paul II TI - The Encyclicals of John Paul II ID - 875 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This richly illustrated book has copies of many original images that chronicle the history of spaceflight, both in fact and fiction. AU - Miller, Ron CY - Melbourne, FL DA - 1993 KW - illustrations science +future and science fiction space communication illustrations +aeronautics and space communication science fiction future space travel rocketry satellites illustrations, and spaceflight future, and spaceflight LB - 7660 PB - Krieger PY - 1993 ST - The Dream Machines: An Illustrated History of the Spaceship in Art, Science and Literature TI - The Dream Machines: An Illustrated History of the Spaceship in Art, Science and Literature ID - 2135 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This richly illustrated book looks at sound recording beginning with the gramophone in the late nineteenth century and covers developments into the late twentieth century including Elvis Presley, the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, and punk rockers. Photographs and posters showing early recording devices and artists are among the best aspects of this work. Perhaps the most famous of these illustrations, appearing as early as 1910, is the dog Nipper in the Victor Record’s advertisement (later “His Masters Voice”). The chapter entitled “From Music-Hall to War” considers recording during World War I. Other interesting chapters consider “Recording the Great Opera Stars,” “Royalty Embraces the Record,” and “The Rise and Fall of the Big Bands.” AU - Miller, Russell and Roger Boar (edited and designed by Jacques Lowe) CY - London DA - 1982 KW - popular culture illustrations entertainment entertainment, home photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations +sound recording home entertainment war home, and new media home World War I music posters +sound recording phonograph home, and information technology public address systems information technology illustrations +sound recording +photography and visual communication gramophone phonograph World War I, and sound recording sound recording, and World War I microphones advertising, and phonograph sound recording, and opera phonograph, and His Master's Voice posters, and phonograph Gaisberg, Fred sound recording, and jazz sound recording, and African Americans information technology, and home African Americans, and sound recording illustrations, and sound recording Presley, Elvis Beatles Victor Records advertising sound recording, and music World War I African Americans LB - 2570 PB - A Quartet/Visual Arts Book PY - 1982 ST - The Incredible Music Machine TI - The Incredible Music Machine ID - 1650 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is the second of a multi-volume history of research at Bell Labs. Approximately thirty authors contributed to this volume which is written for specialists in engineering history. This book has 12 chapters, each dealing with a broad theme in the communication sciences. Some chapters discuss research areas (e.g., vacuum-tube electronics and waveguides) that are no longer active. Other chapters consider such enduring communication-related research areas as mathematics, acoustics, visual communication, switching, and computer science. AU - Millman, S., ed. CY - [Indianapolis] DA - 1984 KW - R & D computers corporations corporations photography +military communication materials materials digitization +computers and the Internet +television +telephones telephones, and video radio general studies Bell Laboratories engineering vacuum tubes waveguides research and development mathematics numeracy acoustics visual communication switching computers computer science hearing aids analog media digital media scanning television, and color television, and bandwidth bandwidth, and television video conferencing radio radio, and shortwave radio, and antennas microwaves radio, and microwaves lasers lightwave communication waveguide research +photography and visual communication telephones, and picture phones +television +telephones LB - 970 PB - At&T Bell Laboratories PY - 1984 ST - A History of Engineering and Science in the Bell System: Communications Sciences (1925-1980) TI - A History of Engineering and Science in the Bell System: Communications Sciences (1925-1980) ID - 1493 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The Yellow Kid was a cartoon character in during the 1890s in Joseph’s Pulitzer’s The New York World. William Randolph Hearst, the owner of The New York Journal, believed that the immensely popular cartoon character would boost circulation, so he lured the cartoonist away from the World, which claimed the copyright to the character. Soon, both newspapers were touting their respective versions of The Yellow Kid, which was indeed done in yellow ink. The intense marketing war between the competing newspapers became known as “Yellow Kid journalism,” which became more popularly referred to as “yellow journalism.” Although the publishers, and some editors, may have sacrificed journalistic standards during the circulation war, not all reporters did. Some were very good at getting the facts despite the risks involved, particularly when the assignment meant going to Cuba to report the war going on between the Spanish army and the insurgents. Profiles of several of these journalists portray young men who were highly educated, daring, resourceful, and dedicated to getting a story; profiles of a few of these journalists inform us that some indeed were rascals who fabricated tales or otherwise too much enjoyed storytelling over reporting. --James Landers AU - Milton, Joyce CY - New York DA - 1989 KW - photography newspapers journalism news and journalism news and journalism war non-USA Spain news journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers color yellow journalism journalism, yellow news, and sensationalism news, and yellow journalism Hearst, William Randolph +photography and visual communication color, and newspapers Pulitzer, Joseph Spanish-American War newspapers, and color Landers, James LB - 10080 PB - Harper & Row PY - 1989 ST - The Yellow Kids: Foreign Correspondents in the Heyday of Yellow Journalism TI - The Yellow Kids: Foreign Correspondents in the Heyday of Yellow Journalism ID - 2373 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Minnelli, Vincente (with Hector Arce) CY - Garden City, NY DA - 1974 KW - Marked ref, secondary ref, auto motion pictures color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color Kalmus, Natalie Kalmus, Natalie, and Technicolor Technicolor Technicolor, and Natalie Kalmus LB - 41170 PB - Doubleday & Company, Inc. PY - 1974 ST - I Remember It Well TI - I Remember It Well ID - 4216 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This substantial, 573-page book is based on archival sources and has a lengthy bibliography of secondary sources. Mirowski writes that “economists were present at the creation of the cyborg sciences, and, as one would expect, the cyborg sciences have returned the favor by serving in turn to remake the economic orthodoxy in their own image. My intention is to provide that complementary argument, to document just in what manner and to what extent economics at the end of the second millennium has become a cyborg science, and to speculate how this will shape the immediate future.” Several characteristics define cyborg sciences, according the Mirowski. First, the “depend on the existence of the computer as a paradigm object for everything from metaphors to assistance in research activities to embodiment of research products. Bluntly: if it doesn’t make fundamental reference to ‘the computer’ (itself a historical chameleon), then it isn’t a cyborg science.” The “breaching of the ramparts between the Natural and the Social, the Human and the Inhuman, is a second and perhaps the most characteristic attribute of the cyborg science,” the author says. This is largely a post-World War II development. Third, “as the distinction between the Natural and the Social grows more vague, the sharp distinction between ‘reality’ and simulacra also becomes less taken for granted and even harder to discern.” Drawing on the work of such writers and Paul Edwards (Closed Worlds [1996]), Mirowski sees an important military dimension in such developments. Government and military funding has been highly significant. Military weaponry during the Cold War came more and more to depend on simulations. “Once the cyborg sciences emerged ... from their military incubator, they became, in Herbert Simon’s telling phrase, ‘the sciences of the artificial’. It is difficult to overstate the ontological import of this watershed.” A fourth characteristic is the cyborg sciences’ “heritage of distinctive notions of order and disorder rooted in the tradition of physical thermodynamics,” a topic Mirowski explores in some detail in chapter 2. Fifth, in the cyborg sciences such terms as “‘information,’ ‘memory,’ and ‘computation’ become for the first time physical concepts, to be used in explanation of the natural sciences.” Sixth, the cyborg sciences were not invented haphazardly. They trace their origins “to the conscious intervention of a new breed of science manager, empowered by the crisis of World War II and fortified by lavish foundation and military sponsorship. The new cyborg sciences did not simply spontaneously arise; they were consciously made.” Mirowski examines how economists embraced the cyborg sciences. AU - Mirowski, Philip CY - New York DA - 2002 KW - R & D computers corporations nationalism simulations preservation research and development research and development war communication revolution history, and new media +future and science fiction computers communication revolution, and second industrial revolution Cold War war history +computers and the Internet +military communication capitalism capitalism, and computers computers, and economics cybernetics capitalism, and cyborgs +artificial intelligence and biotechnology capitalism, and artificial intelligence future, and economics future, and computers Cold War, and computers computers, and Cold War virtual reality simulations, and computers computers, and simulationss military, and simulationss military, and computers research and development, and World War II World War II, and research and development research and development, and government support second industrial revolution history, break with +bibliographies bibliographies, and cyborg sciences Arrow, Kenneth, and cyborg sciences Bush, Vannevar computers, and Vannevar Bush Bush, Vannevar, and computers cyborg sciences game theory information technology economics, and new media Koopmans, Tjalling, and cyborg sciences RAND Corporation RAND, and computers +nationalism and communication nationalism, and computers nationalism, and cyborg sciences Turing, Alan Neumann, John von Wiener, Norbert World War II control revolution social control future communication revolution LB - 1780 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 2002 ST - Machine Dreams: Economics becomes a Cyborg Science TI - Machine Dreams: Economics becomes a Cyborg Science ID - 266 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Mitchell's work is an early effort to use social science to examine the influence of movies on children. Mitchell wrote of “flashing shadows of life on a screen, shadows which Youth thinks are real,” yet in reality were reflections of experiences that robbed them of the innocence of childhood. AU - Mitchell, Alice Miller CY - Chicago DA - [1929] KW - audiences theaters censorship and ratings children audiences +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and social science motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children media effects motion pictures, and critics audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences children, and media LB - 12710 PB - University of Chicago Press ST - Children and Movies TI - Children and Movies ID - 449 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This important book deals with the advent of digital photogaphy and how it differs fundamental in important respects from traditional film photography. The photograph was once thought to represent truth. Now, images can be manipulated with ease and with no negative, their original nature cannot be detected. Digital photography is having "far-reaching consequencesfor our visual culture," Mitchell writes. With digital photography, the "uses of images -- and therefore their meanings and their value as tokens of factual discourse -- began to change fundamentally." AU - Mitchell, William J. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1992 KW - National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) ethics photography public relations advertising propaganda values preservation motion pictures journalism history, and new media materials materials ethics digital media news and journalism analog media history photography, and reality postmodernism +photography and visual communication digital imaging, and origins NASA, and digital imaging digital imaging, and NASA NASA photography, and digital imaging photography, digital digital photography ethics, and digital photography digital photography, and ethics newspapers, and digital photography digital photography, and newspapers motion pictures, and digital photography digital photography, and motion pictures digitization analog v. digital photography, and bias propaganda, and photography photography, and propaganda photography, and truth digital media, and photography newspapers, and digital photography digital photography, and newspapers motion pictures, and digital photography digital photography, and motion pictures history, break with values, and digital photography values newspapers news public relations advertising and public relations LB - 1790 PB - MIT Press PY - 1992 ST - The Reconfigured Eye: Visual Truth in the Post-photographic Era TI - The Reconfigured Eye: Visual Truth in the Post-photographic Era ID - 1575 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a translation of Miltry's abridged edition (1990) of Esthétiqu et psychologie du cinéma. The original, unabridged work appeared in 1963 and ran about 900 pages in two volumes. The work is divided in to five chapters. Chapter 1, "Preliminaries," deals with cinema and creation, cinema and language, and word and image. Chapter 2, "The Film Image," deal with "the image itself" and "structures of image." Chapter 3, "Rhythm and Montage," covers the beginnings of montage, "cinematic rhythm, and the "psychology of montage." Chapter 4, "Rhythm and Moving Shots," examines "the liberated camera and depth-of-field," and "speech and sound." Chapter 5, "Time and Space of the Drama," covers "In Search of Dramatic Structure," and "Content and Form." Among the topics Miltry explores is the use of color in cinema (224-30). This volume appears in The Society for Cinema Studies Translation Series. AU - Mitry, Jean (trans. by Christopher King) CY - Bloomington DA - 1997 KW - motion pictures color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and motion pictures motion pictures, and camera sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and montage motion pictures, and aesthetics LB - 34630 OP - 1963 PB - Indiana University Pres PY - 1997 ST - The Aesthetics and Psychology of the Cinema (Esthétiqu et psychologie du cinéma) TI - The Aesthetics and Psychology of the Cinema (Esthétiqu et psychologie du cinéma) ID - 2954 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Photographers, unlike reporters, must be where the action is if they are to get the story. Yet, combat photographers rarely had their best work published because it was deemed too graphic for most people to view. This paradox was especially applicable during World War II when the capability of cameras and the quality of film enabled photographers to capture images of combat instantaneously. Although more realistic photographs were published during the Korean War, it was not until the Vietnam War that candid combat images were more acceptable to editors, and presumably viewers. Still, the most horrific photographs that were published tended to be of enemy casualties rather than American combatants, or of foreign civilians who were injured or killed. American photographers advanced the art of combat photography from the posed pictures of the Spanish-American War, through the sanitized imagery of World War I, through the tentative realism of World War II, to the startling scenes of the Vietnam War. --James Landers AU - Moeller, Susan D. CY - New York DA - 1989 KW - photography Vietnam War Korea journalism law censorship and ratings news and journalism war non-USA World War II World War I Vietnam War Spain +photography and visual communication newspapers news +photography and visual communication photojournalism censorship, and photography cameras cameras, and war +books, periodicals, newspapers photography, and war World War II, and photography Korean War, and photography World War I, and photography Vietnam War, and photography newspapers, and half tones half tones Spanish-American War, and photography +television censorship Spanish-American War Landers, James World War I World War II Spanish-American War Vietnam War photography, and censorship photography, and World War I photography, and World War II photography, and Spanish-American War photography, and Vietnam War military communication LB - 10100 PB - Basic Books PY - 1989 ST - Shooting War: Photography and the American Experience of Combat TI - Shooting War: Photography and the American Experience of Combat ID - 2375 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Moley began this work in 1936, and did much of the research in 1938 and 1939, then laid aside during the war years. Moley had access to Hays Office records and also had the cooperation of Hays and his staff. The author opposed government censorship and so looked favorably on the industry's efforts at self-regulation. AU - Moley, Raymond CY - Indianapolis DA - 1945 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) self-regulation Production Code PCA values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. MPAA MPPDA values religion law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and history Hays, Will H. Breen, Joseph MPPDA, and history motion pictures, and self-regulation Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code Administration (PCA) LB - 12800 PB - The Bobbs-Merrill Company PY - 1945 ST - The Hays Office TI - The Hays Office ID - 458 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The title plays off of journalist Henry James Forman's popularization of the Payne Fund Studies that was entitled Our Movie Made Children (1933). Hays asked a short, popular account of Mortimer Adler's 650-page Art and Prudence (1938), which attacked the Payne Fund Studies. This book was the result. AU - Moley, Raymond CY - New York DA - 1938 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) self-regulation Production Code PCA advertising, and public relations social science research propaganda advertising public relations Payne Fund Studies Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. MPAA MPPDA motion pictures critics Adler, Mortimer Payne Fund Studies, and critics motion pictures, and social science social science research, and critics critics, and social science public relations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and public relations MPPDA, and social science MPPDA, and public relations motion pictures, and defense of media effects Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 13710 PB - Mach-Masium PY - 1938 ST - Are We Movie Made? TI - Are We Movie Made? ID - 535 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book has some information on Soviet dictator Josef Stalin's attitude toward American motion pictures and cinema in general. During the late 1940s and 1950s, Eric A. Johnston of the Motion Picture Association of America persuaded the Soviets to buy twenty American pictures and in return, several Soviet-made movies were distributed in the United States. Stalin dominated the Soviet film industry and no movie could be exhibited unless he had approved it personally. He was likely to prohibit films with any suggestion of sexuality. He denounced movies for their ideological bent, and according to some who knew him, often confused what he saw on the screen with reality. Yet Stalin enjoyed some American films and after World War II he gained a large private collection of them that had been confiscated from the Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels. Stalin liked cowboy movies directed by John Ford, Charlie Chaplin films, and gangster pictures. He held in high regard such American actors as Spencer Tracy, Clark Gable, and Gary Cooper. At least four American films were being shown in Moscow in March, 1949, including Cooper’s The Adventures of Marco Polo (1938) and The Crowd Roars (1938), starring Robert Taylor. During the early 1950s, Cooper’s Mr. Deeds Goes to Town also played in the USSR. Soviet authorities sometimes altered Hollywood movies, though, and then for a time refused to show them during the 1950s. But by November, 1958, Johnston could report that the authorities had agreed to purchase ten more American films. AU - Montefiore, Simon Sebag CY - New York DA - 2004 KW - Soviet Union , motion pictures USSR motion pictures, and USSR USSR, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and foreign markets Johnston, Eric, and USSR Stalin, Josef Stalin, Josef, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Josef Stalin non-USA LB - 31580 PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 2004 ST - Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar TI - Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar ID - 2847 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book covers the history of Canadian recorded sound from 1878 to 1930. The text of this fine reference work runs 123 pages. The remaining 300-plus pages are devoted to interesting related material. Chapter 5 ("Biographical Notes") gives short sketches of Canadian recording artists. Chapter 6 ("Discography") lists Canadian-born, -adopted, or -trained performers and the title of their performances (pp. 159-288). Pages 289-372 lists Canadian series. The book contains eight appendices that includes Emile Berliner on "The Development of the Talking Machine," and "Edison Phonograph Price List," among others. Page 433 has a brief bibliography on Canadian recorded sound. AU - Moogk, Edward B. CY - Ottawa DA - 1975 KW - corporations Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories non-USA +sound recording phonograph +sound recording sound recording, and Canada phonograph phonograph, and Canada Berliner, Emile Edison, Thomas Edison Gramophone Company gramophone gramophone, and Canada sound recording, and recording methods Victor Talking Machine Company Canada biography corporations LB - 3990 PB - National Library of Canada PY - 1975 ST - Roll Back the Years: History of Canadian Recorded Sound and Its Legacy: Genesis to 1930 TI - Roll Back the Years: History of Canadian Recorded Sound and Its Legacy: Genesis to 1930 ID - 1787 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a collection of articles that Charles Leonard Moore published in The Dial. Moore talks about the present age wishes to abandon the past. In the first paragraph of this book, he writes: "The modern spirit, the democratic spirit, is impatient of superiorities. It is inconvenient for it to have to worship dead people when it wants to worship its living self. It would like to see an Act of Obliteration passed so that everything which happened before it came upon the scene should be cast away. It feels confidently able to produce out of its own resources all that any reasonable creature needs in the way of literary or artistic work. In some of the South Sea Islands, when a man has reached a certain age he is buried in the ground up to his neck and left to his own devices. A good many modern writers, artists, and musicians would like to apply this method to their predecessors." (1) He goes on to write: "Let us deal kindly with tradition, and tradition will be good to us. Let us not try to push our grandsires from their thrones...." (320) In his chapter "Modernity in Literature and the Next Movement," Moore says: "The world-view roar of the realistic movement has broken up into a hundred, a thousand, noises and motions. We are in the midst of whirlpools and eddies and waters that sway back and forth and seem to have no order or discipline or determined end. It is a day of individualism, naturalism, neo-romanticism, symbolism, revolutionary nihilism, sex celebration and sex enmity, social frivolity and nature seriousness, -- all these doctrines and dogmas and a myriad more are cried up...." (321) Part of this inclination to abandon the past and to embrace modernity has to do with the arrival of new media -- especially moving pictures. (See his chapter, "Pictures and Words," which is filed separately.) His last chapter is entitled "The Magazine Girl" (336-43). "This is the literary era of the wax doll with the brick-dust complexion. She stares at us from every news-stand. No self-respecting magazine ventures to issue forth without her picture on its cover. Head or bust or full length; walking, golfing, motoring; rampant, couchant, or regardant, -- she is the heraldic emblem under which the cohorts of periodicals charge to victory." (336) Unfortunately, Moore did little to develop this theme in the remaining pages of this chapter. AU - Moore, Charles Leonard CY - New York DA - 1915 KW - theater stage Plato journalism history words vs. images magazines photography ref, mag history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures images vs. words critics metaphors motion pictures, and metaphors theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity quotations history, break with Plato, and poets women photography, and women women, and photography sexuality modernity history, and modernity modernity, and history women, and magazines magazines, and women photography and visual communication ref, book history LB - 340 PB - G. P. Putnam's Sons PY - 1915 ST - Incense & Iconoclasm: Studies in Literature TI - Incense & Iconoclasm: Studies in Literature ID - 3330 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In his chapter entitled “Mummer Worship” (153-80), George Moore write a scathing indictment of stage actors. He begins the chapter by saying: “An actor is one who repeats a portion of a story invented by another. You can teach a child to act, but you can teach no child to paint pictures, or to write poetry, prose or music; acting is therefore the lowest of the arts, if it is an art at all, and makes slender demands upon the intelligence of the individual exercising it; but his age, being one mainly concerned with facile amusement and parade, reverences the actor above all beings, and has by some prodigy that cannot be explained by us, succeeded, or almost succeeded in abstracting him from the playwright, upon whom he should feed in the manner of a parasite, and endowing him with a separate existence of necessity ephemeral, but which by dint of gaudy upholstery and various millinery has been prolonged beyond due limits and still continues. We of the nineteenth century have witnessed this, ….” (153) 153/154 Moore says that in the time of Shakespeare and Johnson, that actor could be “compared with a careless lad and wench, who having tired of the ties of home and ways of respectability, threw off galling restaint and roved, after their own heart’s fashion, on the outskirts of society, telling poetry to the joyous who like them cared little for beads, ashes, and repentance. Such manner of life found favour to the close of the last century [18th century], and did not fall into complete desuetude until about twenty years ago. Then a great and drastic change came; the mummer grew ashamed of his hose and longed for a silk hat, a villa, and above all a visit from the parson….” (154) 154/155 “Genius and respectability for the actor, genius and virtue for the actress, is the cry from the modern stage. Grant us this and we’ll be still….” (155) 155/163 “For the last ten years the actor has not only demanded acclamation for what he does, but he has striven to obtain, and has succeeded in obtaining, praise for what he is, thus emulating all priests and scared apes. He demands more than they: by right of his office he claims intelligence as his inalienable right. Even priests and sacred apes have refrained from this last audacity….” (163) 163/164 “Our contention is a threefold one; first, that acting is the lowest of the arts, if it be an art at all; secondly, that the public has almost ceased to discriminate between bad and good acting, and will readily grant its suffrage and applause to any one who has been abundantly advertised, and can enforce his or her claim either by beauty or rank; thirdly, that the actor is applauded not for what he does, but for what he is that of late years the actor has been lifted out of his place, and, in common with all things when out of their places, he is ridiculous and blocks the way. A plain account of Mr. Wyndham’s continental tour will fully prove these three indictments….” (164) 164/171 “The offer them as a pretext for remaining at home. So the arts are encumbered with young men and women. The most intelligent and least carnal go to literature, painting, 171/172 sculpture, and music; the stupid, the vain, and the fleshly go to the stage. Not in vocation and original impulse must we seek the reason of the thousands of pictures that yearly line the walls of the public galleries and the piles of novels that crowd the stalls of the book-sellers, but in vanity and idleness; and the dull-witted, uneducated, over-dressed young men who speak of being on or of going on the stage at Kensington and Bayswater drawing-rooms, are too cowardly to enlist, too lazy to face the hardships of colonial life….” (171-72) 172/177 “The stage was once a profession for the restless, the frankly vicious for those who 176/177 sought any escape from the platitude of their personality; the stage is now a means of enabling the refuse of society to idly satisfy the flesh, and air much miserable vanity. Such change has come. No change is more than superficial, and the dramatic art has not rise above the law that governs human things. To-day the stage is as moral as it was a hundred years ago as much so and not one jot more….” (176-77) 177/180 Moore says that some stories will be told of actresses who nurse their children and who go “to church every Sunday; many strange things shall come to pass, but such phases of stage-life are ephemeral and circumstantial gnats on the surface of a well, and in the end the abiding and important truth will be found unchanged at the bottom….” (180) AU - Moore, George CY - London DA - 1891 KW - theater anti-theatrical bias actors acting censorship actors acting ref, secondary ref, book critics theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings modernity modernity, and theater theater, and modernity sexuality acting, and sexuality sexuality, and actors actors, and bias against actors, and status of theater, and bias against anti-theatrical prejudice quotations critics, and acting critics, and actors critics, and theater quotations, and actors audiences audiences, and immoral plays media effects audiences, and media effects media effects, and audiences theater, and class actors, and bias against acting, and bias against motion pictures LB - 42040 PB - David Nutt in the Strand PY - 1891 ST - Impressions and Opinions TI - Impressions and Opinions ID - 4302 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Moore maintains that two influences shaped the early development of the gramophone. One was the rarified atmosphere of the nation’s capital, Washington, D. C. The other was the fact most of the people who worked on the early gramophone were either immigrants or the offspring of immigrants. “Thus the combination of nostalgia and opportunity which inspires every time-machine suffused the atmosphere in which the gramophone was born.” The inventor of this machine, Emile Berliner, left Germany in 1870. The Gaisberg family, who helped make Berliner’s invention a success, had come to America in 1854. Moore’s opening chapter discusses the family and then follows the career of Fred Gaisberg. This life and times biography covers Gaisberg's effort to record military band music in Italy during World War I (chapter 14). The American edition of this book was published under the title A Matter of Records (New York: Taplinger Publishing Company, 1976). AU - Moore, Jerrold Northrop CY - London DA - 1976 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories preservation history, and new media war World War I +sound recording history +sound recording gramophone phonograph Berliner, Emile Gaisberg, Fred Caruso, Enrico Chaliapin, Feodor Clark, Alfred World War I, and phonograph +biography history, gramophone and nostalgia Columbia Phonograph Company World War I, and sound recording sound recording, and World War I LB - 2510 PB - Hamish Hamilton PY - 1976 ST - Voice in Time: The Gramophone of Fred Gaisberg, 1873-1951 TI - Voice in Time: The Gramophone of Fred Gaisberg, 1873-1951 ID - 1644 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is the American edition of Moore's book, which in England was published under the title Voice in Time: The Gramaphone of Fred Gaisberg, 1873-1951 (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1976). See under the London edition for summary. AU - Moore, Jerrold Northrop CY - New York DA - 1976 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories preservation history, and new media war World War I +sound recording history +sound recording gramophone phonograph Berliner, Emile Gaisberg, Fred Caruso, Enrico Chaliapin, Feodor Clark, Alfred World War I, and phonograph +biography history, gramophone and nostalgia Columbia Phonograph Company World War I World War I, and sound recording sound recording, and World War I LB - 3960 PB - Taplinger Publishing Company PY - 1976 ST - A Matter of Records TI - A Matter of Records ID - 1784 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book provides a good introduction to court cases involving obscenity and pornography. AU - Moretti, Daniel S. CY - London DA - 1984 KW - U. S. Supreme Court Supreme Court (U. S.) values sexuality values obscenity court cases context censorship and ratings censorship law pornography context, and law obscenity, and law law, and obscenity Supreme Court (U. S.), and obscenity obscenity, and court cases, obscenity context, and obscenity +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography motion pictures, and obscenity Supreme Court (U. S.), and pornography pornography, and Supreme Court (U. S.) law, and pornography context, and pornography law, and pornography censorship censorship and ratings LB - 16740 PB - Oceana Publications PY - 1984 ST - Obscenity and Pornography: The Law Under the First Amendment TI - Obscenity and Pornography: The Law Under the First Amendment ID - 622 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Morgall writes that her "interest in women and technology stems from more than a decade of research into the effects of technological change on women in the context of their productive and reproductive lives. In the course of my work," she says, "I found that dissimilar technological developments seem to have similar (and often negative) effects on women. I made this observation when I began researching women and health, after studying technology in the labor market for many years. Another observation was that women and women's needs were invisible, except within feminist studies. This was true in both the development and the assessment of technology." This work includes an 18-page bibliography. AU - Morgall, Janine Marie CY - Philadelphia DA - 1993 KW - technology Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) women, and new media labor genetics women feminism women values technology and society technology assessment women, and technology feminist studies abortion OTA birth control capitalism genetic engineering patriarchy values, and technology bibliographies, and women and technology +bibliographies labor, and new media +artificial intelligence and biotechnology LB - 4850 N1 - See also: office PB - Temple University Press PY - 1993 ST - Technology Assessment: A Feminist Perspective TI - Technology Assessment: A Feminist Perspective ID - 1872 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This advertising textbook discusses the use of color and it capacity to “create mood and emotional responses.” (213) AU - Moriaty, Sandra E. CY - Englewood Cliffs, N. J. DA - 1986 KW -, advertising and public relations color advertising, and color color, and advertising psychology psychology, and color color, and psychology advertising, and psychology psychology, and advertising advertising, and texts advertising LB - 32500 PB - Prentice-Hall PY - 1986 ST - Creative Advertising: Theory and Practice TI - Creative Advertising: Theory and Practice ID - 2909 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Morris quotes film critic Judith Crist as saying of Roger Corman's 1967 film The Trip that it was one long “commercial for LSD.” (77) The movie used innovative lighting and color in an attempt to give audiences the experience of taking LSD. AU - Morris, Gary CY - Boston DA - 1985 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories , biography motion pictures motion pictures, and Roger Corman motion pictures, and drugs Crist, Judith The Trip Crist, Judith, and The Trip Crist, Judith LB - 32720 PB - Twayne Publishers PY - 1985 ST - Roger Corman TI - Roger Corman ID - 2920 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a reminder of the extensive impact of railways construction on shaping and altering the landscape. As the title suggests, this work takes up the question of the material evidence left behind by railways – the infrastructure that includes bridges, earthworks, tracks, tunnels, stations, and signaling devices. The author considers physical evidence that has left a visible mark on the landscape, supplemented by some documentary evidence. Evidence is considered from as far back as the sixteenth century and extends into then nineteenth. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Morriss, Richard CY - Stroud (UK) DA - 1999 KW - labor non-USA office office, and new media office Wolf, Nicholas Great Britain infrastructure, and Great Britain Great Britain, and infrastructure +transportation railroads Great Britain, and railroads railroads, and Great Britain infrastructure Great Britain LB - 1940 PB - Tempus Publishing, Inc. PY - 1999 ST - The Archaeology of Railways TI - The Archaeology of Railways ID - 282 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work covers sound recording and how it has changed American culture from Thomas Edison's inventions in the 1870s to computer hackers and digital file sharing of music. "When I started this project,," Morton says in his Preface, "I did not know how it would end. Initially I sought the origins of a technology, sound recording that seemed to have infused American society of the 1990s. As I would later learn, discovering the roots of recording technology did not explain why it had become ubiquitous in our culture. When I turned my attention to the implications of ubiquity, I realized that explaining the way a new technology becomes a part of daily life is even more difficult than uncovering its origins. The greatest task, however, has been to explain why an everyday technology is important. As a colleague once pointed out to me, "Air is ubiquitous, and it's certainly important in everyone's life, but it doesn't make interesting history." Such is the nature of writing history that sometimes the most important things make the least captivating of subjects. Fortunately, for many people sound recording holds a great deal of intrinsic interest, and I hope I have done justice to its history." The author argues that there is a difference between the culture of recording and the culture of music. "It is important to distinguish between the culture of recording, which refers to the practices surrounding sound recording technology, and music as culture. The sound recorder plays an important role in transmitting musical culture. Its limitations (and possibilities) have shaped musical expression in various ways. The mass production and broad distribution of musical records is also an agent of cultural change. Music historians have noted the extent to which the phonograph broke down social barriers and disseminated culture in a stratified society, bringing black music to white audiences, for example. They have been less successful in showing how culture, including musical culture, influenced technological change in recording, or how the making of phonograph records itself constituted a new form of culture. Another major stumbling block has been the concept of ‘high fidelity,’ or truth to the original source of the sound. Steven Jones and others have demonstrated how little real meaning the concept of fidelity holds in terms of today's popular music, which is largely electronically generated. They have also pointed out that ‘fidelity,’ or accuracy remains central in the technical vocabulary of music recording and reproduction, though practice has strayed ever further from the ideal. One important question that remains is how this situation came to be, and where it is likely to lead." (15) Morton says that the “years between the late 1930s and the late 1960s marked an important transition in the history of sound recording; at the beginning of this period, few Americans were users of sound recording technologies, while at the end, tens of millions were. Beginning in the late 1930s and especially after World War II, manufacturers presented Americans with a range of new sound recorders, and individuals, companies, and institutions invented new ways to utilize them. Hobbyists interested in collecting sounds, historians gathering data, and teachers interested in engaging their students' interest were only a few of the new users. In terms of sheer numbers, however, the most important use of the sound recorder that emerged was the duplication of commercial music recordings.” (136) --Catharine Gartelos AU - Morton, David CY - New Brunswick, N. J. DA - 2000 KW - tape recording, magnetic corporations corporations corporations corporations corporations corporations corporations magnetic recording magnetic tape recording tape recording materials materials magnetic tape war +sound recording sound recording, and new technology sound recording, and magnetic tape magnetic recording AT & T answering machines sound recording, and answering machines dictating machines sound recording, and dictating machines Bell Laboratories sound recording, and broadcasting CBS sound recording, and music industry Dictaphone Corporation phonograph NBC sound recording, and high fidelity sound recording, and optical recorders phonograph recorders RCA sound recording, and stereo sound recording, and tape recorders tape recorders sound recording, and wire recorders Western Electric Company sound recording, and long-playing records sound recording, and dictating machines World War II, and dictating machines dictating machines +radio radio, and sound recording sound recording, and radio Gartelos, Catharine World War II LB - 17580 PB - Rutgers University Press PY - 2000 ST - Off the Record: The Technology and Culture of Sound Recording in America TI - Off the Record: The Technology and Culture of Sound Recording in America ID - 677 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Mosely, Sydney CY - London DA - 1952 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories television, and history of Baird, John Logie biography +television television, and origins LB - 7190 PB - Odhams Press PY - 1952 ST - John Baird: The Romance and Tragedy of the Pioneer of Television TI - John Baird: The Romance and Tragedy of the Pioneer of Television ID - 2090 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Chapter 12 in this book, "The Kinetoscopic Theatre" (200-14), discusses moving pictures and their relation to the live theater. Moses maintained in 1911 that the "kinetoscopic theatre is at the parting of the ways." It would either become "a great success or an absolute failure." (200) He acknowledged that "Judiciously used, it could be educational, but at best it is mechanical, it lacks individuality...." (202) He considered it a foe of the live stage. "The moving-picture as an amusement lacks the human element, yet the response it creates is human. It can never be art; it can only be a representation of art, and as such 202/203 it must be directed. The Victor talking machines have ground forth the speeches of Taft and of Bryan; the biograph has projected the motion of the National Conventions. Bring the phonograph and the biograph together, and still the live element is absent. For this reason it is one of the greatest enemies of the theatre, which is a live institution, presenting plays in human fashion." (202-03) Moses contrasts the educational experience of seeing a movie versus seeing a live play. "At best the nickelodeon audiences are casual groups: they are not held together by any effective bond of common interest or large idea. Their drama is told in seeable action, and there is little or no time spent on other than elemental idea or sentiment. That is a danger which only an educational grip of the situation could stop. But the boys and girls of the tenements, their mothers and fathers, go of an evening because the diversion is stimulating without effort, even though there is a strain upon the eyes." (203) Without proper guidance, movies could be a menace to communities. "The moving-picture business needs intelligent guiding; that is its only hope. Otherwise, it become a menace, socially, morally, and ethically. What is now urgent is to prevent the vitiating effect of undesirable performances. The nickelodeon without an idea behind it is a menace to the neighborhood. The idea must be inserted, for there is no doubt that the moving-picture has come to stay. The visual sense must be supplemented by a mental stimulus. Intellectually, the five-cent audience is worthy of a higher form of amusement than the moving-picture show can supply." (204) Moses quotes from a press account of how moving pictures and their actors often appear as hallucinations. "The nickelodeon theatre has its press-agent, and this press agent has his particular vocabulary, filled with descriptive adjectives that express motion. The Moving Picture World, devoted to the interests of animated photographs, quotes a sample of such literature: 'To hear the voice, to catch every sound and intonation of every word, and see the people in life size moving before your eyes, and yet realise there is not a single person there -- it seems like some phantom of the brain, an hallucination, and one is almost tempted to rush to the stage and grapple with the ghostly actors as one is moved to cry out in the vividness of a dream.'" (205) One of the characteristics of moving pictures is their monotony, Moses says, "the monotony of mechanical interpretation." (206) He predicts that improvements will come to the movies -- e.g., the use of color and also improved fire safety. (210) He says that there have been instances of children stealing after they have seen certain films (211) but that "as a general rule the nickelodeons, or moving-picture theatres, of which there are some three or four hundred in New York City, present a harmless bill of fare, if not a very educational one." (211) The author comments on the greater emphasis that movies give to violence than is the case in live theater. "In Chicago, according to the Moving Picture World, the police stopped the performance of 'Macbeth,' and the report of the officer of the law is worth quoting: 'I am not taking issue with Shakespeare,' he said. 'As a writer he was far from reproach, but he never looked into the distance and saw that his plays were going to be interpreted for the five-cent theatre. Shakespeare has a way of making gory things endurable, because there is so much of art and finish. But we cannot reproduce that ... . When it gets on the canvas, it is worse than the bloodiest melodrama ever.' " (213) Moses goes on to explaining that the "stabbing scene in the play is not predominant, but in a picture show it is the feature. By outdoing melodrama, the moving-picture has been one of the agents to kill melodrama of the violent kind. In the play, the stabbing is forgotten amidst the other exciting and artful and artistic creations that divert the imagination. On the canvas, you see the dagger enter and come out, the blood flow, and the wound that is left." (213) Overall, Moses believed that the movies hurt the live theater. "The moving-picture has undoubtedly hurt the theatrical business. It steals the spoken drama and reduces it to motion. Every road company has its tale to tell of business ruined by the kinetoscope; every vaudeville house is forced to open its doors to celluloid drama. And when summer arrives, the legitimate playhouses turn themselves into nickelodeons. In a way all this is a menace to the American dramatist." (214) AU - Moses, Montrose J. CY - Boston DA - 1911 KW - theater stage class ref, secondary motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and kinetoscope motion pictures, and art art, and motion pictures sound recording sound recording, and phonograph phonograph sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sound recording audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences words vs. images images vs. words education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and education motion pictures, and class class, and motion pictures censorship and ratings motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures quotations quotations, and actors as ghosts quotations, and movies as hallucinations motion pictures, as dreams quotations, and movies as dreams children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence quotations, and movie violence ref, book art censorship children LB - 40000 PB - Little, Brown, and Company PY - 1911 ST - The American Dramatist TI - The American Dramatist ID - 4098 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author notes that the "music-box was the first automatic instrument of wide use. It was invented in Switzerland, and the Swiss developed its design, almost to the peak of perfection. The United States ... protected and encouraged its improvements in design, through its patent system, and manufactured it in great numbers. That the two first federal-republics in the world collaborated to bring music into the homes of many people for the first time, by means of the automatic music-box, makes this story unique." This book covers the period "from the invention of the first device which was the forerunner of the first music-box, to the invention of the graphophone or voice-recorder and reproducer by Thomas Alva Edison" in 1877. It considers the "subsequent decline and fall of the music-box in popular esteem as a result of the increasing and overwhelming popularity of the phonograph as an automatic musical instrument." By music-box, Mosoriak meant "any device or contrivance used by man to reproduce music by means of vibrating tongues or teeth automatically, without the application of his own bodily force during the immediate performance of the music." This book is illustrated with numerous black-and-white photographs. AU - Mosoriak, Roy CY - Chicago DA - 1943 KW - entertainment entertainment, home +sound recording home entertainment non-USA home, and new media home sound recording, and music +sound recording home, and information technology music information technology +sound recording sound recording, and music boxes music boxes Edison, Thomas information technology, and home sound recording, and home phonograph graphophone home, and music boxes Switzerland LB - 3940 PB - Lightner Publishing Co. PY - 1943 ST - The Curious History of Music Boxes TI - The Curious History of Music Boxes ID - 1782 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Five people contributed to this volume. Susan Mossman’s chapter “Perspectives on the History and Technology of Plastics” (15-71), provides a scientific overview of the development of plastics. She devotes pages to cellulose-based plastics such as Xylonite/Ivoride and Celluloid, and also cellulose acetate. She discusses John Wesley Hyatt’s work and early uses of celluloid. The chapter contains interesting advertisements and illustrations for celluloid toothbrushes and collars. There is also some discussion of celluloid’s use in film. At the time this volume appeared, Mossman was curator at the Science Museum in London. Mark Suggitt’s chapter, “Living with Plastics” (113-36), has a brief mention of celluloid film and movies, as well as inexpensive Kodak cameras and celluloid roll film which by the late 1930s was “becoming the medium of modern memory.” Suggitt, a social historian, concentrates on Great Britain’s early celluloid industry. Morris Kaufman’s “Other Technologies and Plastics” (148-59) is richly illustrated with color photographs. He discusses plastics use in radio with such innovations as the phenolic plug and circuit board, as well as the Ekco radio cabinet. He also offers brief observations about celluloid’s significance in motion pictures and plastics important to the transmission of electricity. Kaufman, who died in 1988, also wrote The First Century of Plastics (1963). Other essays in the book include Roger Newport’s “Plastics and Design” (72-112), Suggitt’s “Working with Plastics” (137-47), and Mossman’s “Postscript” (160-62). Mossman also provides a Catalogue of London’s Science Museum’s Plastics Collection from about 1850 to 1950 (163-271). The work has a useful bibliography on the plastics and electrical industries in Great Britain (272-78). AU - Mossman, Susan CY - London and Washington, D.C. DA - 1997 KW - technology illustrations photography public address systems preservation loudspeakers history, and new media materials materials non-USA history +photography and visual communication history, and photography history, and celluloid history, and plastic photography, and history celluloid, and history plastics Hyatt, John Wesley celluloid Xylonite cameras cameras, Kodak cameras, and history of history, and cameras +radio radio, and plastic loudspeakers, and plastic illustrations +electricity electricity, and plastics plastics, and electricity technology and society Great Britain Great Britain, and celluloid Great Britain, and plastics LB - 12330 PB - Leicester University Press PY - 1997 ST - Early Plastics: Perspectives, 1850-1950 TI - Early Plastics: Perspectives, 1850-1950 ID - 2580 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work has a good deal of information on Motion Picture Association of America. For example, Eric A. Johnston expanded Will H. Hays’s work in community relations, cooperating with national organizations and local leaders. Within a few years, he had established 130 Motion Picture Councils in major cities and they united in a national organization known as the Federation of Motion Picture Councils. AU - Motion Picture Association of America, Inc. CY - Washington, D. C. and New York DA - [1951] KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA reports, MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations +television References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps propaganda advertising public relations archives NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Johnston, Eric +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures public relations, and MPAA public relations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and public relations MPAA, and public relations reports MPAA, and Annual reports MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric, and MPAA reports primary sources, reports primary sources primary sources, MPAA MPAA, and television television, and MPAA MPAA, and commercial theater television statistics reference works LB - 16320 PB - MPAA ST - 1951 Annual Report TI - 1951 Annual Report ID - 586 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work contains a good deal of information about the Motion Picture Association of America and the entertainment industry in general. This volume also discusses the work of the Motion Picture Industry Council which had been created in the aftermath of the 1947 HUAC investigations of Hollywood. Among other things, the MPIC served as a public relations organization to put the best face possible on the movie industry. AU - Motion Picture Association of America, Inc. CY - Washington, D. C. and New York DA - [1954?] KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA reports, MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps propaganda advertising public relations archives NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures public relations, and MPAA public relations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and public relations MPAA, and public relations reports MPAA, and Annual reports MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric, and MPAA primary sources reports primary sources, reports primary sources, MPAA statistics reference works Motion Picture Industry Council LB - 16330 PB - MPAA ST - 1954 Annual Report TI - 1954 Annual Report ID - 587 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work contains a good deal of information about the Motion Picture Association of America and the entertainment industry in general. It also covers the work of the Motion Picture Industry Council. It notes that in 1955, the Production Code Administration gave its seal of approval to 65 foreign films. AU - Motion Picture Association of America, Inc. CY - Washington, D. C. and New York DA - [1955?] KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA reports, MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps propaganda advertising public relations archives NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Johnston, Eric +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures public relations, and MPAA public relations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and public relations MPAA, and public relations reports MPAA, and Annual reports MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric, and MPAA Federation of Motion Picture Councils, and MPAA MPAA, and Federation of Motion Picture Councils primary sources reports primary sources, reports primary sources, MPAA Motion Picture Industry Council statistics reference works LB - 16340 PB - MPAA ST - 1955 Annual Report TI - 1955 Annual Report ID - 588 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work contains a good deal of information about the Motion Picture Association of America and the entertainment industry. For example, MPAA president Eric A. Johnston promoted foreign films in the United States in belief that they improved understanding of other cultures, and also because of “greater flow of sorely needed dollars abroad.” He established an Advisory Unit for Foreign Films as part of the MPAA’s International Division, to assist foreign producers to market their products in America. AU - Motion Picture Association of America, Inc. CY - Washington, D. C. and New York DA - [1953] KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA self-regulation reports, MPAA Production Code CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps propaganda advertising public relations censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Johnston, Eric foreign films non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures public relations, and MPAA public relations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and public relations MPAA, and public relations reports MPAA, and Annual reports MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric, and MPAA motion pictures, and foreign films Production Code, and foreign films MPAA, and foreign films foreign films, and MPAA primary sources reports primary sources, reports primary sources, MPAA statistics reference works values LB - 16480 PB - MPAA ST - 1953 Annual Report TI - 1953 Annual Report ID - 600 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work has a good deal of information on Motion Picture Association of America. Among the topic included are the industry's public relations efforts and the growth of drive-in theaters. AU - Motion Picture Association of America, Inc. CY - New York and Washington, D. C. DA - [1952] KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA audiences reports, MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations theaters References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps propaganda advertising public relations archives NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Johnston, Eric substance abuse drug abuse +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures public relations, and MPAA public relations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and public relations MPAA, and public relations reports MPAA, and Annual reports MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric, and MPAA reports primary sources, reports primary sources primary sources, MPAA motion pictures, and drive-ins drive-in theaters theaters, and drive-ins statistics reference works LB - 18250 PB - MPAA ST - 1952 Annual Report TI - 1952 Annual Report ID - 732 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In early 1956, Eric Johnston appointed a committee to study changes in the motion picture industry's Production Code. Most of the work was farmed out to a subcommittee headed by Kenneth Clark and overseen by PCA director Geoffrey Shurlock. This is the revised Code the MPAA adopted in 1956. It is much more flexible in allowing movies to treat such subjects and abortion, drug addiction, prostitution, miscegnation, kidnapping, and profanity. It attempted to keep in place the Code's ban on treating venereal disease and "sex pervision" (i.e., homosexuality). AU - Motion Picture Association of America, Inc. CY - New York DA - Dec. 1956 KW - self-regulation reports, MPAA motion pictures censorship and ratings Production Code (1956) motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and miscegnation motion pictures, and drugs motion pictures, and prostitution motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and kidnapping children and media violence motion pictures, and violence Production Code, and decline of Johnston, Eric Shurlock, Geoffrey Johnston, Eric, and Production Code Production Code, and Eric Johnston Production Code, and Geoffrey Shurlock children Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 35670 PB - MPAA PY - 1956 ST - The Motion Picture Production Code [1956] TI - The Motion Picture Production Code [1956] ID - 3206 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This was the last effort to revise the motion picture Production Code, originally adopted in 1930. This Code came during Jack Valenti's first year as MPAA president and two years before the movie industry its rating system. The primary goal of the 1966 Code was "to encourage artistic expression by expanding creative freedom." AU - Motion Picture Association of America, Inc. CY - New York DA - Sept. 20, 1966 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA reports, MPAA CARA motion pictures censorship and ratings Production Code (1956) motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and miscegnation motion pictures, and drugs motion pictures, and prostitution motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and kidnapping children and media violence motion pictures, and violence Production Code, and decline of Johnston, Eric Shurlock, Geoffrey Johnston, Eric, and Production Code Production Code, and Eric Johnston Production Code, and Geoffrey Shurlock Valenti, Jack Production Code, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and Production Code classification motion pictures, and classification children Production Code LB - 35680 PB - MPAA PY - 1966 ST - The Motion Picture Code of Self-Regulation TI - The Motion Picture Code of Self-Regulation ID - 3207 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this history of American magazines, Mott discusses the explosion of illustrated publications during the 1890s and early 20th century. "Paper and printing costs were cheaper than ever before. But the greatest promise held for the success of a low-priced illustrated magazine for the general reader was that offered by the new, cheap technique of photoengraving known as the halftone. This process was developed in the eighties, largely through the successive inventions of Frederic E. Ives, experimenting in the laboratories of Cornell University, in 1878 and 1886. By 1893 it was apparent that the halftone would soon displace the far more expensive fine-line engraving on wood. Even the Century, whose reputation depended in no small degree on its beautiful wood engraving by Timothy Cole and other artists of almost equal rank, was using some halftones by this time. Small wonder, when the Century paid up to three hundred dollars for a page-size woodcut, and it could buy a halftone for less than twenty dollars. "S. S. McClure founded his magazine in June 1893 as a copiously illustrated, well-edited monthly, containing fiction and articles on a literary level at least comparable with that of the established 'quality group,' and in an area of ideas more timely, lively, and journalistic....." (5) Cosmopolitan, Munsey's, Peterson's Magazine, and Harper's followed. Mott talks about the appearance of 10-cent and even 5-cent magazines after 1895. (5-6) "Frank Munsey wrote in 1899 that there were 'a vast number of them,' and added: 'It is an off month that does not record the advent of several new ones.' And four years later Munsey estimated, probably with approximate correctness, that the ten-centers had 85 per cent of the circulation of American magazines; be he thought that of the 'hundred or two' of such magazines, only four were big money-makers -- his own Munsey's and Argosy, the Cosmopolitan, and McClure's. (6) Mott goes on to say that "There was also a vogue in the nineties for five-cent magazines, and even for monthlies selling for one or two cents." (6) The ten-cent magazines were characterized by "copious and well-printed illustration, liveliness and freshness in presentation of nonfiction articles, variety in subject and freshness in presentation of nonfiction articles, variety in subject matter, a serious treatment of contemporary problems, a keen interest in new inventions and progress in general, and attention to major world 6/7 events. These magazines had also ... the attraction of success; there was a popular appear in the numbers fat with advertising." (6-7) Chapter IX (144-56) is entitled "The Graphic Arts." Mott covers the "growth of photography" (148-49), "journalists devoted to photography" (149-50), "leading magazine illustrators," (150-51), "phases of magazine illustration," (151-52), and "the nude in magazine art" (152-53). With regard to the phases of illustration, he notes that "Poster art became a cult in the nineties." (151) Advertising used them especially. "Another fad -- on a different level, to be sure, but not without its importance -- was the extraordinary popularity of Palmer Cox's [']Brownies.' These tiny characters, representing the 'dude,' the policeman, the Irishman, and so on appeared and reappeared in Cox's draw- 151/52 ings -- always a lot of them in one picture, at the ball game, celebrating the Fourth, or just going through funny antics. Originally designed for children, these creatures became familiar to everyone after they were introduced in St. Nicholas in 1887; they got into other magazines, into the advertising pages, into books and newspapers. 'Few books for children have been so successful as the Brownie books,' said the Bostonian in 1895, announcing that a hundred thousand of them had been sold." (151-52) Mott comments on the increasing prevalence of portraits of people. "In these latter days, when everyone has his picture in the paper now and then, it is hard to understand the passion for portraits that was general in the nineties [1890s]. But it was possible then, for the first time, for middle-class readers to collect portraits of the great; and thousands of them did. The movement was tied up with the study of history and current events that belonged to the widespread adult education movements of the times. McClure's Magazine was able to base it first great success on its publication of pictures of Napoleon, and an even greater success on its Lincoln portraits. Several magazines -- notably Demorest's -- printed series of portraits of famous men and women on pages which were blank on the other side so that they could be removed without injuring the magazine, and sold scrapbooks in which their readers could past them." (152) (my emphasis) The next-to-last part of chapter IX discusses "photography the revolutionist" (153-54). "It was photography that revolutionized magazine illustration in the nineties. This was a double revolution. First, photography furnished the copy for the picture in many cases without any need of a drawing or painting. Second, not only was the artist thus eliminated, but so was the engraver, for the print could be re-photographed on a sensitized plate through a fine screen, and acid baths would remove or reduce the printing points of the whites in order to make a plate by 'automatic' process. By this double revolution, a great flood of timely and apposite pictures was made available by the photographers, and then plates were prepared for printing at a fraction of the former cost." (153) (my emphasis) Mott says that "printing in the quality magazines by what was at first called 'the Ives process,' after the inventor, Frederick E. Ives, and later 'the half-tone plate.' began when the Century used it to reproduce some brush drawings made to illustrate John Vance Cheney's ballads in 1884. Soon Harper's was experimenting with the new process. Though such beginnings were tentative, halftones were established in the magazines by the beginning of the nineties...." (153) Mott's last section in this chapter is on the Quarterly Illustrator. (154) AU - Mott, Frank Luther CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1957 KW - wood engraving presidents and new media journalism journalism Ives, Frederic fame art ref, secondary women women, and new media advertising and public relations propaganda public relations news and journalism books, periodicals, newspapers news and journalism magazines magazines, and history of advertising, and magazines magazines, and advertising women women, and magazines magazines, and women magazines, and pulp magazines, and men's advertising photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and magzines magazines, and half tones wood engraving, and magazines magazines, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and magazines magazines, and photo engraving sexuality sexuality, and magazines magazines, and sexuality nudity, and magazines magazines, and nudity photography, and art art, and photography values photography, and values values, and photography photography, and decadence photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality Ives, Frederic, and photo engraving portaits, and personality personality, and portraits posters color color, and posters president and new media Lincoln, Abraham Lincoln, Abraham, and photography photography, and Abraham Lincoln history and new media history, and photography photography, and history ref, book celebrity history motion pictures nudity personality photography LB - 39600 PB - Belknap Press of Harvard University Press PY - 1957 ST - A History of American Magazines: 1885-1905 TI - A History of American Magazines: 1885-1905 ID - 4058 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The authors argue that public confidence in American democratic institutions has fallen dramatically since the late 1960s. While some scholars see this decline as a rational reaction to Vietnam, Watergate, and other events, another body of research has concluded “that the negative tone of the mass media undermines public confidence in institutions.” Moy and Pfau conclude that there is an element of truth in both conclusions but that the issue is more complex than previously believed. Their work is based on data collected between 1995 and 1997. It includes content analyses of how media depicted Congress, the presidency, the judicial system, public schools, and the media. Along with these analyses they also performed four public opinion surveys that the publics political expertise, use of media, and attitudes toward democratic institutions. The authors describe their methodology as follows: “Most previous research on media’s influence on confidence has relied singularly on analysis or opinion surveys and does not take ‘an interconnected approach,’ which... is necessary in order to determine the influence of the media on confidence. Few studies examine the influence of multiple media simultaneously, which is essential in order to accommodate differing media use patterns. Our work compares the relative contributions of seven communication modalities on public perceptions of confidence: newspapers, news magazines, network television news, local television news, television news magazines, television entertainment talk shows, and political talk radio. “In addition to the ‘interconnected data approach’ and analysis of multiple communication modalities, this study features a unique approach to data analysis. The results reported in this book are based on a combination of approaches, including muiltivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) to assess differences in media depictions of each institution and structural equation modeling to track the path of media influence on perception of confidence.” The authors conclude that print media (newspapers and magazines) generally “exert an overall positive influence on confidence” while political talk radio program have a persistently “negative impact.” Network TV news and other media exert an influence on public confidence in democratic institutions that is more mixed. This book is in the Praeger Series in Political Communication, Robert E. Denton, Jr., series editor. AU - Moy, Patricia and Michael Pfau CY - Westport, CT DA - 2000 KW - Vietnam War books, periodicals, newspapers journalism news and journalism community democracy news and journalism war +radio +television democracy and media media effects newspapers news magazines magazines, and news radio, and political talk shows television, and news television, and network news television, and TV news magazines television, and entertainment talk shows news, and democratic institutions democracy, and journalism bibliographies, and news and democracy journalism journalism, and democracy democracy, and journalism Watergate Vietnam War Vietnam War, and media Watergate, and media presidents, and new media presidency radio, and democracy television, and democracy democracy, and radio democracy, and television +bibliographies LB - 11910 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Praeger PY - 2000 ST - With Malice Toward All? The Media and Public Confidence in Democratic Institutions TI - With Malice Toward All? The Media and Public Confidence in Democratic Institutions ID - 2538 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work provides a world perspective and is written simultaneously in three languages (English, German, French). Its date of publication also readers a window into the state of visual communication in 1971. The author takes a broad view of visual communication, one which includes the book and print culture. Early pages deal with written word in the pre-Gutenberg era. Space is given to the civilizations in Mesopotamie, Egypt, China, India, and Europe. The author then moves to the Middle Ages and the invention of printing. “With the advent of printing, the single book, hand-written and limited in availability, grew into a medium for the worldwide dissemination of thought; communication to the few became information for the masses. Oral transmission, which had dominated for so long, was replaced by visual communication. And man’s thought, behavior, and civilization were inevitably affected. “As printing was improved and grew more widespread,” the author said, “the media of visual information multiplied: the newspaper, magazine, illuminated sign, television, exhibition. And already work is in progress [this in 1971] shaping the media of the future such as computer writing, stereoscopic colored pictures, home-facsimile newspapers, .... “The history of visual communication is closely linked with the history of art, civilization and trade. And with advertising,” Mueller-Brockmann said. “Advertising has an aim in common with all men: to make an impact, to captivate, to convince. This makes it as old as humanity itself. But advertising with all its scientific methods and attention to detail is still relatively young and closely bound up with our highly technical civilization.” Later pages of this work deal with such twentieth century developments as Futurism, Dadaism, Russian Constructivism, De Stijl, The Bauhaus, Constructive and Objective design during the 1920s and 1930s, Object Photography, Illustrative Design following World War I, the development of Objective Visual Communication after World War II. Each section is followed by numerous illustrations (mostly in black and white). Indeed, perhaps two thirds of the pages of this volume are illustrations. This book gives a useful overview of this topic. AU - Mueller (Muller)-Brockmann, Josef CY - New York DA - 1971 KW - illustrations computers photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations print news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers journalism +future and science fiction news and journalism war non-USA printing printing press news +general studies +photography and visual communication communication, pre-Gutenberg printing press oral communication writing newspapers +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers magazines +electricity electricity, and electric signs advertising electricity, and advertising +television +computers and the Internet stereoscope, color color facsimile, and home newspapers future Dadaism Russian constructivism Bauhaus illustrations World War I World War II Stijl, De facsimile +duplicating technologies Russia stereoscope LB - 1800 PB - Visual Communication Books, Hastings House PY - 1971 ST - A History of Visual Communication TI - A History of Visual Communication ID - 1576 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book deals with “the changing relationship between control and communication and with the organization of the ‘economies’ of communications, the social structures governing networks, the allocation of the resources needed for communication, and the conditions of access and use.” Mulgan sets forth several ideas concerning “control.” “We have become used to the idea that communications systems can carry conversations, films or sounds, but it is their nature as control infrastructures that generally pre-dates their role as media in the modern sense,” he writes. Early examples include the postal systems of the Persian, Mongol, Roman, and Chinese empires, and the British empire’s cable system, the first modern electrical global network. When new technologies are inserted into such systems, the a world already interconnected grows more complex giving rise to “a permanent crisis of control.” As independence is replaced by interdependence and speed replaces distance, it become “much hard to exercise control within a closed system.” As new networks are created, they challenge “traditional categories and intellectual structures on many fronts.” Mulgan attempts to explain the dynamics of new networks and to suggest ways in which societies depend on the flow of information and knowledge. Communications technologies have a paradoxical effect. On the one hand they tremendously enhance controls exercised by governments, corporations, voters, and consumers. On the other hand, they create a “new order of chaos and uncontrollability which brings, in turn, a sense that control is unachievable.” Several themes run through this book. One considers the relation between closure and openness. A second group of themes concerns the difficulties economic theory has in explaining values that are circulated in communication networks. Third is the creation of “new economies of communication.” A fourth theme concerns economic theory in a world where abundance of information, not scarcity, is a central characteristic. A fifth theme deals with the ways in which communication technologies pose challenges to western civilization’s political motifs. Here Mulgan suggests that the new technologies do not totally bypass mediation, allowing unrestricted one-to-one communication, but rather create a world in which “more complex structures of mediation” have emerged. This work has eleven chapters. Chapter 6, for example, deals with freedom and control of the cultural industries (books, film, music, etc.) and issues involving censorship, security, piracy, and protection of intellectual property. “Control can be liberating as well as oppressive,” the author writes. AU - Mulgan, G. J. CY - New York DA - 1991 KW - R & D post office nationalism radio time and timekeeping time preservation labor +sound recording research and development war communication revolution history, and new media law community democracy freedom law law censorship and ratings war non-USA history office office, and new media office geography recording information technology Information Age history Great Britain general studies control revolution democracy and media capitalism nationalism and communication infrastructure wireless communication postal service Great Britain, and British Empire cable global communication time space (spatial) change, acceleration of history, break with communication revolution information age military communication information v. knowledge information technology, and consumers chaos information processing books entertainment, and cultural industries cultural industries regulation motion pictures recording, and music music intellectual property piracy censorship copyright freedom of expression security political economy books, periodicals, newspapers +sound recording +duplicating technologies change culture entertainment electricity Great Britain, and telegraph nationalism, and new media telegraph cultural imperialism LB - 980 PB - Guilford Press PY - 1991 ST - Communication and Control: Networks and the New Economies of Communication TI - Communication and Control: Networks and the New Economies of Communication ID - 1494 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This well illustrated book provides a history of sexually explicit motion pictures during the 1970s. The work mentions camera and video technology and how they altered the adult movie business. The book is organized choronologically with five chapters, each devoted to one decade from the 1930s through the 1970s. AU - Muller, Eddie AU - Faris, Daniel CY - New York DA - 1996 KW - illustrations entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) audiences motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality entertainment, home magnetic recording sexuality advertising, and public relations video theaters sex propaganda public relations sexuality motion pictures home entertainment videotape magnetic tape home +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography pornography pornography, and motion pictures Deep Throat (1972) movie Behind the Green Door sex, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sex theaters, and pornography pornography, and theaters VCRs VCRs, and pornography home entertainment revolution pornography, and VCRs video, and pornography pornography, and video pornography, and motion pictures advertising, and pronography advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising (porn) illustrations illustrations, and porn films motion pictures, and history (porn) home, and new media advertising LB - 19520 PB - St. Martin's Griffin PY - 1996 ST - Grindhouse: The Forbidden World of 'Adults Only' Cinema TI - Grindhouse: The Forbidden World of 'Adults Only' Cinema ID - 787 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The first and second drafts of this book were completed in 1930 and 1931 respectively. Mumford noted that while Arnold J. Toynbee used the term “Industrial Revolution” during the 1880s, “and while anthropologists and archaeologists paid due attention to the technical equipment of primitive peoples, sometimes exaggerating the formative effect of tools, the broader influence of technics upon human cultures was hardly touched on.” In Technics and Civilization, Mumford attempted to break away from this traditional neglect of technological achievements. His book, he wrote in 1963, tried not only to summarize “for the first time the technical history of the last thousand years of Western civilization,” but to reveal “the constant interplay between the social milieu -- monasticism, capitalism, science, play, luxury, war -- and the most specific achievement of the inventor, the industrialist, and the engineer.” The first indication of “the new order took place in the general picture of the world: during the first seven centuries of the machine’s existence the categories of time and space underwent an extraordinary change, and no aspect of life was left untouched by this transformation. The application of quantitative methods of thought to the study of nature had its first manifestation in the regular measurement of time; and the new mechanical conception of time arose in part out of the routine of the monastery....” Mumford maintained that the clock rather than the steam-engine was “the key-machine of the modern industrial age.” AU - Mumford, Lewis CY - New York DA - 1963 KW - technology time and timekeeping time steam power values preservation inventions innovation history, and new media timekeeping, and clocks non-USA history geography history general studies Toynbee, Arnold J. Industrial Revolution technology and society capitalism science inventors engineering time space (spatial) numeracy quantitative methods timekeeping monasticism steam engines (see: engines, steam) clocks history, break with engines, steam engines quantification +transportation capitalism, and technology values, and technology values LB - 990 OP - 1934 PB - Harcourt, Brace & World, Inc.; A Harbinger Book PY - 1963 ST - Technics and Civilization TI - Technics and Civilization ID - 1495 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Munro, John CY - London DA - 1893 KW - +future and science fiction values television, and history of +electricity future values, and electricity electricity, and religion +television television, and origins LB - 5020 PB - Religious Tract Society PY - 1893 ST - The Romance of Electricity TI - The Romance of Electricity ID - 1889 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Munro, John CY - London DA - 1903 KW - +electricity electricity, and history of LB - 5030 PB - George Newnes PY - 1903 ST - The Story of Electricity TI - The Story of Electricity ID - 1890 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Munro, John CY - London; and Westport, CT DA - 1976 KW - future and science fiction +television future science fiction Munro, John science LB - 7210 OP - 1897 PB - Jerrold and Sons; and Hyperion Press PY - 1976 ST - A Trip to Venus TI - A Trip to Venus ID - 2092 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This anthology of articles by former students of James Carey discusses Carey's research on communication. As John Pauley notes in his Introduction, Carey maintained that “Modern people deploy communication technologies--telegraph, telephone, broadcast signal, coaxial cable, computer network--for ... symbolic purposes .... Such technologies create an idiom with which to discuss the social system. By making possible new forms of connectedness, these media simulate the feel of face-to-face communication.” Among themes treated by these essays are the relationship between communication and the development of communication, and the relation between journalism and democracy. AU - Munson, Eve Stryker, and Catherine A. Warren. eds. CY - Minneapolis DA - 1997 KW - Chicago, IL nationalism news and journalism community democracy news and journalism values general studies Carey, James democracy and media +nationalism and communication democracy, and journalism cable, coaxial +telephones +telegraph communication, and culture values, and communication Chicago School cable journalism, and democracy journalism, and new media journalism LB - 10110 PB - University of Minnesota Press PY - 1997 ST - James Carey: A Critical Reader TI - James Carey: A Critical Reader ID - 2376 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Münsterberg, who was born and educated in Germany, studied philosophy, psychology, and medicine, and came to the United States to teach at Harvard at the end of the nineteenth century. He was interested in modern environment’s influence on the psychology of individuals. In this work, he examines how people experience movies subjectively. By 1916, motion pictures had become the most popular form of entertainment not only the United States but in the world, and was “one of the strongest social energies of our time.” (215) The popularity and influence of movies was growing stronger almost daily. He considered motion pictures to be a new art form, not simply an extension of live theater. Films appealed not only to the imagination but also to the intellect, he said. (21) Münsterberg noted that by 1916, the “masses” preferred “to be taught by pictures rather than by words.” (27) Films provided new ways of experiencing the news, gave images of far-off lands, and traced “the life of nature even in forms which no human observation really finds in the outer world.” (26) The movies allowed the actor “to entertain many thousand audiences at the same time,” (29) thus democratizing the theater. The close-up, made possible by the camera, changed the nature of acting by allowing emphasis on small details that were impossible in live theater. (36) The “close-up leaves all stagecraft behind,” Münsterberg said. “Suddenly we see not Booth himself as he seeks to assassinate the president, but only his hand holding the revolver and the play of his excited fingers filling the whole field of vision.” (37) By splicing together pictures from different times and places, by running them backward and forward, the movies altered audiences’ relationship to time and space. “Every dream becomes real,” he wrote, uncanny ghosts appear from nothing and disappear into nothing, mermaids swim through the waves and little elves climb out of the Easter lilies.” (35) Münsterberg saw in cinema something strikingly different from the live stage. “The use of natural background, the rapid change of scenes, the intertwining of the actions in different scenes, the changes of the rhythms of action, the passing through physically impossible experiences, the linking of disconnected movements, the realization of supernatural effects, the gigantic enlargement of small details: these may be sufficient as characteristic illustrations of the essential trend. They show that the progress of the photoplay did not lead to a more and more perfect photographic reproduction of the theater stage, but lead away from the theater 37/38 altogether.” (37-38) Film had so many new features that it was not merely an extension of the theater but had developed its own “esthetic independence.” (38) In cinema, Münsterberg considered the "cut-back" ("going back to an earlier scene") comparable to the close-up in its significance. “…The case of the cut-back is there quite parallel to the close-up. In the one we recognize the mental act of attending, in the other we must recognize the mental act of remembering. In both cases the act which in the ordinary theater would go on in our mind alone is here in the photoplay projected into the pictures themselves. It is as if reality has lost its own continuous connection and become shaped by the demands of our soul. It is as if the outer world itself became molded in accordance with out fleeting turns of attention or with our passing memory ideas.” (95) (emphasis in original text) He writes that “In our mind past and future become intertwined with the present. The photoplay obeys the laws of the mind rather than those of the outer world.” (97) “Just as we can follow the reminiscences of the hero, we may share the fancies of his imagination.” (100) The photoplay could “not only 'cut back' in 109/110 the service of memories, but it can cut off in the service of suggestion," he wrote. (109-10) Münsterberg moves on to speculate about the psychological impact of cinema. When we watch movies, he says, “it is as if reality has lost its own continuous connection and become shaped by the demands of our soul.” (95) “The objective world is molded by the interests of the mind. Events which are far distant from one another so that we could not be physically present at all of them at the same time are fusing in our field of vision, just as they are brought together in our own consciousness.” (106-07) (emphasis in original text) “The massive outer world has lost its weight, it has been freed from space, time, and causality, and it has been clothed in the forms of our own consciousness,” he maintained. “The mind has triumphed over matter and the pictures roll on with the ease of musical tones. It is a superb enjoyment which no other art can furnish us.” (220) (emphasis in original text) Münsterberg had little doubt that the movies had “strong social effects.” (221) The reactions to what was seen on the screen was “as vivid as realities, because the mind is so completely given up to the moving pictures,” he said. “The more vividly the impressions force themselves on the mind, the more easily must they become starting points for imitation and other motor responses. The sight of crime and of vice may force itself on the consciousness with disastrous results.” (221) “The fact that millions are daily under the spell of the performances on the screen is established. The high degree of their suggestibility during those hours in the dark house may be taken for granted.” (223) He noted that some movie makers even welcomed censorship although he warned against confusing “artistic freedom with moral licentiousness” (222) and argued that federal censorship was at odds with traditional American beliefs in freedom of expression (223). Münsterberg also stressed that films had a great potential for social and moral uplift and he encouraged reformers to emphasize “the tremendous influences for good which may be exerted by the moving pictures.” (223) It was “not the dangerous knowledge which must avoided,” he concluded, “but it is the trivializing influence of a steady contact with things which are not worth knowing.” (225) -SV (May 2006) This book, published only a few months before Münsterberg's death in 1916, offers an insightful look at motion pictures (or the "Photoplay") from a noted Harvard psychologist. Münsterberg observes that with motion pictures "For the first time the impression of movement was synthetically produced from different elements." (7) Movies appeal to not only the imagination but to the intellect, he maintains. (21) They should be ranked with newspapers and magazines in their significance for society. He notes that even in 1916 it was possible to record a news event and show it at considerable distance the same day. For example, "the investiture of the Prince of Wales was performed at Carnarvon at four o'clock in the afternoon, the public of London at ten o'clock of the same day saw the ceremony on the screen in a moving picture twelve minutes in length. The distance between the two places is two hundred miles. The film was seven hundred and fifty feet long. It had been developed and printed in a special express train made up of long freight cars transformed into dark rooms and fitted with tanks for developing and washing and with a machine for printing and drying." (23) In the United States there was less interest in such news reels until World War I stimulated in news from the battle fields. (24) It some respects movies have become "the magazine on the screen," Münsterberg writes. (26) He comments on the popularity of illustrated magazines and says that these publications have "deeply influenced ... much American history in the last two decades" because "the masses of today prefer to be taught by pictures rather than by words." (27) (my emphasis) Münsterberg discusses the development of special effects in movies and says that there "is no limit to the trick pictures which the skill 34/35 of the experts invent.... Every dream becomes real, uncanny ghosts appear from nothing and disappear into nothing, mermaids swim through the waves and little elves climb out of the Easter lilies." (34-35) He considers the ability of the camera to show close-ups and to focus attention on aspects of a drama that would be impossible on the live stage. He emphasizes the differences between the photoplay and the live theater. "The art of the photoplay has developed so many new features of its own, features which have not even any similarity to the technique of the stage that the question arises: is it not really a new art which long since left behind the mere film reproduction of the theater and which ought to be acknowledged in its own esthetic independence? (38) (emphasis in original text) Movies are as difference from the theater as is the painter's work different from that of the sculptor. (38) Münsterberg writes about the development of the stereoscope and the ability of motion pictures to give audiences as real sense of depth. (48-49; see also Chapter 3, "Depth and Movement," 43-71)) He says that "Depth and movement alike come to us in the moving picture world, not as hard facts but as a mixture of fact and symbol. They are present and yet they are not in the things. We invest the impressions in them." (71) (emphasis in original text) Moving pictures allow us to overcome time and space, and also to magnify personality, Münsterberg maintains. The close-up, he concludes, "has objectified in our world of perception our mental act of attention and by it has furnished art with a means which far transcends the power of any theater stage." (88) (emphasis in original text) In Chapter 5 (92-111), Münsterberg writes about "Memory and Imagination." The "cut-back" ("going back to an early scene") is comparable in its effect to the close-up, he states. (95) In its ability to go backward and forward in time and to show scenes over a large terrain, the "photoplay alone gives us our chance for ... omnipresence," quite unlike what is possible in the live theater. (104) "The objective world is molded by the interests of the mind. Events which are far distant from one another so that we could not be physically present at all of them at the same time are fusing in our field of vision as they are 106/107 brought together in our own consciousness." (106-07) (emphasis in original text) Münsterberg explains that the "photoplay can not only 'cut back' in 109/110 the service of memories, but it can cut off in the service of suggestion." (109-10) "It is as if the outer world itself became molded in accordance with our fleeting turns of attention or with our passing memory ideas," he says. (95) The photoplay can show events in reverse and in a way not possible in nature nor on stage. (128) And, there are powerful differences between the photoplay and the theater in depicting distance. In the film, "not more than one sixteenth of a second is needed to carry us from one corner of the globe to the other, from a jubilant setting to a mourning scene. The whole keyboard of the imagination may be used to serve this emotionalizing of nature," he states. (120) The ability of the camera to focus on facial expression means that too often "emotional expression become exaggerated." (115) Münsterberg does make a questionable assertion about the nature of a film's effect on the audience when he writes: "It is obvious that for this leading group of emotions the relation of the pictures to the feelings of the persons in the play and to the feelings of the spectator is exactly the same." (124) Münsterberg concludes that movies have become "the most popular entertainment of the country, nay, of the world, and their influence is one of the strongest social energies of our time." (215) The tell "the human story by overcoming the forms of the outer world, namely, space, time and causality, and by adjusting the events to the forms of the inner world, namely, attention, memory, imagination, and emotion." (173) (emphasis in the original text) A few pages later, he reiterates this point when he says that "The massive outer world has lost its weight, it has been freed from space, time, and causality, and it has been clothed in the forms of our own consciousness. The mind has triumphed over matter and the pictures roll on with the ease of musical tones. It is a superb enjoyment which no other art can furnish us. [emphasis in original text] No wonder 220/221 that temples for the new goddess are built in every little hamlet." (220-21) Münsterberg believed that movies had strong effects on their audiences. "The intensity with which the plays take hold of the audience cannot remain without strong social effects," he said. For many people, what they see on the screen has a powerful effect. "The associations become as vivid as realities, because the mind is so completely given up to the moving pictures." (221) This seems especially true for rural audiences. The wrong kind of movies may be a stimulus to imitation and crime. "The more vividely the impressions force themselves on the mind, the more easily must they become starting points for imitation and other motor responses. The sight of crime and of vice may force itself on the consciousness with disastrous results. The normal resistance breaks down and the moral balance, which would have been kept under the habitual stimuli of the narrow rou- 221/222 tine life, may be lost under the pressure of the realistic suggestions. At the same time the subtle sensitiveness of the young mind may suffer from the rude contrasts between the farces and the passionate romances which follow with benumbing speed in the darkened house. The possibilities of psychical infection and destruction cannot be overlooked." (221-22) Münsterberg goes on to emphasize the influence of movies. "The fact that millions are daily under the spell of the performances on the screen is established. The high degree of their suggestibility during those hours in the dark house may be taken for granted." (223) Yet Münsterberg was doubtful about the need or effect of federal censorship. He writes that it was questionable that the "new movement toward Federal censorship is in harmony with American ideas on the freedom of public expression." (223) Moving pictures can be a powerful educational force; the danger is from the steady emphasis on trivial matters. "Not only the news pictures and the scientific demonstrations but also the photoplays can lead young and old to ever new regions of knowledge. The curiosity and the imagination of the spectators will follow gladly. Yet even in the intellectual sphere the dangers must not be overlooked. They are not positive. It is not as in the moral 224/225 sphere where the healthy moral impulse is checked by the sight of crimes which stir up antisocial desires. The danger is not that the pictures open insight into facts which ought not to be known. It is not the dangerous knowledge which must be avoided, but it is the trivializing influence of a steady contact with things which are not worth knowing. The larger part of the film literature of today is certainly harmful in this sense. The intellectual background of most photoplays is insipid...." (224-25) (my emphasis) The solution to the problems raised by movies lies in education, or to use a more recent term, media literacy. "The people still has to learn the great difference between true enjoyment and fleeting pleasure, between real beauty and the mere tickling of the senses," he said. (230) (my emphasis) The movie represented something new. "For the first time the psychologist can observe the starting 232/233 of an entirely new esthetic development, a new form of true beauty in the turmoil of a technical age, created by its very technique and yet more than any other art destined to overcome outer nature by thee free and joyful play of the mind," he concluded. (232-33) --SV (Feb. 2010) AU - Münsterberg, Hugo CY - New York DA - 1916 KW - Münsterberg, Hugo Munsterberg, Hugo history fame ethics children celebrity art ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography photography, and new art form photography, and psychology Münsterberg, Hugo photography, and Hugo Münsterberg Münsterberg, Hugo, and photography photography, and art art, and photography values ethics photography, and values photography, and ethics ethics, and photography values, and photography photography, as magic modernity photography, and modernity modernity, and photography new way of seeing new way of seeing, and photography photography, and time and space quotations quotations, and modernity critics critics, and modernity Munsterberg, Hugo motion pictures motion pictures, and Hugo Münsterberg Münsterberg, Hugo, and motion pictures new way of seeing, and motion pictures motion pictures, and new way of seeing actors acting photography photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and special effects acting, and facial expression acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting media effects motion pictures, and media effects media effects, and motion pictures history and new media history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history news and journalism motion pictures, and newsreels news, and newsreels newsreels pictorial journalism news, and pictorial journalism acting, and close-ups cameras, and close-ups motion pictures, and stereoscope motion pictures, and 3-D 3-D, and motion pictures quotations quotations, and psychological effect of movies audiences media effects, and audiences audiences, and media effects motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures children and media media effects, and children children, and media effects motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures censorship and ratings motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures Münsterberg, Hugo, and censorship censorship, and Hugo Münsterberg media literacy media literacy, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media literacy media literacy, and Hugo Münsterberg Münsterberg, Hugo, and media literary 3-D censorship news LB - 40390 PB - D. Appleton and Company PY - 1916 ST - The Photoplay: A Psychological Study TI - The Photoplay: A Psychological Study ID - 4137 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author began work as a systems programmer for IBM in the late 1960s, then went to Harvard to study English literature, especially the Victorian era, and then began teaching at MIT in 1971. She became interested in computers again during the early 1980s. “I had left computing in the age of punch cards and came back to it in the age of video display terminals and microcomputers,” she writes. She has also worked with foreign language teachers, in a Shakespeare archives, and on a film art digital textbook. She concludes that the computer offers “a thrilling extension of human powers,” because it gives “us greater control over different kinds of information,” inviting “us to tackle more complex tasks and to ask new kinds of questions.” Her book, she says, “is an attempt to imagine a future digital medium, shaped by the hacker’s spirit and the enduring power of the imagination and worthy of the rapture our children are bringing to it.” One particularly interesting section of this book is entitled “Alien Kisses." Murray presents various visions of different writers of the possibilities and problems presented by new media that tell stories by engaging multiple sensations (virtual reality). She discusses the worlds created by such television series as Star Trek and Tek War, and by such writers as Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World (1932), Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 (1953), William Gibson’s Neuromancer (1983). “For Huxley and Bradbury, the more persuasive the medium, the more dangerous it is. As soon as we open ourselves to these illusory environments that are ‘as real as the world’ or even ‘more real than reality,’ we surrender our reason and join with the undifferentiated masses, slavishly wiring ourselves into the stimulation machine at the cost of our very humanity. In this dystopian view, the new entertainment technologies are a means of stripping away the language and culture that give life meaning and of reducing us to a state of abject bestiality....” In Bradbury’s work, “books are praised as a better representational technology by virtue of their limitations; their meager sensory input makes their illusions easier to resist. ‘You can shut them and say, “Hold on a moment'." But with the new multisensory media, the populace is overpowered.” Murray is aware that this new medium has dual (or multiple) possibilities. One line of thinking (which she reflects) is essentially positive. Another line, however, “offers an opposing image of a sensation-based storytelling medium that is intrinsically degrading, fragmenting, and destructive of meaning, a medium whose success implies the death of the great traditions of humanism, or even a fundamental shift in human nature itself....” Murray concludes that the “computer is chameleonic. It can be seen as a theater, a town hall, an unraveling book, an animated wonderland, a sports arena, and even a potential life form. But it is first and foremost a representational medium, a means for modeling the world that adds its own potent properties to the traditional media it has assimilated so quickly. As the most powerful representational medium yet invented, it should be put to the highest tasks of society. Whether or not we will one day be rewarded with the arrival of the cyberbard, we should hasten to place this new compositional tool as firmly as possible in the hands of the story-tellers.” AU - Murray, Janet CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home reality motion pictures home entertainment community democracy censorship and ratings home, and new media home values home, and information technology metaphors information technology +computers and the Internet +books, periodicals, newspapers digital media virtual reality virtual reality, and television virtual reality, and motion pictures virtual reality, and computers reality v. virtual reality computers, and popular culture computers, and literature democracy and media values, and computers metaphors metaphors, and computers cyberspace information technology, and home children, and media computers, and popular culture children computers virtual reality home, and new media +television +motion pictures and popular culture digital media digitization Gibson, William Huxley, Aldous Bradbury, Ray LB - 7920 PB - Free Press PY - 1997 ST - Hamlet on the Holodeck: The Future of Narrative in Cyberspace TI - Hamlet on the Holodeck: The Future of Narrative in Cyberspace ID - 2161 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Musser examines cinema's first twelve years, from 1895 to late 1907. "Here, cinema refers to projected motion pictures and their sound accompaniment, but two closely related developments must also be considered," he says. "First, there is the history of screen practice -- projected images and their audio complement -- which dates back to the seventeenth century and includes the magic lantern, a precursor of the modern slide projector. As the title of this book suggests, cinema was neither ‘born’ nor a ‘new art form’: it emerged out of, even as it soon dominated, screen practice. For this reason, the first chapter briefly traces the history of earlier projected images as they originated in Europe and subsequently developed within the United States. Second, this volume is concerned with the history of motion pictures, which includes not only cinema but forms of exhibition that did not involve projection. Of these exhibition formats, individualized or peephole viewing was the most important. The history of commercial motion pictures in fact began in 1894 with Edison’s peephole kinetoscope, while the mutoscope, a peephole flip-card device, was an important presence during the late 1890s and early 1900s. The cinema, the screen, motion pictures -- these involve distinct though overlapping practices.” The author notes that there has often been a concern about the deceptive potential of images. “Indeed, the potential for deception remained an underlying concern of early cinema, which enjoyed an even greater level of technical illusionism,” he writes (19) in discussing Kircher's demystification of the projected image in 17th century. Musser, drawing on Gordon Hendricks' book The Kinetoscope, notes an important development in film's ability to portray history. Musser discusses early historical films (1894-95) and the use of stop action to depict beheading of Mary, Queen of Scots. “This stop-motion substitution, along with the depiction of historical subject matter, were significant innovations,” he writes. (87; also ibid., 86-7) Musser says that "it was undoubtedly scenes of foreign lands that provided the cinématographe with its chief attraction for American audiences.” (145) This book is Volume 1 in Scribner's History of the American Cinema Series, Charles Harpole, editor. It is the culmination of 12 years of research and writing by the author. It is the first volume of a multi-volume History of American Cinema Series (Charles Harpole, editor), published by Scribner's. These works attempt to consider the interaction of technology, economic and social conditions, and aesthetics and style. The text of Musser’s book runs 495 pages, and the notes, bibliography, and index consume another 100-plus pages. This book is grounded in substantial research in primary collections including material at the Federal Archive and Record Centers in Bayonne, NJ, Chicago, and Philadelphia, as well as several other archival holdings. AU - Musser, Charles CY - New York DA - 1990 KW - magic history censorship actors acting actors acting non-USA motion pictures motion pictures bibliographies, and early cinema motion pictures, and silent movies motion pictures, and Europe Europe, and motion pictures motion pictures, and exhibition format kinetoscope Edison, Thomas magic lanterns motion pictures, and origins Europe bibliographies history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space ref, secondary censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and deception actors, and status of motion pictures, and magic motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and motion pictures ref, book special effects LB - 6310 PB - Charles Scribner’s Sons PY - 1990 ST - The Emergence of Cinema: The American Screen to 1907 TI - The Emergence of Cinema: The American Screen to 1907 ID - 3428 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Lyman H. Howe was one of many "traveling showmen who brought urban-based entertainments to the American heartland" during the late-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. "He was part of a way of life soon undermined by mass entertainment -- first the storefront motion picture houses or nickelodeons, and then the movie palaces with their balanced programs. Touring a miniature coal breaker, he entered the world of show business in 1883, exactly fifty years after Barnum and thirty years before [Adolph] Zukor. He gave phonograph concerts during the 1890s and added motion pictures to his programs in 1896. His last road shows ended in 1919, shortly after the end of World War I. In his heyday he toured new, technologically based entertainments with important prerecorded elements. Howe flourished in one era, when performers journeyed from town to town almost exclusively by railroad; he grew old in another, when an evening's fun could be shipped in a film can." AU - Musser, Charles (in collaboration with Carol Nelson) CY - Princeton, NJ DA - 1991 KW - audiences motion pictures and popular culture Howe, Lyman, and motion pictures motion pictures, and origins motion pictures, and traveling exhibitions sound recording phonograph photography and visual communication phonograph, and photography photography, and phonograph motion pictures, and travelogues theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and theaters Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Thomas Edison values motion pictures, and early themes nickelodeons motion pictures, and nickelodeons motion pictures, and projectors projectors, and motion pictures Roosevelt, Theodore presidents and new media Roosevelt, Theodore, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sound sound recording, and motion pictures military communication, and motion pictures military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and railroads railroads, and motion pictures news, and early motion pictures motion pictures news photography projection theaters railroads travel, and motion pictures travel LB - 28980 PB - Princeton University Press PY - 1991 ST - High-Class Moving Pictures: Lyman H. Howe and the Forgotten Era of Traveling Exhibition, 1880-1920 TI - High-Class Moving Pictures: Lyman H. Howe and the Forgotten Era of Traveling Exhibition, 1880-1920 ID - 2676 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book deals with the impact of the information "explosion" on intellectual property and copyright. It considers the impact of new duplicating technologies on copyright but at a time before digitization had made an impact on American society and law. Among the new technologies that strained copyright law was the photocopier. This work attempts to cover copyright law, revisions of that law then under consderation, and the economics of publishing in a manner understandable to the layman. The book's eight chapters, Bibliography, and Index run 174 pages. AU - Nasri, William Z. CY - New York and Basel DA - 1976 KW - duplicating technologies copyright duplicating technologies, and photocopying photocopying photocopying, and copyright copyright, and photocopying copyright, and duplicating technologies copyright, pre-digital law law, and copyright copyright, and law duplicating technologies LB - 30660 PB - Marcel Dekker, Inc. PY - 1976 ST - Crisis in Copyright TI - Crisis in Copyright ID - 2827 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book contains several essays about the nature of color. Section I, entitled "The Science of Color," has four essays. Section II, "Color in Art, Culture and Life," has six chapters. Section III, "Colorants, the Preservation and the Reproduction of Color," also as six essays. AU - Nassau, Kurt, ed. CY - Amsterdam DA - 1998 KW -, color color, and science color, and reproduction color, and art color, and sexuality sexuality, and color sexuality LB - 32520 PB - Elsevier PY - 1998 ST - Color for Science, Art and Technology TI - Color for Science, Art and Technology ID - 2911 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Natanson investigates the representation of African American culture by Farm Security Administration photographers during the New Deal era and analyzes how the print media used images of black Americans. Natanson asserts that Roy Stryker and the photographers dispensed with a politically safe agenda regarding black representation and addressed the broader social and cultural issues involving black Depression culture. Yet he notes that it was still the white image that dominated the Historical Section’s file, and consequently, the print media. Citing examples of multiple print mediums in which the black image did or did not appear, Natanson contends that not only did editors use selective captioning to reconstruct the meaning of the black image, they often omitted blacks in their publications by pre-selecting photographs or completely cropping them out of the frame. Overall, he finds a multitude of evidence in which editors intentionally distorted the meaning of the black image or excluded them from print. Moreover, Natanson points out that editors who drew on the FSA’s photographic file often overlooked black subjects in favor of white, thus reinforcing negative stereotypes and influencing public perceptions about rural black America. -Michele Kroll AU - Natanson, Nicholas CY - Knoxville DA - 1992 KW - reform Roosevelt, Franklin D. photography Kroll, Michele photography and visual communication photography, documentary photography, and New Deal Roosevelt, Franklin, and photography presidents, and new media Stryker, Roy photography, and reform reform, and photography Roosevelt, Franklin administration Farm Security Administration photography, and Farm Security Administration photography, and African Americans African Americans, and photography race race, and photography photography, and race African Americans LB - 28820 PB - University of Tennessee Press PY - 1992 ST - The Black Image in the New Deal: The Politics of FSA Photography TI - The Black Image in the New Deal: The Politics of FSA Photography ID - 2631 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report offers and excellent -- a disturbing -- report on the major changes brought to libraries and archives by digital media. "No stereotype of libraries as quiet, uneventful places could survive in the 1990s. Whatever stability and predictability libraries once had as 'ordered storehouses of the treasures of the printed word were shattered by the digital revolution. The intellectual function of libraries-to acquire, arrange, and make accessible the creative work of humankind-is being transformed by the explosion in the production and dissemination of information in digital form, especially over global networks.” Following an Executive Summary, this work has eight chapters. Chapter 1, “Digital Revolution, Library Revolution,” discusses the challenges posed by electronic media. Chapter 2 is a history of the Library of Congress from “Jefferson to the Twenty-First Century.” Chapter 3 discusses “Building Digital Collections,” and chapter 4 has important things to say about “Preserving a Digital Heritage.” Chapter 5 is “Organizing Intellectual Access to Digital Information: From Cataloging to Metadata.” Chapter 6 deals with “The Library of Congress and the World Beyond Its Walls.” Chapter 7 covers “Management Issues,” and chapter 8 is about “Information Technology Infrastructure.” This work also has a excellent bibliography on the themes treated in this work. AU - National Research Council, et al. CY - Washington, D.C. DA - 2000 KW - Library of Congress primary sources history and new media preservation libraries archives electronic media law copyright law digital media digital media, and information storage information storage, and digital media +information storage digital media, and libraries libraries, and digital media Library of Congress, and digital media digital media, and Library of Congress copyright, and libraries law, and libraries law, and libraries preservation, and digital media archives, and digital media +bibliographies bibliographies, and digital libraries bibliographies, and electronic preservation bibliographies, and Library of Congress archives, and electronic preservation electronic preservation electronic preservation, and archives digitization archives history LB - 28240 PB - National Academy Press PY - 2000 ST - LC21: A Digital Strategy for the Library of Congress TI - LC21: A Digital Strategy for the Library of Congress ID - 1370 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This short book (170 pages), written from secondary sources, examines three aspects of moviemaking: photography and film, sounding recording, and the use of color. Neale observes that during the 1940s and 1950s several factors limited the number of feature-length motion pictures. They included Technicolor’s near monopoly of color film which required a special camera and use of its processing services, the high cost of using color, and the fact that there were only limited markets for color films. Circumstances began to change during the late 1940s. In 1947, the U. S. Justice Department filed an anti-trust suit against Technicolor and two years later Eastman Kodak began marketing a single strip color negative and began printing film stock, thus opening up new commercial coloring processes. Not until the 1960s, though, when television began to convert to color, did color movies become almost universal. Neale devotes space to “Colour and the Female Image,” and observes that color film changed the manner in which beauty was portrayed and defined. Neale attempts to set his work apart from earlier histories of cinema technology such as James Limbacher’s Four Aspects of Film (1969). Limbacher, Neale maintains, treated “technology as a self-contained sphere with a self-contained history” in which “one technological event is preceded or followed by another, in simple chronological sequence.” Neale also attempts to separate himself from such theorists as André Bazin, Siegfired Kracaeuer, and Pier Paulo Pasolini, who began with the “premise that the sounds and images comprising films are linked ontologically to the objects that the microphone and camera record,” and that “films themselves are inherently realist and that their language is the language of reality.” Neale writes that he tried “to develop a counter-approach, one in which a series of technological events and innovations are located within a variety of contexts – aesthetic, ideological and economic as well as scientific and technical. Each context, each set of factors are as important as the others. Technology in the cinema is reducible to none of these factors singly. It is instead the complex product of all of them. The one factor – or rather the one institution – that binds these other other [sic] factors together is the film industry. It is within the context provided by the industry and its practices at any one point in time that the precise articulation of these other factors takes place.” --SV Neale believes that technology does not exist in a vacuum, but rather works hand-in-hand with aesthetics, psychology, ideology and economics to create film content. Each of these elements interweaves with the others in a complex manner, “each conditioning, but not fully explaining or determining the others.” Each is as important as the other. The book relies mostly upon secondary sources. --Gordon Jackson AU - Neale, Steve CY - Bloomington, IN DA - 1985 KW - technology corporations corporations photography women, and new media women technology and society materials materials cinema motion pictures celluloid non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color +sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sound recording +photography and visual communication cameras cameras, and motion pictures film Technicolor Eastman Kodak Cinemascope celluloid Edison, Thomas Fox Film Corporation Marey, Étienne Jules technology, and motion pictures motion pictures, and technology women, and motion pictures color, and women women, and color motion pictures color, and Eastman Kodak color, and Technicolor Jackson, Gordon technological determinism LB - 12550 PB - Indiana University Press PY - 1985 ST - Cinema and Technology: Image, Sound, Colour TI - Cinema and Technology: Image, Sound, Colour ID - 2602 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Negrine’s’s introduction about problems of broadcasting across national borders is informative. See also Heather E. Hudson’s chapter on satellite broadcasting in the United States. This interesting book that covers the connection between cable and satellite broadcasting. Chapters deal with Europe, the Nordic countries, West Germany, UK, France, Australia, Canada, and Japan, in addition to the United States. AU - Negrine, Ralph, ed. CY - London and New York DA - 1988 KW - nationalism non-USA +television +aeronautics and space communication satellites +nationalism and communication global communication cable, and satellite broadcasting Europe Scandinavia Germany Great Britain France Australia Canada Japan cable nationalism, and satellites cable, and satellites satellites, and cable LB - 7220 PB - Routledge PY - 1988 ST - Satellite Broadcasting: The Politics and Implications of the New Media TI - Satellite Broadcasting: The Politics and Implications of the New Media ID - 2093 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book provides the history of events leading to the "digital revolution," although it is not intended to be historical research and lacks many details. The work is divided into three parts. The first describes how digital technology works and some of the ramifications of moving a society from "atombased" to "bitbased." The second concerns human-computer interface and provides reasons for why some people find computers so difficult to use for many people. The final section concerns the future of digital media as Negroponte sees it. --Mark Tremayne AU - Negroponte, Nicholas CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - computers motion pictures communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution materials materials digital cinema digital cinema analog media microelectronics +computers and the Internet Tremayne, Mark digital revolution communication revolution miniaturization microelectronics revolution digital media virtual reality digitization analog v. digital digital v. analog digital movies motion pictures, and digital television, and digital +television LB - 8860 PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 1995 ST - Being Digital TI - Being Digital ID - 2253 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book gives insight into how microfilm was viewed in 1965. “It is not difficult to let one’s imagination foresee the time when a simple, compact microfilm reader may be as essential a household appliance as a can opener; when the student may study from a small portable reader and be able to carry with him a whole library of microfilm; when the publications field, the whole field of education, and information distribution systems will employ microfilm as a basic medium....” The three-page Introduction gives a brief history of microfilm. The remainder of the book deals with the scientific and engineering aspects of microfilming. AU - Nelson, Carl E. CY - New York DA - 1965 KW - archives +future and science fiction home, and new media home home, and information technology microfiche, microfilm, microform libraries information technology libraries, and information storage information storage information storage +duplicating technologies microfilm microfilm readers +information storage information technology, and home miniaturization, and microfilm libraries, and microfilm information storage, and microfilm future, and microfilm future miniaturization home, and microfilm readers LB - 5740 PB - McGraw-Hill Book Company PY - 1965 ST - Microfilm Technology: Engineering and Related Fields TI - Microfilm Technology: Engineering and Related Fields ID - 1959 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Nerone considers anti-press violence to be an integral part of freedom of expression. It is common and continues to exist. He further claims the protestors are not on the fringe but their beliefs reflect a mainstream attitude, and finally, the press should have freedom but not without virtue. “I hope to show that violent acts are systematic rather than episodic, responses to recurring crises in an evolving system of public expression.” Against the press is an informal way of keeping order by preventing battles of rhetoric from becoming conflict. Nerone identifies “four basic patterns: violence among individuals, violence against ideas, violence against groups, and violence against an institution.” Nerone is particularly interested in violence against newspapers. As a medium, the newspaper is a structure that produce and consumes texts, meanings and audiences but this structure is not a network of relationships. "At root, the word medium refers to something in the middle, an intermediary between or among things.... In modern usage, a medium is a structure of connections between and among newsmakers, journalists, advertisers, civic organizations, readers, voters, shoppers, and so forth." --Amanda Novak AU - Nerone, John CY - New York DA - 1994 KW - media effects media violence violence journalism news and journalism Novak, Amanda +books, periodicals, newspapers violence, against press newspapers, and violence public sphere public sphere, and violence violence, and public sphere newspapers news democracy LB - 1820 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1994 ST - Violence Against the Press: Policing the Public Sphere in U. S. History TI - Violence Against the Press: Policing the Public Sphere in U. S. History ID - 270 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The focus of attention here is media regulation and how it slowed the process of media convergence in the United States, and policy advice from the authors for the future of the “Information Highway.” The authors sketch of history of what is now the Internet and point to user benefits delayed by misdirected regulation. In addition, the efforts of many businesses to achieve and maintain market dominance have also worked against the potential of the new media. The authors called for deregulation of media companies and more vigorous enforcement of antitrust laws. --Mark Tremayne AU - Neuman, W. Russell, Lee McKnight, and Richard Jay Solomon CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1997 KW - computers community democracy law regulation media Internet computers and the Internet regulation, and information technology Tremayne, Mark democracy and media Internet, and history of regulation, and Internet antitrust laws deregulation media convergence information highway censorship and ratings Information Age LB - 9130 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - MIT Press PY - 1997 ST - The Gordian Knot : Political Gridlock on the Information Highway TI - The Gordian Knot : Political Gridlock on the Information Highway ID - 2280 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - These are the memoirs of one of the leading historians of photography, Beaumont Newhall. They cover his life from his birth in 1908 until late in his life (he died in 1993). Included are reminiscences of Ansel Adams and Newhall’s experiences in World War II. AU - Newhall, Beaumont CY - Boston DA - 1993 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories photography war non-USA autobiography +photography and visual communication photography, and Beaumont Newhall Newhall, Beaumont Adams, Ansel photography, and Alfred Barr photography, and Eastman House photography, history of Museum of Modern Art photography, and Museum of Modern Art World War II World War II, and photography photography, and World War II photography, and reconnaissance World War II, and Beaumont Newhall photography, and Alfred Stieglitz photography, and Paul Strand military communication museums LB - 2320 PB - Little, Brown and Company (A Bulfinch Press Book) PY - 1993 ST - Focus: Memoirs of a Life in Photography TI - Focus: Memoirs of a Life in Photography ID - 320 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The first 90 pages of this history of photography cover major developments including news photography, color photography, scientific photography, and motion pictures. Page 97-189 are black-and-white photographs, many of excellent quality. Newhall also provides a Biographical Index (191-216) which gives biographical sketches of major photographers. There is a brief, four-page annotated bibliography on photography. AU - Newhall, Beaumont CY - New York DA - 1937, 1938 KW - R & D illustrations Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories photography science research and development motion pictures news journalism news and journalism +photography and visual communication photography, history of illustrations photography, and motion pictures color color, and photography photography, color news, and photography photography, and news science, and photography photography, and science motion pictures, and photography +motion pictures and popular culture biography, and photographers photography, and biographies biography LB - 2360 PB - Museum of Modern Art PY - 1937 ST - Photography: A Short Critical History TI - Photography: A Short Critical History ID - 324 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This history of photography, by one of the pioneer historians in this field, gives an overview of major developments. It covers different styles of photography -- pictorial, documentary, avant-garde, photojournalism -- and it also offers a good introduction to important technological developments. AU - Newhall, Beaumont CY - London DA - 1982 KW - documentaries Eastman Kodak +photography and visual communication photography, history of cameras 35mm cameras, 35mm photojournalism Daguerre, Louis Kodak Eastman, George celluloid materials photography, avant-garde lenses cameras, and lenses Great Britain Germany Germany, and photography photography, and Germany Great Britain, and photography photography, and Great Britain photography, and lighting documentary photography photography, and documentary half tones color photography, and color color, and photography Kodak, and color Polaroid cameras, and Polaroid non-USA photography LB - 28990 PB - Secker & Warburg PY - 1982 ST - The History of Photography from 1839 to the Present TI - The History of Photography from 1839 to the Present ID - 2677 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This autobiography is by the man who was at one time chief counsel to the Motion Picture Association of America. He devotes a chapter in this work to "Pornography -- Obscenity" ( 356-89). He discusses the Roth case in 1957, the Miller case in 1973, as well as such movies as Last Tango in Paris (1972) and Carnal Knowledge (1971). Nizer believed that "to have a private censorship board cut into the flesh of a book or picture was an atrocity." He and Jack Valenti concluded "that self-restraint by our own companies was necessary; or censorship boards, goaded by religious organizations, would multiply like viruses in a conducive environment." The U. S. Surpeme Court's "exclusion of hard-core pornography from constitutional protection," he said, though, was "a reasonable limitation in the interest of a healthier social structure." AU - Nizer, Louis CY - Garden City, N.Y. DA - 1978 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Valenti, Jack values sexuality pornography values obscenity motion pictures law autobiography +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and censorship Roth case (1957), and motion pictures pornography, and motion pictures obscenity, and motion pictures law, and pornography law, and obscenity Valenti, Jack, and censorship Valenti, Jack, and pornography Valenti, Jack, and obscenity censorship and ratings LB - 2510 PB - Doubleday & Company, Inc. PY - 1978 ST - Reflections without Mirrors: An Autobiography of the Mind TI - Reflections without Mirrors: An Autobiography of the Mind ID - 339 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In 1970, Philip Nobile published an interesting collection of writings from such authors as Herbert Marcuse, Norman O. Brown, and Eric Hobsawm entitled The New Eroticism. He was later a severe critic of the Meese Commission that was established by the Reagan administration in 1985 to investigate pornography and to make recommendations on how to combat it. AU - Nobile, Philip CY - New York DA - 1970 KW - presidents and new media sexuality pornography President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) Marcuse, Herbert Hobsbawm, Eric LB - 27000 PB - Random House PY - 1970 ST - The New Eroticism: Theories, Vogues and Canons TI - The New Eroticism: Theories, Vogues and Canons ID - 1258 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a polemic against the Meese Commission. Philip Nobile is described as the editorial director of Forum, who studied for the Catholic priesthood and who earned graduate degrees from Boston University and the Higher Institute of Philosophy at Louvain, Belgium. Nobile and Nadler acknowledge the help of Penthouse's marketing and publicity staff. In 1986, Nobile and Nadler accused the Meese panel of being biased, superficial, and reaching conclusions irrespective of the evidence. According to their account, the evidence that looking at pornography caused violent sexual crimes was unconvincing. The authors denounced the Commission for ignoring erotica’s positive qualities and for threatening First Amendment rights. It was a “scary enterprise in censorship,” said the authors who argued that “erotica is an idea. And when the government joins forces with special-interest groups to repress freedom of thought, it is time to protest their not-so-silent scream.” Minotaur Press, a part of Penthouse International, published more than a 100,000 copies of United States of America vs. Sex, and sold the paperback edition for only $3.95. AU - Nobile, Philip AU - Nadler, Eric CY - New York DA - 1986 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising sexuality sexuality Penthouse Meese Commission Meese Commission, and critics pornography pornography, and Meese Commission Penthouse, and pornography Penthouse, and Meese Commission public relations public relations, and Penthouse public relations, and Meese Commission LB - 26670 PB - Minotaur Press, Ltd., a Penthouse International Company PY - 1986 ST - United States of America vs. Sex: How the Meese Commission Lied about Pornography TI - United States of America vs. Sex: How the Meese Commission Lied about Pornography ID - 1231 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - A finely detailed description of the railways and the experience of train travel c.a. 1830-1960. This work is less an analysis of the impact of railways than a collection of the details, large and small, that together constituted the experience of steam railways and rail travel over the course of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. There is no footnotes or mentioned sources. The book concentrates on technological advancements in speed, safety, and accommodations, with a chapter devoted to mail carrying. There is some consideration of the personalities and companies behind the railways, but only secondarily. The book concentrates on England and Scotland. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Nock, O. S. CY - London DA - 1961 KW - steam power non-USA Wolf, Nicholas +transportation Great Britain railroads Great Britain, and railroads railroads, and Great Britain steam power, and railroads Great Britain, and steam power railroads, and steam power Scotland Scotland, and railroads railroads, and Scotland steam power, and Scotland LB - 1950 PB - Adam & Charles Black PY - 1961 ST - British Steam Railways TI - British Steam Railways ID - 283 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work has eighteen essays on various aspects of communication and the tragedy of September 11, 2001. The book originated with short papers on the attacks that were published in Prometheus on the first anniversary of the event. The authors subsequently expanded their essays for this book. The following articles appear in this volume: – A. Michael Noll’s “Introduction: A Global Tragedy.” – John Carey, “The Functions and Uses of Media during the September 11 Crisis and Its Aftermath.” – Everett M. Rogers, “Diffusion of News on the September 11 Terrorist Attacks.” – Elisia L. Cohen, Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach, Joo-Young Jung, and Young-Chan Kim, “Civic Actions after September 11: A Communication Infrastructure Perspective.” – Jonathan Liebenau, “Communication during the World Trade Center Disaster: Causes of Failure, Lessons, Recommendations.” – Mitchel L. Moss and Anthony Townsend, “Response, Restoration, and Recovery: September 11 and New York City’s Digital Networks.” – William H. Dutton and Frank Nainoa, “The Social Dynamics of Wireless on September 11: Reconfiguring Access.” – James E. Katz and Ronald E. Rice, “The Telephone as a Medium of Faith, Hope, Terror, and Redemption: America, September 11.” – Jeremy Harris Lipschultz, “A Content Analysis of American Network Newscasts before 9/11.” – Fiona McNee, “Something’s Happened: Fictional Media as a Recovery Mechanism.” – Joachim W. H. Haes, “September 11 in Germany and the United States: Reporting, Reception, and Interpretation.” – Pille Vengerfeldt, “The Internet as a New Medium for the Crisis News of Terrorist Attacks in the United States.” – Paul N. Rappoport and James Alleman, “The Internet and the Demand for News: Macro- and Microevidence.” – Patrick Martin and Sean Phelan, “History and September 11: A Comparison of Online and Network TV Discourses.” – Menahem Blondheim and Tamar Liebes, “From Disaster Marathon to Media Event: Live Television’s Performance on September 11, 2001 and September 11, 2002.” – James William Carey, “Globalization Isn’t New, and Antiglobalization Isn’t Either: September 11 and the History of Nations.” – René-Jean Ravault, “Is There a bin Laden in the Audience? Considering the Events of September 11 as a Possible Boomerang Effect of the Globalization of U. S. Mass Communication.” – Peter Clarke, “Epilogue: ‘The Bell Rang and We Answered’.” AU - Noll, A. Michel ed. CY - Lanham, MD DA - 2003 KW - computers cellular telephones nationalism global communication telephones television news and journalism computers and the Internet nationalism and communication news, and television crises, and television television, and crises news, and Internet Internet, and news nationalism, and Internet Internet, and nationalism telephones telephones, and nationalism nationalism, and telephones wireless communication telephones, cell cell phones globalization anti-Americanism terrorism terrorism, and communication democracy democracy, and new media digital media nationalism, and digital media digital media, and nationalism infrastructure infrastructure, and nationalism email Germany September 11, 2001 history, and analogies history and new media electronic mail electronic media non-USA history Internet news LB - 29680 PB - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. PY - 2003 ST - Crisis Communication: Lessons from September 11 TI - Crisis Communication: Lessons from September 11 ID - 2719 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work, originally published in Paris in 1978, sets out how computers and other media seemed likely to challenge and present opportunities to French society during the 1980s. In 1979, Daniel Bell wrote an Introduction to this American edition. Bell saw several areas in which "telematics or compunications" were likely to alter transaction patterns. These included data processing networks, data banks and systems of retrieval, teletex systems, facsimiles, interactive computer networks. This Report became a best-seller in France and a source of wide discussion about how to modernize the administration of the French government. Bell noted that the energy crisis of the 1970s had obscured an important debate over the role of new media in society, both in France and the United States. AU - Nora, Simon and Alain Minc CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1980 KW - energy computers nationalism interactivity communication revolution archives energy non-USA media libraries libraries, and information storage Information Age +computers and the Internet France France, and computers France, and information technology Bell, Daniel energy crisis facsimile information processing +information storage +nationalism and communication communication revolution media convergence interactive media LB - 11480 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media OP - 1978 PB - MIT Press PY - 1980 ST - The Computerization of Society: A Report to the President of France TI - The Computerization of Society: A Report to the President of France TT - L'Informatisation de la société ID - 2508 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This formidable history of the Information Processing Techniques Office (IPTO) provides two parallel analyses. The IPTO was part of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), and one of the Department of Defense’s most important research-support agencies. One is a history of research programs, management techniques, and the influence of the agency. The second is “an in-depth investigation of the larger context of the development of four significant areas of computing that IPTO actively funded -- time sharing, networking, graphics, and some areas of artificial intelligence.” This work is distinguished by the authors’ use of primary sources: e.g., RG 330 in the National Archives at Suitland, MD, and the IPTO records in Arlington, VA. The book is also based on at least 45 oral interviews. Whereas other studies have focused on the work of academic scientists and engineers, this book looks at how the DOD organized and developed computing research program, and how those programs changed since 1960. The authors devote several pages to the strategic computing initiative. AU - Norberg, Arthur L. and Judy E. O’Neill, with contribution by Kerry J. Freedman CY - Baltimore DA - 1996 KW - R & D computers nationalism ARPA research and development war communication revolution digital media government war computers research and development information technology information processing Information Age +nationalism and communication +military communication +computers and the Internet Department of Defense, and computers Information Processing Techniques Office (DOD) Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) DARPA Advanced Research Projects Agency strategic computing initiative +artificial intelligence and biotechnology supercomputers computers, and supercomputers networks communication revolution information technology, and Department of Defense time sharing, and Department of Defense graphics, Department of Defense DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) Department of Defense, and civilian applications research and development, and civilian applications DARPA Department of Defense, U.S. ARPA nationalism, and computers nationalism, and artificial intelligence digitization military, and computers military, and artificial intelligence military, and digital media nationalism, and digital media research and development, and government support computers, and time-sharing computers, and artificial intelligence LB - 2340 PB - The Johns Hopkins University Press PY - 1996 ST - Transforming Computer Technology: Information Processing for the Pentagon, 1962-1986 TI - Transforming Computer Technology: Information Processing for the Pentagon, 1962-1986 ID - 1627 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This report surveys progress in historic preservation between 1986 (when the Commission on Preservation and Access was created) and 1991. It then points to future problems, and notes that while the preservation of printed material is still crucial, additional attention needs to be paid to preserving nonprint material -- "films, video tapes, recorded sound, photographs, and information stored in electronic form." The Commission makes several recommendation and concludes by saying that "we today speak of the 'slow fires' of paper decay and the 'fast fires' of video image deterioration, but with growing awareness and attention which harsh historians cannot dismiss as frivolous." AU - Norbert, Arthur L., William D. Schaefer, David H. Stam, and L. Yvonne Wulff CY - Washington, D.C. DA - Sept. 26, 1991 KW - preservation history and new media preservation archives history, and new media history materials paper libraries libraries, and information storage +information storage electronic preservation paper electronic media, and deterioration paper, and deterioration electronic media historical preservation preservation, and nonprint media preservation, and paper materials LB - 11000 PB - Commission on Preservation and Access PY - 1991 ST - Review and Assessment Committee: Final Report TI - Review and Assessment Committee: Final Report ID - 2461 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work came from Nord’s doctoral thesis. In looking at such cities as St. Louis and Chicago, he noted that as political activists began to get more involved in politics, they sought to have their voices heard and rally others to their cause. They used mass communication, especially newspapers, to spread their message. “To push these issues, the new reformers developed two very modern political techniques. They formed issue-oriented pressure groups and coalitions, and they used new forms of mass communication to cut through old political alliances, to stir up a broadly based public opinion, and to redirect the attention of citizens from personal and private concerns to issues of general, city-wide significance. Mass communication, in the form of big city newspapers, lies at the heart of the new politics, and newspapers were taken very seriously by all political actors in the 1890’s,” Nord says. (9) --Michael Shefky AU - Nord, David Paul CY - Ann Arbor, MI DA - c1981 KW - nationalism urban studies journalism community democracy reform news and journalism Shefky, Michael +nationalism and communication newspapers, and democracy newspapers, and reform newspapers, and urban studies newspapers, and nationalism nationalism, and newspapers democracy, and nationalism urban studies, and newspapers reform, and newspapers Ph. D. thesis theses newspapers news LB - 2080 PB - UMI Research Press PY - 1981 ST - Newspapers and New Politics: Midwestern Municipal Reform, 1890-1900 TI - Newspapers and New Politics: Midwestern Municipal Reform, 1890-1900 ID - 296 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Beginning in 1950, the Eastman Kodak Company installed the first of many coloramas -- photographs 18 feet high and 60 feet wide and illuminated with over a mile of cold-cathode tubes behind them -- in Grand Central Terminal in New York City. Over the next four decades, 565 Colorama photographs were be displayed here. These pictures "proffered an almost unchanging vision of landscapes, villages, and families, American power and patriotism, and the decorative sentimentality of babies, puppies, and kittens," (5) Allison Nordström explains in her opening essay "Dreaming in Color" (5-11). "They marked traditional holidays, conventional views of the faraway, and such uplifting events as a moonwalk, and a royal wedding: the suggested, with varying degrees of explicitness, that such sights could be defined, secured, memorialized, and enjoyed through the complementary practice of photography." (5) Nordström says that "Kodak veterans describe these ambitious installations as 'displays of renewal and accomplishment,' 'a panoramic picture gallery of human experiences,' 'a mirror of American aspirations,' 'an upbeat affirmation,' and 'a record of wonders.'" (6) According to Nordström, "the roots of the Colorama are fixed spectacle. In an age where tail fins, skyscrapers, and Cinemascope evinced the triumphs of both scale and technology, the biggest example of anything was worthy of note. In photography, lifelike color was still a novelty. Kodak's Cavalcade of Color , an extravagant presentation of gigantic slide projections, had been immensely popular at the 1939 World Fair. The first proposal for the space at Grand Central had been for a similar display, until it became clear that the varying ambient light inside the station would impair the projected images. The solution of back-lit color transparencies was determined well before the technical problems of their production had been resolved." (6) In the book's concluding essay, "Picture Perfect" (77-79), Peggy Roalf points out that in 1949 when New York Central Railroad offered Kodak advertising space in the Grand Central Terminal, "color photography represented only 2 percent of Kodak's business." (77) Colorama, which was launched in May, 1950 to promote America's postwar consumer culture, "became one of the most successful product-development and marketing campaigns in corporate history." (77) There were technical problems that had to be overcome. "At first, everything about the film, the processing, and the assembly conspired against the result of finished images with a perfectly even tone throughout. This caused series problems in photographs with broad expanses of blue sky, of which there were many. But the tremendous resources of the company were put to the task. Soon, improved emulsions produced finer-grained and faster films; the Colorama enlarging easel was fitted with a 1,000-watt airport runway light to produce more consistent exposures; and a better methods of splicing and rejoining the transparency strips was developed. By the time the first display was unveiled, in May 1950, Kodak's Colorama team had solved the technical problems so skillfully that the basic production methods remained in place for the life of the program. (78) "The slow speed of the early Ektachrome film dictated the use of sophisticated lighting set ups to stop action -- even in photographs shot outdoors in bright sunshine. In Camping at Lake Placid, New York -- a photograph meant to suggest that the viewer, too, could capture family vacation scenes like this with a simple point-and-shoot camera -- dozens of disposable flashbulbs supplied enough light to balance the color and detail in the dark foreground with the bright sky and water beyond. By 1977, the speed and fine grain of Kodak's 35mm films allowed for enlargements that were 150,000 times the size of the original slide." (78) Most of this 79-page book is made up of stunning color photographs used in the Coloramas. AU - Nordström, Alison AU - Roalf, Peggy CY - [New York] DA - 2004 KW - illustrations photography ref, news color color, and photography photography, and color photography and visual communication Kodak photography, and Kodak Kodak, and color photography color, and Kodak Kodak, and color color, and colorama Kodak, and colorama colorama nationalism and communication color, and nationalism nationalism, and color color, and patriotism patriotism, and color advertising and public relations color, and advertising advertising, and color illustrations illustrations, and Kodak color photography illustrations, and color advertising, and Kodak advertising, and photography photography, and advertising lighting lighting, and color photography photography, and lighting film, and enlargements photography, and film enlargements ref, book advertising film nationalism patriotism LB - 39740 PB - Aperture Foundation PY - 2004 ST - Colorama: The World's Largest Photographs From Kodak and the George Eastman House Collection: Essay by Alison Nordström and Peggy Roalf TI - Colorama: The World's Largest Photographs From Kodak and the George Eastman House Collection: Essay by Alison Nordström and Peggy Roalf ID - 4072 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This ambitious book constructs “an utopian design for the emerging microbinics technology,” one that the author believes probably cannot be put in place until the year 2050. “The purpose of this design is to promote discovery, invention and innovation which have become the principal aspects of nation state competition. Because the design requires major institutional changes which would require a long period to gain even partial public acceptance, the design had to be presented in the future. The future design is based on technology coming into existence.” After an introductory chapter, chapter 2 analyzes the United States from the 1780s to the present and concludes that while the rate of discovery and invention have been accelerated, that current U.S. information policy inhibits innovation. The growth of the federal government has led to a decline in its ability to promote innovation. Chapter 3 treats current progress in microbinics, and chapter 4 provides a forecast for where these advances will lead. “One major impact of this technology will be the gradual advance of automation in both manufacturing and services. This advance of automation will gradually reduce the work week and require a new mechanism for maintaining a politically stable income distribution. In addition, the advances in microbinics will create a social nervous system, or a communication network capable of manipulating, storing and transmitting all text, data, symbols, voice, and images. This means that, increasingly, activities can be conducted from any terminal connected to the social nervous system. The locus of market activities will accordingly shift from physical locations to this social nervous system. Consequently, the advance of automation and the development of the social nervous system will give individuals increasing freedom of location.” The author sees a continued need in the new information society of a welfare system to help ease problems associated with automation and unfair income distribution. One proposal made is for a system of “social inheritance,” which would be “a system of inheritance where each year the federal government would sell the assets of those who died that year and distribute the proceeds to each state in proportion to the number of citizens.” AU - Norman, Alfred Lorn CY - Boston DA - 1993 KW - R & D nationalism research and development innovation genetics +future and science fiction community democracy capitalism geography science labor Information Age general studies biotechnology genetic engineering microbionics technology inventions inventors scientific research, and government support automation information age labor, and information technology social nervous system information processing space (spatial) social inheritance inheritance tax welfare system democracy and media labor labor, and new media research and development, and government support +artificial intelligence and biotechnology future, and microbinics +nationalism and communication nationalism, and new media capitalism, and new media future LB - 1010 N1 - See also: office PB - Kluwer Academic Publishers PY - 1993 ST - Informational Society: An economic theory of discovery, invention and innovation TI - Informational Society: An economic theory of discovery, invention and innovation ID - 1497 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The concern that we are always being watched by our government has never been more present than it is now. A host of movies such as Enemy of the State and The Net, have addressed this theme. Certainly the concern has grown along with the technological capabilities of CCTV (Closed-circuit television). Norris and Armstrong, using a combination of historical/archival and observational methods examine how CCTV has developed from the early uses of photographs for criminal identification to the potential for CCTV to identify individuals using facial mapping techniques. A good portion of this text is devoted to the author’s observational study of surveillance camera operators and their techniques, leanings, and reasons for observing some people and not others. Also of import in this text is a consideration of the social and personal issues that arise when people are recorded without giving their consent. --Michael Boyle In this overview of the rise of Closed Circuit Television (CCTV) surveillance cameras in public life, Norris and Armstrong explore the history, use and future of surveillance in the (British) public space. They address issues of safety, prevention, (violation of) privacy, and general pros and cons of using cameras in public areas. Their books is divided in three parts. Part one deals with the history, introduction, implementation, and political and public response to the use of CCTV. Part two is more empirical as both authors describe their experiences with sitting in on surveillance shifts at different companies and with different “watchers”, using actual examples to argue that those monitored are often selected on basis of dress, age, and race. Part three provides a glance into what in 1999 was the future, but what is today already reality: the linking of video images to people’s biographies, criminal records or financial information. The book provides balanced opinions, although the authors are somewhat reluctant to accept the huge amounts of cameras in the public sphere. The behind the scenes look is both interesting and entertaining, as the reader gets a chance to understand how the human side of CCTV surveillance works and on what basis people are being picked out of crowds to examine their behavior more closely: both scary and understandable at the same time. -- Bart Nijman AU - Norris, Clive and Gary Armstrong CY - New York DA - 1999 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) nationalism data processing magnetic recording photography surveillance law, and privacy law materials materials magnetic tape materials digital media non-USA analog media Boyle, Michael television television, closed-circuit videotape VCRs surveillance, and videotape videotape, and surveillance privacy privacy, and CCTV television, and surveillance cameras, video data bases, and privacy data bases, and videotape digitization digital media, and surveillance privacy, and digital media analog v. digital nationalism and communication nationalism, and CCTV nationalism, and data bases nationalism, and video cameras privacy, and video cameras Great Britain Great Britain, and CCTV Great Britain, and surveillance television, closed circuit, and GB photography and visual communication photography, and facial mapping photography, and law enforcement photography, and crime cameras Nijman, Bart LB - 1620 PB - Berg PY - 1999 ST - Maximum Surveillance Society: The Rise of CCTV as Social Control TI - Maximum Surveillance Society: The Rise of CCTV as Social Control ID - 77 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is an early example of the use of photography and the interview to create celebrity personalities. "Fame brings with it certain disadvantages," the author begins. "One of these is the interviewer. Anyone who become prominent in these days is at once hunted down, photographed, interviewed, and his or her autograph demanded. We only now require a species of Bertillon system for labeling interviewed persons for future identification." [p. iii] Northrop writes that "Seeing one's name in 'cold print' -- that is, if not connected with legal proceedings -- is a pleasure most persons enjoy. Those who pretend not to like it may be deceiving themselves; but nobody else." [p. iii] Clearly by this time the public was fascinated by celebrities. "Fame is not altogether a bubble; it brings with it substantial rewards. If it bring the interviewer, it is because the public wishes to know something of his personal history of the man or woman who has stepped before the footlights," Northrop says. "To satisfy this curiosity the present book has been written." [p. iv] Among the nineteen celebrities who are interviewed and whose photographs are presented are Thomas Edison, Mark Twain, and several British personalities. AU - Northrop, W. B. CY - London DA - 1904 KW - fame celebrity ref, secondary celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and photography Great Britain, and celebrity culture non-USA, and photography non-USA, and celebrity culture Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and celebrity culture quotations quotations, and fame quotations, and celebrities news and journalism newspapers, and celebrity culture celebrity culture, and newspapers ref, book photography LB - 39800 PB - R. A. Everett & Co., Ltd. PY - 1904 ST - With Pen and Camera: Interviews with Celebrities TI - With Pen and Camera: Interviews with Celebrities ID - 4078 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a reprint of Nowtny's MA thesis, "The Way of All Flesh Tones: A History of Color Motion Picture Processes (1895-1929)" (MA Thesis, University of Texas, Austin, 1979). AU - Nowotny, Robert Allen CY - New York and London DA - 1983 KW - Urban, Charles ref, theses (MA) color motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures color, and hand tinting Urban, Charles, and color moives motion pictures, and Charles Urban color, and Charles Urban Technicolor Technicolor, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor LB - 40790 PB - Garland Publishing, Inc. PY - 1983 ST - The Way of All Flesh Tones: A History of Color Motion Picture Processes (1895-1929) TI - The Way of All Flesh Tones: A History of Color Motion Picture Processes (1895-1929) ID - 4176 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is a solid, informative work on the history of video recording technology. Although the Quadruplex video recorder – the prototype for VCRs – first appeared in 1956, and videotape was quickly adopted by television stations, the technology at first was simply too expensive and cumbersome for most movie makers. By the late 1960s, however, most consumer electronics experts agreed that there was an enormous potential home video market and it seemed as though almost every company that manufactured videotape was trying to make new video products for use in the home. In 1971, Sony, a Japanese company, introduced the three-quarter inch U-matic videocassette, a development that eventually would make the technology much more accessible to the public because it eliminated the need for a technician. Recording and playback involved simply inserting an cassette into a machine. In 1975, Sony launched its Betamax ½-inch video recorder. Two years later, RCA followed with a VCR in VHS format. The author goes on to discusses the rapid spread of video recorders during the 1980s. This book has eleven chapters plus and Epilogue. Chapters cover such topics as the origins of magnetic recording and German contributions to this technology, "nonmagnetic methods of recording television," the invention of the videotape recorder, "the home video revolution" and the growth of the VCR market, videodiscs, portable VCRs, how video technology has influenced related industries. AU - Numungwun, Aaron Foisi CY - Hillsdale, N. J. DA - 1989 KW - illustrations entertainment computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) corporations corporations corporations corporations entertainment, home discs, compact data storage magnetic recording video cassettes video preservation optical disks home entertainment materials videotape magnetic tape digitization computers compact discs (CDs) CDs non-USA home home, and new media home +sound recording +television +radio +computers and the Internet magnetic recording sound recording, and magnetic tape video recording magnetic recording, and video magnetic recording, and sound magnetic recording, and data storage history, and new media data storage, and magnetic recording optical disk recording optical disk recording, and CDs optical disk recording, and CD-ROMs optical disk recording, and DVDs digital versatile disks DVDs CD-ROMs compact discs (CDs) CDs computers, and floppy disks computers, and data storage computers, and hard drives Magnetophon audio recorder sound recording, and Magnetophon VCRs VCRs, and quadruplex video recorder RAMAC Random Access Method of Accounting and Control (RAMAC) sound recording, and magnetic tape sound recording, and wire sound recording, and steel tape Poulsen, Valdemar sound recording, and Valdemar Poulsen sound recording, and Oberlin Smith Smith, Oberlin Pfleumer, Fritz, and tape recording sound recording, and Fritz Pfleumer sound recording, and IBM computers, and IBM IBM BASF, and sound recording sound recording, and BASF Germany, and sound recording Germany Austria Austria, and sound recording Ampex, and sound recording video recording, origins Betamax Sony Corporation VCRs, and VHS video cassette recorders (VCRs), and VHS video cassettes cassettes, video digital media digital audio recording digital video recording television, and magnetic recording television, and videotape quadruplex recorders RCA Telegraphone sound recording, and Telegraphone Video Home System illustrations home entertainment revolution video, and home home, and video, history materials history LB - 20100 PB - Lawrence Erlbaum Associates PY - 1989 ST - Video Recording Technology: Its Impact on Media and Home Entertainment TI - Video Recording Technology: Its Impact on Media and Home Entertainment ID - 834 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This anthology is divided into three parts. Part 1 is on "The Creation of Memex," and deals with the history of Bush's analog computers that help prepare the way for Memex. Part 2 is "The Extension of Memex," addresses how Memex performed as digital computers became the standard, and also Bush's ideas about extending Memex and issues about artificial intelligence. Part 3 is "The Legacy of Memex," which considers Bush's influence on digital computing and hypertext. Several essays are by Vannevar Bush: "The Inscrutable Thirties," "Memorandum Regarding Memex," "As We May Think," "Memex II," "Science Pauses," "Memex Revisted," and "From 'Of Inventions and Inventors'." Other contributions to this volume include: Larry Owens, "Vannevar Bush and the Differential Analyzer: The Text and Context of an Early Computer"; James M. Nyce and Paul Kahn, "A Machine for the Mind: Vannevar Bush's Memex"; Paul Kahn and James M. Nyce, "The Idea of a Machine: The Later Memex Essays"; Colin Burke, "A Practical View of Memex: The Career of the Rapid Selector"; Douglas C. Engelbart, "Letter to Vannevar Bush and Program On Human Effectiveness"; Theodor H. Nelson, "As We Will Think"; Linda C. Smith, "Memex as an Image of Potentiality Revisited"; Tim Oren, "Memex: Getting Back on the Trail"; Gregory Crane, "Aristotle's Library: Memex as Vision and Hypertext as Reality"; and Randall H. Trigg, "From Trailblazing to Guided Tours: The Legacy of Vannevar Bush's Vision of Hypertext Use." AU - Nyce, James M. and Paul Kahn CY - Boston DA - 1991 KW - R & D computers +military communication archives materials materials +future and science fiction digital media computers analog media science research and development libraries libraries, and information storage Information Age +computers and the Internet future Bush, Vannevar +information storage research and development, and government support scientific research, and government support computers, personal information processing +artificial intelligence and biotechnology Memex Bush, Vannevar, and Memex computers, digital computers, analog analog v. digital digitization hypertext Bush, Vannevar, and hypertext computers, history of LB - 8870 PB - Academic Press, Inc. PY - 1991 ST - From Memex to Hypertext: Vannevar Bush and the Mind's Machine TI - From Memex to Hypertext: Vannevar Bush and the Mind's Machine ID - 2254 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This study is based on the General Electric Photographic Archives, which Nye says houses one million photographs. Rather than imposing categories (women, workers, etc.) on these photographs, Nye attempts to explain the categories that General Electric used. He says that such categories, or patterns ("repetitions of formulas that the photographers had used..."), clearly emerge upon studying this collection. The time period used (1890-1930), he argues, marks a distinct era in "the company's internal development and in the national economy," as well as "in the practice of photography." “New reproductive technologies emerged in the 1930s, changing the photographer’s work and the range of possible images,” Nye writes. “Smaller cameras, new color films, improved color reproduction in magazines, superior flash bulbs, and other improvements collectively transformed the strategies of representation corporations might employ. At the same time business became more conscious of photography with the appearance of Fortune Magazine (1929), the popular success of the Farm Security Administration documentary photographers in the mid–1930s, and the appearance of such freelance practioners as Margaret Bourke–White.” Nye argues that “In terms of social impact commercial photography such as that practiced at General Electric can arguably be considered the best–funded and the most influential photography of the twentieth century. It reached audiences of workers, consumers, technicians, managers, and voters with billions of messages each year by the 1920s. These were concentrated in magazines and newspapers, which dominated popular culture before radio and television...General Electric’s photographs were consciously tailored to a variety of markets and directed to every family in the United States.” --SV In large part, Nye believes, the roles that corporations have played in American history has been downplayed by historians in favor of a human centered analysis. However, large corporations were societies of their own with influence that extended far beyond their inter-company community. “Put another way, the corporation’s very mode of operation places a structural limit on the method of the myth and symbol school. And since the corporation also challenges the piecemeal practices of the social historians, it is evident that a new methodology is necessary that treats it as a whole rather than as detachable parts and recognizes its role as a symbol-making, ideological force in American society.” (p.4) Nye notes that General Electric put resources into its public relations endeavors. It sought to provide each sect of its corporation with its own magazine and message all designed to promote the greater welfare of General Electric as decided by corporate leaders. “By the 1950s General Electric issued seven quite different publications to reach audiences that together totaled more than a quarter of a million persons a month. It had become the largest single corporate publisher in the United States. Starting with the Review in 1903, it later developed Works News (blue collar workers, 1917), Monogram (managers, 1922), General Electric News Graphic (appliance salesmen, 1922), Light (lighting specialists, 1923), and G.E. Digest (overseas personnel, 1924). Each addressed a single audience, as had the trade publications and scientific journals.” (60) Nye is good on analyzing the corporation’s photographic images, noting, for example, that women were photographed differently than men. --Michael Shefky Nye writes that “The following chapters thus move from a consideration of one the representative corporation’s growth to dominance during the late nineteenth century to its consolidation of that that position in the first quarter of the twentieth century. The study as a whole treats both management and labor, production and consumption, photographic technique and ideological content. It incorporates many of the findings of social history into a larger pattern that links these disparate spheres together through critical analysis of the company’s imagery. These images objectify the corporation’s values, presenting in concrete terms its conception of both economic and social relations. Together the corporate photographs express an often contradictory pattern of concerns, visualizing the same subjects in different ways, depending on the audience addressed. Ultimately these contradictions are as important as the specific content of the images themselves. They record the failure of corporations to express a unified vision of the work force, of industrial production, of the manager’s role, or of the consumer. In short corporations such as General Electric ultimately failed to conceive a convincing history for themselves beyond the narrow limits of the balance sheet. They did not construct a coherent social reality, even in the imaginary world they visualized.” (5) In the second chapter, “Five Billion Messages: The Creation of General Electric and Its Markets,” the conception of General Electric as corporation is examined. Here it shows how three electric companies, including Thomas Edison’s would come together to form one of America’s most important companies of the first half of the twentieth century. Also introduced were the unique ways GE monopolized its industry, and expanded into other fields most notably consumer goods. In order to have a company run as efficiently as GE, internal propaganda through the use of company magazines and photographs kept the company on the same page. In Chapter Three, “Origins, Techniques, and Aesthetics of Commercial Photography,” we take a look at how corporate photography developed and grew into a key component of Corporation work. Examined is the development of the half-tone process, and photography techniques utilized at the time to create the best shot. As photography grew in importance for GE, the company expanded space and resources used for this function. GE effectively used photography to stratify its workforce, and to promote its best road toward profits. In Chapter Four, “Engineers: The Corporation as Science,” is the beginning of the examination of each work class and its place in GE and with its images. GE printed in-house publications that catered to each group. For the engineers, General Electric Review fostered separation of engineers from unskilled laborers. G.E. encouraged university schooling, trading of ideas, and fresh ideas in its promotion of engineering work. Secrecy of development was a not a concern, but advancement was. In Chapter Five, “Workers: The Corporation as Community,” examines the place of the Blue-collar working in the new mass production factories of the Industrial Revolution. During this time period the work place was becoming more and more divided with unskilled laborers at the bottom of the food chain, with little hope of upper advancement. These workers, usually immigrant labor from Europe, or women or children, were at the bottom of the spectrum, many came to the factory speaking limited English. Much of this labor force was also unprepared for the rigors of the assembly line productivity. This backdrop was set against the rise of communism and worker union power at the beginning of the century. G.E.’s solution to this problem was to encourage community at the bottom level, through its bottom level Works News magazine. GE like other corporations found that fostering community, and providing outlets for worker tensions such as giving the workers pension plans, language training, or community teams or events, harmonized the workers and kept unrest at a minimum. The “grunt” labor was never gloried in the pages of any of the company productions, instead their work outside was. When it came to in the factory, every day blue collars were hard to even notice in the pictures, they were either left out, or faded into the machinery or factory. In Chapter Six, “Managers: The Corporation as Tribe,” examined is the relation of the growing middle level, the white collar managers that were growing in importance in a factory at an inverse proportion to the decreasing importance of blue-collar workers. These managers separate from the bottom, took a much more prominent role as factory showmen or production efficiency experts. The old close relations with all plant workers ceased to exist. Replaced was an entirely new class of people. Managers reported upward much more so than they did downward. In GE’s case, a managerial camp was set up at an island in Lake Ontario to meet and discuss company objectives and for male bonding activities. There the up echelon could observe new blood managers and see if their potential for advancement in the future. And the camps further stratified the company’s ranks, those invited versus those who were not, and it became a sort of secret society. For managers, GE setup the Monogram, a publication glorifying their work and showing what was going on by managers at other plants. Again workers are obscured in these pages, while managers are spotlighted. In Chapter Seven, “Consumers: The Corporation as History,” we observe General Electric’s tactics for mass advertising. In this initial stage of development of mass advertising, GE was at the forefront. GE stratified its campaigns, just like it did its in-house magazines, catering to different groups with specific ads. Rarely did G.E. sell a specific product, instead they sold a lifestyle with a clever slogan or repetition of persuasive images. The photography was a key component of these campaigns, and GE used images to its advantage to sell its lifestyle rather than a highly advanced light bulb. In Chapter 8, “Reaching the Voter: The Invisible Corporation,” an examination on the role of Public Relations for GE. This chapter focuses the least on the talents of company photographers and actually argues that usually photographs took away from the message silent PR work did at promoting GE’s name and products. GE was one of the pioneers at PR work, sending articles to papers that were picked up as actual news. These articles blatantly deceived, but under the disguise of newspaper legitimacy. Nye argues that this work was aimed to show that a public holding of electricity was not cheaper and more efficient than private corporation ownership. GE’s PR work was extremely persuasive especially set against the anti-communist fervor of the time period, but pictures had little place in this world. The final chapter, “Conclusion: Photography as Ideology,” wraps up the text using work explored in each chapter. Photography played a key role in the development and advancement of GE as a company, in its ideology and its direction. Photography was not just along for the ride, but played an integral role, a role that cannot be underestimated. Nothing GE’s image producers created was without a purpose, and it had a profound effect on the corporation as a whole. --Jason Karnosky AU - Nye, David E. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1985 KW - General Electric Company photography women, and new media advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations communication revolution news and journalism books, periodicals, newspapers women reproduction revolution photography and visual communication magazines labor general studies photography and visual communication electricity capitalism advertising advertising, and photography cameras, portable color, and new film (1930s) cameras, and flash bulbs (1930s) magazines, and color photography, and Farm Security Administration Bourke-White, Margaret General Electric Company Company communication revolution reproduction technologies (1930s) labor, and photography women, and photography photography, documentary cameras color color, and magazines duplicating technologies labor photography, and bias labor women Shefky, Michael capitalism, and photography photography, and capitalism photography, and General Electric Company electricity electricity, and General Electric Company General Electric Company General Electric Company, and photography Karnosky, Jason LB - 1810 PB - MIT Press PY - 1985 ST - Image Worlds: Corporate Identities at General Electric, 1890-1930 TI - Image Worlds: Corporate Identities at General Electric, 1890-1930 ID - 25 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a history of the growth of electricity in American up to 1940, and how that new means of power and communication related to the social structure in the United States. Nye writes that “A technology is not merely a system of machines with certain functions; it is part of a social world. Electrification is not an implacable force moving through history, but a social process that varies from one time period to another and from one culture to another. In the United States electrification was not a ‘thing’ that came from outside society and had an ‘impact’; rather, it was an internal development shaped by its social context. Put another way, each technology is an extension of human lives: someone makes it, someone owns it, some oppose it, many use it, and all interpret it.” By the late nineteenth century, electricity had become both a new means of power and a metaphor for modern living. “The title Electrifying America suggests these transformations and can be read in two ways: as a social process taking place over a sixty year period in the United States, or as ‘exciting, super-charged America.’ For ‘electrifying’ was both a process and an attribute, and Americans understood the new technology in both ways. They regularly shifted from seeing electricity in terms of technical change to a metaphorical level where it meant novelty, excitement, modernity, and heightened awareness. Anything electric was saturated with energy, and the nation came to admire ‘live wires,’ ‘human dynamos,’ and ‘electrifying performances.’” --SV The spread of electricity followed a distinct order in its pattern of implementation. The most important area to receive immediate attention of electrical companies was that of street lighting. After that other areas of society were wired in to the new technology, Nye notes. “Private houses were distinctly unattractive as a market until after factories had been electrified. Thus, electrification did not emerge everywhere at the same time, in Muncie or around the country. Utilities fond that their technical and financial options pointed to street and commercial lighting in the 1880s, to electrical traction business after 1888, to factories after the middle 1890s, to domestic business after 1910, and to farms only after 1935.” (28) --Michael Shefky AU - Nye, David E. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1990 KW - technology home exhibitions entertainment nationalism entertainment, home advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations modernism modernity modernity modernism medicine home entertainment war home, and new media home World War I values rural areas home, and information technology networks metaphors medicine health lighting information technology electricity technology and society networks, electrical values, and electricity information technology, and home advertising, and electricity transportation transportation, and electricity World War I, and electricity lighting, electrical exhibitions, and electricity electricity, and electric signs advertising, and electric signs street cars, electric electricity, and amusements metaphors, and electricity medicine, and electricity information technology, and home electricity, and home electricity, and manufacturing agriculture, and electricity rural areas, and electricity advertising exhibitions World Fairs home, and new media home, and electricity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity electricity, and metaphors nationalism and communication nationalism, and electricity transportation transportation, and electric street cars street cars, electric Shefky, Michael agriculture LB - 5040 PB - MIT Press PY - 1990 ST - Electrifying America: Social Meanings of a New Technology, 1880-1940 TI - Electrifying America: Social Meanings of a New Technology, 1880-1940 ID - 1891 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Nye, David E. CY - Odense? DA - 1983 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories +electricity biography Edison, Thomas LB - 5050 PB - Odense University Press PY - 1983 ST - The Invented Self: An Anti-biography, from documents of Thomas A. Edison TI - The Invented Self: An Anti-biography, from documents of Thomas A. Edison ID - 1892 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Among the interesting parts of this book are Nye's chapters on the electrical sublime. AU - Nye, David E. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1994 KW - technology +future and science fiction values +electricity technology and society values, and technology future LB - 5060 PB - MIT Press PY - 1994 ST - American Technological Sublime TI - American Technological Sublime ID - 1893 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - O’Malley writes: “This is not a study of the pressure to work harder, or a study of how hard people actually worked, but a study of how American ideas about time and its authority changed. It focuses on how we built the web of interconnected, standardized clock time that structures our lives and labor, and how it altered the way we think about ourselves and our society. In the nineteenth century, time changed from a phenomenon rooted in nature and God to an arbitrary, abstract quantity based in machines, in clocks. The development of standard time zones, the mass production of watches and clocks, the invention of instantaneous, synchronized time transmissions and factory punch clocks; all these established new patterns for self-discipline, social order, and the organization of knowledge." Standard time led to a reconstructing of authority -- "the authority Americans used to govern themselves both in private and public life, at work and in play.... O'Malley's first chapter "describes a small crisis in antebellum American culture, as a sense of time rooted in nature and religion confronted mechanically based sources of time that offered new models for social organization. Chapter Two follows the evolution of a partial answer, regional standard times based on astronomy. These regional standard times helped rationalize interstate commerce and trade. The introduction of national standard time zones by the railroads is the subject of Chapter Three, along with the lasting and virulent hostility they provoked. Chapter Four discusses the mass production and marketing of clocks, watches, and factory punchclocks, exploring the strange interdependence that developed between timekeeping machines and their owners. Standard time established new ways of ordering knowledge, new models for self-discipline. Taylorism, discussed in Chapter Four, provides the transition to the next chapter, which speculates about the connections between time and progressive politics by examining motion picture narrative. The final chapter relates the introduction and repeal of daylight saving during World War I, using the debate to guess at Americans’ attitudes toward the framework of standard time created over the preceding fifty years. It ends with the struggle over time, nature, and evolution at the Scopes Trial.” This book has a few things to say about the telegraph and a good deal to say about the movies and the railroad. Chapter headings include such titles as chapter 1, “Time, Nature, and the Good Citizen”; chapter 2, “Celestial Railroad Time”; chapter 5, “Therbligs and Hieroglyphs”, and chapter 6, “The Golf Stick and the Hoe.” -SV The point to O’Malley’s book is that the concept and perception of time has altered American life in a variety of ways. From the beginning, time was viewed as a precious commodity given to humans from God Almighty. The value of time was such that to waste it was considered to be a slight to God. During the early years of humanity, the sun served as the best indicator of time. It was the difference between day and night and it served to highlight the arrival or departure of seasons. After the invention of modern printing, the almanac became the best source of time as it outlined what needed to happen at certain periods of time. As long as humanity remained an agrarian society, this system stayed in place. Once industrialization hit the United States in earnest, the concept of time changed radically. First, it was a device by which industry could trigger labor. The use of “factory clocks” told workers when to arrive and when to leave. However, workers began to distrust these devices because companies could manipulate them to keep workers on the job longer. Then it became a way to organize industry when railroad managers came up with the modern system of time keeping. Until they developed a system of time zones based on a standard set time, or Greenwich Mean Time, trains had to deal with times that changed depending on the community. Railroad managers wanted a way to structure railroad schedules to maximize profits and minimize delays. Finally, the United States had to deal with whether or not to adopt daylight savings time. Manufacturing and leisure industries wanted it because it saved them money on energy costs and it gave more Americans time to enjoy leisure activities, such as golf. Opponents felt that it was an arbitrary designation that put more control into industry. The U.S. did adopt daylight savings time for good after WWII, but it is still controversial today. Outside of the concept of time, the book discusses how time has played an important part in American social development. Stopwatches allowed industry to become more efficient. Stop-motion photography and other time-related movie techniques permitted industry to perfect worker jobs and allowed movies to develop new methods of story telling. It ends with a discussion of the Scopes “monkey” trial and how Clarence Darrow’s clever discussion on the Biblical nature of time rattled fundamentalist hero William Jennings Bryan. Although Scopes was convicted of violating local law when he taught his pupils evolution, the case marked the first true victory for science when compared to religion. -Patrick Wright AU - O’Malley, Michael CY - New York DA - 1990 KW - time and timekeeping time standard time advertising communication revolution labor timekeeping, and clocks war World War I motion pictures timekeeping time clocks railroads transportation communication revolution transportation revolution standard time, and origins capitalism timekeeping, and factories Taylorism clocks, mechanical timekeeping, and commerce timekeeping, and watches motion pictures, and timekeeping timekeeping, and motion pictures motion pictures general studies timekeeping, and daylight savings World War I, and daylight savings time Scopes Trial telegraph propaganda timekeeping, and railroads railroads, and timekeeping labor, and timekeeping Wright, Patrick advertising and public relations science LB - 2030 PB - Viking PY - 1990 ST - Keeping Watch: A History of American Time TI - Keeping Watch: A History of American Time ID - 26 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is more accessible to the general reader (although still technical) than the volume in this series edited by S. Millman on the Communication Sciences (1925-1980). It has a good opening chapter on “The State of the Technology (1925-1930),” and several chapters pertaining to radio (e.g., shortwave and regular radio), microwave radio, submarine cable systems, satellites (e.g., Telstar). AU - O’Neill, E. F., ed. CY - [Indianapolis] DA - 1985 KW - technology corporations corporations technology and society technical systems labor office office, and new media office +television networks general studies radio, and shortwave satellites Telstar technology, and state of (1925-30) +aeronautics and space communication cable +radio shortwave radio microwaves radio, and microwaves cable, submarine infrastructure technical systems, and submarine cable Bell Laboratories networks, and cable television, and satellites radio, shortwave LB - 1040 PB - AT&T Bell Laboratories PY - 1985 ST - A History of Engineering and Science in the Bell System: Transmission Technology (1925-1975) TI - A History of Engineering and Science in the Bell System: Transmission Technology (1925-1975) ID - 1500 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 518-page work (also on optical laser disc) covers the results of the Harvard Conference on the Internet, held May 28-31, 1996, in Cambridge, MA. AU - O’Reilly and Associates, eds. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - c1997 KW - computers home, and new media home values home, and information technology information technology +computers and the Internet information technology, and home values, and Internet LB - 7940 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1997 ST - Harvard Conference on the Internet and Society (1996: Cambridge, Mass.) TI - Harvard Conference on the Internet and Society (1996: Cambridge, Mass.) ID - 2163 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The authors describe this book as “an inside story of the Alvey Programme," Great Britain strategic computing initiative. It is "a collective -- and selective -- personal memoir based largely on the recollections of many of those involved. It is not an official history or a research report. It aims to provide an album of snapshots of important issues and events, drawing on contemporary material to set the 1988 views in context.” The authors seek to convey the “flavor” of the Alvey project. Oakley was Director of the Alvey Programme from 1983 to 1987; Owen was a freelance writer who a consultant to the Alvey Directorate from 1983 to 1988. This work provides some information on the United States’ Strategic Computing Initiative, announced in 1983, and not to be confused with the better-known Strategic Defense Initiative of the Reagan administration. AU - Oakley, Brian and Kenneth Owen CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1989 KW - R & D computers nationalism SDI presidents, and new media research and development war war non-USA computers Great Britain +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology Strategic Computing Initiative Reagan Administration strategic defense initiative (SDI) Alvey Programme Great Britain, and strategic computing initiative +nationalism and communication +military communication supercomputers nationalism, and computers military, and computers strategic computing initiative, and Great Britain LB - 7930 PB - MIT Press PY - 1989 ST - Alvey: Britain’s Strategic Computing Initiative TI - Alvey: Britain’s Strategic Computing Initiative ID - 2162 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Many of the essays in this volume were written by Raymond Williams between 1968 and 1972 for a regular column that appeared in the weekly British magazine, The Listener, published by the BBC. It also includes other writings by Williams on such topics as his impression of American TV, the Falklands War, and violence at the Olympic Games. Included is Williams' Inaugural Lecture at the University of Cambridge, Oct. 29, 1974, on "Drama in a Dramatised Society." He notes an important change in society from a earlier era when people had primarily live theater for entertainment. The transformation was brought by such modern media as movies, radio, and television. He writes that "drama, in quite new ways, is built into the rhythms of everyday life." (4) "We have never as a society acted so much or watched so many others acting," (3) he said. "What we now have is drama as habitual experience: more in a week, in many cases, than most human being would previously have seen in a lifetime." (4) Of cinema's (and tv's) influence, Williams maintained that "the new mobility and with it the fade, the dissolve, the cut, the flashback, the voice-over, the montage, that are technical forms but also, in new ways, modes of perceiving, of relating, of composing and of finding our way," had become pervasive in everyday life. (12) AU - O'Connor, Alan, ed. CY - Toronto DA - 1989 KW - nationalism television critics Williams, Raymond values advertising and public relations capitalism nationalism and communication military communication new way of seeing motion pictures advertising LB - 32960 PB - Between the Lines PY - 1989 ST - Raymond Williams on Television: Selected Writings TI - Raymond Williams on Television: Selected Writings ID - 3094 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This collection of essays examines how history is interpreted through television. This work, and the O'Connor's earlier American History/American Film: Interpreting the Hollywood Image (edited with Martin A. Jackson) (1979), were influential in calling attention to modern media's interpretation of the past to mass audiences. Subsequent to these works, historians began to review television programs and films of a historical nature on a more regular basis. In this work, O'Connor's "Introduction: Television and the Historian," discusses problems associated with portraying history through television. AU - O'Connor, John E., ed. CY - New York DA - 1983 KW - preservation history, and new media history +television history, and television LB - 10790 PB - Frederick Ungar Publishing Co. PY - 1983 ST - American History/American Television: Interpreting the Video Past TI - American History/American Television: Interpreting the Video Past ID - 2442 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This collection of essays examines how history is interpreted and presented in Hollywood motion pictures. This work, and the O'Connor's later American History/American Television: Interpreting the Video Past (1983), were influential in calling attention to the fact that modern media interpret the past to mass audiences. Subsequent to these works, historians began to review television programs and films of a historical nature. Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. contributes the Foreword to this volume. Among the authors in this work are: Thomas Cripps, Robert Sklar, Lawrence Suid, Daniel J. Leab, David Culbert, June Sochen, Michael T. Isenberg, Garth Jowett, and Peter C. Rollins. AU - O'Connor, John E. and Martin A. Jackson, eds. CY - New York DA - 1979 KW - history preservation history, and new media history +motion pictures history, and motion pictures LB - 10800 PB - Frederick Ungar Publishing Co. PY - 1979 ST - American History/American Film: Interpreting the Hollywood Image TI - American History/American Film: Interpreting the Hollywood Image ID - 2443 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - An account largely of the building and management of Irish railways lines between 1830 and 1960. As the title suggests, this book is concerned with the creation of the railway infrastructure, with many details about the lives of laborers--navvies--involved in laying down rails and engineering works. Although the author does not document sources, primary source quotation from contemporaries throughout the text offer illustrative and insightful glances into the past. The book is arranged by rail company, and traces their rise and decline over roughly a century of steam travel. --Nicholas Wolf AU - O'Connor, Kevin CY - Dublin DA - 1999 KW - non-USA Wolf, Nicholas Ireland +transportation railroads railroads, and Ireland Ireland, and railroads Ireland LB - 1960 PB - Gill & Macmillan PY - 1999 ST - Ironing the Land: The Coming of the Railways to Ireland TI - Ironing the Land: The Coming of the Railways to Ireland ID - 284 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The Roscoe “Fatty” Arbuckle scandal of 1921 brought calls for government regulation of the motion picture industry and was an important factor in the industry's creation of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America. Arbuckle was a rotund comedian whose popularity at the time was perhaps second only to Charlie Chaplin. Even before the Labor Day scandal that destroyed his career, Arbuckle had been the focus of rumors. In July, 1921, newspaper reports had appeared about a dinner that movie moguls had given the comedian more than four years earlier in which prostitutes had been present. Hollywood magnates had raised $100,000 to keep the matter quiet. All this paled when compared to events in early September, 1921. Arbuckle and some of his Hollywood friends had rented rooms at the St. Francis Hotel in San Francisco, and the party that followed featured bootleg liquor and heavy drinking. A young actress, Virginia Rappé, who had been in Arbuckle’s room, died of peritonitis and an autopsy revealed bruises and internal injuries. Rumors circulated that Arbuckle had raped the woman (possibly with a coke bottle) and that his great weight -- almost 300 pounds -- had ruptured her bladder. The district attorney wanted to try Arbuckle for murder, but a grand jury returned an indictment of manslaughter, leading to accusations that the actor’s celebrity had gained him special treatment. During the trials that followed (the first two ended in hung juries), the comedian was buried under an avalanche of publicity. Not only was Arbuckle’s libertine life style examined in detail but stories circulated about Rappé’s reputation: that she was a heavy drinker, a call girl, that she had contracted syphilis from a Hollywood director, and had several abortions. Although a jury acquitted Arbuckle, he was finished as an actor. AU - Oderman, Stuart CY - Jefferson, NC DA - 1994 KW - celebrity Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures biography motion pictures, and scandal motion pictures, and actors' status motion pictures, and censorship celebrity culture motion pictures, and celebrity culture Arbuckle, Fatty biography biography, and Fatty Arbuckle LB - 13320 PB - McFarland & Company, Inc. PY - 1994 ST - Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle: A Biography of the Silent Film Comedian TI - Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle: A Biography of the Silent Film Comedian ID - 504 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - "We live in a historical moment when the media on which the word relies are changing their nature and extending their range to an extent not seen since the invention of movable type," writes the author. "The changes have been building through the twentieth century, as the spoke word reannimated communication over telephone and radio, and as the moving image on film and television supplemented the 'mere' word. The invention and dissemination of the personal computer and now the explosive growth in links between those computers on the worldwide networks of the internet create a genuinely new and transformative environment. O'Donnell's goal in this book is "to make clearer what is happening or what might happen by thinking about similar transformations in the past." (p. 9) AU - O'Donnell, James J. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1998 KW - computers preservation new media libraries archives digital media digitization computers +computers and the Internet +information storage libraries, and new media history, and new media new media, and history libraries, and computers libraries, and digital media digital media, and libraries digital media, and information storage computers, and libraries computers, and information storage history LB - 80 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1998 ST - Avatars of the Word: From Papyrus to Cyberspace TI - Avatars of the Word: From Papyrus to Cyberspace ID - 2709 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The Program on Information Resources Policy was organized at Harvard University in 1972, and this book has three of the policy studies from that Program. Common themes run through each study. "One is the breaking down of differences between information technologies. Another is the lowering of barriers that once distinguished information industries. A third is new ways of acquiring and using information." The studies in this trilogy include: Paul J. Berman and Anthony G. Oettinger, "The Medium and the Telephone: The Politics of Information Resources"; Paul J. Berman, "Computer or Communications? Allocation of Functions and the Role of the Federal Communications Commission"; and William H. Read, "Foreign Policy: The High and Low Politics of Telecommunications." AU - Oettinger, Anthony G., Paul J. Berman, and William H. Read CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1977 KW - computers nationalism corporations corporations corporations Federal Communications Commission (FCC) censorship and ratings journalism regulation law news and journalism non-USA +television regulation newspapers news media information technology Information Age +telephones +computers and the Internet AT & T Bell Laboratories cable, coaxial television, and coaxial cable Communication Act of 1934 common carriers information processing data processing information processing FCC regulation, and telephones regulation, and computers +nationalism and communication General Electric Company newspapers, and emergency calls communication, point-to-point +radio telecommunications circuits, and telephones telephones, and switching networks global communication telephones, and overseas calls broadcasting information technology, and finance media convergence newspapers cable circuits information processing +television telecommunications, and foreign policy nationalism, and telephones nationalism, and telecommunications LB - 4420 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - Ballinger Publishing Company PY - 1977 ST - High and Low Politics: Information Resources for the 80s TI - High and Low Politics: Information Resources for the 80s ID - 1830 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Chapter six, "The Movie Industry Gets a Czar: 1921-1934" (55-65) discusses Will Hays and the MPPDA. The author does not discuss Breen's work in public relations and in fact says that "Breen was in many ways the opposite of Hays; to put it simply, Breen did not trust others generally, and producers specifically." (64) AU - Olasky, Marvin N. CY - Hillsdale, N. J. DA - 1987 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) self-regulation Production Code PCA advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. MPAA MPPDA context context, and public relations motion pictures, and public relations public relations public relations, and motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Hays, Will H., and public relations public relations, and Will Hays MPPDA, and public relations Hays, Will H. Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 15360 PB - Lawrence Erlbaum Associates PY - 1987 ST - Corporate Public Relations: A New Historical Perspective TI - Corporate Public Relations: A New Historical Perspective ID - 558 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This publication is a photographic collection of locomotives, organized by rail company. Not directly useful for communication history, but a good visual source. The study is largely nostalgic, with the author capturing steam engines of a bygone era at the time of their eclipse as diesel machines replaced them in the mid-twentieth century. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Oldham, Eric CY - Pheonix Mill (UK) DA - 1998 KW - illustrations non-USA Wolf, Nicholas +transportation Great Britain railroads Great Britain, and railroads railroads, and Great Britain illustrations LB - 1970 PB - Sutton Publishing, Ltd. PY - 1998 ST - British Railways Steam in Retrospect TI - British Railways Steam in Retrospect ID - 285 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Guy Stanton Ford called this book “the first comprehensive historical account of American technology and invention as a basic contribution to the nation’s culture.” The work is a solid, informative survey of technological achievements -- including important development in mass communication -- up to 1956. For teachers, this book still provides a useful account of major developments in transportation, the electrical industry, newspaper and other print media, motion picture technology, clocks, cable and wireless communication, air transport, radar and the proximity fuse, and other innovations. Interestingly, the computer is not even indexed, although it is discussed in the context of automation. The transistor is mentioned briefly in the context of its use in hearing aids and in replacing vacuum tubes. Oliver also discusses the reaction of such historians as Charles Francis Adams, Fred Morrow Fling, and George Baxter Adams to science and new technology at the turn of the twentieth century. Oliver believed that innovations in communications, including those after World War I, had strengthened American unity and homogenized American culture. He wrote that “today, in the remotest rural areas as well as in the metropolitan districts, news is instantly available. This development in communications has been a mighty unifying force in our history and has tended to standardize our civilization. Now that a revolution has taken place in communication technology, taking in the entire world, the question arises, ‘Will it have a similar unifying global effect?’” AU - Oliver, John W. CY - New York DA - 1956 KW - technology computers nationalism radio time and timekeeping transistors integrated circuits print motion pictures communication revolution journalism materials materials timekeeping, and clocks news and journalism war print culture news information technology general studies technology and society transportation electricity newspapers motion pictures and popular culture print media clocks cable wireless communication air travel radar proximity fuse automation computers and the Internet transistors vacuum tubes Adams, Charles Francis Fling, Fred Morrow Adams, George Baxter World War I nationalism and communication news communication revolution information technology, and rural areas aeronautics and space communication nationalism, and news timekeeping labor LB - 1030 PB - The Ronald Press Company PY - 1956 ST - History of American Technology TI - History of American Technology ID - 1499 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work has no notes but does have a short bibliography and a copy of Land’s curriculum vitae. The concluding chapter (“The Man Behind the Camera”) offers insight into how Land viewed his invention. He believed it would engender “a system that will be a partner in perception enabling us to see the objects around us more vividly than we can see them without it, a system to be an aid to memory and a tool for exploration.” (Land quoted) Land hoped his invention would be as widely used as the telephone, and thought his camera was one of most important innovations in the history of American technology. --SV Olshaker explores the history of the Polaroid company and its founder and central figure, Edwin Land. Concentrating almost exclusively on Polaroid’s place in the camera industry, Olshaker traces Land’s life from his initial invention of the polarizing filter through Polaroid as an international company in the late 1970s. Olshaker emphasizes Land’s inventive genius in creating new technology, and clearly sees his life as indicative of the so-called “American Dream” whereby individuality and inventiveness enable success and distinctiveness. The work is largely based on periodical literature covering Land and Polaroid over the period c.a. 1920-1978. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Olshaker, Mark CY - New York DA - 1978 KW - photography +photography and visual communication +photography and visual communication cameras, instant cameras, Polaroid Polaroid photography, instant Land, Edwin cameras Wolf, Nicholas LB - 1820 PB - Stein and Day PY - 1978 ST - The Instant Image: Edwin Land and the Polaroid Experience TI - The Instant Image: Edwin Land and the Polaroid Experience ID - 1578 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This text looks at the role of the written word in the development of both its own legacy as well as its implications on oral language. Olson argues that the development of a written language brought about cognitive and social changes that moved parts of the oral language into the forefront of the human conscious. He also debunks many of the myths associated with the written word and literacy chiefly that the written word can completely take over and fulfill the same needs as an oral language. Further, although the written word has enhanced our capability for long-term storage of knowledge, many things are lost such as emotions and feeling, sarcasm, as well as what the author was really feeling in the transfer from oral to written word. However, literacy had a tremendous impact on the specialization of sciences and the formation of systems of logic. The properties of a written language, then, act to bring many of the principles of categorization, logic, etc. into consciousness. Written words allow us to devise equations, create maps, among other things. Ultimately, the written and oral language are complementary, rather than competitive, in that the strengths of each would not have come about without the other. Olson writes that “If literacy is thought of as simply the basic skill of recognizing emblems or of decoding letters to sound or words to meanings, the implications of literacy, while important, are bound to be limited. But if we regard literacy in the classical sense, as the ability to understand and use the intellectual resources provided by some three thousand years of diverse literate traditions, the implications of learning to exploit these resources may be enormous. Enormous not only in that literacy has permitted the accumulation of treasures which are stored in texts but also in that it involves a diverse set of procedures for acting on and thinking about language, the world and ourselves. That is the main concern of this book.” (17-18) --Michael Boyle AU - Olson, D. R. CY - New York DA - 1994 KW - values print archives materials non-USA Boyle, Michael +books, periodicals, newspapers print culture writing reading literacy values, and literacy print v. oral culture paper +information storage values materials LB - 1600 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1994 ST - The World on Paper: The Conceptual and Cognitive Implications of Reading and Writing TI - The World on Paper: The Conceptual and Cognitive Implications of Reading and Writing ID - 248 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this work the author, Michael Ondaatje, interviews film editor Walter Murch. Murch discusses his work on several films and how new technological innovations (e.g., digitization) influenced the way he edited movies. AU - Ondaatje, Michael CY - New York DA - 2002 KW - entertainment computers projection entertainment, home Murch, Walter +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, and digital movies +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality Hollywood, and digital movies digital movies, and Hollywood digital cinema of the mind digital cinema digital media digital media home entertainment Hollywood motion pictures home photography 35mm computers LB - 28700 PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 2002 ST - The Conversations: Walter Murch and the Art of Editing Film TI - The Conversations: Walter Murch and the Art of Editing Film ID - 2646 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Onosko, Peter CY - Kent, OH DA - 1976 KW - +future and science fiction future utopianism LB - 8970 PB - Kent State University Press PY - 1976 ST - Wasn’t the Future Fun? TI - Wasn’t the Future Fun? ID - 2264 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work was a 1990 doctoral dissertation. According to Stephen R. Barley, "Orr’s study of photocopier repair technicians at Xerox has for some years now been an underground classic among ethnographers of work.” Orr documented and developed "the important and counterintuitive notion that technical knowledge is best viewed as a socially distributed resource that is diffused and stored primarily through an oral culture.” AU - Orr, Julian E. CY - Ithaca DA - 1996 KW - technology corporations corporations labor xerography +duplicating technologies office, and information technology information technology +duplicating technologies photocopying Xerox Corporation experts, photocopier repair technicians information technology, and office technology and society ethnography, and photocopying experts office LB - 5750 PB - ILR Press, and imprint of Cornell University Press PY - 1996 ST - Talking about Machines: An Ethnography of a Modern Job TI - Talking about Machines: An Ethnography of a Modern Job ID - 1960 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Orvell argues "that the tension between imitation and authenticity is a primary category in American civilization, pervading layers of our culture that are usually thought to be separate, from commercial design and advertising to literature. More specifically, I argue in this book that a major shift occurred within the arts and material culture from the latae nineteenth century to the twentieth century, a shift from a culture in which the arts of imitation and illusion were valorized to a culture in which the notion of authenticity became of primary value. One might describ e this change, in rough terms, as a change in the meaning of a phrase that remains central to both nineteenth- and twentieth-century culture, 'the real thing.' Put simply, the nineteenth-century culture of imitation was fascinated by reproductions of all sorts-- replicas of furniture, architecture, art works, replicas of the real thing in any shape or form imaginable. It was a culture inspired by faith in the power of the machine to manufacture a credible simulacrum; yet it had not fully absorbed the methods of the machine, and in the end it was a culture of types, of stylizations, of rounded generalities. The culture of authenticity that developed at the end of the century and that gradually established the aesthetic vocabulary that we have called 'modernist' was a reaction against the earlier aesthetic, an effort to get beyond mere imitation, beyond the manufacturing of illusions, to the creation of more 'authentic' works that were themselves real things." Orvell is not arguing "that a culture of authenticity entirely replaced the earlier culture of imitation; nothing so neat took place. In fact, as I shall reiterate later," he says, "the nineteenth-century culture of imitation remained (and still remains) a strong part of the mainstream of twentieth-century industrial popular culture. But what developed around the turn of the century was a counterthrust to the mainstream culture, an effort on the part of a number of intellectuals and artists to revitalize a culture thought to have grown moribund, an effort that centered on values of authenticity." (sv) This work is divided into three parts. Part I, "The Condition of Future Development," devotes a single chapter of "Whitman's Transformed Eye." Part II is entitled "A Culture of Imitation," and has three chapters. Chapter 2 is "A Hieroglyphic World: The Furnishing of Identity in Victorian Culture." Chapter 3 is "Photography and the Artifice of Realism." Chapter 4 is "The Romance of the Real." Part III is entitled "Inventing Authenticity," and also has three chapters: Chapter 5, "The Real Thing and the Machine-made World"; Chapter 6, "The Camera and the Verification of Fact"; and Chapter 7, "Not 'Realism' but Reality Itself." Orvel's Epilogue is called "The Dump Is Full of Images." This book is a volume in the Cultural Studies of the United States series, Alan Trachtenberg, ed. AU - Orvell, Miles CY - Chapel Hill DA - 1989 KW - technology Muybridge, Edward documentaries photography photography and visual communication duplicating technologies cameras Benjamin, Walter Bourke-White, Margaret capitalism capitalism, and consumer culture advertising documentary photography photography, documentary modernism Dos Passos, John Evans, Walker James, Henry, and photography photography, and Henry James Mumford, Lewis Muybridge, Eadweard realism realism, and photography photography, and realism Riis, Jacob moderism, and technology technology, and modernism Stieglitz, Alfred art facsimile, and authenticity art facsimile technology and society advertising and public relations LB - 32970 PB - University of North Carolina Press PY - 1989 ST - The Real Thing: Imitation and Authenticity in American Culture, 1880-1940 TI - The Real Thing: Imitation and Authenticity in American Culture, 1880-1940 ID - 2935 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Laurence O’Toole begins by explaining that rather than treating pornography as merely a problem, he has attempted “to look on it as an industry, a legal event, a film genre and a viewing experience.” He also has tried to examine how porn users view their experiences and concludes that rather than finding it “sad, demeaning, addictive or harmful,” most users “find their time with porn pleasurable.” The author spends considerable time discussing specific films, some of which he finds to be of fine quality. He notes that “modern porn is about fantasy and arousal” and only secondarily is it “revolutionary, educational, or philosophical.” Scattered throughout this work are observations about new technologies (video, cable, satellite, the Internet, for example) and how they have changed pornography’s place in society. The coming of video during the late 1970s and 1980s, he believes was “truly a major event” that “changed everything, for better or worse.” Videocassettes brought porn directly into homes and vastly expanded the market for such entertainment. Amateur videos became popular by the late 1980s. This work is based largely on secondary sources. It has a slim, two-page bibliography and a four-page Videography. In the endnotes, the books and articles from which the author’s text quotations are taken are cited but not the pages numbers from those sources. AU - O'Toole, Laurence CY - London DA - 1998 KW - entertainment computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) entertainment, home magnetic recording sexuality women, and new media television, and V-chip X-rated films video videotape video cassettes VCRs values religion sexuality motion pictures violence media effects media violence magazines news and journalism books, periodicals, newspapers magazines horror home entertainment videotape magnetic tape women feminism law censorship and ratings non-USA home home, and new media home video cassettes pornography women women, and pornography television computers and the Internet sex motion pictures, and pornography censorship V-chip Great Britain Video Recordings Act (1984) (Great Britain) Great Britain, Video Recordings Act (1984) obscenity law law, and obscenity MacKinnon, Catharine feminists, and pornography Great Britain, and censorship censorship, Great Britain British Board of Film Classification Dworkin, Andrea motion pictures, and classification X-rating, and motion pictures horror films, and VCRs horror films, and home entertainment violence, and home entertainment home entertainment revolution motion pictures, and horror motion pictures, and violence VCRs, and camcorders camcorders, and pornography pornography, and camcorders, women home, and pornography home, and VCRs home, and cable television home, and satellite television home, and violence movies home, and horror movies sex materials camcorders cameras self-regulation LB - 11930 PB - Serpent's Tail PY - 1998 ST - Pornocopia: porn, sex, technology and desire TI - Pornocopia: porn, sex, technology and desire ID - 444 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work contains information about technological improvements in cinematography. During the 1970s, lighter, smaller, and more powerful lighting equipment, and improvements in color film stock accelerated the trend away from shooting films on studio sets to shooting on location. The introduction of faster lenses permitted filming at much lower levels of light than had been possible with the older Technicolor stock, and the over development (“pushing”) of film in the lab increased its speed. As a result, American movie making attained a new aestheticism, which the cinematographer Nestor Almendros, who used the techniques in making Days of Heaven (1978), likened to the change brought to late-nineteenth-century painting by the introduction of premixed oil paint that came in tubes. That innovation improved the artist’s ability to capture changing light conditions outdoors and contributed to the rise of Impressionism. Just as the earlier advance had given artists greater freedom to paint on location, developments in film and camera equipment during the late 1960s and 1970s made it easier to shoot evocative film scenes in much lower levels of light. AU - Oumano, Ellen CY - New York DA - 1985 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories lighting oral histories +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and special effects motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and lighting lighting, and motion pictures cameras, and motion pictures cameras, and portable motion pictures, and cameras motion pictures, and new technology cinematography, cameras cameras cinematography LB - 19560 PB - St. Martin's Press PY - 1985 ST - Film Forum: Thirty-Five Top Filmmakers Discuss Their Craft TI - Film Forum: Thirty-Five Top Filmmakers Discuss Their Craft ID - 790 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Chapter 10 (“Scientific revolutions and technical dreams”) has interesting things to say about the spread of electricity after 1870 (before then it was primarily confined to the telegraph), and about new dyestuffs coming from German technology and research into coal-tar. The internal combustion and diesel engines are discussed and chapter 11 deals with “Survival technology in the twentieth century.” AU - Pacey, Arnold CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1990 KW - dyes dyeing materials non-USA science Germany general studies +electricity telegraph electricity, spread of post-1870 color, and dyes dyestuffs coal-tar engines, internal combustion engines, diesel Germany, and technology (19th century) visual communication scientific revolution, and technology color engines materials LB - 1830 PB - MIT Press PY - 1990 ST - Technology in World Civilization: A Thousand-Year History TI - Technology in World Civilization: A Thousand-Year History ID - 1579 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book offers a set of case studies that illustrate various ways in which the mass media distorts the news and limits the range of debate in the United States. Page’s main point is that our press system provides us with partial and inaccurate news and we are therefore unable to deliberate and make informed democratic decisions. Page joins in with a host of other media critics who blame the press for a whole range of problems, including low voter turnout and political disinterest. Page uses three particular incidents to illustrate his points. The first case study examines the Persian Gulf War and the way that the press, in particular the New York Times, misinformed the public about the issues and created a false sense of public opinion. The second case study concerns the L.A. riots of 1992 and the debate over public officials’ claims that the riots were caused by social programs like welfare. The final case deals with the controversy over Attorney General nominee Zoe Baird. In each case, Page argues that the public did not have access to all of the information necessary to make a balanced judgment about the situation. It was the press that engaged in the debate, and essentially took democracy out of the hands of citizens. Page does not address concerns about media concentration, advertising or commercial bias. Instead, he argues that other factors such as the speed of modern news flow, the primary role of “professional communicators” in framing discussions, and the tendency of a papers editorial position to slant news coverage are to blame. These and other factors have created a system where the “media elites” are the players and the people are excluded. --Rob Rabe AU - Page, Benjamin I. CY - Urbana DA - 1996 KW - journalism community democracy news and journalism non-USA news media democracy and media Rabe, Rob news, and bias news, and Persian Gulf War news, and L. A. riots (1992) news, and Zoe Baird critics media elites LB - 9490 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - University of Illinois Press PY - 1996 ST - Who Deliberates?: Mass Media and Modern Democracy TI - Who Deliberates?: Mass Media and Modern Democracy ID - 2316 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume is a collection of papers presented at a Science Week Symposium of the New York Academy of Sciences, April 5-8, 1983. The papers cover a wide range of fields -- new directions in computer sciences, computer graphics, computers and the work force, the limits of computation, computers and scientific inquiry, artificial intelligence, the human factor in computer use, new perspectives in psychology and education, and how computers change the way we think about ourselves (several panel discussions are also included). As with most such publications, the quality of the pieces is uneven and some pieces are of more value for historical context than others. This work is Volume 426 in the Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences series, published Nov. 1, 1984. AU - Pagels, Heinz R., ed. CY - New York DA - 1984 KW - computers values labor +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology computers, and society values, and computers computer graphics automation, and computers labor, and computers computers, and scientific research automation computers labor LB - 7960 N1 - See also: office PB - New York Academy of Sciences PY - 1984 ST - Computer Culture: The Scientific, Intellectual, and Social Impact of the Computer TI - Computer Culture: The Scientific, Intellectual, and Social Impact of the Computer ID - 2165 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author writes that "most natural scientists hold a view that maintains that the entire vast universe, from its beginning in time to its ultimate end, from its smallest quantum particles to the largest galaxies, is subject to rules--the natural laws--comprehensible by a human mind....I believe that this reductionalist - materialist view of nature is basically correct." Pagels also writes that "the computer creates not only a new class of people struggling for intellectual and social acceptance, but a new way of thinking about knowledge. It will transform the scientific enterprise and bring forth a new worldview,” he argues. "I am convinced that the nations and people who master the new sciences of complexity will become the economic, cultural, and political superpowers of the next century. The purpose of this book is to articulate the beginnings of this new synthesis of knowledge and to catch a first glimpse of the civilization that will arise out of it." This work is partly a memoir. It is often wordy but occasionally has a good, substantive paragraph. AU - Pagels, Heinz R. CY - New York DA - 1988 KW - computers communication revolution values science +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology complexity, and computers scientific research, and computers computers, and new way of thinking values, and computers communication revolution Turing, Alan Turing machines computers computers, and complexity complexity LB - 7970 PB - Simon and Schuster PY - 1988 ST - The Dreams of Reason: The Computer and the Rise of the Sciences of Complexity TI - The Dreams of Reason: The Computer and the Rise of the Sciences of Complexity ID - 2166 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is divided into two parts. The first contains an annotated bibliography of periodicals and newspapers that "regularly include material about magazines and the magazine industry." It also lists reference works relating to magazines. In Part II, there is a select biliography of about 2,200 articles, books, and dissertations about magazines. Many entries deal with technology related to magazines. For example, chapter 8 is entitled "Production & Design." Chapter 9 is entitled "History," and also includes entries touching on technology. AU - Paine, Fred K. and Nancy E. Paine CY - Metuchen, N.J. and London DA - 1987 KW - photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines +bibliographies bibliographies, and magazines bibliographies, annotated advertising bibliographies, and magazine advertising +photography and visual communication photography, and magazines magazines, and photography LB - 2750 PB - Scarecrow Press, Inc. PY - 1987 ST - Magazines: A Bibliography for Their Analysis, with Annotations and Study Guide TI - Magazines: A Bibliography for Their Analysis, with Annotations and Study Guide ID - 363 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Papert invented the computer language LOGO. A follower of Piaget, he was a professor of Mathmatics and Education at MIT when Mindstorms appeared. Papert argued that it is possible to design computers in a way that it would become a natural process to communicate with them. When children learn to use computers, it changes the way they learn other things. AU - Papert, Semour CY - New York DA - 1980 KW - computers seeing at a distance postmodernism modernism education censorship and ratings new way of seeing information technology +computers and the Internet children, and media children, and computers computers, and children new way of seeing, and children and computers information technology, and education information technology, and children children computers new way of seeing, and computers children education, and computers LB - 3400 PB - Basic Books PY - 1980 ST - Mindstorms: Children, Computers and Powerful Ideas TI - Mindstorms: Children, Computers and Powerful Ideas ID - 1730 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Christian Parenti, who has a doctorate in sociology, provides a compelling account of changes in surveillance technology from slave passes during the antebellum period to the Total Information Awareness program in the aftermath of September 11, 2001. He argues that with the arrival of digitization, personal computers, DNA testing and other innovations during the late twentieth century, technology now exists that makes surveillance possible on an unprecedented scale. This new surveillance, sometimes called “dataveillance,” frequently “ignores the physical body and instead tracks one’s informational doppelganger.” (p. 4) At the same time, traditional forms of surveillance have not declined. Moreover, Parenti notes that sophisticated “biometric” techniques have become relatively inexpensive and much more prevalent in recent years. The use of closed-circuit television and other methods of visual surveillance have also become much more common. Microchips embedded in clothing and implanted under the skin are now used to track animals, children, and ordinary citizens. These developments have made it possible to invade people’s privacy in ways that go “way past 1984.” (p. 167) The text of this work runs 212 pages plus about 43 pages of notes and an Index. AU - Parenti, Christian CY - New York DA - 2003 KW - identity computers cellular telephones nationalism corporations corporations telephones cell phones computers and the Internet privacy computers, and surveillance videotape closed circuit television television, closed circuit surveillance DNA testing cameras photography photography, and privacy privacy, and cameras digital media digital media, and privacy privacy, and digital media Total Information Awareness cameras, and surveillance labor labor, and surveillance labor, and cameras telephones, cell cell phones, and privacy cell phones, and surveillance surveillance, and cameras surveillance, and cell phones surveillance, and computers nationalism and communication nationalism, and surveillance surveillance, and databases surveillance, and nationalism digital media, history of FBI fingerprinting Foucault, Michel aeronautics and space communication satellites satellites, and global positioning systems global positioning systems IBM digital media, and identity identity, and digital media law law, and surveillance Taylor, Frederick W. labor, and computers office DNA television computers global communication LB - 29750 PB - Basic Books PY - 2003 ST - The Soft Cage: Surveillance in America from Slavery to the War on Terror TI - The Soft Cage: Surveillance in America from Slavery to the War on Terror ID - 2727 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Paris, Michael CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - R & D public relations advertising research and development war war values propaganda +motion pictures values, and motion pictures +military communication air travel, and motion pictures propaganda, and motion pictures air travel military, and motion pictures +aeronautics and space communication advertising and public relations transportation LB - 6320 PB - St. Martin’s Press/Manchester University Press PY - 1995 ST - From the Wright Brothers to Top Gun: Aviation and Popular Cinema TI - From the Wright Brothers to Top Gun: Aviation and Popular Cinema ID - 2015 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Parker considers the role of women in efforts to reform American culture and in pro-censorship campaigns. Her work discusses the Women's Christian Temperance Union, which not only tried to stop drinking but sought to purify American society by monitoring movies, libraries, and literature. AU - Parker, Alison M. CY - Urbana DA - 1997 KW - audiences women, and new media women theaters religion values morality libraries law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality censorship, and women censorship, and motion pictures women, and censorship women, and motion pictures temperance temperance, and women women, and temperance theaters, and motion pictures theaters, and women women, and theaters libraries, and women motion pictures, and reform women, and libraries women, and literature motion pictures, and critics motion pictures, and actors' status LB - 12760 PB - University of Illinois Press PY - 1997 ST - Purifying America: Women, Cultural Reform, and Pro-Censorship TI - Purifying America: Women, Cultural Reform, and Pro-Censorship ID - 454 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Pasley’s text offers a fresh look at the origin and operations of the early partisan newspaper press in the period from the mid-1790s to the 1830s. At once highly readable and packed with a wealth of detail, The Tyranny of Printers promises to be the final authority on the development of the party press for some time. According to Pasley, newspapers played an integral role in the transition from informal political alliances centered on political leaders with disparate views on core issues to the formation of national political parties. A network of allied printers, sharing information through newspaper exchanges, made possible the mobilization of partisan forces in the absence of formal party structures before the 1830s. Partisan printers often acted as party leaders in their communities and many print shops served as meeting places for party activities. More formal party structures emerged from these networks and became more sophisticated later in the nineteenth century. Recent journalism histories have suggested that the beginnings of the party press date to the late eighteenth century and not the Jacksonian Era of the 1820s. Pasley’s study, I think, conclusively settles this question. More often than not, though, historians tend to avoid arguments that place newspapers at the center of historical development, seeking instead to document the variety of factors that shape history. In this case, however, Pasley’s argument seems at least plausible. The bulk of this book focuses on Democratic Republican printers and outlines the difficulties they endured as they promoted a Jeffersonian vision, often in the face of persecution (or even prosecution). During the years of Federalist supremacy, these printers were at a disadvantage in the competition for patronage, subsidies, and advertising dollars. Benjamin Franklin Bache, for example, lost most of his grandfather’s fortune as he printed the Philadelphia Aurora. As Pasley notes, however, Republican printers in the first decade and a half of the nineteenth century did not get a lot of support from Republican administrations either. Federalists also turned to the party newspaper to rally support, counter accusations, and spread invective about their political rivals. As early as 1800, political leaders understood that a powerful newspaper was necessary to win elections. A handful of Republican printers were prosecuted under the Sedition Act, but Pasley argues that the overall effect of the law was to radicalize and mobilize the Republican press. Dozens of new papers emerged during the two years that the law was on the books and Republican vilification of President Adams continued unabated. Pasley uses the experiences of some fascinating early printers to illustrate his larger arguments, giving the book a readable narrative feel. The book is based on material from over 100 manuscript collections, dozens of newspapers, and a solid collection of secondary sources. Pasley won the 2002 Best Book Award from the AEJMC history division. -- Rob Rabe AU - Pasley, Jeffrey L. CY - Charlottesville DA - 2001 KW - Rabe, Rob books, periodicals, newspapers news and journalism print newspapers, and party press labor labor, and newspaper printers censorship, and newspapers newspapers, and censorship newspapers news censorship LB - 28920 PB - University of Virginia Press PY - 2001 ST - The Tyranny of Printers: Newspaper Politics in the Early American Republic TI - The Tyranny of Printers: Newspaper Politics in the Early American Republic ID - 2669 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 68-page work was part of The Art of Life Series, edited by Edward Howard Griggs. In it, Simon Patten, a professor political economy at the University of Pennyslvania, commented on urban life and amusements. Patten made his observation after coming into a city from a vacation in the country. The change in scenery was decidely for the worse, he writes. After leaving his mountain-camp in the morning, "happy and free," (11) and returning to the city and civilization, he and his companions gradually became more formal and out of sorts. On a "brightly-lighted street" (12) in the town's center, Patten observed something odd. The city "seemed to have only one side: and the people's faces were turned one way." (13) The side to which people congregated was lighted; the other side was for the most part "dark." (13) On the dark side of town were the "very Institutions of Civilization itself!" (13) -- the library, high school, and church. It was on the "'wrong side,' where all the right things were assembled!" (18) Patten then describes the "right" side of the street where people were attracted: "'It was festooned with lights and cheap decorations meant only for fair weather;... beside penny shows and the gay vestibules of nickel theaters. Opposite the barren school yard was the arcaded entrance to the Nickelodeon, finished in the white stucco, with the ticket sell 18/19 er throned in a chariot drawn by an elephant trimmed with red, white and blue lights. A phonograph was going over and over its lingo, and a few picture machines were free to the absorbed crowed which circulated through the arcade as through the street. Here were the groups of working girls -- now happy 'summer girls' -- because they had left the grime, ugliness and dejection of their factories behind them, and were freshened and revived by doing what they like to do...." (18-19) Patten commented on the lack of distinct institution for the stimulation of healthy pleasure. Patten likened the movies to the saloon in that they were "the first amusement to occupy the economic plan that the saloon has so long exclusively controlled." The nickel theater's "enormous popularity is proof that it appeals to the foundation qualities of man." (45) A conservative estimate puts the number of people in New York City who daily visit nickelodeons at 200,000, he said. (46) Where a man may leave the saloon "debilitated" (46), he often leaves the movie house with a lasting "glow" (46) attesting to the powerful impact films have on the imagination. Patten also likens movies to sports, agreeing with Jane Addams who also made similar comparisons. (47-49) "'In the lower realm, where religion and morality do not act, amusements and sports are the only effective motives to elevate men. Sport is the beginning of inspiration, just as amusement is the lower round of regeneration.'" (67) Patten said that "Vivid mental images do for the modern world what bears and 60/61 miracles did for our ancestors." (60-61) AU - Patten, Simon Nelson CY - New York DA - 1909 KW - Marked ref, secondary electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time color electricity, and color color, and electricity advertising and public relations electricity, and advertising advertising, and electricity metaphors metaphors, and light and civilization critics critics, and modern entertainment Patten, Simon, and urban life anti-urbanism electricity, and anti-urbanism electricity, and Simon Patten women women, and movie theaters theaters critics, and theaters motion pictures motion pictures, and urban life critics, and Nickelodeons color advertising, and color color, and advertising color, and urban life motion pictures, and Simon Patten motion pictures, and saloons theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures phonograph sound recording sound recording, and phonograph phonograph, and motion pictures motion pictures, and phonograph ref, secondary ref, secular critics, and modernity advertising LB - 41400 PB - B. W. Huebsch PY - 1909 ST - Product and Climax TI - Product and Climax ID - 4239 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Patterson has interesting ideas about Harold Innis, Marshall McLuhan, and history. He notes that Innis treated “almost everything as media of communication,” including himself. For Innis, Patterson argues, “the world of the media was a place of complex dialectical oppositions. And in the modern world, according to him, this dialectic was hastening to a resolution of catastrophe.” (5) While Innis believed that the pulp and paper industries had played an important role in Great Britain’s rise to power and its influence on opinion, Patterson believes that it was Innis’s earlier work on waterways that helped to turn his later research in the direction of communication. It “was waterways, not pulp and paper,” as Donald Creighton had argued, “that directly led” to Innis’s late work.” (8) “Waterways and roads were central to the thesis of Empire and Communications,” (10) Patterson contends. This work is based on research in the papers of Innis, McLuhan, Donald Creighton, and W. T. Easterbrook, as well as on published sources. AU - Patterson, Graeme CY - Toronto DA - 1990 KW - nationalism imperialism preservation history, and new media materials paper non-USA Innis, Harold McLuhan, Marshall +nationalism and communication cultural imperialism history, and communications +transportation nationalism, and transportation nationalism, and wood pulp nationalism, and paper paper, and nationalism wood pulp, and nationalism nationalism, and waterways Great Britain Canada Creighton, Donald Easterbrook, W. T. history materials LB - 2130 PB - University of Toronto Press PY - 1990 ST - History and Communications: Harold Innis, Marshall McLuhan, and the Interpretation of History TI - History and Communications: Harold Innis, Marshall McLuhan, and the Interpretation of History ID - 301 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This update to the 1972 Report of the Surgeon General’s Advisory Committee on Television and Behavior provides an overview of the academic research done throughout the 1970s on the subject of television. The scope is quite broad, covering not only behavior effects and psychological impacts of watching television but also examining television’s content, norms and place in American society. While the aim seems to have been television in general, most of the commentary is skewed toward concern with effects television may have on (highly impressionable) children. Most of the studies referred to in Volume 1 receive only one-sentence summaries; Volume 2 provides a more focused overview of some of the research [for this annotation, Eerlandson looked only at the Violence and Aggression section of Volume 2.] Many of the observations of Volume 1 are now common knowledge in television research: in the 1970s there were more men than women on television; children a not-entirely-understood capacity to mimic what they see on television (especially violence); the average life on television is far more glamorous (younger, wealthier, more attractive) than the average life in reality. However, there were many interesting facts about what shows were watched, how much television was watched and how people were presumably affected. The work is probably most interesting as a historical marker of how far mass communications research had come by 1982 and as an indicator of social trends in the hopes and predictions made by the authors of Volume 1. For example, the authors of the report were very concerned with how much and what television the institutionalized (i.e., the elderly, hospitalized or mentally ill) accessed. There was great hope expressed for the combination of television and education -- both using television to teach and socialize children and using instructional modes to make the general populace better consumers of television. There were clear assumptions in the research summary that children were more akin to passive sponges than to reasoning creatures; that old people (referred to as such in text) led dull, unfulfilling and useless existences after retirement; that genders were appropriately confined to specific occupations (although television exaggerated this stereotype); and that mothers -- never fathers -- would be the ones responsible for watching television with their children and observing all coping with all the ramifications of that activity. While communications and psychological research has evolved significantly and will no doubt continue to do so, Television and Behavior is an interesting window into one of the steps along the way. Where Volume I was a synthesis of the research on the effects of television for the previous ten years, Volume 2 contains the technical essays written by such researchers as L. Rowell Huesmann ("Television Violence and Aggressive Behavior"), George Gerbner, George Comstock, Steven Chaffee, Jack McLeod, Dolf Zillmann, and several others. --Dale Erlandson AU - Pearl, David AU - Bouthilet, Lorraine AU - Joyce Lazar, eds. CY - Rockville, MD DA - [1982] KW - Surgeon General television violence television, and violence violence, and television violence, and social science research social science research, and violence children, and media television, and effects motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures Surgeon General's reports (1971) television, and Surgeon General's reports (1971) violence children, and TV violence media effects, and television violence, and syntheses syntheses National Institute of Mental Health, and violence violence, and National Institute of Mental Health media effects, and violence violence, and media effects reports social science research, and TV violence Surgeon General's reports (1972) television, and social science television, and violence violence, and television media effects, and television children, and media children, and TV violence social science research, synthesis (violence) Zillmann, Dolf Comstock, George Chaffee, Steven Gerbner, George McLeod, Jack Huesmann, L. Rowell children media effects National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) NIMH social science research Erlandson, Dale LB - 29220 PB - National Institute of Mental Health ST - Television and Behavior: Ten Years of Scientific Progress and Implications for the Eighties: Volume II: Technical Reports TI - Television and Behavior: Ten Years of Scientific Progress and Implications for the Eighties: Volume II: Technical Reports VL - 2 ID - 52 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work was among the first serious histories of advertising the United States. It followed David Potter's People of Plenty (1954). Potter, a historian who specialized on the American Civil War and Reconstruction periods, had written about the American character in People of Plenty and included a chapter on modern advertising and compared its social influence by the mid-1950s to the school and church. Pease, who worked with Potter, extended Potter's analysis on this important topic. “Modern Advertising in America is at least forty years old,” Pease wrote in 1958. “Thoughtful citizens who have strained their eyes at the current growth of television and who have pondered with disquiet the evidence of massive hidden persuaders in their culture find it difficult to remind themselves that most of the advertising they now see was foreshadowed and substantially conceived in previous decades, now increasingly remote and more readily accessible to historians than to present memories. (vii) “Advertising in American has been a sprawling and diffuse enterprise, and the materials which bear on its study as a whole are for the most part too unorganized and unworked at the present time to permit any single individual to encompass and digest them. Few of the preliminary investigations on which the interpretive historian will necessarily depend have yet been made. As a consequence, he must for the moment content himself with making forays of more modern size, where the capacity for insight may be permitted compensate for restricted dimensions.” (ix) AU - Pease, Otis CY - New Haven DA - 1958 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations values community democracy advertising values, and advertising advertising, and values democracy, and advertising advertising, and democracy Potter, David +radio radio, and advertising advertising, and radio values LB - 28270 PB - Yale University Press PY - 1958 ST - The Responsibilities of Public Advertising: Private and Public Influence, 1920-1940 TI - The Responsibilities of Public Advertising: Private and Public Influence, 1920-1940 ID - 660 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Kathy Peiss, a history professor at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, argues that, contrary to popular belief, the American beauty industrymake-up, hair products and hairdressers, etc. has not oppressed women and it was not male-dominated. “…this business for women was largely built by women. In the early stages of the developing cosmetics industry, from the 1890s to the 1920s, women formulated and organized ‘beauty culture’ to a remarkable extent (p.4).” As evidence, she delves into the lives of Elizabeth Ardenborn Florence Nightingale Grahamwho came from the lower classes to dominate the beauty industry, Helena Rubinstein a Jewish women from Krakow who rose to prominence and became Arden’s rival, Annie Turnboa black woman from a poor home in Illinois who became wildly successful by selling hair products, and a host of other female owners of make-up companies. In addition to detailing the rise of these companies, Peiss also delves into the daily lives and rituals of women at the turn of the century until the 1960s (with a small section on the 1970s-1990s) to prove her other main point that “The beauty trade…did not depend upon advertising as its impetus. Rather, it capitalized on patterns of women’s social lifetheir old customs of visiting, conversation, and religious observance, as well as their new presence in shops, clubs, and theaters (p.5).” And, she writes about the politically charged world of make-up for African-Americans, where skin whiteners were a profitable part of the trade. In the late 1800s, before the commercialized beauty culture came into being, women mixed up their own cosmetics in the home, using everyday ingredients like herbs, vinegar, and lemon juice. Skin creams could also be bought at the local pharmacy, where pharmacists would mix the product themselves, and beauty salons. Women made the distinction between the socially acceptable cosmetics, which were creams and lotions that protected the skin and enhanced natural beauty, and the socially unacceptable paints, that covered up the skin and still possessed an association with prostitution. After World War I, make-up became more acceptable and a mass market developed. Because many of these commercially produced products were very similar, advertising was used to help consumers distinguish the various products. Movie stars, like Mary Pickford, appeared in the advertisements, and companies, like Max Factor, placed displays for make-up in movie theater lobbies and would make over women at the theater. Make up was transformed from a paint that obscured the natural, “true” self to a product that allowed women to truly express their individuality. During World War II, the use of make up was promoted, because it allowed women workers to keep their “femininityeven though you are doing man’s work (p.240).” The War Production Board, in 1942, passed an order that forced cosmetics companies to reduce their output by 20 percent and prevented new products from being created. In just four months, the order was dissolved, and they “called for women to curtail cosmetic purchases voluntarily." (244) This act, Peiss says, showed how important make up had become to convincing women to support World War II. A backlash occurred in the 1960s, when feminists protested at the Miss America pageant in 1968 and attacked the unrealistic beauty standards women were held up to. Concluding her argument, Peiss says that women have used cosmetics to their own benefit. They’ve expressed their individuality and they “still perceive beautifying as a domain of sociability, creativity, and play.” (269) --Hallie Lieberman AU - Peiss, Kathy CY - New York DA - 1998 KW - Lieberman, Hallie women sexuality women, and advertising advertising and public relations women, and beauty women, and sexuality sexuality, and women women, and advertising advertising, and women advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures Pickford, Mary, and beauty motion pictures, and Mary Pickford war war, and women women, and World War II World War II, and women propaganda propaganda, and World War II propaganda, and women World War II, and women World War II, and propaganda advertising motion pictures Pickford, Mary World War II World War I LB - 36980 PB - Henry Holt and Company PY - 1998 ST - Hope in a Jar: The Making of America’s Beauty Culture TI - Hope in a Jar: The Making of America’s Beauty Culture ID - 250 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This fine intellectual history about the decline of gentility in America does not speak to developments in technology per se, but it does provide context to changes in American thought and culture during the Industrial Revolution. AU - Person, Stow CY - New York DA - 1973 KW - cultural change values modernity cyberspace culture context cultural change, late 19th cultural change, early 20th Victorianism modernism LB - 12890 PB - Columbia University Press PY - 1973 ST - The Decline of American Gentility TI - The Decline of American Gentility ID - 466 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - While Person does not speak to developments in technology per se, he does provide a first-rate intellectual history of changes in American thought and cultural during the Industrial Revolution. AU - Person, Stow CY - New York DA - [1958] KW - cultural change cyberspace culture context cultural change, late 19th cultural change, early 20th, new LB - 12900 PB - Holt ST - American Minds: A History of Ideas TI - American Minds: A History of Ideas ID - 467 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book showed people in 1963 the many ways a tape recorder could be used. “The tape recorder is fast becoming as common in the average home as the fridge, washing-machine and telly. Yet it is rarely as visible, due to a strange hibernating instinct that afflicts it three or four months after its arrival. This drives it into cupboards, under beds and up into attics -- anywhere it can lead a completely inactive life.” How to awaken this “Sleeping Beauty,” this instrument which is “the world’s greatest entertainer”? This is the subject of this book. The opening chapters deal with types of recorders than can purchased. Chapter 15 is entitled “Stereo,” and chapter 18 is “How Many Uses?”. One appendix is called “A Sound Vocabulary.” AU - Peters, Ken CY - London DA - 1963 KW - entertainment tape recording, magnetic magnetic recording recording entertainment, home home entertainment materials materials home, and new media home tape recorders recording sound sound recording tape recording sound tape recording home, and sound recording home, and tape recording LB - 5540 PB - Faber and Faber PY - 1963 ST - Modern Tape Recording and Hi-Fi TI - Modern Tape Recording and Hi-Fi ID - 1939 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book deals with the history of sexuality in America during the twentieth century. It contains much information about erotica and mass media, as well as the changing nature of media. Among development discussed are improvements in photography, motion pictures, cable and satellite television, video recording, and the Internet. By the end of the twentieth century, Petersen says, Americans rented at least 100 million X-rated video cassettes annually. AU - Petersen, James R. CY - New York DA - 1999 KW - computers motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality magnetic recording sexuality photography sex sexuality pornography sexuality motion pictures news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines Internet satellites magnetic tape law censorship and ratings censorship cable +computers and the Internet Internet, and pornography videotape videotape, and pornography pornography, and videotape pornography, and the Internet +television cable television, and pornography pornography, and cable television +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines +aeronautics and space communication pornography, and satellites satellites, and pornography +photography and visual communication photography, and sex sex, and photography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship Playboy +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex sex, and motion pictures LB - 27650 PB - Grove Press PY - 1999 ST - The Century of Sex: Playboy's History of the Sexual Revolution: 1900-1999 TI - The Century of Sex: Playboy's History of the Sexual Revolution: 1900-1999 ID - 1319 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book offers a fine history of changes in magazine publishing during the first six decades of the twentieth century. Among the many publications discussed are Esquire and Playboy. Playboy is particularly noteworthy. It appeared on newsstands in late 1953, and targeted young, predominantly urban males. It featured pictorials highlighting movies with nudity and sexual themes. Playboy’s circulation escalated from 175,000 copies after its first year, to more than 1.3 million in 1963. (By 1968, it had surpassed 5 million copies.) AU - Peterson, Theodore CY - Urbana DA - 1964 KW - women, and new media advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations sexuality news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines magazines, and history of advertising, and magazines magazines, and advertising women women, and magazines magazines, and women Esquire magazine magazines, and Esquire magazines, and Playboy Playboy magazines, and pulp magazines, and fan magazines, and men's advertising LB - 18000 PB - University of Illinois Press PY - 1964 ST - Magazines in the Twentieth Century TI - Magazines in the Twentieth Century ID - 709 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a study in material culture. By examining an everyday object – in this case the pencil – the author seeks to draw larger lessons for modern culture. Petroski has tried to approach engineering through the pencil’s history and symbolism. Understanding the social, cultural, and political context of the pencil’s development, he believes, helps us to understand the importance of civilization’s artifacts and the larger significance of engineering. Moreover, this work argues that the pencil’s history provides lessons for modern international industries such as steel, petroleum, transportation, and nuclear energy. This work sets the pencil’s history in an international context. It argues that during the past four centuries, the single most important advance in pencil making was Nicolas-Jacques Conté’s development of graphite-clay composition lead, something that emerged from work related to in molding cannonballs. The author discusses the “World Pencil War” in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, one that involved competition between the United States, Great Britain, Germany, France, and Japan. Chapters are also devoted more specifically to America. One deals with Henry David Thoreau and pencil manufacturing, while another covers “Mechanization in America.” Subsequent chapters consider “The Importance of Infrastructure,” “The Business of Engineering,” and “Competition, Depression, and War.” A concluding chapter, “Retrospect and Prospect,” attempts to draw parallels between the pencil and the modern-day computer. AU - Petroski, Henry CY - New York DA - 1990 KW - technology R & D advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations sexuality Penthouse research and development inventions innovation materials patents non-USA technology and society writing pencils, history of Thoreau, Henry David, and pencils Conté, Nicolas-Jacques, and pencils engineering engineering, and pencils material culture advertising advertising, and pencils artifacts, and pencils Germany Germany, and pencils Great Britain Great Britain, and pencils France France, and pencils Japan Japan, and pencils inventors and inventing invention, process of writing, mechanical pencils writing, and pens pencils, mechanical pens patents, and pencils research and development, and pencils writing materials pencils LB - 12300 PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 1990 ST - The Pencil: A History of Design and Circumstance TI - The Pencil: A History of Design and Circumstance ID - 2577 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book straddles two areas of historical research that are enjoying wide popularity in recent years: the history of print culture and the study of historical memory. Pfitzer’s account of the rise and fall of illustrated history books over the course of the nineteenth century offers the reader a satisfactory discussion of this largely forgotten genre of publishing while at the same time documenting technological and cultural factors that doomed the lavishly illustrated texts. As a side narrative Pfitzer also describes a powerful debate in the nineteenth century over which group or groups enjoyed the cultural authority to tell the story of the past and give shape to American historical memory and a study of the role of illustration in constructing historical memory in general. Pfitzer’s pictorial histories enjoyed a brief vogue in the late nineteenth century, a time when technological advances allowed cheaper, but more accurate and lifelike, illustration techniques in book printing. Picturing the Past describes the publishing endeavors of early pictorial historians, working in the 1840s, to create an illustrated past that would be accessible to the illiterate and those predisposed to visual learning. Early efforts, with the exception of those of Benson J. Lossing, who believed in accuracy and first-hand observation, were generally romanticized, overly sentimental, and wildly inaccurate. Pfitzer categorized the last two decades of the nineteenth century as a “golden age” for pictorial illustration, due in part to advances in printing and reproduction that allowed for greater quality. Audiences too, according to this argument, had by this time become used to the format and were more willing to accept the visual over the printed word (especially when engravings and text often disagreed in the same text). The most popular editions sold in the hundreds of thousands and the images contained in them were responsible for giving shape to Americans’ historical memory; undoubtedly many readers had their most sustained interaction with historical material through these texts. By the end of the century, pictorial histories had peaked in popularity for a couple of reasons. First, photography made engraving seem antiquated and highlighted the unrealistic quality of older books. Technology allowed seemingly more accurate representation. Perhaps more interesting is Pfitzer’s assertion that the rise of professional history in the latter part of the century wrested control of the story of the past from the amateurs and artists. Objective and scholarly history replaced the sentimental, heroic and moralistic tales of wonder often presented by the pictorial series. Pfitzer does not dwell on the question of why this group was able to become the custodians of historical memory or explore why audiences stopped buying the older style works. The book is based on the author’s observation of numerous pictorial histories, records and correspondence of pictorial authors, artists, and publishers, and a broad selection of press accounts and secondary sources. It works best as a case study of a particular genre of publishing that enjoyed a brief popularity in the late nineteenth century. Left unexplored are too many questions about the nature of the audience for historical books, the role of illustration in the formation of collective historical memory, and the consequences of the rise of the professional historian at the expense of the “popular.” Pfitzer hints in his epilogue that film histories and History Channel documentaries are causing our historical understanding to return somewhat to the mode of the pictorial history, an interesting observation that warrants much more consideration. -- Rob Rabe AU - Pfitzer, Gregory M. CY - Washington, D.C. DA - 2002 KW - illustrations Rabe, Rob photography and visual communication history and new media history, and photography photography, and history illustrations history, and illustrations illustrations, and history print culture +books, periodicals, newspapers photography, and books books, and photography books history photography print LB - 28930 PB - Smithsonian Institution Press PY - 2002 ST - Picturing the Past: Illustrated Histories and the American Imagination, 1840-1900 TI - Picturing the Past: Illustrated Histories and the American Imagination, 1840-1900 ID - 2670 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author became interested in studying historical recordings during the 1960s at a time when the vast majority of recorded music had been neglected, if not forgotten, and when (at least at Oxford University) faculty refused to consider the topic as a serious matter for research. In many respects, this book expands on the author's 1992 work Early Recordings and Musical Style: Changing Tastes in Instrumental Performance, 1900-1950 (Cambridge). This book covers the entire 20th century, and as with the earlier work, focuses primarily on instrumental playing. But as Philip also notes, he considers matters "that were barely touced on in the earlier book: the changing lives of musicians, the experience of making records, the increasing impact of recordings on musicians and audiences, and the state of music-making that we have reached at the beginning of the twenty-first century." Philip also looks "at the ways in which recordings shed light on the different sources of authority for playing styles and interpretation: the authority of the composer (either as performer or as approver of other muscians' performances), the schools of playing that were so much a feature of early twentieth-century playing, and the appeal to the authority of historical evidence, which erupted in the 'Early Music' movement in the second half of the century." (3) Philip observes that "no previous generation has had such easy access to music, or such an ability to leap across space and time to find it. And yet the evidence that recordings present is like all other historical evidence. It needs to be examined critically, its context needs to be understood. Only then can we come to see what recordings are, what they have done to us, and where we now stand in relation to them. The questions that are raised by more than a century of recordings are complex and profound, and this book is an attempt to thnk about some of them." (3) In his opening chapter, "Life before Recordings," Philip attempts to give readers a sense of what experiencing music was like before the late nineteenth century. "For the vast majority of us, most of the music we hear comes out of black boxes, with no musicians in sight. Going to a concert, or performing music themselves, is, for most people, a secondary activity, if they do it at all. "It is impossible to overemphasise the extent to which the growing availability of recordings over the last hundred years has changed the ways in which musicians and audiences experience music. If we could transport ourselves back to the late nineteenth century, before the existence of recordings, we would find ourselves in a deeply unfamiliar world. Brahms and his contemporaries never heard a note of music unless they were in the presence of someone performing it." (4-5) Philip's second chapter (26-62) deals with "The Experience of Recording." Two subsequent chapters cover the theme "Ensemble of Freedom" ("Orchestras" and "Chamber Groups and Pianists"). The next three chapters are on "Questions of Authority" ("the Composer," "Schools of Playing," and "the Archaeological Approach"). The last chapter is entitled "Listening Back: Lessons from the Twentieth Century." AU - Philip, Robert CY - New Haven, CT DA - 2004 KW - music discs, compact sound recording digital media duplicating technologies radio radio, and sound recording phonograph advertising advertising, and phonograph phonograph, and advertising compact discs (CDs) digital media, and compact discs (CDs) sound recording, and music music, and technology music, and phonograph music, and compact discs (CDs) music, and digital media motion pictures motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures audiences sound recording, and audiences audiences, and sound recording history and new media microphones sound recording, and microphones microphones, and sound recording music, and microphones microphones, and music gramophone sound recording, and gramophone sound recording, and LPs electricity electricity, and sound recording sound recording, and electricity home and new media home, and phonograph CDs history home advertising and public relations LB - 32890 PB - Yale University Press PY - 2004 ST - Performing Music in the Age of Recording TI - Performing Music in the Age of Recording ID - 2927 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author notes that until recently historians paid little attention to early twentieth-century recordings. There are several good reasons to study early recordings, though. First "it is the earliest period from which the primary source material has survived. For earlier periods we have documents and instruments, but no performances (except as played by a few mechanical instruments, such as barrel organs). For the early twentieth century we have the performances themselves, often recorded by the composers or by musicians of whom they approved...." (1) There are other reasons. "The recordings have preserved the general performance practice of the period in great detail, and the detail includes habits which are scarcely mentioned, if at all, in written documents. The recordings therefore shed light on the limitations of documentary evidence in any period, not just in the early twentieth century. "Early twentieth-century recordings have a particlar relevance to the study of performance practice in the nineteenth century. Many of the musicians heard on early recordings, were brought up in the late, or in some cases mid, nineteenth century, and their performing styles can be seen as remnants of nineteenth-century style. "Recordings also show how performance has gradually changed from the early twentieth century to our own time." (1) The book is divided into four parts: Rhythm, Vibrato, Portamento, and the implications of these early twentieth-century habits. AU - Philip, Robert CY - Cambridge, Eng. and New York DA - 1992 KW - sound recording phonograph advertising advertising, and phonograph sound recording, and music music, and technology music, and phonograph audiences sound recording, and audiences audiences, and sound recording history and new media microphones sound recording, and microphones microphones, and sound recording music, and microphones microphones, and music gramophone sound recording, and gramophone sound recording, and LPs electricity electricity, and sound recording sound recording, and electricity home and new media home, and phonograph history home music advertising and public relations LB - 32910 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1992 ST - Early Recordings and Musical Style: Changing Tastes in Instrumental Performance, 1900-1950 TI - Early Recordings and Musical Style: Changing Tastes in Instrumental Performance, 1900-1950 ID - 2929 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Phillipps, Lisle March CY - New York DA - 1915 KW - ref, secondary color color, and Middle Ages color, and Renaissance color, and myticism color, and Orientalism Orientalism, and color color, and sensuousness religion religion, and color color, and religion color, and form color, and emotion color, and thought values color, and values color, and stained glass color, and Christianity Christianity, and color Christianity LB - 41070 N1 - Phillipps writes that "The true main elements in art are form and colour. Of these form, in its essence, is a process of definition which lends itself spontaneously to the operations of intellect, while colour, in its essence and divorced from form, is the natural medium in which sensuous and emotional, as distinct from rational, impulses express themselves. Thus the essential division of the human mind into intellectual and emotional is mirrored in art's similar division into form and colour. "In this way have these two vehicles been used in the past. Form has dominated art whenever and wherever the intellectual faculty was dominant in life; colour has dominated art whenever and wherever the emotional faculty has dominated life. Thus, by the traces they have left in aft, the two great currents of ideas which have illumined the mind and spirit of man may be traced in their ebb and flow and in their interactions upon each other. "Moreover, it appears that not only is the mind of man divided into intellectual and spiritual faculties, and not only is art divided into the corresponding elements of form and colour, but the actual universe itself has come to share in this arrangement and be subject to a similar division. Every spiritual impulse which has quickened the soul of man has come out of the East just as every practical invention or intellectual conception has come out of the West. Mysticism is as commonplace an affair in Eastern life as science is in Western. Form, therefore, is the art idiom of the West, colour the art idiom of the East." (p. x) This book has 15 chapters, no references, or Index. Chapter 11 deals with "The Christian Point of View" (188-213). Whereas before the pre-Christian era there was a "distinct line of cleavage" between Eastern thought with its "spiritual and mystical character" and Western thought which "was rational and intellectual," (188), Christianity "attempts a reconciliation or fusion" of these two cultures. (208) Phillipps a more concise view of his thinking about color and form and the differences between Oriental and Western thinking in his article "Stained Glass Windows," Living Age (April 16, 1910), 138-50. Chapter 12 in this book is also title "Stained Glass Window." (214-29) PB - Charles Scribner's Sons PY - 1915 ST - Form and Colour TI - Form and Colour ID - 4206 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 86-page manual by the editors of The Photogram: The Photographic Monthly was address to photographers of all classes who wished to do press work, and in the process, earn money. There is practical advice here about how to approach editors, press agents as well as an explanation of copyright law, press permits, and how best to actually take pictures with the technology then available. It lists the names and addresses of more than 85 illustrated journals then in operation in Great Britain. It also lists about the names and address of about 40 picture postcard publishers. "The picture-postcard field has grown so enormously of late, that it needs special discussion," this work says. (30) "It is almost impossible to predict what will sell largely. One of the most successful single cards was simply a large size view of a human skull, while rather commonplace creeper-clad cottages, smiling and squalling babies, children at play, and groups of kittens have run into enormous editions." There is but one paragraph given to "Homes and Haunts of Celebrities -- When a centenary or a jubilee of a popular man is approaching, it is well to make a careful study of his life, and of his works, if he has been a writer or artist; then to devote as much time as possible -- preferably on several different days, and at different periods of the year -- to photographing his home, favorite haunts, scenes mentioned in his works or represented in his paintings, relics, family portraits, descendants or surviving friends, etc." (15) This work recommends submitting photographs one to two weeks in advance for weekly papers; one to twelve months in advance for monthly publications; and for books, six months to a year in advance. (24) AU - Photogram, Editors of The CY - London DA - 1905 KW - post office postal service journalism magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary non-USA Great Britain photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines non-USA, and photography Great Britain, and photography photography, and Great Britain law law, and journalism journalism, and law copyright, and journalism journalism, and copyright postcards, and photography photography, and postcards postcards, picture photography, and picture-postcards photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography books, periodicals, newspapers ref, book postcards celebrity copyright journalism LB - 37410 PB - Dawbarn & Ward, Ltd. PY - 1905 ST - Photography for the Press TI - Photography for the Press ID - 3840 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work give a broad history of photojournalism. It discusses early use of woodcuts, Joseph Pulitzer's use of illustrations, the tension between the right of privacy and photojournalism dating back to the 1890s, the development of the photo essay, and the use of faster cameras in the 1920s and 1930s. It also covers the Farm Security Administration during the Great Depression, and considers the problem of "truth" in photojournalism. AU - Photography, Life Library of CY - New York DA - 1971 KW - journalism surveillance photography law, and privacy law newspapers news and journalism news news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers news and journalism news and journalism privacy magazines +photography and visual communication Farm Security Administration, and photography photography, and magazines magazines, and photography cameras photojournalism photography, and photo essays privacy, and photojournalism Pulitzer, Joseph news, and photography journalism, and photography newspapers, and photography cameras, and journalism photography, and bias journalism, and cameras journalism LB - 10020 PB - Time-Life Books PY - 1971 ST - Photojournalism TI - Photojournalism ID - 2367 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Electricity transformed Chicago between 1880 and 1930. Newspapers were eager to use electric power. The downtown area of the city underwent a social and economic transformation. The city's electrical network required an infrastructure of generators and wiring. The change from gas to electric power set off a political struggle between these two industries. The Chicago's World Fair in 1893 demonstrated the possibilities of electric power. The spread of an electrical network changed the demographics of the city. AU - Platt, Harold L. CY - Chicago DA - 1991 KW - advertising, and public relations urban studies propaganda public relations labor news and journalism war office office, and new media office World War I networks infrastructure infrastructure, and electricity +electricity public utilities networks, electrical electricity, and history of electricity, and Chicago Insull, Samuel infrastructure, electrical World War I, and electricity advertising, and electricity advertising urban studies, and electricity newspapers, and electricity newspapers news LB - 5070 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1991 ST - The Electric City: Energy and the Growth of the Chicago Area, 1880-1930 TI - The Electric City: Energy and the Growth of the Chicago Area, 1880-1930 ID - 1894 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Pocock, R. F. CY - Redwood City, CA DA - 1972 KW - R & D research and development war war non-USA wireless communication radio Great Britain military communication Great Britain wireless telegraphy global communication Great Britain, and naval communication naval communication, and British navy +radio radio, maritime radio, and Great Britain Great Britain, and radio LB - 6060 PB - Pendragon House PY - 1972 ST - The Origins of Maritime Radio: The Story of the Introduction of Wireless Telegraphy in the Royal Navy, 1895-1900 TI - The Origins of Maritime Radio: The Story of the Introduction of Wireless Telegraphy in the Royal Navy, 1895-1900 ID - 1990 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This text deals with the use of psychology in advertising. Chapters are devoted to the use of color and its psychological effect. For example, chapter 13 is called "The Attention Value of Color." Chapter 20 is "The Feeling Tone of Colors and Color Combinations." This work offers a good account of how advertisers and marketers thought of psychology and color during the late 1920s and early 1930s. Throughout the twentieth century, advertising has been a leader in the expanding the use of color and in advertising, color has long been recognized as a solvent to internal resistance to buying. Advertisers used it in posters and in magazines long before World War II to establish “atmosphere." (459) AU - Poffenberger, Albert T. CY - New York DA - 1925, 1932 KW -, advertising and public relations color advertising, and color color, and advertising psychology psychology, and color color, and psychology advertising, and psychology psychology, and advertising advertising, and texts advertising LB - 32490 PB - McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc. PY - 1925 ST - Psychology in Advertising TI - Psychology in Advertising ID - 2821 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 708-page work is richly illustrated with black-and-white photographs. There are many excellent images of early cameras, personalities, and more. Pollack begins with the origins of photography and discusses such early practitioners as Joseph Nicéphore Niepce, Louis-Jacques Daguerre, and Henry Fox Talbot. Chapters are devoted to wet-plate photography, the stereoscope, the photography of motion, detective cameras and Kodak. Such major figures in the history of photography as Matthew Brady, Eadweard Muybridge, Edward Weston, Roy Stryker, Ansel Adams, Margaret Bourke-White, and many other are covered. Part Four of this work (chapter 34) deals with “Color: Another Dimension.” A chapter on photography for science follows. Chapter 36 through 55 deal with contemporary photography and photographers (through the 1960s). The work has a four-page bibliography of books and articles. AU - Pollack, Peter CY - New York DA - 1969 KW - Muybridge, Edward illustrations corporations corporations photography science labor lenses paper office office, and new media office +photography and visual communication illustrations color color, and photography photography, and color cameras photography, history of photography, and cameras photography, abstract photography, aerial photography, and reconnaissance photography, and American West stereoscope Chim (David Semour) Brassai (Gyula Halasz) Cartier-Bresson, Henri Clergue, Lucien photography, wet-plate Daguerre, Louis-Jacques-Mande Daguerreotype Davidson, Bruce Eakins, Thomas Eastman Kodak Kodak Gardner, Alexander Garnett, William Genthe, Arnold Hill, David Octavius photography, and Oliver Wendell Holmes Holmes, Oliver Wendell, and photography Ingres, Jean-Auguste-Dominique Jackson, William Henry Karsh, Yousuf Lange, Dorothea Lartigue, Jacques-Henri photography, and lenses lenses, and photography photography, and Life magazine lithography Muybridge, Eadweard paper, and photography photography, and paper Parks, Gordon photojournalism photography, and prints photography, and science science, and photography Stieglitz, Alfred Stryker, Roy Talbot, William Fox photography, and war war, and photography Weston, Edward infrastructure war LB - 260 PB - Harry N. Abrams, Inc. PY - 1969 ST - The Picture History of Photography TI - The Picture History of Photography ID - 115 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book examines celebrity journalism from the last decade of the nineteenth century to the eve of America’s entry into World War II. “This book is not a comprehensive history of celebrity; nor is it about celebrities and the experience of being famous,” Ponce de Leon writes. “Rather, it is concerned with the role of the mass-circulation press in the development of celebrity as a particular kind of public visibility, and focuses on human-interest journalism about celebrities. In other words, this is a book about the representations of celebrities in the mass media – media images, not the people behind them. Rather than dismiss such images, as the vast majority of debunking biographers do, I take them seriously and use them to explore the larger symbolic role of celebrity in modern America.” (5) The author sees the use of visual materials as an especially innovative aspect of celebrity culture. “Before 1900 a newspaper profile was often accompanied by a drawing, usually an artist’s rendition of a photographic portrait of the subject. On the whole, however, visuals played a relatively small role in the celebrity journalism of the late nineteenth century. It was only after the turn of the century that reproductions of photographs became widespread in newspapers.” (62-63) The author consider himself to be a critic of celebrity culture but acknowledges that after doing research on this subject he “became increasingly surprised by the complexity of the culture of celebrity – by ambiguities and contradictions that did not fit the pattern established by leading scholars and critics.” AU - Ponce de Leon, Charles L. CY - Chapel Hill DA - 2002 KW - celebrity photography news and journalism photography and visual communication news newspapers news, and photography celebrity culture news, and celebrity culture values values, and journalism journalism, and celebrity journalism, and public relations public relations, and journalism photojournalism celebrity culture, and journalism public relations, and celebrity culture critics celebrity culture, and photography journalism public relations advertising and public relations photography advertising LB - 28780 PB - University of North Carolina Press PY - 2002 ST - Self Exposure: Human-Interest Journalism and the Emergence of Celebrity in America, 1890-1940 TI - Self Exposure: Human-Interest Journalism and the Emergence of Celebrity in America, 1890-1940 ID - 2627 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Pool wrote in 1983 that civil liberty now had to function within the context of a changing technological environment. “For five hundred years a struggle was fought, and in a few countries won, for the right of people to speak and print freely, unlicensed, uncensored, and uncontrolled. But new technologies of electronic communication may now relegate old and freed media such as pamphlets, platforms, and periodicals to a corner of the public forum. Electronic modes of communication that enjoy lesser rights are moving to center stage. The new communication technologies have not inherited all the legal immunities that were won for the old. When wires, radio waves, satellites, and computers became major vehicles of discourse, regulation seemed to be a technical necessity. And so, as speech increasingly flows over those electronic media, the five-century growth of an unabridged right of citizens to speak without controls may be endangered.” Pool believed that the “key technological change,” one at the root of social change, was that communication, other than face-to-face conversation, was “becoming overwhelmingly electronic.” Not only was “electronic communication growing faster than traditional media of publishing, but also the convergence of modes of delivery is bringing the press, journals, and books into the electronic world.” This significant book was written before the spread of the Internet. It is interesting to speculate on how this medium might have altered Pool’s thesis (Pool died in March, 1984). AU - Pool, Ithiel de Sola CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1983 KW - computers nationalism print democracy and media democracy news and journalism communication revolution news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers freedom law law censorship and ratings print culture media information technology general studies Internet freedom of expression information technology, and freedom censorship regulation pamphlets magazines radio satellites wires computers print media media convergence press books information age communication revolution civil liberties +nationalism and communication +books, periodicals, newspapers +telephones +computers and the Internet +books, periodicals, newspapers +aeronautics and space communication LB - 1070 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press PY - 1983 ST - Technologies of Freedom TI - Technologies of Freedom ID - 1503 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - When Pool died in 1984, shortly after finishing Technologies of Freedom (1983), he left a large, unfinished manuscript, one completed by Eli M. Noam. This book extends Pool’s analysis of communication and society into the international arena. The opening chapter gives an overview of developments from the printing press into the era of digital communication, with speculation about the consequences of these changes. Subsequent chapters deal with “The New Communications Technologies,” “Crumbling Walls of Distance,” “Limits to Growth,” and “Talking and Thinking among People and Machines.” Part II (chapters 6-10) is entitled “Satellites, Computers, and Global Relations.” Part III (chapters 11 and 12) is “Ecology, Culture, and Communications Technology.” AU - Pool, Ithiel de Sola CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1990 KW - entertainment computers nationalism entertainment, home space (spatial) and communication +radio aeronautics and space communication time and timekeeping time print preservation communication revolution home entertainment history, and new media materials materials digitization Third World freedom non-USA home, and new media home geography printing printing press home, and information technology information technology Information Age history general studies +nationalism and communication freedom of expression information technology, and freedom global communication printing press digital media communication revolution space (spatial) time artificial intelligence satellites computers information technology, and ecology ecology history, and technology change, acceleration of information technology, and home information technology, and developing nations culture, and technology information technology, and culture information processing analog media wireless communication +artificial intelligence and biotechnology change culture +artificial intelligence and biotechnology Third World, and new media developing nations analog v. digital home, and new media nationalism, and new media +aeronautics and space (spatial) communication +computers and the Internet LB - 1080 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1990 ST - Technologies without Boundaries: On Telecommunications in a Global Age (Edited by Eli M. Noam) TI - Technologies without Boundaries: On Telecommunications in a Global Age (Edited by Eli M. Noam) ID - 1504 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is based on an evaluation of 186 predictions about the social impact of the telephone. Some of these forecasts, Pools notes, were "prescient and some quite wrong." The "forecasts appeared between 1876, the year of Bell's invention, and 1940, by which time, in the United States, there was a mature telephone system in place. In those 65 years hundreds of forecasts were made. The magazines of the day were fond of discussing this exciting new technology and the revolution in life that it had produced. This attention was similar to that paid to the space program today [1983]. Both of these technologies caused revised conceptions of man's place in the universe. Pool says that these forecasts "can be considered as a kind of 'technology assessment.'" Although this phrase was not used between 1876 and 1940, the goal was the same. This work attempts to understand why some people made good assessments of this technology while other did poorly. The study concludes that "in successful technology assessment, market and technical analyses must be brought to bear simultaneously. Alone either of them fails; together they can produce some very prescient forecasts." Pool acknowledges that this book is based on research papers written by Carolyn Cook, Craig Decker, Stephen Dizard, Kay Israel, David Ralston, Pamela Rubin, Barry Weinstein, and Thomas Yantek. AU - Pool, Ithiel de Sola CY - Norwood, NJ DA - 1983 KW - technology McLuhan, Marshall technology and society seeing at a distance modernism +future and science fiction law law +telephones future social forecasting, and telephones technology assessment technology assessment, and telephones medium is the message new way of seeing telephones, international telephones, and postal service telephones, and medicine telephones, and environment telephones, and telegraph law, and telephones telephones, and law capitalism, and telephones capitalism future, and telephones LB - 4830 PB - Ablex Publishing Corporation PY - 1983 ST - Forecasting the Telephone: A Retrospective Technology Assessment TI - Forecasting the Telephone: A Retrospective Technology Assessment ID - 1870 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume is divided into five parts. Part I, “Alternative Paths of Development: The Early Years,” has essays by Sidney H. Aronson, Asa Briggs, Charles R. Perry, Jacques Attali and Yves Stourdze, Colin Cherry, and Pool, et al. Part II, “The Telephone in Life,” has contributions by Henry M. Boettinger, John Brooks, Martin Mayer, Alan H. Wurtzel and Colin Turner, Brenda Maddox, and Suzanne Keller. Part III, “The Telephone and the City,” has essays by Jean Gottmann, Ronald Abler, and J. Alan Moyer. Part IV, “The Telephone and Human Interaction,” includes entries from Bertil Thorngren, A. A. L. Reid, and Emanuel A. Schegloff. Part V, “Social Uses of the Telephone,” has papers by David Lester and Paladugu V. Rao. These papers were prepared as part of MIT’s U.S. Bicentennial celebration in 1976, and are part of the MIT Press's Bicentennial Studies Series. Another volume in this series deals with computing and information processing. AU - Pool, Ithiel de Sola, ed. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1977 KW - entertainment entertainment, home labor home entertainment home, and new media home values urban studies office, and information technology home, and information technology information technology +telephones telephones, and society information technology, and home information technology, and office values, and telephones urban studies, and telephones telephones, and history of home, and telephones Cherry, Colin office LB - 5390 PB - MIT Press PY - 1977 ST - The Social Impact of the Telephone TI - The Social Impact of the Telephone ID - 1924 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Pool attempts to show how society interacts with and shapes technology. He hopes that readers will look at technology in a new way, one that appreciates the limits of rationality and recognizes that textbooks in engineering explain only one facet of this topic. The book began as a study of nuclear power. Although nuclear power remains the central focus of this study, Pool does deal with other technologies such as the typewriters, electricity, and computers. This book is part of the Sloan Technology Series which attempts to reach a broad public. As with many works in this series, the notes have been pared back and this volume has no bibliography. AU - Pool, Robert CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - technology National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) computers atomic power corporations corporations computers law xerography regulation +duplicating technologies technology and society +computers and the Internet +electricity typewriters Xerox Corporation, and personal computers photocopying atomic energy Apple Computer Atomic Energy Commission complexity computers, personal NASA regulation, and nuclear power Xerox Corporation censorship and ratings LB - 11460 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1997 ST - Beyond Engineering: How Society Shapes Technology TI - Beyond Engineering: How Society Shapes Technology ID - 2506 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Although this work is written primarily for videogame enthusiasts, it does have a few pages on the history of this entertainment. The author says that a more thorough history is found in Leonard Herman’s Phoenix: the Fall and Rise of Videogames (1997). AU - Poole, Steven CY - London DA - 2000 KW - computers media effects media violence violence entertainment censorship and ratings computers and the Internet +computers computers, and entertainment entertainment, and computers entertainment, and video games video games computers, and video games violence and media violence, and video games video games, and violence children children, and video games children, and mass media violence children, and media LB - 12190 PB - Fourth Estate PY - 2000 ST - Trigger Happy: The Inner Life of Videogames TI - Trigger Happy: The Inner Life of Videogames ID - 2566 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Members of the Meese Commission argued that there had been major changes in communication technology since the publication of the 1970 Report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (started during the Lyndon B. Johnson administration). These changes made pornography much more available in the home. (The Meese Commission also argued that pornography had become much more pervasive and violent.) Cable television and satellite broadcasts, not regulated by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), were broadcasting sexually explicit films. Many X-rated movie theaters were closing because video cassette recorders were becoming increasingly commonplace. By 1986, 38 percent of American homes had at least one VCR. Videos, McManus also noted, were cheaper to produce than films. Dial-A-Porn, a new form of pornography, had become available in large volume and was often accessible to children. The Commission defined pornography to mean “only that ... material is predominantly sexually explicit and intended primarily for the purpose of sexual arousal.” The Commission often used the term often interchangeably with “sexual materials.” It divided pornography into several categories from violent and degrading to nonviolent and non-degrading. It argued that a causal link existed especially between violent and degrading pornography and real-world violence against women. Critics attacked the Commission arguing that it drew conclusions not supported by empirical research. Critics also charged that the Commission members, many who had come from law enforcement and appointed by the Reagan administration, had an agenda that supported censorship and encouraged vigilanteeism. The Commission did make more than ninety recommendations on how to combat pornography. Some critics also launched a public relations campaign to discredit the Commission's findings. --SV In 1986 the Attorney General’s Commission on Pornography released a comprehensive body of work examining the issue of pornography on a number of levels. This report provides many modes of analysis of pornography’s impact on society through the use of scientific research examining the content and effects of pornography, as well as testimonials from individual users as well as those involved in the industry. It is through the use of the personal testimonies and social science research evidence that the report is at its strongest. Oftentimes research presents somewhat of a detached view of human behavior, quantifying those behaviors for ease of analysis. The testimonies serve to flesh out the scientific research giving it more of a human side. As a word of caution, however, the testimonies are often quite graphic. This report is a useful guide to the issue of pornography in society regarding its harms, its legality, its ties to obscenity, as well as its ties to organized crime. Additionally, it gives the reader a good understanding of the research on pornography and its effects, on individuals and society, prior to 1985. There is no doubt, however, that this report spawned a bevy of research on pornography, a boom that has resurfaced with the increasing prominence of the Internet. --Michael Boyle The Final Report of the Attorney General’s Commission on Pornography was written in 1986, about a decade after the “golden age of pornography” that began in the early 1970s, with the popularity of Deep Throat. In fact testimony from Deep Throat’s star Linda Lovelace (real name Boreman) is featured in the book. She claims that every time someone watches the movie they are watching her being raped. The report is divided into five main sections: Overview and Analysis of Commission Findings, Law Enforcement Recommendations, Pornography and Society, The Commissioners, and Reference Material. The report begins with a brief history of pornography from ancient Greece to the 1980s, as well as a history of obscenity law. It is important to study pornography from a social and historical standpoint instead of just from a legal standpoint, say the authors of the report. This first section also details the various media that pornography is available in. Because it was written before the Internet was in popular use, the focus is on film and video pornography and sexuality on TV. The second section focuses on recommendations for the regulation of pornography, some of which were put into place (required documentation of the ages of porn performers) and some which were not (regulation of cable and satellite TV by the FCC). Pornography and society, the third section of the report, details the human side of porn and its effects on the individuals in pornography as well as those who have viewed it. This section focuses mainly on the negative effects and exaggerates these effects through the use of victim testimony from Playboy bunnies, Linda Lovelace, and Andrea Dworkin, among others. In addition this section synthesizes the academic research on pornography and provides a section on why some of this research may not be reliable (the types of people who would participate in sexual studies may skew data). In addition, there is a chapter on the pornography industry’s ties to organized crime; and, a chapter on what concerned citizens can do to protest pornography. This chapter was, not surprisingly, criticized by the pornography industry. Also, there is a chapter that details the workings of adult stores, their product lines, and the look of their storefronts. This section also focuses on sexual devices, such as dildos, and the largest sexual device manufacturer, Doc Johnson. In addition, there is a 37-page list of several of the titles of pornographic magazines, films, and videos found in the 16 adult only stores that the commission studied Overall, this is a comprehensive study of the pornography industry that is biased against the pornography industry. University researchers need to update this study with less bias. --Hallie Lieberman AU - Pornography, Attorney General's Commission on CY - Nashville, TN DA - 1986 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment computers Classification and Rating Administration video cassette recorders (VCRs) MPAA post office government hearings entertainment, home CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) magnetic recording photography National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) women, and new media social science research values archives primary sources sexuality NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA news and journalism books, periodicals, newspapers magazines satellites home entertainment government magnetic tape First Amendment computers and the Internet color freedom values religion censorship and ratings law cable home home, and new media home reports reports, Messe Commission Meese Commission motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography law, and pornography pornography, and law pornography, and new media home entertainment revolution pornography, and home home, and pornography television postal service television, and cable cable television, and pornography aeronautics and space communication satellites, and television television, and satellites computers computers, and pornography pornography, and computers VCRs VCRs, and pornography pornography, and VCRs magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and pornography pornography, and photography color, and pornography pornography, and color media effects media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects pornography, defined children media effects, and children children, and pornography pornography, and children women women, and pornography pornography, and women religion, and pornography pornography, and religion personal computers personal computers, and pornography primary sources primary sources, Maryland primary sources, College Park primary sources, Meese Commission media effects, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research First Amendment, and Meese Commission First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and legal pornography, and First Amendment primary sources hearings testimony Zillmann, Dolf Donnerstein, Edward Malamuth, Neil Court, J. H. Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and pornography MPAA, and pornography Valenti, Jack, and Meese Commission Boyle, Michael pornography sexuality Lieberman, Hallie children, and media LB - 1250 PB - Rutledge Hill Press PY - 1986 ST - Final Report of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Final Report of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography ID - 58 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is a collection of essays exploring four topics: virtual communities, virtual identity, language and writing online, and politics and the public sphere. The authors seek to answer the following questions: 1. What is Internet culture and what are its defining characteristics? 2. How does the Internet change conceptions of community? 3. What can be said about the psychology of virtual personhood? 4. What effects does the Internet have on our practice or conception of reading and writing? 5. What are the political dimensions of Internet Culture? The essays are based primarily on the authors' personal experiences and on secondary literature. --Mark Tremayne AU - Porter, David, ed. CY - London DA - 1997 KW - computers Internet community democracy values +computers and the Internet Tremayne, Mark values, and Internet public sphere democracy and media community, and Internet virtual reality cyberspace community, virtual community Internet, and community democracy, and Internet Internet, and democracy LB - 9140 PB - Routledge PY - 1997 ST - Internet Culture TI - Internet Culture ID - 2281 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work provides a history of statistics and also how and why Americans came to think increasingly in quantitative terms by the end of the nineteenth century. Porter writes: “Hence, statistical authors of the scientific persuasion set themselves to uncover the principles that governed society, both in its present condition and, especially, as a historical object. The concept of ‘statistical law’ was first presented to the world around 1830 as an early result of this search. As a social truth it was propagated widely and refined or disputed by decades of writers. Shortly afterwards, statistical regularity came to be seen as the basis for a new understanding of probability, the frequency interpretation, which facilitated its application to real events in nature as well as society. The idea of statistical regularity was thus of signal importance for the mathematical development of statistics.” AU - Porter, Theodore M. CY - Princeton DA - 1986 KW - computers nationalism References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps statistics computers +computers and the Internet +nationalism and communication statistics, history of computing before computers quantification nationalism, and satistics LB - 9000 PB - Princeton University Press PY - 1986 ST - The Rise of Statistical Thinking: 1820-1900 TI - The Rise of Statistical Thinking: 1820-1900 ID - 2267 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Postman sees a dark side to technology. He takes exception to the position taken by Sir Charles Snow in 1959 in The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution. Snow saw the conflict between art and science, and came down on the side of science. Postman says that he "posed the wrong question," gave "the wrong argument, and therefore offered an irrelevant answer" to one of the great problems of our age. In this book, Postman "attempts to describe when, how, and why technology became a particularly dangerous enemy" to humanity. Most people, he admits, believe technology is their ally. It does make life easier and better on several levels. But "because of its lengthy, intimate, and inevitable relationship with culture, technology does not invite a close examination of its own consequences." Technology's advantages must be weighed against its disadvantages. Of the latter, he argues, "the accusation can be made that the uncontrolled growth of technology destroys the vital sources of our humanity. It creates a culture without a moral foundation. It undermines certain mental processes and social relations that make human life worth living. Technology, in sum, is both friend and enemy." Postman sees himself picking up lines of argument set forth earlier by such writers as Lewis Mumford, Jacques Ellul, Herbert Read, Arnold Gehlen, and Ivan Illich. AU - Postman, Neil CY - New York DA - 1992 KW - technology computers values preservation history, and new media community democracy history values media information technology Information Age iconography icons history general studies technology and society values, and technology critics Snow, C.P. Mumford, Lewis Ellul, Jacques Read, Herbert Gehlen, Arnold Illich, Ivan information technology, and critics of +computers and the Internet control revolution information processing computers and education democracy and media icons, and media media literacy, and history history, and media literacy history, break with technocracy computers, and ideology computers media literacy LB - 3640 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 1992 ST - Technopoly: The Surrender of Culture to Technology TI - Technopoly: The Surrender of Culture to Technology ID - 1488 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Postman argues that television has become the most influential cultural force of the United States in late twentieth century. Television shapes the way we shop, the way we laugh, the way we think and live. It is the most common experience shared by U.S. citizens. Its influence on who we are as a nation cannot be overstated. He argues that television has changed the way we perceive events and our expectations for what will happen each day. As a result, our world view is compartmentalized, our attention span is extremely short, and our demand to be passively entertained is extremely high. These factors threaten our ability to judge the world and participate in democracy. --Phil Glende Postman was heavily influenced by Marshall McLuhan, but with a pessimistic take on “the medium is the message.” Writing midway through the Ronald Reagan presidency, Postman laments the political culture that elected a former actor President. The cause, he argues, is the technology of communication which has decontextualized news, removing its substance and leaving only its entertainment value behind. The telegraph and the photograph each work to transmit partial truths to audiences that cannot understand the context from which the information was extracted. The ultimate combination of the two is television which receives most of the attention in this book. Postman believes the generations raised on television lack the mental discipline of print culture and have tiny attention spans, thus creating problems for politics and education. --Mark Tremayne AU - Postman, Neil CY - New York DA - 1986 KW - nationalism photography time and timekeeping time television, and values presidents, and new media preservation +nationalism and communication journalism history, and new media education community democracy news and journalism history values Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration news metaphors media history +television Glende, Phil McLuhan, Marshall democracy and media critics values, and television Tremayne, Mark history, break with news, and lack of context +photography and visual communication +telegraph Reagan administration media literacy general studies medium is the message +telephones news, and decontextualized time +telegraph metaphors, and media media convergence Reagan administration, and culture television, and democracy democracy, and television nationalism, and television education, and television LB - 9320 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - Penguin Books PY - 1986 ST - Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business TI - Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business ID - 2299 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Potter was a major historian of the Civil War and Reconstruction periods. In this work, wrote about the American national character and found it rooted in economic abundance. Of particular note, was his chapter on advertising, whose social influence had become by the mid-1950s, comparable to the school and church. Potter, who spent much of his professional life studying the nineteenth century, has an interest view of modern mass media and advertising. AU - Potter, David CY - Chicago DA - 1954 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations values print print culture advertising values, and advertising values +television television, and advertising advertising, and television +radio radio, and advertising advertising, and radio print culture, and advertising advertising, and print culture advertising, and values LB - 1750 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1954 ST - People of Plenty: Economic Abundance and the American Character TI - People of Plenty: Economic Abundance and the American Character ID - 263 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book offers a perceptive examination of the motion picture industry at mid-twentieth century. Although Powdermaker did not have access to many archival records, she did use interviews and other evidence to great effect. It portrays an industry driven by great ambitions and insecurities. The work is especially interesting on the status of actors in American society, and on the the movie industry's Production Code which she argued reflected values that a large portion of Americans no longer subscribed to. AU - Powdermaker, Hortense CY - Boston DA - 1950 KW - motion pictures metaphors +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and actors' status motion pictures, and metaphor metaphors, and motion pictures motion pictures, and culture motion pictures, and anthropology motion pictures, and public relations motion pictures, and social science LB - 13250 PB - Little, Brown PY - 1950 ST - Hollywood, the Dream Factory: An Anthropologist Looks at the Movie-Makers TI - Hollywood, the Dream Factory: An Anthropologist Looks at the Movie-Makers ID - 497 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work offers an account of how motion pictures and popular culture began to portray government agents and other law enforcement people in heroic terms during the Franklin D. Roosevelt adminstration's war on crime. AU - Powers, Richard Gid CY - Carbondale DA - 1983 KW - context +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures context, and 1930s motion pictures, and government motion pictures, and FBI LB - 15500 PB - Southern Illinois University Press PY - 1983 ST - G-Men: Hoover's FBI in American Popular Culture TI - G-Men: Hoover's FBI in American Popular Culture ID - 563 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - As its title suggests, Hollywood’s America: Social and Political Themes in Motion Pictures attempts to chart the social and political effects of the motion picture industry after the studio era. The authors take a deliberate sociological approach, and their methodologies are less theoretical than a typical film studies work in that they use comprehensive surveys and statistical analysis to gauge the social and political effects of post-World War II film. In fact, one of the most useful aspects of this book is that it is openly hostile to contemporary film theory, a position that allows the authors to examine the intersections between film and American society from a more empirical perspective: “At the end of the book, in Appendix A, ‘The Poverty of Film Theory,’ we develop a much more detailed critique of the dominant cultural studies approach to contemporary academic film theory. We maintain that a broad sociological and empirical approach to the study of social messages in motion pictures is more likely to provide us with useful insights than a subjective, symbolic analysis that assumes that the hegemony of certain ideas is embedded in symbolic representations that are to be analyzed as literary texts.” (xvi) In order to advance this “broad sociological and empirical approach,” the authors first argue that the major motion pictures of the last half of the twentieth century are all products of a particular “elite ideology.” The authors resist a theoretical film studies approach that invites one to read constructed representations of reality (film) as stand-ins for reality itself: “There is still a difference between representation and reality and we can study representations separately from their subjects, the better to understand the relation between society and media.” (41) Since the focus of this study is thus how representations of reality are inflected by the cultural biases of film-makers, the authors are careful to locate their analyses in a discussion of this group: “We are interested in movies because of what they can tell us about how one elite group--a particularly alienated one, as it turns out--perceives American society and therefore describes it, a description that may have an impact on the public whether or not those doing describing are conscisouly seeking to lead society or change it.” (41) While this focus on the “elite” perception from which American films are told in one of this book’s great strengths, it could also be considered a weakness since it tends to artificially homogenize the film industry into a single ideological category. Although the authors do make room for difference within the film industry, their main argument necessitates their seeing that industry as relatively homogenous in its political and social views, a move that has the potential for leveling multiple points of view into a single monolith. After the authors establish that there is an “elite ideology” from which most American movies are born, they analyze several social or political issues that these movies grapple with--from views about the military, to crime, violence, class conflict, and gender and race equality. For each of these categories, the authors chose several representative films, then broke down the particular political or social issues at stake in the film. After extrapolating the attitudes or arguments implicit in the films, the author then related these attitudes to the “elite ideology” of their producers. Having explained how such attitudes may have been produced, the authors then compared them with the results of quantitative sociological surveys of eight sample categories of American moviegoers. Through this comparison, the authors hoped to have arrived at a scientific evaluation of the social and political effects these movies had on their audiences at the time of their release. Hollywood’s America is a valuable study if only for the fact that it attempts to gather empirical, quantifiable evidence for the influence of movies on American social life. In this sense the book is a useful departure from theoretically-oriented texts that note similarities between various sign systems without examining the ideological bent of the producers of or receptacles for such systems. --Steve Belletto AU - Powers, Stephen, David J. Rothman, and Stanley Rothman CY - Boulder, CO DA - 1996 KW - nationalism values motion pictures Belletto, Steve +motion pictures and popular culture +nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and theory motion pictures, and Cold War values LB - 1460 PB - Westview Press PY - 1996 ST - Hollywood's America: Social and Political Themes in Motion Pictures TI - Hollywood's America: Social and Political Themes in Motion Pictures ID - 234 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Pred, Allan CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1980 KW - labor office office, and new media office +telegraph urban studies networks infrastructure +books, periodicals, newspapers +transportation LB - 5220 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1980 ST - Urban Growth and the City-Systems Development in the United States, 1840-1860 TI - Urban Growth and the City-Systems Development in the United States, 1840-1860 ID - 1909 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book examines information circulation in the United States prior to the development of the telegraph. Pred examines the methods and speed of information flow and diffusion. He looks at face-to-face communications, newspapers, the postal system, ports and ship transportation, and inter-urban and long-distance travel generally. --David Henning Pred proposes a model that suggests that the largest cities by population are the first to receive information, which means their business people have first opportunity to consider economic innovations and decide whether to make investments or conduct new ventures. Economic activity, Pred says, relies on the flow of information. Pred looks at economics, travel, newspapers, postal rates, shipping schedules and travel and discusses how these empirical data measure the flow of information and whether they support the large rank city stability model. --Karen Faster AU - Pred, Allan R. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1973 KW - post office advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations labor journalism news and journalism office office, and new media office Information Age +books, periodicals, newspapers +transportation +postal service urban studies Henning, David networks +telegraph information flow infrastructure Faster, Karen news advertising, and newspapers transportation, and steam railroads advertising LB - 4060 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1973 ST - Urban Growth and the Circulation of Information: The United States System of Cities, 1790-1840 TI - Urban Growth and the Circulation of Information: The United States System of Cities, 1790-1840 ID - 1794 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This study, chaired by Robert Hutchins of the University of Chicago, originated in 1942 when Henry R. Luce suggested in inquiry into the future of freedom of the press. The Commission, which included Zechariah Chafee, Jr. (Vice-Chairman), Harold Lasswell, Charles E. Merriam, Arthur M. Schlesinger, Sr., and others, made many recommendations for extending freedom not only to the press, but to such media as radio and motion pictures (which was included in the term “press”). Chapter 3, “The Communications Revolution,” (30-51) gives a cogent summary of changes that had taken place during the past generation, and more recently during World War II. While the Commission’s generation still lived in a world of predominantly analog media, it had seen mass communication change dramatically. It had lived through “the development of moving -- then moving and talking -- pictures, of wireless transmission used for telegraph, telephone, and voice broadcasting; of airplane transport; of offset and color printing.” Such changes gave citizens unprecedented amounts of information. The war had been a catalyst for developing novel methods of transmitting news. Using the wireless, an originating station was no longer limited to point-to-point system but could transmit to a wide area simultaneously. Such multiple-address press service had made news transmission four to ten times less expensive than previous methods, and promised to give even the most isolated editors an abundance of information. Some speculated that a practical, low-cost “facsimile newspaper” was just around the corner. “Such a newspaper would go to press at the local radio station at 500 a.m., say, would be broadcast from FM transmitters, and would drop, automatically folded, from the home radio receiver ready for the family breakfast table.” In addition, books were more available than ever to the average person. New techniques of printing and book manufacturing had also lowered to cost of great literature to a quarter or less. The new technology often transcended national boundaries and promised a truly global communications network. Air mail made it possible to send magazines and films anywhere in the world within two to three days. Advances in long-distance wireless transmissions during the war had achieved “speeds up to eight hundred worlds a minute (as compared with average cable speeds of forty to sixty words a minute).... Four color facsimile, by which text or photographs or both are transmitted by wireless, has reached the point where whole pages of books and periodicals with their illustrations are now being instantaneously sent in any language halfway round the world.” The development of short-wave radio held forth the possibility of a “world-wide voice broadcasting network.” The Hutchins Commission predicted in 1947 that in the not-too-distant future television would show events to “enormous household audiences all over the world.” AU - Press, Commission on Freedom of the CY - Chicago DA - 1947 KW - post office nationalism print communication revolution news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers journalism community democracy freedom news and journalism war non-USA radio press news news motion pictures general studies newspapers magazines radio communication revolution World War II wireless communication aeronautics telegraph telephones motion pictures news, and multiple-address press service facsimile news transmission printing books global communication radio, and FM Hutchins Commission radio, and shortwave television freedom of the press freedom of expression First Amendment radio, and First Amendment motion pictures, and First Amendment press, and First Amendment duplicating technologies books television Chafee, Zechariah, Jr. Lasswell, Harold Merriam, Charles Schlesinger, Arthur, Sr. World War II, and wireless World War II, and new media color color, and printing color, and four color facsimile printing, and color printing, offset democracy and media books, paperback nationalism and communication postal service postal service, and airmail airmail news, and wireless wireless communication, and news aeronautics and space communication law military communication news LB - 11540 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1947 ST - A Free and Responsible Press: A General Report on Mass Communication Newspapers, Radio, Motion Pictures, Magazines, and Books TI - A Free and Responsible Press: A General Report on Mass Communication Newspapers, Radio, Motion Pictures, Magazines, and Books ID - 1426 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author examines "the problem of the relation of science and scientists to the political ideas and the constitutional system of the United States, not as Jefferson and Franklin thought it would turn out to be, but as it has developed since their time partly as a result of the work of institutions that they were the foremost in creating." The opening chapter, "Escape to the Endless Frontier," is a takeoff on Vannevar Bush's report urging government support of basic scientific research without regard to its application. The work's concluding chapter is entitled "Science and Freedom." Price writes that "any constitutional system that undertakes to protect freedom by dividing power has to be based first of all on a separation between the institutions that exercise political power and those that are engaged in the search for truth.... "In view of the way in which science seems to condemn us to live in a world of rapid social change, we may have to get used to a constitutional system that does not operate according to absolute rules or fixed procedures, but one that adjusts itself to meet new conditions in a world that we do not expect to become perfect in the predictable future. Perhaps indeed a nation can be free only if it is not in too great a hurry to become perfect. It can then defend its freedom by keeping the institutions established for the discovery of truth and those for the exercise of political power independent of each other. But independence should not mean isolation. Only if a nation can induce scientists to play an active role in government, and politicians to take a sympathetic interest in science (or at least in scientific institutions) can it enlarge its range of positive freedom, and renew it confidence that science can contribute progressively to the welfare of mankind." AU - Price, Don K. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1965 KW - technology R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) atomic power NSF presidents, and new media research and development war Kennedy administration government community democracy freedom war World War II values science research and development Bush, Vannevar research and development, and government support scientific revolution Atomic Energy Commission American Philosophical Society communism, and science Department of Defense, and research and development technology and society values, and science freedom, and technology Jefferson, Thomas Kennedy administration, and scientific research NASA Office of Science and Technology Office of Scientific Research and Development World War II, and research and development communism Department of Defense, U.S. Kennedy, John F. National Science Foundation (NSF) democracy, and science atomic energy +military communication LB - 4110 PB - The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press PY - 1965 ST - The Scientific Estate TI - The Scientific Estate ID - 1799 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is interesting for offering a view of how artists and other practioners considered videotape in its early years. "The video revolution is upon us!" the author proclaims. Price goes on to explain that "Video is a process of expression that is instantaneous, electronic, and replayable on one or more screens, through images and sound transforming time into experience and altering the haitual way the audience has of perceiving. The soul of video is change, not permanence -- a continuous series of visible and audible movements, but not a single rigid plot or patteren. Video imitates the flow of attention, not the conclusions of thought." (4) "As medium, then, video is at the cutting edge of our culture." (10) The author notes several characteristic of video -- it is often nonverbal ("Video is not strong at getting language across" [p.7]), it provides almost live coverage and events in real time, and it offers instant replay. AU - Price, Jonathan CY - New York DA - 1972, 1977 KW - videotape sound recording media effects media effects, and videotape television television, and videotape videotape, and reform values history, break with videotape, and history history and new media history, and videotape history magnetic tape magnetic recording LB - 31840 PB - A Plume Book, New American Library PY - 1972 ST - Video-Visions: A Medium Discovers Itself TI - Video-Visions: A Medium Discovers Itself ID - 2866 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - One essay in this work discusses movie ratings in the United States (R.M. Mosk, “Motion Picture Rating in the United States”). This work discusses the V-Chip’s origins in Canada and its development in the United States. The work contrasts the different roles of regulatory agencies, industry, and government in the U. S. and Canada. It also covers the V-Chip and television rating systems in Australia and Europe. Contributors include A. MacKay (“In Search of Reasonable Solution: The Canadian Experience with Television Ratings and the V-Chip”), S. D. McDowell (“Developing Television Ratings in Canada and the United States: The Perils and Promises of Self-Regulation”), M. Heins (“Three Questions about Television Ratings”), J. M. Balkin (“Media Filters and the V-Chip”), A. Millwood Hargrave (“The V-Chip and Television Ratings: British and European Perspectives”), J. T. Hamilton (“Who Will Rate the Ratings?”), D. F. Roberts (“Media Content Labeling Systems: Information Advisories or Judgmental Restrictions?”), C. D. Martin (“An Alternative to Government Regulation and Censorship: Content Advisory Systems for Interactive Media”), D. J. Weitzner (“Yelling ‘Filter’ on the Crowded Net: The Implications of User Control Technologies”), and J. Weinberg (“”Rating the Net”). AU - Price, Monroe E., ed. CY - Mahwah, NJ DA - c1998 KW - computers television, and V-chip media effects media violence violence law censorship and ratings law censorship and ratings non-USA regulation +motion pictures Internet +motion pictures +television censorship, and television television, and censorship regulation, and television television, and self-regulation V-chip motion pictures, and rating system (1968) Canada Canada, and television regulation Australia Europe +computers and the Internet censorship, and Internet Internet, and censorship censorship children, and media children motion pictures, and censorship censorship regulation, and motion pictures violence, and television television, and violence children, and television violence self-regulation LB - 6330 PB - Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc. PY - 1998 ST - The V-Chip Debate: Content Filtering from Television to the Internet TI - The V-Chip Debate: Content Filtering from Television to the Internet ID - 2016 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is Volume 10 in the History of American Cinema series, Charles Harpole, ed., and attempts to give a comprehensive treatment of developments during the 1980s. Chapter 8, "Movies and Morality," discusses efforts to censor movies by gay rights activists, feminists, Citizens for Decency through Law, the Moral Majority, Campus Crusade for Christ, and by the Reagan administration. Prince devotes a section to the "Pornography of Horror," and also looks at the anti-pornography offensive made by the Meese Commission and others. The book examines technological innovations during the decade. Prince is the primary author, although three other writers contributed chapters: Justin Wyatt, in chapter 4, deals with "Independents, Packaging, and Inflationary Pressure in 1980s Hollywood." In chapter 9, "American Documentary in the 1980s," is written by Carl Plantinga. Chapter 10, "Experimental Cinema in the 1980s," is by Scott MacDonald. AU - Prince, Stephen CY - New York DA - 2000 KW - music Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) home entertainment computers Classification and Rating Administration classification censorship video cassette recorders (VCRs) MPAA underground cinema self-regulation corporations motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality corporations corporations corporations entertainment, home values Christianity Christianity Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) magnetic recording MCA National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) women, and new media advertising, and public relations X-rated films video underground media underground films presidents, and new media Reagan administration censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations values sexuality new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric media effects media violence satellites horror home entertainment Home Box Office (HBO) magnetic tape women feminism exploitation circuit digital media digitization cyberspace culture context +computers and the Internet values religion censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship non-USA audiences home home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and history of motion pictures, and avant-garde films underground films, and motion pictures 16mm 16mm, and avant-garde films 8mm 8mm, and avant-garde films context, and 1970s motion pictures, and new technology motion pictures, and marketing advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and art cinema motion pictures, and blockbusters motion pictures, and box office cameras cameras, and motion pictures motion pictures, and camera technology motion pictures, and special effects cable TV +television television, and cable television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and cable TV satellites, and motion pictures motion pictures, and satellites cinematography motion pictures, and cinematography violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures +sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Dolby sound sound recording, and Dolby motion pictures, and exploitation films exploitation films women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women motion pictures, and feminism foreign films motion pictures, and foreign films motion pictures, and genre films home video new media, and home home entertainment revolution VCRs home, and motion pictures videotape motion pictures, and horror films cameras, and zoom lenses MPAA CARA rating system (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) pornography pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and X-rated films motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures +computers computers, and motion pictures computers, and special effects computers, and computer graphics computers, and computer animation motion pictures, and computers motion pictures, and computer graphics motion pictures, and computer animation, motion pictures, and aesthetics motion pictures, and experimental films audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences VCRs, and Betamax motion pictures, and box office censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and Christianity Christianity, and censorship censorship, and pressure groups censorship, and feminism censorship, and gays culture wars, and motion pictures values, and motion pictures, motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and cultural wars motion pictures, and digital methods video, and digital digital media, and motion pictures digital video motion pictures, and women women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign markets HBO video, and home home, and video motion pictures, and politics Music Corporation of America (MCA) MPAA motion pictures, and multinationals Reagan, Ronald videodiscs violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and youth market X-rating, and motion pictures horror films slasher films, feminists, and pornography pornography, and feminists videotape, and archives camcorders Sony Corporation McDonald, Scott Plantinga, Carl Wyatt, Justin values advertising cable culture wars aeronautics and space communication censorship, and homosexuality children, and media LB - 19990 PB - Charles Scribner's Sons PY - 2000 ST - A New Pot of Gold: Hollywood Under the Electronic Rainbow, 1980-1989 TI - A New Pot of Gold: Hollywood Under the Electronic Rainbow, 1980-1989 ID - 824 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work examines the career of movie director Sam Peckinpah and his contribution to the growth of violent films during the 1960s and 1970s. For example, to stylize violence in the movie The Wild Bunch (1969), Peckinpah used slow-motion and multi-camera montage, as well as telephoto lenses. Many people believed that this movie marked a turning point with regard to violence in films. AU - Prince, Stephen CY - Austin, TX DA - 1998 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) media research MPAA self-regulation Production Code Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories women, and new media Valenti, Jack values Production Code (motion pictures) media effects media violence lenses values religion law censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture +television motion pictures motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures television, and violence violence, and television media effects values censorship motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures television, and censorship censorship, and television media research, and violence violence, and media research Valenti, Jack, and screen violence motion pictures, and slow motion motion pictures, and multicamera montage cameras, and telephoto lenses lenses, telephoto motion pictures, and squibs Peckinpah, Sam Production Code (motion pictures) motion pictures, and Production Code (motion pictures) women women, and screen violence violence, and biography cameras violence LB - 21920 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - University of Texas Press PY - 1998 ST - Savage Cinema: Sam Peckinpah and the Rise of Ultraviolent Movies TI - Savage Cinema: Sam Peckinpah and the Rise of Ultraviolent Movies ID - 934 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book contains several interesting essays on graphic violence in motion pictures. The work is divided into three sections: The Historical Context of Ultraviolence, The Aesthetics of Ultraviolence, and The Effects of Ultraviolence. Prince sees the origins of ultraviolent films in the mid- and late-1960s when in 1966 the Production Code was revised and then replaced in 1968 by a system that rated movies G-X. The Production Code which was in effect from 1930 to 1968 made screen violence “more genteel and indirect.” Prior to the Code, there had been graphic scenes in such pictures as D. W. Griffith’s Intolerance (1916), which showed decapitation. Prince’s Introduction and his later essay in this volume are particularly good in discussing the context of violence as well as the techniques (multicamera montage, slow-motion, squibs, telephoto lenses) used by Arthur Penn and Sam Peckinpah in making such films as Bonnie and Clyde (1967) and The Wild Bunch (1969), respectively. Prince argues that “screen violence provokes an inherently volatile set of viewer responses. These do not include catharsis, and they should make us pessimistic about the psychological health promoted in viewers by much contemporary visual culture.” The final section of this book, on Effects, reprints a 1984 essay by psychology professor Leonard Berkowitz entitled “Some Effects of Thoughts on Anti- and Pro-social Influences of Media Events: A Cognitive-Neoassociation Analysis”; and a 1996 article by sociologist Richard B. Felson entitled “Mass Media Effects on Violent Behavior.” Felson’s piece discusses other meta-analyses of studies done on mass media and violence. AU - Prince, Stephen, ed. and intro. CY - New Brunswick, N. J. DA - 2000 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) media research MPAA self-regulation Production Code women, and new media Valenti, Jack Production Code (motion pictures) media effects media violence lenses values religion law censorship and ratings non-USA motion pictures and popular culture television motion pictures motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures television, and violence violence, and television media effects values censorship motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures television, and censorship censorship, and television media research, and violence violence, and media research Valenti, Jack, and screen violence motion pictures, and slow motion motion pictures, and multicamera montage cameras, and telephoto lenses lenses, telephoto motion pictures, and squibs Peckinpah, Sam Penn, Arthur Kurosawa, Akira Production Code (motion pictures) motion pictures, and Production Code (motion pictures) women women, and screen violence violence, and cameras violence cameras LB - 12580 PB - Rutgers University Press PY - 2000 ST - Screening Violence TI - Screening Violence ID - 2605 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Prindle's history of the movie industry's Screen Actors Guild discusses such SAG leaders as Ronald Reagan and Hollywood politics. SAG's leadership was made up of some of Hollywood's wealthiest actors and this helps to explain its essentially conservative stance on political issues. By the 1940s and 1950s, movie actors had also become important players on the larger stage of American politics. AU - Prindle, David F. CY - Madison DA - 1988 KW - motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures actors, and status of motion pictures, and actors' status Screen Actors Guild television television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television actors acting LB - 18270 PB - University of Wisconsin Press PY - 1988 ST - The Politics of Glamour: Ideology and Democracy in the Screen Actors Guild TI - The Politics of Glamour: Ideology and Democracy in the Screen Actors Guild ID - 734 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 115-page book is divided into four chapters. “Duplicating by means of a stencil was a copying process so fundamentally different from any previous practice that it completely revolutionized the late nineteenth-century office,” Proudfoot writes. Indeed, "historians may well conclude that the evolution of the modern office began with the invention of the stencil and its association, soon after, with the typewriter.” Proudfoot begins with copying methods used in the seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth centuries -- Hartlib’s ink in 1665, Mill’s patent in 1714, Watt’s copying machine in 1780, Wedgwood’s manifold writer in 1806, and the use of carbon copies. Chapter 3 deals with “Stencils for Typewriting.” The final chapter covers the “modern office” of the late nineteenth century and includes a discussion of the mimeograph. AU - Proudfoot, W. B. CY - London DA - 1972 KW - print labor materials non-USA writing printing printing press paper office, and information technology information technology +duplicating technologies typewriters duplicating technologies, and Watt's copying machine duplicating technologies, and Mill's patent (1714) duplicating technologies, and Hartlib's ink (1665) stencils duplicating technologies, and stencils mimeograph duplicating technologies, and mimeograph information technology, and office duplicating technologies, and rotary duplicator carbon paper duplicating technologies, and carbon paper duplicating technologies, and Cyclostyle Gestetner, David duplicating technologies, and Hectograph inks printing, and inks duplicating technologies, and Neostyle paper paper, and duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and paper writing, and pens duplicating technologies, and Trypograph Watt, James, and copy machine duplicating technologies, and wheel pens mimeograph office, and duplicating technologies office materials LB - 5760 PB - Hutchinson & Co. PY - 1972 ST - The Origin of Stencil Duplicating TI - The Origin of Stencil Duplicating ID - 1961 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is not a history of 8mm and 16mm moviemaking but it does provide a good survey of the state-of-the-art in 1970. It is richly illustrated in black- and- white photographs. The author notes that “while it is normal for the amateur to admire the professional productions he sees on TV and in his local motion-picture theater, he should not be overawed by them. The amateur has the freedom and the time to experiment, which the professional often envies, and if the amateur learns to make good use of that freedom, there is no reason why his product need be considered of secondary merit.” The work has chapters devoted to general equipment, lenses, exposure, interior lighting, filters, titling and special effects, editing, and projection. AU - Provisor, Henry CY - Philadelphia DA - 1970 KW - materials 8mm films 8mm 35mm 16mm 16mm film 8mm film 35mm film cameras cameras, 16mm cameras, 8mm cameras, 35mm cameras, portable (1960s) cameras, and technology cameras, hand-held +motion pictures motion pictures, and 16mm film motion pictures, and 35mm film motion pictures, and 8mm film motion pictures, amateur (1970) motion pictures, and cameras cameras, and lenses motion pictures, and Super 8mm cameras, Super 8mm color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and black-and-white materials LB - 11870 PB - Chilton Book Company PY - 1970 ST - 8mm/16mm Movie-Making TI - 8mm/16mm Movie-Making ID - 2534 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - While this first-rate intellectual history does not examine developments in technology per se, it does discuss the challenges posed to democracratic theory during the early twentieth century. Many of democracy's problems were rooted in the spread of mass media. Totalitarian governments in the Soviet Union, Germany, and Italy exploited mass media for anti-democratic ends. Many people in the United States were pessimistic about democracy's future. AU - Purcell, Edward A. CY - [Lexington] DA - [1973] KW - nationalism cultural change context cultural change, late 19th cultural change, early 20th modernism democracy nationalism and communication critics freedom LB - 12860 PB - University Press of Kentucky ST - Crisis of Democratic Theory: Scientific Naturalism and the Problem of Value TI - Crisis of Democratic Theory: Scientific Naturalism and the Problem of Value ID - 2831 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - More than three decades before this book appeared, Hunter Dupree said that “when the history of American science and technology were properly understood, that knowledge would force us to rewrite American history as a whole. I cannot claim to have made that breakthrough,” Purcell says, “but that dream has inspired my career.” This work synthesizes previously published articles and books. Two chapters are noteworthy. Chapter 12, “Wars and the American Century,” gives an overview of developments from World War II starting with the Office of Scientific Research and Development under Vannevar Bush. Computers and the microprocessor are also treated. “Three large communication systems were perfected after the war,” Purcell writes. The first was the network of commercial radio stations in the United States. The second was “a worldwide network of communications, made up partly of American investment overseas, partly of government-owned propaganda efforts such as Radio Free Europe, the Voice of America, and more recently, Radio Marti.” Third was the American military communications system built to exercise control from any distance. Chapter 13, “Challenge, Defense, and Revolution in a Postmodern World,” surveys critics of technology during the 1960s and 1970s (e.g., E. F. Schumacher 1973 book Small Is Beautiful). Purcell also discusses the birth of the “postmodern” information “superhighway,” and the Strategic Computing Project started in 1983 under President Ronald Reagan. AU - Pursell, Carroll W. CY - Baltimore DA - 1995 KW - technology R & D computers nationalism microprocessing presidents, and new media Reagan administration public relations advertising preservation research and development research and development war communication revolution history, and new media war non-USA World War II computers and the Internet science radio Information Age history general studies technology and society history, and technology World War II, and research and development research and development, and government support Office of Scientific Research and Development scientific research, and government support Bush, Vannevar military communication computers microelectronics radio Radio Free Europe Voice of America Radio Marti global communication propaganda postmodern society wireless communication postmodernism metaphors superhighway Strategic Computing Initiative Reagan, Ronald microprocessors information processing information age communication revolution Schumacher, E. F. military, and new media nationalism and communication computers and the Internet critics LB - 1100 PB - The Johns Hopkins University Press PY - 1995 ST - The Machine in America: A Social History of Technology TI - The Machine in America: A Social History of Technology ID - 1506 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Pursell, Carroll W., Jr., ed. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - c1981, c1990 KW - technology preservation innovation history, and new media history general studies technology and society history, and technology inventions inventors LB - 1110 PB - MIT Press PY - 1981 ST - Technology in America: A History of Individuals and Ideas TI - Technology in America: A History of Individuals and Ideas ID - 1507 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author is a practicing Episcopalian who is also interested in different forms of ministry. (5) His book “is about the ways in which the new writing and information technologies have affected our cultural, intellectual, and religious beliefs and structures.” (v) He argues that there have been three major changes in the way we save and retrieve information. Written language was the first of these transformations. Then came the printing press. The third period was the development radio, cinema, television, computers and the Internet – electronic media or forms of communication that do no use paper. "The world of electronic text is a world without a center," Purves maintains, "no one city is the hub of its information, just as there is no one center of transport in the new metropolis." (11) The author uses an unorthodox organization based on a hypertext model. “I decided to arrange my book into ... twenty-five topics and also to suggest some major links among them. The result was a volume that might be compared to macremé: there would be dense knotted bits connected by a variety of threads into a pattern of the reader’s choosing.” (vii) The major linking themes are anarchy, authority, community, idolatry, and network. The work has seven chapters: an autobiographic introduction; "The Nature of Hypertext and Its Challenge"; “new perspectives on literacy”; image and text; “text, hypertext, and literacy in a larger cultural framework; “implication for a new sense of the church”; and a concluding chapter entitled “Inconclusion.” There are brief endnotes, a nine-page bibliography, and an index. AU - Purves, Alan C. CY - New York DA - 1998 KW - information processing computers values print printing preservation new media communication revolution libraries archives communication revolution history, and new media materials paper electronic media community values religion history religion religion, and new media printing press history, break with new media, and authority authority, and new media anarchy, and new media community, and new media computers and the Internet hypertext information revolution electronic media, and images information storage libraries, and electronic media postmodernism reading, and new media comic books television computers radio paper, and paperless society Episcopalianism, and new media democracy materials reading Information Age LB - 460 PB - The Guilford Press PY - 1998 ST - The Web of Text and the Web of God: An Essay on the Third Information Transformation TI - The Web of Text and the Web of God: An Essay on the Third Information Transformation ID - 134 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Putnam, a Harvard political scientist, set out the core of his argument in this book in a 1995 article that appeared in the Journal of Democracy entitled “Bowling Alone: America’s Declining Social Capital.” He also wrote an earlier work on Italian democracy, Making Democracy Work: Civic Traditions in Modern Italy. In Bowling Alone, Putnam argues that civil engagement and involvement in public affairs is in serious decline in the United States. Memberships in civic clubs, unions, PTAs, and attendance at town meetings is sharply down from earlier in the twentieth century. Even organized bowling leagues has suffered a steep drop since the 1980s. The author writes that for “the first two-thirds of the twentieth century a powerful tide bore Americans into ever deeper engagement in the life of their communities, but a few decades ago – silently, without warning – that tide reversed and we were overtaken by a treacherous rip current. Without at first noticing, we have been pulled apart from one another and from our communities over the last third of the century.” Putnam sees many reasons for the decline in American social capital – suburban sprawl, the welfare state, the women’s revolution, increased mobility, increasing divorce, and mass media – especially television. Chapter 13 deals with “Technology and Mass Media.” Here Putnam notes that entertainment and news had become increasingly joined and individualized. Electronic media also allows for people to experience entertainment and news alone, whereas in an earlier time such experiences often required a public setting such as a football stadium, movie theater, or amusement park. Earlier in the century when information was convey primarily through print media such as newspapers and magazines, or perhaps also by radio, public involvement in issues was much higher. All this began to change significantly with television (“television privatizes leisure time”) and later innovations such as the VCR and the Internet. Such media allow people to stay home and increasingly to interact privately with highly individualized programs. Such “electronic media allow social ties to be divorced from physical encounters.” AU - Putnam, Robert D. CY - New York DA - 2000 KW - technology family computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) citizenship magnetic recording women, and new media women telecommunications race networks leisure journalism home, and new media information technology magnetic tape education democracy values censorship and ratings children news and journalism +television VCRs television, and VCRs +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers democracy and media democracy, and Internet democracy, and television community democracy, and print culture citizenship, and media women, and democracy television, and cable cable, and television children, and media religion, and media values values, and media technology and society technology, and values values, and technology telecommunications, and democracy education, and media information technology, and home information technology, and democracy family, and media +computers and the Internet computers information age Internet marriage leisure, and democracy democracy, and leisure racism networks, social urban studies +telephones community, and new media news, and community community, and news news cable religion home LB - 12130 PB - Simon & Schuster PY - 2000 ST - Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community TI - Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community ID - 2560 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author as a young solid-state physicist, participated in the establishment of the microelectronics industry in California. Of this book, he says that he describes "without using technical jargon or mathematical formulas, the early history of the new science of crystals as it developed in Europe, then I trace the technological applications of that science as it moved westward to the United States and then to Japan. I also introduce some of the scientists and researchers whose contributions were fundamental to the understanding of the physics of crystals. Only when science had revealed the fundamental properties of atoms could researchers tackle the enormously difficult task of describing how atoms interact within the crystal lattice. After depicting the rapid evolution of this technology and its previously undreamed-of applications, I take a look at the future promised by microelectronics." The author discusses the competition between the United States and Japan for leadership in microelectronics, and suggests a future realignment of nations. Many implications of this technology, though, were not then foreseen. While the cumulative effects of the scientific breakthroughs discussed here may be revolutionary, the author sees developments as the result of almost seamless progress over many years. AU - Queisser, Hans CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1985, 1988 KW - R & D computers materials, and silicon nationalism microprocessing transistors, and integrated circuits research and development war communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution materials +future and science fiction computers values religion war non-USA solid state science research and development microelectronics Germany +nationalism and communication microelectronics revolution semiconductors computers, and microchips chips, computer, micro microprocessors crystals solid-state physics Bell Laboratories Bardeen, John AT & T vacuum tubes Brattain, Walter +computers and the Internet conductivity, and crystals quantum theory Europe germanium Germany, and microelectronics Hall effect IBM integrated circuits transistors Japan +military communication radar scientific research, and government support research and development, and microelectronics silicon Silicon Valley Shockley, William Texas Instruments Company research and development, and government support chips, computer computer chips quantum physics future, and microelectronics nationalism, and microelectronics Japan, and computers future materials LB - 4640 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1985 ST - The Conquest of the Microchip (translated by Diane Crawford-Burkhardt) TI - The Conquest of the Microchip (translated by Diane Crawford-Burkhardt) TT - Kristallene Krisen ID - 1851 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This account of motion pictures and early efforts to censor them is by a Catholic layman and influential publisher who was one of the architects of the movie industry's Production Code of 1930. Quigley collaborated with Daniel A. Lord on the Code, and he believed that cinema so towered above other forms of communication in "its influence upon human conduct," that it threatened "those principles upon which home and civilization are based," and could become "the curse of the modern world." AU - Quigley, Martin CY - New York DA - 1937 KW - self-regulation Production Code values Christianity values Production Code (motion pictures) religion values morality values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality motion pictures, and critics censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Production Code (motion pictures) Hays, Will H. values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values Catholic Church, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholic Church, values LB - 12810 PB - Macmillan PY - 1937 ST - Decency in Motion Pictures TI - Decency in Motion Pictures ID - 459 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The assumption on which this book rests is that “we are facing a social upheaval, a revolution in fact, with consequences at least as far-reaching as those of the Industrial Revolution.” (ix) The author resists the temptation to assume that this revolution will come automatically by itself and that it will mean less work and more democracy. Rather, its character will be decided by several political choices. “For what we are talking about is not more – or less – work, but a qualitative change in the concept of work itself. And similarly we are not dealing with increased or diminished democracy but with changes in democracy’s very essence.” (ix) The author continues by saying that a “further consequence of my argument is that we must try to work out how this social revolution is to take place in accordance with the real needs and desires of the population at large. It is my belief that the revolution can be a democratically controlled social experiment. To this end, ... so-called ‘social experiments’ with computerized telecommunication systems would be of considerable assistance.” (ix-x) Qvortrup was a fellow at Odense University in Denmark and this work has been translated into English. It has an eight-page bibliography but no index. AU - Qvortrup, Lars CY - Amsterdam/ Philadelphia DA - 1984 KW - computers preservation communication revolution history, and new media community democracy computers communication revolution, and second industrial revolution non-USA history +computers and the Internet second industrial revolution history, break with critics democracy, and media communication revolution democracy, and computers computers, and democracy Denmark LB - 360 PB - John Benjamins Publishing Company PY - 1984 ST - The Social Significance of Telematics: An Essay on the Information Society (translated by Philip Edmonds) TI - The Social Significance of Telematics: An Essay on the Information Society (translated by Philip Edmonds) ID - 124 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is an outgrowth of the International Labour Conference in 1979, as well as of the European Regional Conference of that year. It urged the International Labour Office to study what impact new information technology was having on employment. This book, therefore, was an early attempt to make sense of the burgeoning microelectronics revolution and to place developments in an international context. It looks at effects on employment in offices, banks, printing, as well as its impact on industry including electronics, watches, cash registers, automobiles, and telephone switching equipment. It examines implications for computers and data processing, and also unemployment. A final chapter assesses effects on developing countries. The author concludes that this new information technology will influence the international division of labor in at least five ways. First, increased automation will lessen "the importance of direct labour costs in total production costs, thus making the manufacturing of formerly labor-intensive goods economically feasible in developed economies." Second, the new information technology will strengthen economies with industrialized markets, "namely advanced management techniques, extensive co-ordination, efficiency and systematic marketing." Third, such traditional mass production industries as garments and textiles are doing more research, becoming more capital intensive, and growing more high tech. Fourth, the "technology permits further industrial and service concentration and vertical (forward) integration, which in turn implies streamlining in certain sectors, the accumulation of resources and an increase in the resources and marketing drive of multinational companies." At the same time, many opportunities are opening for newcomers. Finally, the "shift from labour-intensive to capital-intensive activities, which is implied by the use of micro-electronic technology," will influence requirements for capital. AU - Rada, J. CY - Geneva DA - 1980 KW - computers corporations microprocessing transistors, and integrated circuits telephones labor communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution Third World non-USA political economy microelectronics labor Information Age microelectronics revolution automation labor, and microelectronics revolution +artificial intelligence and biotechnology capitalism microprocessors transistors integrated circuits multinational corporations global communication Third World, and new media Europe information processing +computers and the Internet labor labor, and new media office, and microelectronics telephones, and microelectronics capitalism, and microelectronics labor, and computers materials office LB - 3690 N1 - See also: office PB - International Labour Office PY - 1980 ST - The impact of micro-electronics: A tentative appraisal of information technology TI - The impact of micro-electronics: A tentative appraisal of information technology ID - 1757 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - One of the earliest histories of the motion picture industry, Ramsaye gives an informative account of this new medium and how the public reacted to it. It was widely popular, of course, and yet motion pictures disturbed many people because they seemed foreign. Ramsaye comments on the spread of motion picture theaters. With “glaring arc lamps and raucous ballyhoo phonographs,” they stood on the American landscape “like carbuncles.” He writes about the movie censorship. From Chicago, where the first municipal board was established in 1907, censorship arose “from a dot on the map” and extended “cloud-like over all the world of the screen.” Ramsaye also discusses the close relationship that had already developed between the press and movie industry. He also cover the "Fatty" Arbuckle scandal of 1921 and its aftermath. AU - Ramsaye, Terry CY - New York DA - 1926 KW - audiences advertising, and public relations theaters propaganda advertising public relations news and journalism news and journalism audiences +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and history theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and theaters motion pictures, and critics audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences, one, journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and journalism public relations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and public relations journalism LB - 12720 PB - Simon and Schuster PY - 1926 ST - A Million and One Nights: A History of the Motion Pictures TI - A Million and One Nights: A History of the Motion Pictures ID - 450 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - One of the earliest histories of the motion picture industry, Ramsaye gives an informative account of this new medium and how the public reacted to it. Movies were widely popular, of course, and yet motion pictures disturbed many people because they seemed foreign. Ramsaye comments on the spread of motion picture theaters. With “glaring arc lamps and raucous ballyhoo phonographs,” they stood on the American landscape “like carbuncles.” He writes about the movie censorship. From Chicago, where the first municipal board was established in 1907, censorship arose “from a dot on the map” and extended “cloud-like over all the world of the screen.” Ramsaye also discusses the close relationship that had already developed between the press and movie industry. Chapter 65 (pp. 652-69) is entitled "The Screen and Press Conspire." Ramsaye also covers the "Fatty" Arbuckle scandal of 1921 and its aftermath. Ramsaye concludes his book by writing: "The genii have answered the Wish of the World with the Aladdin's Lamp of the camera and the Magic Carpet of the film. An empire built of shadow glories has prospered and its boundaries are the limits of Earth." (834) Ramsaye began his career as a journalist with the Kansas City Star. In 1915, the started working for the Mutual Film Corporation. In 1920, he retired and began writing this book. He joined the Quigley Publishing Company in 1931 as editor of the Motion Picture Herald, a position he held until 1941. AU - Ramsaye, Terry CY - New York DA - 1926 KW - metaphors metaphors, and movies as Aladdin's lamp metaphors, and movies as magic carpet motion pictures, as magic carpet motion pictures, as Aladdin's lamp audiences advertising, and public relations theaters propaganda advertising public relations news and journalism news and journalism audiences motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and history theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and theaters motion pictures, and critics audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiencesjournalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and journalism public relations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and public relations news and journalism propaganda World War I propaganda, and motion pictures motion pictures, and propaganda World War I, and motion pictures motion pictures, and World War I motion pictures, and printing press war LB - 41600 PB - Simon and Schuster PY - 1926 ST - A Million and One Nights: A History of the Motion Picture TI - A Million and One Nights: A History of the Motion Picture ID - 4259 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Randall explores the history of pornography, from its biological origins to its earliest representations in art and looks at formal and informal attempts to regulate it. He argues that technological advancements in mass media have resulted in a situation where the former means of controlling pornography no longer work. The result is a society with more pornography than most citizens want. Randall argues that legislation based on “harm” is problematic because harm has been difficult to prove. Similar ambiguity makes a legal standard of appealing to the “prurient” interest unworkable. Instead Randall proposes that future legislation be based on the “offensiveness” of the content. He says this is a more flexible means of maintaining social control. --Mark Tremayne Pornography is an issue that has had a contentious relationship with humanity since both the beginning of human existence. Since the earliest erotic drawings in the deepest recesses of caves, pornography has walked the line between legal and illegal, censored and uncensored, moral and immoral. As such, different societies have employed different means of controlling the distribution and use of sexual imagery. Randall’s text, Freedom and Taboo, gives a detailed account of the interesting niche pornography has filled in our society. Within this text, Randall gives a fairly detailed account of the findings of much of the “scientific” research conducted on the uses, opinions toward, and effects of pornographic media. Also of import in this text is Randall’s discussion of the formulation of obscenity laws and decency regulations. This examination is useful in understanding the root of much of the way obscenity is determined and how regulations develop from that determination. Methodologically, Randall uses information gathered from empirical research on pornography, as well as historical documents and court cases dealing with obscenity and sexual explicit materials. By interweaving all of this, the reader gets a pretty good sense of how public opinion toward sexual material has changed throughout history, and the factors that have coincided and developed from this change. --Michael Boyle Most books about pornography fall into two camps: pro-pornography tomes by free-speech activists and anti-pornography tracts by feminists. Thankfully, Randall’s Freedom and Taboo is neither. Writing something that teeters excitingly close to a philosophy of pornography, Randall uses Freudian psychology to explain that there are two pornographies that humans experience: a pornography within and a material representation of that pornography. Unlike other animals, humans (with our innate capacity for imagination and our inability as infants and young children to act on our sexual desires) naturally produce pornographic images in our mind that terrify and excite us. Some of these representations are made into pictures and stories that are readily available in adult retail establishments; this comprises material pornography. By situating pornography within humanity itself, Randall renders the pro- and anti- pornography debate moot: it is impossible to ban pornography if it resides in every human beings mind. Of course, this is an argument that rests on somewhat shaky ground. There is no way to prove that all human beings have pornographic minds. Randall traces humans’ pornographic creations from the Venus of Willendorf to X-rated movies from the 1980s. He frequently uses Joseph Campbell’s Heart of Darkness to explain the wild nature of human sexuality that resides within all of us. In addition to relying on Campbell, he uses other works of literature, such as Sade’s 120 Days of Sodom and George Bataille’s Story of the Eye to demonstrate the simultaneously revolting and exciting nature of the pornographic within. As a political scientist, a lot of his evidence relies on court cases on obscenity and pornography in the United States and Britain. Courts have not been able to properly define pornography, but we all ‘know it when we see it.’ Thus it is a universal category with no set boundaries. Proof, according to Randall, that we all have a pornography within. --Hallie Lieberman One strength of this book is that Randall provides a good synthesis of research (up to the mid-1980s) on pornography's effects on those people who view it. AU - Randall, Richard CY - Berkeley DA - 1989 KW - sexuality photography Victorianism syntheses (of research) syntheses social science research sex sexuality new media motion pictures modernity modernism context law censorship and ratings law censorship and ratings values regulation pornography media law general studies Tremayne, Mark censorship, and pornography pornography, and mass media media convergence motion pictures and popular culture television photography and visual communication values, and pornography law, and pornography regulation, and pornography censorship children, and media children pornography, and censorship context, and pornography new media, and pornography pornography, and new media taboos, sexual Victorianism, and pornography modernism, and pornography context, and legal media effects media effects, motion pictures and sex motion pictures, and sexual arousal syntheses, media effects and sexual arousal research, and sexual arousal social science research, and sexual arousal context, and pornography context, and research sexual arousal, and research pornography, and research syntheses, and pornography research media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) Meese Commission social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research media effects, and photography Boyle, Michael Lieberman, Hallie LB - 10330 PB - University of California Press PY - 1989 ST - Freedom and Taboo: Pornography and the Politics of a Self Divided TI - Freedom and Taboo: Pornography and the Politics of a Self Divided ID - 46 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This history of motion picture censorship appear the same year that the movie industry adopted its rating system. It was also written before many archival collections such as the Production Code Administration (PCA) files became available to scholars. Still, this work is informative, particularly about the breakdown of the Production Code during the 1950s and 1960s. For example, foreign and domestic films were being shown without the PCA’s blessing by the 1960s. Between 1961 and 1964, state censors in New York licensed 2,376 feature-length, foreign-made movies, and almost 95 percent of them did not have the PCA seal. In 1966 the PCA approved less than sixty percent of the movies shown in the United States. AU - Randall, Richard S. CY - Madison DA - 1968 KW - classification self-regulation CARA censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) context law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship context, and movie censorship rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and censorship (history), LB - 16460 PB - University of Wisconsin Press PY - 1968 ST - Censorship of the Movies: The Social and Political Control of a Mass Medium TI - Censorship of the Movies: The Social and Political Control of a Mass Medium ID - 598 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is thematically organized with sections devoted to early technology, the building of infrastructure, investment, communications, and locomotive development. Two significantly detailed chapters are devoted to the post office and rail, including the introduction of the Penny Post in 1840, and the telegraph system, respectively. This book is a synthesis of many secondary studies, both from the nineteenth and the twentieth centuries. An excellent and accessible look at the technology behind the railways. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Ransom, P. J. G. CY - London DA - 1990 KW - post office labor non-USA office office, and new media office Wolf, Nicholas +transportation Great Britain railroads Great Britain, and railroads railroads, and Great Britain Great Britain, and infrastructure infrastructure, and Great Britain +telegraph telegraph, and Great Britain Great Britain, and telegraph +postal service Great Britain, and postal service postal service, and Great Britain postal service, and railroads infrastructure LB - 1980 PB - Heinemann PY - 1990 ST - The Victorian Railway and How it Evolved TI - The Victorian Railway and How it Evolved ID - 286 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This short book examines the ways in which computers and the Internet are, and can be used in the political process. Rash argues that the 1998 election cycle was the first in history to make meaningful use of this new medium, and that from now on elections will increasingly rely on the electronic forum. He describes the ways that politicians and advocacy groups have used the Internet thus far to communicate with voters. While he does not claim that ideas or substance no longer matter, he does believe that the ability to use the Internet effectively may come to determine political success. Rash lists a number of uses of the Internet for political purposes. For the time being, even putting your campaign online is a newsworthy event. From there, one can provide news releases and background information, mobilize volunteers, establish a question-and -answer forum, solicit contributions, and provide up to the minute information on the campaign in a way that no traditional media outlet can. Rash believes that these and other factors will revolutionize the democratic process by allowing voters to gather information first hand and to communicate directly with the candidates. In addition, fringe political movements may be able to increase visibility by using the Internet and bypassing the traditional media that often overlooks them. --Rob Rabe AU - Rash, Wayne Jr. CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - computers alternative media underground media democracy community computers Internet +computers and the Internet democracy and media Rabe, Rob Internet, and 1998 elections democracy, and Internet Internet, and democracy computers, and democracy democracy, and computers alternative media LB - 9500 PB - W.H. Freeman and Co. PY - 1997 ST - Politics on the Net: Wiring the Political Process TI - Politics on the Net: Wiring the Political Process ID - 2317 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Ray argues that Hollywood films do convey differing ideologies and that changes in culture are reflected in the types of movies that are produced in different eras. This is particularly true after World War II (and the rise of television) as audiences became fragmented. There is pressure on filmmakers to offer the audience something new, but there is also pressure on them to play it safe in during this Cold War era. The result was split between the Hollywood “blockbuster” and the “cult” film. --Mark Tremayne AU - Ray, Robert B. CY - Princeton DA - 1985 KW - +motion pictures +motion pictures +television Tremayne, Mark motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures LB - 10340 PB - Princeton University Press PY - 1985 ST - A Certain Tendency of the Hollywood Cinema, 1930-1980 TI - A Certain Tendency of the Hollywood Cinema, 1930-1980 ID - 2398 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - James Morgan Read details the use of atrocity propaganda, or propaganda that stresses the vicious aspects of war in order to gain support for war efforts. His work first appeared in 1941 and focuses on World War I propaganda from 1914 to 1919. Read's analysis is concerned with explaining the successes and failures of atrocity propaganda created by Belgium, Great Britain, France, and Germany. He concludes that atrocity propaganda during this period exaggerated actual conditions during the Great War. -- Kevin Kiley AU - Read, James Morgan CY - New York DA - 1972 [c1941] KW - war propaganda World War I propaganda, and World War I World War I, and propaganda France Germany Great Britain non-USA military communication France, and propaganda propaganda, and France Great Britain, and propaganda propaganda, and Great Britain Germany, and propaganda propaganda, and Germany propaganda, and atrocities Kiley, Kevin Belgium propaganda, and Belgium Belgium, and propaganda LB - 29000 PB - Arnos Press PY - 1972 ST - Atrocity Propaganda, 1914-1919 TI - Atrocity Propaganda, 1914-1919 ID - 2678 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a comprehensive, well-illustrated history of the phonograph from 1877 through the 1950s. The work’s thirty chapters are devoted to such topics as Edison’s early inventions, local phonograph companies, concert cylinders, the coin-slot phonograph industry, the coming of discs, the international situation, disc vs. cylinders, wireless telegraphy, wireless telephony, and radio, sound recording and motion pictures, sound films and the phonograph industry, competition between various speed records, growth of the component system, recording standards, copyright, high fidelity, the need for a national archive of recorded sound, and what the future (in 1959) might hold with regard to tape recording and phonographs. The work has an eight-page bibliography. This book has been an excellent starting point for scholars interested in the history of sound recording. AU - Read, Oliver and Walter L. Welch CY - Indianapolis DA - 1959, 1976 KW - tape recording, magnetic corporations Johnson, Lyndon corporations magnetic recording magnetic tape recording tape recording magnetic tape tape recording sound recording presidents, and new media primary sources Johnson administration innovation materials future and science fiction law non-USA recording, and tape recorders recording, and tape recording sound recording phonograph +motion pictures public address systems sound recording motion pictures bibliographies, and sound recording phonograph, and history of Edison, Thomas tape recording future sound recording, and magnetic tape sound recording, and LP records sound recording, and cylinders Bell Laboratories Columbia Phonograph Company gramophone Victor Talking Machine Company sound recording, and dictating machines Berliner, Emile Bell, Alexander Graham Caruso, Enrico De Forest, Lee Gaisberg, Fred Johnson, Eldridge Jones, Joseph Maxfield, J. P. Harrison, H. C. Tainter, Charles Sumner Marconi, Guglielmo sound recording, and acoustics sound recording, and amplification copyright dictating machines sound recording, and high fidelity high fidelity juke boxes sound recording, and juke boxes microphones cameras, and motion pictures motion pictures, and projectors patents inventors inventions phonograph sound recording, and records radio sound recording, and tinfoil speakers sound recording, and speakers telegraph telephones sound recording, and stylus cameras duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and sound recording bibliographies wireless telegraphy copyright, and sound recording archives, and sound recording future, and sound recording archives materials wireless communication sound, and speakers LB - 5550 PB - Howard W. Sams & Co., Inc./The Bobbs-Merrill Co., Inc. PY - 1959 ST - From Tin Foil to Stereo: Evolution of the Phonograph TI - From Tin Foil to Stereo: Evolution of the Phonograph ID - 1940 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Ronald Reagan's first autobiography is interesting for many reasons. They give an account of a man who was on the verge of running for governor of California, and who later would become U. S. President. Reagan's political apprenticeship occurred in Hollywood. He understood that motion pictures could convey powerful messages and called Hollywood a "grand worldwide propaganda base" that could be used in the Cold War to speak to hundreds of millions of people worldwide. AU - Reagan, Ronald, with Richard G. Hubler CY - New York DA - 1965 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories presidents, and new media Reagan administration public relations advertising propaganda archives motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture autobiography primary sources propaganda, and motion pictures motion pictures, and propaganda Reagan, Ronald, and propaganda propaganda, and Ronald Reagan motion pictures, and Ronald Reagan Reagan, Ronald public relations advertising and public relations LB - 25730 PB - Duell, Sloan and Pearce PY - 1965 ST - Where the Rest of Me? TI - Where the Rest of Me? ID - 1166 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Redhead, Steve CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - law law censorship and ratings values regulation +motion pictures regulation, and popular culture censorship, and popular culture values, and popular culture censorship LB - 6340 PB - St. Martin’s Press PY - 1995 ST - Unpopular Cultures: The Birth of Law and Popular Culture TI - Unpopular Cultures: The Birth of Law and Popular Culture ID - 2017 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book looks at the history of avant garde film making, which was particularly notable during the 1920s and 1960s. This genre has had a mixed relationship with film technology. On the one hand, it has embraced the ability of film to render visual imagery, and has often emphasized the visual at the expense of dialogue and narrative. On the other hand, the avant garde is usually characterized by cheap, amateurish efforts that have not always been merely the product of limited financial resources. In a way, avant garde has reacted against the domination of modern life by technology, and demonstrates what it is pleased to think of as authenticity. The book relies largely on secondary sources. --Gordon Jackson AU - Rees, A. L. CY - London DA - 1999 KW - computers underground cinema magnetic recording underground media underground films lighting magnetic tape non-USA 8mm +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and underground films motion pictures, and reform underground films motion pictures, and 16mm film 16mm film 8mm films motion pictures, and 8mm film videotape videotape, and underground films +computers +computers and the Internet computers, and motion pictures motion pictures, and computers motion pictures, and videotape underground films, and 8mm underground films, and 16mm underground films, and videotape underground films, and computers underground films, and lighting lighting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and avant garde motion pictures, and Great Britain Great Britain Great Britain, and experimental film Jackson, Gordon motion pictures, and dada motion pictures, and surrealism surrealism, and motion pictures avant garde, and motion pictures 16mm art avant garde LB - 17610 PB - BIF Publishing [British Film Institute] PY - 1999 ST - A History of Experimental Film and Video: From the Canonical Avant-Garde to Contemporary British Practice TI - A History of Experimental Film and Video: From the Canonical Avant-Garde to Contemporary British Practice ID - 680 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work offers some information on the extent to which computers and begun to influence the arts, including the animated films, during the 1960s. AU - Reichardt, Jasia, ed. CY - New York DA - 1969 KW - computers , motion pictures computers and the Internet computers, and animated films motion pictures, and computers (1960s) computers, and motion pictures (1960s) motion pictures, and animated films computers LB - 32680 PB - Frederick A. Praeger PY - 1969 ST - Cybernetic Serendipity: The Computer and the Arts TI - Cybernetic Serendipity: The Computer and the Arts ID - 2870 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In American Sexual Histories, Elizabeth Reis, a professor of history and women’s studies at the University of Oregon, compiles essays from scholars on the history of sexuality in America from the late 1600s to the early 21st century. The topics covered include bestiality in early America, Anglo-Indian Relationships, bundling (unmarried couples sharing the same bed), the Oneida community, Onderdonk Trial, race relations, hysteria, homosexuality during the WWI-era, abortion, contraceptives in the 1930s, sex between Orientals and Americans, lesbianism in postwar America, the Sexual Revolution, and transsexuals. Each section contains an essay by a noted scholar and one to three primary historical documents relating to the subject. In her introduction, Reis argues that “It would be a mistake…to see the history of sexuality simply as a steady progression from a harsh, rigidly enforced puritanical regime of yesteryear to a liberal, enlightened, free, and tolerant milieu of today." (p.6). Instead, she believes that we should have a more nuanced view of America’s sexual history. For example, during colonial times both abortion and birth control were illegal, but in 1873, Comstock put an end to that with the Comstock Law that prohibited birth control and abortion, as well as written materials related to it. She also argues that our ideas about sex are culturally constructed, and our conceptions of what is normal sexuality are constantly changing. She considers sex to be “a public matter” because even though it is a private act, it still has “public implications,” causing sexual topics to be debated in a courts of law. An outstanding essay in the book is Andrea Tone’s “Contraceptive Consumers: gender and the Political Economy of birth control in the 1930s.” In this essay she discusses how birth control was marketed at a time when birth control and any information about it was deemed illegal (unless it was sold for other purposes besides contraception). Birth control was big business in the 1930s, and it was mass marketed to women under the euphemism “feminine hygiene.” The products sold to women included douches, foaming tables, vaginal suppositories, and others. The only problem was that these products were ineffective, with vaginal douches having a 70 percent failure rate, and occasionally dangerous (there were reports of deaths from vaginal douches). Douches were the most popular over the counter birth control product and Lysol manufactured the most popular brand of douche. Lysol also marketed there douche for use as a household cleaner. Department stores were the most popular places for distribution of contraceptives. Some of the department stores even had special set-apart departments for personal hygiene (staffed by women) so women wouldn’t be embarrassed to purchase the douches and other products. Unfortunately, contraceptive manufacturers weren’t regulated by the FDA; therefore, they could make non-substantiated claims. They claimed that their products were as safe and effective as doctor-prescribed contraception like diaphragms. --Hallie Lieberman AU - Reis, Elizabeth CY - Malden, MA DA - 2001 KW - Lieberman, Hallie sexuality sexuality, and Comstock Law sexuality, and women women, and sexuality sexuality, and obscenity obscenity, and sexuality sexuality, and birth control censorship and ratings censorship, and birth control censorship, and sexuality Comstock, Anthony censorship, and Comstock Law censorship obscenity women LB - 36990 PB - Blackwell Publishers PY - 2001 ST - American Sexual Histories TI - American Sexual Histories ID - 252 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author seeks to answer three questions: "What is SDI?" "Why did SDI happen?" and "Why did SDI develop in the way it did?" The work is divided into five parts. Part 1 summarizes "theories about the dynamics of the arms race. It outlines the main strategic, political, bureaucratic, economic and psycho-political perspectives;.... Chapter 2 gives the prehistory of SDI: the 'ABM' debate of the 1960s and the history of Ballistic Missile Defense (BMD) from 1945 to 1983...." "Part 2 studies the first two year of the SDI programme. It describes ho a constituency gathered around and then shaped SDI..." (2) 2/3 "Part 3 describes SDI from 1985 to 1988.... "Part 4 describes the European response to Reagan's plan and the extent of participation by the Allies. It then considers the broader contexts and conditions surrounding SDI...." (3) Finally, "Part 5 is about the radical change to SDI since the accession of President [George H. W.] Bush" in 1989. (3) Bush announced a refocusing of SDI into the Global Protection Against Limited Strikes (GPALS). The author was at the University of Bradford. AU - Reiss, Edward CY - Cambridge, Eng. DA - 1992 KW - R & D death rays ref, secondary nationalism SDI presidents and new media research and development war war non-USA Reagan Administration strategic defense initiative (SDI) nationalism and communication military communication death rays, and Japan Japan, and death rays death rays, and Great Britain Great Britain, and death rays research and development war Cold War, and research and development research and development, and Cold War Cold War Reagan, Ronald, and SDI Reagan, Ronald, and research and development Reagan, Ronald Bush, George H. W. Bush, George H. W., and strategic defense initiative strategic defense initiative, and George H. W. Bush ref, book Great Britain Japan LB - 39060 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1992 ST - The Stragegic Defense Initiative TI - The Stragegic Defense Initiative ID - 4005 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 1967 work has a great deal of information on underground, experimental, and avant garde films, many of which were made with 16mm and 8mm cameras. Indeed, pages 261-94 list many underground movies with their formats and whether or not they were shot in color or black-and-white. This work also has information on television and “computer films” (see chapter 6, “Expanded Cinema”), as well as on the "stars" and other personalities associated with underground cinema. This book provides an excellent starting point for learning about this topic. AU - Renan, Sheldon CY - New York DA - 1967 KW - computers underground cinema magnetic recording underground media underground films lighting magnetic tape 8mm +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and underground films motion pictures, and reform underground films motion pictures, and 16mm film 16mm film 8mm films motion pictures, and 8mm film videotape videotape, and underground films +computers +computers and the Internet computers, and motion pictures motion pictures, and computers motion pictures, and videotape underground films, and 8mm underground films, and 16mm underground films, and videotape underground films, and computers underground films, and lighting lighting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and avant garde 16mm LB - 17520 PB - E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc. PY - 1967 ST - An Introduction to the American Underground Film TI - An Introduction to the American Underground Film ID - 672 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The Sloan Commission in early 1970 set up a Commission on Cable Communications to report on the promise and problems of this technology and to make recommendations. “Cable technology, in concert with other allied technologies, seems to promise a communications revolution,” the Commission concluded. “Citizens may still take a hand in shaping cable television’s growth and institutions in a fashion that will bend it to society’s will and society’s best intentions.” The Commission believed that by the end of the 1970s, or soon thereafter, virtually all cable television systems would offer at least twenty channels and some systems would provide forty channels. From forty to sixty percent of all American homes would have cable television. Moreover, cable would “provide digital return signals to computers at each headend and at little extra expense to other computers at a limited number of selected locations; and that it will be capable of full interconnection at moderate cost.” The opening chapter gives a brief history of cable television. “Abstracts of Commissioned Papers” appears on pages 243-49. AU - Report of the Sloan Commission on Cable Communications CY - New York DA - 1971 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home home entertainment digitization community democracy computers home, and new media home home, and information technology media information technology +television television, and cable cable television democracy and media information technology, and home media convergence Sloan Commission +computers and the Internet digital media cable democracy, and cable television home, and cable television television, and democracy cable television, history of computers, and cable television LB - 7250 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - McGraw-Hill Company PY - 1971 ST - On the Cable: The Television of Abundance TI - On the Cable: The Television of Abundance ID - 2095 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This substantial book is a fine study of the history of the computer, the ideas behind this invention, and people who developed it. The author begins with Charles Babbage and Augusta Ada Byron (Countess of Lovelace), and moves on to informative treatments of Alan Turing, John von Neumann, Norbert Wiener, Claude Shannon, and many others. AU - Rheingold, Howard CY - New York DA - 1985 KW - computers information theory general studies +computers and the Internet Babbage, Charles Byron, Augusta Ada (Countess of Lovelace) Turing, Alan Neumann, John von Wiener, Norbert Shannon, Claude computers calculating machines +artificial intelligence and biotechnology computers, history of LB - 1120 PB - Simon and Schuster PY - 1985 ST - Tools for Thought: The People and Ideas Behind the Next Computer Revolution TI - Tools for Thought: The People and Ideas Behind the Next Computer Revolution ID - 1508 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 185-page book, while not as substantial as the author’s earlier Tools for Thought (1985), explains how electronic media allows people to cut across barriers of time and space to forge new relationships. The author has put this book online. AU - Rheingold, Howard CY - Reading, MA DA - 1993 KW - computers surveillance nationalism email ARPA time and timekeeping time sexuality labor community democracy computers law law censorship and ratings non-USA office office, and new media office virtual reality geography regulation pornography Japan Internet +computers and the Internet Japan, and Internet virtual communities +nationalism and communication ARPANET Internet, and history of Big Sky Telegraph Brand, Stewart regulation, and Internet censorship, and Internet crime, and computers electronic mail computers, and hacking Licklider, J. C. R. MIT networks infrastructure space (spatial) time privacy urban studies pornography, and Internet +television Usenet censorship community, imagined community, virtual community crime electronic media community, and Internet Internet, and community democracy, and Internet Internet, and democracy LB - 7980 PB - Addison-Wesley Publishing Company PY - 1993 ST - The Virtual Community: Homesteading on the Electronic Frontier TI - The Virtual Community: Homesteading on the Electronic Frontier ID - 2167 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Richelson’s book surveys the historical development of the CIA and specifically its Department of Science and Technology. The book charts the United States flirtations with and accomplishments in the espionage world via new spy devices such as the U-2 spy plane and CORONA spy satellites. It describes the ongoing battle between the CIA and the Navy over who should be in control over individual technologies. The Wizards of Langley also documents the competitive race between the United States and the Soviet Union for the dominance in photo-reconnaissance technologies. Even para-psychic research is discussed as the United States and Soviet’s looked for any kind of advantage. The last few chapters of Richelson’s work move into the decades of the 1980s and 1990s and the important role of the CIA in science and technological development despite the end of the cold war. --Michael Shefky AU - Richelson, Jeffrey T. CY - Boulder, CO DA - 2001 KW - R & D computers surveillance, and satellites surveillance Kennedy, John F. Johnson, Lyndon Ford, Gerald Eisenhower, Dwight D. Central Intelligence Agency Carter, Jimmy photography Nixon, Richard U-2 plane presidents, and new media Nixon administration research and development research and development war Kennedy administration Johnson administration Eisenhower administration computers Cold War Carter administration war Shefky, Michael CIA surveillance research and development, and government support research and development, and CIA +artificial intelligence and biotechnology +computers and the Internet computers, and CIA CIA and computers +photography and visual communication photography, and CIA photography, and surveillance satellites satellites, and surveillance +military communication military, and satellites military, and space communication Cold War, and CIA CIA, and new media Eisenhower, and CIA Kennedy, John F., and CIA Johnson, and CIA Nixon, and CIA Carter, and CIA Ford, and CIA CORONA satellites, and CORONA Cold War, and new media +aeronautics and space communication privacy LB - 2110 PB - Westview Press PY - 2001 ST - Wizards of Langley: Inside the CIA's Directorate of Science and Technology TI - Wizards of Langley: Inside the CIA's Directorate of Science and Technology ID - 299 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Richelson writes: “How the United States translated the concept of space photography to an initial operational satellite and then to the sophisticated satellites of today is a story of great importance. For the photo reconnaissance satellite is one of the most important military technological developments of this century, along with radar and the atomic bomb. Without it, the history of this century would be very different. Indeed, without it history might have ceased. “On the one hand, the photo reconnaissance satellite has been a partner to the atomic and nuclear weapons whose use could devastate the civilized world. Both the United States and the Soviet Union have relied on their reconnaissance satellites to locate and identify targets to be attacked in the event of war. In the first year of their operation, the CORONA satellites helped dispel America’s fear of Soviet strategic superiority that had haunted many Americans since the launch of Sputnik. Since then, they have allowed knowledge to prevail over fear in assessing Soviet capabilities. And the arms limitation agreements of past, present, and future would not be possible without such devices to verify compliance. In the future, they may be significant in helping curb the spread of ballistic missiles and atomic weapons to a variety of Third World countries. Richelson deals with several facets of satellite reconnaissance including the technology used by the program, and the program's influence. AU - Richelson, Jeffrey T. CY - New York DA - 1990 KW - R & D USSR nationalism Soviet Union, and space photography research and development war war non-USA satellites reconnaissance photography, and satellites +photography and visual communication +aeronautics and space communication +photography and visual communication reconnaissance, and photography reconnaissance, and satellites satellites, and photo reconnaissance satellites, and CORONA Sputnik satellites, and Soviet Union photography, and satellites +military communication +nationalism and communication reconnaissance, and satellite photography Soviet Union nationalism, and satellites Soviet Union, and satellites military, and satellites LB - 1870 PB - Harper & Row, Ballinger Division PY - 1990 ST - America’s Secret Eyes in Space: The U. S. Keyhole Spy Satellite Program TI - America’s Secret Eyes in Space: The U. S. Keyhole Spy Satellite Program ID - 1583 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The text of this 39-page work (pp. 41-111 are pictures of posters) provides a decent overview of the poster in history. The author covers such themes as “The First Golden Age” (the 1870s-1890s), World War I, and “The Second Golden Age” (the 1920s and 1930s). Of interest, too, are the pages on “The Reprographic Revolution” of the 1960s. “Image reproduction, in words or pictures or both, has moved from the printing plant to the office and living-room table. The transition, one of the least-recognized yet possibly one of the most significant developments in human history, has given every individual opinion a new dimension. Now no longer a passive recipient of the products of the presses, the ordinary man is his own publisher.” AU - Rickards, Maurice CY - n. p. DA - 1971 KW - entertainment entertainment, home photography preservation communication revolution history, and new media community democracy war non-USA history home, and new media home World War II World War I reproduction revolution posters history +photography and visual communication history, break with posters, and history of World War I, and posters World War II, and posters posters, and World War I posters, and World War II communication revolution home publishing +duplicating technologies duplicating technologies (1960s) reprographic revolution graphics revolution (1960s) graphics revolution posters, late 19th century color, and posters democracy and media duplicating technologies, and home publishing color home, and duplicating technologies graphics revolution, and democracy democracy, and graphics revolution home entertainment LB - 1880 PB - [Newton Abbot] David and Charles PY - 1971 ST - The Rise and Fall of the Poster TI - The Rise and Fall of the Poster ID - 1584 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Rider observed that the size of research libraries' collections were doubling every 16 years. By the year 2040, he predicted, the Yale University Library would hold 200,000,000 volumes, require 6,000 miles of shelves, and would have a card catalog that took up eight acres of floor space. He proposed interlibrary cooperation and using micro-card publications to solve this problem. He said that microforms would be the most rational solution to the Library’s growing storage problems. Books could be stored on cards (3x5's) and users could duplicate the cards, leaving the original in the Library. Only a few reference books would actually be needed in the stacks. Rider's book does not have a bibliography or index. AU - Rider, Fremont CY - New York DA - 1944 KW - archives microfiche, microfilm, microform libraries libraries, and information storage +information storage +duplicating technologies microfilm micro-cards microform libraries, and microforms miniaturization information storage, and libraries LB - 4860 PB - Hadham Press PY - 1944 ST - The Scholar and the Future of the Research Library: A Problem and Its Solution TI - The Scholar and the Future of the Research Library: A Problem and Its Solution ID - 1873 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Ridley is a British journalist with a Ph. D. in zoology. His book is free of jargon and argues that each person's personal genome has "echoes" of one's ancestors. Some of these echoes have existed for billions of years and are common to everyone while others are distinct to individual families. Ridley uses stories to illustrate his discussion of human chromosomes. He discusses twenty-three chromosomes. He does not duck the issue of genetics and human behavior, and maintains that understanding the biology of human beings is essential in the search for social justice. Ridley takes issue with many traditional interpretations of early twentieth-century eugenics, and does not so much blame overly ambitious geneticists for abuses and coercive eugenics laws as he does unfettered government. This work suggests that understanding the nature of DNA and genetics can also be a powerful tool in rewriting other episodes from the past. AU - Ridley, Matt CY - New York DA - 2000 KW - preservation history, and new media genetics values history +artificial intelligence and biotechnology DNA genetic engineering Human Genome Project history, and genetics eugenics values, and genetics LB - 11360 PB - HarperCollins Publishers PY - 2000 ST - Genome: The Autobiography of a Species in 23 Chapters TI - Genome: The Autobiography of a Species in 23 Chapters ID - 2496 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Public interest in Artic exploration in the 19th century owed much to newspaper coverage of polar expeditions. Modern media informed people of worlds beyond their borders, and undoubtedly stimulated travel, expansion, and scientific research, as well as interest in the environment. Efforts to describe the Artic during the first half of the nineteenth century often emphasized "the picturesque" and "the sublime." The author maintains that the decade from 1855 to 1865 "was remarkable from the standpoint of change. The Anglo-American public’s long-established ways of perceiving the unknown-- through traditional aesthetics related both to nature and art-- disappeared because they were no longer consistent with the horrible realities exposed by the discovery of the fate of the Franklin expedition. In particular, the sublime view of the Arctic began to be replaced by a vision based on new concepts of man’s continuing struggle against nature.” AU - Riffenburgh, Beau CY - London DA - 1993 KW - nationalism journalism news and journalism newspapers news +books, periodicals, newspapers environment, and 19th century newspapers, and Artic exploration Bennett, James Gordon +nationalism and communication environment nationalism, and news geography, and news news, and geography geography LB - 10350 PB - Belhaven Press PY - 1993 ST - The Myth of the Explorer: The Press, Sensationalism, and Geographical Discovery TI - The Myth of the Explorer: The Press, Sensationalism, and Geographical Discovery ID - 2399 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - "Color is identified with the emotional, rhapsodic, emancipated, formless, and even deceitful aspect of art," writes the author. "Even in our age, bright colors are viewed with suspicion.... It is almost as though colors are dangerous." (6, 7) This work attempts to examine color through history as it has been treated in philosophy, painting, architecture, literature, music, and psychology. AU - Riley, Charles A., II CY - Hanover and London DA - 1995 KW - censorship avant garde World War I Kandinsky, Wassily context color freedom color, and freedom color, and 1960s art, and color color, and art avant garde, and color color, and avant garde censorship, and color color, and censorship censorship and ratings color, and prejudice against sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, context context, and color color, and 1960s materials color, and materials materials, and color Cezanne, Paul, and color color, and Paul Cezanne color, and chemistry color, and dyes color, and Vincent van Gogh van Gogh, Vincent, and color color, and Greeks color, and Impressionism color, and Middle Ages Matisse, Henri, and color color, and Henri Matisse color, and Wassily Kandinsky Kandinsky, Wassily, and color color, and Claude Monet Monet, Claude, and color color, and Isaac Newton Newton, Isaac, and color color, and oil painting color, and van Rijn Rembrandt color, and Renaissance color, and Georges Seurat color, and World War I World War I, and color color, and sensation Jung, Carl, and color color, and Carl Jung Barthes, Roland, and color color, and Roland Barthes color, and philosophy color, and literature color, and painting color, and music Derrida, Jacques, and color color, and Jacques Derrida Goethe, J. W. von, and color color, and J. W. von Goethe Gauguin, Paul, and color color, and Paul Gauguin Kant, Immanuel, and color color, and Immanuel Kant color, and James Joyce Joyce, James, and color Lichtenstein, Roy, and color color, and Roy Lichtenstein color, and Arnold Schoenberg Schoenberg, Arnold, and color color, and Frank Stella Stella, Frank, and color Trakl, Georg, and color color, and Georg Trakl color, and Ludwig Wittgenstein Wittgenstein, Ludwig, and color color, and Richard Wagner Wagner, Richard, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and morality Barthes, Roland art war LB - 32460 PB - University Press of New England PY - 1995 ST - Color Codes: Modern Theories of Color in Philosophy, Painting and Architecture, Literature, Music, and Psychology TI - Color Codes: Modern Theories of Color in Philosophy, Painting and Architecture, Literature, Music, and Psychology ID - 2905 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Rinhart, Floyd and Marion CY - New York DA - 1981 KW - photography +photography and visual communication Daguerreotype LB - 8880 PB - Aperture PY - 1981 ST - The American Daguerreotype TI - The American Daguerreotype ID - 2255 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is part of the Sloan Technology Series, designed for a broad readership. This work covers such topics as the invention of the transistor, Bell Laboratories, integrated circuits, computers, and Moore's law. Chapter three, "The Revolution Within," deals with the invention of the X-ray. The authors' chapter, "Born with the Century," examines the lives of the three men who invented the transistor: John Bardeen, Walter Brattain, and William Shockley. The authors contend that "Whatever one thinks about Shockley's notions on genes and intelligence, there is little doubt that he was the principal driving force behind the explosive rise of the semiconductor industry. ... Neither Bardeen nor Brattain had anywhere near Shockley's visionary appreciation of the transistor's vast commercial potential." (277, 278) AU - Riordan, Michael AU - Hoddeson, Lillian CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - computers materials, and silicon corporations corporations corporations corporations corporations photography transistors, and integrated circuits Texas Instruments Company photography and visual communication materials General Electric Company Company radio transistors integrated circuits radio, transistor transistor radios AT & T Bardeen, John, and transistors Bell Laboratories Brattain, Walter Bush, Vannevar +computers and the Internet computers computers and transistors General Electric Company germanium transistors, junction Kelly, Mervin miniaturization Moore, Gordon photolithography transistors, point-contact radar RCA semiconductors Shockley, William silicon Teal, Gordon Texas Instruments Company Western Electric Company X-rays materials Bardeen, John transistors, and radio LB - 17530 PB - W. W. Norton & Company PY - 1997 ST - Crystal Fire: The Birth of the Information Age TI - Crystal Fire: The Birth of the Information Age ID - 673 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Michael Ritchie (the motion picture director -- and member of the Creative Council of the Museum of Television and Radio) presents a chronicle of the early days of television, the period between 1920 and 1948, before there were regularly scheduled programs, or even written scripts. The book includes a look at a number of "firsts" in the television industry: first commercial, soap opera, sports and newscast. Ritchie also touches upon the life of Philo T. Farnswroth, the person credited with inventing the first electronic television system, and the first network battles between RCA and DuMont, and NBC and CBS. It is a work that does not know whether it wants to be a scholarly treatment of an era, or a coffee-table book. Still, it has nuggets of fascinating information. --Robert Pondillo AU - Ritchie, Michael CY - Woodstock, NY DA - 1994 KW - corporations corporations corporations corporations +television Pondillo, Robert RCA NBC CBS Fransworth, Philo T. DuMont LB - 7260 PB - Overlook Press PY - 1994 ST - Please Stand By: A Prehistory of Television TI - Please Stand By: A Prehistory of Television ID - 2096 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This short work (158 pages) considers issues involving digital imaging and gives examples of altered photographs throughout history, many of which are memorable. In Our Own Image is a brief discussion of potential problems brought on by the “enhancement” of photography through computers. Ritchin worries about the ease with which images can be altered in digital photography and the difficulty viewers have in knowing whether something is real or not. Although he argues that computer based photographs “are not themselves creating radically new representations of the world,” mostly because people learned long ago how to fake, manipulate, and decontextualize images or employ them cynically to arouse emotions, he does believe that electronic manipulation magnifies the problem. “The reader,” he points out, “unable to detect the alterations, can be deceived most of all.” This is a problem in a culture that believes, which many evidently still do, that the camera never lies. The book is partly a history of photojournalism, with special emphasis on the rise of the image-based mass media to which we are accustomed today. He shows a series of examples of manipulated images from Life magazine and other classic publications. The bulk of the book is something of a how-to guide to photo alteration. Ritchin presents numerous recent (late 1980s) magazine covers and advertisements that have been altered in some way, including a National Geographic cover that moved two of the Egyptian pyramids closer together to fit them into the frame. This information is not presented in a uniformly negative light. Ritchin makes it clear that people have always had to “read” photographs and that they will likely learn how to understand photographs in a digital age. The book’s few notes refer the reader to articles in science and photography magazines and a smattering of books about the social meaning of photographs. It is mostly based on his own experiences and observation as a photographer. Many of the book’s discussions are illustrated with black and white photos. The writing is only marginally good, and the book could use the careful attention of a skilled editor, but overall is it readable and interesting. -- Rob Rabe AU - Ritchin, Fred CY - New York DA - c1990 KW - ethics computers photography public relations advertising values materials ethics digitization analog media values +photography and visual communication values, and digital photography photography, and digital imaging digital media, and photography propaganda photography, and reality digital media values, and digital photography analog v. digital photography, and bias digital photography, and ethics propaganda, and digital photography digital photography, and propaganda ethics, and digital photography news and journalism news, and digitial photography photography, and news journalism, and digital photography photography, and journalism computers computers, and photography photography, and computers +computers and the Internet Rabe, Rob journalism news advertising and public relations LB - 1890 PB - Aperture PY - 1990 ST - In Our Own Image: The Coming Revolution in Photography TI - In Our Own Image: The Coming Revolution in Photography ID - 1585 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book, based largely on interviews, reveals how the Pentagon censors motion pictures on a regular basis. This is true, especially if movie makers want to use military equipment and/or bases to cut down on the expense of production. Phil Strub was the liaison with whom movie makers had to deal. Robb discusses many well-known films from the 1980s and 1990s -- Top Gun, The Right Stuffi, Thirteen Days, Forrest Gump, Sum of All Fears, The Presidio, Hunt for Red October, Good Morning, Vietnam, and many more. AU - Robb, David L. CY - Amherst, NY DA - 2004 KW - nationalism censorship and ratings motion pictures military communication nationalism and communication motion pictures, and Pentagon motion pictures, and military Strub, Phil censorship, and Pentagon censorship, and Phil Strub censorship LB - 33070 PB - Prometheus Books PY - 2004 ST - Operation Hollywood: How the Pentagon Shapes and Censors the Movies TI - Operation Hollywood: How the Pentagon Shapes and Censors the Movies ID - 2944 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Though a comparatively brief work, this book covers a lot of territory in a short amount of time. The author considers a variety of topics related to the railways, including its social impact. Includes coverage of topics like its relationship with the Post Office, timekeeping, influence on class structure, impact on landscape, railway laborers, business aspects, infrastructure, legislation, and even overseas effects. The author also traces its history in its immediate roots in the coal industry and in early entrepreneurs like George and Robert Stephenson, I.K. Brunel, and Joseph Locke. Though not footnoted, sources and references for each chapter are included at the end, and largely rely on railway studies spanning the period between 1830 and 1914. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Robbins, Michael CY - London DA - 1962 KW - post office time and timekeeping labor timekeeping, and clocks non-USA office, and new media Wolf, Nicholas +transportation Great Britain railroads Great Britain, and railroads railroads, and Great Britain timekeeping timekeeping, and railroads timekeeping, and Great Britain Great Britain, and timekeeping +postal service Great Britain, and postal service postal service, and Great Britain labor labor, and Great Britain labor, and railroads Great Britain, and labor infrastructure, and Great Britain Great Britain, and infrastructure infrastructure office LB - 1990 N1 - See also: office PB - Routledge & Kegan Paul PY - 1962 ST - The Railway Age TI - The Railway Age ID - 287 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book offers an inside look at the Lyndon B. Johnson White House and such people as Jack Valenti, the President's assistant. The work appear a year before Valenti accepted a position as president of the Motion Picture Association of America. AU - Roberts, Charles CY - New York DA - 1965 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti LB - 19590 PB - Delacorte Press PY - 1965 ST - LBJ's Inner Circle TI - LBJ's Inner Circle ID - 793 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - A dense, extended study of the early history of the Scottish railway. By concentrating closely on the early nineteenth century--the eighteenth century is given more as a background--the author is able to provide many details concerning construction, technology, and industry business. Based largely on primary sources, this book utilizes many manuscript sources from company records, Parliamentary papers, contemporary newspapers and periodicals, as well as contemporary accounts and modern secondary sources. This work is a great source for the business and investment side of the railway. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Robertson, C. J. A. CY - Edinburgh DA - 1983 KW - non-USA Wolf, Nicholas +transportation Scotland railroads Scotland, and railroads railroads, and Scotland LB - 2000 PB - John Donald Publishers, Ltd. PY - 1983 ST - The Origins of the Scottish Railway System, 1722-1844. TI - The Origins of the Scottish Railway System, 1722-1844. ID - 288 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work examines the work of the British Board of Film Censors (BBFC). “The BBFC carried no legal status, its functions being to either classify or cut or reject the films submitted to it. At its head was a president, while it was to be administered by a secretary, assisted by four censors. To guarantee its independence of the film industry, the BBFC was to levy fees based upon the footage of the submitted films. The BBFC decided to catagorize films with either an ‘A’ (adult) or ‘U’ (universal) certificate (cut or uncut) or to withhold a certificate altogether.” Much of the work of the BBFC paralleled the Hays Office and the Production Code Administration in the United States. The author discusses themes that worried censors (not unlike the topics that worried their counterparts in the U. S.). AU - Robertson, James C. CY - London DA - 1985 KW - law law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA regulation Great Britain +motion pictures Great Britain, and film censorship censorship, and motion pictures censorship, and Great Britain regulation, and motion pictures British Board of Film Censors LB - 10360 PB - Croom Helm PY - 1985 ST - The British Board of Film Censors: Film Censorship in Britain, 1896-1950 TI - The British Board of Film Censors: Film Censorship in Britain, 1896-1950 ID - 2400 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The authors, Robins (a professor of communications) and Webster (a professor of sociology) challenge the optimistic view of computers and the Internet promoted by such corporate leaders as Bill Gates, and by such “optimists” as Nicholas Negroponte (Being Digital [1995]). “Luddism,” they writes, “serves as an important motif in our argument. Drawing on the work of Edward Thompson, we have sought to rescue Luddism from the scorn of those who sing the praises of ‘progress’, arguing that Luddism provides us with an illuminating way of reflecting on technological change. We may see in the historical moment of Luddism a movement not against technology per se (though technology was indisputably a key issue), but one that was mounting a protest against far more widespread changes in ways of life, as older forms of ‘custom and practice’ gave way to the new social mobilisations of laissez-faire capitalism in the opening decades of the nineteenth century.” (6-7) They see the spread of global information networks as part of “the forward march of the Enclosure movements, in terms ... of the further and rapid extension of the reach of market criteria and conditions. This process has both extensive and intensive dimensions. It promises to enclose the entire globe, creating what Stephen Gill has called the ‘global panopticon’.” (7) Interesting sections in the book include chapter 6, “Propaganda: The Hidden Face of Information,” chapter 7, “Cyberwars: The Military Information Revolution,” and chapters dealing with education and the university. This work is part of Routledge’s Comedia series (David Morley, editor). AU - Robins, Kevin and Frank Webster CY - London and New York DA - 1999 KW - R & D computers surveillance nationalism imperialism utopianism surveillance public relations advertising networks research and development research and development war Internet future and science fiction education cyberspace community democracy computers community capitalism war non-USA nationalism and communication virtual reality military communication computers and the Internet military, and computers research and development, and government support cyberspace, and identity information age democracy and media Internet, and critics computers, and critics critics utopia, and new media community, and Internet community, and computers capitalism, and computers Gates, Bill, and critics future, and computers Luddism political economy cultural imperialism capitalism, and new media networks, and new media networks, and capitalism propaganda propaganda, and new media military, and information revolution military, and surveillance surveillance, and military community, and virtual reality virtual reality, and community education, and new media cybernetics, and capitalism capitalism, and cybernetics democracy, and computers control revolution computers, and control social control capitalism, global nationalism, and new media virtual communities global communication future capitalism artificial intelligence and biotechnology public relations privacy advertising and public relations cybernetics LB - 1810 PB - Routledge PY - 1999 ST - Times of the Technoculture: From the Information Society to the Virtual Life TI - Times of the Technoculture: From the Information Society to the Virtual Life ID - 269 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Rochlin, a professor of energy and resources at the University of California, Berkeley, challenges the established orthodoxy on the current computer revolution. He casts a skeptical eye on the “information age,” focusing his attention on what society has lost and can expect to lose, rather than on the glorious new world of the automated future. He is rather unimpressed with the changes to date, which he sums up as “the replacement of art with artifice.” He finds an automated society to be one that necessarily undermines some of the exclusively human capabilities that have proved beneficial in the past. The dangers of increasing reliance on computers and automation, Rochlin finds reflected in such places as the financial markets, characterized in the data processing age by the movement of capital away from productive endeavors and into speculation, and the United States military, which grows increasingly more dependent upon high tech and those capable of operating it. --Gordon Jackson From Lawrence Hunter’s review of this 293-page book in the New York Times Book Review, Sept. 7, 1997: “Imagine that during the era of the Model T there had been a warning of the global, long-term consequences of dependence on the internal combustion engine.... Would anyone have listened? Gene I. Rochlin gives us a similar opportunity, here at the dawn of the information age. In ‘Trapped in the Net,’ an insightful and painstakingly documented book, he explores the changes already wrought by computers and networking in areas as diverse as financial markets, air travel, nuclear power plants, corporate management and the military. After analyzing the transformations in organizations as they have adapted to ubiquitous networked computering, he extrapolates to the increasingly dramatic changes he expects over the long term.” AU - Rochlin, Gene I. CY - Princeton DA - 1997 KW - R & D computers surveillance nationalism law, and privacy law research and development war computers war privacy networks +computers and the Internet Hunter, Lawrence capitalism, and Internet air travel, and Internet +military communication privacy, and Internet networks, and Internet air travel capitalism +nationalism and communication military, and computers nationalism, and computers digital media military, and digital media digitization digital media, and military computers, and digital media Jackson, Gordon capitalism, and computers +aeronautics and space communication transportation LB - 7990 PB - Princeton University Press PY - 1997 ST - Trapped in the Net: The Unanticipated Consequences of Computerization TI - Trapped in the Net: The Unanticipated Consequences of Computerization ID - 2168 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This collection, which is introduced briefly by Gene I. Rochlin, is divided into five sections: I: Technics and Empirical Technology. II: The Rise of Scientific Technology. III: The Triumph of Scientific Technology. IV: Energy: The Ultimate Resource. V: Heat: The Ultimate Waste. Section III contains an essay by John R. Pierce, "Communication," which appeared in the Scientific American in Sept. 1972. It offers an interesting account of the state of communication in 1972. The author notes that Claude E. Shannon's work on information theory and Norbert Wiener's book Cybernetic had "created an intellectual stir about communication that has not yet subsided." (242) Pierce adds to these two authors Noam Chomsky's Syntatic Structures (1957). AU - Rochlin, Gene I., Intro. CY - San Francisco, CA DA - 1974 KW - computers ref, secondary Chomsky, Noam Shannon, Claude Wiener, Norbert cybernetics telephones television radio sound recording sound recording, and phonograph sound recording, and magnetic tape television, and cable cable television microwaves radio, AM radio, FM information theory, and Claude Shannon cybernetics, and Norbert Wiener Bell Laboratories community, and communication communication, and community electronics, solid-state transportation railroads electricity computers and the Internet computers, digital digitization digital media artificial intelligence artificial intelligence and biotechnology cable community computers electronic media information theory LB - 40840 PB - W. H. Freeman and Company PY - 1974 ST - Reading from Scientific American: Scientific, Technology and Social Change TI - Reading from Scientific American: Scientific, Technology and Social Change ID - 4183 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Roddick, who is also a screenwriters, was written before the opening of such major archival collections as the Production Code Administration files. Still, it is an interesting account of the themes -- e.g., rags-to-riches -- found in Warner Bros. pictures during the Great Depression. AU - Roddick, Nick CY - London DA - 1983 KW - context +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures context, and 1930s motion pictures, and government motion pictures, and FBI Warner Bros. motion pictures, and Warner Bros. LB - 15510 PB - British Film Institute PY - 1983 ST - A New Deal in Entertainment: Warner Brothers in the 1930s TI - A New Deal in Entertainment: Warner Brothers in the 1930s ID - 564 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This first-rate study, based on primary research, deals with the censorship of photographs during World War II. Photographers captured graphically on film the full horror of war. Yet the images that Americans saw in magazines, newsreels, and the press were sanitized. More realistic pictures of the war appeared at the fighting drew to an end in 1944 and 1945. Roeder writes: “What Americans saw by 1945 was more revealing, and sustained a more complex understanding of the war, than what they had seen in December 1941. Americans eventually saw more not because the government loosened control, but because it used its power to encourage a different emphasis in the visual presentation of the war. Officials made these changes in response to evolving wartime needs and circumstances, including diminished public tolerance for sanitized images of war. These officials perceived pictures of the American dead as extremely hazardous material during the war’s early years. Before it ended they considered them the most powerful weapons in their motivational arsenal." --SV This thin and heavily illustrated volume is a vital addition to our understanding of mass media and public opinion during World War Two. Despite the proliferation of research on this “popular” war, scholars of mass communication have still not come to terms with the role played by propaganda and wartime imagery. Roeder, an art historian at the Chicago Art Institute, offers perhaps the best analysis of the interplay between government information programs, visual culture, and public opinion, and the photographs and other images included in the text add greatly to the narrative. It is a common complaint among war veterans, including most notably the acerbic Paul Fussell, that homefront Americans were never given the “real” picture of the war and that only those who fought actually understand the true meaning of the conflict. The Censored War explains ably why this is the case. Roeder has examined the files of the Office of War Information and the publicity departments of the military branches to piece together strategies related to wartime imagery. As he makes clear, the operating assumption early in the war was that the homefront was not prepared for realistic representation and photographs (and news accounts incidentally) showing death and destruction were often censored. The War Department maintained a “chamber of horrors” where the most horrific images were kept carefully hidden from public view. After September 1943, however, the decision was made to selectively release more graphic and realistic images to bring the hardship and sacrifice to the public’s attention. Such images proved useful to bond drives and other motivational campaigns that relied heavily in guilt appeals. The War Advertising Council received some of these images for use in its programs. The public and journalists, too, waged a running battle with Washington, asking to be given the “straight story.” As Roeder makes clear, however, this new information strategy was carefully limited and did not include any photos that would tend to place soldiers or the military in a bad light. Images of deep suffering, disfigured or dismembered casualties, emotional breakdown, self-inflicted wounds, wastefulness, or overt sexuality remained off limits. Wartime imagery was supposed to present the war effort as professional, competent and virtuous, regardless of how “realistic” it was. According to Roeder, the worst legacy of this information policy is that it allowed Americans to plunge headlong into later warfare without fully comprehending the consequences. The book is nicely illustrated and well written. Its manageable size and clear writing make it a useful book for an undergraduate media history course. -- Rob Rabe AU - Roeder, George, Jr. CY - New Haven DA - 1993 KW - OWI nationalism photography Vietnam War Roosevelt, Franklin administration presidents, and new media public relations advertising journalism community democracy law censorship and ratings news and journalism war non-USA Vietnam War +television race propaganda news +photography and visual communication +books, periodicals, newspapers censorship, and World War II censorship, and photography cameras propaganda, and World War II photojournalism Office of War Information (OWI) Life photography, and race race, and photography +motion pictures newsreels democracy and media Roosevelt, Franklin D. Vietnam War, and television television, and Vietnam War photography, and Korean War +nationalism and communication censorship photography and war photography, and World War II photography, and censorship World War II World War II, and censorship World War II, and photography photography, and World War II Rabe, Rob public relations LB - 10370 PB - Yale University Press PY - 1993 ST - The Censored War: The American Visual Experience During World War II TI - The Censored War: The American Visual Experience During World War II ID - 2401 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author wrote about the marvels of the telegraphy, telephone, cable, and wireless telegraphy. She speculated about the possibility that "thought transference" will be possible in the future. AU - Rogers, Bessie Story CY - Boston DA - 1905 KW - +radio +future and science fiction future wireless communication +telephones cable +telegraph LB - 11140 PB - Richard G. Badger, The Gorham Press PY - 1905 ST - As It May Be: A Story of the Future TI - As It May Be: A Story of the Future ID - 2475 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - An informative, but often awkward, account of the growth of communication research. Rogers sees Wilber Schramm as the founding father. The chapters on Darwin, Freud, and Marx could have been better. The author then discusses the Chicago School, Harold Lasswell, Paul Lazarsfeld, Kurt Lewin, Carl Howland, Norbert Wiener, Claude Shannon, and others such as Willard Bleyer. Rogers offers a useful introduction to these people and their work. This book might be read in the context of studies by Howard Rheingold, Christopher Simpson, and Roger L. Geiger's two-volume study of American research universities. AU - Rogers, Everett M. CY - New York DA - 1994 KW - R & D Chicago, IL information theory communism Darwinism Marxism war research and development general studies World War II Office of Facts and Figures Darwin, Charles Freud, Sigmund Marx, Karl Schramm, Wilbur Chicago School Lasswell, Harold Lazarsfeld, Paul Lewin, Kurt Howland, Carl Wiener, Norbert Shannon, Claude research, and communication research and development, and World War II LB - 1140 PB - The Free Press PY - 1994 ST - A History of Communication Study: A Biographical Approach TI - A History of Communication Study: A Biographical Approach ID - 1510 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The invention of the microprocessor in 1971, Rogers believes, was the key to the Information Revolution of the 1980s that linked satellites, cable, and computers. (See also the volume edited by Rogers and Francis Balle, The Media Revolution in America and in Western Europe [1985]). This revolution was made feasible by the miniaturization of computers growing out of this invention. Pages 103-111 of this book which discuss “How Ted Hoff Invented the Microprocessor.” The pages on Hoff are reverential. Hoff, who was interviewed for the book, then preferred “to keep a low profile.” According the Rogers and Larsen, “The microprocessor represented such a radical invention that the mass media did not pick up on it for almost a year after Intel’s announcement of the new product in late 1971.” The authors rely heavily on their interview with Hoff and also on a Nov. 1975 article in Fortune by Gene Bylinsky (“Here Comes the Second Computer Revolution”). AU - Rogers, Everett M., and Judith K. Larsen CY - New York DA - 1984 KW - R & D computers materials, and silicon microprocessing materials silicon communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution computers communication revolution, and second industrial revolution non-USA values microelectronics Information Age +computers and the Internet Apple Computer microprocessors Hoff, Ted Intel Corp. microelectronics revolution Silicon Valley second industrial revolution values, and microprocessors computers, personal Fairchild Semiconductor Hewlett-Packard IBM information processing information age Japan microcomputers research and development semiconductors Stanford University capitalism, and microelectronics revolution Bylinsky, Gene capitalism microprocessors, invention of communication revolution LB - 8000 PB - Basic Books, Inc. PY - 1984 ST - Silicon Valley Fever: Growth of High-Technology Culture TI - Silicon Valley Fever: Growth of High-Technology Culture ID - 2169 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is a collection of essays by noted communication researchers who argued in 1985 that a gap existed between “Western European and American scholars of mass communication in understanding each other’s work.... Our purpose is to improve the knowledge of European and American scholars of mass communication about research in their field, with emphasis upon the work being done on both side of the Atlantic. We particularly stress the communication research presently underway on the new communication technologies of computers, satellites, and cable that are bringing about an Information Revolution in America and Europe.” In the view of those who assembled this volume, “What is ‘revolutionary,’ at least potentially, about the new communication technologies is their interactive nature." The new communication systems derived their interactivity from the computers that were among their components. Examples of these interactive systems then included Hi-OVIS in Japan, Bildschirmtext in West Germany, Prestel in Great Britain, Antiope in France, Telidon in Canada, and QUBE in the United States. Hundreds of other experimental systems also then existed in the USA and in Europe, made possible by miniaturized computers, thanks in part to semiconductors that followed the invention of the microprocessor in 1971. "The Information Revolution now under way is basically a microcomputer revolution. Thanks to microprocessor technology, computers are now everywhere. In 1946, there was one computer. In 1984, eight million. Part I is good on new communication technologies. Entitled “The Changing Nature of the Mass Media in Europe and America,” it includes essays by Claude-Jean Bertrand and Miguel Urabayen (“European Mass Media in the 1980s”), Bradley S. Greenberg (“Mass Media in the United States in the 1980s”), Henry Breitrose (“The New Communication Technologies and the New Distribution of Roles”), Francis Balle (“The Communication Revolution and Freedom of Expression”). PART II, “The New Worlds of the Mass Media,” has essays on media effects by Jacques Ellul, Rogers and Arnold Picot, Bella Mody, Elie Abel, Axel Gryspeerdt, and Denise Bombardier. PART III, “European and American Approaches to Communication Research,” features essays by Jay Blumler, Wilbur Schramm, Osmo Wiio, Rogers, Karl Erik Rosengren, Steven Chaffee and John L. Hochheimer, Rogersand Francis Balle. This work is Volume 2 in the Paris-Stanford Series. AU - Rogers, Everett M. and Francis Balle, eds. CY - Norwood, NJ DA - 1985 KW - entertainment computers nationalism microprocessing interactivity entertainment, home communication revolution second industrial revolution microelectronics revolution media media effects media convergence mass media home entertainment democracy community computers freedom non-USA home, and new media home home, and information technology microcomputers media Japan information technology Great Britain Germany general studies Europe communication revolution information age cable satellites +computers and the Internet interactive media Japan, and Hi-OVIS Germany, and Bildscirmtext Great Britain, and Prestel Canada, and Telidon France, Antiope United States, and QUBE microprocessors microelectronics microcomputer revolution freedom of expression democracy and media communication revolution, and myth of information technology, and home Canada +television media convergence +nationalism and communication computers, home +aeronautics and space communication home, and computers home, and new media critics Schramm, Wilbur France LB - 1130 N1 - See also: media PB - Ablex Publishing Corp PY - 1985 ST - The Media Revolution in America and in Western Europe: Volume II in the Paris-Stanford Series TI - The Media Revolution in America and in Western Europe: Volume II in the Paris-Stanford Series ID - 1509 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The book is concerned with the problematic status of tourism which is embodied by a complex set of social discourse and practices. The first part of this volume discusses a number of theoretical topics including the role of traveler, the nature of tourist destination as well as the significance of tourist activities. The second half of this book reveals the contemporary ‘context’ of tourist activities. Some provide insights into the impact of the development of tourism; some attempt to understand the significance of the representation of history and heritage in a tourist destination. In particular, Carol Crawshaw and John Urry’s chapter, ‘Tourism and Photographic Eye,’ discloses the role of photographic images in the construction and reproduction of a tourist site. Starting with an understanding of the tourist gaze, the authors trace the history and development of tourism and photography and illuminate the interconnections between modern tourism and photography by means of their research of the spectacle of the Lake District in England. In their remark, “photography is thus part of the process by which subjectivities are formed” (p. 195). Paying attention to the relationship between the visual consumption and the environments, they urge us “to look further into how the photographic eye I both continuously intrusive and actively employed.” (ibid.). --Huai-Hsuan Chen AU - Rojek, Chris AU - John Urry, eds. CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - tourism geography Chen, Huai-Hsuan photography and visual communication photography photography, and tourism tourism, and photography photography, and geography geography, and photography photography, and leisure photography, and travel non-USA non-USA, and photography Great Britain photography, and Great Britain Great Britain, and photography LB - 33110 PB - Routledge PY - 1997 ST - Touring Cultures: Transformations of Travel and Theory TI - Touring Cultures: Transformations of Travel and Theory ID - 65 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The Defense Advance Research Projects Agency (DARPA) spent at least $1 billion between 1983 and 1993 on computer research to develop machine intelligence. This Strategic Computing Initiative (SCI) “was conceived at the outset as an integrated plan to promote computer chip design and manufacturing, computer architecture, and artificial intelligence software.... What distinguishes Strategic Computing ... from other stories of modern, large-scale technological development is that the program self-consciously set about advancing an entire research front,” write the authors. (1) They note that several factors converged during the early 1980s, not the least of which was the “belligerent rhetoric and hegemonic ambitions of the new Reagan administration,” to make SCI possible. The work devotes chapters to Robert Kahn and Robert Cooper. Kahn was a visionary who became the “godfather” (13) of SCI. He argued in 1983 that “The nation that dominates ... information processing ... will possess the keys to world leadership in the twenty-first century.” (13) Cooper, who became DARPA director in 1981, help to sell strategic computing. The work’s ten chapters are divided into three parts. Chapters 4-7 (Part II) deal with infrastructure and early programs. Chapter 8 covers the middle period of SCI, 1985-1989. Chapter 9 is on “The Disappearance of Strategic Computing.” The work is particularly informative about efforts to develop a technical infrastructure for strategic computing and also bureaucratic maneuvering. More than $1 billion was put into SCI between 1983 and 1993 but its results were mixed. "Indeed, one cannot escape the suspicion that SC was always a triumph of packaging over substance," the authors write. (330) "On balance SC probably spent its funding as effectively as any government research program, more effectively than most. And it can claim credit for some important advances, even though they were components, not a system. SC was a pot of money used to nourish the technology base, not a coordinated assault on machine intelligence." (331) This book, which is part of MIT’s History of Computing series (I. Bernard Cohen and William Aspray, eds), is well research. It is based on a “solid but incomplete base of primary documents,” (397) that included DARPA documents. Materials from the Charles Babbage Institute at the University of Minnesota, and the records of the Laboratory for Computer Science, collection no. 268, at MIT were used. In addition, the authors conducted extensive interviews with people involved in SCI. The book is grounded also in secondary literature, especially that which deals with the history of technology and the nature of technological change, work on the characteristic of government research and development, histories of research institutions and their culture, research on the evolution of military and civilian relationships, and work on technologies role in economic development. AU - Roland, Alex, with Philip Shiman CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 2002 KW - technology R & D computers corporations corporations corporations Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) chips, computer ARPA technology and society presidents, and new media MIT research and development war microprocessors IBM war non-USA +computers and the Internet +military communication DARPA Kahn, Robert Cooper, Robert, and DARPA Kahn, Robert, and strategic computing initiative Strategic Computing Initiative Reagan administration Reagan administration, and strategic computing Reagan, Ronald Reagan, Ronald, and strategic computing military communication, and strategic computing strategic computing, and military artificial intelligence Advanced Research Projects Agency ARPANET archives, and DARPA DARPA, and archives Carnegie Mellon University, and strategic computing Cooper, Robert, and strategic computing research and development research and development, and strategic computing military-industrial complex chips, and strategic computing Japan Japan, and fifth generation computers fifth generation computers information processing Information Science and Technology Office Intel Corp. IBM, and strategic computing Licklider, J.C.R. MIT, and strategic computing strategic computing, and MIT microprocessing technology, and economic development technology, and change +artificial intelligence and biotechnology archives Information Age LB - 190 PB - MIT Press PY - 2002 ST - Strategic Computing: DARPA and the Quest for Machine Intelligence, 1983-1993 TI - Strategic Computing: DARPA and the Quest for Machine Intelligence, 1983-1993 ID - 108 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This uneven book deals with the impact of digital technology on movie making. It contains interviews with several independent movie makers. Many are part of the Dogme 95 movement -- e.g. Danish directors Lars von Trier and Thomas Vinterberg. Dogme 95 set out several guidelines for movie making -- shooting should be done on location, sound should not be produced separate from the images, handheld cameras should be used, filmming should be done in color and filters are forbidden, normal movie genres are abandoned, movies should not have superficial action, and more. Among the best interviews are those by German movie maker Wim Wenders and cinematographer John Bailey. Wenders says we do not yet any any conception of how profoundly digital movie making will change cinema. "The entire landscape of film is about to be shaken up completely. Its past will no longer be its future." Bailey notes that digital projection allows studios greater control over the distribution of motion pictures because digital movies can be encoded and only projectors with the proper coding are able to show the picture. AU - Roman, Shari CY - Hollywood, CA DA - 2001 KW - independent moving making projection preservation motion pictures history, and new media digital cinema digital cinema digitization law censorship and ratings censorship history +motion pictures and popular culture digital media motion pictures, and digital indepedent moviemaking, and digital new media motion pictures, and new media new media, and motion pictures history, break with history, and digital movies censorship, and digital movies projection, digital digital projection digital movies Wenders, Wem, and digital movies Bailey, John, and digital movies history LB - 27850 PB - IFILM Publishing PY - 2001 ST - Digital Bablyon: Hollywood, Indiewood & Dogme 95 TI - Digital Bablyon: Hollywood, Indiewood & Dogme 95 ID - 1337 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Romm deals with the underground press, and every other page has excerpts from different publications. Chapter One, entitled "The Street-Corner and Movement Press," devotes a couple of pages to the use of a new process of cold-type offset used by such publications as the Oracle, East Village Other, Seed, Kaleidoscope, and Other Scenes. Chapter Three, "Cults in the Computers Age," has little to say about the use of computers, though. AU - Romm, Ethel Grodzins CY - [New York] DA - 1970 KW - underground newspapers underground media underground press print communication revolution communication revolution printing printing press +books, periodicals, newspapers +duplicating technologies underground press (1960s) printing, cold-type offset graphics revolutions, and newspapers (1960s) graphics revolution, offset printing printing, and offset underground press, and offset printing printing, and underground press printing printing press offset printing graphics revolution LB - 11390 PB - A Giniger Book, published in association with Stackpole Books PY - 1970 ST - The Open Conspiracy: What America's Angry Generation Is Saying TI - The Open Conspiracy: What America's Angry Generation Is Saying ID - 443 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Rosen uses the impeachment of President Bill Clinton in 1998-1999 “as a window onto a less unusual phenomenon that affects all Americans: namely, the erosion of privacy, at home, at work, and in cyberspace, so that intimate personal information -- from diaries, e-mail, and computer files to records of the books we read and the Web sites we browse -- is increasingly vulnerable to being wrenched out of context and exposed to the world.” He then examines the changes in law, technology, and culture that have weakened out ability to control information about ourselves. He also explores ways to create “zones of privacy” that have been invaded by law and technology. Rosen, who at the time of this book was a professor at the George Washington School of Law and legal affairs editor for the New Republic, dissects Kenneth Starr’s investigation of the Monica Lewinsky scandal. Part of the problem, he notes, grew out of sexual harassment legislation favor by feminists that maintained that privacy shielded degradation and abuse. Rosen does not seek, though, “to eliminate sexual harassment law, but to rethink it in a way that is consistent with the principles of classical liberalism.” He argues that “invasion of privacy law may be better equipped than discrimination law to distinguish between indignities that are merely embarrassing and those that are serious enough to be illegal.” The author devotes chapters to privacy in the home, work (e.g., e-mail, Internet surveillance), court, and cyberspace. Chapter 3, “Jurisprurience,” makes the case “for reconceiving certain forms of hostile environment sexual harassment as invasions of privacy instead.” Rosen’s Epilogue, “What Is Privacy Good For?,” considers the relation between privacy and gossip and considers what invasions of privacy costs us socially, politically, and personally. Each of this book’s chapters relates to the author’s underlying theme: “the danger of misjudging people by confusing information with knowledge in an economy that is increasingly based on the recording and exchange of personal information.” AU - Rosen, Jeffrey CY - New York DA - 2000 KW - technology entertainment computers tape recording, magnetic magnetic recording recording entertainment, home email Clinton, William Jefferson tape recording sexuality photography women, and new media sex presidents, and new media sexuality labor libraries information technology home entertainment women electronic media Clinton Administration freedom law home, and new media home office office, and new media computers privacy cyberspace cyberspace, and privacy computers, and society computers, and privacy law +computers and the Internet information technology, and privacy information technology, and freedom information technology, and home information technology, and office home home, and privacy office office, and privacy home, and information technology law, and privacy information technology, and law law, and information technology libraries, and privacy photography +photography and visual communication privacy, and computers privacy, and the Internet privacy, and medical records privacy, and electronic records privacy, and libraries electronic records electronic records, and privacy privacy, and photography privacy, and sound recording +sound recording sound recording, and privacy recording recording, and privacy surveillance surveillance, and government surveillance, and data bases surveillance, and electronic media surveillance, electronic surveillance, and photography tape recording tape recording, and privacy technology and society technology, and privacy Clinton, Bill Starr, Kenneth Lewinsky, Monica Brandeis, Louis, and privacy women feminism women, and privacy sexual harassment, and privacy electronic mail electronic mail, and privacy freedom of speech Internet Internet, and privacy Jones, Paula MacKinnon, Catharine pornography Warren, Samuel D. information v. knowledge Brandeis, Louis LB - 11960 PB - Random House PY - 2000 ST - The Unwanted Gaze: The Destruction of Privacy in America TI - The Unwanted Gaze: The Destruction of Privacy in America ID - 2543 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In early 1958, President Eisenhower asked Eric Johnston to call a bipartisan conference of opinion leaders in an effort to convince Americans to support greater foreign aid to other nations. The goal was "to inform a broad group of citizen leaders about Mutual Security, with the hope that they in turn would carry the facts to ever-widening groups of citizens." (54) Among those who attended were Eisenhower, Richard Nixon, Harry Truman, Adlai Stevenson, Lyndon Johnson, and John Foster Dulles. Rosenau devotes Chapter 2 to this conference (42-90) and Johnston's role in organizing it. AU - Rosenau, James N. CY - Princeton DA - 1963 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) nationalism Eisenhower administration community addresses motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and community Johnston, Eric, and community community, and motion pictures community, and Eric Johston motion pictures, and Cold War Cold War, and motion pictures capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism values, and motion pictures addresses speeches motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising advertising advertising, and motion pictures MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric, and capitalism capitalism, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and anticommunism democracy democracy, and capitalism capitalism, and democracy nationalism and communication motion pictures and nationalism presidents and new media Eisenhower, Dwight D. motion pictures, and Dwight Eisenhower Eisenhower, Dwight D., and motion pictures capitalism Cold War freedom MPAA war advertising and public relations values LB - 35110 PB - Princeton University Press PY - 1963 TT - National Leadership and Foreign Policy: A Case Study in the Mobilization of Public Support ID - 3151 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This history of science in American social thought argues that science was not the "handmaiden" of religion during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, but that religion and science did coexist peacefully during that time. As scientists began to consider heredity, lines of difference between science and religion became more sharply drawn. Genetic research before and after World War I thrived in the United States, Rosenberg says. “Americans played an extraordinarily important role in the formative period of modern genetics-- the years immediately following 1900. By the First World War this new subdiscipline was being pursued at least as successfully in the United States as in any other country. And this is not simply a nationalistically tinged impression. It was a circumstance agreed upon by contemporary biologists and is confirmed by a study of the references in any monograph on heredity written in the first two decades of this century.” AU - Rosenberg, Charles, E. CY - Baltimore DA - 1976 KW - genetics values science +artificial intelligence and biotechnology genetic engineering science and society science and religion eugenics values, and science scientific research, and government support Kuhn, Thomas LB - 10410 PB - John Hopkins University Press PY - 1976 ST - No Other Gods: On Science and American Social Thought TI - No Other Gods: On Science and American Social Thought ID - 2405 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book assesses programs that the United States government initiated between the 1890s and World War II to spread the influence of American business and ideas. Rosenberg divides the period into three distinct stages, each with a different kind of governmental role. These stages are labeled the Promotional State, the Cooperative State, and the Regulatory State. During each era, the government promoted American cultural and economic interests abroad. This period saw the United States move from a relatively minor player in international trade and politics to the dominant power in each of these fields. Rosenberg pays particular attention to World War I, when the United States government planned to take advantage of various international factors to displace Great Britain and Germany as the most powerful nation in Central and South America. The government used trade policy, communication expansion, and cultural exchange to great effect and did indeed ensure this transformation after the war. Rosenberg covers cable and news association, and motion pictures during the 1930s. This book is written in a clear, accessible style, and it offers insights into the evolving role of the United States government in international trade policy, foreign lending and currency issues, commercial and military communications, wartime propaganda, and efforts to promote American culture as a popular model for other nations to imitate. It also provides a useful bibliography. --Rob Rabe AU - Rosenberg, Emily S. CY - New York DA - 1982 KW - nationalism nationalism Asia public relations advertising news and journalism cultural imperialism news and journalism war non-USA journalism World War II imperialism +nationalism and communication +motion pictures cable Associated Press United Press Cooper, Kent Howard, Roy Rockefeller, J. D. +radio imperialism, cultural propaganda Germany China Japan Great Britain France World War II, and propaganda nationalism, and motion pictures nationalism, and radio nationalism, and cable Rabe, Rob World War I cultural imperialism nationalism, and news associations public relations advertising and public relations LB - 10380 PB - Hill and Wang PY - 1982 ST - Spreading the American Dream: American Economic and Cultural Expansion, 1890-1945 TI - Spreading the American Dream: American Economic and Cultural Expansion, 1890-1945 ID - 2402 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book, grew out of Rosenberg's Ph. D. thesis, and is a study of American interactions with Latin America during World War I. The United States used its communication (cable and wireless) and transportation (shipping) networks to establish its dominance in Latin America. The author develops themes in this book also in her work Spreading the American Dream (1982). World War I forced American policymakers to reassess the importance of Latin America. "Officials ceased to focus almost exclusively on the Canal area, as they had done prior to 1914, and expanded their interest to include South America. The war revealed an inconvenient, even dangerous, lack of unity in the hemisphere, and United States officials longed to rationalize Latin America into a harmonious group of stable democracies." United States business interests in Latin American, which used modern communication, helped spread American influence in the region. The government's efforts and fortuitous circumstances during the war also "combined to advance United States economic influence in Latin America. In the few years after 1914 the United States established an infrastructure for economic penetration of the hemispherebanks, cable and wireless communications, and shipping lines. United States news services began to familiarize Latin Americans with the United States." AU - Rosenberg, Emily S. CY - New York DA - 1987 KW - nationalism public relations advertising war non-USA World War I wireless communication propaganda nationalism and communication Latin America, and U.S. communication World War I, and Latin America radio wireless communication, and World War I cable, and Latin America +transportation propaganda, and Latin America cable World War I Latin America public relations advertising and public relations LB - 10400 PB - Garland Publishing, Inc. PY - 1987 ST - World War I and the Growth of United States Predominance in Latin America TI - World War I and the Growth of United States Predominance in Latin America ID - 2404 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is a well-researched and important book that argues that prior to World War I and the rise of Hollywood as the film capital, motion pictures dealt with problems of working people with directness and creativity, with a surprising number of people sympathetic to laborers making films. With the rise of Hollywood studios and wealthy producers, movies began to become much more conservative and anti-labor. During World War I, many of the new moguls worked for the U.S. government which discouraged pictures showing labor unrest in America. After the war, with the Red Scare following the Bolshevik revolution in Russia, movies reflected the anti-communist sentiments so prominent among the American public. Early silent films discussed openly the problems of class. Later movies promoted the myth of America as a classless society. Moreover, the movie theater during the silent era was anything but silent. It was often a loud, boisterous place where working people debated and discussed labor-related issue. “Movies were far more political and varied in their ideological perspectives during the silent era than at any subsequent time,” Ross writes. In “looking solely for films explicitly about labor and capital conflicts, I identified at least 605 movies made between 1905 (when nickelodeons appeared) and April 1917 (when the United States entered World War I) that could be classified as working-class films. Had I extended my search to include films that merely featured working-class characters the total number would have reached into the thousands.” “Class-conscious productions grew so popular by 1910 that movie reviewers began writing about the emergence of a new genre of ‘labor-capital’ films.” “Unlike most working-class films, labor-capital productions were highly polemical pictures that explored struggles among unions, strikers, capitalists, police, and government troops.... These movies also explored the activities of socialists, anarchists, nihilists, and communists. “In telling their stories, labor-capital films advanced a range of ideological perspectives unequaled in the history of American cinema. Political life at the turn of the century was far more varied and oppositional in nature than today.” These early silent films sometimes came from contemporary novels by the likes of Theodore Dreiser, Upton Sinclair, and Frank Norris. They also dealt with the problems of women workers, child labor, and discrimination against the elderly. Ross’s book should be read in conjunction with Kevin Brownlow’s Behind the Mask of Innocence, Charles Musser’s (with Carol Nelson), High - Class Moving Pictures: Lyman H. Howe and the Forgotten Era of Traveling Exhibition, 1880-1920, Kathryn Fuller’s At the Picture Show, and perhaps also Gregory A. Waller’s Main Street Amusements. These works all reveal that movies in the silent era, especially before the creation of the MPPDA (1922) and the Production Code (1930), dealt with a wide array of controversial topics, many of which were discouraged or forbidden by the Production Code Administration. Ross's book should also be read with works by Robert Sklar, Roy Rosenzweig (Eight Hours for What We Will), Gregory Waller, and others who have looked at movie audiences and working people. Ross writes: “My research eventually revealed six themes that struck me as especially important: first, class was a central theme in silent films, and audiences saw hundreds of movies that dealt with strikes, union organizing, and socialist efforts to overthrow American capitalism; second, workers and radicals made movies that challenged the dominant political ideals of the day and offered alternative visions for achieving a more democratic society; third, frightened that radicalism on the screen might inspire radicalism off the screen, censors and government authorities fought to keep these images out of American theaters; fourth, movies and the movie industry had a rich history well before the emergence of ‘Hollywood’ and its attendant studio system; fifth, working-class people were the industry’s main audience before American entry into World War I (April 1917) and it was not until the construction of movie palaces after the war that the bulk of the ‘middle class’ flocked to the movies on a regular basis; and sixth, the changing class composition of audiences in the 1920s was accompanied by a shift from highly polemical films that explored conflict between the classes to far more conservative films that emphasized fantasies of love and harmony among the classes.” “... During the past decades, an new generation of scholars rejected the idea that people ‘must be “cultural dopes,”’ and documented the intense interclass struggles over the reception and uses of mass culture. In Europe, Raymond Williams, Richard Hoggart, Stuart Hall, and others portray popular and mass culture as contested terrains of resistance and accommodation to the dominant ideas and values of society. In the United States, Roy Rosezweig, Frank Couvares, Kathy Peiss, and Lizabeth Cohen reject social-control models and show how working -class audiences often used various forms of mass culture to further specific class, gender, and ethnic needs. Practitioner of the ‘new’ film history also contest simplistic notions of a united bourgeoisie (that is, ruling capitalist class) easily imposing its will on movies and the movie industry. They show how economic, social, political, and technological pressures affected the content of film and the evolution of the film industry. Yet, although these studies have sharpened our understanding of the vibrant cultural struggles between different groups and classes, they still portray mass culture as something produced from above and see the power of the masses as confined largely to the realm of reception. Ross builds on these works by using four interrelated stories: "how silent filmmakers portrayed working people and their struggles; the rise and fall of the first worker film movement; the important role silent movies played in shaping modern class identities; and how the changing structure of the film industry, especially the emergence of what came to be known as Hollywood, effected all of the above. The title Working-Class Hollywood reflects the tensions within an industry that made working people the frequent subjects of its films but fought to keep worker filmmakers on its outskirts....” This book “is a story of one of the greatest power struggles in American history -- a struggle for the control of American consciousness.” Ross has a good opening chapter (“Going to the Movies: Leisure, Class, and Danger in the Early Twentieth Century”) on the movie-going experience and why movies and movie theaters were troubling to many people. Chapter 5 (“When Russia Invaded America: Hollywood, War, and the Movies) is good on World War I’s impact on working-class filmmaking. “Between 1917 and 1922, four developments interacted to shift cinematic discourses about class conflict and class relations in increasingly conservative directions: major transformations in the structure of the film industry; mounting public hysteria over perceived Communist threats; political pressure on filmmakers by federal agencies and state censors; and heightened labor militancy inside and outside the movie industry.” Ross argues that the "labor-capital films that came out of Hollywood during these years were shaped by the new corporate orientation of the movie industry and by the hopes and fears of government officials.... The anti-labor, anti-left films of the war and immediate postwar years were paralleled by the emergence of the movie industry as a major big business and by increased militancy among its workers. The largest Hollywood studios were now closer in their business practices to General Motors, Ford, and U.S. Steel than they were to the modest movie companies of a decade earlier. And so too were their labor problems.” AU - Ross, Steven J. CY - Princeton DA - 1998 KW - R & D audiences ethnicity women, and new media values religion new way of seeing seeing at a distance propaganda public relations propaganda advertising postmodernism modernism motion pictures war research and development military communication media effects sexuality media effects violence labor office children censorship and ratings World War I values motion pictures Hollywood motion pictures values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and silent movies motion pictures, and labor propaganda, and motion pictures World War I, and motion pictures Hollywood, and origins motion pictures, and themes motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and communism theaters motion pictures, and class new way of seeing, and motion pictures motion pictures, and progressive era labor labor, and motion pictures women women, and motion pictures children children, and motion pictures ethnicity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and ethnicity motion pictures, and progressive era theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and theaters media effects advertising and public relations children, and media LB - 6350 PB - Princeton University Press PY - 1998 ST - Working-Class Hollywood: Silent Film and the Shaping of Class in America TI - Working-Class Hollywood: Silent Film and the Shaping of Class in America ID - 2018 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This relatively short book (text 163 pages) examines the technology of early cinema and efforts to provide alternatives to celluloid film which was highly flammable. “After the worldwide publicity given the shocking fires at the Société Charité Maternelle in Paris in March 1897, in which 143 French socialites died, reports of private home screenings or upper-class venues outside strictly theatrical settings are almost nonexistent. The highly flammable celluloid that was an integral part of many moving picture shows meant that some social groups quickly decided to avoid involvement with the new medium. An apparatus that to lanternists was an exciting addition to their repertoire was seen by others as a danger to public safety. These conflicting views of different social groups shaped both the location and the acceptance of the new medium; it was to overcome such conflicts that inventors proposed the variety of alternative technologies that characterized the beginnings of the cinema.... Many of the alternative technologies proposed for moving pictures were a direct response to this characteristic of celluloid movies, and were attempts to bring the sensational new attraction to groups who rejected the dangers of celluloid.” AU - Rossell, Deac CY - Albany DA - 1998 KW - audiences materials materials cinema motion pictures celluloid film theaters +motion pictures motion pictures, and technology +motion pictures motion pictures, and technological innovations film, flammable celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid motion pictures, and origins theaters, and fire hazard celluloid, and alternatives motion pictures, and celluloid motion pictures, and origins theaters, and fire hazard, celluloid LB - 6360 PB - State University of New York Press PY - 1998 ST - Living Pictures: The Origins of the Movies TI - Living Pictures: The Origins of the Movies ID - 2019 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Because color “is a sensation,” it has the capacity to communicate feelings directly, the author writes in a chapter entitled "Communicating Feelings."(209) Part Five of this work has two chapters develop to the technology of color. Chapter 16 deals with the reproduction of color, and chapter 17 is "Added Colour." The author has tutored chemistry at St. Anne's College, Oxford, and is an avid photographer. AU - Rossotti, Hazel CY - Princeton DA - 1983 KW - censorship avant garde context art , color freedom color, and freedom color, and 1960s art, and color color, and art avant garde, and color color, and avant garde censorship, and color color, and censorship censorship and ratings color, and prejudice against sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, context context, and color color, and 1960s color, and sensations color, and light color, and technology color, and language color, and communication color, and psychology television color, and television television, and color color, and reproduction LB - 32450 PB - Princeton University Press PY - 1983 ST - Colour TI - Colour ID - 2904 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book deals with timekeeping from antiquity, through the Middle Ages, into the modern era. Most of the discussion deals with the period before the nineteenth century, although the last chapter, number 10, “Coordination and Acceleration: Time-Keeping and Transportation and Communications up to the Introduction of ‘World Time’ Conventions,” does carrying the story up through the coming of the railroad and the need for standardized time. Chapter 9 is on “Work Time and Hourly Wage.” This is a substantial book, although somewhat slow reading in its English-language translation. AU - Rossum, Gerhard Dohrn-van CY - Chicago DA - 1992, 1996 KW - time and timekeeping time preservation history, and new media timekeeping, and clocks history labor history timekeeping clocks, water clocks, mechanical change, acceleration of history, break with timekeeping, and transportation timekeeping, and world time world time standard time timekeeping, and standard time labor, and timekeeping timekeeping, and labor clocks change time LB - 2040 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1992 ST - History of the Hour: Clocks and Modern Temporal Orders TI - History of the Hour: Clocks and Modern Temporal Orders TT - (Translated by Thomas Dunlap)(Originally published as Die Geschichte der Stunde: Uhren und moderne Zeitordnungen [Munchen Wien, Carl Hanser Verlag, 1992]) ID - 1600 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Roszak writes that his is not so much interested in “the technology of computers, but in their folklore: the images of power, the illusions of well- being, the fantasies and wishful thinking that have grown up around the machine. Primarily, my target is the concept to which the technology has become inextricably linked in the public mind: information. Information has taken on the quality of that impalpable, invisible, but plaudit-winning silk from which the emperor’s ethereal gown was supposedly spun. The word has received ambitious, global definitions that make it all good things to all people. ... Like all cults, this one also has the intention of enlisting mindless allegiance and acquiescence. People who have no clear idea what they mean by information or why they should want so much of it are nonetheless prepared to believe that we live in an Information Age, which makes every computer around us what the relics of the True Cross were in the Age of Faith: emblems of salvation. Roszak maintained that "two distinct elements come together in the computer: the ability to store information in vast amounts, the ability to process that information in obedience to strict logical procedures." He explores these themes and their relation to thought chapters 5 and 6. He insists that “there is a vital distinction between what machines do when they process information and what minds do when they think. At a time when computers are being intruded massively upon the schools, that distinction needs to be kept plainly in view by teachers and students alike. But thanks to the cultlike mystique that has come to surround the computer, the line that divides mind from machine is being blurred. Accordingly, the power of reason and imagination which the schools exist to celebrate and strengthen are in danger of being diluted with low-grade mechanical counterfeits. “If we wish to reclaim the true art of thinking from this crippling confusion, we must begin by cutting our way through an undergrowth of advertising hype, media fictions, and commercial propaganda. But having done that much to clear the ground, we come upon the hard philosophical core of the cult of information, which is as much the creation of the academies and laboratories as of the marketplace. Gifted minds in the field of computer science have joined the cult for reasons of power and profit.” This work might be connected with Langdon Winner’s work and other critics of computer culture. AU - Roszak, Theodore CY - Berkeley DA - 1986, 1994 KW - computers advertising and public relations propaganda public relations public relations advertising communication revolution archives education community democracy Luddism libraries information technology libraries, and information storage Information Age general studies information v. knowledge democracy and media artificial intelligence computers Luddites, neo information age information age, and myth of communication revolution, and myth of myth +information storage information processing information technology, and education propaganda advertising cult of information +artificial intelligence and biotechnology critics communication revolution +computers and the Internet advertising, and computers computers, and advertising education, and computers computers, and education LB - 1160 PB - University of California Press PY - 1986 ST - The Cult of Information: A Neo- Luddite Treatise on High Tech, Artificial Intelligence, and the True Art of Thinking TI - The Cult of Information: A Neo- Luddite Treatise on High Tech, Artificial Intelligence, and the True Art of Thinking ID - 1512 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 35-page report deals with the “problem of long-term digital preservation, analyzes the inadequacies of a number of ideas that have been proposed as solutions, and elaborates the emulation strategy. The central idea of the emulation strategy is to emulate obsolete systems on future, unknown systems, so that a digital document’s original software can be run in the future despite being obsolete. Though it requires further research and proof of feasibility, this approach appears to have many advantages over the other approaches suggested and is offered as a promising candidate for a solution to the problem of preserving digital material far into the future.” This report came on the heels of a 1996 report by the Commission on Preservation and Access and the Research Libraries Group which concluded that at the time no way existed “to guarantee the preservation of digital information.” Not only was this a technical problem but it also was a legal one for “preserving digital information requires a legal environment that enables preservation.” It also requires a cooperative efforts from corporations, libraries, and governmental agencies. Three years later, Rothenberg’s report found that still there was “as yet no viable long-term strategy to ensure that digital information will be readable in the future. Digital documents are vulnerable to loss via the decay and obsolescence of the media on which they are stored, and they become inaccessible and unreadable when the software needed to interpret them, or the hardware on which that software runs, become obsolete and is lost. Preserving digital documents may require substantial new investments, in the scope of this problem extends beyond the traditional library domain, affecting such things as government records, environmental and scientific baseline data, documentation of toxic waste disposal, medical records, corporate data, and electronic-commerce transactions.” AU - Rothenberg, Jeff CY - Washington, D.C. DA - 1999 KW - primary sources preservation history and new media preservation archives electronic media history libraries libraries, and digital media libraries, and future libraries, and information storage libraries, electronic libraries, analog information delivery information processing +information storage information storage, and computers information storage, and digital media information storage, and microelectronics information storage, and miniaturization information storage, and technology information storage, and the Internet information storage, and obsolete technology history, break with electronic preservation preservation, electronic electronic preservation, and obsolete technology preservation, and obsolete technology history history, and digital media history, and computers history, and digital memory history, and electronic media history, and future history, and Internet history, and memory history, and microelectronics revolution history and new media history, and technology archives, and digital media preservation, and digital media archives Information Age LB - 11950 PB - Council on Library and Information Resources PY - 1999 ST - Avoiding Technological Quicksand: Finding a Viable Technical Foundation for Digital Preservation (A Report to the Council on Library and Information Resources) TI - Avoiding Technological Quicksand: Finding a Viable Technical Foundation for Digital Preservation (A Report to the Council on Library and Information Resources) ID - 2542 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - A biography of George Stephenson, whose life was virtually synonymous with the rise of the railway industry in Britain. Stephenson was responsible for many early endeavors, including the two first milestones, the Stockton to Darlington (1825) and the Manchester to Liverpool (1830) lines. Although this work does make some mention of the engineering and business aspects of the railways, its focus is largely on the details of Stephenson’s life. The biography is largely based on older studies from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, along with some private papers and documents. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Rowland, John CY - London DA - 1954 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories non-USA Wolf, Nicholas +transportation Great Britain railroads Great Britain, and railroads railroads, and Great Britain biography LB - 2010 PB - Odhams Press, Ltd. PY - 1954 ST - George Stephenson: Creator of Britain’s Railways TI - George Stephenson: Creator of Britain’s Railways ID - 289 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Rowland, John CY - New York DA - 1966 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories +television Baird, John Logie biography LB - 7270 PB - Roy Publishers PY - 1966 ST - The Television Man: The Story of John Logie Baird TI - The Television Man: The Story of John Logie Baird ID - 2097 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book examines the history of media research dealing with violence. It covers the period from the Payne Fund Studies (1928-1933) through the 1982 study by the National Institute of Health on Television and Behavior. The book is divided into three parts. Part I is "The Early History of Communication Research," and and devotes chapters to the rise of American social science research and the rise of mass communication research. Part II is "The History of Violence Effects Research," and has a chapter dealing with early research and politics from the Payne Fund Studies through the Dodd Senate Subcommittee hearings from 1961-1964. Chapter 5 deals with the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence (1968-1969), and Chapter 6 covers the Surgeon General's Scientific Advisory Committee (1969-1971). Chapter 7 then examines the "Immediate Aftermath of the Surgeon General's Report" in 1972. Part III is "The Exhaustion of Violence Effects." Chapter 8 is "The Emerging Policy Dilemmas (1972-1974)"; Chapter 9 is "The Continuing Research and Policy Debates (1975-1981)." Chapter 10 is "The Congressional Search for an Escape: The New Technologies of Deregulation," and it the period from the Van Deerlin Subcommittee hearings (1976-1977) to the NIMH's 1982 Report. The final chapter is "The Symbolic and Political Uses of Violence Effects." This work good behind-the-scenes information on various hearings and reports conducted on media violence over the years. It is informative, for example, on how conflicting interests in the Surgeon General's Scientific Advisory Committee eliminated scholars who had linked media violence and real-world aggression. Of the Surgeon General's Report in 1972, Rowland says that it was “a masterpiece of evasiveness.” Its “conflicting conclusions” were worded in such a manner that “if taken out of context,” said one historian, they “could be adduced to either side of the effects debate.” Small wonder that the press coverage of the final report was confusing. AU - Rowland, Willard D., Jr. CY - Beverly Hills, CA DA - 1983 KW - violence media effects media effects, and violence violence, and media effects television television, and violence violence, and television social science research, and TV violence social science research, and public policy public policy, and media effects research media effects research, and public policy television, and media effects media effects, and television Payne Fund Studies NIMH, and television violence television violence, and NIMH Surgeon General's Report (1972) television, and Surgeon General's Report (1972) National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) NIMH social science research Surgeon General LB - 30550 PB - Sage Publications PY - 1983 ST - The Politics of Violence: Policy Uses of Communication Research TI - The Politics of Violence: Policy Uses of Communication Research ID - 2816 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Violence in American mass media had become a problem in other countries by the mid-1970s. In Canada, American movies and television programs dominated the market – more than 90 percent of the films for which Canadian paid rental fees came from the United States. In 1977, Ontario’s Commission on Violence in the Communications Industry concluded that the “great weight of research into the effects of violent media contents indicates potential harm to society.” It found that Canadians – including children – were watching increasing amounts of American-made TV which had “much higher levels of violence” than programs produced in Canada or elsewhere, and television’s “escalation of violence” was “drawing other sections of the media along like the tail of a comet.” AU - Royal Commission on Violence (Ontario, Canada) CY - Toronto DA - [1977] KW - television, and media effects syntheses (of research) Surgeon General social science research media effects media violence media effects censorship and ratings children non-USA Canada +television violence television, and violence violence, and television violence, and social science research social science research, and violence children, and media +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures Surgeon General's Report (1972) violence children, and TV violence media effects, and television media effects, and TV violence (synthesis) syntheses media effects, and violence violence, and media effects reports social science research, and TV violence television, and social science television, and violence violence, and television media effects, and television children, and media children, and TV violence social science research, synthesis (violence) Canada, and media violence reports LB - 21990 M1 - 1 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Queen's Printer for Ontario ST - Report of The Royal Commission on Violence in the Communications Industry: Volume I: Approaches, Conclusions and Recommendations TI - Report of The Royal Commission on Violence in the Communications Industry: Volume I: Approaches, Conclusions and Recommendations ID - 872 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book offers a look at television production problems as they existed in 1948. AU - Royal, John F., ed. CY - New York DA - 1948 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins LB - 10890 PB - McGraw Hill PY - 1948 ST - Television Production Problems TI - Television Production Problems ID - 2451 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book reprints articles and papers that were written by people who made significant contributions to disc recording and reproduction -- “improvements that have made the phonograph the quality instrument that it is today.” According to the editor, there have been (up to 1978) “four major eras of improvements: (1) the introduction, in the mid-twenties, of electrical recording and the development of the all acoustic ‘Orthophonic Victrola’; (2) the submission of the fine groove records, 45's and LP’s, in the late forties; (3) the introduction of the stereophonic records some ten years later; and (4) the quadraphonic records of today.” The editor notes that “record standards were practically nonexistent until broadcasters, faced with the problem of playing records of different manufacture with varying response characteristics," discovered it was necessary to establish guidelines. The articles are divided into nine categories: Early History, Recording, Pickups, Measurements, Tracking Angle, Tracing Distortion, Groove Deformation Effects, Systems, and Quadraphonic Systems. Each section begins with the editor’s comments on the papers that follow. Part I: “Early History,” has four articles: W. S. Bachman, B.B. Bauer, and P. C. Goldmark, “Disk Recording and Reproduction"; J. P. Maxfield and H. C. Harrison, “Methods of High Quality Recording and Reproducing of Music and Speech based on Telephone Research"; Edward W. Kellogg, “Electrical Reproduction from Phonograph Records"; and H. A. Frederick, “Vertical Sound Records: Recent Fundamental Advances in Mechanical Records on ‘Wax’." AU - Roys, H. E., ed. CY - Stroudsburg, PA DA - 1978 KW - non-USA +sound recording sound recording, and discs sound recording, and records sound recording, and LP records sound recording, and history of Harrison, H. C. Maxfield, J. P. Edison, Thomas Berliner, Emile Kellogg, Edward high fidelity sound recording, and high fidelity sound recording, and stereo sound recording, and quadraphonic phonograph LB - 5560 PB - Dowden, Hutchingon [sic] & Ross, Inc. PY - 1978 ST - Disc Recording and Reproduction TI - Disc Recording and Reproduction ID - 1941 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Mobilizing Women for War is a comparative study of propaganda literature urging women to join the workforce in Germany and in the United States from just before and into World War II. Rupp focuses on this propaganda because "it was here that war offered the greatest challenge to the prewar public images of women." This work examines prewar images of women and measures how successfully they were mobilized into the wartime workforce in both countries. Rupp concludes that the adaptation of new public images of women to the demands of war allowed both German and American societies to accept employment by women who were previously homemakers without seriously challenging the common belief that a woman's place was in the home. "Rosie the Riveter," Rupp asserts, had no permanent impact on women's role in either society. -- Linda Friend The pre-WWII public image of womanhood in the United States and Germany was similar in many ways, with a strong emphasis on women’s role as wife and mother. As the war economy demanded that women leave the home and fill jobs traditionally held by men, each nation’s propagandistic image needed to be adapted to wartime reality. The Nazi ideal which poised women as mothers of the nation easily shifted women from making sacrifices for their family’s well-being to making sacrifices for their county’s war. The American ideal of the glamorized housewife was a harder sell, made possible only by an emphasis on the temporary nature of women as vital workers. In both cases, public images made room for women in the war without challenging social assumptions of women as homemakers. --Dale Erlandson AU - Rupp, Leila J. CY - Princeton, NJ DA - 1978 KW - war women propaganda World War II World War II, and women propaganda, and World War II women, and World War II women, and propaganda propaganda, and women Friend, Linda Germany non-USA Germany, and propaganda World War II, and German propaganda Germany, and women women, and Nazi Germany Erlandson, Dale LB - 29010 PB - Princeton University Press PY - 1978 ST - Mobilizing Women for War: German and American Propaganda, 1939-1945 TI - Mobilizing Women for War: German and American Propaganda, 1939-1945 ID - 32 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work discusses video art and notes that by 1965, the Sony Corporation had already introduced the Portapak, a mobile form of video technology that gave the individual movie maker the ability to record in many more locations. This hand-held camera and portable tape recorder sold for $1000 to $3000 compared to the $10,000 to $20,000 that television video cameras cost. By 1968, exhibition of video art had already been shown in many countries inclulding Great Britain, Canada, Argentina, Spain, Japan, and, of course, the United States. This book devotes chapters to video art "shaping a history," to the "conceptual body," to narrative, and the final chapter is entitled "Extensions." AU - Rush, Michael CY - London DA - 2003 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) corporations corporations , videotape VCRs color color, and videotape videotape, and color Portapak Sony, and videotape Sony, and Portapak television television, and videotape videotape, and art cameras cameras, and Portapak cameras, and videotape Sony Corporation magnetic tape magnetic recording LB - 31940 PB - Thames & Hudson PY - 2003 ST - Video Art TI - Video Art ID - 2838 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book began as a Ph.D. thesis in international relations at the University of Kent, Canterbury. Russell notes that developments in biotechnology will affect future international patterns of trade, the transfer of technology, and agricultural advances. “However, a more specific objective of this study is to examine the history of what has already happened from an international orientation. In particular, by focusing on the contentious discussions of safety, the emergent policy frameworks will be shown to be highly interdependent transnationally.” He notes that by “the 1980s genetic manipulation had achieved the status of ‘standard practice’ in microbiological laboratories, and commercial products of the new revolution were being marketed. The patenting of new forms of microbiological life produced by genetic manipulation is acceptable, and indeed so is patenting of the laboratory procedures themselves. Databanks are being established for the deposit of decoded DNA and machines have been produced capable, although in a limited fashion, of synthesizing strands of new DNA from component chemicals. If decoding and manipulating DNA represent the first steps, then writing new messages in the code may represent the next.” Russell focuses on the origins of the biotechnology revolution. As of 1984, he notes, there were already 1,200 firms actively involved in biotechnology worldwide. He attempts to assess how safety guidelines were developed, what biases may have been reflected in such guidelines, and whether or not other technologies were used as models. “As competition increases and the new biotechnology carves out its industrial niche, it will be become another significant industry tied into the complex economies and politics of international trade and development. Safety policy may remain essentially nationally based, but any potential hazards will surely be transnational.” The author reminds us to heed Aldous Huxley who in a 1946 introduction to Brave New World (1932) warned that science could end life or at least make living it “impossibly complex or uncomfortable.” (Huxley quoted by author) AU - Russell, Alan M. CY - New York DA - 1988 KW - technology nationalism corporations corporations, multinational technology and society genetics non-USA political economy +artificial intelligence and biotechnology biotechnology +nationalism and communication multinational corporations DNA genetic engineering Great Britain nationalism, and biotechnology technology transfer LB - 2490 PB - St. Martin’s Press PY - 1988 ST - The Biotechnology Revolution: An International Perspective TI - The Biotechnology Revolution: An International Perspective ID - 1642 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book presents technical information about color motion pictures processes developed in the United States (e.g., Technicolor and Eastman Color), as well as processes in other countries that had a significance influence in the American movie industry. Processes covered that were developed outside the United States in such areas and Great Britain, Europe, or Asia, include Kinemacolor, Fujicolor (Japan), Ferraniacolor (Italy), and Gevacolor (Belgium). Color processes have been classified into two general categories, Additive and Subtractive, with chapters devoted to aspects of each type of process. The work is base in part on publications in technical and trade journals, and it is clearly written. Appendices deal with Kenemacolor, Bi-pack Camera Instructions, Fox Nature Color Instructions, Technicolor Two-Color Instructions, and Technicolor Three-Color Instructions. This work also contains a nine-page glossary covering important terminology. Ryan notes that by 1975 Eastman Color films and processes had become the most popular in the United States, replacing Technicolor’s’s imbibition process. He also observes that cinematographers were finding it much easier to deal with color -- it was virtually no different than filming in black-and-white. By the time this book was finished color had become so easy to handle that the average amateur filmmaker could “obtain better color pictures by pointing a camera and pushing a button” that could the best professional using the most expensive equipment forty years earlier. AU - Ryan, Roderick T. CY - London and New York DA - 1977 KW - Fuji film motion pictures materials film cinema celluloid film +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures cameras, and color color, and cameras Technicolor Eastman Color Fujicolor Kinemacolor Agfa-Gevaert, and color film, and color +sound recording sound recording, and color motion pictures color, two-color processes color, three-color processes color, and processing color processing, additive color processing, subtractive color, cameras materials cameras color LB - 12620 PB - Focal Press PY - 1977 ST - A History of Motion Picture Color Technology TI - A History of Motion Picture Color Technology ID - 2608 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The inception of this book dates to 1975 when then chairman of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers’s (IEEE) History Division pointed to the need for better history of electricity and the electrical profession. The idea for this work, which is a popularly oriented account with illustrations, came from Donald Christiansen, then editor of IEEE Spectrum. The work is an informative account along the lines of Age of Innovation (1981), by the Editor of Electronics, and Steven Lubar’s Infoculture (1993). This book begins with the telegraph and invention of the electric light. It then discusses the growth of the electrical engineering profession; Marconi and wireless communication; the electric transit system and creation of electrical networks; semiconductors and solid state; developments during World War II; creation of the transistor and the integrated circuit; radar, rocketry, satellites, and satellite reconnaissance; television and the development of color TV; computers and the revolution in information (chapter 10); education for electrical engineer, and the professionalization of this field, including the history of the IEEE. An earlier, related work published by IEEE Press and edited by James Brittain is Turning Points in American Electrical History (1976). AU - Ryder, John D. and Donald G. Fink CY - New York DA - 1984 KW - R & D computers corporations tape recording, magnetic corporations corporations magnetic recording recording corporations corporations corporations tape recording transistors, and integrated circuits research and development war materials materials war non-USA World War II World War I utilities tape recorders recording tape recording research and development reconnaissance sound recording networks lighting general studies electricity computers and the Internet television radio vacuum tubes Colossus Enigma Eniac cryptography radar military communication engineering, electrical professionalization, and electrical engineering Marconi, Guglielmo IEEE wireless communication rocketry aeronautics and space communication satellites reconnaissance, satellite television, and color color, and television integrated circuits transistors semiconductors solid state networks, electrical Bell Laboratories AT & T Telstar Bush, Vannevar artificial intelligence and biotechnology De Forest, Lee Edison, Thomas education, and electrical engineering World War II, and research and development research and development, and World War II General Electric Company Faraday, Michael Great Britain utilities, public TVA generators, electrical Henry, Joseph motors lighting, electrical RCA World War I, and radio Sarnoff, David tape recorders telephones Shockley, William Bardeen, John Brattain, Walter Westinghouse Corporation Western Electric Company phonograph Terman, Frederick electronic media color education engineering generators professionalization computers computers and the Internet LB - 2520 PB - IEEE Press PY - 1984 ST - Engineers & Electrons: A Century of Electrical Progress TI - Engineers & Electrons: A Century of Electrical Progress ID - 1645 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a wide-ranging, if uneven, history of instructional technology. It is short on analysis and historical context, but provides a copious amount of factual information about technical and institutional developments; very few players are left out (even Abelard gets significant ink!). Makes an effort to link technology to instructional theories of John Dewey, Kilpatrick (the Project Method), along with learning theories of Thorndike, Skinner and Kurt Lewin. Chapters on the following topics: 1. Early Forerunners of Instructional Technology: Until 1700 2. Later Forerunners of Instructional Technology: 1700-1900 3. Beginnings of a Science and Technology of Instruction 1900 to the Present 4. Origins of School Museums 5. Emergence of the Instructional Film 6. The Audiovisual Instruction Movement: Emergence (1918-1942) 7. A Case Study: Instructional Technology in Industry and the Military During World War II 8. The Audiovisual Instruction Movement: Development 9. Evolution of Instructional Radio 10. Development of Instructional Television 11. The Rise of Programmed Instruction 12. The Systems Approach to Instruction: A Prospective View 13. Beginnings of Instructional Media Research: 1918-1945 14. Intensification of Instructional Media Research: 1945-1965 A revised edition of this book appeared in 1990 with the title The Evolution of American Educational Technology ( Englewood, Colo. : Libraries Unlimited). -Mark Van Pelt AU - Saettler, L. Paul CY - New York DA - 1968 KW - computers education democracy education, and new media Dewey, John Lewin, Kurt education, and museums museums war education education, and World War II World War II radio education, and radio radio, and education television television, and education education, and television democracy, and radio radio, and democracy democracy, and television television, and democracy media research social science research education, and computers computers, and education computers and the Internet Van Pelt, Mark computers LB - 34480 PB - McGraw-Hill Book Company PY - 1968 ST - A History of Instructional Technology TI - A History of Instructional Technology ID - 3086 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Long before the nations of Europe conquered and occupied most of Africa and Asia, the literature of novelists and intellectuals took for granted that the people of those distant territories were to be exploited for the benefit of the superior white race. This racist presumption became more pronounced after the Age of Empire actually began during the late nineteenth century. Even after imperialism and racist doctrine were passé, the culture of Western nations was deemed superior, perhaps subconsciously. Western artists, business executives, government officials, intellectuals, labor leaders, and scholars categorized, evaluated, and interpreted their counterparts in Africa, Asia, and Latin America without questioning their right to do so — acting on the belief that Western ways were the foundation for all endeavors. Communication has played an important role in the expansion of American influence, Said says. “This twinning of power and legitimacy, one force obtaining in the world of direct domination, the other in the cultural sphere, is a characteristic of classical imperial hegemony. Where it differs in the American century is the quantum leap in the reach of cultural authority, thanks in large measure to the unprecedented growth in the apparatus for the diffusion and control of information. As we shall see, the media are central to the domestic culture. Whereas a century ago European culture was associated with a white man’s presence, indeed with his directly domineering (and hence resistible) physical presence, we now have in addition an international media presence that insinuates itself, frequently at a level below conscious awareness, over a fantastically wide range. . . . “No one has denied that the holder of greatest power in this configuration is the United States, whether because a handful of American trans-national corporations control the manufacture, distribution, and above all selection of news relied on by most of the world (even Saddam Hussein seems to have relied on CNN for his news), or because the effectively unopposed expansion of various forms of cultural control that emanate from the United States has created a new mechanism of incorporation and dependence by which to subordinate and compel not only a domestic American constituency but also weaker and smaller cultures.” --James Landers AU - Said, Edward W. CY - New York DA - 1993 KW - nationalism corporations, multinational corporations journalism cultural imperialism news and journalism non-USA values political economy imperialism +nationalism and communication global communication cultural imperialism imperialism, Western values, and media colonialism CNN multinational corporations political economy communication, and empire Landers, James culture news, and multinational corporations nationalism, and news news, and capitalism news LB - 10420 PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 1993 ST - Culture and Imperialism TI - Culture and Imperialism ID - 2406 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This large book has useful information on the technology of filmmaking from 1895 through the 1970s. What the author’s thesis is, however, is less clear. One thread that runs throughout concerns the relation between film technology and average shot length. Still, the work, despite it descriptive information, is unsatisfying with regard to what it all means. In Part I, chapters 2-5 deal with film theory, and then chapters 6-9 deal with “Film Style and Technology” from 1895-1919. There follows a chapter on “Statistical Analysis of Motion Pictures -- Part I.” Part II has two chapters on “Film Style and Technology” during the 1920s, followed by a statistical analysis of movies during that period. Then follow five chapters, each devoted to a separate decade -- the 1930s, 1940s, 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. Then a chapter entitled “Stylistic Analyses of the Films of Max Ophuls,” an “Afterword,” and a Bibliography. Good material on the specifics of film technology but weak on analysis. --SV Salt, who earned a doctorate holder in physics before switching to film studies, disparages those who would propose a “scientific theory of film,” arguing that the speculations of film study hardly entail the accuracy of a proper science. He expresses confidence that the reader will acknowledge the superiority of his own interpretations. He also defends the scientific method against the onslaught of continental philosophy, particularly as practiced by the French. Amidst all the braggadocio, Salt has little to say about technology’s impact upon film, but does seem to take the position that the consciousness of the film maker, which is shaped by many factors, is the most important element in determining film content. The work relies almost exclusively on secondary sources; there is a bibliography, but no notes. --Gordon Jackson AU - Salt, Barry CY - London DA - 1983 KW - +motion pictures motion pictures, and technology +motion pictures motion pictures, and technological innovations motion pictures, and film style Jackson, Gordon motion pictures, and lighting motion pictures, and cameras motion pictures, and framing motion pictures, and printing motion pictures, and flexible film motion pictures, and framing LB - 6370 PB - Starword PY - 1983 ST - Film Style and Technology: History and Analysis TI - Film Style and Technology: History and Analysis ID - 2020 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - From SV's review of this work in Journalism Educator. Journalism and journalists have long been a staple of motion pictures, and the images of the news profession, “whether on the movie or television screen, and augmented by real-life experiences and examples, have been absorbed by generations through the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. They have more power on the American consciousness than the real thing,” (148) Joe Saltzman tells us in his book Frank Capra and the Image of the Journalist in American Film. Saltzman focuses on the films of Frank Capra, who perhaps more than any film maker created some of our most lasting cinematic images of journalists. Capra was not afraid to depict the profession’s flaws. But from his silent film The Power of the Press (1928), which starred Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., to the end of his career, Capra and his writers had a genuine affection for reporters and considered their work crucial to democratic government. In more recent times, Saltzman maintains, movies have been produced by people who are disdainful of “intrusive” journalists and they have created an “image of a harassing press” and “obnoxious” reporters. It is a troubling, if not “dangerous” trend, the author contends, and one that “undermines the public’s trust in the media.” (147) Saltzman writes from the perspective of a Capra fan and provides extended synopses of the films in which journalists had a significant role. He devotes sections to the depiction of male journalists, female reporters (“Hollywood’s sob sisters”), the editors, and the publishers and media tycoons. Capra’s newsmen often reflected the recollections of real-life reporters and when played by such stars as Fairbanks, Jr., Clark Gable (It Happened One Night, 1934), or Bing Crosby (Here Comes the Groom, 1951), they usually reflected “an old-style common-man reporter battling the upper class.” (37) More often than not, they were also fast talking, cynical, and hard-drinkers. Women reporters -- for example Loretta Young in Platinum Blonde (1931), Barbara Stanwyck in Forbidden (1939), Jean Arthur in Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (1936), and Rosalind Russell in His Girl Friday (1940), often were “independent, hardworking” (54) types who made mistakes and had to prove themselves to their male counterparts being accepted. Sometimes a cynical female journalists aided the hero in Capra’s movies. (73) Capra’s editors, usually played by character actors and known only by their last names, were essentially good people who made wayward reporters toe the line. Whatever the failings of Capra’s news people and editors, they could be counted on to serve the public interest. Not so with the media moguls and publishers in such movies as Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939), Meet John Doe (1941), and State of the Union (1948). They were villains who subverted the public trust and the pursuit of the truth in the pursuit of power and profit. On this point, Saltaman believes, Capra remains as relevant today as he was to the first half of the twentieth century. “Capra and his writers hated and feared control of the mass media by one person or group of person,” he writes. “The were wary of media conglomerates, of putting to much power in the hands of too few people.” (111) Saltzman limits himself primary to plot summaries of these work. He does not attempt to assess how the stories in Capra's films may have been influenced by movie censorship nor does he comment specifically on the technology of film making used by Capra. At the time of this book Saltzman was a professor at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Southern California, and this work was supported by "The Image of the Journalist in Popular Culture," a project of the Norman Lear Center. AU - Saltzman, Joe CY - Los Angeles DA - 2002 KW - news and journalism motion pictures motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures Capra, Frank myth motion pictures, and myth news, and motion pictures journalism, and myth journalism, and motion pictures news, and myth journalism news LB - 32960 PB - The Norman Lear Center, Annenberg School for Communication PY - 2002 ST - Frank Capra and the Image of the Journalist in American Film TI - Frank Capra and the Image of the Journalist in American Film ID - 2934 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume is a supplement to Cambridge University Press's three-volume American Studies: An Annotated Bibliography. The original three volumes covered literature produced between 1900 and 1983, and had 6,000 annotated entries. This supplementary volume covers only four years, 1984-88, and has 3,500 entries. These volumes cover eleven thematic areas: Anthropology; Art and Architecture; Autobiography and Memoirs; History; Law; Literature; Music; Political Science; Popular Culture; Religion and Science; Technology, Science and Medicine; and Sociology. This bibliography, the original three volumes and the supplement, is devoted only to books published in the United States. Scholarship relating to the history and social impact of communication technologies is scattered throughout this volume. The current volume is not indexed, although Volume 3 of the original bibliography is an Index for the literature up to 1983. AU - Salzman, Jack, ed. CY - Cambridge, Eng. DA - 1990 KW - bibliographies American Studies, bibliography bibliographies, American Studies bibliographies, annotated LB - 11060 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1990 ST - American Studies: An Annotated Bibliography, 1984-1988 TI - American Studies: An Annotated Bibliography, 1984-1988 ID - 2467 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This three-volume bibliography covers scholarship on American cultural studies from 1900 to 1983, and has about 6,000 entries. This bibliography is devoted only to books published in the United States. The bibliography is divided into eleven thematic areas. Volume I covers Anthropology and Folklore; Art and Architecture; History; and Literature. Volume II covers Music; Political Science; Popular Culture; Psychology; Religion; Science, Technology, and Medicine; and Sociology. Volume III is an Index to Volumes I and II. A supplementary volume published in 1990, American Studies: An Annotated Bibliography, 1984-1988, has another 3,500 entries on scholarship published during the mid-1980s. At the time of its publication, this work was the most comprehensive bibliography on American Studies. Scholarship on the history and social impact of communication technologies is scattered throughout these volumes. AU - Salzman, Jack, ed. CY - Cambridge, Eng. and New York DA - 1986 KW - bibliographies American Studies, bibliography bibliographies, American Studies bibliographies, annotated LB - 11070 M1 - 3 Volumes PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1986 ST - American Studies: An Annotated Bibliography [3 volumes] TI - American Studies: An Annotated Bibliography [3 volumes] ID - 2468 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Samuel argues that between 1946 and 1964, "American television -- and much of American culture -- was brought to you by television advertising." (ix) His goal is to reveal how commercial TV revived the "national mythology of the American Dream, that is, every citizen's birthright to achieve success, realize prosperity, and enjoy the fruits of consumer culture." (x) This topic, the author maintains, has not been treated in any substantial way in either scholarly or popular writing. Part of this resurgence of capitalism required that "Americas be retaught to not want to save money, to replace things that still worked." (ix) This drive to promote unrestrained consumerism was a sharp departure from the values that many Americans had held through World War II. This work is organized chronologically into six chapters, divided into three parts. Part I, "Home Sweet Home," covers the growth of post-World War II advertising and its relationship to the American Dream rooted in the family and domestic life. Part II, "Keeping Up With the Joneses," connections competition in the advertising and TV industries with the average citizen's efforts to keep up economically with their neighbors. Part III, "The New Society," examines the interrelationship between the rise of a youth oriented society during the 1960s with advertising and television. Samuel's uses contemporary journalistic accounts of advertising during the 1950s and 1960s as well as his own analysis of numerous TV ads from this period. AU - Samuel, Lawrence R. CY - Austin, TX DA - 2001 KW - nationalism corporations corporations corporations corporations Federal Communications Commission (FCC) advertising and public relations television television, and advertising advertising, and television nationalism and communication capitalism consumerism values advertising, and values advertising, and the American Dream American Dream, and advertising nationalism, and American Dream values, and advertising nationalism, and advertising advertising, and nationalism advertising, and television television, and advertising CBS children children, and advertising advertising, and children FCC advertising, and FCC FCC, and advertising motion pictures advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising General Electric Company NBC home and new media radio radio, and advertising advertising, and radio home, and advertising advertising, and home family, and advertising television, and family television, and home home, and television ABC print advertising, and print print, and advertising youth culture history, and advertising advertising, and history youth culture, and television youth culture, and advertising television, and youth culture advertising, and youth culture advertising regulation General Electric Company Company history home censorship and ratings children, and media LB - 29870 PB - University of Texas Press PY - 2001 ST - Brought to You By: Postwar Television Advertising and the American Dream TI - Brought to You By: Postwar Television Advertising and the American Dream ID - 2743 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book expands and updates Russell Sanjek’s third volume of American Popular Music and Its Business -- The First Four Hundred Years, published in 1989 by Oxford University Press. This text of this work runs 683 pages and is a richly detailed history of the music business from 1900 through 1996. Among themes that run through this work are how technological innovations have expanded outlets for music; how a small number of corporate conglomerates have come to control the music business and to profit from the work of creative artists; how during the century popular music forms have broadened and become increasingly democratic; and how technological innovations have forced changes in copyright laws (often a fifteen-year lag exists between the appearance of a new technology and full copyright protection for its use). While this work is not footnoted, it does have a lengthy bibliography. --SV Sanjak, a long-time employee and vice president of Broadcast Musicians Incorporated, has written an exhaustive account of the twentieth- century American music business, from the rise and fall of vaudeville to the emergence of the enormous entertainment conglomerates. His emphasis almost exclusively is on the economic history of the business, which makes it a rather tiresome read at 700 pages. --Gordon Jackson AU - Sanjek, Russell (updated by David Sanjek) CY - New York DA - 1988, 1996 KW - +sound recording law music +sound recording bibliographies, and sound recording sound recording, and business of music industry, and history of copyright, and sound recording copyright, and music industry piracy sound recording, and new technology copyright piracy, and sound recording sound recording, and piracy Jackson, Gordon +bibliographies LB - 5570 PB - Da Capo Press PY - 1988 ST - Pennies from Heaven: The American Popular Music Business in the Twentieth Century TI - Pennies from Heaven: The American Popular Music Business in the Twentieth Century ID - 1942 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author says that between 1909 and 1913 there were anywhere from 10,000 to 50,000 people who were attempting to write screen plays for moving pictures. (10) He discusses the theater and producing a photoplay. There is some discussion of tinting, or coloring, film (17). He notes the difficulties in making sound films. One problem is that after six minutes, the record runs out. As for censorship, Sargent says that "there is absolutely nothing to prevent the distribution and exhibition of a film not passed" by the National Board of Censorship, except that the movie would be stopped by the police in many cities. Censorship is justified in this work by the fact that movies are attended by so many young people. "The juvenile mind is receptive and observant," (134) the author says. But, most youth learn little films that they have not already learned elsewhere and moving pictures have gotten "an undeserved bad name." (134) The author of films should seek to restore cinema's good name. AU - Sargent, Epes Winthrop CY - New York DA - 1913 KW - theater stage fame fame celebrity censorship words vs. images actors acting motion pictures motion pictures, and juvenile delinqucy children and media media effects, and children children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children censorship and ratings censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and lighting lighting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures ref, secondary celebrity culture fame personality motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame images vs. words motion pictures, and writers writers, and motion pictures motion pictures, and stars democracy motion pictures, and democracy democracy, and motion pictures lighting media effects censorship ref, book children theaters LB - 40 PB - The Moving Picture World PY - 1913 ST - The Technique of the Photoplay TI - The Technique of the Photoplay ID - 1513 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a collection of letters, memoranda, addresses, and other communications that Sarnoff made between 1914 and 1967, in which he talks about modern media and their potential. The selections are divided into six categories: wireless communication, radio broadcasting, black-and-white television, color television, the communications revolution, and science, technology, and human affairs. These selections show Sarnoff to have been perceptive in seeing the potential of new media. In the view of Jerome B. Wiesner, who wrote the Foreword to this volume, Sarnoff's name deserves to be listed with Hertz, Marconi, Fleming, De Forest, Pupin, Bell, Edison, Armstrong, and Zworykin as one of the giants in the history of electrical communication. AU - Sarnoff, David CY - New York DA - 1968 KW - technology R & D entertainment corporations nationalism entertainment, home photography labor research and development war communication revolution journalism innovation home entertainment +future and science fiction news and journalism war home, and new media home World War II science satellites radio +sound recording phonograph office, and information technology home, and information technology newspapers news information technology +electricity +radio +television wireless communication +aeronautics and space communication +military communication Titanic RCA Young, Owen Marconi, Guglielmo radio, portable +sound recording phonograph, and radio radio, and phonograph radio, and politics radio, and newspapers newspapers, and radio radio, and shortwave television, and color television, and black-and-white +photography and visual communication color, and television communication revolution electronic media information technology, and home information technology, and office future satellites, and broadcasting satellites, and television television, and satellites technology and society +nationalism and communication inventions inventors Zworykin, Vladimir World War II, and communication technology and society science and society newspapers color office LB - 3650 PB - McGraw-Hill Book Company PY - 1968 ST - Looking Ahead: The Papers of David Sarnoff TI - Looking Ahead: The Papers of David Sarnoff ID - 1402 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author uses declassified documents and interviews to document the extensive involvement of the CIA in post-World War II cultural life. The CIA used front organization, philanthropic organizations to spread its influence. It started magazines, sponsored conferences and concerts. Saunders writes: "During the height of the Cold War, the US government committed vast resources to a secret programme of cultural propaganda in western Europe. A central feature of this programme was to advance the claim that it did not exist. It was managed, in great secrecy, by America's espionage arm, the Central Intelligence Agency. The centrepiece of this covert compaign was the Congress of Cultural Freedom, run by CIA agent Michael Josselson from 1950 until 1967. It achievements -- not least its duration -- were considerable. At its peak, the Congress for Cultural Freedom had offices in thirty-five countries, employed dozens of personnel, published over twenty prestige magazines, held art exhibitions, owned a news and features service, organized high-profile international conferences, and rewarded musicians and artists with prizes and public performances. Its mission was to nudge the intelligentsia of western Europe away from its lingering fascination wit Marxism and Communism towards a view more accommodating to 'the American way'. "Drawing on an extensive, highliy influential network of intelligence personnel, political strategists, the corporate establishment, and the old school ties of the Ivy League universities, the incipient CIA started, from 1947, to build a 'consortium' whose double task it was to inoculate the world against the contagion of Communism, and to ease the passage of American foreign policy interests abroad. The result was a remarkably tight network of people who worked alongside the Agency to promote an idea: that the world needed a pax Americana, a new age of enlightenment, and it would be called The American Century. "The consortium which the CIA built up -- consisting of what Henry Kissinger described as 'an aristocracy dedicated to the service of this nation on behalf of principles beyond partisanship' -- was the hidden weapon in America's Cold War struggle, a weapons which, in the cultural field, had extensive fall-out. Whether they liked it nor not, whether they knew it or not, there were few writers, poets, artists, historians, scientists or critics in post-war Europe whose names were not in some way linked to this covert enterprise. Unchallenged, undetected for over twenty years, America's syping establishment operated a sophisticated, substantially endowed cultural front in the West, for the West, in the name of freedom of expression. Defining the Cold War as a 'battle for men's minds' it stockpiled a vast arsenal of cultural weapons: journals, books, conferences, seminars, art exhibitions, concerts, awards. "Membership of this consortium included as assorted group of former radicals and leftist intellectuals whose faith in Marxism and Communism had been shattered by evidence of Stalinist totalitarianism...." (1-2) As historian Arthur Schlesinger notes, according to this book, "the CIA's influencw as not 'always, or often, reactionary and sinister.... In my experience its leadership was politically enlightened and sophisticated.'" (3) This work notes that after World War II, many Europeans who remember fascism reacted negatively to aggressively anti-communist films from Hollywood. Saunders notes that U. S. policy makers were slow to respond to European resentment to American movies and that during the early 1950s, the Soviets attempted to make inroads at such venues as the Cannes Film Festival. Cecil DeMille's "acceptance of a consultancy with the Motion Picture Service (MPS) was a coup for government propagandists." (288-9) The MPS advised the government on Hollywood films acceptable for showing in Iron Curtain countries. The author notes that by early 1954 there were several people in Hollywood who "understood 'the propaganda problems of the U. S.' and who were prepared 'to insert in their scripts and in their action the right ideas with the proper subtlety.'" (289) These people included DeMille, Eric Johnston, Darryl Zanuck, Spyros, Dore Schary, Nicholas Schenk, Barney Balaban, Jack and Harry Warner, Harry Cohn, Walt and Roy Disney, and others. This works also discusses efforts during the late 1940s by Hollywood to counter Soviet claims about racial discrimination in America. (291) AU - Saunders, Frances Stonor CY - New York DA - 1999 KW - nationalism Central Intelligence Agency nationalism and communication propaganda motion pictures capitalism democracy CIA propaganda, and CIA Johnston, Eric war Cold War LB - 35150 PB - The New Press PY - 1999 ST - The Cultural Cold War: The CIA and the World of Arts and Letters TI - The Cultural Cold War: The CIA and the World of Arts and Letters ID - 3155 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a series of interviews with notable cameramen. By 1984, when the book was published, they had become consummate professionals who typically served long apprenticeships and were highly attuned to the creative aspects of their work. The rise of the cinematographer has done much to undermine the auteur theory of film making, as it points up the necessarily collaborative nature of making a movie today. --Gordon Jackson This work has information about improvements in the technology of cinematography which affected adult films and mainstream entertainment alike. Several light-weight 35-mm cameras appeared in the early 1970s, the most significant of which was Panavision’s Panaflex 35 mm camera in 1973. Weighing twenty-five pounds, it carried 250 feet of film in its magazine, and made it possible to shoot in previously inaccessible places. As one cinematographer who had had to deal previously with a 165-pound camera put it, with a Panaflex you could move right into the bathroom and “without taking the walls out ... shoot scenes in there.” --SV AU - Schaefer, Dennis AU - Salvato, Larry CY - Berkeley DA - 1984 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories lighting oral histories +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and special effects motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and lighting lighting, and motion pictures cameras, and motion pictures cameras, and portable motion pictures, and cameras motion pictures, and new technology cinematography Panaflex cameras, Panaflex Jackson, Gordon color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and realism cameras LB - 19570 PB - University of California Press PY - 1984 ST - Masters of Light: Conversations with Contemporary Cinematographers TI - Masters of Light: Conversations with Contemporary Cinematographers ID - 791 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work provides the most comprehensive history of exploitation films. The work is also well-illustrated. This book is a good source for learning about movies outside the mainstream that featured nudity and sexuality, horror, drug use, and more. The author writes that he has "concentrated on examples of nudity and sexual display because these served as the dominant forms of spectacle in exploitation films. Other types of spectacle were included, such as microscopic views of biological processes and the depiction of drug use." Exploitation movies "relied on forbidden spectacle to differentiate themselves from classical Hollywood narrative films and conventional documentaries. As such, they were related to the cinematic tradition Tom Gunning has called 'the cinema of attractions.'" Of special values is the book's "Filmography" in Appendix 2 (345-87). AU - Schaefer, Eric CY - Durham, N. C. DA - 1999 KW - exploitation circuit sexuality sex sexuality nudity media effects media violence law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and exploitation circuit exploitation circuit censorship, and exploitation circuit exploitation circuit, and censorship violence violence, and exploitation circuit nudity, and exploitation circuit abortion, and exploitation circuit sex hygiene, and exploitation circuit exploitation circuit, and violence exploitation circuit, and nudity exploitation circuit, and abortion exploitation circuit, and sex hygiene exploitation circuit, and violence motion pictures, and horror films cinema of attractions bibliographies, and exploitation films bibliographies, and filmography abortion +bibliographies LB - 20650 PB - Duke University Press PY - 1999 ST - "Bold! Daring! Shocking! True!": A History of Exploitation Films, 1919-1959 TI - "Bold! Daring! Shocking! True!": A History of Exploitation Films, 1919-1959 ID - 439 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work examines the role that landscape has played in the cultures of Western Europe and America. Schama considers how the idea of landscape has been presented in art, literature, and photography. AU - Schama, Simon CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - nationalism photography non-USA +nationalism and communication +photography and visual communication painting environment, and landscape Germany Great Britain Europe environment nationalism, and painting LB - 10430 PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 1995 ST - Landscape and Memory TI - Landscape and Memory ID - 2407 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This autobiography cover producer-director Dore Schary's career in motion pictures. It covers such topics as the Hollywood Ten, Eric Johnston, politics and the movie industry, and such controversial movies as Blackboard Jungle. AU - Schary, Dore CY - Boston DA - 1979 KW - self-regulation motion pictures motion pictures, auto Hollywood Ten Production Code (1956) Blackboard Jungle censorship and ratings motion pictures, and reform freedom capitalism democracy motion pictures, and freedom motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and democracy Johnston, Eric Hollywood Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 35710 PB - Little, Brown and Company PY - 1979 ST - Heyday: An Autobiography TI - Heyday: An Autobiography ID - 3210 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is Volume 6 in Scribner's History of American Cinema Series (Charles Harpole, editor). Schatz wrote several chapters in this volume but other authors have also contributed. Janet Staiger discusses the Hollywood Studio System in 1940-1941; Mary Beth Haralovich deals with that system between 1942 and 1945; Clayton R. Koppes writes about the Office of War Information and the Production Code Administration; Gorham Kindem discusses the Screen Actors Guild and the House Committee on Un-American Activities after World War II; Thomas Doherty writes about documenting the 1940s; Christopher Anderson covers Hollywood and television during the 1940s; and Lauren Rabinovitz looks at avant-garde and experimental films during this decade. Scattered throughout this work are observations about new technology and filmmaking. In addition to Anderson’s discussion of TV and the film industry, Rabinovitz, for example, deals with how avant-garde cinema benefitted with the increased use of 16mm film and camera during and after World War II. This work has a relatively short bibliography covering works published mostly before 1994. AU - Schatz, Thomas CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - OWI Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA corporations audiences self-regulation Production Code PCA corporations Federal Communications Commission (FCC) CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) women, and new media Roosevelt, Franklin administration presidents, and new media Reagan administration public relations advertising Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. MPAA news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines Hollywood cinema motion pictures celluloid film regulation substance abuse drug abuse values religion law censorship and ratings war non-USA 16mm +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture +television television, and Hollywood motion pictures, avant-garde films censorship motion pictures, and censorship Office of War Information (OWI) Production Code Administration (PCA) African-Americans, and motion pictures motion pictures, and African Americans HUAC Screen Actors Guild blacklisting block booking 16mm film cameras, 16mm film, 16mm FCC Breen, Joseph motion pictures, and Great Britain Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures Japan, and motion pictures Japan motion pictures, and Japan stereotypes, Japanese newsreels motion pictures, newsreels motion pictures, and magazines magazines, and motion pictures MPPDA MPAA MGM Columbia Pictures Warner Bros. Paramount Pictures film noir propaganda propaganda, and motion pictures motion pictures, and propaganda RKO Hollywood Ten Reagan, Ronald Roosevelt, Franklin, and motion pictures Technicolor motion pictures, and color color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor United Artists Universal Pictures women women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women World War II World War II, and motion pictures motion pictures, and World War II experimental films motion pictures, and experimental films motion pictures, and avant garde films television, and FCC motion pictures, and FCC FCC, and television FCC, and motion pictures theaters drive-in theaters theaters, and drive-ins motion pictures, and drive-ins cameras advertising and public relations Roosevelt, Franklin D. materials news African Americans LB - 12060 PB - Charles Scribner's Sons PY - 1997 ST - Boom and Bust: The American Cinema in the 1940s TI - Boom and Bust: The American Cinema in the 1940s ID - 2553 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work provides a good overview of obscenity and the law. A law professor at the University of Michigan, Schauer had written this book for legislators, judges, and prosecuting attorneys. During his career, Schauer had defended the producers of the movie Deep Throat. During 1985-86, he was considered a middle-of-the-roader on the Meese Commission which studied and made recommendations about combatting pornography. He wrote the “Overview and Analysis” section of the Commission's Final Report (1986). In this Statement that appears in the Final Report, Schauer expressed the hope that the Commission's work would “ be read rather than summarized, ... be thought about rather than used as rallying cry or flag of battle, and ... be as much the beginning of serious discussion and debate rather than the end of it.” AU - Schauer, Frederick F. CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1976 KW - U. S. Supreme Court Supreme Court (U. S.) values values obscenity court cases context law context, and law obscenity, and law law, and obscenity Supreme Court (U. S.), and obscenity obscenity, and court cases, obscenity context, and obscenity censorship censorship and ratings LB - 13120 PB - Bureau of National Affairs, Inc. PY - 1976 ST - The Law of Obscenity TI - The Law of Obscenity ID - 486 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Harold Schechter strongly defends one argument: modern day (American) society has not become more violent compared to the standards of previous generations. In fact, he claims that society has actually become less violent. He manages to make a case for his argument by comparing today’s society to previous decades and previous centuries. In his boyhood in the late 1950s, for instance, playing with toy guns and “killing” each other with them was perfectly normal, while today youth prefers to play videogames. These videogames can be violent, too, but kids generally do not fight each other over what they see or experience in videogames. Schechter goes beyond that simple (but often repeated) example by taking the reader back to the savage (European) Dark Ages, where he gives examples of violent (capital) punishments and torture methods that were common in those days. Closer to home, he stresses the popularity of public hangings in the United States which occurred until the mid-1930s. Many people surely would want to witness such spectacles in the early 21st century, Schechter arges. Many readers may be inclined to believe Schechter when he maintains that the connection between violence on television, in the movies and in videogames and actual human behavior has never been proven, but this book is a little too shallow in its choice of subjects and use of sources to be totally convincing. Schechter is a professor of literature at Queen's College. His earlier work includes Film Tricks: Special Effects in the Movies (1980), with David Everitt, and Deviant: The Shocking True Story of the Original "Psycho" (1989). -- Bart Nijman AU - Schechter, Harold CY - New York DA - 2005 KW - Nijman, Bart violence media effects children and media children, and media violence violence, and entertainment violence, and children television motion pictures video games video games, and violence motion pictures, and violence television, and violence violence, and television violence, and motion pictures violence, and video games violence, and history media effects, and violence violence, and media effects violence, and children special effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and special effects television, and special effects special effects, and television special effects, and video games video games, and special effects children special effects LB - 41630 PB - St. Martin's Press PY - 2005 ST - Savage Pastimes: A Cultural History of Violent Entertainment TI - Savage Pastimes: A Cultural History of Violent Entertainment ID - 4261 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book covers advances in special effects technology in the movies. Horror movies became much more gruesome during the late 1960s and 1970s than they had been in previous decades in both storylines and special effects. Many of these films were relatively low-budget pictures. A few achieved cult status. George Romero’s Night of the Living Dead (1968), an independently distributed film shot in black and white, showed dead people rising from their graves to hunt the living in order to devour their flesh. Romero’s sequel, Dawn of the Dead (1979) was filmed in color and showed people in a shopping mall fighting and being attacked by zombies who could only be killed by having their brains destroyed. Early in the movie one particularly graphic scene shows a man’s head being shot off. Tobe Hooper’s Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974), a low-budget film about cannibalism, based loosely on Wisconsin serial killer, Ed Gein, used scenes in which viewers saw the chainsaw slicing into the flesh of victims. Actors wore sheet metal covered with packets of blood and raw steak under their clothing. A big-budget, mainstream horror picture by William Friedkin about demonic possession, The Exorcist (1973), starring Max Von Sydow, Linda Blair, and Ellen Burstyn, took special effects to a new level. Effects specialists Marcel Vercoutere and Dick Smith created a series of life-like masks for Blair to wear. Perhaps the most sensational scene in the film showed Blair apparently rotating her head 360 degrees. To create the effect, a replica of the star’s head was mounted on an axle and the eyes were operated by remote control. The Exorcist became a box office blockbuster earning ten Academy Award nominations, winning two. Virtually every major Hollywood studio hurried to try to copy Warner Bros.’s success. AU - Schechter, Harold AU - Everitt, David CY - New York DA - c1980 KW - motion pictures media effects media violence horror motion pictures and popular culture special effects special effects, and horror horror films, and special effects violence violence, and special effects special effects, and violence motion pictures, and violence LB - 21930 PB - Harlin Quist PY - 1980 ST - Film Tricks: Special Effects in the Movies TI - Film Tricks: Special Effects in the Movies ID - 55 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work has neither notes nor bibliography. Still, it is a clearly written introduction to the recording industry beginning with Thomas Edison’s phonograph up through the early 1970s and the creation of “surround sound.” This book is particularly helpful in dating the development of such inventions as the long-playing record in 1948, the development of tape recording during and after World War II, and other postwar developments such as high fidelity and stereo. Part II devotes space to explaining “The Anatomy of a Record Company.” AU - Schicke, C. A. CY - Boston DA - 1974 KW - CDs tape recording, magnetic magnetic recording tape recording sound recording materials materials war World War II tape recorders recording sound recording music music industry, and history of sound, and LP records sound, and records sound 45 rpm tape recording sound stereo high fidelity sound, and high fidelity sound, and stereo phonograph Edison, Thomas World War II, and sound recording sound, and World War II sound recording tape LB - 5590 PB - Little, Brown and Company PY - 1974 ST - Revolution in Sound: A Biography of the Recording Industry TI - Revolution in Sound: A Biography of the Recording Industry ID - 1944 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Schiffer, Michael B. CY - Tucson DA - c1991 KW - technology radio +radio technology and society radio, portable radio, personal LB - 5960 PB - University of Arizona Press PY - 1991 ST - The Portable Radio in American Life TI - The Portable Radio in American Life ID - 1981 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Schiller, Herbert I. CY - Boston: DA - 1973 KW - R & D nationalism advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations new media research and development war satellites information technology community democracy war non-USA democracy and communication information technology, and democracy new media, and democracy corporations, multinational multinational corporations satellites, and communication +military communication +television television, and advertising advertising, and television +nationalism and communication advertising +aeronautics and space communication corporations capitalism LB - 60 PB - Beacon Press PY - 1973 ST - The Mind Managers TI - The Mind Managers ID - 96 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The United States was one of the few modern nations to allow its radio system to develop privately. The resultant commercial system served as the model for television. Other nations, which had resisted the commercialization of state-operated radio systems, allowed wholesale or partial commercialization of their television systems, based on the American model. American networks and independent producers supplied much of the programming for these systems because the cost was low and the entertainment value was deemed apolitical and inoffensive. The cultural cost of this programming was not considered. The relationship of the mass communications system to the industrial producer system was crucial to the stimulation of the economy, both in the United States and elsewhere. When satellite technology was developed by the United States, the commercial potential of a truly international communication system was appreciated by investors and policymakers. Government and business cooperated to establish American dominance. --James Landers AU - Schiller, Herbert I. CY - Boulder, CO DA - 1969, 1992 KW - nationalism corporations corporations Federal Communications Commission (FCC) advertising, and public relations censorship and ratings propaganda public relations public relations advertising journalism cultural imperialism regulation news and journalism war non-USA news nationalism and communication +aeronautics and space communication satellites +radio +television cultural imperialism imperialism propaganda capitalism, and communication empire, and communication global communication FCC deregulation advertising news, and corporate bias Third World Cold War Comsat (Communication Satellite Corporation) AT & T capitalism culture Landers, James LB - 10470 PB - Westview Press PY - 1969 ST - Mass Communication and American Empire TI - Mass Communication and American Empire ID - 2411 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work covers several topics -- the lamp (e.g., fire and flame, gaslights, electrical); street lighting, including flood lights; night life, including shop windows; the drawing room; and the stage. The chapters on stage lighting considers the impact of the darkening of auditoriums with the appearance of the diorama in 1822, and the magic lantern, and finally film. “The power of artificial light to create its own reality only reveals itself in darkness,” the author says. “In the dark, light is life.... The illuminated scene in darkness is like an anchor at sea. This is the root of the power of suggestion exercised by the light-based media since Daguerre’s time. The spectator in the dark is alone with himself and the illuminated image, because social connections cease to exist in the dark. Darkness heightens individual perceptions, magnifying them many times.” In the pre-electrical era, primitive footlighting often conspired to give actors an unnatural appearance. “If we see the source of light at the actor’s feet, do we not assume that it must be coming straight from Hell?” asked author Jean Baptiste Pujoulx in 1801. AU - Schivelbusch, Wolfgang CY - Berkeley and Muchen Wien DA - 1983, 1988 (translated from the German by Angela Davies) KW - magic audiences theaters motion pictures electricity lighting lighting, and film lighting, and stage theaters, and lighting actors, and image of actors, and lighting electricity, and stage motion pictures, and electricity theaters, and electricity magic lanterns diorama, and stage stage, and diorama panoramas, and stage stage, and panoramas panoramas electricity, and cities electricity, and street lighting lighting, and lamps lighting, and gas lamps cities, and electrical lighting acting actors stage LB - 27170 PB - University of California Press and Carl Hanser Verlag PY - 1983 ST - Disenchanted Night: The Industrialization of Light in the Nineteenth Century TI - Disenchanted Night: The Industrialization of Light in the Nineteenth Century TT - Lichtblicke. Zur Geschichte der kunstlichen Helligkeit im 19. Jahrhundert ID - 1274 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author of this study delves into the many less tangible aspects of the advent of the railway, particularly its impact on culture and mentalities. In particular, the author considers themes such as velocity, frictionless travel, and mechanization as new metaphors for nineteenth-century thought. Chapters are devoted to the contrast between old and new forms of travel, time, space, glass and steel as building materials, perceptions of travel, social hierarchy, and health anxieties as these themes intersected with train travel. Another useful chapter compares and contrasts the technological and aesthetic aspects of the railway in Europe with those in America. Although this study considers all of Europe, most of its information is highly relevant to the British case, which is cited frequently throughout. A quality source for understanding both the social impact of the railway and its influence on communication, including telegraphy. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Schivelbusch, Wolfgang (translated by Anselm Hollo) CY - New York DA - 1979 KW - technology time and timekeeping time values non-USA Wolf, Nicholas +transportation Great Britain railroads Great Britain, and railroads railroads, and Great Britain Europe metaphors metaphors, and railroads railroads, and metaphors time space (spatial) railroads, and time railroads, and space (spatial) values, and railroads technology and society values LB - 2020 PB - Urizen PY - 1979 ST - The Railway Journey: Trains and Travel in the Nineteenth Century TI - The Railway Journey: Trains and Travel in the Nineteenth Century ID - 290 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a first-rate intellectual history of the way in which mass media and advertising have transformed American holidays -- Christmas, Valentine's Day, Easter, and Mother's Day. The author, a student of theology, does not see mass advertising completely undermining the religious significance of our scared holidays. Rather, these occasions have been joined with consumerism into something similar, yet different from earlier times. The sacred and secular have merged. The book is nicely illustrated. Especially interesting are pictures of early twentieth century department stores designed in religious motifs -- secular cathedrals of consumption. --SV This book is about how holidays, both religious and secular, have been changed by commercialization. "The mall, not church,’ has become the place for our interest in Easter. The marketplace has come to serve as the “obvious arena of holiday preparation, observance, and enthrallment – a central location for the commemoration of Christianity's most important holy days as well as for the enactment of America's most prominent civic holidays." (3) Modern consumer culture marks traditional holidays with advertising, which has become a supplement to community celebration. "This concern plays on an essential nostalgia in modern industrialized societies for the genuine, the handcrafted, the authentic, or the real. Modern holidays and their rituals are often thought to be sadly insubstantial, ersatz, or hollow; they are never so good, genuine, joyous, or fulfilling as they used to be. The suspicion that the holidays have somehow been worked up by Hallmark or Macy's, that the holidays are not our own, hangs like a shadow over modern American celebration," Schmidt writes. --Amanda Novak AU - Schmidt, Leigh Eric CY - Princeton DA - 1995 KW - photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations values values advertising values, and advertising capitalism, and religion general studies department stores +photography and visual communication color capitalism capitalism, and advertising values, and capitalism advertising, and values advertising, and holidays advertising, and religion religion, and advertising Novak, Amanda religion LB - 10480 PB - Princeton University Press PY - 1995 ST - Consumer Rites: The Buying and Selling of American Holidays TI - Consumer Rites: The Buying and Selling of American Holidays ID - 2412 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Magazines were transformed beginning in the 1890s and lasting until World War I. From periodicals directed at a genteel culture, magazines became a popular mass medium, national in scope. Social and economic factors created a mass readership of middle-class men and women. Some magazines served their readers by focusing on important social issues, such as reform of municipal government, abolishing child labor, eradicating slums, and expanding education. Other magazines emphasized new developments in technology and science. Overall, the magazines believed in human progress, that society was improving and would continue to do so. --James Landers AU - Schneirov, Matthew CY - New York DA - 1994 KW - photography news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers journalism news and journalism values reform news magazines +books, periodicals, newspapers Landers, James muckraking news, and magazines values, and magazines reform, and magazines magazines, and reform popular culture +photography and visual communication LB - 10490 PB - Columbia University Press PY - 1994 ST - The Dream of a New Social Order: Popular Magazines in America, 1893-1914 TI - The Dream of a New Social Order: Popular Magazines in America, 1893-1914 ID - 2413 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Schramm, Wilbur CY - Stanford DA - 1964 KW - nationalism modernism modernity non-USA modernity +nationalism and communication modernism Third World LB - 10500 PB - Stanford University Press PY - 1964 ST - Mass Media and National Development TI - Mass Media and National Development ID - 2414 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book considers how the first generation of radio users thought about this invention. In Part One (“The Era of Maritime Adoption”), chapters 2-4 are entitled: “Many Ships Acquire Voices”; “Beginnings of a New Radio in a New Land”; and “Radio Becomes a Maritime Necessity but the Atlantic Remains as Wide as Ever.” Among the chapters in Part Two ("The Era of Military Use”) are “High Power Chains”; and “War.” From Part Three (“The Era of Popular Use”), chapters 10 and 11 are “The Radio Boom” and “Ethereally Linked Continents,” respectively. AU - Schubert, Paul CY - New York DA - 1928, 1971 KW - U. S. Navy R & D research and development war government war non-USA radio +radio +military communication wireless communication global communication U. S. Navy, and wireless communication radio, maritime military, and radio LB - 5970 PB - Arno Press and the New York Times; originally by Macmillan Company PY - 1928 ST - The Electric Word: The Rise of Radio TI - The Electric Word: The Rise of Radio ID - 1982 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work surveys the nature of news in American society during the past three centuries. The author maintains that news is a genre of writing, and that it is a cultural product complete with is own literary and social implications. Schudson examines what he calls "media illusions" of authority and power. Many of journalism's defects are rooted in the profit motive. The "press more often follows than leads, it reinforces more than it challenges conventional wisdom. Views at the margins get little coverage, not because they lack validity or interest but because they lack official sponsorship. If the corporate structure of the media does not in itself determine news content, it still tends to marginalize some news and some ways of telling the news. It still tends to subordinate news values to commercial values." AU - Schudson, Michael CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1985 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations journalism community democracy news and journalism news myth +books, periodicals, newspapers news, and nature of news, and corporate bias news, and capitalism +television television, and news news, and television myth, and news advertising, and news public sphere democracy and media advertising news, and democracy democracy, and news television, and democracy democracy, and television LB - 10440 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1985 ST - The Power of News TI - The Power of News ID - 2408 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is an account of the changing nature of news in American culture. Schudson examines the emergence of the ideal of objectivity and its critics. AU - Schudson, Michael CY - New York DA - 1978 KW - presses advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations propaganda advertising public relations advertising journalism community democracy news and journalism war World War I public relations propaganda paper news +books, periodicals, newspapers presses, printing presses, Koenig paper, and machine made penny press objectivity news, and objectivity news, and professionalism Pulitzer, Joseph Hearst, William Randolph New York Times World War I, and propaganda propaganda, and World War I news, and World War I public relations pseudoevents news, and public relations muckraking +television news, and television Watergate Lippmann, Walter democracy and media advertising, and news public sphere advertising papermaking, and machines news, and democracy democracy, and news democracy and media LB - 10450 PB - Basic Books PY - 1978 ST - Discovering the News TI - Discovering the News ID - 2409 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work provides a good overview of film and TV censorship. It considers the Production Code and also efforts to create a code for television. The also covers the debate over movie classification -- rating films according to their appropriateness for children -- during the early 1960s. It offers an interesting look at the controversies leading up to the adoption of the rating system in 1968, although the work appeared four years before that system was put into place. AU - Schumach, Murray CY - New York DA - c1964, 1975 KW - classification self-regulation Production Code (TV) Production Code homosexuality values Production Code (motion pictures) sexuality nudity values religion censorship and ratings children law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship +television television, and censorship censorship, and television Production Code (motion pictures) television, and Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code, and television motion pictures, and classification classification motion pictures, and state censorship censorship, and Supreme Court motion pictures, and nudity motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality, and motion pictures nudity, and motion pictures Breen, Joseph children, and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Hays, Will H. Johnston, Eric LB - 21110 PB - Da Capo Press PY - 1964 ST - The Face on the Cutting Room Floor: The Story of Movie and Television Censorship TI - The Face on the Cutting Room Floor: The Story of Movie and Television Censorship ID - 912 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a collection of essays, some previously published, others appearing for the first time. The work’s Introduction is entitled “Humanism and the New Media,” and sets the tone. “Unlike print, which today maintains vast separations among people, the new media are holistic, which is to say that they bring together what societies and traditional media have kept apart. The new media have accurately been called the central nervous system of humanity, connecting human beings much the same way the individual’s nervous system connects him to his body.” It argues that the “new media do have enormous potential for democratizing the decision-making apparatuses of society,” but “without access to and control over the role these media will play in our lives, we can have only a less hopeful vision of the future.” Among the new media in 1973 that promised vast changes were: “satellite communication, color television, cable relay television, cassettes, videotape, videotape computer systems, video phones, electrostatic reproduction techniques, laser communication, electronic high-speed printing, electronic learning machines, printing by radio, time-sharing computers, generalized data banks, telepathy, various parapsychological phenomena, holography, biofeedback, and interstellar communication.” These new media were also capable of creating “innumerably varied hybrid media.” This work includes selections by R. Buckminister Fuller (“Utopia or Oblivion”), Kingsley Widmer (“Sensibility under Technocracy: Reflections on the Culture of Process Communications”), John Lilly (“Mental Health and Communication”), Norbert Wiener (“Cybernetics in History”), Jagjit Singh (“Language and Communication”), Barry Schwartz (“Video Tape and the Communications Revolution”), Barry Schwartz and Jay-Garfield Watkins (“The Anatomy of Cable Television”), Robert E. L. Masters and Jean Houston (“Subjective Realities”), Isaac Asimov (“I Can’t Believe I Saw the Whole Thing!”), James Freedman and Henry Korn (“Somebody up There Likes Me”), Bernard Law Collier (“Brain Power: the Case for Bio-Feedback Training”), Barry Schwartz (“Lewis – The Electronic Person”), Sam Keen (“From Dolphins to LSD: A Conversation with John Lilly”), Paul Pietsch (“Shuffle Brain”), and Peter C. Goldmark (“Tomorrow We Will Communicate to Our Jobs”). AU - Schwartz, Barry N., ed. CY - Englewood Cliffs, N.J. DA - 1973 KW - computers science holograms data processing magnetic recording video cassettes print print culture communication revolution magnetic tape future and science fiction community democracy communication revolution television television, and cable cable television videotape print culture, and non print media democracy and media democracy, and television satellites aeronautics and space communication artificial intelligence and biotechnology artificial intelligence computers and the Internet computers democracy, and print culture future science fiction electricity cybernetics Wiener, Norbert science fiction, and Isaac Asimov values, and new media democracy, and new media holography biofeedback data banks video phones video cassettes computers, and time sharing computers, and videotape videotape, and computers telepathy lasers photocopying electrostatic reproduction photocopying print v. electronic values cable +duplicating technologies video telephones video cassette recorders (VCRs) VCRs LB - 12570 PB - Prentice-Hall, Inc. PY - 1973 ST - Human Connection and the New Media TI - Human Connection and the New Media ID - 2604 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Chapter six, “Ditto,” deals with such copying devices as carbon paper, the mimeograph, typewriter, and photocopying, and the latter’s effect on copyright law. This is a substantial chapter, with lengthy notes and a useful bibliography. Other chapters are entitled: "Vanishing Twins," "Doppelgangers," "Self-Portraits," "Second Nature," "Seeing Double," "Once More, with Feeling" (on our faith in reenactment and replication), "Discernment," "Encore," and "The Parallel Universe." --SV This is a rambling, eclectic study of humankind's fascination with copies of all kinds. Throughout history and across cultures, we have been interested in twins, doubles, reproductions, forgeries, magnifications, camouflage, mimics, and the like. To Schwartz, this indicates a human desire to understand an "otherness," to be something other than what we are. Schwartz argues that we are less likely to understand ourselves in a culture where copy and replication are widespread. The x-ray, the photocopier, the telescope do not open new avenues for understanding human desires and motivations. Our fascination with copies stems from the fact that we can never completely know ourselves. The book has a wealth of interesting historical tidbits and tales. Schwartz writes about everything from Siamese twins to parrots, from the Middle Age Christian scribe to the Xerox 2400 model. He even tries to track down the real McCoy, both the expression and the man. It is a little difficult to follow his train of thought, as his writing flows quickly from topic to topic. However, it is an enjoyable and actually fascinating reading experience. --Rob Rabe AU - Schwartz, Hillel CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1997 KW - computers photography women, and new media advertising, and public relations time and timekeeping time propaganda public relations preservation history, and new media materials genetics war non-USA writing World War II World War I geography +sound recording patents painting Japan Industrial Revolution history +duplicating technologies advertising art, and copying duplicating technologies, and authenticity +books, periodicals, newspapers books capitalism, and duplicating technologies carbon paper +computers and the Internet facsimile duplicating technologies, and decoys genetic engineering writing, and penmanship history, and duplicating technologies industrial society Japan Japan, and duplicating technologies history, and memory memory, and duplicating technologies mirrors duplicating technologies, and mirrors +motion pictures +sound recording museums painting, and duplicating technologies patents phonograph photocopying +photography and visual communication portraits, and duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and gelatin process time space (spatial) twins uniqueness, and duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and uniqueness women women, and duplicating technologies xerography World War I, and duplicating technologies World War II, and duplicating technologies typewriters mimeograph duplicating technologies, and mimeograph bibliographies, and duplitcating technologies Rabe, Rob art capitalism patents inventions typewriters bibliographies materials LB - 5780 PB - Zone Books/MIT Press PY - 1997 ST - A Culture of Copy: Striking Likenesses, Unreasonable Facsimiles TI - A Culture of Copy: Striking Likenesses, Unreasonable Facsimiles ID - 1963 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume collects 12 essays to address the dynamic “alliance between photography and the geographical imagination” (p. x). Studying from tourist photography to domestic photography, the essays in this volume seeks to illustrate how photographs are understood as visualized spatial forms interacting with different spatial context and constituting meanings for both individual and collective notion of identities. The theme of the volume is concerned with “the role of photography in picturing place’ and explore the significance of photographic practices such as travel, tourism, ethnography, family life, landscape description or state administration. --Huai-Hsuan Chen AU - Schwartz, Joan M. AU - James R. Ryan, eds. CY - London DA - 2003 KW - tourism geography Chen, Huai-Hsuan non-USA Great Britain non-USA, and photography photography, and non-USA photography, and Great Britain Great Britain, and photography photography, and geography geography, and photography photography, and tourism tourism, and photography photography, and travel travel, and photography photography, and ethnography nationalism and communication photography, and nationalism nationalism, and photography photography and visual communication nationalism photography transportation LB - 33120 PB - I.B. Tauris PY - 2003 ST - Picturing Place: Photography and the Geographical Imagination TI - Picturing Place: Photography and the Geographical Imagination ID - 66 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work, completed after the author's death, is a excellent treatment of battles that Hollywood writers fought over what would appear in motion pictures. It complement another strong contribution on this topic, The Inquisition in Hollywood: Politics in the Film Community, 1930-1960 (1980), by Larry Ceplair and Steven Englund. AU - Schwartz, Nancy Lynn [completed by Sheila Schwartz] CY - New York DA - 1982 KW - blacklisting values Hollywood law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Hollywood Ten blacklisting, and Hollywood Hollywood, and blacklisting censorship, and Hollywood Ten censorship, and Hollywood values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and reform motion pictures, and anticommunism motion pictures, and communism motion pictures, and writers values LB - 16390 PB - Knopf PY - 1982 ST - The Hollywood Writers' Wars TI - The Hollywood Writers' Wars ID - 592 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book, published on the eve of the collapse of the Soviet Union, begins by asking "Should the United States help Mikhail Gorbachev succeed?" The book does have some information on computers in the Soviet Union, and generally the USSR's computer capabilities. The work also addresses the problem of technology transfer. AU - Schweitzer, Glenn E. CY - New York DA - 1989 KW - technology R & D computers USSR nationalism SDI technology and society presidents, and new media research and development war war non-USA +military communication Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration +computers and the Internet Soviet Union technology transfer +nationalism and communication Gorbachev, Mikhail strategic defense initiative (SDI) Reagan administration, and Soviet Union nationalism, and new media LB - 3710 PB - Plenum Press PY - 1989 ST - Techno-Diplomacy: US-Soviet Confrontations in Science and Technology TI - Techno-Diplomacy: US-Soviet Confrontations in Science and Technology ID - 1759 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author states his goal by saying that “this book is not prescriptive, its narrative is not designed to chart a new course for television. Rather, the goal is to provide a richly detailed history, including new narrative threads, of the rise of television during the Cold War to its position as a medium of global influence and to show how global television was significantly shaped by the theory and practice of Cold War geopolitics.” (p.4) Despite the secondary literature, “the Cold War history of television and electronic information networks … is under-researched and little-known.” (4) Schwoch says that “The television of the Cold War era is in fact a relic. Electronic information networks have undergone a similar shift of quantum proportions since the Cold War era.” (3) American global television “during the Cold War began its global quest in very ad hoc and circumstantial ways, without a grand design or much thought from policy makers and strategic thinkers in the late 1940s and early 1950s.” [p. 1] Schwoch argues that “globalization thesis is inaccurate, because based on available evidence, it is not clear that outcome [concern over “East-West or superpower security”] is what the actors strictly intended.” (5) He says that “Globalization was, in the main, not the conscious or articulated intent, particularly the exact articulation of the term globalization, of most of the principal actors. Globalization was not a term in common use during the period of this study.” (6) Schwoch does acknowledge that “although the globalization of television was the prime outcome of the period from 1946 to 1969, the pursuit of East-West security in relation to global television growth from 1946 to 1969 was the prime motivator of actions.” (6) With regard to “intents and outcomes, globalization and security are thus inextricably conjoined in this study, centrally so by the tensions and resolutions of various extraterritorialities.” (6) The book’s eight chapters, plus introduction and epilogue, “tells the story of television and globalization as a double helix.” (8) Each chapter title is a quotation from a figure from this time period. Chapters 1-4 constitute the first strand of the double helix and focus “on questions of discourse, policy, ideology, and geopolitics. The second strand, chapters 5-8, deal with issues involving new global electronic communication technologies. (8) In Schwoch’s story, the two strands intersect with one another in several ways. The opening two chapters deal with the first major involving TV in the Cold War which was television in Berlin and occupied Germany after World War II. Events during this period influenced the development of Soviet TV in occupied Germany and in surrounding countries such as Finland and Austria. (8-9) These chapters are solid on Germany as a battleground for early television. The provide an interesting discussion of the part played by both radio and television in America’s expanding global influence after World War II but they make little or no mention of the part also played by motion pictures. On the whole, this book might have said more on the role of cinema in conjunction with television. As the USIA recognized in 1955, the Cold War “in the realm of psychological warfare was ‘a battle for men’s minds’….” (52) Leaders in the motion picture industry used the same language to describe Hollywood’s part in the Cold War. Chapter 3 examines the role of television in “the institutionalization of psychological warfare by the U. S. government.” (9) Schwoch discusses several organizations including the Central Intelligence Agency, United States Information Agency (USIA), National Science Foundation, and National Security Council, and concludes the chapter with an in-depth discussion of the Sprague Committee (Presidential Committee for Information Activities Abroad), created by the Eisenhower administration. The Sprague Committee urged “using all available mass media, global public opinion polling, and existing and emerging global electronic communication technologies, such as television, to promote a positive global image of American science and technology as a means to enhance the global image of America through funding a wide range of ‘feasible’ American-directed science projects that had proven popular in world public opinion.” (10) The discussion of the Sprague Committee and the effort to improve America’s world image in science is interesting, although there is perhaps too much detail on the committee’s discussions. Schwoch observes that during this period American policy makers equated science and freedom. (59) This chapter suggests that deep concerns about the state of American science predated the launching of Sputnik in October, 1957. (50, 58) Sputnik added to these worries and to a sense of “urgency” (58) that the United States needed to catch up with the Soviets. The chapter discusses the globalization of U. S. science but has relatively little on television. This chapter is based on archival collections primarily in the National Archives and in presidential libraries. (10) The grounding of this and other chapters in archival materials is one of this book’s great strengths. A weakness is the work’s style. Because the book deals with government agencies, the use of numerous acronyms throughout is unavoidable but unfortunately they sometimes detract from the flow of the author’s narrative. Chapter 4 continues themes in the previous chapter and discusses them in the context of such nongovernmental agencies as universities, advertising agencies, and philanthropy. Schwoch pays particular attention here to the Ford Foundation during the late 1950s and 1960. It was becoming world’s largest philanthropic organization and had close ties to the RAND (Research and Development) Corporation and the American government. It funded research at Stanford and MIT and was important in creating the Presidential Freedom Awards (11, 70-71), established as a global TV event to counter the Lenin Prize. One of the “angry young intellectuals,” (73) Melvin Lasky, was dubious about internationalized TV programming fearing it would lead to increasing conformity. It was “better to be bored than to be rooted in front of a television set,” he said. “The thought of eighty-two channels available at the flick of a switch is frightening.” (Lasky quoted, 73) In this chapter, Schwoch uses collections at the Foundation Archives and material in the John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Libraries. (10-11) Through such people as Waldemar Nielsen and such institutions as the Ford Foundation, he examines media culture and philanthropy during the early Cold War. In explaining postwar funding for communication research, Schwoch offers an account similar to Christopher Simpson, et al. (e.g., 64, 66, 75n 47). This chapter does offer a brief discussion of cinema and the USIA (67-68). Chapter 5 through 8 turn toward considering the new communication technologies of this era, with special attention to global television. Chapter 5 is entitled “We Can Give the World a Vision of America,” a quotation taken from South Dakota Republican Senator Karl Mundt. This chapter discusses the work not only of Senator Mundt but also Senators of Bourke B. Hickenlooper (IA), and Alexander Wiley (WI), all “Cold war hawks.” (84; see also 82-84, 87) More context on these conservative senators would have been useful. Chapter 5 deals with failed attempts during the 1950s to set up international and intercontinental television networks that could span the Atlantic Ocean with live broadcasts. Success in this arena would have meant less reliance on filmed or taped programming. (11) This chapter examines the Cold War relationship between new media technologies and military technology during the early 1950s. Schwoch provides an informative discussion of TV’s role in Cold War propaganda and how television differed from print, radio, and film in the production and distribution of “white” propaganda (in addition, gray and black propaganda are covered). (80-81) This chapter also discusses the origins of microwave technology during the 1930s and the state of that technology during the 1950s (82) Microwave technology made possible live TV transmissions over large areas. Before then, TV distribution depended on wire. (81-82) Schwoch covers the connection between a “global microwave TV relay project” (12) and the rise of Japanese commercial television, the growth of European television networks, and “the emergence of television and other new electronic communications technologies as potential tools for modernization and development in the newly independent nations of the world.” (12) Particularly interesting is the account of the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, which Schwoch highlights as “the first preplanned ‘global TV event’….” (quotation, 12; see also 90-92) This chapter discusses David Sarnoff’s plan to use Ultrafax in developing transatlantic television. (86) Schwoch is good on explaining why Ultrafax and UNITEL failed in their efforts to provide global TV they failed because of the appearance of communication satellites. (93) Sarnoff and others “saw live global TV and electronic information networks as part of an electrotechnical fortress for North America.” (86) Among the archives used for this chapter: Wisconsin Historical Society, Herbert Hoover and Dwight Eisenhower Libraries, and NARA. Chapter 6 looks at the USIA Moscow Exhibition in 1959 and the growing role of computer technology during the Cold War. It also covers more briefly the Advertising Council of America’s People’s Capitalism Exhibit in 1959. (97-98) The chapter gives special attention to RAMAC, the IBM 305 computer, which was programmed for the Moscow exhibit to answer 3,000 questions about the United States. The computer also collected information on what questions were asked most often about the U.S. Schwoch seems similarities between RAMAC and later search engines: “These attributes include questions of audience surveillance, comparison of data gleaned about searches with other machine-based information sources, unanticipated results regarding the frequency (or lack thereof) for individual queries on particular topics, technical glitches and slower-than-desired output, public relations ballyhoo reporting to the press about popular queries placed to RAMAC, and use of data gleaned about searching RAMAC for follow-up tactics and strategies regarding future Cold War diplomacy.” (96) Here, in other words, the computer combined with public relations and information diplomacy to enhance America’s image. This exhibition featured an exchange between Vice President Richard M. Nixon and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, and “was an important moment for Cold War television, as American-style closed-circuit color television was distributed 12/13 throughout the exhibition grounds. These closed-circuit broadcasts and the reactions of Soviet audiences provided many insights into questions of American and Soviet culture, including consumer society, race relations, and leisure activities.” (12-13) The chapter then covers the state of Soviet TV during the period, using USIA records of the 1959 exhibition and State Department reports on TV in the USSR. “By January 1952,” Schwoch says, “Moscow-area set ownership was estimated to be more than thirty thousand homes and had begun to spread to nearby cities and a few dachas…. By April 1952, Moscow had over sixty thousand TV sets with about 15% of the viewers in the outlying areas of the Moscow oblast.” (113) Two years later, 1954, “this TV audience was estimated at over one hundred thousand homes in the Moscow 114/115 area, and TV was expanding throughout the Soviet world geographically and socially. Relay stations had also begun to carry programs from Kiev, Moscow, and Leningrad beyond transmitter range and to new Soviet audiences in 1955, and Soviet manufacturing expected to build 750,000 new TV sets that year. In 1956, William McFadden reported from the embassy in Moscow that ‘television antennae appear on the most beaten down hovels around Moscow.’ Though admitting his contacts were limited, he also noted, ‘the Russians who have access to TV seem to watch it continuously’ and seemed to prefer TV to radio. By the time the 1959 USIA Moscow Exhibit was winding down, TV had entered nearly 5 million Soviet homes.” (114-15) In 1958, the USIA created a division that focused on television. It estimated that by 1959, more than four million television sets were being used in the Soviet Union, and an additional one million sets were scheduled to be produced. (110) The Soviets were just then starting test transmissions of color TV. (110) The USIA reported that “by 1960 a total of 899 television stations in the world were on the air, with 189 of those in Communist nations and regions.” (40) Although this chapter deals with Soviet TV, up to this point, there is little discussion of satellites and TV (that starts on p. 121). Chapter 7 begins with the first all-Europe live TV event broadcast from the USSR, the Yuri Gagarin spaceflight in April 1961. American audiences saw Gagarin only later after videotape and newsreel films had been flown across the Atlantic. (118) The Soviet broadcast to Europe occurred 16 months before the first live American TV transmission across the Atlantic Ocean to Europe by Telstar in July 1962. (13) Before that time, Europeans watched American space achievements on newsreel film after the events had happened. The USIA believed that the live broadcasts of Gagarin and other Soviet space and military successes “represented a disaster for the global image of America.” (120) In Great Britain, Schwoch says, most citizens believed the U.S. to be behind the USSR in space until about 1966. (120) This work then turns to focus on Telstar and American efforts at live TV transmission. Those broadcasts were particularly threatened by high-altitude testing of nuclear weapons. (13, 129-37) The Limited Test Ban Treaty of 1963 not only aided global TV transmissions but also “was vital for preventing excessive space radiation to ensure the future growth of space-based surveillance.” (136) This chapter is good on the Soviet TV coverage of Gagarin (118, 128), on the extent of and damage done by atmospheric nuclear testing, how those tests adversely affected communication satellites, and how the 1963 Treaty was important to the success of satellite communication. (136-37) Chapter 8, which begins with a poorly written opening paragraph (139), moves from Telstar to COMSAT (the Communications Satellite Corporation) and the International Telecommunications Satellite Consortium (now the International Telecommunications Satellite Organization or ITSO). It examines “the American quest for a single global satellite system in the name of world citizenship and concludes the main narrative of the book with the 1969 moon landing.” (13) Chapter 8 “also brings forward the full transformation into a discourse of globalization, with American science and communication satellites as major 13/14 signifiers of that discourse.” (13-14) The chapter ends with the 1969 moon walk and America’s “commanding presence in global television, satellite communication, and multiple electronic information net-154/155 works….” (154-55) These systems made it possible for the United States to transmit live across the world “‘a new idea capable of uniting the thoughts of people all over the earth.’ That new idea was Cold War globalization, offered in an American variant and designed, like the visions of Cold War security which preceded it, to project a global image of America that served the nation’s interests as the most powerful geopolitical entity on and beyond the small blue-green orb known as Earth.” (155) An epilogue attempts to bring these themes into the early 21st century. Schwoch says that the George W. Bush administration appeared not to “know that the number of TV sets in the world doubled from 1989 to 1994, and then doubled again from 1994 to 2004, and most of that growth is outside of North America, Western Europe, and Japan.” (161) The Epilogue offers a critique of the Bush administration’s polices but unfortunately seems hurried. AU - Schwoch, James CY - Urbana and Chicago DA - 2009 KW - public relations computers television aeronautics and space communication computers and the Internet non-USA television, and USSR USSR, and television non-USA, and television USSR nationalism and communication television, and nationalism nationalism, and television military communication satellites satellites, and television television, and satellites nationalism, and globalization globalization globalization, and television Telstar nationalism, and satellites satellites, and globalization satellites, and nationalism television, and CIA television, and USIA television, and Ford Foundation Ford Foundation, and television Nixon, Richard television, and Richard Nixon television, and Nikita Khrushchev media effects media effects, and psychological warfare propaganda propaganda, and globe TV television, and propaganda Cold War war war, and television television, and war television, and Cold War Cold War, and television privacy television, and privacy privacy, and television privacy, and computers computers, and privacy privacy, and satellites satellites, and privacy television, and microwaves mircowaves, and television television, and David Sarnoff television, and RCA Ultrafax television, and Japan television, and Great Britain Great Britain, and television Japan, and television television, and BBC Great Britain, and BBC computers, and USSR USSR, and computers television, and color color color, and television USSR, and color TV public relations and advertising television, and public relations television, and advertising advertising, and propaganda propaganda, and advertising propaganda, and People's Capitalism exhibit (1959) advertising, and People's Capitalism exhibit (1959) satellites, and surveillance public relations, and Telstar AT&T, and satellites satellites, and AT&T satellites, and COMSAT satellites, and INTELSAT advertising advertising and public relations AT&T computers global communication Great Britain Japan nationalism Soviet Union LB - 33330 PB - University of Illinois Press PY - 2009 ST - Global TV: New Media and the Cold War, 1946-69 TI - Global TV: New Media and the Cold War, 1946-69 ID - 91 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This paper explains that the Clinton administration "made the development of an advanced National Information Infrastructure (NII) and the GII [Global Information Infrastructure] top U.S. priorities. A major goal of the NII is to give our citizens access to a broad range of information and information services. Using innovative telecommunications and information technologies, the NII -- through a partnership of business, labor, academia, consumers, and all levels of government -- will help the United States achieve a broad range of economic and social goals. “... The GII is an outgrowth of that perspective, a vehicle for expanding the scope of these benefits on a global scale. By interconnecting local, national, regional, and global networks, the GII can increase economic growth, create jobs, improve infrastructures, and contribute to global stability. Taken as a whole, this worldwide ‘network of networks’ will create a global information marketplace, encouraging broad-based social discourse within and among all countries.” AU - Sciences], [National Academy of CY - [Washington, D. C.?] DA - March 29-30, 1995 KW - Clinton, Bill nationalism corporations corporations, multinational Clinton, William Jefferson presidents, and new media labor community democracy Clinton Administration non-USA government office office, and new media office networks political economy infrastructure infrastructure, global Global Information Infrastructure presidents and new media government reports National Academy of Sciences infrastructure, national National Information Infrastructure (NII) global communication multinational corporations democracy and media networks, and global information capitalism, global +nationalism and communication networks, of networks capitalism Clinton administration, and national information infrastructure nationalism, and new media nationalism, and information infrastructure nationalism, and global information infrastructure LB - 8740 PB - [National Academy of Sciences?] PY - 1995 ST - The Global Information Structure: A White Paper: Prepared for the White House Forum on the Role of Science and Technology in Promoting National Security and Global Stability TI - The Global Information Structure: A White Paper: Prepared for the White House Forum on the Role of Science and Technology in Promoting National Security and Global Stability ID - 2243 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 194-page book, which is not indexed, is divided into six chapters: 1) Development of the Sound Film; 2) The Writing of Sound; 3) Revolution; 4) Theatre Installations; 5) Colour Projection; 6) Some Opinions of Talking Pictures. It provides a good discussion of the technology of movie making during the 1920s (written from the vantage point of 1930). Readers who are interested in color films will find in chapter 5 (151-78) an account of the advantages and disadvantages of different systems then used for making motion pictures. These systems include Pathécolour, "which while giving some very delightful effects, could not by any stretch of imagination be described as true colour photography; for it was accomplished by the almost inconceivable process of actually painting each picture of an ordinary black and white film. Quite a short run of film, lasting not much more than five or six minutes, used sometimes to take three or four weeks to tint, a job which required enough patience to turn Job himself green with envy. It was for this reason that Pathécolour rarely showed anything of a fast moving nature, and confined itself to sylvan scenes and the like, which would enable the 'artists' to cut stencils that could be used for a dozen or more pictures before it was necessary to make another set. As it was, trees and objects of that sort usually appeared on the screen with a somewhat indefinite halo of alleged green hovering vaguely round them. This fringe might sometimes intrude on the placid waters of a lake, which in the turn lent the trees some of its blue." (167) (my emphasis) Other systems discussed include Technicolor (173-74) and Multicolor (174). The British company, Zoechrome is treated (174-77) as are other British systems including Raycol (177-78) and Polychromide (178). The author expects color projection to improve in the future but concludes by saying "whether or not colour cinematography is ever likely to give results as attractive as the original, each reader must judge for himself." (178) AU - Scotland, John CY - London DA - 1930 KW - ref, secondary color motion pictures sound recording photography photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography motion pictures, and color non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and color movies motion pictures, and Great Britain non-USA, and color movies motion pictures, and non-USA France France, and color movies France, and motion pictures color, and France motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and sound film kinetophone Edison, Thomas, and kinetophone chronophotophone, and sound film sound recording, and Chronophotophone Chronophotophone, and sound films lighting lighting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and lighting motion pictures, and projectors motion pictures, and Pathécolour color, and Pathécolour Pathécolour, and motion pictures quotations quotations, and Pathécolour color, and Technicolor Technicolor Technicolor, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor Pathé, and color films Pathé, and motion pictures Pathé Pathécolor LB - 40180 PB - Crosby Lockwood and Son PY - 1930 ST - The Talkies TI - The Talkies ID - 4116 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author describes his goal as attempting "a description of film aesthetics that balances the claims of art and technology." His work "is oriented to seeing filmss rather than making them." (iii) The first 200 pages of this work are particularly interesting with regard to the technology of film making. Scott dicusses changes in cameras, lighting, sound, the use of magnetic recording, color films, and does so in the context of specific motion pictures. He often draws on material in the American Cinematographer. AU - Scott, James F. CY - New York DA - 1975 KW - lenses, zoom sound motion pictures cameras videotape magnetic recording sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and videotape videotape, and motion pictures lenses cameras, and lenses cameras, and zoom lenses zoom lenses lighting motion pictures, and lighting lighting, and arc lighting color motion pictures, and color lighting, and color color, and light photography photography, and color color, and photography color, and panchrome lighting, and orthochrome motion pictures, and orthochrome motion pictures, and panchrome lighting, and tungsten lamps sound recording, and optical sound sound recording, and disc sound sound mixing motion pictures, and montage montage, and motion pictures magnetic tape magnetic recording LB - 32970 PB - Holt Rinehart and Winston, Inc. PY - 1975 ST - Film: The Medium and the Maker TI - Film: The Medium and the Maker ID - 3095 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is a closely argued, well-researched study in business history. It tries “to recast the history of the Second Industrial Revolution, that epochal transformation of productive capacities and organizational forms which spanned the half-century after 1870 in the United States.” Scranton “depicts the deployment of specialty manufacturing as an industrial and institutional dynamic that paralleled, complemented, and at times conflicted with the achievements of this nation’s celebrated mass production corporations. Specialty sectors not only crafted the hardware that made mass production feasible and the styled goods that helped define an American consumer society, but also initiated technological and organizational transformations distinct from, but comparably significant to, the creation of routinized assembly, bureaucratic management, and oligopolistic competition. This ‘other side’ of the Second Industrial Revolution is complex and diffuse, neither tidy nor reducible to formulas ....” The author distinguishes between “custom, batch, bulk, and mass production.” Chapter 9 (“Back East: The Electrical Equipment Industry”) discusses “the deployment of electrical production in this chapter will help elaborate the notion of ‘bridge’ firms that blended making custom and batch goods (generators, motors, switch gears) with mass outputs (lamps and bulbs), stretching the integrated anchors category. It will also underscore the role of ‘narrow focus’ cities, similar to Grand Rapids, Jamestown, New Britain, or Reading, in the extension of specialty capacity and will provide a different angle of approach to the problem of technical education.” -SV Endless Novelty attempts to fill the gap left by most scholarly assessments of American manufacturing, which Scranton claims have a deterministic focus on the largest, most prominent of mass production corporations, despite their relatively small share of the nation’s industrial capacity. The focus of this text, then, is on specialty producers, defined not by the size of operation but by the capacity to produce custom or batch orders in addition to or instead of bulk and mass production goods (Introduction, pages 10-11). Scranton traces the fortunes of case-study individuals, firms, sectors and cities: from the proliferation of specialty manufactures in the 1860s; the depression of the mid 1870s; the knock-off and price gouging wars of the 1880s; the rise in advertising -- print and exhibition -- in the 1890s; the organizational shake-ups as the century turned; and, finally, the government intervention in the 1920s that installed mass production as the dominant and deified form of manufacture in America. -Dale Erlandson AU - Scranton, Philip CY - Princeton DA - 1997 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations preservation communication revolution history, and new media communication revolution, and second industrial revolution history information technology history general studies novelty history, break with Industrial Revolution advertising capitalism information technology, and factories second industrial revolution specialty manufacturing electricity, and equipment production, custom production, batch production, mass electricity, and generators electricity, and motors electricity, and switch gears electricity, and lamps and bulbs electricity communication revolution Erlandson, Dale LB - 1170 PB - Princeton University Press PY - 1997 ST - Endless Novelty: Specialty Production and American Industrialization, 1865-1925 TI - Endless Novelty: Specialty Production and American Industrialization, 1865-1925 ID - 27 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Segal is concerned throughout this work about “the painfully naive assumption that the technological optimism that has historically characterized American society and culture will or must continue unabated. If I have learned any basic lessons from my professional studies over the last two decades, it is that the past is profoundly discontinuous from the present and that the attempted recovery of the past by the present in the name of imagined historical continuities is utterly futile.” Segal devotes chapters to the “Middle Landscape,” the automobile, “Alex de Tocqueville and the Dilemmas of Modernization,” “The Machine Shop in American Society and Culture,” technological museums, computers and museums, Edward Bellamy and technology, feminist technological utopianism in the work of Mary E. Bradley Lane’s Mizora (1890), Kurt Vonnegat’s Player Piano, and a chapter on “Lewis Mumford’s Alternatives to the Megamachine.” A concluding chapter deals with the ironies of contemporary technological optimism. AU - Segal, Howard P. CY - Amherst DA - 1994 KW - technology computers technology and society values values preservation modernism modernity modernity modernism communication revolution history, and new media +future and science fiction history museums machines history general studies progress history, break with automobiles modernization Tocqueville, Alexis de machines, and American culture museums, and technology computers museums, and computers utopianism utopianism, and feminism and technology Vonnegat, Kurt Mumford, Lewis Lane, Mary E. Bradley future optimism Bellamy, Edward, and technology communication revolution, and myth of myth critics communication revolution +computers and the Internet technological determinism transportation LB - 1190 PB - University of Massachusetts Press PY - 1994 ST - Future Imperfect: The Mixed Blessings of Technology in America TI - Future Imperfect: The Mixed Blessings of Technology in America ID - 1515 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The first half of the book is really a history of the computer and computer networks. The remainder focuses on the creation of “Interface Message Processors,” computers developed in the 1960s to connect military computers. More recent developments of the Internet are not addressed. --Mark Tremayne AU - Segaller, Stephen CY - New York DA - 1998 KW - R & D computers research and development war computers war networks Internet +computers and the Internet Tremayne, Mark Internet, and history of +military communication computers, history of networks, and computers Interface Message Processors LB - 9150 PB - TV Books PY - 1998 ST - Nerds 2.0.1 : A Brief History of the Internet TI - Nerds 2.0.1 : A Brief History of the Internet ID - 2282 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - With Notes, Bibliography, and Index, this work runs 222 pages, with six chapters and a Conclusion. Chapter 1 deals with "Vaudeville and the Copy Act," and Chapter 2 cover the "Silent Era, to 1929." Subsequent chapters include: 3) "Jackrabbits and Star Stealing, 1930-1945"; 4) "Larceny in the Box Office, Butchry in TV's Grindhouse, 1945-1974"; 5) "Domestic Piracy, 1975-2001"; and 6) "Foreign Piracy, 1975-2001." AU - Segrave, Kerry CY - Jefferson, N.C. DA - 2003 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) video cassette recorders (VCRs) MPAA motion pictures motion pictures, and copyright copyright, and motion pictures motion pictures, and piracy Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and motion picture piracy copyright, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and copyright VCRs Valenti, Jack, and VCRs VCRs, and Jack Valenti copyright LB - 30650 PB - McFarland & Company, Inc. PY - 2003 ST - Piracy in the Motion Picture Industry TI - Piracy in the Motion Picture Industry ID - 2826 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This informative book examines the domination of world cinema by the United States during the twentieth century. Segrave devotes four chapters to the post - 1945 era. Chapter 6 is "Under the Celluloid Boot: 1945-1952." Chapter 7 is entitled "Hollywood Sells Everywhere: 1952-1979." Chapter 8, "Hollywood Dreams of Hollywood: 1980-1995," has a good deal of material on Jack Valenti, the Reagan administration, and the expansion of Hollywood's foreign markets. The final chapter (no. 9), is called "Monoculture." Segrave quotes writer Daniel Singer that if American movies and TV programs continue to dominate world screens, "we will be sentenced to a sinister uniformity of heroes and models, metaphors and dreams. Mastery of the image may well become both the instrument and the symbol of leadership in the new world order." (280) Later, Segrave writes that "U. S. mass culture is the most prolific disseminator of images in history. If films are viewed as a medium of expression, then the context for judging its purpose changes from one of profit to one of communications.... Hollywood myth is that an individual can change society and can even change the world. Complex reality is simplified. U. S. films cannibalize history and present it through a prism that simply entertains Americans but does not move them to action." (281) AU - Segrave, Kerry CY - Jefferson, N. C. DA - 1997 KW - nationalism Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) video cassette recorders (VCRs) MPAA nationalism , motion pictures censorship and ratings motion pictures, and Europe foreign films motion pictures, and foreign film non-USA Europe Europe, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Europe capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign markets globalization motion pictures, and globalization Motion Picture Export Association MPAA Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and foreign markets nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures VCRs media effects global communication LB - 31590 PB - McFarland & Company, Inc. PY - 1997 ST - American Films Abroad: Hollywood's Domination of the World's Movie Screens from the 1890s to the Present TI - American Films Abroad: Hollywood's Domination of the World's Movie Screens from the 1890s to the Present ID - 2848 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work deals with how motion pictures came to television. People who owned TVs were able to watch movies during the late 1940s and early 1950s, films that sometimes had not been censored. In the early days, even uncensored films could occasionally be seen on television. The Pennsylvania State Board of Censors had tried to prevent uncensored movies from being shown on TV in 1949, but the courts ruled that the states could not regulated films shown on television because that power had already been delegated under the Federal Communications Act. What happened in Ohio, though, was not typical of movies on television during the 1950s. Local TV stations often edited films to fit the tastes of their viewers and advertisers. The National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) also adopted a Television Code in 1951. It was based on the movie industry’s Production Code and the Radio Code that had emerged during the New Deal. The TV Code had its greatest impact on programs, movies broadcast on television, and commercials during the 1950s, 1960s, and into the 1970s. It relied heavily on complaints from viewers, although it never had total participation by all members of the TV industry. Overall, its enforcement was ineffectual. The punishment for violating the Code was that the offending station could not display the NAB’s “seal of good practice.” Few, if any, stations were denied the seal and only the rare viewer would have noticed even if they had been. After deregulation, the NAB discarded the Television Code in 1983. The bulk of Hollywood pictures did not reach TV until 1955, after General Tire & Rubber Company purchased RKO from Howard Hughes and began running RKO films on its New York station, WOR. Profits convinced other studios to release their pre-1948 films. AU - Segrave, Kerry CY - Jefferson, N. C. DA - 1999 KW - home video cassette recorders (VCRs) , motion pictures television motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures VCRs home and new media home, and motion pictures home, and television censorship and ratings television, and censorship censorship, and television home censorship LB - 31660 PB - McFarland & Company, Inc. PY - 1999 ST - Movies at Home: How Hollywood Came to Television TI - Movies at Home: How Hollywood Came to Television ID - 2852 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The drive-ins, it was said, were “plagued by sex sex in the drive-ins and sex on the drive-ins.” In this book, Kerry Segrave discusses the spread of drive-in theaters in American from 1933 into the 1980s. Many municipalities and states tried to regulate drive-ins. Efforts to control people’s conduct and the content of the movies met with only limited success. More successful were measures that required owners to take steps that insured that their outdoor screens would not be visible from roadsides or in nearby neighborhoods. The drive-ins provided entertainment more complex than their critics were willing to acknowledge. AU - Segrave, Kerry CY - Jefferson, N. C. DA - 1992 KW - audiences motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality exploitation circuit , motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures theaters theaters, and drive-ins motion pictures, and exploitation circuit exploitation circuit, and drive-ins audiences, and drive-ins audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences +transportation motion pictures, and automobiles automobiles, and motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and drive-in theaters audiences automobiles exploitation circuit LB - 32380 PB - McFarland & Company, Inc. PY - 1992 ST - Drive-In Theaters: A History from Their Inception in 1933 TI - Drive-In Theaters: A History from Their Inception in 1933 ID - 2898 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work began as a doctoral dissertation and grew into a comprehensive biography of Nikola Tesla. In the previous literature, according to the author, there were several notable myteries and contradictions. "These included not only Tesla's obscure early years, tenure at college, and relationship to such key people as Thomas Edison, Guglielmo Marconi, George Westinghouse, and J. P. Morgan but also the worth of Tesla's accomplishments and his exact place in the development of these inventions." (xii) Seifer attempt to solve these mysteries in this biography. Tesla’s inventions included, says Seifer, “the induction motor, the electrical-power distribution system, florescent and neon lights, wireless communication, remote control, and robotics.” Seifer discusses Tesla's attempts to build a particle beam weapon, or death ray, and similar attempts by such people as Harry Grindell-Mathews. Grindell-Matthews, a veteran of the British army who had fought and been wounded in the Boer War, was awarded 25,000 pounds sterling by the British government during World War I to build a weapon that could defend against zeppelins and other unmanned craft. In July, 1934, Tesla claimed that he had perfected a particle beam weapon, or a “death beam,” that could bring down a fleet of 10,000 planes at a distance of 250 miles, or that could silently and instantly annihilate an army of 1,000,000 men. His device, he said, could enforce the peace. “It is, I believe, the greatest aid to international peace ever perfected, because through it every country in the world may be made impregnable and all possibility of invasion will be ended.” Tesla’s invention, the Los Angeles Times reported, would set up “an invisible wall” around any country that owned it and thus render that nation “impenetrable to enemy attack by air or otherwise.” Seifer writes that the columnist Joseph Alsop, who interviewed Tesla for the New York Herald Tribune in 1934, thought the scientist’s story was credible. After Tesla’s death in 1943, the FBI seized and classified the inventor’s papers. (446-62) The author concludes by saying that "Tesla remains a cult hero because of his esoteric status, because his life's work has served as a template for numerous science-fiction characters and cinematic themes, and because he provides answers for those who studdy his work for its inner meanings." Yet, "unlike so many other esoteric figures, ... Tesla is in a unique position because so many of his inventions were incorporated into our modern high-tech world. Had his ultimate world broadcasting plan actually coalesced during his heyday, there is no telling how history might have proceeded and how the quality of our lives might have changed." (470) AU - Seifer, Marc J. CY - Secaucus, NJ DA - 1996 KW - death rays ref, secondary Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories innovation networks lighting biography, and Nikola Tesla networks, electrical lighting, fluorescent and neon remote control wireless communication inventors inventions robotics artificial intelligence and biotechnology Tesla, Nikola radio artificial intelligence and biotechnology Edison, Thomas Westinghouse, George Marconi, Guglielmo Edison, Thomas, and Nikola Tesla Westinghouse, George, and Nikola Tesla Marconi, Guglielmo, and Nikola Tesla death rays, and Nikola Tesla Grindell-Mathews, Harry, and death rays electricity electricity, and Nikola Tesla robotics, and Nikola Tesla remote control, and Nikola Tesla Tesla, Nikola, and particle beam weapon lighting ref, book biography LB - 39070 PB - Carol Publishing Group PY - 1996 ST - Wizard: The Life and Times of Nikola Tesla: Biography of a Genius TI - Wizard: The Life and Times of Nikola Tesla: Biography of a Genius ID - 4006 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book recounts the sex scandal that involved former Meese Commission (1985-86) member, Father Bruce Ritter, who ran Convenant House for trouble youth. Ritter was forced to resign from Convenant House. AU - Sennott, Charles M. CY - New York DA - 1992 KW - values Christianity sexuality Catholic Church pornography Meese Commission Ritter, Bruce Catholic Church, and homosexuality pornography, and Bruce Ritter LB - 26700 PB - Simon & Schuster PY - 1992 ST - Broken Covenant: The Story of Father Bruce Ritter's Fall from Grace -- How Power, Politics, and Sex Rocked the Foundation of the Sprawling Covenant House Charity TI - Broken Covenant: The Story of Father Bruce Ritter's Fall from Grace -- How Power, Politics, and Sex Rocked the Foundation of the Sprawling Covenant House Charity ID - 1234 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work, by a French journalist, deals primarily with the American press and television. The author notes that (in 1972) a fourth of the world's daily newspapers and a third of the TV networks were American. The work is concerned with the merger of newspapers and demise of such major magazines as the Saturday Evening Post, Life, and Look, but also looks to the future and what technology may hold. The book is divided into four parts. Part I ("Is the Press Still a Money-Makers?") and Part II ("Power Comes from the Tip of the Pen") together have eleven chapters. Part III is entitled "Overinformation," and deals with new media. The chapter entitled "Beyond Gutenberg," looks at the electrification of the press, the use of photographic processes, microfiche, microfilm, teledelivery, tape recording, and the "all-purpose telephone." There follow chapters called "The Television of Abundance," "Knowing It All, Instantly, Anywhere," and "Electronic Politics and Business." Part IV is "Reinventing Freedom." Included in its four chapters are "A Useful Myth: Freedom of the Press," and "Only the Rich Are Really Informed." AU - Servan-Schreiber, Jean-Louis CY - New York DA - 1972, 1974 KW - nationalism imperialism photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations journalism archives news and journalism non-USA recording newspapers news microfiche, microfilm, microform libraries libraries, and information storage +books, periodicals, newspapers +sound recording +telephones +information storage microfilm microfiche newspapers, and photographic processes recording, and tape +photography and visual communication advertising advertising, and magazines +information storage cultural imperialism news, and corporate ownership +nationalism and communication nationalism, and new media LB - 11500 PB - McGraw-Hill Book Company PY - 1972 ST - The Power to Inform: Media: The Information Business TI - The Power to Inform: Media: The Information Business TT - Le Pouvoir d'Informer ID - 2510 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Settel, Irving CY - New York DA - 1983 KW - illustrations illustrations +television illustrations, and television LB - 7290 PB - Frederick Ungar Publishing Co. PY - 1983 ST - A Pictorial History of Television TI - A Pictorial History of Television ID - 2099 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Unlike most literature on mass media representations of racial minorities which study how one minority group might be represented and compared with the White majority, this book deals with “relations among racial minorities in conflict situations.” The authors retain “whiteness” as a concept to explain how conflict begin and are represented. While most studies deal with mass circulation media owned and largely operated by Whites, this book also includes ethnic minority papers. Conceptually, “this study is framed by a theory of racial formation,” the authors write, that “allows us to consider the reciprocal relationships between structure and culture as it applies to new coverage of racial minority groups.... Racial formation also allows us to bring the concepts of ideology and hegemony into play to help us demonstrate the importance of the press as a key producer of cultural symbols that can either buttress the racial status quo or offer alternative visions of how the world operates. This part of our analysis leads us to a critique of press performance and recommendations for improvement.” The authors contend that their study can improve understanding of “the demographic complexity of the United States in the 21st century,” and the role of the ethnic minority press in creating a “new” America. This works deals with news coverage of events in Miami in 1989, in Washington, D. C. in 1991, and the Rodney King episode in Los Angeles in 1992. Spanish-language newspaper, black newspapers, and the Asian American press are included in this book. AU - Shah, Hemant and Michael C. Thornton CY - Thousand Oaks, CA DA - 2003 KW - ethnicity +books, periodicals, newspapers news and journalism newspapers, and ethnic press ethnic press, and newspapers ideology, and news news, and minority papers values, and newspapers newspapers, and values race, and news news, and race news, and ethnicity ethnicity, and news values, and news news, and values values newspapers ideology news race LB - 28720 PB - SAGE Publications, Inc. PY - 2003 ST - Competing Visions of "America": Minority and Mainstream Newspaper Coverage of Interethnic Conflict in Three U. S. Cities TI - Competing Visions of "America": Minority and Mainstream Newspaper Coverage of Interethnic Conflict in Three U. S. Cities ID - 2540 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In his chapter “Expression of the Individuality,” Nathaniel Southgate Shaler, writes of the importance of the face: “As soon as the observer has overcome the idle, commonplace way of looking upon the faces of the people about him and has advanced a way in the royal art of reading something of what is therein, he will find himself possessed by a singularly intense interest in his task. There is indeed a strange fascination in the study of faces. No other objects in this world so deserve and commend attention, yet there is none other in the visible realm so completely neglected. We look to them for the most that the world has to bestow. We are in despair if we can not behold them, yet our seeing is done in an instinctive, trivial manner that is satis- 162-163 fied with the fulfillment of the momentary need, asking no account of the depths. If the student will break past this wall of inherited habit that limits the interest in faces to the momentary needs of human intercourse, he will most likely be led on until indeed he may have to restrict his interest in this inquiry lest he become controlled by it in an excessive way….” (p. 162) (my emphasis) AU - Shaler, Nathaniel Southgate CY - New York DA - 1900, 1902 KW - fame celebrity celebrity culture photography ref, secondary motion pictures, and stars (origins) photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality personality, and faces personality quotations actors acting ref, book motion pictures LB - 15560 PB - D. Appleton and Company PY - 1900 ST - The Individual: A Study of Life and Death TI - The Individual: A Study of Life and Death ID - 3715 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a journalist’s account of how the flood of information from new media helped bring about the collapse of the USSR. Shane was the Baltimore Sun’s correspondent in Moscow arriving on Lenin’s birthday, April 22, 1988, with his wife and two small daughters. He stayed until 1991. Of the many factors bringing down the USSR, information was the most important. “Information slew the totalitarian giant,” he writes. This work contains a number of interesting observations. For example, not until 1988 did the Soviets admit that city maps of Moscow had been deliberately distorted to mislead potential invaders. This practice dated back to Stalin’s era, and for many years the most accurate maps of Moscow were produced by the American CIA. This book appeared before works by Gladys Ganley and Manuel Castells, which also argued that new communication technologies played a central role in the fall of the Soviet Union. AU - Shane, Scott CY - Chicago DA - 1994 KW - USSR nationalism magnetic recording video cassettes videotape magnetic tape freedom law censorship and ratings non-USA +duplicating technologies information technology Information Age +nationalism and communication information technology, and Soviet Union censorship, and Soviet Union freedom of expression, and Soviet Union Soviet Union, and new media Gorbachev, Mikhail control revolution information control, and Soviet Union communism glasnost Chebrikov, Viktor Brezhnev, Leonid I. Andropov, Yuri Soviet Union, and KGB Lenin, Vladimir I. perestroika Soviet Union, and press Solzhenitsyn, Alexander +television television, and Soviet Union Soviet Union, and television Yeltsin, Boris +duplicating technologies photocopying facsimile video cassette recorders (VCRs) censorship Soviet Union Soviet Union, and collapse of VCRs nationalism, and new media LB - 2450 PB - Ivan R. Dee PY - 1994 ST - Dismantling Utopia: How Information Ended the Soviet Union TI - Dismantling Utopia: How Information Ended the Soviet Union ID - 1638 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This unannotated bibliography has 2,732 entries. Of these entries, 448 are listed under the heading “The History of Technological Development and Innovation in Communication.” Several subcategories are in this chapters: Communications Technologies (General), Books and Printing, Magazines, Newspapers, Telegraph and Cable, Telephone, Photography, Film, Radio and Wireless Telegraphy, and Television. In addition to this chapter, there are eight other themes. Chapter 1 covers “Theory and Process of Media: Technologies as Media and Messages.” Chapter 3 is “The Shaping of Mass Media Content: Media Sociology.” Chapter 4 is entitled “The Social Effects of Mass Media.” Chapter 5 is “The Mass Media As Creators and Reflectors of Public Opinion.” Chapter 6 deals with “Politics and the Mass Media.” Chapters 3-6 each have subheading devoted to literature relating to Mass Media (General), Print Media, Film, Radio, and Television. Chapters 7 through 9 are entitled respectively: “Buyer Beware: Advertising and the Mass Media,” “Glimpses Beyond: The Future of Mass Communications,” and “Fine Art and Literature in the Technologized Society.” The work has both an Author and Subject Index. AU - Shearer, Benjamin F. and Marilyn Huxford, comp. CY - Westport, CT DA - 1983 KW - technology computers photography women, and new media advertising and public relations sexuality propaganda public relations propaganda advertising public relations advertising print media effects media violence violence news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers journalism +future and science fiction community democracy law censorship and ratings children law censorship and ratings news and journalism war +bibliographies bibliographies, and future bibliographies, and books bibliographies, and printing bibliographies, and advertising bibliographies, and public relations bibliographies, and newspapers bibliographies, and magazines bibliographies, and cable bibliographies, and telegraph bibliographies, and technology bibliographies, and motion pictures media effects bibliographies, and media effects bibliographies, and telephones bibliographies, and television bibliographies, and photography bibliographies, and radio bibliographies, and wireless future +books, periodicals, newspapers books newspapers magazines cable telegraph telephones television +photography and visual communication +motion pictures future cable media sociology advertising public relations public opinion democracy and media radio wireless communication bibliographies, and communication technology and society communication, and community bibliographies, and children and media bibliographies, and media violence bibliographies, and violence children, and media violence, and media bibliographies, and censorship censorship computers bibliographies, and computers cybernetics bibliographies, and regulation regulation regulation, and federal government bibliographies, and news news press printing satellites bibliographies, and satellites bibliographies, and propaganda propaganda sexuality, and mass media bibliographies, and sexuality and mass media bibliographies, and telecommunications telecommunications technology and society bibliographies, and communication technology values bibliographies, and values and media women bibliographies, and women +aeronautics and space communication computers and the Internet LB - 11900 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Greenwood Press PY - 1983 ST - Communications and Society: A Bibliography on Communications Technologies and Their Social Impact TI - Communications and Society: A Bibliography on Communications Technologies and Their Social Impact ID - 2537 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Shedd and Odiorne examined and categorized the content of 43 major union periodicals from January through August 1960 in an effort to see how union leaders used labor publications to influence membership views on political and legislative matters during a presidential election year. They examined nearly 400,000 column inches, and using a broad definition of political content, found an average of 25.8 percent of content could be considered political news and viewpoints. “Contrary to some widely-held opinions, the average union newspaper editor does not emerge from this study as a narrowly-oriented propagandist, however clearly his slant toward the interests of union members may appear.” For example, more than three times as much content was devoted to matters of public welfare than to the presidential election that year. Only 0.5 percent of column inches were devoted to influencing congressional elections. “That unions should attempt to affect the actions of government to the extent of devoting a quarter of its newspaper space to politics should come as a surprise to no one. In fact, this might be a surprisingly low figure to those who imply that unions are interested in little else.” Shedd and Odiorne noted that papers circulated among industrial workers tended to have more political news than those for craft unions. Only about 9 percent of total space was devoted to political action, “giving frank recognition to the fact that historically labor hasn’t been able to `deliver the vote.’ They add this caution: “No pretense is made here, in offering the facts revealed in this study, to assert that the union newspaper or periodical accurately mirrors the labor mind, or even the mind of the leadership. It is, however, tangible evidence of what union editors have stated in print. Experience in reading union periodicals teachers the student of unionism that much of what is said in these publications is designed to achieve an effect, rather than to document the state of thinking of the membership, the editor, or the leadership.” --Phil Glende AU - Shedd, Frederick R. and George S. Odiorne CY - Ann Arbor DA - 1960 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers news and journalism Glende, Phil labor magazines labor, and magazines magazines, and labor public relations public relations, and labor labor, and public relations LB - 1070 N1 - See also: office PB - Bureau of Industrial Relations, University of Michigan PY - 1960 ST - Political Content of Labor Union Periodicals: An Analysis of 43 Key Union Periodicals Representing Major United States and Canadian Unions TI - Political Content of Labor Union Periodicals: An Analysis of 43 Key Union Periodicals Representing Major United States and Canadian Unions ID - 195 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Sheldon, H. Horton and Edgar Orisewood CY - New York DA - 1929 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins LB - 10900 PB - D. Van Nostrand Co. PY - 1929 ST - Television TI - Television ID - 2452 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book examines the computer’s impact in industrialized society. Part I is entitled “Where, When, and What -- The Practical Impacts.” It has chapters on what computers are and are likely to become; their impact on work; influence on consumers (two chapters); and the government’s use of this technology. Part II is entitled “The Effects,” and has chapters on who controls computers and who benefits from them; adaptation to and by computers; are they a force for good or evil?; and the future. This is a work aimed at a general readership. The author, at the time of publication, had worked as an economist at the University of London, and as a dental surgeon. The work is unencumbered by notes, bibliography, or index. AU - Sherman, Barrie CY - New York DA - 1985 KW - computers +future and science fiction consumerism government values labor +computers and the Internet consumers, and computers capitalism, and computers values, and computers automation labor, and computers government, and computers future capitalism government labor future, and computers computers LB - 8050 N1 - See also: office PB - John Wiley and Sons PY - 1985 ST - The New Revolution: The Impact of Computers on Society TI - The New Revolution: The Impact of Computers on Society ID - 2174 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work on Thomas Young, Hermann von Helmholtz, and James Clerk Maxwell is aimed at the historian of science more than the social historian. “The modern technologies of color films and color television, ... are hardly imaginable without the ability to define colors as first demonstrated by Maxwell,” Sherman writes. AU - Sherman, Paul D [sic] CY - Bristol DA - 1981 KW - photography non-USA +television television, and color +motion pictures +photography and visual communication color, and 19th century Young, Thomas, and color Helmholtz, Hermann von, and color Maxwell, James Clerk, and color color, and science of color vision, science of television, and color (history of) motion pictures, and color (history of) color Maxwell, James Clerk LB - 1910 PB - Adam Hilger Ltd. PY - 1981 ST - Colour Vision in the Nineteenth Century: The Young-Helmholtz-Maxwell Theory TI - Colour Vision in the Nineteenth Century: The Young-Helmholtz-Maxwell Theory ID - 1587 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This annotated bibliography attempts to pull together the "state-of-the-art" on this subject. Noting that the potential in 1971 for satellite telecommunication is "enormous," the creators of this work also observe that legal and political barriers rather than technological obstacles may determine how satellite systems develop and are used. The Introduction to this work mentions two other related bibliographies published by EDSAT at about the same time: The Educational and Social Use of Satellite Communications (1970), and Teleconferencing (1971). AU - Shervis, Katherine, comp. (under guidance of Delbert D. Smith) CY - Madison, WI DA - June 1971 KW - nationalism law non-USA satellites piracy intellectual property +aeronautics and space communication +television +bibliographies satellites, and communication (bibliography) satellites, and legal and social telecommunications television, and satellites intellectual property, and satellite telecommunication piracy, and satellite communication copyright, and satellite communication +nationalism and communication Intelsat global communication copyright bibliographies, and satellites telecommunications bibliographies, annotated nationalism, and satellites LB - 4100 PB - EDSAT Center, University of Wisconsin PY - 1971 ST - Legal and Political Aspects of Satellite Telecommunication: An Annotated Bibliography TI - Legal and Political Aspects of Satellite Telecommunication: An Annotated Bibliography ID - 1798 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is part of a series entitled Historical Studies in Telecommunications, published by Arno Press. Arno Press reprinted many nineteenth century or out-of -print books, and this series compiled original articles on particular communication technologies. Shiers edited many of these titles, including similar anthologies on the telephone and television. Shiers attempted to find the most important or ground-breaking articles from scientific journals or other sources about the technology anthologized. He includes material from the 1850s to the 1940s and covers a broad range of sources in this volume. In this work there are articles from the 1850s and 1860s explaining the electric telegraph. These are grouped around theme of early electric telegraphs. Included are reprints of articles from The Telegraph Manual, an 1859 text, excerpts of the proceedings of various engineering and telegraphic societies, and a few retrospective articles looking back at electric telegraphs from the early twentieth century. An excellent essay by W. James King on the development of the electric telegraph looks at its predecessors, including Claude Chappe’s optical telegraph in France in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. The problem with an anthology of this sort is that except for a too brief introduction by Shiers, these pieces are presented without background or explanation. He never explains his rationale for including or excluding material. His introduction simply discusses the inventors. And there is no table of contents or index to help the reader search for specific themes or ideas. This book does have value for the scholar interested in the history of the electric telegraph. Some of the reprints would be difficult to find, and the collection generally seems to be a pretty good sampling. This anthology is of less value to the non-specialist. --David Henning AU - Shiers, George, ed. CY - New York DA - 1977 KW - innovation telegraph electricity Henning, David optical telegraph telegraph, optical telegraph, and operators Chappe, Claude Wheatstone, Charles telegraph, Wheatstone Morse, Samuel inventions inventors networks signaling systems telegraph, electric LB - 4040 PB - Arno Press PY - 1977 ST - The Electrical Telegraph: An Historical Anthology TI - The Electrical Telegraph: An Historical Anthology ID - 1792 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Shiers, George, ed. CY - New York DA - 1977 KW - non-USA +radio wireless communication Marconi, Guglielmo LB - 5980 PB - Arno Press PY - 1977 ST - The Development of Wireless to 1920 TI - The Development of Wireless to 1920 ID - 1983 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Shiers, George CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - +television +bibliographies bibliographies, and television LB - 7310 PB - Garland Publications PY - 1997 ST - Early Television: A Bibliographic Guide to 1940 TI - Early Television: A Bibliographic Guide to 1940 ID - 2101 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Shiers, George, ed. CY - New York DA - 1977 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins LB - 7330 PB - Arno Press PY - 1977 ST - Technical Development of Television TI - Technical Development of Television ID - 2103 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Shlain’s medical background makes this work interesting. The notes for his chapters, though, suggest minimal reading in communication theory (he mentions Marshall McLuhan but few others) or in history. Most chapters cite only a handful of secondary sources. Shlain thesis (set out also in the Utne Reader) is also too simplistic. Still, his thesis about changes in the way different media affect thinking and culture is thought provoking, and suggests a line of research outside the normal avenues of communication theory and historical scholarship. See also Shlain’s article in Utne Reader (1998). -SV Shlain’s book attempts to pinpoint the exact reason men and masculine ideals began to dominate and discredit women and more feminine ideals. As the title foretells, he blames the advent and spread of alphabet-based literacy and the concurrent spread of monotheism as the catalyst for this social change. Before the idea of the modern alphabet, ancient societies used images for their written communication and descriptions of their deities. Ancient Egypt is the best example as they are the culture most connected with hieroglyphics, a picture and image based form of communication. The Egyptians used these pictures to honor and discuss their Gods, from Amon-Ra with his ram’s head on a human body to the “vulture-Goddess” Nekhbet. At the time, many female Goddesses were considered as important, if not more so, than their male counterparts. But alphabet-based communication and monotheism put more power in masculine ideals and denigrated female icons and vocabulary. The reason this occurred, according to Shlain, has to do with basic human brain physiology. Images and pictures are processed in the right hemisphere of the human brain. This side is used for abstract conceptual processing, such as artistic endeavors and feelings, and it is considered to be associated with feminine strength. The right hemisphere is used for more concrete processing, such as logic-based deductions and reading, and it is associated with masculine strength. Ancient cultures used spoken and image-based communication to create a “balanced” cerebral processing system, where humans used both sides of the brain in their daily lives. But alphabet-based literacy has no use for images and causes the left side of the brain to dominate in daily life and communication. At the same time, cultures that developed alphabets tended to worship only one, masculine God. In fact, these cultures were so dedicated to their new left-brain dominated existence, that they banned all images of their new deity as an insult to Him. He blames such literacy as the reason religious followers started to fight brutal and savage wars over, what he terms, trivial differences in religious doctrine because they could read and interpret passages for themselves. Slowly, this began to change. The Catholic Church began to commission artists to portray God and various Biblical stories in art, such as the Sistine Chapel. But women and feminine ideals would teeter between favored and banned status for centuries within almost every human culture, from Spain to China. Recent technological innovations have spawned a new emphasis on feminine ideals and could bring global cultures back into a hemispheric balance as it concerns the human brain. Television and movies helped pictures regain its rightful place as an equal to the written word and computers, with its use of images and color to communicate, could make humans use both sides of their brains again when communicating ideas. This turn of events would help eliminate centuries of cultural misogyny and establish more peaceful communities. -Patrick Wright AU - Shlain, Leonard CY - New York DA - 1998 KW - computers photography women, and new media print community democracy war women print culture v. nonprint culture nonprint culture print culture print media nonprint media iconography general studies alphabet cognition, male v. female print culture v. nonprint culture democracy and media literacy nonprint media communication, perspective of vascular surgeon McLuhan, Marshall reading nonprint media, and women women, and nonprint media photography and visual communication radio World War II television icons computers computers, and icons critics computers print v. electronic computers and the Internet Wright, Patrick LB - 1210 PB - Viking PY - 1998 ST - The Alphabet Versus the Goddess: The Conflict Between Word and Image TI - The Alphabet Versus the Goddess: The Conflict Between Word and Image ID - 28 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 38-page bibliography has four categories: 1) Information Warfare and Operations; 2) Information Highway; 3) Information Technology, Management, Other Information Concepts; and 4) Related Bibliographies. AU - Shope, Virginia C., comp. CY - Carlisle, PA DA - Feb. 1998 KW - R & D new media research and development war war +bibliographies +military communication war, and communication new media, and war war, and new media new media, and military military, and new media LB - 20 PB - U. S. Army War College PY - 1998 ST - Information: A Selected Bibliography TI - Information: A Selected Bibliography ID - 93 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Short, who at the time was editor of the Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, here assembled article by leading scholars of American and British film and radio history that include Thomas Cripps, Nicholar Pronay, and others. The essays are solidly research and informative. “ “‘Propaganda’,” Short writes, “is one of those ambiguous words which has the problem of being both a pejorative term in common usage and an umbrella term amongst professional users. If one reads through the extensive number of definitions to be found in dictionaries, encyclopedias, or the writings of social science, an extremely wide range of emphasis can be discovered without any one definition proving conclusive. The oft-raised question of whether propaganda was (or is) a good thing or not usually answered by its commentators in the negative, although the alternative has its able defenders.” AU - Short, K. R. M., ed. CY - London DA - 1983 KW - public relations advertising motion pictures war non-USA propaganda +radio radio, and propaganda propaganda, and radio +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and propaganda propaganda, and motion pictures World War II World War II, and propaganda propaganda, and World War II World War II, and motion pictures World War II, and radio World War II, and British propaganda Great Britain Great Britain, and propaganda Great Britain, and radio propaganda Great Britain, and film propaganda Germany, and World War II Germany, and radio propaganda Germany, and propaganda Germany military communication public relations advertising and public relations LB - 1740 PB - Croom Helm PY - 1983 ST - Film and Radio Propaganda in World War II TI - Film and Radio Propaganda in World War II ID - 262 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book was originally published by the National Committee for Study of Social Values in Motion Pictures in 1928. William H. Short was the Executive Director of the Motion Picture Research Council. The Payne Fund Studies had originated in 1928 when he had invited several university researchers to examine what effects the movies had on children. Short was a Congregational minister, who had been a leader in the New York Peace Society, the League to Enforce Peace, and the League of Nations Non-Partisan Association, he was an outspoken critic of the movies. In 1928, he published A Generation of Motion Pictures, a redundant book which pulled together material from many sources condemning films. Short argued that by 1928 the movies were "already on Equality With Books." (80) "The expert in visual education of the New York City schools says the motion picture has made the world, its past, its thoughts, its inventions, its activities, its problems, and its dreams for its future 'mean more to the average man than ever before in the history of mankind'; and a medical professor at Columbia University says that the possibilities of the motion picture in science are 'beyond conception.'" (80) Short also said that "Movies Get Unparalleled Response From Simple People Because Appeal Is on Their Own Level." (81) Short quoted Terry Ramsaye's A Million and One Nights (1926). Ramsaye said "'The motion picture ... the only rival the printing press has ever known.'" (Ramsaye quoted, Short, p. 82). Later, Short commented that "The art of printing was seized by church and university within a few years of its discovery, and used for the upbuilding of character and the institutions of civilized life. This new art of the motion picture, probably more important than printing -- the most potent for the upbuilding or the destruction both of man and of society of any tool that mind has fashioned -- is a monopoly in the hands of a few men." (88) AU - Short, William H. CY - New York DA - 1928, 1978 KW - history values Christianity Protestants religion morality religion law censorship and ratings censorship motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and critics morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and Christianity Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Protestants Protestants, and motion pictures critics media effects sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and printing press media effects children and media motion pictures, and media effects media effects, and motion pictures children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children history and new media history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history motion pictures, and science children violence LB - 41580 PB - Garland Publishing Company PY - 1928 ST - A Generation of Motion Pictures: A Review of Social Values in Recreational Films TI - A Generation of Motion Pictures: A Review of Social Values in Recreational Films ID - 4257 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Shurkin has written a readable work that covers developments into the early 1980s. He considers the computer comparable to printing with movable metal type in its historical significance. He deals with major figures such as Charles Babbage, Alan Turing, John von Neumann, J. Presper Eckert (and ENIAC). AU - Shurkin, Joel CY - New York DA - 1984 KW - computers corporations corporations Moore, Gordon corporations corporations corporations magnetic recording magnetic tape recording transistors, and integrated circuits magnetic tape tape recording Hollerith technology materials materials values +computers and the Internet computers, history of Turing, Alan Babbage, Charles Neumann, John von Eckert, J. Presper ENIAC Ada, Countess of Lovelace Analytical Engine Atanasoff, John Vincent AT & T Brainerd, John Grist COLOSSUS computing, before computers values, and computers differential analyzer Difference Engine EDVAC Hollerith, Herman IBM computers, and magnetic tape tape recording, magnetic Mauchly, John William Moore's Law punch cards computers, and punch cards Noyce, Robert RCA Remington Rand vacuum tubes UNIVAC Sperry Rand Corporation transistors integrated circuits Watson, Thomas computers tape recording, magnetic +sound recording computers LB - 8020 PB - W. W. Norton & Company PY - 1984 ST - Engines of the Mind: A History of the Computer TI - Engines of the Mind: A History of the Computer ID - 2171 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This unpublished oral history is by the man who replaced Joseph Breen as head of the Production Code Administration in 1954. When Breen’s health declined and he retired in 1954, Shurlock became head of the PCA. He did not see his role to shield audiences from harmful effects of motion pictures, rather as protecting the industry from an outraged public. This interpreation the Production Code was in accord with what producers had desired all along: the public, not some ideal standard of morality, should determine what could be shown in movie theaters. AU - Shurlock, Geoffrey CY - Los Angeles, CA; Beverly Hills, CA DA - 1975 KW - self-regulation Production Code Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories values religion censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives primary sources motion pictures primary sources primary sources, California primary sources, Los Angeles +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and Production Code (motion pictures) Shurlock, Geoffrey primary sources, Geoffrey Shurlock oral histories Breen, Joseph Production Code, and decline of LB - 15350 PB - American Film Institute; Center for Advanced Film Studies PY - 1975 ST - Oral History with Geoffrey Shurlock TI - Oral History with Geoffrey Shurlock ID - 557 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is an early effort by UNESCO to examine the spread and influence of television. Siepmann notes that by 1950, television "had achieved importance for the general public only in France, Great Britain, in the United States and in the U. S. S. R." Two year later, in 1952, TV was "a practical reality in 17 countries." In the United States there were 109 TV stations and 17 million receivers being used. In Great Britian, there were about 1.5 million receivers and television transmitters reached about 80 percent of the population. The work suggest ways that television was influencing children. "Most studies," the author says, "agree that reading is seriously affected." Siepmann also considers the psychological influence of TV on children. He draws on Frederic Wertham's research on comic books showing that they subtly distort human values: kindness and sympathy for human suffered are considered weaknesses; cunning and shrewdness are highly valued; women are not "respected as persons, but are luxury prizes...." He cites Paul Witty who maintained that by 1952, the average 20-year-old person had "absorbed ... a minimum of 18,000 picture beatings, stranglings, shootings, torturing to death, and blood puddles from comics alone." (Witty quoted, 105) This figures does not include violence on radio, television, or in motion pictures. Siepmann quotes from the New York Time Magazine saying that "television writers are fascinated by death." Yet, Siepmann is nonjudgmental and draws on the work of psychiatrist Lauretta Bender, who said that violence in comic books, TV, and other poplular "provides only a harmless outlet for ... aggression." Siepmann is concerned with television as an educational tool. AU - Siepmann, Charles A. CY - Paris DA - 1952 KW - USSR United Nations UNESCO media effects media violence comic books non-USA +television violence comic books, and violence Wertham, Fredric violence, and popular culture violence, and comic books violence, and television television, and violence Great Britain Great Britain, and television France France, and television Soviet Union Soviet Union, and television television, and Great Britain television, and France television, and UNESCO television, and Soviet Union UNESCO, and television television, and spread of UNESCO, and media violence LB - 20530 PB - UNESCO PY - 1952 ST - Television and Education in the United States T2 - Press, Film and Radio in the World Today TI - Television and Education in the United States ID - 865 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The compilers of this volume conclude that the studies show "that the everpresent images of media violence lead to an acceptance of violence as normal behavior. Moreover, violence and victimization demonstrate power: they tell us who is on top, who is on the bottom, who will win, and who will lose. These portrayals convey lessons with important implications for the cultivation of insecurity and dependence, anxiety and alienation, approaches to crime and law enforcement, and the differential allocation of power in society. "This unequal sense of danger, vulnerability, mistrust, and general malaise cultivated by what is called 'entertainment' invites not only aggression but also exploitation and repression...." (xxi) AU - Signorielli, Nancy AU - comp., George Gerbner CY - Westport, CT DA - 1988 KW - media effects media violence media effects violence +bibliographies bibliographies, annotated bibliographies, and violence bibliographies, and media violence bibliographies, and TV violence bibliographies, and film violence bibliographies, and media effects +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures television, and bibliography motion pictures, and bibliography media effects, and bibliography LB - 20310 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Greenwood Press PY - 1988 ST - Violence and Terror in the Mass Media: An Annotated Bibliography TI - Violence and Terror in the Mass Media: An Annotated Bibliography ID - 849 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This annotated bibliography runs 232 pages and has 784 entries. UNESCO commission this project in 1984. The compilers sent out 4,600 requests to researchers worldwide who were working on violence, terrorism, and mass media. They also searched the holdings of major libraries between 1985 and 1987. While efforts were made to reach a broad range of scholars, the majority of studies in this volume are from the United States. Although this work does not attempt to evaluate the methodology or substance of each work, the creators of this work maintain that a careful examination of the annotations indicates “how and where the research converges.” The work attempts to include articles published through spring, 1987. The entries are divided into four broad categories: mass media content, mass media effects, pornography and the media, and terrorism and the media. The work includes both an author and subject index. AU - Signorielli, Nancy and George Gerbner, comp. CY - Westport, CT DA - 1988 KW - U. S.Congress women, and new media women United Nations sexuality news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers home, and new media information technology censorship and ratings children law censorship and ratings news and journalism non-USA +bibliographies bibliographies, and violence bibliographies, and media effects media effects +television bibliographies, and television +motion pictures bibliographies, and motion pictures pornography bibliographies, and pornography terrorism bibliographies, and terrorism children, and media bibliographies, and children and media Australia bibliographies, and Australia Canada bibliographies, and Canada censorship Congress, U. S. Congress, U. S., and media violence Great Britain bibliographies, and Great Britain Iran Japan Germany magazines bibliographies, and magazine violence +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers information technology, and home sensationalism UNESCO women, and violence war bibliographies, annotated terrorism, and bibliography government home news LB - 12050 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Greenwood Press PY - 1988 ST - Violence and Terror in the Mass Media: An Annotated Bibliography TI - Violence and Terror in the Mass Media: An Annotated Bibliography ID - 2552 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Silver, a biologist at Princeton University, has written a thought-provoking and troubling book. He argues that advances in reproductive technology "force us to reconsider long-held notions of parenthood, childhood, and the meaning of life itself." Couples and individuals now have options for reproducing life that were unimaginable only a few years ago. "The growing use of reprogenetic [the combined technologies of reproductive biology and genetics] is inevitable," he writes. "For better and worse, a new age is upon us -- an age in which we as humans will gain the ability to change the nature of our species." Silver speculates that by the 24th century, if not before, human society will have become divided into two classes: an upper ten percent who are gene-enriched and who have been able to selected their genetic makeup; and a larger group of second-class citizens he calls Naturals who have not be able to afford the technology to control their genetic makeup. It is likely that by this time that a couple, one from each class, will not even be able to conceive children together. Silver provides possible scenarios for what the future may hold and also the ethical issues that are raised by this technology. AU - Silver, Lee M. CY - London DA - 1998, 1999 KW - genetics +future and science fiction values +artificial intelligence and biotechnology genetic engineering cloning values, and genetics DNA future LB - 11370 PB - Phoenix, a division of Orion Books Ltd. PY - 1998 ST - Remaking Eden: Cloning, Genetic Engineering, and the Future of Humankind? TI - Remaking Eden: Cloning, Genetic Engineering, and the Future of Humankind? ID - 2497 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This account of Samuel Finley Breese Morse's life covers not only his work as an artist and inventor of the telegraph but his later career. Morse was interested in politics. Between the 1830s and 1850s, he opposed immigration and papal plots, and also ran unsuccessfully for mayor of New York City and for U. S. Congress. In addition to his nativism, during the American Civil War, he was a critic of the Lincoln administration and a northern defender of slavery. AU - Silverman, Kenneth CY - New York DA - 2003 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Morse, Samuel telegraph biography, Samuel Morse inventors and inventions telegraph, and Samuel Morse inventions LB - 28970 PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 2003 ST - Lightning Man: The Accursed Life of Samuel F. B. Morse TI - Lightning Man: The Accursed Life of Samuel F. B. Morse ID - 2675 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a series of local studies on the impact of the railway on various towns and rural communities in Victorian Britain. The concentration is on the response of local authorities to the railway, as well as the mark left on communities by the train. The book is organized thematically, with chapters devoted to greater London, the large, industrial, provincial cities of the North, West, and Midlands, the railway towns created by the industry itself, ports and docks, minor towns, and finally, the countryside. Source material includes a slate of primary sources, including government documents, company reports, and private papers. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Simmons, Jack CY - London DA - 1986 KW - community non-USA Wolf, Nicholas +transportation Great Britain railroads Great Britain, and railroads railroads, and Great Britain community, and railroads railroads, and community LB - 2030 PB - David & Charles PY - 1986 ST - The Railway in Town and Country, 1830-1914 TI - The Railway in Town and Country, 1830-1914 ID - 291 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - An unsurpassed study of the social impact of the railway and a companion volume to the author’s earlier book on the railway in the town and country. The author is adept at weighing and considering evidence, and imaginative in his focus. Chapters are thematically devoted to infrastructure and landscape; technology and issues of safety and comfort; the mails and telegraphy; timekeeping and uniformity; leisure; and the railway as depicted in popular press and literature. This book is thorough and densely detailed, and is based partially on a synthesis of secondary resources and partially on printed primary source accounts. This work is particularly useful from the standpoint of new technology and communications, and has been cited often since being published. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Simmons, Jack CY - New York DA - 1991 KW - post office time and timekeeping telegraph labor timekeeping, and clocks non-USA office, and new media Wolf, Nicholas +transportation Great Britain railroads Great Britain, and railroads railroads, and Great Britain timekeeping timekeeping, and railroads timekeeping, and Great Britain Great Britain, and timekeeping +postal service Great Britain, and postal service postal service, and Great Britain labor labor, and Great Britain labor, and railroads Great Britain, and labor infrastructure, and Great Britain Great Britain, and infrastructure telegraph, and Great Britain Great Britain, and telegraph telegraph, and railroads infrastructure office LB - 2040 N1 - See also: office PB - Thames and Hudson PY - 1991 ST - The Victorian Railway TI - The Victorian Railway ID - 292 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Essentially an encyclopedia of railway history. This large volume brings together entries on railway technology, industry, and individuals from a number of scholars. Terms cover all aspects of railway history, whether political, social, or economic. Organized by subject area with an easy-to-use index. A good reference work for the subject. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Simmons, Jack and Gordon Bidelle, eds. CY - Oxford, Eng. DA - 1997 KW - post office time and timekeeping telegraph References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps labor timekeeping, and clocks non-USA office, and new media Wolf, Nicholas +transportation Great Britain railroads Great Britain, and railroads railroads, and Great Britain timekeeping timekeeping, and railroads timekeeping, and Great Britain Great Britain, and timekeeping +postal service Great Britain, and postal service postal service, and Great Britain labor labor, and Great Britain labor, and railroads Great Britain, and labor infrastructure, and Great Britain Great Britain, and infrastructure telegraph, and Great Britain Great Britain, and telegraph telegraph, and railroads reference works infrastructure office LB - 2050 N1 - See also: office PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1997 ST - The Oxford Companion to British Railway History from 1603 to the 1990s TI - The Oxford Companion to British Railway History from 1603 to the 1990s ID - 293 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Appearing after the 1970 Report of the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography, this work contends that pornography is essentially harmless. AU - Simons, G. L. CY - London DA - 1972 KW - archives sexuality motion pictures mass media pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and supporters LB - 22290 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Abelard-Schuman PY - 1972 ST - Pornography Without Prejudice: A Reply to Objectors TI - Pornography Without Prejudice: A Reply to Objectors ID - 957 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This brief, controversial work (the text runs 117 pages) examines the "interaction between U.S. psychological warfare and the development of mass communication theories and research methodologies between 1945 and 1960." Simpson argues that "Government psychological warfare programs helped shape mass communication research into a distinct scholarly field, strongly influencing the choice of leaders and determining which of the competing scientific paradigms of communication would be funded, elaborated, and encouraged to prosper. The state usually did not directly determine what scientists could or could not say, but it did significantly influence the selection of who would do the `authoritative' talking in the field." The author takes up three tasks: 1) to outline the history of U.S. psychological warfare between 1945-1960; 2) to examine the contributions made by leading communication researchers and institutions; and 3) to study the impact psychological warfare programs had on ideas about communication and science within the field of communication research itself. --SV This text is a critical examination of the role that government sponsored psychological warfare and propaganda research played in the development of the field of communication research. Simpson argues that communication research as a field has been heavily influenced methodologically and theoretically due to its early dependence on government funding. In a sense, the early great scholars of the field such as Harold Lasswell, Paul Lazarsfeld, and others created a system that encouraged research on propaganda and psychological warfare. This was due to monetary reasons, nationalism, and a sense of duty to protect the values of the United States from Communism. This ultimately created a paradigm of dominance, as Simpson refers to it, from which the leading scholars controlled the direction and publication of research. Leading journals such as Public Opinion Quarterly were used as a means to disseminate findings from government funded psychological warfare research while simultaneously keeping the funding origins of that research hidden from the public. Maintenance of this paradigm of dominance often went a step further, however, when opposition to the nationalistic research was questioned. Critical scholars (i.e. Marxist) were portrayed as mentally unfit and “freaks” in order to belittle their contributions to keep the focus of research on all things American. Some communication scholars may have trouble swallowing Simpson’s introductory paragraph in which he asserts that “communication research is a small but intriguing field in the social sciences. This relatively new specialty crystallized into a distinct discipline within sociology: complete with colleges, curricula, the authority to grant doctorates, and so forthbetween about 1950 and 1955.” This helps set the tone for what the reader should expect: a critical examination of the very tenants of modern day communication research institutions. --Michael Boyle AU - Simpson, Christopher CY - New York DA - 1994 KW - R & D public relations advertising research and development research and development war +military communication war information technology general studies information technology, and Cold War propaganda psychological warfare research and development, and government support military-industrial complex military-university complex Boyle, Michael public relations advertising and public relations LB - 1230 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1994 ST - Science of Coercion: Communication Research and Psychological Warfare, 1945-1960 TI - Science of Coercion: Communication Research and Psychological Warfare, 1945-1960 ID - 1519 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - While this work does not discuss technology per se, it does provide a context for the transition to modernist thought that came with the Industrial Revolution. The book appears in the Fred W. Morrison Series in Southern Studies. AU - Singal, Daniel Joseph CY - Chapel Hill DA - c1982 KW - cultural change values modernity cyberspace culture law censorship and ratings motion pictures, and culture culture, and motion pictures modernism Victorianism censorship context cultural change, early 20th motion pictures LB - 12820 PB - University of North Carolina Press PY - 1982 ST - The War Within: From Victorian to Modernist Thought in the South, 1919-1945 TI - The War Within: From Victorian to Modernist Thought in the South, 1919-1945 ID - 460 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This useful book traces the development of color photography from the nineteenth century into the post-World War II era. It contains stunning color pictures -- e.g., Chicago’s first three-color photoengraving produced by the Chicago Colortype Company in 1894. The fifth chapter is entitled “The Camera and the Press.” Sipley explains three different forms of printing and how photography corresponded to each. “The photographic process has been adapted to each of these three major forms of printing: letter press (relief); lithography (planographic); and engraving (intaglio). The modern photo-mechanical processes corresponding to the old techniques of pictorial printing are: photoengraving (letterpress); photolithography (planographic); and gravure (intaglio).” Later, Sipley wrote that the “perfection of color reproduction on the printing press as well as the tremendous growth of the use of color in advertising and editorial pages of all forms of publications may definitely be attributed to the adoption of photographic processes and techniques to each of the major methods of printing.” Sipley observes that the trend toward using color accelerated after 1945, both in print advertising and for editorial matter and in non-print media. In 1949 the Saturday Evening Post employed color on more than 5,400 pages. During the same period, the Ladies Home Journal used it on more than 2,000 pages. (213-14) AU - Sipley, Louis Walton CY - New York DA - 1951 KW - illustrations photography advertising, and public relations advertising propaganda public relations print magazines news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers news and journalism printing printing press press magazines lithography illustrations +photography and visual communication +books, periodicals, newspapers color, and history of cameras cameras, and color photography press, and color photography magazines, and color photography lithography, planographic lithography, color printing, and letter press (relief) engraving, intaglio illustrations, and color photolithography, and planographic gravure, and intaglio printing press advertising, and color photography, and three-color photo engraving (1894) press, and cameras printing, and photography color advertising photo engraving photolithography engraving LB - 1920 PB - Macmillan Company PY - 1951 ST - A Half Century of Color TI - A Half Century of Color ID - 1588 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 170-page, illustrated book, is divided into eight chapters: 1) The Early Experimenters; 2) The First Years of Success; 3) The Chemists; 4) The Optical Specialists; 5) Masters of Photomechanical Reproduction; 6) Chronophotography and Cinematography; 7) Direct Color Photography; and 8) Multiple and Special Contributors. It provides brief biographical portraits of photography's pioneers in the United States, Germany, Great Britain, and elsewhere, starting with Thomas Wedgwood (1771-1805) through Chester Carlson and Edwin Land. The author's introduction to chapter V on "Masters of Photomechanical Reproduction," gives a brief account of woodcuts with letterpress, metal engraving and etchings or the intaglio processes, the process of lithography, and photoengraving. Pages 137-49 provide a "Selected Chronology of Photography." AU - Sipley, Louis Walton CY - Philadelphia, PA DA - 1965 KW - wood engraving Ives, Frederic ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography news and journalism photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines color color, and photography photography, and color biography, autobiography, oral histories photography, and biographies biographies, and photography motion pictures motion pictures, and photography photography, and motion pictures Germany Great Britain non-USA non-USA, and photography Germany, and photography photography, and non-USA photography, and Germany photography, and Great Britain Great Britain, and photography photography, and Edwin Land photography, and Chester Carlson photography, and Edouard Belin telegraph telegraphy and photography photography, and telegraph motion pictures, and Lumiere brothers photography, and Lumiere brothers Ives, Frederic, and photography photography, and Frederic Ives photography, and Wilhelm Roentgen color, and Gabriel Lippmann photography, and Gabriel Lippmann Lippmann process photography, and Charles Francis Jenkins Edison, Thomas photography, and Thomas Edison motion pictures, and photography photography, and Etienne Marey photography, and Eadweard Muybridge photography, and Louis Daguerre wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photocopying photography, and photocopying x-rays Belin, Edouard, and photos by wire Eastman, George photography, and George Eastman Land, Edwin photography, instantaneous photocopying, and Chester Carlson timelines timelines, and photography photography, and timelines ref, book magazines LB - 39350 PB - American Museum of Photography PY - 1965 ST - Photography's Great Inventors: Selected by An International Committee for the International Photography Hall of Fame TI - Photography's Great Inventors: Selected by An International Committee for the International Photography Hall of Fame ID - 4034 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Sivulka conducts a case study of soap to trace the transitions in American consumer culture in the late 1800s and early 1900s. She argues that that soap companies, in part, drove changes in the advertising industry and practices during this time period. According to the author, Soap companies were early innovators in marketing very similar products through the use of branding. Furthermore, taking a cultural anthropological research framework, Sivulka makes the case that advertising can be analyzed as an “artifact” of culture. From this perspective, “cleanliness” can be studied as a product of the culture of consumption that arose in the United States around the turn of the twentieth century during a period of rapid social change. According to her research, the Civil War period was a turning point in patterns of consumption on the United States. In this study, Sivulka explores the following research questions: “1) What do the advertisements for personal cleanliness products tell us about the change in beliefs and values of mass society from 1875 to 1940? 2) What are the visible expressions of these beliefs and values in terms of myths, icons, stereotypes, heroes, rituals, and formulas? What rituals of cleanliness are portrayed as socially necessary? 3) What types of advertising conventions developed as reliable formulas for success?” (pp. 18-19). Sivulka’s findings include that cleanliness as “moral” came to embody the American ideal and was thus seen as good for business, soap can be viewed as a symbol of changing social relations, soap was a driving force in the development of the advertising industry, and that early soap advertisements were highly stereotypical of women, gender relations, and race. In addition, soap was also used in advertising an American ideal as a tool in Americanization of immigrants and in nation-building globally. --Jill Hopke AU - Sivulka, Juliann CY - Amherst, NY DA - 2001 KW - consumerism Hopke, Jill advertising and public relations education children and media advertising, and hygiene hygiene, and education education, and hygiene values values, and advertising advertising, and values children, and advertising advertising, and children education, and values values, and education critics critics, and advertising critics, and education education, and critics advertising, and critics capitalism capitalism, and education education, and capitalism education, and consumerism consumerism, and education women, and consumerism consumerism, and women women advertising children LB - 32980 PB - Humanity Books PY - 2001 ST - Stronger than Dirt: A Cultural History of Advertising Personal Hygiene in America, 1875-1940 TI - Stronger than Dirt: A Cultural History of Advertising Personal Hygiene in America, 1875-1940 ID - 41 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Skard writes that "the material for the survey was collected from the early 1920's on, more systematically during 1935-36 and 1938-39; the manuscript was roughly drafted in the latter year for an academic competition. Before I had time to revise the draft and exhaust the collected material my homeland Norway was invaded by the Germans. While I managed to bring to the United States a copy of the draft manuscript, the entire material was help up in Japan and probably lost in the bombing of Kobe. Within a reasonable future I will not be able to devote more time to the subject. I have therefore gratefully accepted the offer of the American Philosophical Society to print the manuscript as it is, with a few additions and corrections, before it become too dated." (164) This work is noteworthy if for no other reason than the literature Skard surveys was written in several languages. Skard says that "since the 1880's a large amount of time and work had been devoted to the investigation of the emotional impact of ... colors." (171) After 1900, many theories about color were revised. "The impulse came simultaneously from many quarters; but the decisive attack was directed against the basic dogma of the sensualistic theory of art. Typical of the new attitude was the German aesthetician Th. A. Meyer. Most literary historians of the older school tacitly accepted the idea that richness of the sensory impression and strengh of the poetic imagery were one and the same thing; Meyer and his followers drew this identity into doubt. Vision and poetry are not congruent, but different. Language does not offer a series or real sensations but a kind of shorthand symbol representing the perceptions; the words may be colored and accompanied by vague memories of sensory impressions but do not directly call them up. 'In the poetic description of sensory objects we do not see the objects themselves as we do in a painting. We conceive the sensory object in a spiritualized kind of perception, to which we only link some associations from previous sense experiences.' Any poetical description is therefore a transformation: the details can only be interpreted as parts of the new aesthetic whole which has been created, and within which all the means of expression are closely interrelated. The literary description 'resembles,' and nevertheless shines like a strange, transfigured world." (170) Skard commented on the inadaquecy of language to explain color, that in all languages "color terminology" is "vague and ambiguous.... The number existing color shades is so tremendous that the expression in words is bound to simplify, exaggerate, and cut away the finer distinction. The terms are unstable and varying even in the same person and only a few colors can be clearly and unmistakable defined in words at all. The very denotation of the color shades from moment to moment is a creative activity where all the forces of the mind may come into play." (174) He notes that in England and the United States that physics, biology, and chemistry had expanded the modern color vocabulary. Advertising has also been a factor in this process. (175) Skard observed that his own generation's sense of colore had been strongly "influenced by color photography, the color film, and the animated cartoon." (177) Of Impressionism in art, he wrote: "The idea of Impressionism as contrasted with Naturalism was, not to reproduce the things themselves, but to render their transient impression in the moment when they pass through our mind 'like pigeons in the loft' (Hofmannsthal)." (202) Skard’s Preface runs from pp. 163-203. This is one of two bibliographies on color noted in Neil Harris’ chapter on color in Cultural Excursions (1990). Published as a separate volume with an index, this work originally appeared in the Proceeding of the American Philosophical Society, Vol. 90, No. 3 (July 1946), 163-249. AU - Skard, Sigmund CY - Philadelphia DA - 1946 KW - photography bibliographies photography and visual communication color, in literature color, and research on color bibliographies, and color color non-USA non-USA, and color non-USA, and bibliographies color, and inadequacy of language color, in history ref, secondary ref, book LB - 38620 PB - American Philosophical Society PY - 1946 ST - The Use of Color in Literature: A Survey of Research TI - The Use of Color in Literature: A Survey of Research ID - 3961 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - At the time of this book's publication, Skinner was a professor of history and film at Brandon University in Manitoba and had been vice-chairman of the Manitoba Film Classification Board. This book uses specific motion pictures to examine the work of the Roman Catholic Legion of Decency (later the National Catholic Office for Motion Pictures or NCOMP). Skinner begins by discussing film censorship in the United States before 1933, the creation of the Legion of Decency and the background from which it emerged, its rise to power. Chapter 6-8 discuss the decline of the Legion and later NCOMP. AU - Skinner, James M. CY - Westport, CT DA - 1993 KW - self-regulation Production Code PCA values Christianity Christianity censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality motion pictures, and critics Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity motion pictures, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and motion pictures Legion of Decency Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. Production Code, and decline of NCOMP National Catholic Office for Motion Pictures (NCOMP) Catholic Church morality, and motion pictures censorship morality LB - 28780 PB - Praeger PY - 1993 ST - The Cross and the Cinema: The Legion of Decency and the National Office for Motion Pictures, 1933-1970 TI - The Cross and the Cinema: The Legion of Decency and the National Office for Motion Pictures, 1933-1970 ID - 2652 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a widely cited and influential history of the motion pictures industry in America. Sklar writes: "In the case of movies, the ability to exercise cultural power was shaped not only by the possession of economic, social or political power, but also by such factors as national origin or religious affiliation, not to speak of far more such elusive elements, such as celebrity of personal magnetism. The movies were the first medium of entertainment and cultural information to be controlled by men who did not share the ethnic or religious backgrounds of the traditional cultural elites: that fact has dominated their entire history, engaging them in struggles on many fronts, and sometimes negating the apparent advantage enjoyed by men who otherwise adhered faithfully to the proper capitalist values and conservative political beliefs." In its scope, this work is comparable to another history of the film industry completed in the mid-1970s: Garth Jowett's Film: The Democratic Art (1976). --SV Sklar traces 100 years in the development of American movies from the beginnings at the end of the nineteenth century to the middle of the 1990s. The movies themselves get much of his attention, though he also relies on several secondary sources. He is concerned to show the symbiotic relationship between American movies and American culture, and how the one influenced and shaped the other. Noting the dominance of the industry by Jewish immigrants dating to the early twentieth century and continuing through the century’s end, Sklar finds his principal theme: American movies have not reflected the ethnic or religious backgrounds of the cultural elite, and have proved to be a significant factor in the erosion through the twentieth century of that elite’s authority. Sklar suggests an enormous role for the movies in twentieth- century American cultural history perhaps the most influential form of mass communication in the century’s first half, and a place second only to television’s in the latter half. --Gordon Jackson AU - Sklar, Robert CY - New York DA - 1975 KW - ethnicity law law censorship and ratings values regulation +motion pictures +motion pictures values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history of censorship, and motion pictures regulation, and motion pictures ethnicity, and motion pictures censorship motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and regulation motion pictures, and ethnicity Jackson, Gordon LB - 10550 PB - Random House PY - 1975 ST - Movie-Made America: A Social History of American Movies TI - Movie-Made America: A Social History of American Movies ID - 2419 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - During the 1960s, Sloane understood that by creating new colors, technology had made possible “a greater degree of aesthetic freedom in art,” and “emotional freedom in life.” AU - Sloane, Patricia CY - London and New York DA - [1967] KW - censorship avant garde art , color freedom color, and freedom color, and 1960s art, and color color, and art avant garde, and color color, and avant garde censorship, and color color, and censorship censorship and ratings LB - 32410 PB - Studio Vista and Reinhold Book Corporation ST - Colour: Basic Principles, New Directions TI - Colour: Basic Principles, New Directions ID - 2900 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book attempts to shed light “on an important cultural trend, a trend so pervasive as to be almost invisible: our growing separation from reality. More and more of us, whether we realize it or not, accept the copy as the original,” Slouka writes. “Increasingly removed from experience, overdependent on the representations of reality that come to us through television and print media, we seem more and more willing to put our trust in intermediaries who ‘re-present’ the world to us.” The danger of this approach, he argues, is that “intermediaries are notoriously unreliable.” The text of Slouka’s book runs 152 pages and in addition to an Introduction there are six chapters: “‘Reality Is Death’: The Spirit of Cyberspace”; “‘Springtime for Schizophrenia’: The Assault on Identity”; “Virtual World: The Assault on Place”; “Highway to Hive: The Assault on Community”; “Republic of Illusion: The Assault on Reality”; and “The Case for Essentialism.” The work has a seven-age Glossary. Notes run from page 161 to 185. There is no Index. AU - Slouka, Mark CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - computers cyberspace reality values print preservation journalism identity community democracy community news and journalism history cyberspace (spatial) critics democracy and media virtual reality community, and new media space (spatial) news, and new media +television news, and television television, and news identity, and new media +computers and the Internet television, and reality print media, and reality reality, and technology values, and technology history, break with history, and new media values history news LB - 720 PB - BasicBooks PY - 1995 ST - War of the Worlds: Cyberspace and the High-Tech Assault on Reality TI - War of the Worlds: Cyberspace and the High-Tech Assault on Reality ID - 160 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This short (39 pages) introductory history is based on “An Exhibition in the Great Hall of the Library of Congress in Celebration of the 100th Anniversary of the Invention of the Phonograph.” AU - Smart, James R., and Jon W. Newsom CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1977 KW - illustrations +sound recording illustrations +sound recording phonograph illustrations, and phonograph LB - 5610 PB - Library of Congress PY - 1977 ST - "A Wonderful Invention": A Brief History of the Phonograph from Tinfoil to the LP TI - "A Wonderful Invention": A Brief History of the Phonograph from Tinfoil to the LP ID - 1946 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The title of this work came from Plato's Republic (Book VII). Smith begins with Vice President Spiro Agnew's attack on media power on November 13, 1969, and attempts to answer the question of how television acquired such "'ulterior' powers and meanings." Smith makes several observations: 1) "that the actual technical development of broadcasting took directions which were dictated by a new configuration of market forces and social beliefs about the nature of mass society"; 2) "that broadcasting arrived encrusted in the assumption that it was an instrument by which a few voices addressed a multitude, without response"; 3) that broadcasting had reached "such magnitude that it (and its controllers) can steer the course of entire cultures"; 4) that "broadcasters are dominated by their collective assumptions about their own audiences"; and 5) that means must be found "to steer the various systems of broadcasting in ways which actually relate to the newly identified needs and demands of society." AU - Smith, Anthony CY - Urbana DA - 1973 KW - Netherlands nationalism corporations corporations new media motion pictures journalism critics community democracy news and journalism non-USA +television +motion pictures and popular culture +radio news Japan Japan, and television television, and Japan Holland, and television Holland television, and Holland France France, and television television, and France new media, and society audiences media effects media effects, and television CBS television, and critics critics, and television motion pictures, and critics critics, and motion pictures radio, and critics critics, and radio +nationalism and communication television, and nationalism nationalism, and television democracy, and television television, and democracy broadcasting, and nationalism nationalism, and broadcasting democracy, and broadcasting broadcasting LB - 28080 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - University of Illinois Press PY - 1973 ST - The Shadow in the Cave: The Broadcaster, His Audience, and the State TI - The Shadow in the Cave: The Broadcaster, His Audience, and the State ID - 1357 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work has the following essays: “The invention of television,” by Albert Abramson; “The beginnings of American television,” by William Boddy; “Television as a public service medium,” by Anthony Smith; “Drama and entertainment,” by Richard Paterson; “Non_fiction television,” by Michael Tracey; “Sport," Steven Barnett ; "Political ceremony and instant history,” by Daniel Dayan and Elihu Katz; “Television in the home and family,” by Susan Briggs; “Taste, decency, and standards,” by Colin Shaw; “Terrorism,” by Philip Schlesinger; “The American networks,” by Les Brow; “Canada,” by Marc Raboy; “Japan,” by Hidetoshi Kato; “The Arab world,” by Douglas Boyd; “The Third World,” by Dietrich Berwanger; “South Asia,” by Pradip N. Thomas; “Australia,” by Elizabeth Jacka and Lesley Johnson; “Scandinavia, Netherlands, and Belgium,” by Trine Syvertsen and Eli Skogerbø; “Africa,” by Charles Okigbo; “Greater China,” by Zhao Bin; “Latin America,” by Silvio Waisbord; and “Epilogue : the future,” by Richard Paterson and Anthony Smith. AU - Smith, Anthony, ed. CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - entertainment nationalism entertainment, home Asia television, and home television, and values censorship and ratings preservation home entertainment history, and new media Third World law regulation non-USA home, and new media home television, and history of +television television, international television, and origins home, and television +nationalism and communication nationalism, and television television, and nationalism history, and television Canada television, and Canada values, and television regulation, and television Third World, and television television, and Third World Africa television, and Africa China television, and China Latin America television, and Latin America Scandinavia television, and Scandinavia South Asia television, and South Asia Australia television, and Australia Belgium television, and Belgium Netherlands television, and Netherlands Japan television, and Japan Japan, and television Arab World television, and Arab World values history Arab countries LB - 10810 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1995 ST - Television: An International History TI - Television: An International History ID - 1980 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Smith argues that the struggle between “North” and “South,” between prosperous nations primarily in the northern hemisphere, and struggling nations mainly in the southern hemisphere and in the equatorial zones, has stolen the international spotlight from the East-West divide of the Cold War. His work addresses issues of information flow and cultural hegemony. Third World nations and several international agencies such as UNESCO, have maintained that prosperous Western nations dominate information through their control of news collecting agencies such as Reuters, Agent France-Press, United Press International, and the Associated Press. Moreover, the Western nations have other powerful advantages resulting from their entertainment industries, advertising agencies, international newspaper chains, and their control of “the electro-magnetic spectrum on which broadcasting, navigation, meteorology and much else depend.” Smith maintains “that the existing information order of the world is a product of and has itself extended the historical relationships between the ‘active’ and the ‘passive’ civilizations, the seeing and the seen, imperial and empire, exploring and explored. The prosperous nations of the North have not come to terms with the fact that they are now being obliged to be themselves ‘observed’ as the relative political status of the great power blocs is beginning to change. They are insisting upon their cultural prowess, even where their economic and political power has been diminished; it is this which has suddenly made developing countries aware of how dependent they have been, causing them to seize upon the news flow issue as a method of taking control of their own world image -- with some success.” Yet Smith is doubtful that Third World nations will be able to produce independently large volumes of information that can compete with the more prosperous nations until the Third World develops a greater respect for and commitment to freedom of the press. “Perhaps the greatest weakness in the list of demands which makes up the New International Information Order has been its lack of conception of the primal value of press freedom (and of intellectual freedom as a whole). In a sense, the order was formulated by the wrong people in the wrong way, although much of the sentiment supporting them has been genuine and even in certain respects liberating; but seldom can the charter of a great political cause have been so mean in spirit, so ungenerous in sentiment, so obsessively petty, so insistent upon the obligations of others and so niggardly in ascribing duties to its own adherents.” AU - Smith, Anthony CY - New York DA - 1980 KW - nationalism imperialism advertising, and public relations United Nations propaganda public relations journalism news and journalism Third World freedom news and journalism non-USA journalism +nationalism and communication Third World, and new media New International Information Order cultural imperialism news news, and nationalism advertising news, and advertising news, and capitalism capitalism news, and Third World UNESCO Great Britain Africa Canada Europe France Havas United Press International Associated Press India journalism Reuters South America global communication +radio freedom of expression free speech freedom of expression, and Third World Third World, and freedom of expression nationalism, and new media nationalism, and cultural imperialism LB - 11620 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1980 ST - The Geopolitics of Information: How Western Culture Dominates the World TI - The Geopolitics of Information: How Western Culture Dominates the World ID - 2279 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work has six chapters and begins in 1600. Chapter 6, "'The Demon of Sensationalism,' 1880-1980," discusses technological changes in the press. Smith notes that until the 1970s, twentieth-century technological innovations in the press "added only in speed and quantity to the production capacity of the newspaper." Offset printing and photo-composition brought qualitative changes during the 1970s. He says that different types of color printing had been possible since 1910. Rotogravure illustrations (etched on cylinders) began in 1895 in England but were used in American papers only after World War I. Zincography, combining photography and etching in a way that pictures could be reproduced in varying sizes was invented in 1872. "The real technological revolution in newspaper production of the twentieth century was based on a technique, conceived during a printing strike in 1919 but not developed until after the Second World War," Smith writes, and involved "making a photo-engraving of typewritten material instead of setting a string of line-casting machines." It took many years for such processes to become economical and "even by 1960 they were usable only in small newspapers with small printing runs. Papers with many pages found it cheaper to use conventional stereotypes, but as production costs began to mount with the great inflation of the 1970s, further improvements were made and offset printing became viable for larger and larger publications. Cold type gradually replaced hot metal, and the whole atmosphere of newspaper production changed." The author also notes that during the 1970s, inexpensive computers were introduced into newspaper production. AU - Smith, Anthony CY - London DA - 1979 KW - illustrations photography print print culture +photography and visual communication communication revolution journalism news and journalism communication revolution news and journalism non-USA sensationalism reproduction revolution printing printing press photo engraving newspapers news illustrations Great Britain +books, periodicals, newspapers printing, cold-type offset graphics revolution reproduction revolution (1960s) +duplicating technologies illustrations, and rotogravure color, and newspapers sensationalism, and newspapers Great Britain, and newspapers Great Britain zincography photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving color journalism, and new media newspapers, and new media print v. electronic newspapers, and color offset printing journalism LB - 11410 PB - Thames and Hudson PY - 1979 ST - The Newspaper: An International History TI - The Newspaper: An International History ID - 2501 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a collection of essays and lectures that Smith produced between the mid-1980s and early 1990s. He covers a range of topics and one thread running through these pieces is how new means of communication effect cognition. The work is divided into two parts. Part One considers "Versions of the Self." Chapters include "Information Technology and the Myth of Abundance"; "The Influence of Television"; "On Audio and Visual Technologies: A Future for the Printed Word?" (this lecture includes a discussion of early cinema); "The Public Interest"; "Nations"; and "Revolution and Evolution? The Social Consequences of Technology Convergence." Part Two is entitled "The Life of Institutions." Among its six chapters are: "Contemporary Knowledge and Contemporary Journalism"; "Books to Bytes: The Computer and the Library"; "Public Service Broadcasting Meets the Social Market"; and "Licences and Liberty." AU - Smith, Anthony CY - London DA - 1993 KW - computers nationalism print nonprint media communication revolution news and journalism archives community democracy news and journalism non-USA nonprint culture print culture media libraries journalism libraries, and information storage general studies +television +motion pictures +information storage libraries, and computers electronic preservation print media v. electronic media +books, periodicals, newspapers Great Britain +computers and the Internet broadcasting, public audiences, and television communication revolution democracy and media critics +radio +nationalism and communication media convergence audiences electronic media cognition, and new media broadcasting LB - 11440 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - British Film Institute PY - 1993 ST - Books to Bytes: Knowledge and Information in the Postmodern Era TI - Books to Bytes: Knowledge and Information in the Postmodern Era ID - 2504 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Smith believed that newspapers were in the middle of rapid technological change, and were moving from one era to another. Electronics was driving this change. "The social function of the newspaper is changing, as is the whole culture of journalism and the concept of daily disseminated printed information," he wrote. "For the new electronics offers something quite different from a new production method -- it provides for a series of changes in all of the relationships of which the industry is composed. It alters the demarcations between craftsman and organizer, between investor and regulator, between professional and production worker." This work looks primarily at American newspapers. "What one can see in the newspaper," Smith said, "is a microcosm of a new social information system, in which computers help information to be stored and circulated in ways profoundly different from those which have been employed since the Renaissance, when printing first established itself in Western societies." Smith attempts to reveal parallels between current changes and early transformation in communication that came with writing and printing. "The computerization of print is truly a third revolution in communications of similar scale and importance, in that it raises comparably fundamental issues -- concerning the social control of information, the nature of the individual creative function, the ways in which information interacts with human memory." In examining the newspaper, one sees "the evolution of the newspaper 'morgue' into an electronic information system, the evolution of the journalist into an information technician." AU - Smith, Anthony CY - New York DA - 1980 KW - computers magnetic recording print print culture preservation communication revolution news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers journalism news and journalism archives history, and new media magnetic tape communication revolution, and second industrial revolution news and journalism newspapers news magazines libraries labor journalism information technology libraries, and information storage +information storage information processing Information Age history +books, periodicals, newspapers second industrial revolution communication revolution Gutenberg, Johann printing writing +computers and the Internet newspapers, and computers information storage, and computers newspapers, and society information technology, and newspapers information processing, and newspapers magazines, and new media videotex electronic preservation history, and newspapers history, and electronic media newspapers, and electronic preservation labor, and newspapers electronic media journalism, and new media newspapers, and new media print v. electronic LB - 11510 N1 - See also: office PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1980 ST - Goodbye Gutenberg: The Newspaper Revolution of the 1980's TI - Goodbye Gutenberg: The Newspaper Revolution of the 1980's ID - 2511 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work suggests potential uses of satellite communication. Section II considers "communication satellite system alternatives, drawing distinctions between distribution, community and direct broadcast satellite systems." It also has a brief history broadcasting satellites and how they might aid rural areas. Subsequent sections consider strategies, methodologies, and other topics aimed at helping policymakers concerned with education and national development. The conclusion, Section X, "discusses the intercultural implications of satellite communication." AU - Smith, Delbert D. CY - [Madison, WI] DA - [1972?] KW - nationalism education aeronautics and space communication nationalism and communication satellites satellites, and communication satellites, and national development satellites, and education satellites, and rural area satellites, and history of education, and satellites agriculture, and satellites agriculture LB - 4790 PB - [EDSAT Center] ST - The Use of Satellite Communication for National Development, Education and Cultural Exchange TI - The Use of Satellite Communication for National Development, Education and Cultural Exchange ID - 1866 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Smith, Delbert D. CY - Leyden; Boston DA - 1976 KW - +aeronautics and space communication satellites satellites, and communication LB - 4800 PB - A. W. Sijthoff PY - 1976 ST - Communication via Satellite: A Vision in Retrospect TI - Communication via Satellite: A Vision in Retrospect ID - 1867 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This collection of essays asserts that multimedia and CD-ROMs “are actual media and are no longer merely potential media.” It argues that many complex CD-ROMs now exist and that while CD-ROMs may eventually become obsolete in much the same fashion as the Betamax, they deserve serious analysis no less than movie or literary texts. This work, Greg Smith says, announces a “coming of age” of CD-ROMs as a medium whose commercial, social, and aesthetic impact merits serious study by media scholars. Like motion pictures and novels, CD-ROMs are carefully designed. However, CD-ROMs allow interactivity and “they significantly differ from those other media, which attempt to prescribe a sequence of narrative events. The distinction between the two is not a strong dichotomy between the older ‘linear’ and the newer ‘nonlinear’ media,” Smith writes in his Introduction. “Rather,... these media differ in the boundaries they establish for the player’s/viewer’s/reader’s interactions with the strongly designed medium.” Ten essays make up this volume. The first by Janet Murray and Henry Jenkins, “Before the Holodeck: Translating Star Trek into Digital Media,” discusses the tension between this technology’s interactive potential and commercial forces pushing to target specific audiences. Smith’s “‘To Waste More Time, Please Click Here Again’” discusses the differences between the film Monty Python and the Quest for the Holy Grail and the CD-ROM version. Angela Ndalianis’s “‘Evil Will Walk Once More’: Phantasmagoria -- The Stalker Film as Interactive Movies?” examines how this 1995 game borrowed from modern horror movies. Brian Kelly with Scott Bukatman in “Busy Box Interface: The Pleasures of Winding,” “discuss the fascination with predigital machinery that characterizes much of digital culture.” The final six essay focus how CD-ROMs change our understanding of space and time. Ted Friedman’s “Civilization and Its Discontents: Simulation, Subjectivity, and Space,” examines Civilization II which encouraged users to “think like a computer.” But the essay argues that “underlying this radical restructuring of textual interaction is a far-from-radical ideology of nationalism and imperialism....” Alison Trope’s “Museum (Dis)Play: Imagining the Museum on CD-ROM” discusses how this technology, which “is not limited by the physical constraints of walls,” has led to rethinking about what constitutes a museum. Pamela Wilson’s “Virtual Kinship in a Postmodern World: Computer-Mediated Genealogy Communities” explores how Internet technologies are altering our ideas about the nature of the archive. Vanessa Gack’s “Fantasies of Mastery or Masteries of Fantasy? Playing with CD-ROMs in the 5th Dimension” uses an ethnographic approach to examine the experiences of two children who participated in any after-school computer gaming environment called 5th Dimension. Leslie Jarmon was one of the first people to have a dissertation accepted in CD-ROM format and “Showing and Telling: Developing CD-ROMs for the Classroom and Research” she discusses her experiences in an academic environment. Lisa Cartwright’s essay “Doing Theory in Hypermedia Practice: A Case Study of the HperHistory Video Project” discusses classroom experiences with graduate students who submitted work on hypermedia. AU - Smith, Greg M., ed. CY - New York DA - 1999 KW - computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) interactivity email magnetic recording time and timekeeping video time primary sources preservation history and new media preservation new media motion pictures information technology archives ideology identity materials materials magnetic tape computers history +computers and the Internet CD-ROMs interactive media preservation, and CD-ROMs archives, and CD-ROM history, break with +information storage information storage, and CD-ROMs space (spatial) time information technology, and education computers, and community community community, and computers community, and the Internet computers, and CD-ROMs electronic mail +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and CD-ROMs CD-ROMs, and motion pictures genealogy, and CD-ROMs computers, and games history, and new media history, and CD-ROMs CD-ROMs, and horror films identity, and computers computers, and identity identity, and CD-ROMs CD-ROMs, and identity archives archives, and new media new media, and archives archives, and CD-ROMs virtual reality ideology, and CD-ROMs CD-ROMs, and ideology museums +television television, and CD-ROMs CD-ROMs, and television video, and CD-ROMs data storage information storage video games +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and CD-ROMs history videotape VCRs electronic media LB - 12220 PB - New York University Press PY - 1999 ST - On a Silver Platter: CD-ROMs and the Promises of a New Technology TI - On a Silver Platter: CD-ROMs and the Promises of a New Technology ID - 2569 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Smith examines the original intent of the framers of the First Amendment and press freedom. He argues that printers were aggressive journalists before the Revolution and that seditious libel had no place in the American political arena. Smith is especially critical of Leonard Levy and his interpretation of this period. --Karen Faster AU - Smith, Jeffrey A. CN - KF4774 S64 1988 201 CY - New York DA - 1988 KW - freedom +books, periodicals, newspapers Faster, Karen First Amendment, and origins Levy, Leonard First Amendment law LB - 10560 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1988 ST - Printers and Press Freedom: The Ideology of Early American Journalism TI - Printers and Press Freedom: The Ideology of Early American Journalism ID - 2420 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 149-page report on the life expectance of magnetic data tapes was sponsored by the Polymers Division of the National Bureau of Standards. The study tested tapes with magnetic data under several temperatures and relative humidities. It estimated that under “ambient conditions” such tapes could be expected to have a useful lifetime of 20 years. The reported noted, though, lifetimes vary and that documented reports have shown tapes failing after 10 years of storage under normal humidity and temperature. The reports comments on a huge disparity in the life expectancy of magnetic tape and microfilm. “Photographic film and magnetic tape consist of different active coatings on a film of poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET). The stability of PET film was previously investigated in this program and it was concluded that it should retain useful properties for over 500 years at 20 [degrees] C and 50% relative humidity.” The text of this report runs 22 pages. The remaining pages are charts and graphs. AU - Smith, Leslie E. AU - Brown, Daniel W. AU - Lowry, Robert E. CY - Washington, D. C. DA - Oct. 1986 KW - magnetic recording magnetic tape recording tape recording primary sources preservation history and new media preservation microfiche, microfilm, microform archives history, and new media materials materials history +information storage +sound recording history, break with magnetic tape tape recording, magnetic microfilm preservation, and magnetic tape preservation, and microfilm archives, and magnetic tape archives, and microfilm magnetic tape, life expectancy microfilm, life expectancy archives, and nonprint media archives, and magnetic data tapes archives, and microfilm archives, and digital media preservation, and digital media archives LB - 12230 PB - National Bureau of Standards, Department of Commerce PY - 1986 ST - Prediction of Long Term Stability of Polyester-Based Recording Media TI - Prediction of Long Term Stability of Polyester-Based Recording Media ID - 2570 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Many of the essays in this collection challenge the popular "tendency to create the kind of society that invests technologies with enough power to drive history. If any particular form of human power now has an outstanding claim to that distinction, it probably is technological power. Indeed," the editors write, "one of our chief reasons for collecting these essays is our sense of the increasingly strong hold of that claim on the public imagination. People seem all too willing to believe that innovations in technology embody humanity's choice of its future. Whether that choice is an expression of freedom or an expression of necessity is the dilemma these essays are intended to elucidate." Essays include: Merritt Roe Smith's "Technological Determinism in American Culture"; Michael L. Smith, "Recourse of Empire: Landscapes of Progress in Technological America"; Robert L. Heilbroner, "Do Machines Makes History?"; Robert Heilbroner, "Technological Determinism Revisited"; Bruce Bimber, "Three Faces of Technological Determinism"; Thomas P. hugees, "Technological Momentum"; Thomas J. Misa, "Retrieving Sociotechnical Change from Technological Determinism"; Philip Scranton, "Determinism and Indeterminacy in the History of Technology"; Peter C. Perdue, "Technological Determinism in Agrarian Societies"; Richard W. Bulliet, "Determinism and Pre-Industrial Technology"; Rosalind Williams, "The Political and Feminist Dimensions of Technological Determinism"; Leo Marx, "The Idea of 'Technology' and Postmodern Pessimism"; and John M. Staudenmaier, "Rationality versus Contingency in the History of Technology." AU - Smith, Merritt Roe and Leo Marx, eds. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1994 KW - technology McLuhan, Marshall nationalism women, and new media values preservation history, and new media community democracy history women history history, break with history, and technology technology and society technological determinism medium is the message critics, and technological determinism critics democracy and media progress postmodernism women, and technological determinism history, and technological determinism Staudenmaier, John M. Williams, Rosalind Bulliet, Richard W. Perdue, Peter C. Misa, Thomas J. Bimber, Bruce critics +nationalism and communication nationalism, and technology LB - 4650 PB - MIT Press PY - 1994 ST - Does Technology Drive History? The Dilemma of Technological Determinism TI - Does Technology Drive History? The Dilemma of Technological Determinism ID - 1852 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Some commentators during the 1960s believed that changes were underway that if they did not represent a break with history, at least led many to doubt the past's relevance. Historian Page Smith saw urban life with its “prolonged today,” symbolized by the modern newspaper, nullifying the past AU - Smith, Page CY - New York DA - 1960 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations preservation journalism history, and new media news and journalism history history history, break with history, and city history, and newspapers newspapers, and history +books, periodicals, newspapers advertising, and history history, and advertising advertising newspapers news LB - 19420 PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 1960 ST - The Historian and History TI - The Historian and History ID - 779 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Much of this work first appeared in The Nation (May 18, 1970). The author wrote that “In the 1960s, the nation provided large federal subsidies for a new interstate highway system to facilitate and modernize the flow of automobile traffic in the United States. In the 1970s it should make a similar national commitment for an electronic highway system, to facilitate the exchange of information and ideas.” AU - Smith, Ralph Lee CY - New York DA - 1972 KW - nationalism communication revolution communication revolution community democracy information processing Information Age +television cable television television, and cable metaphors electronic communications highway networks democracy and media information revolution +nationalism and communication cable electronic media nationalism, and cable television electricity LB - 7350 PB - Harper & Row PY - 1972 ST - The Wired Nation: Cable TV: The Electronic Communications Highway TI - The Wired Nation: Cable TV: The Electronic Communications Highway ID - 2105 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Smith writes: “My main focus is on the role of visual imagery within the so-called second industrial revolution in the United States, that is, during the rise of mass manufacturing, linked to mass consumption. This revolution marked a new phase in the history of modern societies. Certain parts of the world were dramatically transformed, actually and figuratively. The Ford Motor Company plants in Detroit, Michigan, installed new methods of reproduction on an unprecedented scale, quickly becoming not only striking examples of innovative manufacture but also symbolic models of a desirable kinds of modernization. “Broadly speaking, a new imagery of modernity evolved during the massive shift from entrepreneurial to monopoly capitalism which began in most industrial countries in the 1880s and came to dominate the social order by the 1920s. There is, however, no simple, deterministic equation between entities such as the Machine Age and Modernism.... Nonetheless, a certain iconography seems fundamental; six images constantly occur, separately or in couplets: industry and workers, cities and crowds, products and consumers.” This work deals with themes also explored by Roland Marchand in his books on advertising and by David Nye in Image Worlds (1985). Barry M. Katz’s reviewed Smith’s book in Technology and Culture, 35 (July 1994), 642-43: “Confining his analysis to the United States, Smith argues that the visual imagery of modernity emerged in the 1920s and 1930s and was more or less securely in place by the beginning of the Second World War. The new iconological ‘regime’ was the product of a shifting but mutually reinforcing series of alliances among the industrial technologies of mass production, corporate industry, various New Deal federal agencies, art-and-documentary photography, painting, and design. The social setting of this interlocking process is the shift from entrepreneurial to monopolistic capitalism, and its markers are the prevailing depictions of industry and workers, cities and crowds, and products and consumers. The overall effect of this confluence of tendencies is that ‘modernity circa 1930 was taking form in domains of representation devoted above all to aestheticizing American industry.’... “The body of the book consists of richly detailed case studies of the emergence of a newly ‘modern’ way of seeing, beginning with the visual symbolism of the Ford Motor Company empire and ending with the New York World’s Fair of 1939-40....” Part I looks at Ford’s Highland Park plant from 1910-29; Part II examines such publications as Time, Life, and Fortune, the work of social realists photographers, and New Deal agencies; Part III “extends the argument to the commercialism of the nascent industrial design profession, the purist modernism endorsed by the Museum of Modern Art, and the futurism projected by the 1939 New York World’s Fair.” (Quotations taken from Katz’s review.) AU - Smith, Terry CY - Chicago DA - 1993 KW - illustrations corporations corporations photography advertising, and public relations time and timekeeping time seeing at a distance propaganda public relations modernism modernism modernity communication revolution news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers +future and science fiction consumerism communication revolution, and second industrial revolution World Fairs urban studies +photography and visual communication museums modernity labor iconography icons +photography and visual communication capitalism advertising second industrial revolution Ford Motor Company Ford, Henry modernism modernization iconography icons labor new way of seeing New Deal, and art New Deal, and documentary photography photography, and New Deal documentary World Fairs, and New York (1939-40) illustrations magazines Time Life Fortune future museums, and Museum of Modern Art urban studies, and image of cities consumers control revolution labor, and mass production Katz, Barry M. Industrial Revolution photography, documentary labor, and iconography communication revolution LB - 1940 N1 - See also: office PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1993 ST - Making the Modern: Industry, Art, and Design in America TI - Making the Modern: Industry, Art, and Design in America ID - 1590 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work has a detailed, eight-page Table of Contents. The appendices give excepts from cable messages over the Atlantic Telegraph in 1865, and the Great Eastern Telegraph in 1866. AU - Smith, Willoughby CY - London DA - 1891 KW - non-USA +telegraph telegraph, submarine telegraph, and Atlantic Telegraph telegraph, and Great Eastern Telegraph cable, submarine cable cable, Atlantic cable, transatlantic LB - 5230 PB - J. S. Virtue & Co., Limited PY - 1891 ST - The Rise and Extension of Submarine Telegraphy TI - The Rise and Extension of Submarine Telegraphy ID - 1910 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Smulyan traces the evolution of radio in its earliest days, from a male hobby to a network system that broadcast advertising and entertainment into most homes in America. She recounts the economic forces that led to the development of the modern broadcast system and details the debate over whether the air waves should be used primarily as a commercial medium. Advertisers dictated the content of commercial radio almost from the very beginning of broadcasting. This drew objections early but the economic interests of nonpublic broadcasting determined the form national broadcasting would take. Broadcast advertising was just one of the options for financing radio before the creation of the network, but once the high cost of a national radio service became apparent, advertising was seen by the industry as the only way to pay for it. Still, many had to be convinced and the radio industry mounted a public relations campaign to sell the idea of broadcast advertising to the public, the government and the advertising industry itself. --Phil Glende AU - Smulyan, Susan CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1994 KW - entertainment entertainment, home advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations home entertainment community democracy home, and new media home values home, and information technology information technology +radio Glende, Phil radio, and advertising advertising, and radio information technology, and home values, and radio democracy and media advertising democracy, and radio home, and radio radio, and democracy LB - 5990 PB - Smithsonian Institution Press PY - 1994 ST - Selling Radio: The Commercialization of American Broadcasting, 1920-1934 TI - Selling Radio: The Commercialization of American Broadcasting, 1920-1934 ID - 1984 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Snow talked about the widening gulf between scientific and literary culture. He said that “intellectuals, in particular literary intellectuals, are natural Luddites.” In Snow’s opinion, there was “only one way out of all this: it is, of course, by rethinking our education.” Snow delivered this lecture not long after the launching of Sputnik in October, 1957. He compared the U.S., Britain, and USSR. Snow distinguished between the “industrial revolution” and the “scientific revolution.” “By the industrial revolution, I mean the gradual use of machines, the employment of men and women in factories, the change in this country from a population mainly of agricultural laborers to a population mainly engaged in making things in factories and distributing them when they were made.... It is connected...with many of the attitudes to science and aesthetics which have crystallized among us. One can date it roughly from the middle of the eighteenth century to the early twentieth. Out of it grew another change, closely related to the first, but far more deeply scientific, far quicker, and probably far more prodigious in its result. This change comes from the application of real science to industry, no longer hit and miss, no longer the ideas of odd ‘inventors’, but the real stuff. “Dating this second change is very largely a matter of taste. Some would prefer to go back to the first large-scale chemical or engineering industries, round about sixty years ago. For myself, I should put it much further on, not earlier than thirty to forty years ago [1918-1928] -- and as a rough definition, I should take the time when atomic particles were first made industrial use of. I believe the industrial society of electronics, atomic energy, automation, is in cardinal respects different in kind from any that has gone before, and will change the world much more. It is this transformation that, in my view, is entitled to the name of ‘scientific revolution’. “This is the material basis of our lives: or more exactly, the social plasma of which we are a part. And we know almost nothing about it.” The scientific revolution was widening the gulf between the industrial nations and non-industrial countries. “On the world scale this is the gap between the rich and the poor,” Snow said. AU - Snow, C. P. CY - Cambridge, Eng. DA - 1962 KW - atomic power preservation history, and new media electronic media history science Luddism history general studies science v. humanities Luddites, and intellectuals Sputnik satellites humanities v. science Industrial Revolution scientific revolution atomic energy, and industry chemical industry history, break with scientific revolution, and widening gulf between nations scientific revolution, and gap between rich and poor critics atomic energy +aeronautics and space communication electronics revolution LB - 1240 PB - University Press PY - 1962 ST - The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution: The Reed Lecture, 1959 TI - The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution: The Reed Lecture, 1959 ID - 1520 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This annotated bibliography is intended for scholars, policymakers, business people, and government officials. It appeared at a time when deregulation was changing telecommunication. Most of the entries are from the late -1970s to the mid-1980s. The nations most heavily covered in this work are the United States, Japan, West Germany, and Great Britain. AU - Snow, Marcellus S. and Meheroo Jussawalla, comp. CY - Westport, CT DA - 1986 KW - R & D computers Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) corporations corporations Federal Communications Commission (FCC) fiber optics materials materials fiber optics regulation law non-USA +aeronautics and space communication research and development radio +bibliographies bibliographies, and deregulation bibliographies, and satellites bibliographies, and regulation AT & T +television television, and cable television, and satellites satellites +computers and the Internet Great Britain Japan Germany FCC regulation deregulation optical fibers OTA research and development, and government support +radio radio, and World Adminstrative Radio Conference telecommunications Jussawalla, Meheroo bibliographies, annotated censorship and ratings LB - 11110 PB - Greenwood Press PY - 1986 ST - Telecommunication Economics and International Regulatory Policy: An Annotated Bibliography TI - Telecommunication Economics and International Regulatory Policy: An Annotated Bibliography ID - 2472 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Sobchack sets the tone for this collection of essays by writing: "The complexity of diverse individual trajectories and their nodal coalescence in the massive 'historical events' we see foregrounded as the film's background are ironically revealed as nothing less (while something more) than confusion: that is, notions of both rationality and system are undermined by the visible evidence that "History' is the concatenated and reified effect of incoherent motives and chance convergences." In addition to Sobchack's "Introduction: History Happens," this work has twelve essays. In Part I, "The Historical Event," essays include: 1) Hayden White, The Modernist Event; 2) Cinematic Shots: The Narration of Violence; 3) Bill Nichols, "Historical Consciousness and the Viewer: Who Killed Vincent Chin?; 4) "I'll See It Whe I Believe It": Rodney King and the Prison-House Video. In Part II, entitled "Historical Representation and National Identity," essays include: 5) Sumiko Higashi, "Antimodernism as Historical Representation in a Consumer Culture: Cecil B. DeMille's The Ten Commandments, 1923, 1956, 1993; 6) Robert Burgoyne, Modernism and the Narrative of Nation in JFK; 7) Denise J. Youngblood, Andrei Rublev: The Medieval Epic as Post-Utopian History; 8) Thomas Elsasser, Subject Positions, Speaking Positions: From Holocaust, Our Histler, and Heimat to Shoah and Schindler's List. Part III, entitled "The End(s) of History," essays include: 9) Patrice Petro, Historical Ennui, Feminist Boredom; 10) Robert A Rosenstone, The Future of the Past: Film and the Beginnings of Postmodern History; 11) Shawn Rsenheim, Interrotroning History: Errol Morris and the Documentary of the Future; 12) Dana Polan, "The Professors of History." AU - Sobchack, Vivian, ed. CY - New York DA - 1996 KW - history nationalism women, and new media preservation postmodernism motion pictures modernity modernism media effects media violence history, and new media women feminism history +television +motion pictures and popular culture history, and media history, and motion pictures history, and television television, and history motion pictures, and history violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures modernism, and media +nationalism and communication motion pictures, and antimodernism antimodernism, and motion pictures feminism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and postmodernism postmodernism, and motion pictures history, and postmodernism postmodernism, and history LB - 7360 PB - Routledge PY - 1996 ST - The Persistence of History: Cinema, Television, and the Modern Event TI - The Persistence of History: Cinema, Television, and the Modern Event ID - 2106 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Society, World Future CY - Washington, DC DA - 1979 KW - +future and science fiction future bibliographies, and future bibliographies utopianism progress LB - 8990 PB - The World Future Society PY - 1979 ST - The Future: A Guide to Information Sources TI - The Future: A Guide to Information Sources ID - 2266 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Soley’s monograph, based on archival records newly available in the late 1980s, was the first detailed study of American subversive broadcasting during World War II and the early years of the Cold War. Subversive broadcasting differs from the more widely analyzed state-sponsored propaganda radio that emerged in the 1930s and subsequently served as “weapon” in war and peace. According to Soley, subversive broadcasting differs in that it is clandestine and attempts to hide or distort its origin and purpose. Subversive broadcasts attempt to influence public opinion by spreading false information or attempting to convince listeners that a particular belief is popular in their area when in fact it may not be. In World War II, for example, Nazi Germany operated a station that broadcast in English and purported to be based in England when in fact it was based in France and attempted to weaken British morale. Clandestine broadcasting first became widely operational at World War II neared, and remained a tool of American intelligence services, for better or for worse, as late as the 1980s. Radio Warfare offers a useful international approach to understanding the development and utilization of subversive broadcasting. Although the title indicates that the study is to focus on American efforts, the book in fact traces the development of these practices to pre-war Europe and argues that the United States initiated its psywar programs in response to European efforts, imitating the British model in particular. The power of radio as a propaganda tool was widely discussed, and in some ways feared, during the 1930s and 1940s when concerns about internal “fifth-columnists” dominated strategic thinking in many capitals. American policy-makers were reluctant to engage in propaganda broadcasts, which was seen as somehow “un-American” and dishonest, but also believed that it was a necessary course. Subversive broadcasting first fell under the direction of what became the Office of Strategic Services and William “Wild Bill” Donovan. Using American and British government archives and the papers of many individual policy-makers, Soley outlines a wide variety of wartime operations, which met with different kinds of results. Given less attention are post-war efforts on the part of the United States to undermine governments in many Third World nations around the globe. Ultimately, the book concludes that subversive broadcasting was probably much less effective than its proponents and practitioners believed. Citizens of most nations are unlikely to be deceived or persuaded by radio and “fifth-columns” are difficult to engineer from the outside. It is at best possible to create momentary confusion, but this needs to be followed by other kinds of direct action in order for the desired result to ensue. As Soley discusses in the introduction, the Reagan administration resorted to this tool frequently in the 1980s as it worked to undermine leftists in Latin America, and this book is perhaps a warning, in addition to a smart historical study. -- Rob Rabe AU - Soley, Lawrence C. CY - Westport, CT DA - 1989 KW - Central Intelligence Agency Rabe, Rob +military communication +radio war World War II radio, and World War II World War II, and radio propaganda Germany radio, and Germany Germany, and radio World War II, and Germany Germany, and World War II CIA OSS radio, and propaganda propaganda, and radio World War II, and propaganda propaganda, and World War II non-USA LB - 28890 PB - Praeger PY - 1989 ST - Radio Warfare: OSS and CIA Subversive Propaganda TI - Radio Warfare: OSS and CIA Subversive Propaganda ID - 2674 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Solomon writes that he began this book hoping to re-establish “contact with a radical heritage from which I felt quite distanced. I set out to research and write about work and social protest during the 1930s.... Yet I became distracted by the proliferation of grotesque bodies in Depression-era prose. Attending to these figures of physical disfiguration drew my attention to the interaction throughout the decade between American literature and assorted recreational practices. Depictions of torn bodies and mutilated faces turned out to be a means of gaining interpretive access to the radical artist’s intense involvement with urban manifestations of the carnival spirit, with the dime museum freak show, Coney Island amusement parks, American burlesque and vaudeville, and slapstick cinema. It then became evident to me that images of corporeal fragmentation had proved indispensable to dissident writers concerned to contest the ideological effects of the period’s mass spectacles: its World’s Fairs, Hollywood films, national holidays, and military ceremonies. Left-wing politics turned out to be a laughing matter. “To the degree that these forms of popular entertainment were mechanized, artistic interest in them led writers into an ambivalent engagement with modern technology. To manage the excitements and anxieties these public attractions produced, as did domestic devices like the phonograph, the predominantly male authorial subjects on whom I concentrate consistently turned to gender. Mass amusements were eroticized and made to embody the thrills and terrors conventionally associated with the feminine. In sum, my scholarly labors gave way to a fascination with the ways in which psychosexual, aesthetic, social, and political tensions were negotiated in the Depression era in relation to collective modes of play.” This book has fours chapters: Introduction: Disfigurations; 1) Disinterring Edward Dahlberg; 2) Laughter and Depression: Henry Miller and the Emergence of the Technocarnivalesque; 3) Fascism and Fragmentation in Nathanael West; 4) Militarism and Mutilation in John Dos Passos; and Posface: Discharges. AU - Solomon, William CY - New York DA - 2002 KW - R & D women, and new media World Fairs values popular culture motion pictures modernity modernism research and development war news and journalism war +motion pictures and popular culture military, and popular culture popular culture, and military women women, and popular culture newsreels motion pictures, and newsreels +sound recording phonograph modernism, and popular culture newspapers newspapers, and popular culture World Fairs, Chicago (1933-34) World Fairs, New York (1939-40) World Fairs, Paris (1900) Columbian Exposition (1893) World War I phonograph values, and technology critics +military communication critics values news LB - 420 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 2002 ST - Literature, Amusement and Technology in the Great Depression TI - Literature, Amusement and Technology in the Great Depression ID - 130 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Among the essays in the anthology are: Linda Steiner, “Nineteenth -Century Suffrage Periodicals: Conceptions of Womanhood and the Press"; Holly Allen, “Gender, the Movement Press, and the Cultural Politics of the Knights of Labor"; John Bekken, “The Working-class Press at the Turn of the Century"; Albert Kreiling, “The Commercialization of the Black Press and the Rise of Race News in Chicago"; and Eileen R. Meeha, “Heads of Household and Ladies of the House: Gender, Genre, and Broadcast Ratings, 1929-1990." AU - Solomon, William S. and Robert McChesney, eds. CY - Minneapolis DA - 1993 KW - women, and new media journalism news and journalism women news television African Americans, and mass media political economy cultural studies women, and mass media news, and race books, periodicals, newspapers women, and suffrage periodicals culture McChesney, Robert African Americans cultural imperialism LB - 10570 PB - University of Minnesota Press PY - 1993 ST - Ruthless Criticism: New Perspectives in U. S. Communication History TI - Ruthless Criticism: New Perspectives in U. S. Communication History ID - 2421 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author of this perceptive book on photography writes that "In teaching us a new visual code photographs alter and enlarge our notions of what is worth looking at and what we have a right to observe. They are a grammar and even more importantly, an ethics of seeing . Finally, the most grandiose result of the photographic enterprise is to give us the sense that we can hold the whole world in our heads – as an anthology of images." --SV This volume provides critical insights into the shaping powers of photography upon people’s mind and the optical reality. The author who pays attention to the timeless and historical quality of photography explores the interrelation among photographers, the subjects they picture and the viewers of photographs to imply that the invention of this technology changes more than ways of seeing in artistic notion. Sontag argues that “the camera makes everyone a tourist in other people’s reality, and eventually in one’s own” (p. 57). The production and reproduction of photographic images also make an impact upon, for example, the quality of people’s feeling since they are regarded as documents of the reality which convey concrete facts. The term “tourist,” in this sense, is used literally and symbolically. Sontag urges us to think beyond the representations of photographic images to reveal the ideologies behind the camera. --Huai-Hsuan Chen AU - Sontag, Susan CY - New York DA - 1977, 1990 KW - tourism photography preservation history, and new media history values photography and visual communication history photography and visual communication history, break with photography, and decontextualization values, and photography photography, and history cameras photography, and painting Chen, Huai-Hsuan photography, and tourism tourism, and photography LB - 10580 PB - Anchor Books PY - 1977 ST - On Photography TI - On Photography ID - 67 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is useful for understanding camera technology as it existed in 1967. The work contains a Glossary. The author writes: "The increasing development of international co-productions requires many cinematographers to travel abroad where they face equipment with which they have had no experience. Moreover, the mushroom growth of low budget and 'new wave' production units, incorporating a large proportion of new and young blood into the industry, has increased the number of those interested in learning thoroughly the techniques of this branch of the cinema. "Television, too, has created an enormous demand for filmed material for filling time-gaps and this, in turn, has considerably increased the need for skilled operators. The 16 mm guage has become professional to such a degree that camera makers have concentrated their attention on this medium and have come out with a succession of new instruments to meet this specific demand." This book is part of a series, The Library of Communication Techniques. Other volumes deal with the technique of film editing, film animation, television production, special effects, and more. This volume has relatively little on the history of motion picture cameras, although it does provide a survey of 35 mm and 16 mm cameras available during the late 1960s. Chapter 4, “Specialized Cameras,” covers several formats including 8 mm and 65/70 mm cameras. Chapter 5 offers instruction on how to operate 35 mm and 16 mm cameras and the final chapter, “Shooting Techniques,” covers hand-held cameras, zoom lenses, anamorphic systems, and mobile cameras. AU - Souto, H. Mario Raimondo CY - New York DA - 1967, 1969 KW - materials non-USA 8mm 35mm 16mm +television +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and 16mm cameras motion pictures, and 35mm cameras 16mm cameras 35mm cameras television, and 16mm cameras motion pictures, and new wave motion pictures, low budget motion pictures, and cameras cameras, and motion pictures cameras, and television 16mm film 8mm film 35mm film cameras cameras, 16mm cameras, 8-mm cameras, 35mm cameras, 65mm 70mm cameras, portable (1960s) cameras, and technology cameras, hand-held +motion pictures motion pictures, and 16mm film motion pictures, and 35mm film motion pictures, and 8mm film motion pictures, and 65mm film 70mm film motion pictures, and cameras cameras, and lenses motion pictures, and anamorphic systems cameras, and kinescope materials 8mm cameras LB - 2400 PB - Hastings House, Communications Arts Books'; Focal Press Limited PY - 1967 ST - The Technique of the Motion Picture Camera TI - The Technique of the Motion Picture Camera ID - 328 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work contains several interesting essays. Section one deals with “Home Fronts and New Frontiers,” and “emphasizes social change through scientific engineering.” The authors consider “how the ‘science’ -- or science fictions -- of child- rearing, female sexuality, dating, domestic science, and even space science influenced (and sometimes was influenced by) the representation of family life.” Three chapters in this section analyze programs in the context of controversies over "the new sexuality.” Section two examines “Institutions of Culture,” revealing how pressure groups, industry, and debates over policy influenced TV watching. A final section deals with “Nation and Citizenship.” Included in this work are essays by William Boddy on Senate hearings during the early 1960s investigating video violence; Michael Curtin on how the Kennedy administration hoped to use global television to extend its leadership of the Free World; and Thomas Streeter on how discourse about cable during the late 1960s and early 1970s paralleled later discussions of creating an information superhighway. --SV The Revolution Wasn’t Televised is a collection of research-supported essays that detail particular aspects of the 1960s as it concerned television and social conflict. It outlines how television as a technology and as a media content tool reflected or helped shape the counter-culture ideology. It starts with an essay about the television program, “The Outer Limits.” Although many viewers would label the show as science fiction and leave it at that, Jeffery Sconce discusses it in terms of how it mirrored Americans’ growing dependence, and discomfort, with television. Sconce talks of how the show highlighted the fact that Americans enjoy television, but knew little about how the images and pictures appeared on the screen. Humans have had a predilection to fear the unknown and “The Outer Limits” utilized this theme in many episodes. But the book doesn’t stop there. It details the influence of other programs as they navigated the waters between innovative, culturally reflective content and network censorship. Television programs about teenage girls, such as “The Patty Duke Show” for example, were forced to show their protagonists as sweet and responsible. The shows would not allow their main characters to date boys that were seen as rebellious and they were forced to quell any content that dealt with teen sexuality on anything but the most superficial basis. On the other hand, the show “Honey West” tried to capitalize on the new and rebellious sexual freedom that women, breaking free of the stereotypes that women should be homemakers, were starting to practice and enjoy. More shows played up counter-cultural content that had been ignored previously. “The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour” contained content meant to attract the very same rebellious teenagers and college-aged students that embodied the counter-culture movement. The show would make liberal use of slang humor, such as using vocabulary commonly associated with marijuana smoking in other contexts, to entertain and avoid direct network censorship. Then the book discussed how certain shows opened up new discussions about social topics, such as child rearing and “Dennis the Menace”, and cultural diversity, such as the lack of black characters or positive Native American characters in network programming. More than the battles between counter-cultural content and network censorship, other events of the 1960s shaped the future of television. Connecticut Sen. Thomas Dodd, father of current Connecticut Sen. Christopher Dodd, started the first congressional hearings to deal with violent content on television. Although his hearings cost millions of dollars and ended with no solid connections between such content and juvenile delinquency, for example, it led to other public and private studies regarding the effects of media violence. Also, cable television came of age in this decade. Originally thought to be a means of providing television content to rural communities, this new content provider brought television from a medium with a few channels to one of several hundred. It was considered to be the “Internet” of its day due to its potentially unlimited capacity for content. --Patrick Wright AU - Spigel, Lynn, and Michael Curtin, eds. CY - New York and London DA - 1997 KW - future nationalism sexuality television, and values media effects media violence violence community democracy censorship and ratings non-USA values Information age television television, and culture cable television television, and cable aeronautics and space communication satellites global communication television, and satellites nationalism and communication democracy and media metaphors information superhighway children,and media violence, and video violence, and media television, and sex values, and television cable children nationalism, and television nationalism, and satellites violence, and television television, and violence democracy, and cable television Wright, Patrick future and science fiction women women, and television television, and women sexuality, and television television, and sexuality television, and censorship censorship, and television television, and science fiction science fiction, and television censorship science fiction LB - 7370 PB - Routledge PY - 1997 ST - The Revolution Wasn’t Televised: Sixties Television and Social Conflict TI - The Revolution Wasn’t Televised: Sixties Television and Social Conflict ID - 2107 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work contains several interesting essays. Section one deals with “Home Fronts and New Frontiers,” and “emphasizes social change through scientific engineering.” The authors consider “how the ‘science’ -- or science fictions -- of child- rearing, female sexuality, dating, domestic science, and even space science influenced (and sometimes was influenced by) the representation of family life.” Three chapters in this section analyze programs in the context of controversies over "the new sexuality.” Section two examines “Institutions of Culture,” revealing how pressure groups, industry, and debates over policy influenced TV watching. A final section deals with “Nation and Citizenship.” Included in this work are essays by William Boddy on Senate hearings during the early 1960s investigating video violence; Michael Curtin on how the Kennedy administration hoped to use global television to extend its leadership of the Free World; and Thomas Streeter on how discourse about cable during the late 1960s and early 1970s paralleled later discussions of creating an information superhighway. --SV The Revolution Wasn’t Televised is a collection of research-supported essays that detail particular aspects of the 1960s as it concerned television and social conflict. It outlines how television as a technology and as a media content tool reflected or helped shape the counter-culture ideology. It starts with an essay about the television program, “The Outer Limits.” Although many viewers would label the show as science fiction and leave it at that, Jeffery Sconce discusses it in terms of how it mirrored Americans’ growing dependence, and discomfort, with television. Sconce talks of how the show highlighted the fact that Americans enjoy television, but knew little about how the images and pictures appeared on the screen. Humans have had a predilection to fear the unknown and “The Outer Limits” utilized this theme in many episodes. But the book doesn’t stop there. It details the influence of other programs as they navigated the waters between innovative, culturally reflective content and network censorship. Television programs about teenage girls, such as “The Patty Duke Show” for example, were forced to show their protagonists as sweet and responsible. The shows would not allow their main characters to date boys that were seen as rebellious and they were forced to quell any content that dealt with teen sexuality on anything but the most superficial basis. On the other hand, the show “Honey West” tried to capitalize on the new and rebellious sexual freedom that women, breaking free of the stereotypes that women should be homemakers, were starting to practice and enjoy. More shows played up counter-cultural content that had been ignored previously. “The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour” contained content meant to attract the very same rebellious teenagers and college-aged students that embodied the counter-culture movement. The show would make liberal use of slang humor, such as using vocabulary commonly associated with marijuana smoking in other contexts, to entertain and avoid direct network censorship. Then the book discussed how certain shows opened up new discussions about social topics, such as child rearing and “Dennis the Menace”, and cultural diversity, such as the lack of black characters or positive Native American characters in network programming. More than the battles between counter-cultural content and network censorship, other events of the 1960s shaped the future of television. Connecticut Sen. Thomas Dodd, father of current Connecticut Sen. Christopher Dodd, started the first congressional hearings to deal with violent content on television. Although his hearings cost millions of dollars and ended with no solid connections between such content and juvenile delinquency, for example, it led to other public and private studies regarding the effects of media violence. Also, cable television came of age in this decade. Originally thought to be a means of providing television content to rural communities, this new content provider brought television from a medium with a few channels to one of several hundred. It was considered to be the “Internet” of its day due to its potentially unlimited capacity for content. --Patrick Wright AU - Spigel, Lynn AU - Michael Curtin, eds. CY - New York and London DA - 1997 KW - future nationalism sexuality television, and values media effects media violence violence community democracy censorship and ratings non-USA values Information age television television, and culture cable television television, and cable aeronautics and space communication satellites global communication television, and satellites nationalism and communication democracy and media metaphors information superhighway children, and media violence, and video violence, and media television, and sex values, and television cable children nationalism, and television nationalism, and satellites violence, and television television, and violence democracy, and cable television Wright, Patrick future and science fiction women women, and television television, and women sexuality, and television television, and sexuality television, and censorship censorship, and television television, and science fiction science fiction, and television censorship science fiction LB - 7370 PB - Routledge PY - 1997 ST - The Revolution Wasn’t Televised: Sixties Television and Social Conflict TI - The Revolution Wasn’t Televised: Sixties Television and Social Conflict ID - 47 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In Educating the Consumer-Citizen, Joel Spring analyzes the ways in which Americans have been turned to the ideology of consumerism. Spring makes a historical argument to explain how schools, advertising, and media have together created a consumerist ideology that is central in American life and the driving force of the global economy. Spring stretches his analysis of the causes back to the late-nineteenth century when goods were produced in greater numbers, due to the Industrial Revolution, and the beginnings of a middle class began to form. He then addresses the rise of the movie and radio industries, television and the Red Scare and Cold War. Lastly he focuses on the current state of consumerist ideology. While Spring does focus on education, as the title suggests, he spends more time discussing others aspects of entertainment/education. For instance, he spends a large portion of one chapter discussing the movie and radio industries and the way in which they were viewed by the public, the debates of morality, and their eventual self-censorship. When Spring does discuss education, particularly later in the book, censorship is often the main focus. However, I don’t feel he does a good job of tying together the Red Scare with Americans consuming more goods. Overall the book has interesting parts but they don’t mesh well together. Spring includes more information than is necessary and spreads himself too thin. --Ryder Kouba AU - Spring, Joel CY - Mahwah, NJ DA - 2003 KW - consumerism Kouba, Ryder advertising and public relations education children and media advertising, and schools advertising, and education education, and advertising values values, and advertising advertising, and values children, and advertising advertising, and children education, and values values, and education critics critics, and advertising critics, and education education, and critics advertising, and critics capitalism capitalism, and education education, and capitalism education, and consumerism consumerism, and education children, and consumerism consumerism, and children children, and education education, and children advertising children LB - 32960 PB - Lawrence Erlbaum PY - 2003 ST - Educating the Consumer-Citizen: A History of the Marriage of Schools, Advertising, and Media TI - Educating the Consumer-Citizen: A History of the Marriage of Schools, Advertising, and Media ID - 39 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Sproule looks at the history of the study of propaganda in the United States from the early 1920s to the 1960s. He discusses two major methods of study -- qualitative and quantitative -- and attempts to explain why propaganda research shifted from qualitative methods in the early 1940s to quantitative methods thereafter. Sproule associates qualitative research between world wars with a “progressive critique” of propaganda. This critique, he said, was driven by the belief that exposure of the existence and methods of propaganda would make the targets of propaganda better able to mitigate its influence. Ultimately, he said, citizen understanding of the techniques of propaganda was essential to democracy. Within this field of study were those who were critical of all forms of propaganda, without regard to whether it served a good cause, and those who saw value to using propaganda to help shape beneficial outcomes. This movement in the study of propaganda died as the United States entered World War II and several political, social and scientific factors came together to rapidly establish the pre-eminence of quantitative propaganda research during and after the war. Propaganda research that led to a critical assessment of U.S. government was considered unpatriotic, un-American and perhaps even pro-Communist. Universities concerned about private money chose to emphasize the kind of research that foundations wanted, and foundations wanted apolitical “scientific” research. The U.S. government, particularly the military, during the war valued research on specific issues of opinion and persuasion. This type of research survived after the war because it was considered to have value without being value-laden. --Phil Glende AU - Sproule, J. Michael CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - R & D nationalism public relations advertising research and development war community democracy war World War II propaganda media democracy and media Glende, Phil critics media literacy propaganda World War II, and propaganda Cold War, and propaganda propaganda, and study of media, and propaganda media effects Cold War military communication military-university complex +nationalism and communication nationalism, and propaganda democracy, and propaganda military-industrial complex advertising and public relations LB - 9330 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1997 ST - Propaganda and Democracy: The American Experience of Media and Mass Persuasion TI - Propaganda and Democracy: The American Experience of Media and Mass Persuasion ID - 2300 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book grew out of a doctoral thesis at the University of Toronto. It compares the thought of Canadians Harold A. Innis and Marshall McLuhan with theories of Theodor Adorno and Walter Benjamin. The author attempts to read Innis and McLuhan “as philosophers and neo-dialecticians, even though they have rarely been read this way,” and to compare them to two theorists who had similar interests: “deep dissatisfaction with Western rationality, understanding of the West as a culture that privileges spatial over temporal concerns, and an attempt to rethink dialectic by retrieving its oral origins.” This work attempts to demonstrate that Innis and McLuhan “were critics of modernity,” and that they were “critics of a specific kind.” The author argues that they “invented a uniquely Canadian version of critical theory – a fusion of critical political economy and of the critical rationality associated with the early Frankfurt School and its followers. But Innis and McLuhan are not yet identified widely as theorists of modernity, critical or otherwise,” Stamps maintains. “They are still too often read as crude empiricists, and hence as examples of modernity.” The author hopes her work will lead to a reinterpretation of these two Canadians. The work – the text runs 167 pages – is based largely on published sources with a few references from Innis’s papers at the University of Toronto Archives. AU - Stamps, Judith CY - Montreal and Kingston DA - 1995 KW - technology time and timekeeping time preservation modernism modernity modernity modernism media history, and new media non-USA history Canada Innis, Harold McLuhan, Marshall Adorno, Theodor Benjamin, Walter Frankfurt School political economy critical theory modernity, critics of history, break with time spatial bias technology, and values technology, and society media, and civilization critics space (spatial) space and time LB - 12530 N1 -; PB - McGill-Queen’s University Press PY - 1995 ST - Unthinking Modernity: Innis, McLuhan, and the Frankfurt School TI - Unthinking Modernity: Innis, McLuhan, and the Frankfurt School ID - 2600 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book traces the development of the telegraph, making comparisons to the development of the Internet in the late 1990s. Standage intended this book as an introduction to telegraphy, particularly for a general audience. The author was struck by several similarities between the telegraph and the telegraphic community in the middle of the nineteenth century and the Internet and on-line community of the late twentieth century. Standage briefly discusses precursors to the telegraph, particularly the optical telegraph of the French inventor Chappe. He puts forth a reasonably clear picture of the design and operation of the optical telegraph in France, and a briefer one of the shutter telegraph in Britain, but he omits mention of other systems such as the one in Sweden. He briefly attempts to explain the workings and codes of these systems and describes some of the uses to which they were put. The men generally credited with the invention of the telegraph, Wheatstone and Cooke in Britain and Morse in the United States, are given a simplistic treatment as men not fully able to execute their ideas and struggling against governmental entities and commercial rivals. On both sides of the Atlantic private and government sponsorship was crucial, and in both cases the initial telegraphic line was instrumental in the capture of a few criminals, demonstrating its value to law enforcement and then the military. Commercial use of the telegraph escalated in the 1850s as telegraphic lines from large cities and financial centers radiated toward most of the other important cities or lines. Oddly enough, France, the first nation to develop an optical telegraph, resisted the electric telegraph, preferring to rely on their optical networks well into the 1850s. The most interesting section of this book is where Standage constructs the Victorian Internet. Major telegraph offices were nineteenth-century information centers with thousands of messages moving into, through and out of the office at a rapid speed. By the early 1870s, “telegraph networks, submarine cables, pneumatic tube systems and messengers combined to deliver messages with in hours over a vast area of the globe.” Telegraph operators worked “on-line” and often developed friendships (and occasionally romances—telegraph operator was an occupation open to single women) with operators at the end of a distant line, constituting an on-line community of thousands. During slow periods, they exchanged jokes and gossip, played chess or checkers and listened to other conversations, which Standage likens to an on-line chat room today. Included are sections on codes, which consists of little more than long strings of encoded messages, and criminal uses of the telegraph, mostly unattributed anecdotes. The lack of anything more than a general and sometimes vague system of attribution seriously undermines the value this book could have for scholars and hobbyists. So does the sometimes simplistic analysis, forced analogies and generalizations that Standage all too often relies upon. However, for a general audience of non-specialists this book offers an exciting glimpse into a nineteenth century network of communication. --David Henning AU - Standage, Tom CY - New York DA - 1998 KW - R & D computers research and development war innovation war non-USA Great Britain telegraph optical telegraph telegraph, optical telegraph, and operators Chappe, Claude Morse, Samuel Wheatstone, Charles telegraph, Wheatstone networks Henning, David inventions inventors signaling systems Great Britain Great Britain, and telegraph Internet telegraph, electric computers and the Internet military communication military, and telegraph metaphors LB - 4050 PB - Berkeley Books PY - 1998 ST - The Victorian Internet: The Remarkable Story of the Telegraph and the Nineteenth Century's On-Line Pioneers TI - The Victorian Internet: The Remarkable Story of the Telegraph and the Nineteenth Century's On-Line Pioneers ID - 1793 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Maren Stange looks at photographs that were produced for the exclusive purpose of social reform campaigns, and examines them within the context of reform publicity as well as in the multiple media in which they appeared. By analyzing the photographs of documentary photographers Jacob Riis, Lewis Hine, and Farm Security Administration photographers Dorothea Lange, Ben Shahn, and Russell Lee, Stange contends that the bureaucratic leaders, or “technicians of reform,” manipulated the photographs through the use of different contexts to achieve political objectives, and to mold the nation according to their agendas. -Michele Kroll AU - Stange, Maren CY - New York and Cambridge DA - 1989 KW - reform Roosevelt, Franklin D. photography Kroll, Michele +photography and visual communication photography, documentary photography, and New Deal Roosevelt, Franklin, and photography presidents, and new media Riis, Jacob Lange, Dorothea Shahn, Ben Lee, Russell photography, and reform reform, and photography Roosevelt, Franklin administration Farm Security Administration photography, and Farm Security Administration LB - 28810 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1989 ST - Symbols of Ideal Life: Social Documentary Photography in America, 1890-1950 TI - Symbols of Ideal Life: Social Documentary Photography in America, 1890-1950 ID - 2630 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work offers a history of the motion picture industry. AU - Stanley, Robert H. CY - New York DA - 1978 KW - materials materials context +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid motion pictures, and history of context, and movie history LB - 20620 PB - Hastings House PY - 1978 ST - The Celluloid Empire: A History of the American Movie Industry TI - The Celluloid Empire: A History of the American Movie Industry ID - 438 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Stefik, Mark CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1996 KW - computers +computers and the Internet metaphors myth LB - 8030 PB - MIT Press PY - 1996 ST - Internet Dreams: Archetypes, Myths, and Metaphors TI - Internet Dreams: Archetypes, Myths, and Metaphors ID - 2172 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - At some point during the latter half of the twentieth century, “for perhaps the first time in human history,” Stephens believes, “it began to seem as if images would gain the upper hand over words.” In his view, “video remains the communications revolution of our time.” It is “humankind’s third major communications revolution,” the other two being writing and print. Stephens sees the video revolution as an essentially positive development, and argues that we are still very early in this transformation and that humans have not learned to exploit fully these new media. Stephens opening two chapters deal with the changes brought by writing, and then by the invention of paper and the printing press. He turns to television and other media that use images, noting that throughout history images have provoked intense and hostile reactions. “This fury was unleashed, always, by partisans of the word-- written or (for Plato) spoken. Behind it was a multifaceted fear: [1] fear, to begin with, for the word. Images -- easy to understand, fun to look at -- inevitably threatened to turn the populace away from the deeper, more cerebral rewards of sacred writings or philosophic discourse. “[2] There was fear too of the magic that seems to lurk in images. They steal likenesses. They do what only gods should be able to do: They recreate the living and preserve the dead. It is hard not to see this as black magic. Images allow us actually to look in on (not just hear about) the familiar from another perspective, an external perspective, often a disorienting perspective -- to see ourselves, for example. They are, in this way, inherently unnatural -- further evidence of magic. “[3] There is the persistent ‘reality’ issue. Images look real but are fake. They pretend to be what they are not. They lie. The portrait is a mute, lifeless substitute for the person; the idol, a primitive and superficial knockoff of the god. But that idol is also attractive and easy to see. It can distract from the more profound but more amorphous glories of the god. A painter, Plato warned, can deceive ‘children and fools’ with mere ‘imitation of appearance,’ instead of ‘truth’ or ‘real things.’ Images can entrance. “[4] Worse, in imitating ‘real things,’ images tend to devalue them. This is what the French theorist Jean Baudrillard called ‘the murderous capacity of images.’ Once we begin to lose ourselves in this world of illusions, it can begin to seem as if ‘truth’ and ‘reality’ are just further illusions (deserving of quotation marks). Images, on this level, are, as Baudrillard put it, ‘murderers of the real, murderers of their own model.’ The person is now seen as if posing for a portrait. The god is perceived as if just another idol.” But, Stephens says, images have advantages and words limitations. Among images’ advantages are: 1) they “are marvelously (though never perfectly) accessible.” The “unlettered” can learn from them. 2) Their concision is “a significant advantage for drivers speeding by or on a crowded computer screen.” 3) They “can wield great power -- religious, tribal, romantic, pedagogic.” 4) As Aquinas said, they could be used to “excite the emotions, which are more effectively aroused by things seen than by things heard.” (Aquinas quoted) 5) “There are also understandings, sometimes deep understandings, that can be put into images -- accessibly, concisely, powerfully -- but are difficult to put into words. The study of botany, zoology, anatomy, geography and astronomy were all advanced during or after the Renaissance by more precise depictions, models, representations and diagrams. ‘Primates are visual animals,” Stephen Jay Gould, the scientist and science writer, has asserted, ‘and we think best in pictorial or geometric terms. Words are an evolutionary afterthought.’” Writing has several limitations: 1) It is abstract. 2) It “ignores our ability to find spatial and temporal connections between objects in the world.” If “the measure is direct stimulation to our senses, a page of print makes a few moments of television look like a five-course French meal.” 3) According to Richard A. Lanham, who has written on Renaissance rhetoric and modern computers, “printed prose is ‘an act of extraordinary stylization, of remarkable, expressive self-denial’” AU - Stephens, Mitchell CY - New York DA - 1998 KW - print culture magnetic recording photography print nonprint media communication revolution videotape magnetic tape communication revolution, and second industrial revolution general studies words vs. images photography and visual communication video revolution communication revolution second industrial revolution writing print culture nonprint media paper print culture information age image media magic Baudrillard, Jean Aquinas, Thomas Gould, Stephen Jay Lanham, Richard A. critics television print v. visual media paper images vs. words LB - 1250 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1998 ST - The Rise of the Image the Fall of the Word [sic] TI - The Rise of the Image the Fall of the Word [sic] ID - 1521 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The early pages of this work (1-60) have interesting information on the telephone. AU - Sterling, Bruce CY - New York DA - 1992 KW - computers law law +telephones +computers and the Internet law, and electronic media telephones, and history of LB - 5410 PB - Bantam Books PY - 1992 ST - The Hacker Crackdown: Law and Disorder on the Electronic Frontier TI - The Hacker Crackdown: Law and Disorder on the Electronic Frontier ID - 1926 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work, which in an earlier time would surely have been a good text for broadcasting courses, covers radio and television and is a solid survey that gives a good overview of it subjects. The opening of each chapter deals with new technology for the period under consideration. AU - Sterling, Christopher H. and John M. Kittross CY - Belmont, CA DA - 1978 KW - technology magnetic recording advertising, and public relations technology and society censorship and ratings propaganda public relations materials materials magnetic tape law regulation war World War II World War I regulation radio audiences audiences, and radio information technology general studies +radio +television radio, and technology television, and technology information technology, and radio information technology, and television wireless communication World War I, and radio radio, and early stations World War II, and radio World War II, and research and development advertising, and radio radio, and audiences television, and audiences radio, and FM videotape television, and videotape television, and stereo advertising, and television regulation, and television regulation, and radio technological innovation, and difficulties of networks radio, and networks television, and networks radio, and educational broadcasting television, educational advertising technological determinism LB - 1260 PB - Wadsorth Publishing Company PY - 1978 ST - Stay Tuned: A Concise History of American Broadcasting TI - Stay Tuned: A Concise History of American Broadcasting ID - 1522 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The goal of this volume is to provide a statistical reference for the most important trends since 1900 in the American communication industry. The work offers 300 tables of data and interpretative text that accompany them. The media categories used include: 1) general background data describing two or more media; 2) books; 3) newspapers; 4) magazines; 5) recordings; 6) motion pictures; 7) broadcasting in general; 8) radio; 9) television; and 10) cable television. The authors also discuss the reliability of the data they present. AU - Sterling, Christopher H. and Timothy R. Haight CY - New York DA - 1978 KW - audiences References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps new media theaters radio general studies +television +books, periodicals, newspapers +radio +motion pictures reference works cable, television +sound recording +duplicating technologies +telegraph +telephones theaters, and motion pictures radio, and AM radio, and FM radio, and shortwave audiences networks cable statistics, and new media new media, and statistics statistics context context, and statistics reference works LB - 11320 PB - Praeger Publishers PY - 1978 ST - The Mass Media: Aspen Institute Guide to Communication Industry Trends TI - The Mass Media: Aspen Institute Guide to Communication Industry Trends ID - 2492 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this account of sensationalism in the nineteenth-century New York press, Stevens notes that new communication technologies played a significant part in this kind of journalism. He notes that “Linotype machines speeded type setting presses grew larger and faster and paper made from wood pulp cut the cost of that essential by nearly 90 percent. New processes allowed multicolumn headlines and illustrations. Big drawings changed the look of front pages. Newspapers were on the verge of color printing. The half tone photographs would follow. But those who produced the words got some help too– from the fountain pen, the typewriter, and the telephone..” The telegraph and Atlantic cable were also significant. “The telegraph had been around for decades, but newspapers made much greater use of it. The Atlantic Cable had reduced from days to minutes the time it took to receive messages from Europe. By the 1880s the Associated Press was the dominant American news agency, thanks mostly to its exclusive arrangement with Western Union. The AP, in turn, was dominated by its member papers in New York City." Photography made an impact on the manner in which the press presented information. “An article in Scientific American in 1878 praised photography as a new way to see. Photography was not really that new, but it was finally out of the laboratory and into the public arena. Photo portrait studios sprang up everywhere, but newspapers held back. The photos of the Crimean War carried in a British publication are probably the first spot news photos, but they had to be translated by artisans into woodcuts. The New York Daily Graphic was the first American newspaper to print a photo without that intermediate step in 1880. Although by 1890 newspapers had at their command the technology to publish photos, they were slow to utilize the dry plates, flash , and improved lens.” AU - Stevens, John D. CY - New York DA - c1991 KW - corporations photography newspapers linotype news and journalism materials paper news and journalism non-USA journalism +telegraph sensationalism presses +photography and visual communication +photography and visual communication penny press sensationalism, and 19th century cable, Atlantic Atlantic cable half tones typewriters +telephones fountain pens linotype machines presses, linotype Associated Press Western Union photography, and Crimean War photography, and newspapers +books, periodicals, newspapers cable cable, transatlantic newspapers, and photography paper, and wood pulp newspapers, and half tones materials news LB - 10620 PB - Columbia University Press PY - 1991 ST - Sensationalism and the New York Press TI - Sensationalism and the New York Press ID - 2425 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - When it was first published in 1918, copies of Married Love sold as quickly as they could be published. Six editions were published by 1919. Clearly there was a need for Marie Stopes’ marriage manual. Knowledge of sexual functioning was not too strong at the turn of the century. Her book is dedicated “to young husbands and all that are betrothed in love.” At the time, of course, sex outside marriage could not be promoted, most people did not admit that this was occurring. Stopes’ stated goal in writing this book was to “increase the joys of marriage, and to show how much sorrow may be avoided.” (p.9) Her solution to increase joy was to increase the pleasure in sex, and she explains that she feels strongly about this because “In my own marriage I paid such a terrible price for sex-ignorance that I feel that knowledge gained at such a cost should be placed at the service of humanity.” (p.11) She states firmly that the book is for “normal” people, meaning those “who are married or about to be married, and hope, but do not know how, to make their marriages beautiful and happy.” (p.10) Even marriages that appear happy to outsiders, are, according to Stopes, unhappy, because the partners have lost the enthusiasm for sex that they once had, or they never had good sex lives to begin with. She blames the city as one of the reasons for a lackluster love life, with “its tubes and cinema shows” (p.26) that allow less time for romantic encounters than the peacefulness of the countryside. She derides the fact that many women come into marriage with little knowledge of sex or their own bodies, and her book is somewhat a corrective to that. She also puts some blame on men whose only experiences of sex before marriage are with prostitutes who fake orgasm with the men. Stopes is an advocate for the female orgasm. In 1918, many doctors did not even believe that women had orgasms or received pleasure from sex. Married couples should have sex for three or four days in a row, followed by ten days of abstinence, according to Stopes. This advice is based on her study of “Periodicity of Recurrence of natural desire” in women, of which she provides two charts in the book (one of a normal woman’s desire and one of a fatigued woman’s desire). If sex spontaneously arises at other moments, Stopes believes that couples should indulge. She sets up the unrealistic goal of mutual orgasm during sexual intercourse and instructs men that women may need ten to twenty minutes of sex before they have an orgasm, whereas men sometimes only require two minutes. Coitus interruptus should be avoided, she says, because women should absorb a man’s ejaculate in order to remain healthy. She is pro-contraception, a fact that made her book controversial with the Catholic church. She offers little advice on the best methods for contraception, however. Her strongest argument for a successful marriage is that men should continue to woo their wives and be romantic and women should not always submit to the wooing but should allow their husbands to enjoy “chasing” them. More controversial is her argument that women should learn from the prostitute and when having sex with her husband include an “element of charm and mutual gaiety of pleasure.” (p.99) This edition of Married Love also includes notes and an introduction by Ross McKibben. --Hallie Lieberman AU - Stopes, Marie CY - New York DA - 1918, 2004 KW - Lieberman, Hallie sexuality sexuality, and Comstock Law sexuality, and women women, and sexuality sexuality, and obscenity obscenity, and sexuality sexuality, and birth control censorship and ratings censorship, and birth control censorship, and sexuality religion, and sexuality religion sexuality, and Catholic Church censorship obscenity women LB - 37000 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1918 ST - Married Love TI - Married Love ID - 259 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book provides an interesting account of the state of photography at the turn of the 20th century. Chapters 11 through 18 deal with the following themes: 11) Photographic Printing Processes; 12) Photography and Letterpress Printing; 13) Photo-Block Printing; 14) Recent Discoveries and Applications; 15) Color Photography; 16) The Telegraph and Photography; 17) Photograph and Art; and 18) Photography and Art -- continued. Story says that "more marvels... have been the result of the penetrating eye of photography than perhaps of all the sciences combined during the previous hundred years." (124) Among these marvels has been the x-ray and a picture of a hand with a needle embedded in it is shown. (129) The author comments on the Kinetoscope and notes that moving picture often suffer from jerkiness and vibrations. But, the "possibilities that this form of photography opens up are almost endless, and we may ere long expect the 'living picture' to be rendered useful not merely in providing popular amusement and entertainment, but for instruction in schools and in numberless other ways." (131) As for color photography, Story says that "in reality, up to the present time, there is no such thing. Whether there ever will be is another question." (137) The author discusses sending photographs and telegraph and an inventor in Cleveland named Amstutz. "The transmission of drawings, and especially of photographs, by means of the telegraph, so that a friend could at the same time transmit his 'counterfeit presentment,' in order, as it were, to stamp and verify his communication, has long been an end aimed at by inventors, and we have from time to time heard of partial success obtained." (143) Amstutz's device, the artograph which has been patented, costs about $75 and weighs less than 16 pounds. (144) The inventor saw possibilities for using this device to transmit photographs to newspapers and also police photos of criminals. After a brief account of how the artograph works, Story writes that "It will be seen from the above that the inventor regards the artograph as chiefly useful for newspaper portrait work, although he has his eye on the wrong-doer as well." (147) A criminal's picture could be sent to "police in any city in the country." (147) This work was originally copyrighted in 1898 and 1902 by D. Appleton and Company. AU - Story, Alfred T. CY - New York DA - 1904 KW - Muybridge, Edward lenses ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography news and journalism photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines color color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures motion pictures, and photography photography, and motion pictures telegraph telegraph and photography photography, and telegraph x-rays photography, and art cameras cameras, and lenses lenses, and cameras photography, and art motion pictures, and kinetoscope kinetoscope, and motion pictures Muybridge, E., and motion pictures motion pictures, and E. Muybridge education education, and photography education, and motion pictures quotations quotations, and photography quotations, and color photography quotations, and living pictures ref, book kinetoscope magazines Muybridge, Eadweard LB - 39360 PB - McClure, Phillips & Co. PY - 1904 TT - The Story of Photography ID - 4035 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Stott’s book is partly a literary analysis and partly a cultural history. “As literary analysis,” he writes, “this book seeks to prove that documentary – whether film, photograph, writing, broadcast, or art – is a genre as distinct as tragedy, epic, or satire, but a genre unlike these traditional ones in that its content is, or is assumed to be, actually true. “As cultural history, this book surveys the documentary expression of the 1930s and early 1940s, and suggests not only that a documentary movement existed then but that recognition of it is essential to an understanding of American life at the time.” Stott argues that documentary aims at the emotions and that those who made documentaries intuitively realized that “emotion counted more than fact.” He notes the connection between social documentary and propaganda. AU - Stott, William CY - New York DA - 1973 KW - reform Roosevelt, Franklin D. photography +photography and visual communication photography, and documentary photography, and reform photography, and New Deal reform, and photography Stryker, Roy Farm Security Administration presidents and new media Roosevelt, Franklin administration Roosevelt, Franklin, and photography propaganda propaganda, and New Deal New Deal, and documentary propaganda, and documentaries documentaries, and propaganda documentaries New Deal LB - 28870 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1973 ST - Documentary Expression in Thirties America TI - Documentary Expression in Thirties America ID - 2636 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work examines swing music and jazz during the New Deal. Swing’s "jazz-oriented dance music was the leading (though certainly not the only) form of popular music during those years. Large numbers of teenagers and young adults listened and danced to it. Swing was part catalyst, part product of the electronic mass culture industry coalescing during those years. At the same time, many others speculated about swing, seeking to explain its popularity and social significance. Swing was widely thought to express, for better or worse, a certain spirit of the age.” AU - Stowe, David W. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1994 KW - +sound recording values music +sound recording music, and jazz music, and swing values, and music music, and popular culture African Americans, and jazz African Americans LB - 10670 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1994 ST - Swing Changes: Big Band Jazz in New Deal America TI - Swing Changes: Big Band Jazz in New Deal America ID - 2430 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Strasser traces the evolution of the mass market from the mid-nineteenth century to the early twentieth century, arguing that the market was created by mass manufacturers who discovered a need to create reliable and markets for the goods they were able to produce in large quantities. The mass market system at first depended on wholesalers and salesmen but later became more dependent on advertising and promotions as manufacturers discovered they could bypass middlemen and create a demand to which retailers would be forced to respond. American culture was fundamentally altered to focus more on manufactured objects as citizens were transformed from customers buying locally produced goods to consumers attempting to satisfy the demands created by national advertising and promotion. Modern communication technologies made possible the rise of national advertising. --Phil Glende AU - Strasser, Susan CY - New York DA - 1989 KW - nationalism advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations consumerism values +nationalism and communication Glende, Phil advertising advertising, national capitalism consumers values, and advertising nationalism, and advertising LB - 9340 PB - Pantheon PY - 1989 ST - Satisfaction Guaranteed: The Making of the American Market TI - Satisfaction Guaranteed: The Making of the American Market ID - 2301 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Suid, Lawrence CY - Reading, MA DA - 1978 KW - nationalism motion pictures mititary communication motion pictures, and nationalism motion pictures, and military nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism LB - 33120 PB - Addison-Wesley PY - 1978 ST - Gut and Glory: Great American War Movies TI - Gut and Glory: Great American War Movies ID - 2949 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Suid discusses the U. S. Navy's influence on American cinema from before World War I into the post-Cold War era. He discusses numerous feature films as well as documentaries and made-for-TV movies. AU - Suid, Lawrence CY - Annapolis, MD DA - 1996 KW - nationalism censorship and ratings motion pictures military communication nationalism and communication motion pictures, and Navy motion pictures, and military censorship, and U. S. Navy motion pictures, and nationalism military communication, and motion pictures censorship LB - 33130 PB - U. S. Naval Institute Press PY - 1996 ST - Sailing on the Silver Screen: Hollywood and the U. S. Navy TI - Sailing on the Silver Screen: Hollywood and the U. S. Navy ID - 2950 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is the last of four volumes that offer primary documents about the connection between the U. S. Department of Defense and the American movie industry. Suid , the author of Gut and Glory (about the military-Hollywood connection) collected many of these documents. This volume is divided into eight chapters: 1) The Why We Fight Series for Cold War Audiences; 2) American Film Policy in Occupied Germany; 3) The Atomic/Soviet Threat, 1950; 4) Cold War Recuiting Films; 5) Military Support for Hollywood Feature Films; 6) Film Censorship and Film's Impact in the 1950s; 7) John Kennedy, PT-109, and the USIA; 8) Hollywood, Pentagon, and Vietnam. In Chapter 5, for example, are documents establishing a postwar relationship between filmmaker and TV producers agreeing to submit scripts to the Department of Defense on entertainment that used military personnel, equipment, and/or bases. It lists 145 film and about 25 TV series between 1949 and 1970 in which the DOD rendered help to commercial motion pictures. AU - Suid, Lawrence H. CY - Westport, CT DA - 1991 KW - nationalism nationalism and communication military communication motion pictures motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and nationalism military, and motion pictures censorship and ratings motion pictures, and censorship military, and Hollywood war Cold War motion pictures, and war war, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Cold War Cold War, and motion pictures LB - 35030 PB - Greenwood Press PY - 1991 ST - Film and Propaganda in America: A Documentary History: Volume IV: 1945 and After TI - Film and Propaganda in America: A Documentary History: Volume IV: 1945 and After VL - 4 ID - 3143 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 1990 Stanford University doctoral thesis (School of Law) examines copyright issues relating to photocopying and other duplicating technologies. The work emphasizes Thailand and the United States. The work details photocopying practices by libraries in these two countries. AU - Sukonthapan, Pisawat CY - Ann Arbor, MI DA - 1990 KW - libraries archives law copyright law non-USA photocopying copyright, and photocopying +information storage +duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and copyright information storage, and photocopying photocopying, and copyright libraries, and copyright libraries, and photocopying photocopying, and libraries theses Ph.D. thesis law, and copyright law, and photocopying Thailand Thailand, and photocopying Thailand, and copyright LB - 2710 PB - UMI Press PY - 1990 ST - The Impact of Contemporary Copying Technologies on Copyrighted Works: Problems Arising from Photocopying in Libraries and Appropriate Solutions Thereto TI - The Impact of Contemporary Copying Technologies on Copyrighted Works: Problems Arising from Photocopying in Libraries and Appropriate Solutions Thereto ID - 359 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This excerpt from Warren Susman commenting on movies and personality, is in the chapter entitled "'Personality' and the Making of Twentieth Century Culture." (p. 282) “The test of the general approach proposed in this paper would be a more specific analysis of the cultural forms of our century to see whether they in fact share the characteristics of a culture of personality, whether they can be examined as manifestations of the working out of the basic ideas central to this vision of self. Investigations have convinced me that most cultural forms studied to date reveal a kinship in the culture of personality. Comic strips, radio programs, even beauty pageants have yielded evidence of significant dependence on these ideas. For purposes of this paper, however, I want to offer only one example. I am convinced that the nature and form of the modern motion picture as it developed as a middle-class popular art between 1910 and 1915 clearly shows its participation in the culture of personality. Technically, the film, most especially in the hands of its major developer as a middle-class art, D. W. Griffith, and those who followed him, depended on two major modes and used them dramatically in startling juxtaposition. The first was the handling of vast groups of people. Vachel Lindsey in his brilliant 1915 book on film speaks of the role of what he calls ‘crowd splendor’ in motion pictures. (16) Films are not only a mass medium, they also represent one of the major ways in which a mass society can examine itself as mass. There was from the start of serious motion pictures an intimate relationship between it and the portraying of the role of crowds. To the depiction of the crowd, and often in striking contrast to it, Griffith added the extraordinary form of the ‘close-up.’ Almost as if following the teachings of Shaler, the face, bigger than life and abstracted from it, provides a brilliant expression of self, of an individual. The importance of this contrast the mass and the isolated individual apart from the mass to the development of film, and thus of film’s role in the culture of personality, cannot be exaggerated. “Up to 1910, motion picture studios generally concealed the indentity of most screen players. In 1910, however, the idea of the movie star was born. The creation of the star changed the nature of the role of motion pictures in our society. It brought into even more prominent use the press agent and modern advertising.” (282) AU - Susman, Warren I. CY - New York DA - 1973, 1984 KW - Lindsay, Vachel heroes fame celebrity actors acting photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and heroes heroes, and motion picture celebrity culture, and heroes heroes, and celebrity culture Lindsey, Vachel, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Vachel Lindsay Griffith, D. W. ref, book LB - 15380 PB - Pantheon Books PY - 1973 ST - Culture as History: The Transformation of American Society in the Twentieth Century TI - Culture as History: The Transformation of American Society in the Twentieth Century ID - 3697 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Susskind, Charles CY - San Francisco DA - 1995 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories non-USA +television Hertz, Heinrich biography LB - 7400 PB - San Francisco Press PY - 1995 ST - Heinrich Hertz: A Short Life TI - Heinrich Hertz: A Short Life ID - 2110 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work talks about a machine that shows scenes of Niagara Falls, the Alps, or Yellowstone -- all in one's home thus making it unnecessary to undertake time-consuming and often uncomfortable travel. AU - Swan, H. E. CY - Stafford, KS DA - 1896 KW - entertainment entertainment, home +future and science fiction home, and new media home television, and history of future seeing at a distance +television television, and origins home, and new media home entertainment LB - 11160 PB - H. E. Swan PY - 1896 ST - It Might Be: A Story of the Future Progress of the Sciences the Wonderful Advancement in the Methods of Government and the Happy State of the People TI - It Might Be: A Story of the Future Progress of the Sciences the Wonderful Advancement in the Methods of Government and the Happy State of the People ID - 2477 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This informative work “purposely confines itself to the pre-cavity - magnetron era of radar,” examining the emergence of the technology in the United Kingdom, the United States, Italy, Germany, France, Japan, Russia, Hungary, and Holland. With the exception of the latter two nations, an annotated bibliography is provided for each country. “After a short discussion of what radar is, the physical principles underlying pulse radar systems are discussed in some detail. The principal forerunners of radar, from Tesla’s concept in 1900 of a method for detecting the presence and movement of distant objects to Chester Rice’s experiments with microwaves in the 1930's, are treated in chronological order.” The author treats developments in the United Kingdom in more detail than radar in other countries. “The emergence of the resonant-cavity-megnetron was a turning point in radar history,” Swords writes. “The story of its origin, prefaced by an account of earlier types of megnetron, is told.” AU - Swords, Sean S. CY - Dublin, Ireland DA - 1983 KW - R & D USSR Netherlands research and development war war non-USA Japan Italy Great Britain Germany military communication radar bibliographies, and radar +bibliographies Great Britain, and radar Italy, and radar Germany, and radar France, and radar Japan, and radar Soviet Union, and radar Hungary, and radar Holland, and radar Rice, Chester resonant cavity magnetron Tesla, Nikola Tizard, Henry Soviet Union Holland Hungary military, and radar bibliographies, annotated France LB - 6070 PB - Department of Microelectronics and Electrical Engineering, Trinity College PY - 1983 ST - Technical Report MEE1: A Technical History of the Beginnings of Radar TI - Technical Report MEE1: A Technical History of the Beginnings of Radar ID - 1991 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Symes writes that the "facsimile culture" that was made possible, first by the camera and then by phonograph, is important for several reasons: first, it enabled the most ephemeral parts of experience to be preserved; second, it allowed them to be replicated almost without end; and third, it enabled a range of cultural forms -- and recordings of classical music are cases in point -- to be privatized and embodied. Moreover, as the technology involved has undergone progressive refinements, it has led to forms of reproduction whose verisimilitude competes favorably with, and in some instances surpasses, that of the original," (1) which raise significant ethical and artistic questions. "The new technologies of communication and reproduction, among which the phonograph is one of the most significant," the author says, "have played an important role in decentering culture, rendering its core elements accessible from a distance and enabling the periphery to act, as never before, on the artistic center." (2) Symes believes that music is the area that has been the most changed by the invent of recording. Edison was, he argues, "the Gutenberg of sound." (2) This book has several black-and-white pictures of advertisements and jacket covers relating to recorded classical music. Indeed, chapter 4 is entitled "Creating the Right Impression: An Iconography of Record Covers." Other chapters deal with "The Best Seat in the House: The Domestication of the Concert Hall," "Just for the Record: The Narrative Architecture of Gramophone Magazines," "Keeping Records in Their Place: Collections, Catalogs, Libraries, and Societies," and more. This work also has a good bibliography. AU - Symes, Colin CY - Middletown, CT DA - 2004 KW - technology illustrations computers music magazines discs, compact sound recording digital media duplicating technologies radio radio, and sound recording phonograph advertising advertising, and phonograph phonograph, and advertising compact discs (CDs) digital media, and compact discs (CDs) sound recording, and music music, and technology music, and phonograph music, and compact discs (CDs) music, and digital media motion pictures motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures audiences sound recording, and audiences audiences, and sound recording technological determinism music, and Internet computers and the Internet values values, and digital sampling history and new media microphones sound recording, and microphones microphones, and sound recording music, and microphones microphones, and music home and new media sound recording, and jazz sound recording, and race race race, and sound recording magnetic recording sound recording, and magnetic tape sound recording, and LPs Edison, Thomas home, and phonograph illustrations books, periodicals, newspapers gramophone sound recording, and magazines magazines, and sound recording sound recording, and stereo stereo home, and stereo recording women women, and sound recording sound recording, and women sound recording, and bibliographies bibliographies, and sound recording bibliographies CDs history home advertising and public relations technology and society LB - 32930 PB - Wesleyan University Press PY - 2004 ST - Setting the Record Straight: A Material History of Classical Recording TI - Setting the Record Straight: A Material History of Classical Recording ID - 2931 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Tabori’s The Humor and Technology of Sex is divided into three books. I only focused on the third book, “The Toys of Love.” The other two books are “Erotic Humor in Literature” and “The Many Colors of the Blue Joke.” Lumping sex toys in with blue jokes is appropriate in the sense that dildos are inherently humorous to many people. A prolific author who’s written several novels and nonfiction books (including The Natural Science of Stupidity), Tabori writes about the history of sex toys in the world from Greek civilization to 1969. He argues that there is a “universal human desire to heighten and vary sexual pleasure” (p. 283) and that this desire can be demonstrated throughout progressive civilizations as well as underdeveloped ones. Since so little writing has been dedicated to the history of sex toys, this is argument enough, but he also has a broader goal with the writing of this book. He believes that “guilt and inhibition, ignorance and fear should be banished from the land of Eros.” (p.xxi) “Toys of love,” according to Tabori, include aphrodisiacs, dildos/sex toys, rubber and latex (for the fetishists), and condoms (with a focus on those with ticklers). He begins with the Greeks, from which the word “aphrodisiac,” originated Aphrodite served as the inspiration, she being the “foam-born, laughter-loving goddess” (p.271) and moves on to discuss sex technology in the Eastern and Western cultures. He details the various types of aphrodisiacs mentioned in Greek plays (Medea and the plays of Aristophanes) and medical treatises (Galen). The aphrodisiacs included such varied items as snails, onions, peas, mushrooms, Parmesan cheese, and crabs. The Greeks also crafted dildos (which they called olisbos) from leather “wood, clay, glass and other materials.” (p.278). Each culture had their unique approach to sex products. The Chinese distributed “Bride’s Books” (sex manuals) to newly married women. The Indians had their Kamasutra, a book of sexual poses and sexual tenets, which was actually very progressive because its author, Vatsyayana believed that women could experience more pleasure from sex than men. The Japanese had the pillow-book, a book filled with sexy illustrations and stories. Dildos were also popular and the first writings about them appeared in 769 A.D. The Arabs were partial to Spanish fly, which was supposed to function as an aphrodisiac. In the Western world, sex products were just as popular. Dildos were prevalent during the Italian renaissance, and nuns had special glass dildos made. In England, dildos were popping up in brothels in the mid-1800s. Rubber fetishism seems to have been especially popular in England, Germany, and the United States up to the 1960s, and they spawned a number of magazines, yet fetishists still feel isolated in their desires. A section on German sex toy store founder Beate Uhse, rounds out the book. She started out writing a book about contraception (the rhythm method) in 1950. Sales were tremendous so she opened a sex supermarket in 1962, which carried anti-impotence devices, sex gags (pin-up key chains), books on birth control, and other sex-related items. It is still in operation today. --Hallie Liberman AU - Tabori, Paul CY - New York DA - 1969 KW - Lieberman, Hallie sexuality sexuality, and humor censorship and ratings sexuality, and censorship sexuality, and technology non-USA non-USA, and sexuality Great Britain Germany sexuality, and Great Britain sexuality, and Germany LB - 37010 PB - Julian Press PY - 1969 ST - The Humor and Technology of Sex TI - The Humor and Technology of Sex ID - 298 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is a classic treatment of its subject. AU - Taft, Robert CY - New York DA - c1938, 1964 KW - photography +photography and visual communication photography, and 19th century photography, and U. S. social history photography, and documentary (19th century) LB - 1950 PB - Dover Publications (originally Macmillan Company) PY - 1938 ST - Photography and the American Scene: A Social History, 1839-1889 TI - Photography and the American Scene: A Social History, 1839-1889 ID - 1591 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 331-page book provides a decent account of movie making as it existed in 1912. An early chapter covers initial efforts to make moving pictures. Two chapters deal with celluloid, the "search" for it and how it is made. Another chapter is devoted to the kinetoscope, the animatograph, and the cinematographe. In all there are 29 chapters. Other chapter include: "The Story of the Perforation Gauge," how the movie camera is made and operated, "Developing and Printing the Pictures," "How the Pictures Are Shown on the Screen," the movie studio, recording "topical events" and "scenic films," "Motion Pictures of Microbes," "Pictures that Move, Talk, and Sing," films dealing with popular science, six chapters on "trick" pictures or special effects, the "Electric Spark Cinematography," the "'Animated' Newspaper, "Animation in Natural Colours," "Moving Pictures in the Home," educational films, and recent developments and current trends in cinema. This book notes the appears of the animated newspaper or early newsreels shown in movie theaters. "Although the animated newspaper has been amongst us for only a few months, yet it has already developed into an institution. Many people would as soon think of missing the 'newspaper' item as they would think of overlooking an opportunity to see the Derby re-run upon the screen." (278) There is an assumption that films record the truth of events. "There is one feature in which the man with the camera holds an undisputed advantage over his confrere armed with notebook and pencil," the author writes. "He gives a truthful pictorial account of what takes place, not the garbled product of a vivid imagination. As a result the editor of the animated picture newspaper is spared the menace which hangs always over the head of the newspaper director. He is immune from the pains and penalties of the libel law!" (279) The author says that "Seeing that the length of the film newspaper is limited to between 500 and 650 feet, and is built up of from ten to seventeen subjects which vary in length according to their respective importance, careful discrimination is necessary." (282) The author reports and early example of what might a century later be called a "citizen reporter" using amateur camera equipment. "For instance, the dramatic manner of Bleriot's flight across the Channel caught the professional cinematographers by surprise. Elaborate arrangements had been made to secure pictorial records of this journey, but only one man, a wide-awake amateur, obtained a film of the embarkation. Although his film was deficient in technique and photographic quality, it commanded a high price; and the enterprising photographer never had occasion to regret his enterprise, for his initial expense was recouped several times over." (301) The author says, though, that the "cost of the camera and the expense of the film are the chief drawbacks to the popularisation of cinemato-301/302 graphy; the bulkiness of the apparatus has also militated against its adoption by the amateur. Recently, however, these admitted drawbacks have been overcome, and by methods which claim te distinct merit of ingenuity and resource. "About 1886 a novel device known as the 'Kineograph' appeared. It was an anticipation of the 'Mutoscope,' which made such a bold bid for public appreciation in the early 'nineties and, like the Kineograph itself, failed to make its mark. A number of instantaneous photographs were printed and mounted upon separate leaves. The pictures were placed in consecutive order and bound at one side to form a kind of book. When the leaves were turned over rapidly, giving fleeting though distinct glimpses of the successive pictures, the idea was conveyed that motion was being represented. "Recently this idea has been revived in the 'Kinora' motion photography system. This likewise made its first appearance some years ago, but failed of success, although it was distinctly ingenious. It offered to the home in pictures just what the phonograph provides in regard to sound -- the capture of a particular incident to be reproduced at leisure. In a highly improved form the same device has recently reappeared, and its reception augurs well for its future. "The amateur is provided with facilities for taking his own photographs, a special camera having been evolved for the purpose of simple deign and operation. In general appearance it resembles the ordinary hand-camera, measuring 9 1/8 inches in length by 6 5/8 inches wide by 7 5/8 inches deep. When loaded it does not weigh more than 7 1/4 pounds. Externally it possesses few fittings...." (302) Talbot goes on to say that "Endless pleasure can be obtained with this instrument in the home. Pretty little incidents of domestic life, such as children playing, animals gamboling, and so forth, can be photographed and reproduced upon the reel!" (305) Regrettably, the author says that the Kinova system was be "valueless" for the amateur at the present time. (306) For example, recording one's travels abroad and then showing them at home would be difficult. "Unfortunately, such an achievement is impossible under existing conditions. The apparatus, both recording and projecting, is expensive; the film is costly; while the problem incidental to the illuminant is not easily solved in the average home." (306) Talbot then describes another system. "At first sight it seems an almost impossible quest to secure all these essentials in a single stroke. But it has been accomplished, and what is more, with absolute perfection. To-day the amateur can take moving pictures and project them upon a screen at will, for the edification of his friends, more easily and cheaply than he can 'Kodak' and project snapshots by lantern-slides. Moreover, the results thus obtained and shown are far superior to those obtainable with the methods and apparatus now in vogue. "This revolutionary achievement has been attained through the effort of an indefatigable Italian worker, M. Gianni Bettini...." (306) The chapter the discusses Bettini's work. "The possibilities of the Bettini cinema-a-plaque system, therefore, are obvious. The invention brings the art of cinematography within reach of the amateur; introduces moving pictures to the drawing-room as completely and cheaply as the phonograph conveys sound to the fireside; provides the photographer with a far more fascinating hobby; while its professional applications are illimitable." (311) AU - Talbot, Frederick A. CY - Philadelphia DA - 1912 KW - home history magazines photography ref, secondary motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space special effects motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and microphotography microphotography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines fan magazines magazines, fan color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color Pathé Pathé, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Pathé Pathé, and color films color, and Pathé Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Thomas Edison home and new media motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures home entertainment celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid celluloid, and motion pictures materials materials, and celluloid kinetoscope motion pictures, and animatograph motion pictures, and cinematographe sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sound recording cameras cameras, and motion pictures newsreels motion pictures, and newsreels newsreels, and motion pictures citizen reporters journalism, and citizen reporters cameras, and citizen reporters citizen reporters, and cameras cameras, and amateurs non-USA non-USA, and motion pictures motion pictures, and non-USA motion pictures, and Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures Great Britain photography, instantaneous motion pictures, and Kineograph Kineograph cameras, and bulkiness cameras, portable home entertainment, and Bettini cinema-a-plaque system motion pictures, and Bettini cinema-a-plaque system Bettini cinema-a-plaque system, and home movies motion pictures, and magic motion pictures, and tobacco ads advertising, and tobacco photography, and exposure time history and new media history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history photography and visual communication microphotography actors acting ref, book advertising advertising and public relations journalism LB - 16410 PB - J. B. Lippincott Company PY - 1912 ST - Moving Pictures: How They Are Made and Worked TI - Moving Pictures: How They Are Made and Worked ID - 3794 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - A work of participant-observation, mixed with historical analysis, Gay Talese’s Thy Neighbor’s Wife was controversial when it first came out in 1980mainly due to the fact that the married Talese participated in group sex sessions and massage parlor sexual shenanigans and remains important to this day because he historically contextualizes the sea changes that occurred in the world of sexuality in the 1960’s and 1970’s. As the back of the book jacket says, the book was written before the advent of AIDS (and genital herpes), when swinging was hip and Deep Throat was a movie event that men took their wives to. Talese profiles a number of the big players of the 70’s: John and Barbara Williamson, founders of utopic sexual colony Sandstone; Hugh Hefner, founder of Playboy; Samuel Roth, seller of pornography (and famous for the Supreme Court Case in 1957 that he lost; it established a new test for obscenity); Al Goldstein, founder of Screw magazine, and many others. Because Talese participated in sexcapades at Sandstone, he could not be “objective” in describing the goings-on, but this is beside the point, because very few people (participants or not) can be objective when describing a swingers’ colony. What he learns in his journey to Sandstone, is that the colony’s success is due in no small measure to their charismatic leader, John Williamson, a seductive man who plays mind games with his followers (daring one to drive into the desert alone, with minimal supplies, and daring his wife to listen to her husband have sex with someone else). He connects Sandstone to the Oneida community, a free-love society founded in the 1800s by a charismatic leader John Humphrey Noyes. Talese says that this book was inspired by “America’s new openness about sex, its expanding erotic consumerism, and the quiet rebellion that he sensed within the middle class against the censors and clerics that had been an inhibiting force since the founding of the Puritan republic.” (p.524) He argues that American society has become more open and accepting about sexuality, a change brought about by a number of occurrences, including the introduction of Playboy in 1953, the proliferation of “full-service” massage parlors, and the existence of several communities founded on sexual freedom (Esalen, and Sandstone, as the most prominent examples). This openness with sex, he sees as mainly a positive development. In an afterward, he notes that his marriage survived the infidelities he engaged in while writing this book and hints that it may have been strengthened by his personal exploration of sexuality. --Hallie Lieberman AU - Talese, Gay CY - New York DA - 1980, 2009 KW - Lieberman, Hallie sexuality sexuality, and women women, and sexuality women pornography pornography, and sexuality censorship and ratings sexuality, and censorship censorship, and sexuality sexuality, and Playboy magazines, and Playboy sexuality, and magazines censorship magazines LB - 37020 PB - HarperCollins PY - 1980 ST - Thy Neighbor's Wife TI - Thy Neighbor's Wife ID - 334 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The essays in this book came out of conference held December 1-4, 1976, sponsored by Carnegie-Mellon University's Department of Engineering and Public Policy, and the National Science Foundation. Its purpose was to consider the role of history in technology assessment. The idea for the conference came from Lynn White, Jr.'s 1973 American Historical Association presidential address in which White said that more study was needed of the often unintended and indirect social and other influences of technology. The papers in this volume attempt "to use history to shed light on some important areas of the interaction between technology and society, as well as the evolution of technology policy." The book is divided into three parts. Part 1 is an introductory statement by Daniel De Simone, from the Office of Technology Assessment, entitled "Technology assessment: Where we have been." Part 2 has four essays by Mary R. Hamilton ("The Use of Historical Records to Inform Prospective Technology Assessments") Michael S. Baram, Alan L. Porter, and Frederick A. Rossini on methodology. The bulk of the book is then given over to case studies that make up Part 3. Papers relating to communication technology include: Roberta Balstad Miller, "Transportation innovation and regional development in 19th Century New York: The case of the Erie Canal"; Henry Bain, "Origins and impacts of BART, the San Francisco Bay Area's newest travel mode"; Henry H. Hitchcock & Thomas F. Jaras, "The impact of the Atlantic Cable on diplomacy: Implications for forecasting"'; Delbert D. Smith, "Communications satellites: From vision to reality"; Terry Kay Rockefeller, "The Failure of Planning for Electrical Power Supply: The Case of the Electrical Engineers and 'Superpower,' 1915-1924"; Jerome E. Milch, "Coping with Technological Change: Political Responses to the Evolution of the Airport"; George Wise, "Past Efforts at Technology Assessment and Prediction, 1890-1940"; Jon D. Miller, "The Impact of Two Decades of Space Exploration on the Development of American Attitudes Toward Science and Technology"; and a concluding statement by Joshua Menkes, "Is There a Future in History: The Applicability of Historical Analysis to Policy Research." AU - Tarr, Joel A., ed. CY - San Francisco DA - 1977 KW - technology R & D Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism NSF values preservation research and development war history, and new media +future and science fiction war values history general studies +telegraph cable, transatlantic +aeronautics and space communication satellites satellites, and communication +transportation air travel transportation, and air travel transportation, and Erie Canal +electricity OTA values, and technology future history, and technology technology and society technology and culture +military communication +nationalism and communication technology assessment cable, Atlantic National Science Foundation (NSF) technology, and unintended consequences technological determinism cable LB - 3810 PB - San Francisco Press, Inc. PY - 1977 ST - Retrospective Technology Assessment -- 1976 TI - Retrospective Technology Assessment -- 1976 ID - 1769 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This collection of papers dealing with microfilm and microform were presented at the seventeenth annual convention of the National Microfilm Association in1968. A specific session on May 22 deal with “Technology,” but several papers deal with technologically related issues. The Introduction to this volume is entitled “Microfilm’s Role in Meeting the Mass Information Challenge.” One of the most important characteristics of microfilm was that it provided “a method of compacting written and graphic material for efficient and easy storage in an era of ever-diminishing space.” While printed materials had expanded enormously, microfilm was a kind of publishing “implosion” that brought “information and knowledge back to manageable proportions.” Many people involved with the conference saw microfilm “as an element in an information system rather than an information system itself,” and their goal was to “provide higher density information to help individuals do their jobs better.” Yet, this work acknowledges a drawback to microfilm: “There is no question that there is little relaxation and enjoyment in staring into the bright light of a viewer.” AU - Tate, Vernon D., ed. CY - Annapolis, MD DA - 1968 KW - computers photography microfiche, microfilm, microform libraries archives cinema motion pictures celluloid film education computers microfilm microform +information storage information storage, and microfilm information storage, and microform libraries, and microfilm microfilm, and libraries microform, and information storage film, and microfilm microphotography photography, micro +photography and visual communication photography, and miniaturization miniaturization, and photography education, and microform +computers and the Internet computers, and microfilm systems microfilm, and computers miniaturization materials LB - 2290 PB - National Microfilm Association PY - 1968 ST - Images in Action: Proceedings of the Seventeenth Annual Meeting and Convention TI - Images in Action: Proceedings of the Seventeenth Annual Meeting and Convention ID - 317 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 441-page book, written by a New York Times editorial page editor, is a lucid account of the aerial and satellite reconnaissance under the Dwight D. Eisenhower administration. Eisenhower emerges from this work as “a visionary leader with a high tolerance for risk” in matters involving military and intelligence technology. The author credits the development of new espionage technologies during this period, which led to far more accurate information about the Soviet Union’s military capabilities, for saving the United States from “debilitating” expenditures on defense which would have damaged the American economy and led to a “garrison state.” The author argues that “unfortunately, the gusher of espionage innovation during the Eisenhower years, and another burst of creativity in the 1960s and 1970s, were not followed by a similar period of technological advancement in the 1990s,” and as a result, the United States was unprepared for the kind of terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001. The book contains notes and a bibliography, and is based on interviews, oral histories, archival collections, and secondary sources. AU - Taubman, Philip CY - New York DA - 2003 KW - R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) USSR corporations corporations corporations corporations Central Intelligence Agency Soviet Union, and space photography U-2 plane reconnaissance presidents, and new media RAND Corporation photoreconnaissance research and development war Lockheed Martin Co. Eisenhower administration Eastman Kodak Cold War cinematography CIA war non-USA +aeronautics and space communication +military communication satellites Eisenhower, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Dwight, and satellites reconnaissance, and satellites +photography and visual communication photography, and satellites satellites, and photography satellites, and reconnaissance Air Force, U.S. Arnold, Henry H. (Hap) CIA, and satellites satellites, and CIA cameras, and satellites satellites, Corona photoreconnaissance, and satellites Dulles, Allan, and satellites Eastman Kodak, and satellites rocketry U-2, and reconnaissance satellites, and USSR Soviet Union, and satellites Killian, James, and satellites Land, Edwin, and satellite photography Lockheed, and satellites NASA, and satellites RAND Corporation, and satellites satellites, and Cold War Cold War, and satellites Wheeler, Albert, and satellites satellites, and Albert Wheeler World War II World War II, and aerial reconnaissance September 11, 2001 cameras Land, Edwin NASA Soviet Union U. S. Air Force LB - 230 PB - Simon & Schuster PY - 2003 ST - Secret Empire: Eisenhower, the CIA, and the Hidden Story of America's Space Espionage TI - Secret Empire: Eisenhower, the CIA, and the Hidden Story of America's Space Espionage ID - 112 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book was Volume 4 in The Economic History of the United States. Taylor deals with "Improved Communications" on pageds 149-52 -- namely the postal service, newspapers, and the magnetic telegraph. "In an age of revolutionary developments in transportation and communication, perhaps the most drastic change resulted from the magnetic telegraph," he argued. AU - Taylor, George Rogers CY - New York DA - 1951, 1958 KW - post office +telegraph telegraph, magnetic +books, periodicals, newspapers +postal service +transportation LB - 5240 PB - Rinehart & Company, Inc. PY - 1951 ST - The Transportation Revolution: 1815-1860 TI - The Transportation Revolution: 1815-1860 ID - 1911 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The Gulf War in 1991 presented both the Allied Coalition (The U.S., Great Britain, France, etc.) as well as the Iraqi forces led by Saddam Hussein with an interesting scenario: a large part of the war would be “fought” over the airwaves of television. As Taylor points out, a great amount of positioning by both sides took place before troops were ever deployed to the Gulf region. Each side went to great lengths to portray their own side as “good” as preparations for the impending conflict moved forward. Aware of the great power of television, the military leaders of the United States and the Coalition members feared losing the war in their own homelands by losing public support for the battle. Many worried about a repeat of what they perceived had happened in Vietnam – a loss of domestic support for a war being fought many miles from home. As a result, the military leaders went to lengths to ensure that footage detrimental to pro-war sentiment would not be shown. This led to a compromise, of sorts, between the media, which wanted to exercise its first amendment rights, and the military, which wanted to protect its objectives. The most interesting aspect of this text is how each of the parties involved in the Gulf War demonstrated their media savvy. Taylor gives good accounts of the simultaneous feelings of power and helplessness felt by those in charge when confronted with the media. Using excerpts from interviews and news stories, Taylor gives examples that help to strengthen his points such as demonstrating General Norman Schwarzkopf’s simultaneous feelings of his ability to use the media while also feeling that he was at their mercy. He believed they must be fed information or otherwise they would turn on him. The author is critical of CNN and other news agencies for allowing themselves to become part of the coalition’s propaganda effort. --Michael Boyle AU - Taylor, P. M. CY - New York DA - 1992 KW - R & D nationalism corporations imperialism corporations television, and war public relations advertising research and development war journalism satellites news and journalism war non-USA Boyle, Michael Gulf War (1991) propaganda propaganda, and Gulf War (1991) +television television, and Gulf War (1991) Gulf War (1991), and television news, and Gulf War (1991) Gulf War (1991), and news news, and bias news, and propaganda propaganda, and news global communication +nationalism and communication nationalism, and news nationalism, and television +aeronautics and space communication nationalism, and satellites news, and satellites satellites, and Gulf War (1991) Gulf War (1991), and satellites satellites, and news cultural imperialism +military communication military, and satellites Hussein, Saddam CNN news public relations advertising and public relations LB - 1580 PB - Manchester University Press PY - 1992 ST - War and the Media: Propaganda and Persuasion in the Gulf War TI - War and the Media: Propaganda and Persuasion in the Gulf War ID - 246 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Taylor, a “lecturer in archeology at the University of Bradford,” makes several arguments in this book. His main argument is that since the beginning of time, sex has been “intertwined with culture (p.4).” That is, there was never a period of time when human sexuality existed in a “pure” form, where all sexual practices were directly related to reproduction. There has always been a power component to sex, and sex has always been distinct from gender. Clothing became a signifier of gender, with culture codes dictating what garments are appropriate for each sex. Another argument he presents is that the invention of baby slings (1.8 million years ago) led to language development in humans because babies’ brains were able to develop for longer periods of time. Because the pelvises of humans are so small that a big head could not fit through them, the only way that babies could develop big heads would be if their head kept growing after the babies were born, and the only way this could be facilitated would be through easing the process of caretaking for the mothers. Baby slings allowed women to provide attentive childcare while continuing to do work. Also, a baby in a sling is calm which enables the baby “to thrive, with its energy directed into physical and behavioral development."(p.48) And being carried stimulated the babies’ balance. A key argument is that in intelligent mammals, sex has evolved beyond reproduction, and it became “a source both of pleasure and power as ends in themselves (p.74).” He uses the behavior of the bonobo chimpanzees (a frequently cited example in books on sexuality) as evidence that other primates engage in sex simply for pleasure, and he argues that scientists have misinterpreted bonobo males as trading sex for food, when in fact their partners (the bonobo females) are enjoying the sex just as much as the males, so really they’re sharing two pleasurable items: sex and food. Ice age batonsphallus-shaped tools that have been interpreted as “arrow- or spear-straighteners (p.128)have probably be misinterpreted, Taylor argues, and may have been used for masturbation. They may, in fact, be the first dildoes, or they could have been used to deflower young women. Taylor also argues that the switch from hunting and gathering to farming led to sexual relations morphing from being mutually pleasurable to “voyeuristic, repressive, homophobic, and focused on reproduction (p.143).” Sex was more private during the hunter-gatherer times because couples could venture into the woods to have sex in private; whereas, when people lived in houses, the sex occurred in the small living quarters that had “peep-through…partitioned rooms (p.165),” making the sex less private. Homophobia came about, he says, because sex was viewed as something that should lead to reproduction, just like it did on the farm. In addition, he argues that the importance of gender increased “from the end of the Neolithic onward, with the growth of political complexity in Europe (p.194).” Codes of dress (signifying gender) went hand and hand with codes of rank (signifying class). If gender differences were normalized and seen as natural, then class differences would also be naturalized. He also dates the start of the sex industry to ancient Rome, relying on brothel tokens as evidence that a strong industry had been built up. The tokens depicted different sex acts on them; fellatio was cheaper than vaginal intercourse. He argues that there are a few sexual activities that are banned or frowned upon by all human societies: incest, necrophilia, pedophilia, and bestiality. However, attitudes to most sex acts vary across the world and are not universally sanction (for example: fellatio, lesbianism, cunnilingus, group sex, anal sex, transvestitism). Taylor ends the book by arguing that sexual morality should no longer be “based on reproduction (p.268)” and that continuing to base it on reproduction could exacerbate population problems. Most of the research included in the book is not original; however, his interpretations frequently are. This book is important because it is one of the few books to collect all the information we have on prehistoric sexuality. He does draw upon his own excavations. He relies upon a variety of sources, including: scientific books and articles from archeologists, Darwin’s books and theories, ethnographers’ accounts, Freudian psychology, anthropologists’ works, and neuropsychological theories. --Hallie Lieberman AU - Taylor, Timothy CY - New York DA - 1996 KW - Lieberman, Hallie sexuality sexuality, and history sexuality, and censorship censorship and ratings religion religion, and sexuality sexuality, and religion sexuality, and anthropology sexuality, and psychology sexuality, and morality LB - 37030 PB - Bantam Book PY - 1996 ST - The Prehistory of Sex: Four Million Years of Human Sexual Culture TI - The Prehistory of Sex: Four Million Years of Human Sexual Culture ID - 626 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Tebbel, John CY - New York DA - 1969 KW - women, and new media advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations sexuality news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines magazines, and history of advertising, and magazines magazines, and advertising women women, and magazines magazines, and women Esquire magazine magazines, and Esquire magazines, and Playboy Playboy magazines, and pulp magazines, and fan magazines, and men's advertising LB - 40 PB - Hawthorn Books, Inc. PY - 1969 ST - The American Magazine: A Compact History TI - The American Magazine: A Compact History ID - 95 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Tebbel, John CY - Chicago DA - 1963 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories +television Sarnoff, David biography LB - 7420 PB - Encyclopedia Britannica Press PY - 1963 ST - David Sarnoff: Putting Electrons to Work TI - David Sarnoff: Putting Electrons to Work ID - 2112 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is an informative history of American magazines. The authors do consider the impact of technology on publishing. A wide range of topics is covered -- photography and photojounralism, the use of color, offset printing, lithography, science fiction, nudity. Printed material was more readily available than ever during the mid-twentieth century. Between 1940 and 1960 scientific and technical articles more than doubled each year until by 1960 one to two million articles were appearing worldwide in perhaps 100,000 publications. New techniques of printing and book manufacturing lowered costs to one-fourth or less. The number of paperback books sold between 1947 and 1953 increased from 96 million to 292 million. By mid-century, magazines were using color more often. By 1949 the Saturday Evening Post employed color on more than 5,400 pages, including 1,600 full-page ads. During the same period the Ladies Home Journal used color on 2,100 pages. The time-consuming processing required by color film had limited use in news photography. By the late 1940s, though, processing had been speeded and not only news publications but other magazines began using color photography more often. AU - Tebbel, John AU - Zuckerman, Mary Ellen CY - New York DA - 1991 KW - photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations print printing sexuality pornography sexuality sexuality communication revolution news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers lithography journalism materials communication revolution news and journalism magazines, and paperbacks magazines, and new technology books, and new technology communication revolution, and books communication revolution, and magazines +photography and visual communication magazines, and photography photography, and magazines pornography, and magazines magazines, and pornography photojournalism magazines, and photojournalism nudity magazines, and nudity nudity, and magazines magazines, and pulp paper paper, and wood pulp magazines, and science fiction science fiction, and magazines advertising magazines, and advertising advertising, and magazines magazines, and new technology printing, and new technology Playboy magazines, and radical lithography, offset offset printing printing, and offset lithography color color, and magazines magazines, and color news, and color photography photography, and color magazines, and news and color books news +future and science fiction materials future magazines science fiction LB - 17500 PB - Oxford University Press PY - 1991 ST - The Magazine in America: 1741-1990 TI - The Magazine in America: 1741-1990 ID - 671 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This collection of papers covers a range of topics relating to technology assessment. Some of the essays include: Melvin Kranzberg, "Historical Aspects of Technology Assessment" (Aug. 1969); Vary T. Coates and Bernard S. Finn, "Proposal to the National Science Foundation for a Retrospective Technology Assessment: Submarine Telegraphy" (Nov. 1974); and Mark S. Frankel, "Genetic Technology: Promises and Problems" (March 1973). Frankel's case study discusses gene therapy and also abortion. AU - Technology, Program of Policy Studies in Science and CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1975 KW - technology genetics +telegraph +artificial intelligence and biotechnology genetic engineering abortion cable, submarine cable, transatlantic technology and society technology assessment, and history of Kranzberg, Melvin Finn, Bernard Frankel, Mark cable cable, Atlantic LB - 4820 PB - Program of Policy Studies in Science and Technology, George Washington University PY - 1975 ST - Readings in Technology Assessment: Selections from the Publications of the Program of Policy Studies in Science and Technology TI - Readings in Technology Assessment: Selections from the Publications of the Program of Policy Studies in Science and Technology ID - 1869 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work includes many short articles on the state of photography in 1907-08. For example, Catharine Weed Ward writes on "Press Photography" (97-103) and J. Ellsworth Gross discusses "Illustrating a Story" (137-39). AU - Tennant, John A., ed. CY - New York DA - 1907 KW - journalism magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines women women, and photography photography, and women critics critics, and photography cameras cameras, and availability cameras, portable cameras, and journalism books, periodicals, newspapers photography, and books books, and photography critics, and journalism values values, and women women, and values ref, book books LB - 16330 PB - Tennant and Ward PY - 1907 ST - The American Annual of Photography: 1908 TI - The American Annual of Photography: 1908 VL - 22 ID - 3786 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work, which appeared annually, has several short articles on the state of photography in 1910. For example, Jere Montague writes about the "Transportation of Photographs" (46-48). AU - Tennant, John A., ed. CY - New York DA - 1910 KW - journalism magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and transportation transportation, and photographs ref, book transportation LB - 16350 PB - Tennant & Ward PY - 1910 ST - The American Annual of Photography: 1910 TI - The American Annual of Photography: 1910 VL - 24 ID - 3788 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Tenner says that while there are many works dealing with irony and paradox in the history of technology, relatively little has been written that focus "explicitly on unintended consequences." Several chapters in this book are devoted to medicine, the environment, plant and animal life. More directly related to communication are chapters 8 and 9 which deal with "The Computerized Office." Two chapters also deal with sport. Little has been written on the technology of sport. AU - Tenner, Edward CY - New York DA - 1996 KW - technology computers technology and society values labor office values technology, and unintended consequences technological determinism +computers and the Internet office, and computers office, and new media sports, and new media technology, and sports sports, and technology environment, and technology environment sports LB - 2630 PB - Alfred A. Knopf PY - 1996 ST - Why Things Bit Back: Technology and the Revenge of Unintended Consequences TI - Why Things Bit Back: Technology and the Revenge of Unintended Consequences ID - 351 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work begins with a chapter entitled "Original 1890's Biographical Sketch" of Tesla. Chapters 2 and 4 deal with Tesla's patents from 1886-1888 and 1889-1890 respectively. Chapter 3 deals with Tesla's experiments with alternate current in 1891. Chapter 5 deals with the "Transmission of Electric Energy Without Wire (1904)." Chapter 6 is about "Tesla's Amazing Death-Ray" (247-58) followed by illustrations and reprints of newspaper articles (259-72). One article of note that is reprinted is James Coates, "Was Edison's Adversary father of 'Star War'?" Chicago Tribune, Aug. 10, 1986 (Sunday). Chapter 7 deals with Tesla's "Most Unusual Inventions" and Chapter 8 covers Tesla's "Last Patents (1913 to 1928)." Chapter 9 is on "Tesla & the Pyramids of Mars." An Appendix is on the "Supreme Court documents on The Dismantling of Wardenclyffe Tower." A bibliography of Tesla's works follows. AU - Tesla, Nikola AU - Childress, David H. CY - Stelle, IL DA - 1993 KW - death rays ref, secondary Tesla, Nikola bibliographies bibliography, Nikola Tesla Tesla, Nikola, and death ray death rays, and Nikola Tesla inventors and inventions strategic defense initiative, and Nikola Tesla electricity electricity, and Nikola Tesla Tesla, Nikola, and electricity electricity, and alternate current ref, book inventions strategic defense initiative (SDI) SDI LB - 38740 PB - Adventures Unlimited PY - 1993 ST - The Fantastic Inventions of Nikola Tesla TI - The Fantastic Inventions of Nikola Tesla ID - 3973 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 44-page monograph on Kinemacolor has interesting pictures of advertisements and machinery. The work focuses mainly on the early 1910s. It is informative on the history of color photography and it gives examples of early films that used color. AU - Thomas, D. B. CY - London DA - 1969 KW - technology photography advertising, and public relations technology and society advertising propaganda advertising public relations motion pictures +photography and visual communication +motion pictures +photography and visual communication +motion pictures color, and motion pictures (1910s) motion pictures, and color (list, 1910s) advertising, and color motion pictures technology, and motion pictures (1910s) photography, and color (1910s) motion pictures, and Kinemacolor Kinemacolor color, and history of photography, and color (history of) color advertising photography, and history of LB - 1960 PB - Her Majesty’s Stationery Office PY - 1969 ST - The First color Motion Pictures TI - The First color Motion Pictures ID - 1592 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 44-page monograph on Kinemacolor has interesting pictures of advertisements and of the machinery. The work focuses mainly on the early 1910s. It is informative on the history of color photography and it gives examples of early films that used color. AU - Thomas, D. B. CY - London DA - 1969 KW - technology illustrations photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication motion pictures photocopied color, and motion pictures (1910s) motion pictures, and color (list, 1910s) advertising, and color motion pictures technology, and motion pictures (1910s) photography, and color (1910s) motion pictures, and Kinemacolor Kinemacolor color, and history of photography, and color (history of) color advertising photography, and history of illustrations cameras cameras, and illustrations illustrations, and cameras ref, book advertising and public relations technology and society LB - 1960 PB - Her Majesty’s Stationery Office PY - 1969 ST - The First Colour Motion Pictures TI - The First Colour Motion Pictures ID - 3484 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author argues that research shows that "there is long-established evidence which demonstrates that explicit soft-core pornography, much of which is illegal in Britain, causes no behavioural harm at all." (150) Chapter four is entitled "Pornography Effects Studies" (116-51) Chapter five is "British and European Pornographic Magazine Content" (152-80). Chapter six, "Ideological Evidence," examines the Meese Commission in the U. S. and the Surgeon's General Report (181-218). AU - Thompson, Bill CY - London DA - 1994 KW - social science research sexuality pornography news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines, and pornography magazines, European and porn media effects media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects Meese Commission Great Britain Great Britain, and pornography pornography, and Great Britain LB - 20330 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Cassell PY - 1994 ST - Soft Core: Moral Crusades against Pornography in Britain and America TI - Soft Core: Moral Crusades against Pornography in Britain and America ID - 851 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book examines the history aural culture in the United States during the first third of the twentieth century. It details the major changes in what people listened to and the ways in which they experienced sound. “What they heard was a new kind of sound that was the product of modern technology,” Thompson writes. “They listened in ways that acknowledged this fact, as critical consumers of aural communities. By examining the technologies that produced those sounds, as well as the culture that consumed them, we can begin to recover more fully the texture of an era known as ‘The Machine Age,’ and we can comprehend more completely the experience of change, particularly technological change, that characterized this era.” Thompson’s book builds on the insights of Murray Schafer, whose earlier works include The New Soundscape (1969), The Book of Noise (1970), and The Soundscape: Our Sonic Environment and the Tuning of the World (1994). Schafer, Thompson notes, “defined a soundscape as a sonic environment, a definition that reflected his engagement with the environmental movements of the 1970s and emphasized his ecologically based concern about the ‘polluted’ nature of the soundscape of that era.” Thompson uses the concept of soundscape in a different way. She follows “the work of Alain Corbin,” she explains, and defines “soundscape as an auditory or aural landscape. Like a landscape, a soundscape is simultaneously a physical environment and a way of perceiving that environment; it is both a world and a culture constructed to make sense of that world.” (p. 1) (Corbin’s works include Village Bells: Sound and Meaning in the 19th-Century Countryside (1998). Thompson deals with the 1900-1933 period from four perspectives in chapters 3-6. Chapter 3 examines scientists who studied sound and the way people behaved in architectural areas. Chapter 4 considers they ways in which jazz musicians and avant-garde artists “redefined the meaning of sound and the distinction between music and noise.” (p. 6) Chapter 5 covers the acoustical materials industry. Chapter 6 looks at how public address systems, microphones, loudspeakers, and talking motion pictures used electroacoustic products to create a new soundscape. This work is based on research in more than two dozen archives and it has a substantial bibliography of secondary literature. -SV Thompson traces turn of the century events through the lens of acoustic developments, from the science that made Boston’s Symphony Hall possible in 1900, to the culture that raved over and then immediately rejected Rockefeller Center’s Radio City Music Hall in 1930. Her story line is the creation of the modern sound -- one that fits into early 1900s ideals of scientifically understood and controlled efficiency, and one that quickly became a commercial product in all its aspects: first as aural performance, then as a concept of environmental quiet and control, and finally as the distinct sound of radio and film. Since the early decades of the twentieth century, our acoustic tastes and practices have changed; by recreating and understanding the acoustic preferences of another era, Thompson argues, we can better understand both the past and our present choices. The kind of sounds we hear and the ways in which we listen to them have changed dramatically over time, and were doing so especially in the early 1900s. A better understanding of this evolution enhances our understanding of the radical technological and cultural changes that have brought us to today. Thompson writes: “The physical aspects of a soundscape consist not only of the sounds themselves, the waves of acoustical energy permeating the atmosphere in which people live, but also the material objects that create, and sometimes destroy, those sounds. A soundscape’s cultural aspects incorporate scientific and aesthetic ways of listening, a listener’s relationship to their [sic] environment, and the social circumstances 1/2 that dictate who gets to hear what. A soundscape, like a landscape, ultimately has more to do with civilization than with nature, and as such, it is constantly under construction and always undergoing change. The American soundscape underwent a particularly dramatic transformation in the years after 1900. By 1933, both the nature of sound and the culture of listening were unlike anything that had come before. (1-2) “The sounds themselves were increasingly the result of technological mediation. Scientists and engineers discovered ways to manipulate traditional materials of architectural construction in order to control the behavior of sound in space. New kinds of materials specifically designed to control sound were developed, and were soon followed by new electroacoustic devices that effected even greater results by converting sounds into electrical signals. Some of the sounds that resulted from these mediations were objects of scientific scrutiny; others were the unintended consequences the noises of an ever-more mechanized society; others, like musical concerts, radio broadcasts, and motion picture sound tracks, were commodities consumed by an acoustically ravenous public. The contours of change were the same for all. “Accompanying these changes in the nature of sound were equally new trends in the culture of listening. A fundamental compulsion to control the behavior of sound drove technological developments in architectural acoustics, and this imperative stimulated auditors to listen more critically, to determine whether that control had been accomplished.” (2) -Dale Erlandson AU - Thompson, Emily CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 2002 KW - R & D sound corporations corporations corporations corporations +sound recording urban studies urban studies, and sound modernism phonograph microphones loudspeakers public address systems +motion pictures sound, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sound theaters, and sound sound, and theaters architecture, and acoustics materials sound, and materials materials, and sound acoustics AT&T amplifiers sound, and architecture audiences, and sound Bell Laboratories research and development, and sound inventors, and inventions Edison, Thomas, and sound electroacoustic devices Henry, Joseph modernity, and sound NBC noise sound, and noise home and new media home, and phonograph radio sound, and radio soundscape space, and sound telephones sound, and telephones Warner Bros., and sound sound, and Warner Bros. women women, and sound audiences Edison, Thomas home Warner Bros. inventions research and development Erlandson, Dale electricity modernity theaters LB - 29630 PB - MIT Press PY - 2002 ST - The Soundscape of Modernity: Architectural Acoustics and the Culture of Listening in America, 1900-1933 TI - The Soundscape of Modernity: Architectural Acoustics and the Culture of Listening in America, 1900-1933 ID - 29 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is "Occasional Paper No. 10." AU - Thompson, Gordon B. CY - Montreal, Quebec DA - 1979 KW - inventions innovation information technology new media new media, and economy invention, process of innovation, process of capitalism, and information technology information technology, and capitalism capitalism LB - 70 PB - Institute for Research on Public Policy PY - 1979 ST - Memo from Mercury: Information Technology Is Different TI - Memo from Mercury: Information Technology Is Different ID - 97 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Thomson “examines the evolution of professional graphic design [the author notes that term first appeared in 1922] practice in the United States.” Her study starts in 1870, “at a time when the technological changes we associate with the Industrial Revolution were beginning to transform American society, and it concludes fifty years later, in 1920, when World War I had ended but before the advent of Modernism. As an investigation of origins, this book is not a full-fledged history of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century graphic design -- it contends that graphic design practice evolved at the intersection of printing, typography, advertising, and illustration in the span of these fifty years. When people in these fields began to think self-consciously about designing for mass audiences and faced new design problems, they began to identify themselves with a new profession. What designers did -- in printing, advertising, illustration, and publishing -- how they learned to do it, what they called themselves, and how they organized themselves and their work forms the subject of this book.” Thomson “describes when and how these workers recognized a common interest and how they redefined themselves to create a new professional identify. In other words, why did illustrators, typographers, photographers, advertising artists, printers, cartoonists, art directors and advertising art managers, layout men, and lettering men come to believe that they shared more than the methods of reproduction technology?” Thomson writes that the “relation between technology and American attitudes toward the visual arts forms the background” that helps to explain why “by 1920 representatives of separate professional practices: printers, typographers, illustrators, art directors, photographers, calligraphers, engravers, and lithographers found a community in the same professional association.” Among themes covered in this book are chapter 4 on “Professionalism”; chapter 5, entitled “The Great Divide”; chapter 6, on women; and the last chapter, chapter 7, “At the End of the ‘Mechanical Revolution’.” The author makes interesting observations along the way. For example, she writes that “the use of pictures to enhance or even replace text challenged the supremacy of the written word and, by extension, intellectual authority.” A couple pages later, she says that “Posters in a new style, smaller in size and intensely colored, became the preferred advertising medium for the burgeoning magazine industry, book publishers, the Sunday supplements of newspapers, the new bicycle industry, and manufacturers of health products.” The chapter on the “Great Divide” is good on posters and advertising and how these changed the visual landscape at the turn-of-the-century. The last chapter talks about an article in 1922 in the Boston Evening Transcript by W. A. Dwiggins, a supplement to the Graphic Arts Exposition. “In many ways Dwiggins’s article sums up themes covered in this book: the tremendous advances in printing and reproduction technology and its effect on the printing industry, the growth of a powerful advertising industry and mass media, and the recognition of a new profession facing new opportunities.” -SV Thomson traces the history of printing from the mid-1800s through the turn of the century, detailing developments in type and image printing as well as innovations in paper, labor distribution in the industry and the rise newspapers, magazines and mass advertising. She examines the function of designers and artists in the printing/publishing industry, taking an overview of the issues and developments of the field from the related trade journals of the day. She details the functions of an art director at the turn of the century, and delves into individual career paths and the histories of professional associations to demonstrate the variety of activities in which anyone associated with the title graphic designer would have had a hand in. Somewhat as side notes to her main narrative, Thomson then addresses both the conflict that arose (and still rages) between high and low (i.e., commercial, industrial, popular) art, and she examines the absence of women in most relevant histories. The term ‘graphic design’ has been both contested and fluid since it was coined. What, exactly, a graphic designer does and how that employment should be classified has long been unclear. Thomson writes: “The terms used to describe graphic design activities during this period and for many years thereafter were used loosely and interchangeably. Art historians early in the nineteenth century used the word design in two ways: in the broad sense of ‘planning’ or ‘conceiving’ and in the narrow sense of ‘drawing.’ The first American art history text, written by William Dunlap in 1834, was entitled A History of the Rise and Progress of the Arts of Design in the United States. In his introduction, Dunlap defined design ‘in its broadest signification’ as ‘the plan of the whole.’ Design included visual art, ‘the art of representing form’ that is, sculpture, painting, engraving, and architecture. Dunlap further distinguished two meanings of the word graphic: the first referred to letter forms in printing, and the second, of more recent usage, referred to pictorial forms in reproducing images -- that is, to engraving. “To complicate matters, the phrase ‘graphic arts’ was commonly used but its meaning seems to have been elastic. It continues to plague graphic designers today: witness the recent debate over renaming the American Institute of Graphic Arts (AIGA). ‘Graphic Arts’ in contemporary literature has retained its 3/4 dual associations with graphics; it is used to describe the printing crafts, especially production processes, and to describe fine art printmaking, prints made in limited editions by artists. Graphic design as a profession existed before [William Addison Dwiggins coined it in a 1922 article] and the terminology used during the period under study is inexact, so I use ‘graphic design here as the founders of the AIGA did when they defined their profession in 1913. Graphic design and graphic designers refer to the profession and the professionals involved in ‘all arts and crafts intended to make ideas visible.’” (3-4) (emphasis in original text) -Dale Erlandson AU - Thomson, Ellen Mazur CY - New Haven DA - 1997 KW - illustrations graphic design photography women, and new media advertising and public relations seeing at a distance propaganda public relations print print culture modernism modernism modernity communication revolution news and journalism books, periodicals, newspapers communication revolution World Fairs women printing printing press posters photography and visual communication modernity media magazines labor photography and visual communication books, periodicals, newspapers illustrations graphic arts graphic design, and history of graphic design, and women women, as graphic designers media convergence new way of seeing press, and illustration advertising printing modernism labor, and graphic design labor, and unions labor, and professionalization professionalization experts photography, and graphic design Industrial Revolution graphics revolution color, and posters posters, and color duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and graphic design advertising, and duplicating technologies American Institute for Graphic Arts Art Nouveau World Fairs, and Columbian Exposition (1893) electrotype half tone process Gibson, Charles Dana magazines, and graphic design printing, and graphic design typography calligraphy engraving lithography Mechanical Revolution color art graphic arts half tones advertising, and graphic design graphic design, and advertising print v. image Erlandson, Dale newspapers, and illustrations mechanical reproduction LB - 1970 PB - Yale University Press PY - 1997 ST - The Origins of Graphic Design in America: 1870-1920 TI - The Origins of Graphic Design in America: 1870-1920 ID - 30 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 404-page book contains twenty-two chapters by different authors that attempt to improve our "understanding of emerging communication technologies." This volume, which part of a larger series on new media technologies entitled Media In Transition, tries to offer a historical and comparative perspective on it subject in a way that is accessible to a wide audience of humanists, social scientists, and policymakers. The editors of this volume describe the chapters in this work as follows: "Challenging the assumption that new technologies displace older systems with decisive suddenness and have a revolutionary impact on society, the essays in this book see media change as an accretive, graduate process, always a mix of tradition and innovation, in which emerging and established systems interact, shift, and collude with one another. "The editors' introduction sketches an aesthetics of media transition, patterns of development and social dispersion that may operate across era, media forms, and cultures. Some of the essays that follow are case studies of such earlier technologies as the printed book, the phonograph, early cinema, and television, while other examine contemporary digital forms and explore something of their promise and strangeness. A final section probes aspects of visual culture in such environments as the evolving museum, movie spectaculars, and 'the virtual window.'" (ix-x) The authors contributing to this volume include David Thorburn, Willliam Uricchio, Tom Gunning, Lisa Gitelman, Priscilla Coit Murphy, Paul Erickson, Gregory Crane, Oz Frankel, Daniel Thorburn, William Boddy, William J. Mitchell, Luis O. Arata, Michael Joyce, Shelley Jackson, Peter Donaldson, Sharon Cumberland, Henry Jenkins, Constance Balides, Anne Friedberg, Angela Ndalianis, and Alison Griffiths. Other volumes in the Media In Transition series include: Lisa Gitelman and Geoffrey B. Pingree, eds., New Media, 1740-1915 (2003); and Henry Jenkins and David Thorburn, eds., Democracy and New Media (2003). AU - Thorburn, David AU - Jenkins, Henry CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 2003 KW - visual communication computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) interactivity interactive media books, periodicals, newspapers digital media computers and the Internet motion pictures audiences motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, digital books, and digitization digitization television television, and books books, and television computers, and screens media convergence cyberspace information storage information storage, and digital media libraries, and digitization electricity printing printing, and digital media hypertext television, and hypertext hypertext, and television interactivity and media media interactivity museums, and new media photography television VCRs world wide web visual culture books, history of history and new media democracy books history libraries museums print Internet computers media LB - 33810 PB - MIT Press PY - 2003 ST - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition TI - Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition ID - 3019 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work points out that by using the Internet, the digital movie maker could send a movie directly to the home bypassing theaters, cable and satellite providers, and rental stores. The Internet offered largely unfettered and anonymous access to an incredibly varied array of entertainment, including pornography. By the end of the twentieth century, there were perhaps 400,000 pornographic web sites, three quarters of which originated from outside the United States. Many offered movies. This work appears in the series Committee to Study Tools and Strategies for Protecting Kids from Pornography and Their Applicability to Other Inappropriate Internet Content, Computer Science and Telecommunications Board, National Research Council. AU - Thornburg, Dick AU - eds., Herbert S. Lin CY - Washington, D. C. DA - c2002 KW - computers sexuality new media media effects violence Internet children censorship and ratings law censorship +computers and the Internet children and media pornography, and Internet Internet, and pornography pornography pornography, and children children, and pornography media effects media effects, and pornography media effects, and children censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship censorship, and Internet Internet, and censorship new media, and children websites LB - 27820 PB - National Academy Press PY - 2002 ST - Youth, Pornography and the Internet TI - Youth, Pornography and the Internet UR - http://www.nap.edu/books/0309082749/html/ (accessed Nov. 7, 2005) ID - 1336 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Building on Thomas Kuhn's seminal work, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962), David J. Tietge's Flash Effect examines Cold War American science as a rhetorically-constructed phenomenon that promoted advancements such as atomic power while simultaneously placating the publics anxieties about such technologies. Through close analysis of the media outlets with which 1950s scientists presented themselves to the public, Tietge shows that scientists were portrayed in the media as avuncular figures very much in control of new technologies and aware of their potential impact on American living. As Tietge argues in his introduction: “And if we accept the premise that science is a form of secular religion, then media vehicles such as television, radio, and the Internet are the technological pulpits from which popular science is preached. Science, then, becomes the new opiate of the masses in that it retains the qualities of a religious hierarchy, but it also functions, from a public point of view, as a doctrine of Truth--it has the capacity to salvage the waning soul of humanity because it can capitalize on the rational, pragmatic certainty that we crave to provide order.” (xiv) Indeed, the basic argument of Tietge’s study depends that the reader accept this initial premise that “science is a form of secular religion.” As Tietge develops his argument, however, and analyzes specific accounts of science and scientists in print media such as Life and Scientific American, his first premise seems increasingly viable and his argument is on the whole convincing. After Tietge lays out some theoretical perspectives on the rhetoric of science in chapters 1 and 2, he begins to apply these rhetorical theories to test the premise that science is indeed a type of secularized religion. Tietge argues that in the years immediately following World War II, American mass media created an “Iconographic Mythos” of the scientist, a phenomenon that he sees as tied to anxieties about Soviet domination in space. In a section entitled “The Popular Press, the Popular Scientist, and the Solubility Ethos,” Tietge shows that the “popular press” not only constructed a rational, sober, and all-knowing aura around American scientists, but that many of the scientific community’s “high priests” also courted media attention “prominent figures such as Oppenheimer, Teller, and Dyson frequently spoke to the public in a . . . high-profile manner. These scientists were not only extremely capable physicists; they were highly effective speakers and rhetoricians, giving science a public relations dimension that was relatively new.” (66) It is science's new “public relations dimension” that Tietge is interested in exploring for much of his book; he is particularly insightful when he analyzes the presentation of the Hydrogen Bomb to the public in Scientific American in 1950. Tietge demonstrates that the scientists who wrote each installment of the Hydrogen Bomb series constructed himself as technically knowledgeable but morally reticent to create a weapon of such mass destruction, a construction that would have assured the American public that they were first in both technology and ethics. In addition to this series, Tietge also examines articles and advertisements from publications such as Life magazine, many of which were designed to allay American fears about nuclear attack by offering rational solutions in the event of nuclear war. One such solution, offered by Ralph E. Lapp, was a design for a strip-like city miles long but no more than two miles wide. Such a design, argued Lapp, would decentralize a population in the event of a nuclear attack, thereby minimizing casualties. Despite the utter impracticality of plans like Lapps, Tietge argues that they serve an important rhetorical function; namely, to suggest to the American public that scientists had everything under control, that they were aware not only of the technical aspects of bomb-making, but also of the human side, and that they were doing everything within their power to protect the United States from harm. Tietge is indeed at his best when he reads Cold War relics for their rhetorical significance. Of the object that symbolically started the Space Race, for instance, he writes: “From a Soviet perspective, Sputnik was a rhetorical mechanism its only apparent function was to remind the United States, with its incessant beeping, that their technology had slipped past us.” (85) The value of Tietge’s study, then, is his ability to demonstrate the rhetorical underpinnings of objects such as Sputnik or mass media features such as Scientific Americans Hydrogen Bomb series to show how they are embedded with political meaning. In the end, Flash Effect is a successful book that forces us to consider scientific pronouncements as just that not objective and detached facts, but rather rhetorical constructs designed to achieve a calculated social effect. --Steve Belletto AU - Tietge, David J. CY - Athens, OH DA - 2002 KW - R & D photography advertising, and public relations science +military communication propaganda advertising research and development news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers iconography Cold War war Belletto, Steve magazines magazines, and image of scientists public relations, and scientists Scientific American Life Cold War, and image of scientists public relations scientists, and public relations public relations, and scientiests iconography, and scientists research and development, and image of scientists +photography and visual communication photography, and scientists LB - 1470 PB - Ohio University Press PY - 2002 ST - Flash Effect: Science and the Rhetorical Origins of Cold War America TI - Flash Effect: Science and the Rhetorical Origins of Cold War America ID - 235 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Tiltman, Ronald F. CY - London; and New York DA - 1974 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories television, and history of +television television, and origins Baird, John Logie biography LB - 7450 OP - 1933 PB - Seeley Service and Co.; and Arno Press PY - 1974 ST - Baird of Television: The Life Story of John Logie Baird TI - Baird of Television: The Life Story of John Logie Baird ID - 2115 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - There are a number of perceptive observation in this book which received wide circulation when it first appeared. Toffler argued that the age in which he wrote was a time dramatically different from any other, that there had been a “break with the past.” To support this view, he marshaled quotations from economist Kenneth Boulding, philosopher Sir Herbert Read, automation expert John Diebold, and others. Toffler saw the pace of life -- indeed the pace of change itself -- accelerating in large part because of new technology. This view that life had quickened was a widely held assumption during the late 1960s and early 1970s. New communication had much to do with the development. Toffler wrote about the “deterioration of hierarchy” in factories, businesses and other institutions that depended on a chain-of-command organization. It had become easier for the average worker to communicate with the person needed to solve a specific problem than had been the case earlier. Toffler discussed the “blizzard of best sellers” and other popular literature. Pictures of nude women had become known as “playmates” whereas before they had been known as “pin-ups.” He was interesting also in commenting on the impact of movies and other media. Where many writers saw motion pictures and television creating a homogenized national culture (breaking down regionalism and localism), Toffler argued that the new media of the 1960s could create diversity. More television and radio stations were coming into existence, and they could fit their programming to more specialized audiences than before. Smaller movies theaters attracted more specialized audiences. The 16mm cameras and projection systems made it easier to make and show films. The hand-held camera and video-tape equipment were “revolutionizing the ground rules of cinema. New technology ... put camera and film into the hands of thousands of students and amateurs, and the underground movie -- crude, colorful, perverse, highly individualized and localized” -- was flourishing. Toffler observed, too, that the photocopy machine and tape recorder were empower ordinary people. “The rocketing number of periodicals that land on one’s desk is dramatic testimony to the ease of publication,” he wrote. Even high school students could “finance publication of their underground press with pocket money.” Contrary to 1960s radicals who argued that communication had been captured by an elite, Toffler maintained that new technology would not restrict individuality but would “multiple our choices -- and our freedom -- exponentially.” Toffler’s bibliography is of interest. For example, he has about four pages devoted to “Future Studies,” works that attempted to forecast or anticipate the future. AU - Toffler, Alvin CY - New York DA - 1970 KW - entertainment underground cinema nationalism literature entertainment, home magnetic recording photography underground media underground films References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps publishing preservation sexuality sexuality communication revolution news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers home entertainment history, and new media materials materials magnetic tape +future and science fiction community democracy freedom history home, and new media home reproduction revolution +duplicating technologies +motion pictures labor information technology history graphics revolution general studies history, break with Boulding, Kenneth Read, Herbert Diebold, John change, acceleration of communication revolution information age information technology, and factories capitalism information technology, and power +nationalism and communication labor, and new media information technology, and labor literature, popular image media +photography and visual communication nudity pinups magazines motion pictures +television information technology, and national culture cameras, and technology videotape cameras, hand-held motion pictures, and technology counterculture photocopying reproduction revolution (1960s) democracy and media publishing, and desktop underground press freedom of expression future utopianism freedom of choice control revolution publishing, and best sellers publishing, and mass production timelines cameras graphics revolution (1960s) +duplicating technologies +sound recording +motion pictures and popular culture future future, bibliography bibliographies, and future change reproduction revolution graphics revolution 16mm cameras cameras, and 16mm magnetic tape recording sound recording, and magnetic tape home, and duplicating technologies home publishing +bibliographies Playboy 16mm LB - 1270 N1 - See also: office PB - Random House PY - 1970 ST - Future Shock TI - Future Shock ID - 1523 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is the second in a trilogy by Toffler. It follows his Future Shock (1970), and precedes Power Shift (1990). The Third Wave deals with “the death of industrialism and the rise of a new civilization.” Toffler considered these books to be complementary but also thought The Third Wave to be “radically different from Future Shock in both form and focus.” Where in Future Shock he focused on the acceleration of change, in this book he attempted to explain “the destinations toward which change is carrying us.” Toffler sees three great waves sweeping through history. The first wave was that of Agricultural Revolution. The second, the Industrial Revolution. The third, the coming of a post-Industrial society. “So profoundly revolutionary is this new civilization that it challenges all our old assumptions. Old ways of thinking, old formulas, dogmas, and ideologies, no matter how cherished or how useful in the past, no longer fit the facts.” Although Toffler wrote in a period of economic decline, rising inflation (stagflation), unlike many intellectuals of the late 1970s whom he felt were fashionably pessimistic, he is optimistic about the future. Toffler believed that new communication technologies were important agents bringing about these revolutionary changes. Chapter Thirteen, for example, discusses “De-Massifying the Media,” and argues that the old mass media of television, large-circulation newspapers and magazines, radio, and moving pictures is being replaced by more personalized media: cable television, video games, video cassette players and recorders, satellite broadcasting. These new media help to explain “why opinion on everything from pop music to politics are becoming less uniform.” Chapter Fourteen, “The Intelligent Environment,” talks about home computers (at the time -- 1980 -- he estimated there were about 300,000), and more generally about the spread of machine intelligence with the coming of microprocessors and microcomputers. This chapter contains an interesting discussion of how such advances affect out social memory. Chapter Twenty-Two, “The Crack-up of the Nation,” considers the tremendous pressures changes, especially in communications, are placing on the nation-state. While he says that “it is difficult for us to imagine the actual breakup of, say, the Soviet Union,” he does predict that great pressures will be put on virtually all nations from below by regional, local, social, ethnic, and religious groups, and from above by an expanding global communications network in which interest groups (e.g., environmentalists) will find support well beyond national borders. He also devotes several pages to the growing presence of multinational corporations whose total assets already dwarfed those of the United Nations and many smaller countries. AU - Toffler, Alvin CY - New York DA - 1980 KW - technology entertainment computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) nationalism corporations microprocessing entertainment, home magnetic recording video cassettes preservation new media communication revolution information technology home materials materials magnetic tape +future and science fiction community democracy communication revolution, and second industrial revolution non-USA history +nationalism and communication future +computers and the Internet computers computers, home mass communication, and demassification microprocessors computers, micro second industrial revolution wave theory United Nations multinational corporations global communication communication, global telecommunications history, break with new media, and history history, and new media +television cable cable television videotape VCRs video cassettes +aeronautics and space communication satellites satellite television television, and satellites television, and cable video games technology and society information age postindustrial society Industrial Revolution capitalism information technology, and home home entertainment capitalism, and information technology democracy and media nationalism, and new media de-massified media new media, and de-massified history communication revolution home, and new media demassification LB - 12140 PB - William Morrow and Company, Inc. PY - 1980 ST - The Third Wave TI - The Third Wave ID - 2561 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is the third in a trilogy by Toffler. It follows Future Shock (1970) and The Third Wave (1980). Taken together, these three books examine a 75-year period from the mid-1950s until about 2025, what Toffler calls “the hinge of history.” The focus in Powershift is “on the rise of a new power system replacing that of the industrial past.” Put even more dramatically, Toffler believed in 1990 that he was living at the dawn of a new era. “We live at the moment when the entire structure of power that held the world together is now disintegrating. A radically different structure of power is taking form. And this is happening at every level of human society.” Toffler wrote as the Soviet Union was in the process of collapsing. It was already apparent that the USSR’s empire was coming unglued and that power vacuums were opening throughout the world, especially in Eastern Europe. AU - Toffler, Alvin CY - New York DA - 1990 KW - R & D entertainment computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) USSR surveillance post office nationalism corporations, multinational corporations corporations Europe, Eastern entertainment, home data processing Central Intelligence Agency magnetic recording Asia photography time and timekeeping presidents, and new media Reagan administration law, and privacy law privacy preservation labor networks research and development war communication revolution media effects media violence violence journalism inventions home history, and new media materials materials magnetic tape cyberspace culture community democracy communication revolution, and second industrial revolution timekeeping, and clocks values religion news and journalism war non-USA history office office, and new media office +nationalism and communication computers and the Internet computers computers, home history, break with history, acceleration of timekeeping AT&T artificial intelligence and biotechnology +transportation automobiles information technology, and office information technology, and home information technology, and rich v. poor Soviet Union information technology, and Soviet Union Eastern Europe capitalism information technology, and capitalism capitalism, and information technology CIA China telecommunications global communication multinational corporations Japan culture, and technology values, and technology democracy and media data bases information technology, and data bases environmentalism Europe privacy, and new media globalization Germany France Great Britain Industrial Revolution second industrial revolution wave theory ideology infrastructure, electronic electronic infrastructure information technology IBM ITT Italy information technology, and knowledge knowledge, and information technology military communication networks, electronic news photography, and photoreconnaissance photography and visual communication postal service power press radio railroads Reagan, Ronald religion research and development innovation revolution, and new media aeronautics and space communication satellites telephones television cable television television, and cable home entertainment television, and satellites VCRs videotape violence and media nationalism, and new media Soviet Union, and new media values infrastructure history cable communication revolution environment home, and new media electricity LB - 12180 PB - Bantam Books PY - 1990 ST - Powershift: Knowledge, Wealth, and Violence at the Edge of the 21st Century TI - Powershift: Knowledge, Wealth, and Violence at the Edge of the 21st Century ID - 2565 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Robert Brent Toplin, a historian, is interested in the way in which motion pictures portray history. This book evaluates the films of Oliver Stone. Stone has offered controversial interpretations of history in such movies as Salvador (1986), Born on the Fourth of July (1989), JFK (1991), Nixon (1995), and others. AU - Toplin, Robert Brent, ed. CY - Lawrence, KS DA - 2000 KW - history Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality Nixon, Richard advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex presidents, and new media censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising preservation sexuality Nixon administration motion pictures media effects media violence history, and new media law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA CARA non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Natural Born Killers motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures nudity, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising language motion pictures, and language nudity CARA, and nudity motion pictures, and nudity Stone, Oliver public relations, and Oliver Stone Stone, Oliver, and public relations history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history history, and Oliver Stone Stone, Oliver, and history Stone, Oliver, and Salvador Stone, Oliver, and Born on the Fourth of July JFK (1991) Nixon (1995) Stone, Oliver, and JFK (1991) Stone, Oliver, and Nixon (1995) motion pictures, and Vietnam motion pictures, and John F. Kennedy motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and Richard Nixon (1995) Stone, Oliver, and Heaven and Earth Stone, Oliver, and Wall Street history LB - 26350 PB - University Press of Kansas PY - 2000 ST - Oliver Stone's USA: Film, History, and Controversy TI - Oliver Stone's USA: Film, History, and Controversy ID - 1218 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book’s nine essays question whether a genuine information revolution, brought by cable television, video recorders, and satellite communication was actually underway in 1986. “If anything, the communication revolution is turning out to be an exercise in consolidating the military, economic and political powers of the elite,” writes Michael Traber in the Introduction. (3) The central argument in this volume is that “there is a need for a genuine rather than a phoney revolution, a communication revolution from below.” (4) Many of the ideas for this book came from the World Association for Christian Communication (WACC), based in London, then claiming 600 member worldwide. The authors in the volume come from several countries. Mina Ramirez of the Philippines, has a chapter entitled “Communication as if people matter: the challenge of alternative communication.” Moema Viezzer, from Brazil, writes about “Alternative communication for women’s movements in Latin America.” Paul Ansah, of Ghana, considers “The struggle for rights and values in communication.” Other essays in this volume include: Herbert I. Schiller, “The erosion of national sovereignty by the world business system.” Donna A. Demac, “Communication satellites and the Third World.” James D. Halloran, “The social implications of technological innovations in communication.” Usha V. Reddi, “Leapfrogging the industrial revolution.” William F. Fore, “Communication and religion in the technological era.” AU - Traber, Michael, ed. CY - London / Beverly Hills and Newbury Park DA - 1986 KW - R & D information processing entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) nationalism corporations corporations, multinational imperialism entertainment, home values Christianity Christianity magnetic recording women, and new media values religion war research and development military-industrial complex communication revolution home entertainment military communication magnetic tape Third World non-USA home critics Christianity, and new media Hamelink, Cees J. Schiller, Herbert Demac, Donna A. Hollaron, James D. Ansah, Paul A. Reddi, Usha V. Ramirex, Mina M. Viezzer, Moema Fore, William F. television +aeronautics and space communication satellites television, and cable cable, and television satellites, and television television, and satellites VCRs home entertainment revolution information revolution critics, and information revolution Third World, and information revolution information revolution, and Third World World Association for Christian Communication multinational corporations information revolution, and multinational corporations multinational corporations, and information revolution military-industrial complex, and multinational corporations women, and information revolution information revolution, and women women women, and Latin America Latin America Latin America, and women Philippines Philippines, and information revolution +nationalism and communication nation state, and information revolution capitalism capitalism, and information revolution religion, and information revolution religion information revolution, and religion cultural hegemony, and communication communication, and cultural hegemony satellites, geostationary information revolution, and infrastructure myth, and information revolution research and development, and communication home, and new media home, and new media cable cultural imperialism myth Information Age LB - 380 PB - SAGE Publications PY - 1986 ST - The Myth of the Information Revolution: Social and Ethical Implications of Communication Technology TI - The Myth of the Information Revolution: Social and Ethical Implications of Communication Technology ID - 126 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Opponents attempted to discredit the Meese Commission, created by the Reagan administration to combat pornography, by portraying it as a group of “self-appointed censors and moral vigilantes.” Playboy and Penthouse joined with the ACLU, the American Booksellers, the Association of American Publishers, and the Association of University Presses and announced in July, 1986, that they had hired one of Washington’s most influential lobbying firms, Gray & Company, to assist them. The group formed an association known as Americans for Constitutional Freedom (ACF). One Gray & Company executive recounted how they arrived at the name: “You sit down with a sheet of paper and some very smart, crazy, creative people, and you play with words. You try to come up with an organization whose name will be as attractive to as many people as possible and sounds like something you’d like to be involved in and support.... You register the name. Register with Congress, if you’re going to lobby.” Gray & Company, which was in the process of being acquired by Hill & Knowlton (then the second largest public relations corporation in the world), had acted as lobbyists for the communist-led government in Angola, for Turkey, and for Canada, and also had clout in the White House. Its founder, Robert Keith Gray, had been vice chairman of Hill & Knowlton, director of communications for the 1980 Reagan campaign, and co-chair for the President’s inauguration. Gray was one of Attorney General Edwin Meese’s friends but he was not adverse to working against causes supported by Meese and the President. Part of Gray & Company’s plan was to convince Reagan, Meese, and leaders in both political parties that the Commission’s work was so poorly done that they should back away from endorsing it publicly. (Indeed, Meese did try to distance himself from the Commission’s Final Report.) The other goal was to convince the American public that these self-righteous censors had a broader agenda than just magazines. AU - Trento, Susan B. CY - New York DA - 1992 KW - corporations corporations advertising, and public relations presidents, and new media Reagan administration propaganda advertising sexuality Playboy sexuality sexuality Penthouse Meese Commission Gray & Company law censorship and ratings censorship pornography public relations public relations, and Meese Commission Meese Commission, and public relations Meese Commission, and First Amendment censorship, and public relation public relations, and censorship public relations, and First Amendment Meese Commission, and critics Reagan administration, and pornography pornography, and public relations Playboy, and public relations Penthouse, and public relations ACLU, and public relation Gray & Company, and Gray, Robert Keith ACLU LB - 27010 PB - St. Martin's Press PY - 1992 ST - The Power House: Robert Keith Gray and the Selling of Access and Influence in Washington TI - The Power House: Robert Keith Gray and the Selling of Access and Influence in Washington ID - 1259 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The fifteen essays in this volume resulted from a conference on 16mm film distribution held in February, 1976, and sponsored by the Educational Film Library Association and International Film Seminars. Participants in the conference noted that in "most schools, instruction ends once the film is in the can. The process of distribution -- what happens to the film after it is finished -- seems to be ignored." The purpose of the conference and of this volume "was to present basic information about the various distribution alternatives so that filmmakers who attended would be in a better position to determine the best method for them." (iii) This work contains an annotated bibliography (137-48). AU - Trojan, Judith and Nadine Covert CY - New York DA - 1977 KW - libraries nationalism 16mm motion pictures motion pictures, and 16mm film 16mm film magnetic tape recording magnetic tape recording, video values, and society democracy, and media education, and 16mm film religion, and 16mm film 16mm film, and education 16mm film, and religion nationalism and communication government, and 16mm film public libraries, and 16mm film 16mm film, and public libraries television television, and 16mm film history, and new media history, and 16mm film values, and 16mm film sound recording sound recording, and magnetic tape libraries information storage education law copyright 16mm film, and copyright copyright, and 16mm film motion pictures, and piracy videotape, and film piracy 16mm film, and distribution 16mm film, and Education Film Library Association , motion pictures, and independent filmmakers bibliographies bibliographies, annotated bibliographies, and 16mm 16mm, and bibliographies democracy history magnetic recording values videotape magnetic tape government religion LB - 34610 PB - Educational Film Library Association, Inc. PY - 1977 ST - 16mm Distribution TI - 16mm Distribution ID - 3100 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is written for non-specialists in modern psychology, Troland writes. Readers who might interested in learning more about Troland's thinking about color will find some discussion here (e.g., 75, 205) but nothing on his work with Technicolor during the 1920. This 253-page book has 15 chapters and an index. AU - Troland, Leonard T. CY - New York DA - 1926 KW - censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color audiences sexuality color, and sensation LB - 40190 PB - D. Van Nostrand Company PY - 1926 ST - The Mystery of Mind TI - The Mystery of Mind ID - 4117 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 42-page monograph was original published in The Monist (Jan., 1914). The reprint is collected in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson CY - Chicago and London DA - 1914 KW - religion ethics ethics ref, secondary Troland, Leonard color Troland, Leonard, and color color, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and visual sensation color, and media effects media effects media effects, and color Troland, Leonard, and hedonism Troland, Leonard, and ethics values ethics, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and psychology Troland, Leonard, and metaphysics Troland, Leonard, and religion religion, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and biology LB - 40580 PB - The Open Court Publishing Co. PY - 1914 ST - The Chemical Origin and Regulation of Life TI - The Chemical Origin and Regulation of Life ID - 4153 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - On the cover of the 26-page report is: "A Report on the Work Done in 1916-17 at the Harvard Psychological Laboratory, Under the Gift of Mrs. John Wallace Riddle and the Hodgson Fund. The reprint is collected in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson CY - Cambridge, MA: Harvard University DA - Oct. 1, 1917 KW - Technicolor, and L. T. Troland ref, secondary Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and Sigmund Freud Troland, Leonard, and psychic research Troland, Leonard, and subconscious Troland, Leonard, and psychoanalysis Troland, Leonard, and morality Technicolor Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor Troland, Leonard, and telepathy LB - 40700 PY - 1917 ST - A Technique for the Experimental Study of Telepathy and Other Alleged Clairvoyant Processes TI - A Technique for the Experimental Study of Telepathy and Other Alleged Clairvoyant Processes ID - 4167 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is divided into three parts. Part I deals with the United States, foreign policy, and cinema, primarily under the leadership of Will H. Hays. Attention is also given to Hays' successor, Eric A. Johnston. Hays saw movies as a way to "sell America" to the rest of the world. Many in Great Britain and on the European continent resented the dominance of American films, however, and Trumpbour discusses the part movies played in the creation of anti-American sentiment. Part II deals with Great Britain and the efforts there to compete with American films. Chapter 6, "The Age of Rank," is interesting on the role of J. Arthur Rank, a devout Methodist, in British motion picture censorship. Part III examines two case studies from the continent, France and Belgium. Here European Catholicism, and the Catholic international film movement, was influential. This book examines cinema from several perspectives in each country: state intervention, the organization of each nation's movie industry, the international role of religion in regulation efforts, and the tension between mainstream industrial production of films and artisanal movie production. It is based on research in American, British, French, and Belgian archives. This book appears in the Cambridge Studies in the History of Mass Communications series. AU - Trumpbour, John CY - New York DA - 2002 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) self-regulation Production Code PCA imperialism values Christianity women, and new media women values Production Code (motion pictures) primary sources Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. MPAA motion pictures cultural imperialism values religion law censorship and ratings censorship capitalism non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture Hays, Will H. motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and cultural imperialism cultural imperialism, and movies capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism Johnston, Eric Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Great Britain, and movie censorship censorship, and Great Britain France Belgium France, and censorship France, and motion pictures Belgium, and censorship Belgium, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Great Britain motion pictures, and Belgium motion pictures, and France Catholics, and movie censorship Europe, and movie censorship motion pictures, and anti-Americanism Catholics, and European movie censorship Germany Germany, and movie censorship Germany, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Germany censorship, and Germany Rank, J. Arthur, and movie censorship (GB) censorship, and J. Arthur Rank (GB) MPPDA motion pictures, and U.S. foreign policy Breen, Joseph motion pictures, and Dept. of Commerce (US) motion pictures, and Dept. of State (US) women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women Production Code (motion pictures) archives Catholic Church Europe LB - 28070 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 2002 ST - Selling Hollywood to the World: U. S. and European Struggles for Mastery of the Global Film Industry, 1920-1950 TI - Selling Hollywood to the World: U. S. and European Struggles for Mastery of the Global Film Industry, 1920-1950 ID - 1356 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Tuchman describes the purpose of this work as follows: “I reasoned that the news media set the frame in which citizens discuss public events and that the quality of civic debate necessarily depends on the information available. Accordingly, I wanted to find out how newsworkers decide what news is, why they cover some items but not others, and how they decide what I and others want to know. In short, I sought to uncover what sociologists now call the latent structure of news.... theme that the act of making news is the act of constructing reality itself rather than a picture of reality runs through this book. Newswork transforms occurrences into news events.” AU - Tuchman, Gaye CY - New York DA - 1978 KW - journalism community democracy news and journalism news +television +books, periodicals, newspapers news, and bias news, and narrative structure democracy and media critics news, and propaganda LB - 10680 PB - Free Press PY - 1978 ST - Making News: A Study in the Construction of Reality TI - Making News: A Study in the Construction of Reality ID - 2431 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - While this work is primarily as history of sexually explicit films and the people who make them, it also has information about camera technology used in these adult movies. The Panaflex weighed thirty-four pounds when loaded with a 500-foot magazine. During the early 1970s, pornographic film makers also sometimes used a hand-held 35 mm Aeroflex camera. Some of the better financed pictures used a Mitchell 35 mm BNC reflex camera, reportedly costing $30,000. AU - Turan, Kenneth AU - Zito, Stephen F. CY - New York DA - 1974 KW - audiences theaters sexuality motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture pornography motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and motion pictures Behind the Green Door Deep Throat (1972) movie pornography, and theaters theaters, and pornography cameras, and pornography cameras, handheld, and pornography cameras LB - 21240 PB - Praeger PY - 1974 ST - Sinema: American Pornographic Films and the People Who Make Them TI - Sinema: American Pornographic Films and the People Who Make Them ID - 924 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This is a work of both history and theory. The author’s six chapters are devoted to the following themes: 1) “Definition and Theory of the Flashback”; 2) “Flashbacks in American Silent Cinema”; 3) “European and Japanese Experimentation with Flashbacks in Silent Films”: 4) “The Subjectivity of History in Hollywood Sound Films”; 5) “Flashbacks and the Psyche in Melodrama and Film Noir”; and 6) “Disjunction in the Modernist Flashback.” AU - Turim, Maureen CY - New York and London DA - 1989 KW - history preservation history, and new media non-USA +motion pictures history +motion pictures history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history motion pictures, and theory motion pictures, and silent movies Japan, and silent films Japan LB - 6400 PB - Routledge PY - 1989 ST - Flashbacks in Film: Memory & History TI - Flashbacks in Film: Memory & History ID - 2023 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Turkle, Sherry CY - New York DA - 1995 KW - identity computers children, and media gender computers and the Internet media effects values children artificial intelligence and biotechnology values, and artificial intelligence artificial intelligence, and values video games computers, and games children, and computer games children, and video games video games, and children cyberspace computers, and psychlogy simulations computers, and simulations education computers, and education education, and computers education, and simulations simulations, and education media literacy media literacy, and simulations email Foucault, Michel Freud, Sigmund women computers, and women women, and computers gender, and computers computers, and gender sexuality computers, and sexuality sexuality, and computers identity, and computers computers, and identity Internet, and identity identity, and Internet MIT modernism, and computers computers, and modernism postmodernism, and computers computers, and postmodernism Internet, and sexuality sexuality, and Internet simulations, and computer games simulations, and postmodernism postmodernism, and simulations Turing, Alan Turing test simulations, and video games video games, and simulations virtual reality computers, and virtual reality electronic mail electronic media Internet modernism postmodernism computers modernity LB - 29720 PB - Simon & Schuster PY - 1995 ST - Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet TI - Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet ID - 2724 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This examines "first-generation computer hobbyists" and maintains that "what people do with computers affects the way they see the world. Working with computers can also be a way of 'working through' powerful feelings in a completely safe and controllable microworld." The author at the time this book was a sociologist in the Science, Technology, and Society Program at MIT. AU - Turkle, Sherry CY - New York DA - 1984 KW - identity computers children, and media gender computers and the Internet media effects values children artificial intelligence and biotechnology values, and artificial intelligence artificial intelligence, and values video games computers, and games children, and computer games children, and video games video games, and children cyberspace computers, and psychlogy simulations computers, and simulations education computers, and education education, and computers education, and simulations simulations, and education media literacy media literacy, and simulations email Foucault, Michel Freud, Sigmund women computers, and women women, and computers gender, and computers computers, and gender sexuality computers, and sexuality sexuality, and computers identity, and computers computers, and identity Internet, and identity identity, and Internet MIT modernism, and computers computers, and modernism postmodernism, and computers computers, and postmodernism Internet, and sexuality sexuality, and Internet simulations, and computer games simulations, and postmodernism postmodernism, and simulations Turing, Alan Turing test simulations, and video games video games, and simulations virtual reality computers, and virtual reality computers, personal video games electronic mail electronic media Internet modernism postmodernism computers modernity LB - 29730 PB - Simon and Schuster PY - 1984 ST - The Second Self: Computers and the Human Spirit TI - The Second Self: Computers and the Human Spirit ID - 2725 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Turner, Fred CY - Chicago DA - 2006 KW - future computers computers and the Internet computers, and Utopianism future and science fiction digital media artificial intelligence and biotechnology cybernetics Brand, Stewart Fuller, Buckminster military communication military-industrial-university complex computers, personal Wiener, Norbert Whole Earth Catalog Wired magazine computers LB - 60 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 2006 ST - From Counterculture to Cyberculture: Stewart Brand, the Whole Earth Network, and the Rise of Digital Utopianism TI - From Counterculture to Cyberculture: Stewart Brand, the Whole Earth Network, and the Rise of Digital Utopianism ID - 5 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - To present the complex process of the development of photography, the volume interweaves a history of photography by means of 11 themes about the relationship and ideas of the subject. While thinking of the notion of photography as an art, the authors attempts to contextualize the development of photography and illustrate how the technology of photography affects people’s aesthetic ways of seeing. In particular, the chapter of “Travelers with a Camera” reveals how European traveling photographers as early as 1840s contribute to an understanding of the imagination and construction of landscape in relation to the growth of commerce and nationalism. With abundant and valuable photographs, the book thus demonstrates the changing ways of seeing within the notion of photography. --Huai-Hsuan Chen AU - Turner, Peter CY - New York DA - 1987 KW - tourism geography Chen, Huai-Hsuan photography and visual communication photography photography, and tourism tourism, and photography photography, and geography geography, and photography photography, and leisure photography, and travel non-USA non-USA, and photography Great Britain photography, and Great Britain Great Britain, and photography photography, and Europe Europe, and photography nationalism and communication photography, and nationalism nationalism, and photography Europe nationalism LB - 33130 PB - Exeter Books PY - 1987 ST - History of Photography TI - History of Photography ID - 68 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Biographer Larry Tye presents a balanced view of the life and importance of Edward Bernays, considered by many to be the foremost pioneers of public relations. Tye traces Bernays long life from his early work before World War I, his heyday in private and public press work in the 1920s-1950s, and his long retirement into the early 1990s. Bernays was Sigmund Freud’s nephew (by marriage), and Bernays was taken with his uncle’s theories. Tye’s work is based on Bernays’s personal papers, donated to the Library of Congress, along with various historians of public relations. Tye offers both negative and positive aspects of Bernays’ career, exploring his underlying theories and beliefs, as well as weighing his importance in history. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Tye, Larry CY - New York DA - 1998 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations propaganda advertising Wolf, Nicholas Bernays, Edward public relations public relations, and Edward Bernays public relations, and advertising advertising, and public relations public relations, and new media biography advertising LB - 1490 PB - Crown Publishers, Inc. PY - 1998 ST - The Father of Spin: Edward L. Bernays and the Birth of Public Relations TI - The Father of Spin: Edward L. Bernays and the Birth of Public Relations ID - 237 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author says that he has tried "to record the history of the evolution of thermionic vacuum tube, to trace its complex genealogy, and to present essential facts to assist in the identification of such tubes made prior to 1930." The book covers developments in the United States, Great Britain, France, Germany, Russia, other European nations, and Japan. Several chapters are devoted to military demands for this technology. The concluding eight chapters look at the early days of broadcasting (the 1920s) in various countries. AU - Tyne, Gerald F. J. CY - Indianapolis DA - 1977 KW - R & D corporations corporations post office nationalism corporations corporations corporations research and development war materials war non-USA +telephones patents +radio +military communication themionics +electricity Great Britain France broadcasting, radio Germany Denmark Japan RCA General Electric Company Westinghouse Corporation Netherlands Norway Sweden Austria Russia Hungary Australia AT & T audion vacuum tubes Marconi's Wireless Telegraphy Company De Forest, Lee Edison, Thomas filaments, early development Langmuir, Irving patents, and vacuum tubes postal service, and Great Britain Round, H. J. telephones, and repeaters vacuum tubes, and military uses military, and vacuum tubes Telefunken Western Electric Company Marconi, Guglielmo +postal service +nationalism and communication nationalism, and vacuum tubes broadcasting materials LB - 4450 PB - Howard W. Sams & Co., Inc. PY - 1977 ST - Saga of the Vacuum Tube TI - Saga of the Vacuum Tube ID - 1833 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Udelson, Joseph H. CY - Tuscaloosa DA - 1982 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins LB - 7470 PB - University of Alabama Press PY - 1982 ST - The Great Television Race: A History of the American Television Industry, 1925-1941 TI - The Great Television Race: A History of the American Television Industry, 1925-1941 ID - 2117 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book grew out of a doctoral thesis, directed by Mary Ryan, at the University of California, Berkeley. The work is short -- the text runs 140, plus notes -- but it is not well written. The book attempts to provide “a complex and intriguing account of the changes in the social construction of sexuality in America during the past century. Focusing on Sacramento, California, at the dawn of the twentieth century,” the author “juxtaposes early cinema, vaudeville performances, and popular newspapers and magazines with insights drawn from transcripts of Sacramento court cases.” Ullman tries to demonstrate “how attitudes that emerged in the popular media -- ideas about gender roles, female desire, prostitution, divorce, and homosexuality -- often found complicated and contradictory expression in the courts. As judges, prosecutors, defense attorneys, and juries all weighed in with differing opinions, the courtroom itself became a stage where the community attempted to make sense of a growing sexual chaos. “...Instead of telling the familiar story of steadily increasing liberation," Ullman examines "the trouble confusions and intricate negotiations of an increasingly public sexual universe....” “We leave our story on the eve of World War I. Sexual culture in the war years and after is a tale well told by others. We have often credited our sexual mores to the events of this later time. Yet the cultural contests that helped introduce codes of public heterosexuality into the society at large had raged for at least some twenty years before the Great War. The sexual ‘innovations’ of postwar America were but expansions of earlier cultural footholds.” AU - Ullman, Sharon R. CY - Berkeley DA - 1997 KW - motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality homosexuality women, and new media values obscenity law women regulation +motion pictures +motion pictures motion pictures, and women motion pictures, and sexuality women, and popular culture women, and mass media regulation, and sexuality obscenity, and sex motion pictures, and obscenity homosexuality censorship and ratings LB - 6410 PB - University of California Press PY - 1997 ST - Sex Seen: The Emergence of Modern Sexuality in America TI - Sex Seen: The Emergence of Modern Sexuality in America ID - 2024 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume contains papers presented in December, 1965, by experts in a wide range of fields. UNESCO asked these people to provide advice on a program for the long-range uses of space communication to improve education, cultural exchanges, and the free flow of information. The work consists of nine sections, each usually with two or three authors. The section topics include: 1) “Social Implications of the Space Age,” with essays by Wilbur Schramm and Arthur Clarke. 2) “The Flow of News,” including Ivor Ray’s discussion of “telecommunications and the transmission of news.” 3) “Education by Satellite.” 4) “Cultural Opportunities.” 5) “New Dimensions for Radio and Television Broadcasting,” which an essay by Georges C. Straschnov on legal ramifications of television broadcasting by satellite. 6) “Perspectives for the Developing Countries.” 7) “The State of the Art: Technical Capabilities.” 8) “Building an International Framework.” 9) “Suggestions for UNESCO’s Programme in Space Communication.” AU - UNESCO [United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization] CY - Paris DA - 1968 KW - nationalism journalism +future and science fiction news and journalism non-USA United Nations space communication radio news +aeronautics and space communication satellites +television +radio television, and satellites radio, and satellites education, and satellites distance education news, and satellites global communication +nationalism and communication space communication, and historical significance future UNESCO Clarke, Arthur C. Schramm, Wilbur education nationalism, and satellites news, and satellites rocketry LB - 7700 PB - Place de Fontenoy PY - 1968 ST - Communication in the Space Age: The Use of Satellites by the Mass Media TI - Communication in the Space Age: The Use of Satellites by the Mass Media ID - 2139 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this brief 52-page monography, entrepreneur Charles Urban who promoted Kinemacolor argues that "the Cinematograph has become, not -- as some people imagine it to be -- a showman's plaything, but a vital necessity for every barracks, ship, college, school, institute, hospital, laboratory, academy and museum; for every traveller, explorer and missionary. In every department of State, science and education, in fact, animated photography is of the greatest importance, and one of the chief and coming means of imparting knowledge." (52) Urban devotes brief sections to discussing the various areas in which moving pictures can play an important role. This work is undated, although surely was published after 1903. AU - Urban, Charles CY - np DA - 1908? (undated) KW - Urban, Charles ref, secondary Urban, Charles, and kinemacolor photography ref, news motion pictures color color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures photography and visual communication color vs. black-and-white motion pictures, and black-and-white kinemacolor motion pictures, and kinemacolor Urban, Charles, and color movies motion pictures, and Charles Urban color, and Charles Urban education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures LB - 41410 PB - np PY - 1908 ST - The Cinematograph in Science, Education, and Matters of State TI - The Cinematograph in Science, Education, and Matters of State ID - 4240 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Of particular interest are Sections P (Electric Power) and S (Transportation and Communication). The latter section has data on railroads, canals, roads, civil aviation, postal service, telephones, and the telegraph. AU - Urquhart, M. C., ed. CY - Toronto DA - 1965 KW - post office References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps non-USA general studies Canada reference works +telephones +telegraph +postal service +electricity +transportation +aeronautics and space communication statistics statistics, and Canada statistics, and new media LB - 11330 PB - Macmillan Company of Canada Ltd PY - 1965 ST - Historical Statistics of Canada TI - Historical Statistics of Canada ID - 2493 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this critical and influential book, Urry traces “how in different societies and especially within different social groups in diverse historical periods the tourist gaze has changed and developed” (p. 1). He interrogates the visual nature of the tourism experience embodied by various social discourses which are operated by professionals with different media. The author argues that “travel is a strategy for the accumulation of photographs and hence for the commodification and privatization of personal and especially of family memories” (p. 128-29). Seeing the gazing as the centre of tourism practices, Urry further makes a distinction between ‘romantic’ and ‘collective’ tourist gazes and illustrates how the tourist objectifies and interprets the place in their experience. --Huai-Hsuan Chen AU - Urry, John CY - London DA - 1990 KW - tourism geography Chen, Huai-Hsuan photography and visual communication photography photography, and tourism tourism, and photography photography, and geography geography, and photography photography, and leisure photography, and travel non-USA non-USA, and photography Great Britain photography, and Great Britain Great Britain, and photography photography, and Europe Europe, and photography nationalism and communication photography, and nationalism nationalism, and photography Europe nationalism LB - 33140 PB - Newbury Park: Sage Publications PY - 1990 ST - The Tourist Gaze: Leisure and Travel in Contemporary Societies TI - The Tourist Gaze: Leisure and Travel in Contemporary Societies ID - 69 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This reader seeks to draw attention to and stimulate research on the use of color in motion pictures. Price notes in the General Introduction of this book the "radical subjectivity of color vision" and that and the "even more vexing problem of color naming" which is complicated by differences in cultures. (5) "The problem of color naming is likewise a problem of meaning and interpretation," they write. "Even those scholars especially sensitive to questions of style have attempted to sidestep questions about the meaning of color." (5) As David Batchelor has written in his book Chromophobia (2000), there are long-standing cultural prejudices against the use of color. The editors of this volume write that "the relegation of color to the category of excess is a convenient critical move, insofar as it frees us from having to consider what a color might mean and how it might produce nonliteral meanings that are not so easily found or confirmed." (6) Price argues that scholars need to pay more systematic attention to the uses and meanings of color and he draws a parallel to the study of sound in motion pictures. "Over the past twenty years, film studies has become attentive to other elements of style in an effort to detail the complexities of film as a medium, to move beyond simple images of analyses that engage a particular content -- whether literal or nonliteral -- without respect to how that content is determined by matters of style or form. Witness, for example, the rise of sound studies in the 1980s around the publication of Rick Altman's pioneering special issue on sound in the Yale French Review (no. 60, spring 1980), Elisabeth Weis and John Belton's anthology Film Sound: Theory and Practice (Columbia University Press) in 1982, and Claudia Gorbman's influential study of the film score Unheard Melodies: Narrative Film Music (Indiana University Press), in 1988. It is a field that continued to gain momentum through the mid-1990s....2/3 The goal of the sound theorist has been to move sound out from the periphery and toward a more complex center, to the space formerly occupied by the performer and the word." (2-3) "The same must be said of color. Where sound in film was once inaudible, color was once invisible, despite its overwhelming significance as a meaning-making structure of a film," Price writes. "And yet, where is our vocabulary for color? As sound scholars have already noticed, without even a rudimentary vocabulary, color will remain invisible." (3) The selections in this book are organized into four parts. "Part One: Color Technology and Visual Style" has the following essays: 1) Steve Neale, "Technicolor"; 2) Natalie M. Kalmus, "Color Consciousness"; 3) J. P. Telotte, "Minor Hazards: Disney and the Color Adventure"; and 4) Dudley Andrew, "The Post-War Struggle for Colour." The following selections are in "Part Two: Color Theory": 5) Rudolf Arnheim, "Remarks on Color Film"; 6) André Bazin, "A Bergsonian Film: The Picasso Mystery"; 7) David Batchelor, "Chromophobia"; 8) Brian Price, "Color, the Formless, and Cinematic Eros"; and 9) Trond Lundemo, "The Colors of Haptic Space: Black, Blue and White in Moving Images." In "Part Three: The Filmmaker as Color Theorist" are: 10) Sergei Eisenstein, "On Colour"; 11) Nagisa Oshima, "Banishing Green"; 12) Eric Rohmer, "Reflections on Color"; 13) Eric Rohmer, "Of Taste and Colors"; and 14) Stan Brakhage, "Painting Film." In "Part Four: Case Studies" are: 15) Richard Allen, "Hitchcock's Color Designs"; 16) Mary Beth Haralovich, "All That Heavan Allows: Color, Narrative Space, and Melodrama"; 17) Scott Higgins, "Demonstrating Three-Strip Technicolor"; 18) Marshall Deutelbaum, "Costuming and the Color System of Leave Her to Heaven"; 19) Edward Branigan, "The Articulation of Color in a Filmic System: Deux ou trois choses que je sais d'elle"; 20) Angela Dalle Vacche, "Machelangelo Antonioni's Red Desert: Painting as Ventriloquism and Color as Movement (Architecture and Painting)"; and 21) Peter Wollen, "Blue." AU - Vacche, Angela Dalle AU - Brian Price, eds. CY - New York and London DA - 2006 KW - media effects emotion ref, secondary motion pictures color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures France non-USA France, and motion pictures non-USA, and motion pictures motion pictures, and France color, and France motion pictures, and non-USA Rohmer, Eric, and color films motion pictures, and Eric Rohmer color, and Sergei Eisenstein Eisenstein, Sergei, and color values color, and values values, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color motion pictures, and ideology motion pictures, and classic Hollywood films color, and classic Hollywood films color, and ideology color, and David Batchelor Hitchcock, Alfred, and color film color, and Alfred Hitchcock language, and color color, and inadequacy of language color, and music Technicolor color, and Technicolor color, and Eastman Color Eastman Color color, and Steve Neale color, and Natalie M. Kalmus color, and J. P. Telotte color, and Dudley Andrew color, and Rudolf Arnheim color, and André Bazin color, and Brian Price color, and Trond Lundemo color, and Nagisa Oshima color, and Eric Rohmer color, and Stan Brakhage color, and Richard Allen color, and Mary Beth Haralovich color, and Scott Higgins color, and Marshall Deutelbaum color, and Edward Branigan color, and Angela Dalle Vacche color, and Peter Wollen color, and Henri Bergson ref, book Hitchcock, Alfred language LB - 39870 PB - Routledge PY - 2006 ST - Color, the Film Reader TI - Color, the Film Reader ID - 4085 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - By the late 1950s, the sex had clearly become more overt. Roger Vadim’s Et ...Dieu créa la Femme (And God Created Woman) (1956, 1957), featured Brigette Bardot, and caused a sensation. Nude photographs in American magazines became part of the film’s publicity. The movie played in many U. S. theaters and drive-ins. In Chicago, police initially cut twelve minutes from And God Created Woman, only to restore them after Frank Sinatra introduced Vadim to a city police chief, who liked the director so much that he took him to local strip club. The movie got perhaps even wider exposure in New York, where by early 1958, the city had become “a Bardot festival.” The initials BB quickly became synonymous with sex, and the movie became the most successful money maker of any foreign production to that time. Distributors rushed to import Bardot’s earlier films. AU - Vadim, Roger CY - London DA - 1975 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories memoirs motion pictures color motion pictures, and technicolor Bardot, Brigitte sexuality women photography nudity motion pictures, and nudity LB - 31480 PB - Hutchison of London PY - 1975 ST - Memoirs of the Devil TI - Memoirs of the Devil ID - 2840 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - By the late 1950s, the sex had clearly become more overt. Roger Vadim’s Et ...Dieu créa la Femme (And God Created Woman) (1956, 1957), featured Brigette Bardot, and caused a sensation. Nude photographs in American magazines became part of the film’s publicity. The movie played in many U. S. theaters and drive-ins. In Chicago, police initially cut twelve minutes from And God Created Woman, only to restore them after Frank Sinatra introduced Vadim to a city police chief, who liked the director so much that he took him to local strip club. The movie got perhaps even wider exposure in New York, where by early 1958, the city had become “a Bardot festival.” The initials BB quickly became synonymous with sex, and the movie became the most successful money maker of any foreign production to that time. Distributors rushed to import Bardot’s earlier films. Movie makers instinctively understood that color and lighting could enhance sensuality. But during the 1950s, many of them found that using CinemaScope and color film posed daunting technical problems. Vadim was an exception. They “stimulated” his imagination when he began shooting his first movie, And God Created Woman and he used them to accentuate Brigitte Bardot’s sexuality and create an international sensation. AU - Vadim, Roger CY - New York DA - 1986 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories memoirs motion pictures color motion pictures, and technicolor Bardot, Brigitte sexuality women photography nudity motion pictures, and nudity Fonda, Jane Deneuve, Catherine CinemaScope technicolor LB - 31490 PB - Simon and Schuster PY - 1986 ST - Bardot, Deneuve, Fonda TI - Bardot, Deneuve, Fonda ID - 2841 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This well-written memoir deals with Valenti's years with Lyndon B. Johnson. Valenti was one of Johnson's great admirers and most ardent defenders. The opening chapter covers Valenti's early association with Johnson and the events leading up to and involving the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Valenti devotes only a few pages to the new job he assumed in 1966 as president of the Motion Picture Association of America. He devotes but a handful of paragraphs to such figures as Lew Wasserman, Arthur Krim, and Edwin L. Weisl, men who were important figures in both the Democratic Party and in Hollywood. AU - Valenti, Jack CY - New York DA - 1975 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti autobiography memoirs Wasserman, Lew Krim, Arthur Weisl, Edwin, Sr. biography LB - 20440 PB - W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. PY - 1975 ST - A Very Human President TI - A Very Human President ID - 858 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Observations about communication can be found in Valéry’s chapter entitled “The Conquest of Ubiquity.” He writes that for “the last twenty years neither matter nor space nor time has been what it was from time immemorial.” He continues: “Just as water, gas, and electricity are brought into our houses from far off to satisfy our needs in response to a minimal effort, so we shall be supplied with visual or auditory images, which will appear and disappear at a simple movement of the hand, hardly more than a sign.” He observed that the reproduction of music was at the time (1964) more advanced that the reproduction of pictures. Recent progress, he says, had solved a couple of technical problems: 1) “To make a piece of music instantly audible at any point on the earth, regardless of where it is performed." 2) “To reproduce a piece of music at will, anywhere on the globe and at any time." However, Valéry said in 1964, “we are still far from having controlled visual phenomena to the same degree. Color and relief are still rather resistant. A sunset on the Pacific, a Titian in Madrid cannot yet be enjoyed in our living room with the same force of illusion as a symphony.” This work was translated by Ralph Manheim. AU - Valéry, Paul CY - New York DA - 1964 KW - entertainment entertainment, home photography time and timekeeping time preservation +sound recording history, and new media history home, and new media home visual communication geography recording home, and information technology information technology history general studies space (spatial) time history, break with electricity gas information technology and home recording, and music music color visual communication, and color +photography and visual communication recording, and sound +sound recording home, and sound recording home entertainment LB - 1280 PB - Pantheon Books PY - 1964 ST - Aesthetics TI - Aesthetics ID - 1524 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Valéry makes a few comments in this work related to communication. He discusses the importance of electricity in history, which when it first appeared, seemed relatively unimportant. Yet it gradually became "obvious that this general energizing of the world is more pregnant with consequences, more capable of transforming life in the immediate future than all the 'political' events from the time of Ampère to the present day." Valéry believed that around 1800, "the discovery of the electric current, by means of that admirable invention the battery, opened up the era of new facts that were to change the face of the world." Elsewhere he writes about modernity, novelty, and history. "We hardly think about it without geting lost. So it is useless to try, on the basis of a knowledge of history, to conjecture what will be the dequel to our state of general bewilderment. I have already said that the extraordinary number of novelties introduced into man's world in so few years has very nearly abolisted all possibility of comparing what happened a hundred and fifty years ago with what is happening today. We have introduced new forces, invented new means, and formed entirely different and unexpected habits. We have canceled values, dissociated ideas, destroyed sentiments that seemed unshakable, having survived twenty centuries of vicissitudes; and to talk about such a novel situation we have only age-old notions. "In short, we are faced with confusion in the social system ... conditions that are intellectual in origin, quite artificial, and moreover essentially unstable, for they are directly dependent on further and ever more numerous creation of the intellect." He goes on to write that "every day the dogma of inequality of races becomes more and more dangerous in politics. It will be fatal to Europe. Technology is spreading like the plague." This edition has Preface by François Valéry and an Introduction by Salvador de Madariaga. AU - Valéry, Paul (translated by Denise Folliot and Jackson Mathews) CY - London DA - 1962 KW - technology race values preservation politics innovation history, and new media non-USA history +electricity values history, break with technology and society inventions technology, and politics politics, and technology Europe Europe, and technology race, and technology technology, and race LB - 2640 PB - Routledge & Kegan Paul PY - 1962 ST - History and Politics TI - History and Politics ID - 352 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In the Foreword (written in 1931) to the collection of essays, Valéry writes: "An event that takes place over a century does not figure in any document or any collection of memoirs. For example, the immense and singular role of the city of Paris after the Revolution. Or the discovery of electricity and the conquest of the earth by its different uses. The latter events, unequaled in human history, appear in it, when they do, less prominent than some other affair more scenic, more in conformity (this especially) with what traditional history customarily reports. In Napoleon's time electricity had about the same importance as Christianity at the time of Tiberius. It is gradually becoming obvious that this general energizing of the world is more pregnant with consequences, more capable of transforming life in the immediate future than all the 'political' events from the time of Ampère to the present day." (from "Foreword [1931]," p. 10) AU - Valéry, Paul [trans. by Denise Folliot and Jackson Mathews AU - Jackson Mathews, ed.] CY - New York DA - 1962 KW - technology innovation history and new media non-USA history electricity values history, break with technology and society inventions technology, and politics politics, and technology Europe Europe, and technology history, and electricity electricity, and history politics LB - 41780 PB - Harper Torchbooks / Bollingen Library (Harper & Row) PY - 1962 ST - The Outlook for Intelligence TI - The Outlook for Intelligence ID - 4276 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In Chapter 2, "The Open Door: The Industry's Public Relations," Vasey discusses Will Hays and the MPPDA's public relations endeavors. The author focuses on the MPPDA's appeal to parent and civic organizations, its efforts project the American image abroad, Jason Joy's work with such ploys as the "Don'ts and Be Carefuls," and effort to channel "foreign influences into production." This chapter does not discuss the attempts to develop community ties with local opinion makers, local businesses, and law enforcement. Nor does it discuss Hays as an advocate of new media, the MPPDA's efforts to discredit the Payne Fund Studies, or Joseph Breen's work in public relations. Chapter 3, "Sound Effects: Technology and Adaptation," examines silent movies in America, the adaptation of silent films for the foreign market, the Studio Relations Committee as the silent era ends, industry regulation and sound technology, "foreign agents," sound films and the foreign market, what influence sound technology had on foreign legislation, language problems, and how English-language films were adapted abroad. AU - Vasey, Ruth CY - Madison DA - 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) self-regulation Production Code PCA women, and new media advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. MPAA MPPDA law censorship and ratings non-USA women values +motion pictures +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship women, and motion pictures values, and motion pictures censorship Hays, Will H., and public relations motion pictures, and public relations public relations, and Will Hays MPPDA, and public relations motion pictures, and U. S. films abroad +sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sound technology censorship, and Donts and Be Carefuls motion pictures, and sound films abroad public relations Hays, Will H. Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 6420 PB - University of Wisconsin Press PY - 1997 ST - The World According to Hollywood, 1918-1939 TI - The World According to Hollywood, 1918-1939 ID - 2025 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This study of the United States government’s first large-scale propaganda agency, the so-called Creel Committee (after its chairman George Creel), is grounded in several archival collections. A significant portion of the book deals with the work of print journalists and scholars (historians, political sciences, economists, etc.) who relied on the written word. But the Creel committee also exploited the new media of the late-nineteenth century -- photography, motion pictures, the phonograph, electricity, the telephone -- that revolutionized communication. Chapter 8 deals with the work of professional advertisers and artists. The Creel committee used poster art extensively and this book has many examples of this form of propaganda. AU - Vaughn, Stephen CY - Chapel Hill DA - 1980 KW - R & D nationalism Wilson, Woodrow photography propaganda public relations propaganda advertising public relations advertising democracy and media democracy research and development war communication revolution news and journalism books, periodicals, newspapers journalism news and journalism war news information technology Information Age nationalism and communication +military communication +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines propaganda advertising World War I public relations press news, as propaganda information, and government dissemination +photography and visual communication motion pictures communication revolution information technology, and propaganda propaganda, and World War I World War I, and propaganda posters posters, and World War I World War I, and posters Wilson, Woodrow, administration Wilson, Woodrow, and propaganda propaganda, and mass media presidents, and new media advertising and public relations LB - 2460 PB - University of North Carolina Press PY - 1980 ST - Holding Fast the Inner Lines: Democracy, Nationalism, and the Committee on Public Information TI - Holding Fast the Inner Lines: Democracy, Nationalism, and the Committee on Public Information ID - 1639 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is not only about Ronald Reagan’s career up to 1952, it is also about the way in which the motion picture industry and American politics became joined during the middle third of the twentieth century. Chapters deal with how films were used to promote military preparedness before Pearl Harbor; how the government used moving pictures for propaganda to win World War II and build a large air force, and how Hollywood and Washington cooperated during the early years of the Cold War in a global ideological struggle against communism. The book is based on research in about 150 archival collections, including the massive Warner Bros. Archives and in extensive collections relating to motion picture censorship. AU - Vaughn, Stephen CY - New York DA - 1994 KW - R & D nationalism nationalism motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality values Christianity presidents, and new media Reagan administration public relations advertising values research and development war freedom law censorship and ratings war World War II values motion pictures nationalism and communication +military communication propaganda motion pictures motion pictures, and labor motion pictures, and communism loyalty tests freedom of expression censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship radio motion pictures, and American politics values, and motion pictures Reagan, Ronald motion pictures, and race motion pictures, and military preparedness air power, propaganda for motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence censorship propaganda, and World War II propaganda, and Hollywood World War II, and propaganda World War II, and motion pictures military, and motion pictures nationalism, and motion pictures +aeronautics and space communication Warner Bros. Warner Bros., and military preparedness military, and Warner Bros. blacklisting death rays motion pictures, and culture wars public relations advertising and public relations air power culture wars culture wars, and motion pictures LB - 2470 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 1994 ST - Ronald Reagan in Hollywood: Movies and Politics TI - Ronald Reagan in Hollywood: Movies and Politics ID - 1640 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book examines the history of the motion picture industry and the movie rating system within several contexts: the so-called "cultural wars" of the late 20th century, legal decision involving censorship, media effects research, the history of advertising and public relations, and finally, cinema and new media technologies. Among the technological changes discussed are video recording, cable and satellite television, computers, improved film and cameras that transformed special effects, and digital movie making. The book is based in large part on the Richard D. Heffner's Oral History and related papers at Columbia University. Heffner headed the Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) from 1974 to 1994. This book offers the first behind-the-scenes look at the Motion Picture Association of American under Jack Valenti's leadership. AU - Vaughn, Stephen CY - New York DA - 2005 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment computers Classification and Rating Administration video cassette recorders (VCRs) MPAA self-regulation rating system (U.S.) motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality entertainment, home drug abuse values Christianity CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) motion pictures values media effects advertising and public relations values censorship and ratings Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack CARA MPAA rating controversies pornography violence sexuality digitization women motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and women women, and pornography Reagan, Ronald Reagan, Ronald, and motion pictures presidents and new media Valenti, Jack, and movie ratings Valenti, Jack, and Ronald Reagan Valenti, Jack, and Nancy Reagan First Amendment motion pictures, and censorship ACLU, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography children and media motion pictures, and First Amendment advertising, and motion pictures media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects motion pictures, and advertising motion pictures, and public relations public relations, and motion pictures drugs, and motion pictures motion pictures, and drugs motion pictures, and religion motion pictures, and NC-17 motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and new technologies motion pictures, and digitization computers and the internet computers, and motion pictures violence, and motion pictures violence, and children children, and media violence pornography, and children children, and pornography violence, and special effects television television, and cable motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures VCRs home entertainment home and new media television, and satellites Aeronautics and Space Communication satellites, and television satellites, and motion pictures motion pictures, and satellites cable, and motion pictures motion pictures, and cable motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and computers pornography, and new media media effects, and violence media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects research violence, and media effects research 16mm cameras, 16mm ACLU advertising cable cameras children digital media digital cinema freedom home home entertainment revolution motion pictures, and culture wars public relations Reagan administration satellites special effects substance abuse computers culture wars culture wars, and motion pictures LB - 31130 PB - Cambridge University Press PY - 2005 ST - Freedom and Entertainment: Rating the Movies in an Age of New Media TI - Freedom and Entertainment: Rating the Movies in an Age of New Media ID - 2834 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book examines movie censorship in the United States from the establishment of the first local censorship board in Chicago in 1907 until the creation of the motion pictures rating system in 1968. Chapter 1 is discusses the elements about cinema that worried critics -- the movie theater, sensational advertising that emphasized sex and violence, the content of films, the status of actors whom many considered to be "false leaders." Chapter 2 examines the work of Will H. Hays as head of the Motion Pictures Association of America (MPPDA). Chapter 3 looks at the work of censor Joseph I. Breen, the "decency dictator." The final three chapters deal with the post-World War II era and the breakdown of the 1930 Production Code. Chapter 4 looks at the work of Eric A. Johnston, who replaced Hays as president of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), as the MPPDA became known after 1945. Chapter 5 examines the changes in home entertainment with the coming of TV, magnetic recording, home movie cameras, and more. Chapter 6, "Lights, Color, Action," deals with changes in movie-making technology that was more mobile and made greater use of color and action. AU - Vaughn, Stephen CY - (book manuscript, in press) KW - audiences self-regulation nationalism motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality values Christianity motion pictures home and new media Hays, Will H. Johnston, Eric sound recording magnetic recording videotape audio tape magnetic recording, and video magnetic recording, and audio photocopying offset printing television television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television values motion pictures, and values values, and motion pictures censorship and ratings Production Code (1930) color cameras 8mm 16mm pornography theaters motion pictures, and foreign films Breen, Joseph Adler, Mortimer media effects Payne Fund Studies Adler, Motimer, and Payne Fund Studies Payne Fund Studies, and Mortimer Adler Hays, Will H., and Payne Fund Studies abortion motion pictures, and abortion sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality violence violence, and motion pictures television, and violence motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and violence nationalism and communication magnetic recording blacklisting Douglas, William O. home home entertainment revolution Lord, Daniel A. motion pictures, and culture wars Production Code duplicating technologies Quigley, Martin culture wars culture wars, and motion pictures LB - 33040 ST - Morality and Entertainment: Cinema and Censorship, 1907-1968 TI - Morality and Entertainment: Cinema and Censorship, 1907-1968 ID - 2942 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book provides insight into reproduction processes available during the late 1950s. The work contains pictures at the end of copiers available during this period. Chapter one is entitled “Document Reproduction: A Brief Survey.” The book has a helpful bibliography (298-306), and a “Glossary of Reproduction Terms” used during the 1950s. AU - Verry, H R [sic -- for Herbert Richard] CY - London DA - 1958 KW - illustrations labor +duplicating technologies office, and information technology information technology illustrations +duplicating technologies illustrations, and copy machines (1950s) bibliographies, and duplitcating technologies photocopying information technology, and office office, and duplicating technologies office +bibliographies LB - 5790 PB - Fountain Press PY - 1958 ST - Document Copying and Reproduction Processes TI - Document Copying and Reproduction Processes ID - 1964 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Russian theorist and filmmaker Dziga Vertov offers a view of film technology in an essay in this work ("Kino-Eye," 60-67) which suggests that cinema may be used to fulfill a utopian vision. Using the Futurist and Cubist movements in art, as well as the Constructivist movement in Russian society (which believed that art could be used to advance social and intellectual development), Vertov treats the movie camera as a tool which can be used in a manner that surpasses human vision. His thesis is that the 'camera-eye' (or film lens) can be used in coordination with other elements of cinema, such as editing and special effects, to show the world in a way that reveals the relationship between man and society -- something that the unassisted human eye is incapable of seeing. As a key artistic figure in 1920s post-Revolutionary Russian society, Vertov was responsible for many documentary works in which he applied his theoretical ideas to film (e.g. in The Man With a Movie Camera). His view of technology as a driving force that could change society is consistent with his Marxism, and anticipate leftist political thought during the 1960s. This work was translated by Kevin O'Brien, and in a series edited by Annette Michelson. --Matt Lavine AU - Vertov, Dziga CY - Berkeley DA - 1984 KW - USSR communism Marx, Karl Marxism ideology +future and science fiction non-USA utopianism +motion pictures +motion pictures Lavine, Matt documentaries, Soviet Union ideology, and motion pictures Marxism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Marxism Soviet Union, and motion pictures future utopianism, and motion pictures cubism futurism constructivist movement Soviet Union documentaries LB - 11210 PB - University of California Press PY - 1984 ST - Kino-Eye: The Writings of Dziga Vertov TI - Kino-Eye: The Writings of Dziga Vertov ID - 2482 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Virilio writes about "the crucial importance" of a "'logistics of perception' and of the secrecy that surrounds its. A war of pictures and sounds is replacing the war of objects (projectiles and missiles). In a technician's version of an all-seeing Divinity, ever ruling out accident and surprise, the drive is on for a general system of illumination that will allow everything to be seen and known, at every moment and in every place." This work has a Preface and seven chapters: Preface to the English Edition: The Sight Machine; 1) Military Force Is Based upon Deception; 2) Cinema Isn't I See, It's I Fly; 3) Abandon All Hope, Ye Who Enter the Hell of Images; 4) The Imposture of Immediacy; 5) The 'Fern Andra' Cinema; 6) Sicut Prior est Tempore ita quo Potior lure'; 7) A Traveling Shot over Eighty Years. At the beginning of the twentieth century, Virilio writes, "cinema and aviation seemed to form a single moment. By 1914, aviation was ceasing to be stricly a means of flying and breaking records...; it was becoming one way, or perhaps even the ultimate way, of seeing." This book was translated from the French by Patrick Camiller. AU - Virilio, Paul (translated by Patrick Camiller) CY - London DA - 1984, 1989 (translation) KW - R & D surveillance photography seeing at a distance law, and privacy law postmodernism modernism motion pictures research and development war war non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture military, and motion pictures motion pictures, and military France France, and motion pictures motion pictures, and France new way of seeing +military communication +photography and visual communication military, and motion pictures military, and photography privacy +aeronautics and space communication military, and aviation LB - 400 PB - Verso PY - 1984 ST - War and Cinema: The Logistics of Perception TI - War and Cinema: The Logistics of Perception ID - 128 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - For member of the Production Code Administration Jack Vizzard produced one of the best Hollywood memoirs. It is witty, irreverant, and informative about movie censorship and the breakdown of the Production Code. Vizzard's personality sketches of individuals -- Joseph Breen, Geoffrey Shurlock, and many others -- are crisply drawn. AU - Vizzard, Jack CY - New York DA - 1970 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA self-regulation Production Code PCA values Christianity Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories values Production Code (motion pictures) motion pictures religion values morality values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church memoirs Catholic Church, and motion pictures motion pictures, and critics motion pictures, and Catholic Church Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. Shurlock, Geoffrey censorship, and motion pictures morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality motion pictures, and censorship autobiography Production Code, and decline of Valenti, Jack LB - 13060 PB - Simon and Schuster PY - 1970 ST - See No Evil: Life Inside a Hollywood Censor TI - See No Evil: Life Inside a Hollywood Censor ID - 480 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book originated at a Salzburg Seminar session entitled “The Globalization of American Popular Culture.” The editors of this volume, Reinhold Wagnleitner and Elaine Tyler May, approach their subject from different titles. Wagnleitner, an Austrian historian and bass guitarist, is a student of American popular culture in Europe. May, an American historian, has long studied American popular culture in the United States and how America’s involvement in other countries has influenced domestic culture. Although the title of this book is taken from a Beatles song, the editors argue that “without the global diffusion of American popular culture, there would have been no Beatles.” (p. 1) The work is divided into five parts. Part I deals with the historical background of American popular culture abroad and contains essays by John G. Blair (“First Steps toward Globalization: Nineteenth-Century Exports of American Entertainment Forms”), James T. Campbell (“The Americanization of South Africa”), and Oliver Schmidt (“No Innocents Abroad: The Salzburg Impetus and American Studies in Europe”). Part II, “The World of Hollywood,” contains chapters by Theodore A. Wilson (“Selling America via the Silver Screen? Efforts to Manage the Projection of American Culture Abroad, 1942-1947"), Aurora Bosch and M. Fernanda del Rincón (“Dreams in a Dictatorship: Hollywood and Franco’s Spain, 1939-1956"), Giuliana Muscio (“Invasion and Counterattack: Italian and American Film Relations in the Postwar Period”), and Nosa Owen-Ibie (“Programmed for Domination: U. S. Television Broadcasting and Its Effects on Nigerian Culture”). In Part III, “Rock, Rap, and All That Jazz,” there are essays by Elizabeth Vihlen (“Jammin’on the Champs-Elysée: Jazz, France, and the 1950s”), Penny M. Von Eschen (“‘Satchmo Blows Up the World’: Jazz, Race, and Empire during the Cold War”), Michael May (“Swingin’ under Stalin: Russian Jazz during the Cold War and Beyond”), Thomas Fuchs (“Rock ‘n’ Roll in the German Democratic Republic, 1949-1961"), and Christoph Ribbat (“How Hip Hop Hit Heidelberg: German Rappers, Rhymes, and Rhythms”). Part IV, “The Empire Strikes Back,” has chapters by Masako Notoji (“Cultural Transformation of John Philip Sousa and Disneyland in Japan”), Myles Dungan and David Gray (“Consumption of American Pop Culture in Ireland and England”), Gülriz Büken (“Backlash: An Argument against the Spread of American Popular Culture in Turkey”), and Michael Ermarth (“German Unification as Self-Inflicted Americanization: Critical Views on the Course of Contemporary German Development”). Part V, “Contemporary Issues,” includes Rob Kroes (“Advertising: The Commodification of American Icons of Freedom”), J. Michael Jaffe and Gabriel Weimann (“New Lords of the Global Village? Theories of Media Domination in the Internet Era”), and Reinhold Wagleitner (“Encartafication of Emancipation: The Internet as the New American Frontier?”). AU - Wagnleitner, Reinhold AU - eds., Elaine Tyler May CY - Hanover and London DA - 2000 KW - computers Soviet Union nationalism imperialism motion pictures and popular culture globalization non-USA Germany Japan Ireland Great Britain Turkey South Africa Nigeria USSR +television motion pictures Austria Germany, and US popular culture Japan, and US popular culture Ireland, and US popular culture Great Britain, and US popular culture Turkey, and US popular culture South Africa, and US popular culture Nigeria, and US popular culture USSR, and US popular culture nationalism and communication nationalism, and US popular culture popular culture, and nationalism popular culture, and globalization globalization, and popular culture globalization, and music music, and globalization cultural imperialism advertising and public relations advertising, and cultural imperialism advertising, and globalization globalization, and advertising cultural imperialism, and advertising motion pictures, and cultural imperialism television, and cultural imperialism cultural imperialism, and television cultural imperialism, and motion pictures computers and the Internet nationalism, and Internet Internet, and nationalism cultural imperialism, and Internet Internet, and cultural imperialism globalization, and Internet Internet, and globalization race race, and popular culture race, and globalization globalization, and race African Americans Cold War, and popular culture popular culture, and Cold War Cold War war war, and popular culture capitalism popular culture, and capitalism capitalism, and popular culture consumerism France France, and US popular culture Italy Italy, and US popular culture cultural imperialism, and McDonald's McDonald's, and cultural imperialism rap music, and globalization globalization, and music globalization, and rock 'n' roll Spain Spain, and US popular culture World Wide Web women women, and popular culture advertising Internet music popular culture global communication LB - 29740 PB - University Press of New England PY - 2000 ST - 'Here, There and Everywhere': The Foreign Politics of American Popular Culture TI - 'Here, There and Everywhere': The Foreign Politics of American Popular Culture ID - 2726 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is an attempt to explain developments underway during the 1980s pertaining to artificial intelligence. The book's eleven chapters are divided into three parts. Part I, "Thinking about Thinking," discusses the origins of cognitive science and cybernetics. Subsequent chapters deal with "The Necessity of Knowledge," "Language and Understanding," "Vision and Reality," "Intelligence in Parallel," and "Can a Machine Think?" Part II is entitled "Visions of a New Generation," and chapters cover "Metamorphosis" (the discovery of AI and the growth of knowledge-based systems), and "The Fifth Generation" (which discusses the challenged posed by Japan's fifth generation computers and the American response which included the Strategic Computing Initiative). Part III is "The Shape of the Future," with chapters on "The Relationship of Man and Machine," "A New Way of Working," and "A Question of Responsibility." At the time of this book's publication, Waldrop was a senior writer for Science, a journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He has a doctorate in elementary particle physics. The book is based largely on published sources and has a brief, two-page bibliography. AU - Waldrop, M. Mitchell DA - 1987 KW - technology R & D computers corporations corporations corporations Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) chips, computer ARPA technology and society presidents, and new media MIT war research and development military communication military-industrial complex military communication microprocessors IBM war non-USA computers and the Internet +military communication DARPA Kahn, Robert Cooper, Robert, and DARPA Kahn, Robert, and strategic computing initiative Strategic Computing Initiative Reagan administration Reagan administration, and strategic computing Reagan, Ronald Reagan, Ronald, and strategic computing military communication, and strategic computing strategic computing, and military artificial intelligence Advanced Research Projects Agency Cooper, Robert, and strategic computing research and development research and development, and strategic computing military-industrial complex chips, and strategic computing Japan Japan, and fifth generation computers fifth generation computers information processing Information Science and Technology Office Intel Corp. IBM, and strategic computing Licklider, J.C.R. MIT, and strategic computing strategic computing, and MIT microprocessing technology, and economic development technology, and change robotics artificial intelligence and biotechnology Information Age LB - 210 PB - Walker and Company PY - 1987 ST - Man-Made Minds: The Promise of Artificial Intelligence TI - Man-Made Minds: The Promise of Artificial Intelligence ID - 110 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The Dream Machine tells the inside story of the development of the computer and the computing industry loosely following computer pioneer J.C.R. Licklider from his pre-WWII computer days to his passing in 1990. Waldrop sees Licklider, or “Lick” as he was known, as the main catalyst of what ultimately became computing as we now know it. Although not always at the center of the developments or innovations, Licklider’s inspiration, vision, and personality were often the driving force behind computer advancement. Beginning with the early days at the Harvard labs before moving to a basement in MIT, Lick and other pioneers of the computing world worked tirelessly to develop computers for military use, academic use, and personal use. Although, roughly 470 pages of text, it is an enjoyable read as Waldrop puts a personal touch on many of the “nameless” inventions that have led us to where we are today. --Michael Boyle AU - Waldrop, Mitchell M. CY - New York DA - c2001, 2002 KW - R & D computers Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories research and development war inventions innovation archives computers war Boyle, Michael +computers and the Internet computers, personal Licklider, J.C.R. +information storage information storage, and J.C.R. Licklider computers, history of biography inventors +military communication military, and computers LB - 1610 PB - Penguin Books PY - 2001 ST - The Dream Machine: J. C. R. Licklider and the Revolution that Made Computing Personal TI - The Dream Machine: J. C. R. Licklider and the Revolution that Made Computing Personal ID - 249 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Waldroup, Frank and Joseph Borkin CY - New York DA - 1938 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins LB - 10820 PB - William Morrow and Co. PY - 1938 ST - Television: A Struggle for Power TI - Television: A Struggle for Power ID - 2444 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Waldstreicher’s subject of historical inquiry is the early American celebration: Fourth of July parties, elections celebrations, and other traditional fetes. He argues that far from innocent events, these activities were the means by which people participated in politics in the aftermath of the Revolution and in the early National/Federal period. Thus, the celebration became a means of expressing revolutionary patriotism, weighing in on the Federal vs. Anti-Federal debates, and in essence contributing to the creation of a national, political identity. Waldstreicher utilizes printed pieces, contemporary descriptions, and ephemera to come to terms with these events. Of particular note for the study of mass communication is his treatment of print culture. An essential part of these celebrations, he argues, was their coverage in the press. The newspapers’ involvement in describing these events and disseminating them to a wider audience was every bit a part of the overall element of celebration as the actual participation. The notes below concentrate mostly on his treatment of the press as part of this phenomenon. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Waldstreicher, David CY - Chapel Hill DA - 1997 KW - nationalism spectacles journalism news and journalism Wolf, Nicholas +nationalism and communication nationalism, and print culture newspapers, and nationalism nationalism, and newspapers nationalism, and print culture nationalism, and spectacle spectacles, and nationalism nationalism, and fetes newspapers news LB - 1560 PB - University of North Carolina Press for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture PY - 1997 ST - In the Midst of Perpetual Fetes TI - In the Midst of Perpetual Fetes ID - 244 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work looks at the late 1920s when silent film gave way to the talkies. This transition, notable says Walker as “a lightning retooling of an entire industry” unlike any that had previously been seen, was not a particularly edifying episode, in his view. It was characterized by confusion, stupidity, ambition, and greed. This technological transformation also had a significant effect on the content of movies. Since social class distinctions became all the more apparent with the advent of talkies, a European sensibility was lost to American movies forever, Walker argues, and replaced by a focus on American society. This focus at first resulted in a Cinema of realism, but with the realism came hypocrisy, the Hays Office, and a withdrawal of American movies into fantasy or phony uplift. --Gordon Jackson AU - Walker, Alexander CY - London DA - 1978 KW - motion pictures law censorship and ratings censorship Jackson, Gordon +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and silent films +sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sound recording motion pictures, and sound films censorship, and motion pictures Hays Office, and talking films Hays, Will H. LB - 1540 PB - Elm Tree Books PY - 1978 ST - The Shattered Silents: How the Talkies Came to Stay TI - The Shattered Silents: How the Talkies Came to Stay ID - 242 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book is about “the history of film and commercial entertainment in America during the silent era from the bottom up” in Lexington, Kentucky. Unlike other studies of movie audiences in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, Chicago, or Worcester, Mass., Lexington (e.g., see Roy Rosenzweig, Eight Hours for What We Will) this work examines “a small city with little heavy industry, few first-generation immigrants, a substantial African-American community, a preponderance of native Kentuckians, and a sense of itself as being southern.” It is unclear how many, if any, of the films Waller discusses he has actually seen. He relies to a large degree on newspaper and other printed accounts of the films. Chapter 6: “Reform and Regulation” is good on movies during the Progressive era, and discusses such themes as “Regulating Theater Safety,” “The Problem of Amusement,” “Sabbatarian Campaigns,” “The Fear of Offense,” “Local Censorship in Action,” and “Naming, Counting, Describing the Audience.” There are also several pages devoted to the controversy over showing “The Birth of a Nation.” Chapter 7 (“Another Audience: Black Moviegoing from 1907 to 1916"), chapter 8 (“Movies on the Homefront”) are good as is chapter 9 (“Movies and Something More: Film Exhibition from 1919 to 1927") on the role of movie theaters in Lexington. Chapter 10 deals with “Movies, Culture, and the ‘Jazz Environment’,” and chapter 11 is on “The Coming of Sound and the Restructuring of Local Film Exhibition.” Appendix 1 is “Local Films and Local Filming.” Appendix 2 is “City Ordinances and State Legislation.” AU - Waller, Gregory A. CY - Washington, D. C. and London DA - 1995 KW - R & D audiences regulation censorship and ratings motion pictures war research and development military communication law censorship and ratings war World War I regulation motion pictures motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship theaters regulation, and motion pictures African Americans, and motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound motion pictures, and local censorship motion pictures, and audiences World War I, and motion pictures motion pictures, and World War I motion pictures, and progressive era censorship African Americans LB - 6430 PB - Smithsonian Institution Press PY - 1995 ST - Main Street Amusements: Movies and Commercial Entertainment in a Southern City, 1896-1930 TI - Main Street Amusements: Movies and Commercial Entertainment in a Southern City, 1896-1930 ID - 2026 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Frank Walsh's Sin and Censorship is strong study of the Catholic Church and its efforts to regulation the motion picture industry, more balanced in its assessment of the Church's position than Gregory Black's two volume study of movie censorship. Black tends to be more critical of the Church and its leaders. AU - Walsh, Frank CY - New Haven DA - 1996 KW - self-regulation Production Code PCA values Christianity values Production Code (motion pictures) religion values morality values religion religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality motion pictures, and critics Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity motion pictures, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and motion pictures Legion of Decency Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. Production Code, and decline of LB - 12790 PB - Yale University Press PY - 1996 ST - Sin and Censorship: The Catholic Church and the Motion Picture Industry TI - Sin and Censorship: The Catholic Church and the Motion Picture Industry ID - 457 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work has more than fifty speculations made in 1893 about what the coming century would hold. Improvements in electricity, sound recording, transportation, the theaters were among the topics covered. As Mary E. Lease predicted, the would be "improvements so extraordinary the world will shudder." AU - Walter, Dave, comp. and intro. CY - Helena, MT DA - 1992 KW - time and timekeeping time time news and journalism +future and science fiction news and journalism future World Fairs World Fairs, Chicago (1893) future, and World Fairs transportation, and future future, and transportation +electricity electricity, and future future, and electricity +sound recording sound recording, and future future, and sound recording journalism journalism, and future future, and journalism future, and time time, and future +transportation LB - 2820 PB - American & World Geographic Publishing PY - 1992 ST - Today Then: America's Best Minds Look 100 Years into the Future on the Occasion of the 1893 World's Columbia Exposition TI - Today Then: America's Best Minds Look 100 Years into the Future on the Occasion of the 1893 World's Columbia Exposition ID - 370 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book assesses changes in the movie industry in a time of unprecedented technological change. For audiences, the new technology have meant changes in special effects. “With their bag of technological tricks, special effects experts now can create new worlds, alien creatures and previously dangerous or impossible actions on film. One visual effect supervisor had notes that “now virtually anything can be done visually. If you can describe it, you can do it.” She notes that while electronic media promise to bring great changes to film making, as of 1994 “the electronic process of video has yet to replace the chemically based process of film for the production of feature films and dramatic television programs. Some of the resistance have to do with traditional 'film people' simply refusing to change. But other reasons have to do with technical differences and economic advantages.” AU - Wasko, Janet CY - Austin, TX DA - 1994 KW - entertainment piracy entertainment, home magnetic recording special effects new media motion pictures home entertainment Hollywood materials materials magnetic tape home +motion pictures and popular culture new media, and Hollywood Hollywood, and new media motion pictures, and new technology motion pictures, and cameras motion pictures, and computers motion pictures, and film motion pictures, and digital technology +sound recording sound recording, and Hollywood videotape, and motion pictures videotape sound recording, and motion pictures +television television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television Hollywood, and television home entertainment revolution motion pictures, and home entertainment home entertainment, and television cable television, and cable +satellites satellites, and television television, and satellites motion pictures, and cable cable, and motion pictures satellites, and motion pictures motion pictures, and satellites video piracy special effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and special effects motion pictures, and resistence to new media video games home home, and new media +aeronautics and space communication copyright LB - 21540 PB - University of Texas Press PY - 1994 ST - Hollywood in the Information Age: Beyond the Silver Screen TI - Hollywood in the Information Age: Beyond the Silver Screen ID - 928 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Wasko examines the relationship between the motion picture industry and the financial community – investment bankers, venture capitalists, banks, insurance companies. These financial interests have exercised significant control over the movie industry’s structure and the way it has done business. Wasko’s opening chapter discusses the early connections between movie making and banking. Chapter 2 examines the period from 1919 until the introduction of sound around 1926, and looks at a case study involving D. W. Griffith. Chapter 3, “The Introduction of Sound and Financial Control (1927-1939), studies involving AT&T, Fox Film and Theater Corporation, and RKO. Chapter 4 looks at the period from 1940 to 1960 and is entitled “The Transitional Period and the Growth of Independent Production.” Chapter 5, “The Film Industry and Commercial Banks in the 1970s,” examines several topics including Walt Disney Production, Warner Communications, Inc., MCA Inc./Universal Pictures, Paramount (Gulf & Western Industries, Inc.), Columbia Pictures, and Hollywood banks during this decade. This work is based on research in several film archives and research centers as well as on interviews with industry and banking people and on oral histories. The work has a useful bibliography that includes government and legal documents, court cases, and unpublished material. AU - Wasko, Janet CY - Norwood, NJ DA - 1982 KW - corporations corporations motion pictures motion pictures, and finances capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures AT&T RKO Fox Film and Theater Co. Bank of America, and motion pictures Hollywood, and investment bankers Columbia Pictures Griffith, D. W. motion pictures, and independent films Paramount Pictures motion pictures, and antitrust law antitrust, and motion pictures Twentieth Century-Fox sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures United Artists Warner Bros. Walt Disney Productions Disney Hollywood Bank of America LB - 29770 PB - Ablex Publishing Corporation PY - 1982 ST - Movies and Money: Financing the American Film Industry TI - Movies and Money: Financing the American Film Industry ID - 2733 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Wasserman examines “the circumstances surrounding the invention and implementation of a particular innovation, the loading of telephone lines, which had a profound effect on the operation of the telephone industry at the turn of the century. The examination of this method for improving the transmission characteristics of long-distance telephone lines serves three principal purposes. First, I use the invention of loading as a test case to study the general process of innovation. By developing a simple model of the process of innovation (outlined in this introduction), I am able to compare the specific case of loading with an ideal type of the innovative process. Such an approach helps me identify crucial aspects of the process of innovation and provides a framework for analyzing the specific history of the invention and implementation of loading. The second purpose of the study is to understand better the evolution of technology in the telephone industry and the effect of AT&T’s experience with loading on the manner in which technological innovation was subsequently handled within the company. Finally, the study presents the detailed history of the invention and implementation of loading, an innovation that represented the first application of contemporary scientific theory to the problems of telephone transmission. This work is based on company archives: For the years before 1907, "when AT&T’s research organization was moved from Boston to New York City, the research records contained in the Boston files provide extensive documentation of research and development in this firm. These materials are now located in the AT&T Bell Laboratories Archives, Murray Hills, New Jersey, and are accessible through them. In addition, the executive files of Frank Jewett and J. J. Carty, also in AT&T Bell Laboratories Archives, contain important information concerning the evolution of research and development organizations at AT&T.” The Introduction provides a clear explanation of loading and its importance in the development of long-distance transmission. This book seems designed for historians of business and technology, especially those interested in the relation between scientific theory and technological development. It may also have served as a model for researchers at Bell Labs. Wasserman’s concluding chapter is entitled“Innovation and Economics in the Bell System.” AU - Wasserman, Neil H. CY - Baltimore DA - 1985 KW - R & D nationalism corporations corporations corporations innovation research and development networks +telephones telephones, and long distance AT & T Bell Laboratories networks networks, and telephones inventions inventors research and development, and telephones +nationalism and communication telephones, and loading LB - 5420 PB - The Johns Hopkins University Press PY - 1985 ST - From Invention to Innovation: Long-Distance Telephone Transmission at the Turn of the Century TI - From Invention to Innovation: Long-Distance Telephone Transmission at the Turn of the Century ID - 1927 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author writes that by using Innis's works on communication "as a window into his intellectual biography," he hopes to have written "a book that leads to a more profound understanding of Innis himself." (4) Watson goes on to write that "Innis was never a nationalist in the parochial sense. He believed that the continued vitality of Western civilization depended on the efforts of individual thinks whose marginal position in relation to the great centres of that civilization allowed them to develop new critical perspectives. The intellectual synthesis produced by these marginal men from generation to generation represented the lifestream of Western culture. When Innis, as a marginal intellectual, found himself unable to complete and disseminate his new critical synthesis -- his communications work -- he was led to consider a radical new possibility: the final failure of Western civilization itself." (23) This well-researched 525-page book, which began as the author's doctoral thesis, is based on the Innis Papers at the University of Toronto as well as on other archival material. AU - Watson, Alexander John CY - Toronto DA - 2006 KW - Chicago, IL nationalism time and timekeeping writing time history and new media preservation power history information storage history, and new media non-USA history Innis, Harold McLuhan, Marshall political economy present mindedness history, break with communication, and empire nationalism and communication Innis, Harold, and nationalism nationalism, and Harold Innis time space (spatial) power, and temporal bias power, and spactial bias alphabet, and technology writing, and technology alphabet Canada Chicago School materials LB - 36930 PB - University of Toronto Press PY - 2006 ST - Marginal Man: The Dark Vision of Harold Innis TI - Marginal Man: The Dark Vision of Harold Innis ID - 2715 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This exceptionally well-researched book deals with the life of Walt Disney and the impact that Disney entertainment has had on American culture. Disney was not only an entertainer, Watts argues, but also “a historical mediator. His creations helped Americans come to terms with the unsettling transformation of the twentieth century. This role was unintentional but decisive.” In addition, Watts writes, “Disney’s creative work marked a clear arc as it blazed across the American cultural sky in the middle decades of the century. In its early stages, studio productions often carried a charge of social criticism. Although immersed in fantasy and sentimentalism, Disney’s animated films often playfully provoked, pricked, and probed the conventional. They stood both inside and outside the cultural mythos of modern America, accepting its essential values while gently satirizing its weaknesses or excesses. Not coincidentally, this critical instinct flourished alongside the daring aesthetics of the ‘golden age’ of the Disney Studio. Over the next twenty years, however, critiques of the social order gradually gave way to a powerful preservationist impulse. By the 1950s, the studio’s work lost its edge even as it gained huge new popularity. Moving completely inside the mainstream culture, Disney now defined American traditions, built a cultural embankment around them, and assumed a defensive position. Yet here too it mirrored mainstream America.” (p. xvi) AU - Watts, Steven CY - Boston and New York DA - 1997 KW - corporations Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories motion pictures motion pictures and popular culture Disney, Walt biography, and Walt Disney Walt Disney Studio values values, and Disney Cold War, and Disney Disney, and Cold War Disney, and politics Disneyland modernism modernism, and Disney Disney, and modernism Disney, and populism +television television, and Disney children and media children, and Disney Disney, and children war World War II World War II, and Walt Disney Disney, and World War II Disney, and new technology war, and popular culture popular culture, and war Cold War, and popular culture children Cold War Disney popular culture biography modernity LB - 29640 PB - Houghton Mifflin Company PY - 1997 ST - The Magic Kingdom: Walt Disney and the American Way of Life TI - The Magic Kingdom: Walt Disney and the American Way of Life ID - 2711 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is a collection of essays on most aspects of film making in 1938, from the work of producers, directors, public relations people, and actors, to the significance of sound and color. A different author discusses each subject. Watts provides a brief introduction to each essay. For example, before Natalie M. Kalmus's piece on "Colour" (116-27), Watts wrote: "The history of the cinema -- itself the direct result of the revolution of photography which made animated pictures possible -- has twice been changed by revolutionary inventions. The first was sound. It came suddenly -- and stayed. The second revolution was (and is) colour. Opinions differ about colour's place in the cinema. Its transformation of the finished article of film production has not been so much like a clap of thunder as was the coming of sound. It has been more like the gradual appearance of a rainbow, creeping steadily across the sky, until its arc is complete. There are still black-and-white films showing and being made, but the proportion of films being made in colour shows such a steady increase that to deny the approach of the day when the black-and-white film will be an anachronism is to ally oneself dangerously with the people who, ten years ago and less, were saying that nothing could ever supersede the silent film." (114) [emphasis added] AU - Watts, Stephen, ed. CY - London DA - 1938 KW - Kalmus, Herbert censorship censorship motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Technicolor, and Natalie Kalmus Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color censorship, and Natalie Kalmus ref, secondary color, and primitives color, and cinematographers color, and novelty color, and music Kalmus, Natalie, and color music color, and sound films sound recording sound recording, and color ref, secondary color, and Nature color, and personality personality, and color color, as revolution in movies advertising and public relations motion pictures, and public relations public relations, and motion pictures quotations metaphors quotations, and color film as rainbow quotations, and color film as revolution metaphors, and color film as rainbow advertising personality public relations LB - 41290 PB - Arthur Barker, Ltd. PY - 1938 ST - Behind the Screen: How Films Are Made TI - Behind the Screen: How Films Are Made ID - 4228 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Weber, Dianne, comp. (under direction of Katherine Shervis) CY - Madison, WI DA - 1971 KW - networks +aeronautics and space communication +bibliographies bibliographies, and teleconferencing teleconferencing, and bibliography bibliographies, and satellites cable, television telecommunications networks, and teleconferencing satellites cable teleconferencing LB - 4090 PB - EDSAT Center, University of Wisconsin PY - 1971 TT - Teleconferencing: A Bibliography ID - 1797 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - A biography of Joseph Locke, another seminal figure in the development of the railways both in Britain and on the Continent and a student of George Stephenson. This work concentrates on the industry itself and the contributions Locke made to it. Details about his personal life are peripheral and added for aesthetic narrative purposes rather than as essential subject matter. Webster makes an even-handed and critical, rather than celebratory, assessment of Locke, mentioning both his strengths and shortcomings. Sources include Locke’s letters and manuscripts, as well as early twentieth-century secondary quotations from his autobiography, never published and now lost. This work is not footnoted, but does include the content of many primary source letters and memoranda in the body of the text. --Nicholas Wolf AU - Webster, N. W. CY - London DA - 1970 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories non-USA Wolf, Nicholas +transportation Great Britain railroads Great Britain, and railroads railroads, and Great Britain Europe Europe, and railroads railroads, and Europe biography Locke, Joseph, and railroads LB - 2060 PB - George Allen & Unwin Ltd. PY - 1970 ST - Joseph Locke: Railway Revolutionary TI - Joseph Locke: Railway Revolutionary ID - 294 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The dilemma confronting American statesmen and intellectuals from the 1780s onward concerned the philosophic reconciliation between the espousal of natural rights and subjugation of nationalities that stood in the way of territorial expansion. Nationalism, as defined by seventeenth- and eighteenth-century philosophers, extended to identifiable ethnic groups, which would include the various Indian tribes inhabiting the North American continent. Beginning with this Indian “problem,” expansionist ideologues concocted a flexible theory of why the natural rights of one nationality — Americans— should take precedence over others. From continentalism, this theory subsumed imperialism to justify acquisition of land for the Panama Canal, naval bases in the Pacific and Caribbean, and protectorates. Although Weinberg does little in this work to connect American expansion to communication technology, he does note that John L. O'Sullivan's Democratic Review first used the phrase "Manifest Destiny" in the debate of the annexation of Texas in 1845. --James Landers AU - Weinberg, Albert K. CY - Gloucester, MA DA - 1958 KW - nationalism +nationalism and communication manifest destiny, and Democratic Review American mission O'Sullivan, John L. Landers, James American exceptionalism nationalism, and mission LB - 10910 PB - Peter Smith PY - 1958 ST - Manifest Destiny: A Study of Nationalist Expansion in American History TI - Manifest Destiny: A Study of Nationalist Expansion in American History ID - 2453 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Weinberg discusses the color arrangements and combinations and how they might be applied to dress, the home, businesses, the theater, and to community plays in this 343-page book. This work grew out of a course he gave entitled "Color and Its Applications, Based on a Study of Museum Originals," at the Metropolitan Museum of Art for New York University. (xiv-xv) Weinberg says that "the most casual thought must reveal that color is the medium of some of our most exquisite sensations and that it is intimately associated with our most varied moods." (3) Color is connected with modern life but the "mere use of intenser colors does not make one a 'modern' in the best sense of the word," he argues. "The essence of a truly modern use of color is a truly modern knowledge of color properties." (12) This book is divided into 20 chapters. After an opening chapter entitled "Color in Everyday Life," Weinberg devotes chapters to "What Color Is and How It Act," "Choosing a Color Combination," and chapters on color in dress, the home, and business. Chapter 8 is "The Physics of Color and Color Principles," chapter 9 is "The Threefold Aspect of Color," and Chapter 10 is "Nomenclature and Color Standards." Then follow several chapters discussing color schemes and color harmony. Chapter 17 is "Color-Music and Color-Moods." Weinberg asks: "What change in emotional suggestions does a color undergo as it varies from its purest intensities through its reduced intensities to gray?" He comments on gray. "Gray as such, in its lack of intensity or hue, varies from light to dark. It is associated in the lighter values with sophisticated moods, refinements, and subtleties. In the darker values, it is mysterious," he writes. (309) "A pure color grayed loses something of its quality and approaches the sophistication, refinement and subtlety, even the mystery of gray. Thus, yellow slightly grayed is less active, less intense, less joyous; it is milder and still stimulating if only moderately grayed; but wan and strangely faded if more positively grayed. It would appear then that dulled color has a slightly wan, tired, spectral, subtle appearance and suggest sophistication as against the primitive freshness of even the dark, intensely pure colors." (309) Chapter 18 , which deals with "Color Illumination," examines the "Gay White Way" as as symbol, and the use of lighted streets, fountains, and using colored searchlights to project colored images on clouds and steam. It also covers the use of color in electric signs. "Colored illumination is a subject all the more interesting because although it is only in its infancy, it gives every promise of transforming the surface aspect of life in the decades to come," Weinberg says. (310) He notes that the "Gay White Way" has become a powerful symbol of electrical lighting. "Under stress of competition new novelties are evolved and a warmer and richer glamour of colored light envelops the principal thoroughfares of business and amusement." (310) At present, the author observes, "the streets of American cities as lighted ... are cold and glaring. The arc lights are most of them disagreeable and annoying centers of retinal irritation." (317) In this chapter, Weinberg comments on the effect of lighting on actors and acting. "The vaudeville actor who wishes to impersonate a drug addict, or to tell a mystery story, has the blue or green spot-light thrown upon his face. [emphasis added] The preference for warm tones had best be recognized in selecting lamp shades, and even the desire for novelty of effect should be restrained and carefully considered before deciding upon a scheme in which cold lamp shades are employed as a dominant color note." (314) Weinberg here also notes the importance of color electric signs by 1918 in urban centers such as New York City. "Of recent years the electric display signs have shown an increased recognition on the part of their designers of the value of color effects. Brilliance in itself is no longer sufficient. Neither is the large attention-getting factor of motion in the lights. Planned color effects, combining brilliance, motion and color novelty and imagination are now sought." (321) (emphasis added) After describing a recently erected electrical sign in New York, Weinberg concludes: "This may be the beginning of a new art of the skies, in which men of the color talent and fantasy of a Monticelli or a Prendergast will execute in colored bulbs upon a skeleton of iron, imaginative scenes of rippling colors, ladies in brocades and silks and satins, walking beneath autumn groves, while blue seas spotted with white sails gleam in the distance." (322) Chapter 19 covers "Color in the Theatre." The theater is to keep it grip on the public imagination, it "must exploit every one of its resources to the fullest limit of emotional effect," the author says. "Color is one element in the producer's mood compelling magic box." (324) Weinberg associates color with Orientalism and the exotic in the theater. "In the performances of 'Kismet' and of 'Sumurun,' in New York sev- 324/325 eral years ago, one had an opportunity to compare the realistic photographic stage with the modern suggestive color setting. Kismet attempted an absolute duplication of a street scene in Cairo; the bodily lifting of the scene from Cairo to an American stage. In Sumurun a palace scene though it was quite obviously conventionalized and simplified had a quality of Orientalism, an exotic richness of color, a suggestion of wanton luxury and riotous splendor which no absolutely photographic reproduction could have equaled." (324-325) (emphasis added) The author argues that "well planned ... color and well controlled ... lighting, can act as the very mirror of the play's mood, reflecting its every transition by subtle changes." (326) Well executed color schemes have saved musicals. "The amount of pleasure which the eye can derive from beautifully proportioned, beautifully combined colors is demonstrated by the success of these Revues. The eye-filling pictures make them. People who absolutely deny the Picasso idea, who would laugh at the freakishness of one of his abstract painting, here look at a seet representing 'Madam Y's 329/330 millinery shop' and though they enjoy the effect, fail to realize that their enjoyment is based upon the mathematically just balance of spacing, of warm and cold colors, advancing and receding, intense and dulled, high and low value hues, combined with interesting contrasts of textures." (329-330) "The desirability for community play with color used as a means of group expression" is the topic of the final chapter, "Color in Community Play." (334) Writing during World War I in 1918, Weinberg says that among the social uses of color, two of the most important have been "sex allure and military ardor" but that there are many other possibilities. (341) "The amount of thought given to color in dress by women is largely biologic in origin. It is fundamentally based on the desire to attract and hold attention, to stimulate interest and desire just as is the evolution of color in birds' plumage, and in flower forms. The military flag is an evidence of the tribal recognition of the value of color symbolism and of the stirring power of a color design blowing in the breeze. As important as the drummer-boy in the old charge was the color-bearer. But between these two extremes of sex allure and military ardor, the social value of color has not been recognized or applied." (341) Weinberg urges using color in military recruiting, inculcating patriotism and a sense of community spirit. "If color is so moving why should the city, state and nation not avail themselves of its power to throw about community life and national life that glamour which it is in color to evoke." (341) And, if "color can be utilized in war time to help arouse emotions, it can be used still more beautifully and effectively in times of peace in community celebrations and in community play, to create a group emotion, a common feeling of joy." (342) The use of color and electricity can be used to promote holiday celebrations. "With the aid of the new and growing art of color in electric illumination, the lakes, squares, river fronts, bridges and fountains could become the centers of imagination-stirring and mood-compelling effects." (342) Weinberg concludes by saying that "the art of color expression is in its infancy" and predicting "that the future will see color spectacles on a scale and order of beauty and effectiveness such as would make a Venetian carnival seems a pale tinted candle flame by contrast." (343) AU - Weinberg, Louis CY - New York DA - 1918 KW - theater theater magic home emotion decadence ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color color, in history color, and theory color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations theater and stage color, and theater theater, and color censorship and ratings media effects color, media effects media effects, and color color, and sensuality sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color lighting lighting, and color color, and lighting color, and music lighting, and theater theater, and lighting censorship color, and nationalism nationlism, and color nationalism and communication advertising and public relations color, and advertising advertising, and color home and new media home, and color color, and home electricity electricity, and color color, and electricity electricity, and signs motion pictures motion pictures, and black and white color, and gray color, and drug use color lighting, and drug use theater, and magic color, and magic magic, and color magic, and theater advertising, and garish lighting lighting, and harsh light women women, and color color, and women color, and patriotism patriotism, and color color, and spectacles nationalism, and spectacles ref, book electricity, and electric signs advertising nationalism patriotism LB - 39970 PB - Moffat, Yard and Company PY - 1918 ST - Color in Everyday Life: A Manual for Lay Students, Artisans and Artists TI - Color in Everyday Life: A Manual for Lay Students, Artisans and Artists ID - 4095 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Weinberger, Sharon CY - New York DA - 2006 KW - military communication nationalism and communication nationalism LB - 50 PB - Nation Books PY - 2006 ST - Imaginary Weapons: A Journey through the Pentagon's Scientific Underworld TI - Imaginary Weapons: A Journey through the Pentagon's Scientific Underworld ID - 4 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - A compilation of essays about the sex industry, Sex for Sale, is a valuable work that is neither a jeremiad complaining about the immorality of the sex industry, nor is it a paean to the liberation afforded by women in stripping and doing other sex work. Edited by Ronald Weitzer, an associate professor of sociology at George Washington University, Sex for Sale begins with an introduction that defends the necessity of such book, a common conceit for authors of works on sex. The sheer size of the porn and sex industry, $8 billion, is explained as one of the justifications for Sex for Sale. He also trots out the percentage of Americans who watch porn movies, pay for phone sex, and shell out cash for prostitutes. Most books fall prey to sweeping claims about the sex industry, Weitzer writes, and the goal of this book is to avoid this. To demonstrate, he explains the difference between indoor and outdoor prostitute: indoor prostitutes (call girls) are rarely arrested, receive higher pay, and are safer than outdoor prostitutes (street walkers). He also believes that not enough has been written about men in the sex industry, hence Sex for Sale contains articles on male customers (it is notoriously difficult to find those who will consent to be interviewed). According to Weitzer, he commissioned this volume because, “we need a more careful examination of the ways in which sex workers themselves experience and describe their work (negatively, positively, or indifferently), the operations of specific sectors within the industry, and the politics and control of sex work (p.3).” The book is divided into three sections: Perspectives of sex workers and customers; victimization, risk behavior, and support services; and politics, policing, and the sex industry. The first section, on customers and sex workers, presents interviews and ethnographies with porn stars, telephone sex workers, “johns”, and prostitutes/call girls. In Sharon Abbott’s “Motivations for Pursuing an Acting Career in Pornography,” she has interviewed porn actresses and actors, directors, and others involved with production. Not surprisingly, she discovers that male actors enter porn “to get laid,” while women enter for fame and money. Both stay for the freedom the job gives them. Women soon find out that there isn’t that much money to be made unless you are a superstar (the average scene pays $500). The next section details the sordid side of sex work, the drug addicts and the desperation in many prostitutes’ lives. A notable essay is Judith Porter and Louis Bonilla’s “Drug Use, HIV, and the Ecology of Street Prostitution.” The researchers interviewed prostitutes in North Philadelphia and found that most of the white prostitutes were heroin addicts and the black were crack addicts. The white prostitutes had been shunned by their families, whereas the black prostitutes remained on good terms with them. Many of the white prostitutes had not been tested for HIV, but the researchers all thought the chance that they were infected was very high. The third section focuses on the legal side of the sex industry, with essays on “The Politics of Prostitution in America,” legal brothels in Nevada, strippers’ working conditions and lap dancing. In Kathryn Hausbeck and Barbara G. Brents’ “Inside Nevada’s Brothel Industry,” the authors provide a historical analysis of why brothels are still legal in Nevada (it has to do with an “old western” ethos and the fact that a lot of miners worked out in Nevada). Hausbeck and Brents contrast the old west with the new west, and find many of the same principles still around in Nevada. For example, there is still a “migrant economy” that they serve but it now includes truckers and construction workers in addition to miners. -Hallie Lieberman AU - Weitzer, Ronald, ed. CY - New York DA - 2000 KW - Lieberman, Hallie sexuality women sexuality, and women women, and sexuality sexuality, and men sexuality, and prostitution pornography sexuality, and pornography pornography, and history of sexuality, and history of motion pictures, and pornography television, and pornography television motion pictures LB - 33300 PB - Routledge PY - 2000 ST - Sex for Sale: Prostitution, Pornography, and the Sex Industry TI - Sex for Sale: Prostitution, Pornography, and the Sex Industry ID - 88 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author is a critic of unthinkingly enthusiasm about computers and sees a difference between human intelligence and artificial intelligence. AU - Weizenbaum, Joe CY - San Francisco DA - 1976 KW - computers values community democracy computers values +computers and the Internet computers, and society values, and computers human nature +artificial intelligence and biotechnology democracy and media critics computers, and human nature LB - 3080 PB - Freeman PY - 1976 ST - Computer Power and Human Reason TI - Computer Power and Human Reason ID - 1700 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This 431-page book devotes chapters to each years from 1839 to 1900. In addition to the author’s text, the work reprints newspaper and journal articles from the time. The author also quotes liberally from his sources. Numerous black-and-white photographs illustrated the book, many excellent images of places and personalities during the 19th century. The work is divided into three sections. Part I, Solitary Beginnings,” covers 1839 through 1859. The first section (1839-1985) deals with “The Young Daguerreans.” The second (1852-1859) covers “Perfecting the Negative Processes.” Part II, “The ‘Wet-Plate’ Era,” begins in 1860 and runs through 1880. The first section (1860-1867) treats the "Card Photography Revolution.” The second (1868-1880) are called “The Fraternal Years.” Such topics as Mathew Brady’s bankruptcy, early photojournalism, and Eadweard Muybridge are covered. Part III, “Dawn of the Modern Era,” runs from 1881 to the end of the century. It has three section. One (1881-1888) deals with “Dry Plates, Roll Film, and Motion Pictures.” The second (1889-1893) is on the “Kodak Revolution.” The third (1894-1900) is on “‘New Schools’ and Business Trusts.” The work has a short bibliography and index, as well as a section entitled “Principal Holdings of Nineteenth-Century American Photographic Journals.” AU - Welling, William CY - New York DA - 1978 KW - Muybridge, Edward magic illustrations corporations corporations photography motion pictures Edison, Thomas photography and visual communication illustrations photography, and Albumen glass negative process photography, and ambrotype American Photographic Society Anthony, Edward Bachrach, David, Jr. stereoscope photography, and stereoscope photography, and wet plate process photography, and dry plate photography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and photography Brady, Mathew photography, and collodion process cameras, and photography photography, and cameras cameras, detective photography, and detective cameras photography, and carbon process daguerreotype Eastman, George Eastman Kodak Kodak Edison, Thomas, and photography half tones photochemical printing photography, and half tones photography, and photochemical printing Ives, Frederic magic lanterns photography, and magic lanterns photography, and lenses Morse, Samuel, and daguerreotype Muybridge, Eadweard Niepce, Joseph Nicephore photography, and patents photography, and film (paper based) photography, and paper color color, and photography photography, and color photography, instant photography, and American West photo engraving photography, and night photography, and electric light electricity, and photography photography, and slides photography, and stereoscopic photos Talbot, William Fox cameras electricity Morse, Samuel LB - 270 PB - Thomas Y. Crowell Company PY - 1978 ST - Photography in America: The Formative Years, 1839-1900 TI - Photography in America: The Formative Years, 1839-1900 ID - 116 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Although this book has no footnotes or bibliography, it is informative and includes discussion of the U-2 spy plane. AU - Wensberg, Peter C. CY - Boston DA - 1987 KW - photography +military communication war reconnaissance +photography and visual communication +photography and visual communication U-2 plane reconnaissance, aerial Land, Edwin Polaroid photography, instant LB - 1990 PB - Houghton Mifflin Company PY - 1987 ST - Land’s Polaroid: A Company and the Man Who Invented It TI - Land’s Polaroid: A Company and the Man Who Invented It ID - 1595 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The author of this book is a former history professor and U.S. Air Force pilot, who has written earlier works on aviation history. While much of Chasing the Silver Bullet is devoted to the development in military aircraft between the Vietnam War and the 1991 Gulf War, Werrell gives considerable attention to innovations in communication technology. Chapter 1, "USAF Aircraft in Vietnam," deals with both manned and unmanned vehicles. The last pages of the chapter talk about B-52s and drones. Part of chapter 2 discusses the use of sensors during the Vietnam War. Project Igloo White, which originated in 1966-1967, used electronic sensors in an effort to detect movement of troops from North to South Vietnam. Project Shed Light involved using infrared detectors. Chapter 7 is entitled "Precision-Guided Munitions: Unprecedented Accuracy." Chapter 9 (“Command and Control”) and Chapter 10 (“Space: Employing the High Ground”) also cover communication-related technologies. Chapter 9 deals with developments in radar. Chapter 10 looks at the emergence of satellites, for reconnaissance and for communication. The author discusses specific U. S. Air Force and Naval satellites and the use of satellites for early warning systems, weather, and navigation. Chapter 11, “USAF Technology in Action: Planning and Combat in the Gulf War,” then explains how these technologies came into play in 1991, with attention paid to unmanned vehicles, selection of strategic targets, and achieving air superiority. Chapter 12, “The Ground War: Victory in the Desert,” explains how such programs as Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System (JSTARS) aided ground forces. This chapter also discusses precision-guided weapons, and “Space at War.” AU - Werrell, Kenneth P. CY - Washington, D.C. DA - 2003 KW - R & D USSR corporations corporations corporations Kennedy, John F. Eisenhower, Dwight D. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) Advanced Research Projects Agency Soviet Union, and space Vietnam War Vietnam War sensors reconnaissance presidents, and new media RAND Corporation research and development war Lockheed Martin Co. Kennedy administration Eisenhower administration war non-USA military communication aeronautics and space communication satellites satellites, and military satellites, and communication DARPA ARPA Sputnik radar rocketry military communication, and AWACS military communication, and JSTARS satellites, and warning systems satellites, and weather satellites, and navigation Gulf War, 1991 Desert Storm, and technology satellites, and U.S. Air Force satellites, and U.S. Navy Eisenhower, Dwight, and satellites Kennedy, John F., and satellites Vietnam War, and technology satellites, and communication reconnaissance, and satellites satellites, and reconnaissance military-industrial complex lasers laser guided bombs Persian Gulf War (1991) Soviet Union satellites, and Soviet Union Soviet Union, and satellites World War II World War II, and radar radar, and World War II radar, and Cold War sensors, electronic Vietnam War, and electronic sensors sensors, and Vietnam War War sensors, Project Igloo White Igloo White, Vietnam War and sensors Shed Light, infrared detectors sensors, infrared sensors, infrared, and Vietnam War Vietnam War, and infrared sensors McNamara, Robert, and sensors sensors, electronic, and Robert McNamara RAND think tank, and reconnaissance satellites satellites, and RAND think tank precision-guided weapons drones, and Vietnam War Vietnam War, and drones LB - 290 PB - Smithsonian Books PY - 2003 ST - Chasing the Silver Bullet: U. S. Air Force Weapons Development from Vietnam to Desert Storm TI - Chasing the Silver Bullet: U. S. Air Force Weapons Development from Vietnam to Desert Storm ID - 118 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The psychiatrist Fredric Wertham condemned the comic book industry and criticized television in Seduction of the Innocent (1953) for their exploitation of violence and sex. “What all media need at present is a rollback of sadism,” he argued. Wertham's work was referred to often during the 1950s and 1960s in congressional hearings that examined the connection between mass media and juvenile delinquency. AU - Wertham, Fredric CY - New York DA - 1953 KW - media effects media violence comic books +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence violence, and popular culture violence, and comics comic books, and violence +television television, and violence violence, and television LB - 17100 PB - Rinehart & Company PY - 1953 ST - Seduction of the Innocent TI - Seduction of the Innocent ID - 644 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The psychiatrist Fredric Wertham condemned the comic book industry and criticized television in Seduction of the Innocent (1953) for their exploitation of sex and violence. “What all media need at present is a rollback of sadism,” he argued. In A Sign for Cain (1966), he discussed violence in a broad social context and indicated that mass communication was only one part of the problem, but it was a critical factor because, for the young, mass media (films, TV, radio, comic books, magazines) had become schools for violence. Movie violence was dangerous, he thought, because it devalued human life and led viewers to become indifferent to that devaluation. AU - Wertham, Fredric CY - New York DA - 1966 KW - violence media effects media violence mass media comic books +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence violence, and popular culture violence, and comics comic books, and violence +television television, and violence violence, and television violence, and mass media mass media, and violence Smith, Margaret Chase Wertham, Fredric LB - 21700 N1 - See also: media PB - Macmillan Company PY - 1966 ST - A Sign for Cain: An Exploration of Human Violence TI - A Sign for Cain: An Exploration of Human Violence ID - 931 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book provides a great deal of information about the state of surveillance technologies in the United States in 1970. "To its profound distress, the American public has recently learned of a revolution in the techniques by which public and private authorities can conduct scientific surveillance over the individual," write Westin. a strong of privacy and individual freedom. "The real need is to move from public awareness of the problem to a sensitive discussion of what can be done to protect privacy in an age when so many forces of science, technology, environment, and society press against it from all sides." (3) AU - Westin, Alan F. CY - New York DA - 1970 KW - computers tape recording, magnetic surveillance , law freedom censorship and ratings home and new media home, and privacy privacy privacy, and new media subliminal stimulation law, and privacy privacy, and law law, and new media law, and surveillance technologies computers and the Internet computers, and privacy office sound recording sound recording, and surveillance sound recording, and privacy sound recording, and bugging privacy, and bugging photography photography, and privacy cameras cameras, and privacy civil liberties, and new media eavesdropping privacy, and eavesdropping radio radio, and privacy television television, and privacy magnetic recording, audio magnetic recording, and privacy tape recorders, and privacy privacy, and taperecorders wiretapping privacy, and wiretapping telephones telephones, and privacy telephones, and wiretapping civil liberties home magnetic recording tape recording computers LB - 32340 PB - Atheneum PY - 1970 ST - Privacy and Freedom TI - Privacy and Freedom ID - 2896 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Wheen, Francis CY - New York DA - 1985 KW - +television television, and history of LB - 7490 PB - Century Publishing PY - 1985 ST - Television: A History TI - Television: A History ID - 2119 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Kristen Whissel uses the theme of traffic to examine the relationship between early cinema, modernity, and American nationalism. Starting with a theoretical foundation laid by Walter Benjamin, Georg Simmels, Michel Foucault, and others, her study attempts to look “beyond the urban settings familiar in early film studies and outward toward systems and networks of traffic.” (10) What distinguishes her work from earlier research, she contends, is her detailed attention paid to “the national specificity of the experience of American modernity.” (11) Whissel first considers the connection between cinema and empire in an opening chapter that examines the ways early silent films covered American involvement in the Spanish-American and the Philippine-American wars. Of interest here are the sizeable number of films made during this period. Many were produced by the Edison Manufacturing Co. Whissel argues that these films contributed to a “new image of martial masculinity.” (23) Some of these films exploited “the turn-of-the-century ‘cult of the body’” and charged “imperial ideology with pleasure by making available life-sized moving images of the militarized male body in a state of partial undress.” (45) Whissel devotes a chapter two to live battle reenactments such as William F. “Buffalo Bill” Cody’s Wild West show, and “how the cinema borrowed the reality effects of the live reenactment to place its own spectators on the simulated ‘scene’ of history….” (15) She explains how battle reenactments in the “Buffalo Bill” Wild West show and moving images of Theodore Roosevelt’s Rough Riders reflected different phases of American expansionism, and how together they “solidified a sense of historical continuity between the new overseas imperialism … and its earlier continental phase….” (83) Whissel also examines how cinema at the turn of the century tried to incorporate women into U. S. imperialism, and in so doing, “helped transform perception of their work in the public sphere….” (109) Her discussion of “the heroic femininity embodied by the Red Cross nurse” is especially interesting. (104) A third chapter deals with the Pan-American Exposition in 1901 in Buffalo, and sets early film and modern traffic into the larger context of the spread of electrification. She notes that new technology made it possible for “the motion picture camera to pan fluidly on its axis” and allowed Edwin S. Porter to shoot the exposition “and its electric spectacles almost exclusively -- even obsessively -- as circular panoramas.” (137) This chapter sets cinema and American modernity within the context of what a 1907 Vitagraph film called “Liquid Electricity” (156) Chapter 4 examines the way early twentieth-century films such as Traffic in Souls (1913) and Shoes (1916) sensationalized the white slave trade and contributed to a moral panic in America. A concluding chapter covers cinema before and after the American entry into World War I, but not in the same detail as the opening chapter that discusses the Spanish-American and Philippine-American wars. Nevertheless, Whissel covers some interesting movies including Frank Lloyd’s The Intrigue (1916), Cecil De Mille’s The Little American (1917), and Winsor McKay’s The Sinking of the Lusitania (1918). In The Intrigue, and American scientist “invents a wireless X-ray gun that has the power instantaneously ‘to kill, with mathematical precision, at a distance of twenty-five miles.’” (226) Whissel’s book rests on a blend of previous research and new sources. She has an excellent command of the secondary literature. She follows the work of such scholars as Charles Musser, Richard Abel, Tom Gunning, Richard Slotkin in cinema history; Walter LaFeber in U. S. diplomatic history; and a wide range of other historians who have written about masculinity, racism, modernity, and related topics. Whissel also builds on the work of these researchers by using new materials. In discussing moving pictures, she makes good use of catalogue descriptions of films that passed between manufacturers and exhibitors. In discussing the “Buffalo Bill” Wild West show and the Pan-American Exposition, she draws on programs and guidebooks prepared at the time of these events. In addition, she utilizes articles in such late-nineteenth and early twentieth-century magazines as Century, Everybody’s Magazine, and the Atlantic Monthly. The major weakness of this book is stylistic. This is a densely written work with sometimes lengthy paragraphs (one runs from p. 49 to p. 53). The names of Whissel’s secondary sources appear frequently in the text and they are quoted extensively throughout. There are errors. For example, the quotation on page 21 attributed to Captain John W. Philip of the USS Texas in Century (Aug. 1898) was actually from Captain Francis A. Cook of the USS Brooklyn in the same magazine in May, 1898. Cook’s article does not appear in the bibliography. AU - Whissel, Kristen CY - Durham DA - 2008 KW - nationalism history motion pictures military communication nationalism and communication presidents and new media McKinley, William Roosevelt, Theodore motion pictures, and William McKinley motion pictures, and Theodore Roosevelt war motion pictures, and Spanish-American War motion pictures, and Philippine-American War Pan American Exposition (1901) electricity electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity electricity, and modernity modernity, and electricity motion pictures, and modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and military communication military communication, and motion pictures sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sexuality history and new media history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history Buffalo Bill Show World War I World War I, and motion pictures motion pictures, and World War I censorship and ratings motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and white slavery films motion pictures, silent Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Thomas Edison Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures women women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women women, and Red Cross motion pictures, and Rough Riders death rays motion pictures, and death rays death rays, and motion pictures De Mille, Cecil censorship modernity LB - 41640 PB - Duke University Press PY - 2008 ST - Picturing American Modernity: Traffic, Technology, and the Silent Cinema TI - Picturing American Modernity: Traffic, Technology, and the Silent Cinema ID - 4262 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book, a result of the Hutchins Commission’s work, offers a decent historical overview of the development of radio from the earliest experiments with wireless communication. Among the interesting information is a discussion of global short-wave broadcasting which was discovered almost by accident. The work notes that KDKA’s early broadcasts were picked up in London and Calcutta. It also discusses the advent of frequency modulation (FM) radio which had advantages over amplitude modulation (AM) radio in that it offered clearer reception. FM’s disadvantage was that the range of FM stations was confined to a local area. The Commission made eight recommendations regarding radio. The last urged that “in order to establish radio, television, and facsimile broadcasting clearly within the meaning of the term ‘press’ as protected by the First Amendment, the industry appeal to the courts any actual cases of interference by government with freedom of expression on public affairs via radio, and that the F.C.C. co-operate in making such appeals possible.” AU - White, Llewellyn CY - Chicago DA - 1947 KW - presses FM radio Federal Communications Commission (FCC) censorship and ratings democracy and media democracy news and journalism regulation freedom law non-USA regulation press +radio radio, and FM radio, and AM amplitude modulation, and radio radio, and AM fequency modeulation (FM radio) radio, and FM radio, and shortwave shortwave radio global communication, and radio press, defined Hutchins Commission facsimile First Amendment, and radio wireless communication regulation, and radio FCC +duplicating technologies First Amendment global communication radio, and amplitude modulation radio, and First Amendment LB - 6000 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1947 ST - The American Radio: A Report on the Broadcasting Industry in the United States from The Commission on Freedom of the Press TI - The American Radio: A Report on the Broadcasting Industry in the United States from The Commission on Freedom of the Press ID - 1985 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - With respect to communication, Whitehead’s chapter VI on “The Nineteenth Century,” is perhaps most directly relevant. “What is peculiar and new to the century, differentiating it from all its predecessors, is its technology,” he said. “The greatest invention of the nineteenth century was the invention of the method of invention. A new method entered into life. In order to understand our epoch, we can neglect all the details of change, such as railways, telegraphs, radios, spinning machines, synthetic dyes. We must concentrate on the method in itself; that is the real novelty, which has broken up the foundations of the old civilization.” He goes on to say that the “whole change has arisen from the new scientific information.” AU - Whitehead, Alfred North CY - New York DA - 1925, 1962 KW - technology preservation communication revolution innovation history, and new media history science history general studies Industrial Revolution history, break with inventions invention of invention scientific revolution scientific method novelty information age communication revolution scientific information technology and society history, and technology inventors LB - 1290 PB - Macmillan Company PY - 1925 ST - Science and the Modern World: Lowell Lectures, 1925 TI - Science and the Modern World: Lowell Lectures, 1925 ID - 1525 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this book, Wiener attempted to explain cybernetics to a general audience. The work is therefore less technical than Wiener’s earlier Cybernetics: or, Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine (New York: J. Wiley, 1948). The opening chapter, “What Is Cybernetics?,” discusses such terms as “entropy,” “control,” and “feedback.” Wiener’s thesis is that “society can only be understood through a study of the messages and the communication facilities which belong to it; and that in the future development of these messages and communication facilities, messages between man and machines, between machines and man, and between machine and machine, are destined to play an ever-increasing part.” The book is aimed “primarily for Americans in the American environment.” The book’s twelve chapters are devoted to such themes as “The History of Language,” “Law and Communication,” “Communication and Secrecy in the Modern World,” “The First and Second Industrial Revolution, and “Some Communication Machines and Their Future.” Among the devices discussed in the latter chapter was the Vocoder, a machine that would make speech visible for the deaf, and chess-playing computers. Wiener’s discussion of a first and second industrial revolution is interesting. Here he has insightful things to say about the changes brought by electric motors and vacuum tubes. The “change-over in engineering between mechanical connections and electrical connections” was highly significant, he writes. Electrical motors were a method of power distribution in which it was “very convenient to construct in small sizes, so that the individual machine may have its own motor.” Among other things, this development was bringing about a new conception of the factory. Of equal importance was the vacuum tube, not only because it altered “the fundamental postulational conditions of industry,” but because it made possible powerful computers that made possible a “new automatic age.” Wiener saw computer-driven automation primarily influencing factory work, potentially freeing workers from repetitive tasks and giving them possibilities for greater leisure and cultural development. He also believe automation could bring massive unemployment that would make “the depression of the thirties ... seem a pleasant joke.” There were areas, though, that Wiener did not think computers would make a difference: “I cannot see automatic machinery of the judgment-replacing type coming into use in the corner grocery, or in the corner garage,” he wrote. AU - Wiener, Norbert CY - Boston DA - 1950 KW - technology motors Information Age computers information theory corporations corporations wireless communication values progress communication revolution Industrial Revolution materials materials communication revolution, and second industrial revolution +computers and the Internet computers Wiener, Norbert Shannon, Claude cybernetics vacuum tubes +electricity electricity, motor electric motors motors, electric Vocoder computers, and chess second industrial revolution technology and society automation computers, and factories computers, and automation computers, and unemployment vacuum tubes, and computers computers, and vacuum tubes values, and cybernetics Bell Laboratories +telephones telephones, and vacuum tubes +radio radio, and vacuum tubes wireless communication, and vacuum tubes computing machines cybernetics, and feedback Industrial Revolution, and cybernetics second industrial revolution, and cybernetics information, and cybernetics patents intellectual property progress, and cybernetics labor labor, and automation labor, and computers values communication revolution LB - 12470 N1 - See also: office PB - Houghton Mifflin Company PY - 1950 ST - The Human Use of Human Beings: Cybernetics and Society TI - The Human Use of Human Beings: Cybernetics and Society ID - 2594 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book has much information about the preservation of color photographs and motion pictures. The shift away from black-and-white to color photography began in 1935 and 1936 with introduction of Agfachrome and Kodachrome transparency film, then later in 1942 with Kodacolor color negative film, and Eastman Color movie film in 1950. The move to color accelerated rapidly during the 1960s. John F. Kennedy was the first American president to be photographed primarily in color. Many types of color film, though, are very unstable and deteriorate rapidly. Some of the color pictures of Kennedy taken with Ektacolor color negative film, for example, has degraded even though it is stored in cold storage vaults. This book’s twenty chapters run almost 750 pages. The work is richly illustrated. While many of the chapters deal with the best methods available (as of 1993) to store and preserve color pictures, there is also a significant amount about the history of color photography. Chapter 1, “Traditional and Digital Color Prints, Color Negatives, and Color Slides: Which Product Last Longest?,” discusses the development of different types of color photography during the twentieth century. It also includes recommendations about which materials last the longest. Chapter 10 is about “The Extraordinarily Stable Technicolor Dye-Imbibition Motion Picture Color Print Process (1932-1978).” The authors’ notes and references for each chapters are helpful for further study. AU - Wilhelm, Henry (with Carol Brower, contributing author) CY - Grinnell, IA DA - 1993 KW - illustrations Fuji film computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) Library of Congress Kennedy, John F. magnetic recording photography presidents, and new media primary sources preservation history and new media preservation microfiche, microfilm, microform libraries Kennedy administration archives history, and new media materials materials magnetic tape digitization non-USA history +motion pictures photography +photography and visual communication +information storage information storage, and color photography color photography, color historical preservation history, break with preservation, and electronic media Eastman Color Agfachrome Kodachrome Kodacolor Kennedy, John F., and photography photography, black-and-white photography, digital CD-ROMs +computers and the Internet computers computers, and digital photography digital imaging digital media +duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and photography duplicating technologies, and digital media Fuji color film photography, instant Library of Congress, and photography microfilm microfiche Mitsubishi Color paper paper, and photography Polaroid photography, and presidential libraries prints photography, and refrigeration +television motion pictures, and colorization Turner Broadcasting System VCRs videotape color, and digital imaging color, and Agfacolor color, and Technicolor color, and Eastman Color color, and Kodachrome color, and Kodacolor information storage, and the Internet information storage, and technology illustrations archives, and color photographs preservation, and color photography archives materials Turner, Ted Kodak LB - 12070 PB - Preservation Publishing Company ST - The Permanence and Care of Color Photographs: Traditional and Digital Color Prints, Color Negatives, Slides, and Motion Pictures TI - The Permanence and Care of Color Photographs: Traditional and Digital Color Prints, Color Negatives, Slides, and Motion Pictures ID - 2554 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The timing, title, and theme of this book was influenced by George Orwell's novel, 1984. "The struggle that democracy faces in Britain," Will writes, "involves a battle on two fronts. One battle will be to prevent confrontational political, economic and social policies degenerating into violent insurrection. The other will be to ensure that specious calls for measures of increased security, and the application of security technology, do not achieve by an erosion of liberty what insurrection would seek to achieve by violence. Totalitarianism would be the inevitable consequence of losing either battle." Two chapters are of particular interest. Chapter 5, "Computers -- to Service Them All Our Days," discusses computers and information surveillance. Chapter 7 is entitled "The Technology of Tyranny." AU - Will, Ian CY - London DA - 1983 KW - computers nationalism law, and privacy law community democracy computers non-USA surveillance national security +computers and the Internet +nationalism and communication privacy surveillance Orwell, George national security state Great Britain democracy and media democracy, and new media democracy, and surveillance computers, and privacy privacy, and computers LB - 3660 PB - Harrap PY - 1983 ST - The Big Brother Society TI - The Big Brother Society ID - 1754 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work, funded by the Ford Foundation, was published under the direction of the President's Research Committee on Social Trends. President Herbert Hoover appointed the Committee. "For the first time the head of the Nation has called upon a group of social scientists to sponsor and direct a broad scientific study of the factors of change in modern society," the Committee explained. Willey and Rice note that "so rapid are the changes, and so complex and far-reaching are their ramifications, that it takes more courage than is possessed by the present authors to attempt to draw a speculative picture concerning communication in the future. For this reason such untried agencies as television, which is now arousing great public interest, are treated briefly in the following pages." The book is divided into four parts. Part I, "The Transportation Agencies and Their Utilization," covers railroads, highways, motor vehicles, water transport, air travel, touring. Part II, "The Agencies of Point to Point Communication," deals with the postal service, telegraphy, cable and wireless, and telephone. Part III, "The Agencies of Mass Impression," looks as newspapers and periodicals, movies, and radio. A chapter is devoted to"Mass Impression and Social Control." Part IV is "The Integration of Communication." The authors writes that the "expansion of communication facilities, accompanied as it has been by increased speed and frequency of contact, contributes to whatever forces foster nationalism as against localism." The authors also note that "social contacts within narrower confines, within local groups, have multiplied more rapidly than those involving distant points." AU - Willey, Malcolm M. and Stuart A. Rice CY - New York and London DA - 1933 KW - post office nationalism presidents, and new media motion pictures news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers +transportation +nationalism and communication +telegraph +telephones +motion pictures and popular culture +postal service +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines automobiles +aeronautics and space communication +radio +television nationalism, and new media railroads +electricity electricity, and railways cable Hoover, Herbert, and new media LB - 2410 PB - McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc. PY - 1933 ST - Communication Agencies and Social Life TI - Communication Agencies and Social Life ID - 329 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - To tell the story of this small but highly visible and influential sector of French cinema requires also to tell the larger story of the industry which allowed-in fact, encouraged- its creation. Thus this book includes a great deal of information on French film production in general, particularly at the moments of economic and moral crisis which seem to scan its history, like a strange rhyme scheme, every decade or decade and a half. Williams notes that in recent years that French cinema has been weakened, if not overwhelmed, by the American film industry. “Although the cinema avant-garde has been, appropriately, in the forefront of the recent international trend, the rest of the French film community may soon surpass the experimentalists in this regard. The nation's commercial mainstream has always defined itself in terms of its greatest rival, the United States. However, in recent years the nature of this competition has begun to change. Until the mid 1960s French filmmaking sought to distinguish and market itself as specifically French-or, during the years of the Tradition of Quality, European. But the European cinema market, weakened by the rise of television, is no longer large enough to permit amortization of the elevated production costs of major film projects. And with American media threatening to invade the domestic market to a greater degree than ever before, via television, French producers have been forced to attempt to compete in a new, more direct way. One clear sign of the new Franco-American media relationship is the increasing number of works filmed in English by French directors, such as Tavernier's Round Midnight (1986) and Besson's The Big Blue (1988).” (402) --Wayne Hayes AU - Williams, Alan CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1992 KW - audiences imperialism theaters motion pictures Edison, Thomas non-USA Hayes, Wayne +motion pictures and popular culture France France, and motion pictures motion pictures, and France theaters, and fire motion pictures, and sound recording France, and sound pictures motion pictures, and sound (France) Edison, Thomas, and sound film cultural imperialism France, and sound films France, and American films LB - 1650 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1992 ST - Republic of Images: A History of French Filmmaking TI - Republic of Images: A History of French Filmmaking ID - 253 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work is informative about feminism and anti-pornography efforts during the 1970s and 1980s. Feminists believed pornography degraded women, encouraged violence against them, and promoted sex discrimination. They strongly opposed the spread of pornography, especially violent films such as the cult movie Snuff (1974), the slasher pictures which showed women being stalked and killed by madmen, and such mainstream entertainment as Brian De Palma's Dressed to Kill (1980). For a brief time, anti-pornography feminists joined forces with Christian evangelists. The alliance with Christians was doomed as feminists realized that evangelical women opposed their views. Anti-pornography feminists led by Andrea Dworkin and Catharine MacKinnon pushed for legislation in Indianapolis and Minneapolis to ban pornography. The feminists, themselves, split apart during the 1980s. AU - Williams, Linda CY - Berkeley DA - 1989 KW - women, and new media sexuality motion pictures women feminism law censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture pornography women feminists women, and pornography feminists, and pornography pornography, and women pornography, and feminists censorship censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship feminists, and censorship censorship, and feminists Snuff (1974) slasher films, and feminists feminists, and slasher films violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence snuff films LB - 22570 PB - University of California Press PY - 1989 ST - Hard Core: Power, Pleasure, and the "Frenzy of the Visible" TI - Hard Core: Power, Pleasure, and the "Frenzy of the Visible" ID - 985 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This volume has 12 chapters of varying quality dealing with different aspects of communication. Noel Williams wrote three of the essays: "Computers and Communication Skills"; "Computerspeak: The Language of New Technology"; and "Security, Privacy and Control." Other essays include: Peter Hartley, "The Technology of Communication"; Patrik O'Brian Holt, "New Knowledge for Old: The Use of Induction in Knowledge Communication"; Vanessa Pittard, "The Mechanical User"; Linda Goodman, "Evaluating I.T. Work"; Phil Roddis, "What's Wrong with Software?"; Maggie Wykes and Rinella Cere, "News, New Technology and Communication"; Catherine Cassell, "Access to Technology: The Use of I.T. in the Community"; Chas Critcher and Paul McCann, "Satellite Television: Pie in the Sky?"; and Dave Waddington, "Implications of Technological Change for Industrial and Organisational Conflict." AU - Williams, Noel AU - Hartley, Peter CY - London and New York DA - 1990 KW - computers surveillance corporations corporations law, and privacy law privacy language journalism IBM news and journalism non-USA +computers and the Internet +television +aeronautics and space communication satellites television, and satellites satellites, and television binary code +artificial intelligence and biotechnology information technology news, and new technology news privacy, and new technology Great Britain Great Britain, and information technology Great Britain, and satellite broadcasting IBM, and information technology language, and information technology LB - 440 PB - Pinter Publishers PY - 1990 ST - Technology in Human Communication TI - Technology in Human Communication ID - 132 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This much-cited book is not well written -- much of the author’s argument could be condensed substantially. There are few notes and only a thin Book List at the end. Williams discusses three revolutions -- the democratic revolution, the industrial revolution, and “a third revolution, perhaps the most difficult of all to interpret....a cultural revolution.” While “ruling groups have their own reasons for not wishing to recognize the true scale of the revolution,” Williams said “elsewhere it is a genuine crisis of consciousness.” In Williams’ final chapter, “Britain in the 1960s,” he tried to resolve problems resulting from “a very rapid reorganization... going on, with the area of real ownership and independence shrinking in every part of our culture, and seeming certain to continue to do so.” Huge sums were spent annually on a system of advertising that did not rationally inform us about the quality and use of goods but “lives in a world of suggestion and magic.” He argued that in the United States, Americans were in touch with a future that did not work -- “the extension of industry, democracy and communications leads only to what is called the massification of society.” Williams’ critique of modern advertising might be read in connection with other authors of this period (e.g., David Riesman and Daniel J. Boorstin) who also voiced concerns about advertising’s impact on society. AU - Williams, Raymond CY - London DA - 1961 KW - advertising and public relations propaganda public relations advertising preservation communication revolution history, and new media community democracy non-USA history history Great Britain general studies democracy and media democratic revolution cultural revolution third revolution communication revolution long revolution Great Britain (1960s) advertising information v. knowledge propaganda history, break with television magic critics culture advertising advertising, and democracy democracy, and advertising cultural change LB - 1300 PB - Chatto & Windus PY - 1961 ST - The Long Revolution TI - The Long Revolution ID - 1526 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Williams contrasted his position on communication technology's role in society with that of Marshall McLuhan. “The particular rhetoric of McLuhan’s theory of communications is unlikely to last long. But it is significant mainly as an example of an ideological representation of technology as a cause, and in this sense it will have successors, as particular formulations lose their force. What has to be seen, by contrast, is the radically different position in which technology, including communication technology, and specifically television, is at once an intention and an effect of a particular social order.” Television and radio, Williams argued, spoke directly to the masses and required no special training. “The unique factor of broadcasting--first in sound, then even more clearly in television--has been that its communication is accessible to normal social development; it requires no specific training which brings people within the orbit of public authority. If we can watch and listen to people in our immediate circle, we can watch and listen to television. Much of the great popular appeal of radio and television has been due to this sense of apparently unmediated access.” Williams saw American broadcasting's potential for social control and as a means to promote capitalism. “Thus, if seen only in hindsight, broadcasting can be diagnosed as a new and powerful form of social integration and control. Many of its main uses can be seen as socially, commercially and at times politically manipulative. Moreover, this viewpoint is rationalized by its description as ‘mass communication,’ a phrase used by most of its radical critics.” AU - Williams, Raymond CY - New York; [Middletown, CT]; Hanover, NH DA - c1974, 1975, c1992 KW - television, and values community democracy values television radio broadcasting values, and television McLuhan, Marshall motion pictures democracy and media critics television, and capitalism broadcasting, and capitalism democracy, and television democracy, and radio capitalism LB - 10920 PB - Schocken Books; Wesleyan University Press; University Press of New England PY - 1974 ST - Television: Technology and Cultural Form TI - Television: Technology and Cultural Form ID - 2454 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work appeared in the Penguin Special's series Britain in the Sixties. It develops themes that the author set out in his earlier book, The Long Revolution (1961). In Communications, Williams argues that two major conclusions emerge from the history of modern communication. The first is "the remarkable expansion of audiences. In newspapers, magazines, books, broadcasting, television, and recorded music there has been an expansion beyond any previous conception, and this is still continuing.... The whole process has the effect of a cultural revolution." The second development is that the "ownership of the means of communication, old and new, has passed or is passing, in large part, to a kind of financial organization unknown in earlier periods, and with important resemblances to the major forms of ownership in general industrial production. The methods and attitudes of capitalist business have established themselves near the center of communications. There is widespread dependence on advertising money, which leads to a policy of getting a large audience as quickly as possible, to attract and hold advertisers.... All the basic purposes of communication -- the sharing of human experience -- can become subordinated to this drive to sell." Williams sees the cultural revolution brought by changes in communication "as part of a great process of human liberation, comparable in importance with the industrial revolution and the struggle for democracy. In his final chapter, he sets out several proposals to ensure that these values survive and thrive. AU - Williams, Raymond CY - London DA - 1962, 1966 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations communication revolution journalism community democracy news and journalism news media information technology general studies +books, periodicals, newspapers +television democracy and media media literacy broadcasting media, and corporate ownership news, and corporate bias information technology, and education +sound recording capitalism, and mass media cultural revolution communication revolution advertising advertising, and democracy capitalism culture audiences, and new media democracy, and advertising audiences cultural change LB - 11040 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PB - Chatto & Windus PY - 1962 ST - Communications TI - Communications ID - 2465 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this work, Williams devotes several pages in his Conclusion to mass communication. Writing from the vantage point of the late 1950s, he still considers printing and print culture to be the "oldest, and still the most important" means of communication. Williams notes that with new means of communicating that audiences have increased enormously. The growth of mass audiences, and the tendency to relegate them to "mob-status" is a threat to democracy. "Communication becomes a science of penetrating the mass mind and of registering an impact there," he writes. AU - Williams, Raymond CY - London; and New York DA - 1958, 1960 KW - advertising and public relations propaganda public relations public relations advertising community democracy media +books, periodicals, newspapers general studies democracy and media advertising media literacy critics audiences, mass propaganda culture and communication audiences culture media effects LB - 11050 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Chatto & Windus Ltd.; and Columbia University Press PY - 1958 ST - Culture and Society, 1780-1950 TI - Culture and Society, 1780-1950 ID - 2466 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work includes ten essays by several noteworthy authors. Together these authors attempts to survey the entire scope of human communication. Massimo Pesaresi writes about “Language.” His entry is followed by chapters by Arthur D. Shulman and Robyn Penman on “Non-Verbal Communication,” and by Donis A. Dondis on “Signs and Symbols.” Jack Goody surveys “Alphabets and Writing,” and Henri-Jean Martin deals with “Printing.” Ithiel de Sola Pool, in “Extended Speech and Sounds,” writes about the phonograph, telephone, and radio. Garth Jowett, in “Extended Images,” examines visual communication -- prints, photography, motion pictures, and television. Raymond Williams contributes the Introduction and a chapter entitled “Communication Technologies and Social Institutions.” Ederyn Williams provides the last chapter, “The Future of the Media.” This work, which is richly illustrated, provides a solid introduction to the history of communication. Raymond Williams believed that the relationship between communication technologies and the institutions of society was at a turning point. The fate of direct democracy and individual freedom would depend on decisions made relating to these technologies. He believed that “what may now be possible is a qualitative change to the wide distribution of processes: the provision of equitable access to the means and resources of directly-determined communication, serving immediate personal and social needs.” He wrote that “we are now at one of those historical moments when the relations between communications technologies and social institutions are a matter not only for study and analysis, but for a wide set of practical choices. It is not only (though it will often be presented as) a matter of instituting new technologies. The directions in which investment in research and development should go are now, in this field, fundamental social decisions. The effort to understand and take part in them is more likely to be made, as against the bewildered reception of new products and processes which ‘just happen’, if enough of us realize the scale of the communicative and thus social transformation which is now becoming, though still in ways to be decided, technically and institutionally possible.” This work has a useful, three-page bibliography divided by chapter theme. AU - Williams, Raymond, ed. CY - London DA - 1981 KW - wood engraving illustrations computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) USSR interactivity magnetic recording photography advertising, and public relations time and timekeeping values religion second industrial revolution communication revolution advertising propaganda public relations print office labor motion pictures microelectronics revolution communication revolution magazines news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers information technology archives materials magnetic tape future and science fiction democracy community communication revolution, and second industrial revolution timekeeping, and clocks news and journalism non-USA home, and new media home office office, and new media photography and visual communication telephones radio television motion pictures popular culture printing books, periodicals, newspapers books alphabet writing printing presses sound recording prints color duplicating technologies phonograph telegraph advertising calendars timekeeping computers computers and the Internet France Germany Great Britain facsimile Greece Egypt Hoe, Robert presses, Hoe illustrations India public address systems loudspeakers language literacy libraries information storage linotype miniaturization newspapers magazines Native Americans paper propaganda radio, and propaganda propaganda, and radio satellites +aeronautics and space communication Soviet Union telecommunications VCRs woodcuts printing, and woodcuts color, and motion pictures color, and photography color, and television photography, and color motion pictures, and color television, and color democracy and media communication revolution values, and media second industrial revolution interactive media general studies media convergence interactive media future +bibliographies office information technology, and office home information technology, and home home, and new media office, and new media general studies materials news microelectronics LB - 11640 PB - Thames and Hudson PY - 1981 ST - Contact: Human Communication and Its History TI - Contact: Human Communication and Its History ID - 2515 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Williams examines the relationship between late nineteenth-century production and the growth of consumer culture in France. She notes that the exposition held in Paris in 1900 provided "a scale model of the consumer revolution" of that time. She examines the rise of department stores and the use of electricity. "More than any other technological innovation of the late nineteenth century, even more than the development of cinematography, the advent of electrical power invested everyday life with fabulous qualities." Williams argues that "the history of France, even more than that of the United States, most illuminates the nature and dilemmas of modern consumption." (8) The work is divided into two parts. Part One (chapters 2-5) deal with "The Development of Consumer Lifestyles." Part Two (chapters 6-9) examine "The Development of Critical Thought about Consumption." AU - Williams, Rosalind H. CY - Berkeley DA - c1982 KW - technology France advertising and public relations advertising, and modernism world fairs France, and advertising advertising, and France +electricity electricity, and France France, and electricity Exposition of 1900 France, and Exposition of 1900 electricity, and modernism technology and society values advertising LB - 28890 PB - University of California Press PY - 1982 ST - Dream Worlds: Mass Consumption in Late Nineteenth-Century France TI - Dream Worlds: Mass Consumption in Late Nineteenth-Century France ID - 2638 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Williams begins by asking "What are the consequences when human beings dwell in an environment that is predominantly built rather than given?" Her book tries to answer that question by exploring "the psychological, social, and political implications of living in a technological world." Williams argues that since the nineteenth century, "narratives about underground worlds have provided prophetic view into our environmental future. Subterranean surroundings, whether real or imaginary, furnish a model of an artifical environment from which nature has been effectively banished. Human beings who live underground must use mechanical devices to provide the necessities of life: food, light, even air. Nature provides only space. The underworld setting therefore takes to an extreme the displacement of the natural environment by a technological one. It hypothesizes human life in a manufactured world." Williams draws on the writings of American British, and French authors. AU - Williams, Rosalind H. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1990 KW - technology advertising and public relations technology and society values values, and technology advertising, and modernism future and science fiction future environment environment, and technology Bulwer-Lytton, Edward urban studies urban studies, and technology +electricity time time and timekeeping lighting Mumford, Lewis critics Marx, Leo progress Wells, H. G. Verne, Jules advertising LB - 28900 PB - MIT Press PY - 1990 ST - Notes on the Underground: An Essay on Technology, Society, and the Imagination TI - Notes on the Underground: An Essay on Technology, Society, and the Imagination ID - 2639 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work examines the increase in foreign films that came into the United States after World War II, and the art houses in which they played. The arrival of foreign films was a significant development in American cinema history. These films were made in countries not touched by the MPAA's Production Code and consequently often had themes at odds with censors' view about what constitute proper entertainment. The author spends little time, however, on the role of Eric A. Johnston, who was the president of the MPAA from 1945 to 1963, and his efforts to expand markets for American movies abroad. AU - Willinsky, Barbara CY - Minneapolis DA - 2001 KW - audiences self-regulation motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign films foreign films, and motion pictures theaters theaters, and art houses art houses, and foreign films audiences audiences, and foreign films motion pictures, and audiences foreign films, and audiences censorship and ratings censorship, and foreign films Production Code Production Code, and foreign films foreign films censorship LB - 30640 PB - University of Minnesota Press PY - 2001 ST - Sure Seaters: The Emergence of Art House Cinema TI - Sure Seaters: The Emergence of Art House Cinema ID - 2825 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Willinsky seeks to enhance the reader’s appreciate the OED’s history and to have a better understand its inconsistencies. “This study of the OED,” he writes, “is concerned with tempering ... idealizations, informing them in light of persistent and inevitable filtering processes, finding out the patterns of this dictionary’s cultural interests and selective representation in its Victorian origins and its late twentieth-century manifestations. My principal concern is that, as we continue to consult this nineteenth century artifact, we appreciate its editorial origins. “My aim with this book is not to spoil the pleasures of visiting this fascinating castle of the English language. It is meant to give greater pause over the work, over what has gone into making the most comprehensive dictionary of English in the world, so The Oxford English Dictionary can reveal more of what it has made of the language, which in turn will leave its interested readers in a better position to play a substantial role, as they have since the beginning, in its evolution as the great English language’s great dictionary (13).” The author’s research was aided by the computer. The computer gave him, he believes, “an opportunity to take the measure of the OED in ways” that earlier scholars “ would have never dreamed possible. My work with ... computer-generated statistics amounts to an initial and fairly crude pass through the data, focusing on the twenty most-cited authors and titles from among citations used in the OED between 1884-1989. These figures offer one version of how a century’s worth of editors at Oxford has constructed the history, the scope and range of the English language." (93) --Catharine Gartelos AU - Willinsky, John DA - Princeton University Press KW - print literacy non-USA print culture literacy, and print culture Oxford English Dictionary print culture, dictionaries print culture, OED Gartelos, Catharine LB - 1720 OP - 1994 PB - Princeton ST - The Empire of Words: The Reign of the OED TI - The Empire of Words: The Reign of the OED ID - 260 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This informative book covers Franklin D. Roosevelt's relationship with the press. Winfield examines the origins of FDR's media skills, his New Deal press conferences and his working relationship with reporters, and publicity and censorship during World War II. Chapter 6, "Other Mass Media," treats radio, photojournalism, and newsreels. Winfield is particularly interesting on FDR's fireside chats. The president used a false tooth when he spoke on radio (to keep him from whistling). She also notes that those who photographed and filmed FDR had to abide by White House rules. Other chapters deals with the Office of Censorship, World War II Press Relations, and Public Opinion Polling. This work is based on manuscript collections at the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library in Hyde Park, NY, and elsewhere. -- SV This book, a paperback reprint of a 1990 edition (Columbia University Press Morningside edition), is a quality examination of one of the most sophisticated users of mass media ever to reside in the White House. Franklin Roosevelt understood the power of image and communication and was innovative in his use of radio, photography, and public relations to motivate, cajole, explain, and manipulate public opinion. FDR and the News Media is clearly written and well-researched. Winfield has examined a respectable amount of material from the Roosevelt Library, the papers of journalists who covered the president, numerous memoirs, and a raft of secondary sources. As she makes clear, FDR was a journalist in his college days and remained at least an informal student of the mass media during his entire life. Roosevelt is most widely known to media historians for his innovative and powerful radio addresses to the American people, known popularly as Fireside Chats. Radio, which was a new mass medium in the 1920s and 1930s, allowed FDR to communicate directly to the public, circumnavigating the newspapers that he believed were hostile to his agenda. Many have noted that FDR was immensely popular with many of these radio listeners. Winfield covers the Fireside Chats ably. More interesting is her discussion of FDR’s other communication and image building skills. Roosevelt asked for and received the cooperation of photographers and reporters in hiding his paralysis from the public. Photographs did not show his leg braces or wheelchair. FDR was able to project an image of confidence and vigor, at least in his early years, partially because he tried to control the images of him that reached the public. Roosevelt was also adept at publicity. He held numerous press conferences met frequently with journalists. His press secretary Stephen T. Early was only one of an army of publicists and information officers who staffed White House offices and New Deal agencies. Newspaper mailrooms endured a blizzard of press releases during this administration. Winfield argues that Roosevelt’s sophistication bordered on manipulation of the press. Journalists were not always able to get the “real” story and were too often taken in by the president’s personality or publicity apparatus. For example, FDR was a very sick man during the 1944 presidential election, but the public had no idea of the true extent of his illness. Voters might have benefited from a more realistic discussion of his capacity to lead; Roosevelt died shortly after his fourth term began. FDR and the News Media is a very readable book on a very interesting topic. -- Rob Rabe AU - Winfield, Betty Houchin CY - Urbana; New York DA - 1990; 1994 KW - Roosevelt, Franklin D. photography presidents and new media Roosevelt, Franklin administration Roosevelt, Franklin, and newspapers Roosevelt, Franklin, and radio +radio radio, and Franklin Roosevelt news and journalism World War II war propaganda, and World War II World War II, and propaganda censorship and ratings censorship, and newspapers photojournalism, and Franklin Roosevelt +photography and visual communication newsreels, and Franklin Roosevelt Robe, Rob news propaganda censorship photojournalism LB - 28770 PB - University of Illinois Press; Columbia University Press PY - 1994 ST - FDR and the News Media TI - FDR and the News Media ID - 2626 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work could be read as a critique of modern advertising -- e.g., the utopian image sold by computer makers; the 1970s fad for smaller, more humane technologies. Chapter 6, “Mythinformation,” offers a thoughtful critique of the optimistic, even utopian, mythology surrounding the spread of computers. Computer “romantics” assume that “(1) people are bereft of information; (2) information is knowledge; (3) knowledge is power; and (4) increasing access to information enhances democracy and equalizes social power.” Winner says that “According to this view, the computer revolution will, by its sheer momentum, eliminate many of the ills that have vexed political society since the beginning of time. Inequalities of wealth and privilege will gradually fade away....” Winner argues that the people who have helped to create the “computer revolution” (Steven Jobs, et al.) have given little or no thought to the consequences of the changes they have wrought. “By and large the computer revolution is conspicuously silent about its own ends..... A consistently ahistorical viewpoint prevails. What one often finds emphasized, however, is a vision of drastically altered social and political conditions, a future upheld as both desirable and, in all likelihood, inevitable. Politics, in other words, is not a secondary concern for many computer enthusiasts; it is a crucial, albeit thoughtless, part of their message.” Computer romantics have misrepresented the direction the computer revolution is likely to take. “Those who stand to benefit most obviously are large transnational business corporations.... Thus, if there is to be a computer revolution, the best guess is that it will have a distinctly conservative character.” Winner suggests three areas of concern for the future. 1) The invasion of privacy. “The danger extends beyond the private sphere to affect the most basic of public freedoms. Unless steps are taken to prevent it, we may develop systems capable of a perpetual, pervasive, apparently benign surveillance. Confronted with omnipresent, all-seeing data banks, the populace may find passivity and compliance the safest route, avoiding activities that once represented political liberty....” 2) “A thoroughly computerized world is also one bound to alter conditions of human sociability....” 3) “Perhaps the most significant challenge posed by the linking of computers and telecommunications is the prospect that the basic structures of political order will be recast....” Other chapters deal with the limits of other technologies. For example, chapter 4 (“Building the Better Mousetrap”) discusses the 1970s fad for “ecologically sound, small-scale humane technologies” (as popularized in advertising). AU - Winner, Langdon CY - Chicago DA - 1986 KW - technology computers surveillance nationalism advertising, and public relations technology and society propaganda public relations values law, and privacy law preservation +future and science fiction community democracy computers values progress privacy myth +computers and the Internet critics democracy and media advertising, and computers values, and advertising values, and computers future progress, and computers myth, and computers Jobs, Steven privacy, and computers +nationalism and communication telecommunications capitalism, and computers advertising capitalism computers, and advertising technology, and progress computers, and progress computers, and revolution computers, and privacy nationalism, and computers history, and new media history LB - 8040 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1986 ST - The Whale and the Reactor: A Search for Limits in an Age of High Technology TI - The Whale and the Reactor: A Search for Limits in an Age of High Technology ID - 2173 ER - TY - EDBOOK AU - Winship, Michael CY - New York DA - 1988 KW - +television LB - 10830 PB - Random House PY - 1988 ST - Television TI - Television ID - 2445 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Winston is particular insightful in explaining why the motion picture industry is often very slow to adopt new technologies. For example, from 1923 on, Hollywood’s refused to adopt 16mm film and attempted to keep the format associated with amateurism. The growth of television news after the World War II stimulated the use of 16mm film. To keep pace with the immediacy of radio news, TV stations sought equipment that was smaller, more mobile, and cheaper than had been developed for movie studios. Before the widespread use of videotape, local stations found that 16mm cameras worked well for their news broadcasts. National networks and their news operations also turned to this format. Television news helped to secure a more professional status for 16mm film. In addition to 16mm film, Winston devotes chapters that consider resistance to other technologies such as cameras, color film, and high definition television (HDTV). AU - Winston, Brian CY - London DA - 1996 KW - technology magnetic recording photography technology and society new media materials materials magnetic tape cinema motion pictures celluloid film 16mm +television +motion pictures and popular culture +photography and visual communication +motion pictures +sound recording sound recording, and magnetic tape magnetic recording film, nitrate film, acetate motion pictures, and 16mm film 16mm film videotape videotape, and television television, and videotape motion pictures, and videotape videotape, and motion pictures new media, and resistance to motion pictures, and new technology, HDTV television, and high definition (HDTV) technological determinism critics materials LB - 17540 PB - British Film Institute PY - 1996 ST - Technologies of Seeing: Photography, Cinematography and Television TI - Technologies of Seeing: Photography, Cinematography and Television ID - 674 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - In this book Winston has reworked and updated material that appeared in his earlier work, Misunderstanding Media (1986) (a play on Marshall McLuhan’s Understanding Media). Winston argues that much of the discussion about the “information revolution” is hyperbole. “What is hyperbolised as a revolutionary train of events can be seen as a far more evolutionary and less transforming process,” he writes.” He attempts to ground his critique in the past, “in the historical circumstances surrounding the application of what may be broadly termed ‘science’, especially the science of electricity, to the human communication process.” Such a sense of history “reveals the ‘Information Revolution’ to be largely an illusion, a rhetorical gambit and an expression of technological ignorance.” The history of communication technology reveals “not just a slower pace of change than is usually suggested but also such regularities in the pattern of innovation and diffusion as to suggest a model for all such changes.” The book is divided into four parts. In Part I, Winston applies his model to the such electrical systems of communication as the telegraph and telephone. In Part II he deals with radio and television. Part III examines computing: early computers, main frames, the integrated circuit, and microcomputers. Part IV treats networks, electrical and electronic, from the telegraph to the Internet. It also looks as such networks as the telephone, broadcasting and recording technologies, satellite communication, and cable television. The conclusion considers current research in holography. AU - Winston, Brian CY - London and New York DA - 1998 KW - computers holograms advertising, and public relations integrated circuits transistors propaganda public relations preservation communication revolution computers networks Information Age general studies communication revolution, and myth of myth communication revolution information v. knowledge +electricity information age, and myth of change, slower pace of +telegraph +telephones +radio +television +computers and the Internet computers, and main frames integrated circuits microcomputers microelectronics networks, electrical networks, electronic +aeronautics and space communication satellites cable television, and cable holography critics change advertising, and new media +sound recording history, and new media history advertising LB - 1310 PB - Routledge PY - 1998 ST - Media Technology and Society: A History: From the Telegraph to the Internet TI - Media Technology and Society: A History: From the Telegraph to the Internet ID - 1527 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Winston seeks to challenge the "dominant rhetoric, the rhetoric of technological revolution, especially in the field of information processing." He considers the development of information processing to be evolutionary, with old technologies continuing to be used along side of new innovations. The author writes: "The persistence of books, and the ironies of books about the 'information revolution', are too glibly ignored. This glibness can be attributed to a general lack of historical sense, for the 'information revolution' exists only as a consequence of far-reaching misunderstandings about electronic media, their development, diffusion and present forms. This book will be exactly concerned with these matters; and it will be a central thesis that the history of the technologies of information reveals a gradual, uncataclysmic progress. No telecommunications technology of itself or in aggregate suggest revolutionary development. On the contrary, each of them can be seen as a technological response to certain social relations which, at least in the West, have remained basically unchanged during the entire industrial period; the technology, far from being a disruptive force, actually reflects the comparative stasis of these relations." Winston devotes chapters to several media. Chapter 2, "Fugitive Pictures," traces television back to Monsieur Bequerel in 1839. Chapter 3 discusses the origin and development of the computer. Chapter 4 considers the history of the integrated circuit, microprocessor, and personal computer. Chapter 5 examines communications satellites. Chapter 6, "Communicate by Word of Mouth," deals with the telephone and cable television. AU - Winston, Brian CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1986 KW - National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) computers corporations microprocessing Federal Communications Commission (FCC) transistors, and integrated circuits preservation communication revolution materials materials regulation communication revolution, and second industrial revolution communication revolution non-USA second industrial revolution satellites radio computers and the Internet computers, personal computers Information Age history +computers and the Internet critics communication revolution, and critics of information processing computers, personal personal computers integrated circuits transistors microprocessors second industrial revolution, and critics of electronic media +telephones +television +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and communication television, and cable cable, television telephones, and transatlantic cable cable, transatlantic telelphone television, and satellites satellite television history, of information processing history, of television history, of computers history, of satellites, and communication history, of telephones AT &T analog media Bell, Alexander Graham Bell Laboratories cameras, electronic cable, coaxial De Forest, Lee Eniac Eckert, J. Presper Edison, Thomas Enigma FCC General Electric Company IBM Intelsat NASA radio, and shortwave radio, and satellites RCA Shockley, William Turing, Alan Neumann, John von critics, information age cable cameras cable, submarine telephones, and transatlantic history, and new media censorship and ratings LB - 3700 PB - Harvard University Press PY - 1986 ST - Misunderstanding Media: The End of the Information Revolution TI - Misunderstanding Media: The End of the Information Revolution ID - 1758 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - While this is primarily a book on how to use video, its opening chapter (“The World of Video”) offers suggestions on how video appeared to be changing the world in 1986. Video offered novel advantages: it could record sound synchronously with the picture, and it allowed one to check instantly the quality of the sound and image that had been recorded. According the authors, the video camera or camcorder did not permit the photographer to do anything new that could not have been done previously. But the technology did expand options. It could record images in light conditions that would make filming impossible. The tape did not require processing and could be edited or checked instantly, and could be played on a television without complicated projection equipment. The authors note video’s impact on documentaries, industrial movies, and television news. They also discuss its potential for empowering the disadvantaged and for being a catalyst for social change. AU - Winston, Brian AU - Keydel, Julia CY - New York DA - 1986 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) magnetic recording motion pictures lighting journalism materials materials cinema motion pictures celluloid film documentaries news and journalism 8mm 16mm +television +motion pictures and popular culture magnetic tape sound recording, and video +sound recording videotape motion pictures, and videotape camcorders VCRs 8mm film film, 8mm film, 16mm 16mm film documentaries, and videotape videotape, and industrial films videotape, and documentaries news, and video tape television, news and videotape cameras, video motion pictures, and editing videotape, and editing lighting, and videotape sound recording, and videotape videotape, and sound recording news cameras materials LB - 12560 PB - AMPHOTO (an imprint of Watson-Guptill Publications, a division of Billboard Publications, Inc.) PY - 1986 ST - Working with Video: A Comprehensive Guild to the World of Video Production TI - Working with Video: A Comprehensive Guild to the World of Video Production ID - 2603 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Wolseley covers changes in the magazine industry. For example, in the United States in the years following World War II, as the number of periodicals increased, so too did sexual representations of women. Playboy, Esquire, and such less well-known but widely circulated publications as Cavalier, Rogue, Stag, Nugget, Cabaret, U.S. Male, Jaguar, and Duke, devoted considerable space to pictures of partially nude women (although through most of the 1960s there was a self-imposed ban on female genitalia), and to articles relating to sex. Sales of men’s publications reached 42 million by 1969. By the late 1960s a booming mass market existed in the United States for sexually oriented material -- confession magazines, “muscle” publications, so-called “ladies” magazines such as Cosmopolitan (“the woman’s Playboy”), “adult” paperback and hardcover books, underground newspapers, comics. Hard-core pornography sold under-the-counter but was more available and more widely accepted. AU - Wolseley, Roland E. CY - New York DA - 1973 KW - women, and new media sexuality pornography sexuality news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers news and journalism magazines magazines, and sex magazines, and youth magazines, fan women, and magazines women magazines, and women audiences, and magazines magazines, and audiences Playboy magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines audiences LB - 17990 PB - Hastings House PY - 1973 ST - The Changing Magazine: Trends in Readership and Management TI - The Changing Magazine: Trends in Readership and Management ID - 708 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Wood's book covers major developments in the history of magazine publishing. The 1971 edition also mentions changes in the treatment of sexuality by such publications as Esquire and Playboy. Wood also deals with the role of magazine advertising. AU - Wood, James Playsted CY - New York DA - 1949, 1956, 1971 KW - women, and new media advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations sexuality news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers news and journalism magazines magazines, and history of advertising, and magazines magazines, and advertising women women, and magazines magazines, and women Esquire magazine magazines, and Esquire magazines, and Playboy Playboy magazines, and pulp magazines, and fan magazines, and men's advertising LB - 18010 PB - The Ronald Press Company PY - 1949 ST - Magazines in the United States TI - Magazines in the United States ID - 710 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work, with typewriter face and unjustified right margins, has three conclusions: 1) Since the beginning of warfare, commanders have sought direct two-way communication with the battlefield. 2) since the beginning “every new tactical communication development has been neglected at least initially by the forces in power at the time. Most major communication improvements were secured at great personal sacrifice or expense by the inventor or originator.” 3) Over time, rivalry has existed between proponents of different means of communication. AU - Woods, David L. CY - Orlando, FL DA - 1965 KW - R & D research and development war war +military communication LB - 6080 PB - Martin Company, Martin-Marietta Corp. PY - 1965 ST - A History of Tactical Communication Techniques TI - A History of Tactical Communication Techniques ID - 1992 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Wosk examines such diverse artifacts as Honors Daumier’s lithographs of nineteenth-century train travel and the 1860 design of the Atwater sewing machine. In so doing, she tries to show how the public perceived such technological innovations as the railroad and how makers of such technology as the sewing machine appealed to the public by including classical design features. AU - Wosk, Julie CY - New Brunswick, N.J. DA - 1992 KW - technology photography time and timekeeping time technology and society geography photography and visual communication lithography space (spatial) time railroads Industrial Revolution industrial design transportation sewing machines, Atwater technological innovation, and public perception of technology, and visual arts technological determinism LB - 2000 PB - Rutgers University Press PY - 1992 ST - Breaking Frame: Technology and the Visual Arts in the Nineteenth Century TI - Breaking Frame: Technology and the Visual Arts in the Nineteenth Century ID - 1596 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Willard Huntington Wright (aka S. S. Van Dine) was an art critics and also a mystery writer; he also wrote for such fan magazines as Photoplay during the 1920s. Wright was a critic of immorality in motion pictures and here offers a critique of modern art. AU - Wright, Willard Huntington CY - New York DA - 1930 KW - ref, secondary motion pictures modernity modernity, and art motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel motion pictures, and new art form art, and modernity critics ref, book art LB - 13830 PB - Dodd, Mead and Company PY - 1930 ST - Modern Painting: Its Tendency and Meaning TI - Modern Painting: Its Tendency and Meaning ID - 3541 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Willard Huntington Wright (aka S. S. Van Dine) was an art critic and also a mystery writer; he also wrote for such fan magazines as Photoplay during the 1920s. Wright was a critic of immorality in motion pictures, and here he considers trends in modern art. Of color, he writes that it "is a highly subtle, plastic and relatively fluctuating medium, moulding and moulded by its environmental colours, changing and directing line, capable of portraying relative objectivity and of producing complete subjectivity. Tone alone possesses none of these attributes...." (160) "Colour, in fact, constitutes a full third of art's attraction and power, irrespective of subject-matter." (161) Wright discusses "Why the New Colour Art at First Seems Harsh" (265-66). “Why the New Colour Art at First Seems Harsh The eye must be trained to receive powerful colours, just as the ear must be trained to receive powerful sounds…. When the eye becomes adjusted, like the ear, complaints of raucousness 265/266 and harshness will cease; and colour’s new intensity, like that of music, will give birth to a fuller aesthetic emotion.” See also "the New Sense of Colour" (280-82). “The New Sense of Colour Throughout the evolution of man a love of colour has ever been present, manifesting itself in his raiment and the ornaments with which he surrounded himself…. This desire for colour the result of the human need for variety in all things in life has given birth to a large school of writers who use words for the purpose of creating a sense of chromatic richness: it has widely influenced orchestral development; and it has, during the past 280/281 century, set in motion a new cycle of painting. But, withal, colour has remained an isolated and casual pleasure for the eyes, a detached and fragmentary manifestation: only recently has it been rationalized into a complete and satisfying gamut.” The author goes on to talk about Matisse, “whose sensitivity to colour is very keen….” 281/282 “In those artists who have acquired an advanced sensibility to colour lies a greater and more delicate power of co-ordination a surer ability to make a picture so perfectly balanced that its equilibrium will hang on the slenderest thread.” (282) AU - Wright, Willard Huntington CY - New York DA - 1916 KW - ref, secondary motion pictures modernity modernity, and art motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel motion pictures, and new art form art, and modernity critics color color, and modern art color, and modernity modernity, and color ref, book art LB - 13840 PB - John Lane Company PY - 1916 ST - The Creative Will: Studies in the Philosophy and the Syntax of Aesthetics TI - The Creative Will: Studies in the Philosophy and the Syntax of Aesthetics ID - 3542 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Wriston was formerly chairman and chief executive officer for Citicorp, and its principal subsidiary, Citibank. He writes that the “massive amounts of information that move over the network, combined with the speed of transmission, are transforming the way the world works in ways at least a profound as occurred in the Industrial Revolution. It is changing the relationship between the government and the citizen; between one sovereign government and another; between corporations and regulators. The Orwellian vision of Big Brother watching the citizen has been stood on its head, and it is the citizen who is watching Big Brother. The perception of what constitutes an asset, and what it is that creates wealth is shifting dramatically. Intellectual capital is becoming relatively more important than physical capital. Indeed, the new source of wealth is not material, it is information, knowledge applied to work to create value. The pursuit of wealth is now largely the pursuit of information, and the application of information to the means of production. The sovereign’s laws and regulations have not adjusted to the new reality. A person with the skills to write a complex software program that can produce a billion dollars of revenue can walk past any customs officer in the world with nothing of ‘value’ to declare.... Borders once stoutly defended have become porous as data of all kinds move over, across, and through the lines on a map without let or hindrance.” The technology of information, “which carries the news of freedom, is rapidly creating a situation that might be described as the twilight of sovereignty, since the absolute power of the state to act alone both internally against its own citizens and externally against other nations’ affairs is rapidly being attenuated.... We have learned that freedom is a virus for which there is no antidote, and that virus is spread on the global electronic network to people in the far corners of the world who previously had no hope or knowledge of a better way of life. This process is in train and it cannot be reversed, since the technology on which it is based will not go away.” This book’s ten chapters are based on published sources. Most chapters have fewer than ten notes, and none has more than nineteen. Chapter seven (“Serendipity, Inc.”), for example, cites only four books. Still, the author’s background and previous experience make this work an interesting reflection on the impact of new communication technology. It brings to mind the works of Gladys and Oswald Ganley (indeed, Wriston cites their work, To Inform or to Control? [1989], and Global Political Fallout [1987]). AU - Wriston, Walter B. CY - New York DA - 1992 KW - technology computers nationalism law, and privacy law communication revolution archives communication revolution, and second industrial revolution freedom non-USA surveillance libraries information technology libraries, and information storage Information Age general studies +nationalism and communication Citibank second industrial revolution Industrial Revolution communication revolution electronic media Big Brother privacy surveillance information technology, and finance capitalism global communication information, as wealth information technology, and sovereignty information processing +information storage sovereignty, twilight of freedom, as virus technology and society change, acceleration of serendipity control revolution +computers and the Internet change nationalism, and computers nationalism, and new media LB - 1320 PB - Charles Scribner’s Sons PY - 1992 ST - The Twilight of Sovereignty: How the Information Revolution Is Transforming Our World TI - The Twilight of Sovereignty: How the Information Revolution Is Transforming Our World ID - 1528 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The primary goal of this book, the author says, is "to provide a solid history" of the Zapruder film that captured the Kennedy assassination in 1963, "from its creatin to its current resting place." (ix) This "chronicle of the world's most famous amateur motion picture ... opens a window on a nation's entire institutional order and demonstrates that those institutions that define and sustain our society can and do sometimes fail us." (5) Wrone maintains that his book "rests squarely upon a careful analysis of the voluminous evidendentiary base of the official investigation." (ix) Zapruder was an avid amateur home movie maker. He used a Bell and Howell 8mm Director Series camera that used a 25-foot spool of 16mm film that had a sproket advancing mechanism. During filming, only one half of the film was explosed and when it was used up, the camera operator then reversed the roll and continued shooting using the other half of the film. AU - Wrone, David R. CY - Lawrence, KS DA - 2003 KW - Zapruder, Abraham presidents and new media Kennedy, John F. television cameras 8mm cameras, and 8mm photography, amateur news and journalism news, and Zapruder film Zapruder film news, and amateur photographers photography, and visual communication journalism, and visual communication news, and photography journalism news photography LB - 33000 PB - University Press of Kansas PY - 2003 ST - The Zapruder Film: Reframing JFK's Assassination TI - The Zapruder Film: Reframing JFK's Assassination ID - 2938 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - “Electric Sounds” describes the business and entertainment climate of the United States after several key inventions that produced and amplified sound with electricity. The new inventions helped companies capture sound on disks and merge it with moving pictures. It led several key figures of that era to grand predictions for the future. Many people thought inventions, such as the phonograph and radio, would create a modern communications utopia where everyone from the urban dweller to rural farmers could get the same entertainment and information at once. Experts thought such instant information would make for better citizens and a more informed democracy. In a sense, it did because politicians could broadcast to the entire nation at one time instead of ‘whistle stop’ speeches from trains or larger gatherings, such as town halls and plazas. Although that aspect of electric sound is debatable, other inventions did fulfill their promise. The creation of phonograph recordings allowed people the freedom to purchase their favorite music and listen to it repeatedly instead of having to listen to their radio and hear it on a lucky day. The merging of sound and film gave movies are more realistic and dramatic feel for viewers. Instead of offering a boost to inventors and entrepreneurs, these inventions helped solidify corporate power in the United States. Since the new inventions, and the means to create them, could be expensive, companies such as AT&T horded their patents or shared them with one or two other companies when they received patents in return. These ‘patent pools’ allowed participating companies to isolate themselves from the usual corporate competition and guaranteed that they would be the dominate entities for a particular invention for the near future. Not only did these patent pools create seeming monopolies or oligopolies on technology, they made ‘corporate synergy’ a viable business practice. Before these partnerships, companies had to battle for technology or make deals with companies that had certain technologies, such as sound-producing film equipment, to create their products or services. Now, companies could buy or create subsidiaries that would handle every aspect of a production. A company like RCA, for example, could have one segment for radio technology and another segment, or subsidiary, for making the boxes that hold them more attractive for consumers. While these corporate deals made sense from an economic perspective, they deprived the consumer of potential innovations that were ‘outside the box’ or technological conflicts that could create even better products. Wurtzler states this most clearly on page 289. “Hegemony seeks to disguise internal contradictions and mutually contradictory beliefs. Its success might be measured in the absence or marginalization of alternative visions.” These are practices that have been ‘amplified’ to an even larger extent in today’s corporate world. -Patrick Wright AU - Wurtzler, Steve J. CY - New York DA - 2007 KW - Wright, Patrick sound recording electricity motion pictures motion pictures, and sound sound recording, and motion pictures radio radio, and sound recording capitalism capitalism, and sound recording sound recording, and capitalism AT&T phonograph sound recording, and phonograph LB - 32920 PB - Columbia University PY - 2007 ST - Electric Sounds: Technological Change and the Rise of Corporate Mass Media TI - Electric Sounds: Technological Change and the Rise of Corporate Mass Media ID - 31 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Yates examines business communication between 1850 and 1920, and concludes that "by 1920 the major elements of the modern communication system and its role as a tool of managerial control had been established." She maintains that scholars have payed relatively little attention to communication's role within organizations. Yates' work uses both secondary and primary sources, and she focuses on railroads and manufacturing firms. She attempts to build on the work of Alfred D. Chandler (Strategy and Structure and The Visible Hand) and James R. Beniger (The Control Revolution). During the period Yates studies, management made major use of formal internal communication such as reports, memoranda, order forms. These new ways of communication took advantage of the typewriter, vertical files, carbon paper, and the stencil duplicator. Chapter 2 is entitled "Communication Technology and Internal Communication," and it deals with the telegraph, letter presses, and other ways of handling correspondence. It also discusses the typewriters, different duplicating technologies, and innovations in information storage. Archival collections used include those for the Illinois Central Railroad, the Scovill Manufacturing Company, and E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company. Included in this book's illustrations is a picture of a photocopying machine used during the 1920s. AU - Yates, JoAnne CY - Baltimore and London DA - 1989 KW - labor archives materials capitalism +duplicating technologies office, and information technology libraries information technology libraries, and information storage information storage information storage control revolution capitalism manufacturing +transportation railroads railroads, and internal communication Industrial Revolution typewriters carbon paper stencils +telegraph presses vertical files +information storage information storage, and business photocopying +telephones +sound recording sound recording, and dictating machines dictating machines writing writing, and Edison's electric pen Illinois Central Railroad Scovill Manufacturing Company E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Company mimeograph duplicating technologies, and stencils mimeograph office, and new media labor labor, and new media capitalism, and new media materials office LB - 11590 N1 - See also: office PB - The Johns Hopkins University Press PY - 1989 ST - Control through Communication: The Rise of System in American Management TI - Control through Communication: The Rise of System in American Management ID - 2272 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Being the first colony of Japanese empire in 1895 after the Sino-Japanese War, Taiwan thus began its modernization along with the progress of Meiji Restoration. The Japanese introduced motion pictures into the Taiwanese colony in 1896. This book documents the development of motion picture industry in Taiwan during the Japanese colonization from 1895 to 1945. It is divided into four major periods: 1. initial stage of motion picture development, 1896-1919 (the introduction of motion pictures by Japanese and the earliest movie theaters in Taipei, the earliest commercial projection, the first documentary); 2. emergence of motion picture industry in the 1920s (Taiwanese experiences of silent films, commercial projection tours, Taiwanese productions, and the rise of narrators in the silent film period); 3. thriving motion picture industry in the 1930s and 1940s (movie theaters with lavish European architectural style, movie culture in Taipei, and films made during this period); and 4. Taiwanese motion picture industry during the war period in the1940s (film industry under Japanese militarism and strict control, the arrival of films made in Shanghai film studios, and the popularity of movie culture from Mainland China). This book concludes with a series of discussions on the cultural meaning and historical value of Taiwanese motion picture industry during the Japanese colonization. -- Amy Chu AU - Yeh, Lung-Yen CY - Taipei, Taiwan DA - 1998 KW - audiences nationalism imperialism theaters motion pictures cultural imperialism non-USA Chu, Amy Taiwan +motion pictures and popular culture Taiwan, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Taiwan +nationalism and communication nationalism, and motion pictures (Taiwan) Japan Japan, and Taiwan motion pictures Taiwan, and Japan motion pictures, and new technology (Taiwan) theaters, and Taiwan cultural imperialism, and Taiwan cultural imperialism, and Japan Japan, and cultural imperialism Taiwan, and cultural imperialism motion pictures, and cultural imperialism cultural imperialism, and motion pictures LB - 550 PB - Yu shan she PY - 1998 ST - The History of of Taiwanese Movies during the Japanese Colonization (Jihchih shihchi Taiwan tienying shih) TI - The History of of Taiwanese Movies during the Japanese Colonization (Jihchih shihchi Taiwan tienying shih) ID - 143 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work discusses experimental and avant garde movie making. One chapter (pp. 207-56) deal with "Computer Films," and other chapters cover "Cybernetic Cinema," something that was quite new during the 1960s. Stan VanDerBeek is among those artists discussed. Another section (Part Five) deals with "Television as a Creative Medium." Part Seven is entitled "Holographic Cinema: A New World." R. Buckminster Fuller wrote the Introduction to this book. The increased availability of erotic in the home surely made the public more tolerant of sexuality shown in the movie theaters. By the late 1960s, the public had come a long way, Youngblood said. “We aren’t likely to be dazzled by discreet nudity on the Silver Screen,” wrote another commentator, “when our home videotape library contains graphic interpretations of last week’s neighborhood … orgy.” (115) AU - Youngblood, Gene CY - New York DA - 1970 KW - underground films computers pornography holography censorship and ratings motion pictures motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and underground newspapers newspapers underground newspapers, and motion pictures pornography, and underground films pornography, and underground newspapers underground press, and underground cinema underground cinema, and underground press computers and the Internet computers, and motion pictures motion pictures, and computers cybernetics cybernetics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and cybernetics motion pictures, and holograms holograms VanDerBeek, Stan, and experimental cinema Fuller, R. Buckminster home and new media home, and sexuality sexuality, and home sexuality home news underground media VanDerBeek, Stan computers news and journalism underground cinema underground press underground newspapers LB - 31970 PB - E. P. Dutton Co., Inc. PY - 1970 ST - Expanded Cinema TI - Expanded Cinema ID - 2893 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This work contains reactions to the "Decree on the Instruments of Social Communication," set out by Cardinal Cento on November 23, 1962. Rev. Edward Duff, S. J., said the Decree represented "a stage in Catholicism's evolving attitude toward the secular order and its institutions." (279) AU - Yzermans, Vincent A. (Monsignor) CY - New York DA - 1967 KW - values Christianity values values values critics Catholic Church, and social communication religion, and communication Catholic Church religion LB - 28370 PB - Sheed and Ward PY - 1967 ST - American Participation in the Second Vatican Council TI - American Participation in the Second Vatican Council ID - 1376 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Zachary's biography of Vannevar Bush deals with his impact on scientific research in the United States. Of particular interest are the pages on World War II research (145-91), chapter 10 (“The Endless Frontier”), and Zachary’s coverage of the years from 1955 to 1970 in chapter 16, “‘Crying in the Wilderness’...” AU - Zachary, G. Pascal CY - New York DA - 1997 KW - R & D Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories research and development war communication revolution war World War II science general studies scientific research, and government support research and development World War II, and research and development endless frontier Bush, Vannevar communication revolution information age biography +biography +military communication research and development, and government support LB - 1340 PB - The Free Press PY - 1997 ST - Endless Frontier: Vannevar Bush Engineer of the American Century TI - Endless Frontier: Vannevar Bush Engineer of the American Century ID - 1530 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This, the second edition of this book, "reflects the tremendous increase of color choices in the studio and the marketplace." The authors say that "There are now millions of colors available through computer graphics, more than the human eye can even distinguish." [p. 7] They contend that "Color is perhaps the most powerful tool at the artist's disposal.... Because the possibilities of color are ceaseless, the art of using color well is an open-ended, complex discipline which incorporates many different points of view and poses many questions." (9) Chapter 4 deals with the "Psychological Effects of Color" (28-35). It suggests that "Bright colors, particularly warm hues, seem conductive to activity and mental alertness and are therefore increasingly being used in schools." It mention "color-psychodynamics" and says that "colors that seem to increase blood pressure, pulse and respiration rates are, in order of increasing effect, red, orange, and yellow. Those decreasing these physiological measures are green (minimal), blue (medium effect), and black (maximum effect)." (30) In Chapter 4 "Color Symbolism" (31-32) is covered. "Our responses to colors are not just biological . They are als incluenced by color associations from our culture." (31) For example, in "Western industrial cultures, black is associated with death; mourners wear dark clothes and the body is tranported in a black limousine." In Egypt, "black is associated with preparation for rebirth...." (31) In China, white is a mourning color. "Red is associated with vigorous life in many cultures." (31) Color can have a wide range of emotion effects. (32, 35) Chapter 6 deals with "Theories of Color Relationships" (46-56) and covers Leonardo da Vinci, Isaac Newton, Moses Harris, Goethe, Runge, Chevreul, Rood, Munsell, and Ostwald. Chapter 10, "Color in Fine Art" (115-35), deals with "Non-Western Tradions," "Historical Western Approaches," and "Twentieth-Century Western Approaches." The final chapter, Chapter 11, covers "Color in Applied Design" (136-50), and cover "Color Trends," "Color Psychology," "Architecture," "Landscape Design," and more. AU - Zelanski, Paul AU - Fisher, Mary Pat CY - Upper Saddle River, NJ DA - 1989, 1994 KW - computers ref, secondary color color, and architecture color, and theory color, and Goethe color, and psychology color, and emotion computers and the Internet color, and computer graphics quotations quotations, and color LB - 41250 PB - Prentice Hall PY - 1989 ST - Color TI - Color ID - 4224 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - This book uses the media coverage to the assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963 to examine changing nature of journalistic authority and how it influences collective memory. Technology is an important theme in this work. Zelizer writes that the "Kennedy assassination can been seen as a critical incident for the U. S. media. It was a turning point in the evolution of American journalistic practice not only because it called for the rapid relay of information during a time of crisis, but also because it legitimated televised journalism as a mediator of national public experience. The immediate demand for journalistic expertise and eyewitness testimony that characterized the event caused the public to rely on journalists for clarification. Journalists went beyond familiar practices to cover the events of President Kennedy's death, improvising within the configuration of different circumstances and new technologies to meet ongoing demands for information. Ever since, journalists have 4/5 used the event as a benchmark in their discussions of appropriate journalistic practice." (4-5) Zelizer considers journalists to be more than simply a professional community but also, "following sociological models, ... as an interpretive community that uses narratives and collective memories to keep itself together." (9) She argues that members of the media have "promoted themselves over other sources -- particularly historians and independent critics -- in attempting to retell the assassination story. Issues about the authority of official documents, technology, and the workings of collective memory are involved in journalists' attempts to promote themselves as the assassination's preferred retellers." (12) Later she writes that during and after the assassination, "the celebration of television technology" became "an integral part of journalists' definition of professional behavior. By borrowing the characteristics of television technology referenced by certain journalists, reporters in other media in effect became second-class tellers of the assassination narrative." (165) Zelizer maintains that the assassination helped to legitimize television news, the stature of which prior to the Kennedy presidency was still being debated. She notes that reporters often failed to master the technology at their disposal during the assassination and that this failure sometimes limited their ability to cover the story. (73-74) In other ways, technology -- being adept in using it -- became part of the reporters' narratives. Some considered broadcasting technology to have been partly responsible "for creating the sense of intrusion" and confusion during the murder of Lee Harvey Oswald. Not longer after the events of November, 1963, though, two assumption about using television for news emerged: "that the camera equipment ... made for a better journalism, and that television was capable of providing a more truthful and hence more authoritative form of reportage than other media." (94) Where early discussions of the assassination had commented on the intrusiveness of the broadcasting technology, later considerations "ceased to view television as a technological interference." (95) As one moves further away from the assassination chronologically, Zelizer notes that technology (photography and especially television) played an important role in how journalists constructed their professional memories and narratives. Even when reporters had not been in Dallas, "their technologies and narrative strategies allowed them to construct their tales as if they had been." (129) She has a section that deals with celebrity journalism and the assassination. Also interesting is the section entitled "Memory and the Tools of Technology" (162-5). While some journalists considered their cameras to have replaced the traditional note-taking pad and pen, other reporters took detailed notes on paper which they considered to be a way of "stabilizing memory." (163) AU - Zelizer, Barbie CY - Chicago DA - 1992 KW - history celebrity Zapruder, Abraham corporations corporations corporations corporations news and journalism history and new media television photography cameras 8mm cameras, and 8mm Zapruder film Kennedy, John F. presidents and new media news, and technology journalism, and technology photography photography and visual communication photography, and amateurs news and journalism, and citizen journalists books, periodicals, newspapers photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography CBS celebrity culture history, and photography photography, and history television, and history history, and television history, and newspapers newspapers, and history Kennedy, John F., and assassination ABC NBC radio radio, and Kennedy assassination photography, amateur motion pictures motion pictures, and history Stone, Oliver motion pictures, and Oliver Stone history, and motion pictures history, and Oliver Stone magnetic recording television, and videotape videotape, and television newspapers history journalism news videotape magnetic tape magnetic recording LB - 32980 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1992 ST - Covering the Body: The Kennedy Assassination, the Media, and the Shaping of Collective Memory TI - Covering the Body: The Kennedy Assassination, the Media, and the Shaping of Collective Memory ID - 2936 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - The book includes the introduction and adoption of wireless communication technology in China in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, and the early development of radio broadcast industry in the following three periods: the early 1900s, the China-Japan war between the late 1920s to late 1930s, and from the late 1930s to the end of second World War. -- Amy Chu AU - Zhao, Yuming CY - Beijing, China DA - 2001 KW - imperialism Asia Japan cultural imperialism war non-USA +radio China China, and radio China, and wireless +telegraph telegraph, and China China, and telegraph World War I World War I, and China China, and World War I World War II World War II, and China China, and World War II China, and broadcasting Chu, Amy cultural imperialism, and Japan Japan, and cultural imperialism cultural imperialism, and radio radio, and cultural imperialism China, and cultural imperialism cultural imperialism, and China LB - 500 PB - Zhongguo guangbo dianshi chu bvan she PY - 2001 ST - History of Contemporary Radio Broadcast in China, 1923-1949(Zhongguo guangbo jiangshih) TI - History of Contemporary Radio Broadcast in China, 1923-1949(Zhongguo guangbo jiangshih) ID - 138 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Researcher Dolf Zillmann argued that prolonged exposure to non-violent pornography made both men and women more accepting of pre- and extramarital sex, generated discontent with one’s sexual partner, created doubts about marriage being one of society’s essential institutions, and destroyed trust between spouses or friends. Moreover, heavy use of pornography promoted a lack of sensitivity toward victims of sexual violence because it tended to trivialize rape and the sexual abuse of children, led people to believe that unusual sexual activities were normal, and decreased the belief that women should be equal to men in intimate relations. AU - Zillmann, Dolf CY - Hillsdale, NJ DA - 1984 KW - children, and media government hearings media effects, and pornography social science research archives sexuality motion pictures government media effects crime censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research pornography, nonviolent Meese Commission testimony primary sources hearings media effects media effects, and nonviolent pornography children children, and pornography pornography, and children pornography, and opponents pornography, and satiation pornography, and harmful effects pornography, and crime crime, and pornography LB - 22790 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Lawrence Erlbaum PY - 1984 ST - Connections between Sex and Aggression TI - Connections between Sex and Aggression ID - 1004 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Dolf Zillmann and Jennings Bryant studies suggest that prolonged exposure to non-violent pornography made both men and women more accepting of pre- and extramarital sex, generated discontent with one’s sexual partner, created doubts about marriage being one of society’s essential institutions, and destroyed trust between spouses or friends. Moreover, heavy use of pornography promoted a lack of sensitivity toward victims of sexual violence because it tended to trivialize rape and the sexual abuse of children, led people to believe that unusual sexual activities were normal, and decreased the belief that women should be equal to men in intimate relations. AU - Zillmann, Dolf AU - Jennings Bryant, eds. CY - Hillsdale, NJ DA - 1989 KW - children, and media government hearings media effects, and pornography social science research archives sexuality motion pictures government censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research pornography, nonviolent Meese Commission testimony primary sources hearings media effects media effects, and nonviolent pornography children children, and pornography pornography, and children pornography, and opponents pornography, and satiation LB - 22780 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - Lawrence Erlbaum PY - 1989 ST - Pornography: Research Advances and Policy Considerations TI - Pornography: Research Advances and Policy Considerations ID - 1003 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Zimmermann has written a solid history of amateur film making and the technologies involved. During the 1940s and 1950s, several developments helped to improve the status of 16mm pictures, she observes. The military found in World War II that light-weight, portable cameras offered advantages and it appropriated 16mm amateur-film equipment on a massive scale. What had once been largely the domain of hobbyists evolved into a “semiprofessional industry” and emerged after 1945 “as a more legitimate, standardized, and utilitarian technology.” Moreover, during the war many new people had been taught film production and millions had seen firsthand how 16mm movies could be used for educational and training purposes. After the war, a surplus of 16mm cameras encouraged civilians to use this technology. Zimmermann is good on the boom in home movie making after the war. Families used 16mm and 8mm cameras. She asserts that the “domestication of amateur film making as a leisure-time commodity erased any of its social, political, or economic possibilities.” AU - Zimmermann, Patricia R. CY - Bloomington DA - 1995 KW - World War II materials war motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and amateurism 16mm motion pictures, and 16mm motion pictures, and new technology motion pictures, and 8mm film 8mm 16mm film, and World War II World War II, and 16mm film motion pictures, and home movies materials 16mm film LB - 18060 PB - Indiana University Press PY - 1995 ST - Reel Families: A Social History of Amateur Film TI - Reel Families: A Social History of Amateur Film ID - 715 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Ray Zone’s 3-D Filmmakers, Conversations with Creators of Stereoscopic Motion Pictures, is a compilation of conversations between some of the world’s leading 3-D filmmakers and the author. Zone, an award winning 3-D artist, has a strong expertise in this subject and is able stimulate interesting and informative conversations. These conversations range from some of the original producers (such as Arch Oboler), who were the pioneers of the field during the 1950s, to some of the innovators who did work in pornography (Steve Gibson), to some of the theme park film producers (such as Isidore Mankofsky), to major movie producers who like to dabble in 3-D work in their spare time (James Cameron). Readers will enjoy the wide range of subjects discussed with these experts, such as the history of 3-D work, the innovations and failures of the field, to some of the ground breaking work being done in the field. Several major motion films appear headed toward three-dimensional productions as producers strive to give audience more realistic experiences at the theater. Much of this trend has to do with the IMAX revolution, which involves using screens much large larger and rounded then a conventional theater. Many films are being produced that are adapted for both the larger and smaller screen. Producers are candid in sharing the mistakes they made that made their films failures as well as successes. At the end of the text, Zone brings in authors such as Steve Schklair, who are taking stereoscopic work into other areas beyond film, such as live television and sporting events. --Jason Karnosky AU - Zone, Ray CY - Lantham, MD DA - 2005 KW - Karnosky, Jason motion pictures motion pictures, and special effects motion pictures, and 3-D 3-D, and motion pictures special effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and IMAX IMAX, and 3-D 3-D IMAX special effects LB - 33240 PB - Scarecrow Press PY - 2005 ST - 3-D Filmmakers: Conversations with Creators of Stereoscopic Motion Pictures TI - 3-D Filmmakers: Conversations with Creators of Stereoscopic Motion Pictures ID - 82 ER - TY - EDBOOK AB - Zunz writes: “Reflecting on the 1989 collapse of the Soviet Union that conceded final victory to the Americans, French historian Francois Furet pointed to the fact that the former Soviet superpower may have been a formidable political and military force but never a civilization. The proof is that it could vanish without leaving any substantial legacy behind it. My premise in describing the ‘American century’ that helped shape ‘Pax Americana’ is to show exactly the opposite. The United States became a superpower precisely because of its civilization.” Chapter 3 is on “Inventing the Average American.” Communication is woven into the author’s text, although often implicitly. Chapter one, for example, deals with “Producers, Brokers, and Users of Knowledge.” AU - Zunz, Oliver CY - Chicago DA - 1998 KW - USSR nationalism imperialism community democracy non-USA +nationalism and communication cultural imperialism Soviet Union, and collapse of democracy and media knowledge, production of Soviet Union culture LB - 2480 PB - University of Chicago Press PY - 1998 ST - Why the American Century? TI - Why the American Century? ID - 1641 ER - TY - MPCT AB - This movie opened in New York City on January 24, 1962, and was one of several foreign films that dealt with themes that were outside Hollywood's Production Code as it was written in 1930. For example, prostitution and homosexuality were subjects that had been permitted with qualifications when the Code was revised in 1956 and 1961 respectively. Plot summary from American Film Institute Catalog: "Ruggeretto, Scintillone, and Bella-Bella, three indolent young cynics, steal some rifles and pick up two prostitutes on their way to a "fence" on the outskirts of Rome. During the transaction, they pick up a third prostitute who wants a ride back to the city. En route, the youths stop the car, take the women into the woods for the afternoon, and then leave without paying them. They soon discover, however, that one of the women has stolen all their money. Back in Rome, the companions attempt to steal a movie camera from an automobile and get into a brawl with its occupants, three wealthy homosexuals who then treat them to an evening of drinking. At the apartment of one of their newfound friends, Achille, the inquisitive Ruggeretto wanders into a bedroom and finds Laura. He seduces her, although he is unsure whether she is Achille's sister or the maid. Bella-Bella then steals his host's wallet, and the three hoodlums race from the apartment. As Bella-Bella and Ruggeretto argue over the money, Scintillone picks up the wallet and skulks off. He meets an old flame, Rossana, and promises her a night on the town, but he creates a disturbance at a posh restaurant and is led away to jail. Ruggeretto arrives on the scene, grabs the wallet, and takes Rossana to the most expensive club in Rome. When morning comes, he crumples his last bill and tosses it over the side of a bridge." This film was released in Italy in 1959; running time: 105 min. It was released in Paris in Jan 1961 as Les garçons. Also known as On Any Street. Re-released in 1965 by Medallion Pictures as Bad Girls Don't Cry. English language version credited as a Miller-King production. The original production company was Ajace Cinematografica; Franco London Film. AU - Bolognini, Mauro DA - 1962 (USA); 1959 (Italy); 1961 (France) KW - censorship self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality foreign films, and sexuality motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings Johnston, Eric, and Production Code sexuality motion pictures, and sex Production Code, and sex Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality homosexuality, and motion pictures censorship, and homosexuality Production Code, and homosexuality motion pictures, and foreign films foreign films foreign films, and homosexuality non-USA France France, and motion pictures motion pictures, and France LB - 36490 PB - Medallion Pictures; Miller Producing Company PY - 1962 ST - La notte brava (aka On Any Street; Les garçons; Bad Girls Don't Cry) TI - La notte brava (aka On Any Street; Les garçons; Bad Girls Don't Cry) ID - 3282 ER - TY - MPCT AB - This movie was controversial when it came. Some critics, such as U. S. Ambassador to Italy Clare Booth Luce, would not attend the film when it was to be shown abroad because she felt it cast the United States in a bad light. Dore Schary felt the movie was one of the primary reasons the Kefauver hearings investigated the relationship between movies and juvenile delinquency. The film was based on the novel The Blackboard Jungle by Evan Hunter (New York, 1954). The rock n roll music and violence were part of what the film controversial. Songs included: "Rock Around the Clock," words and music by Max C. Freedman and Jimmy DeKnight, performed by Bill Haley and His Comets, Courtesy of Decca Records, Inc; "Go Down, Moses," traditional, arranged by Harry Thacker Burleigh. Music included: "Invention for Guitar and Trumpet" by Bill Holman, performed by Stan Kenton and His Orchestra, Courtesy of Capitol Records, Inc.; "The Jazz Me Blues" by Tom Delaney, played by Bix Beiderbecke and His Gang, Courtesy of Columbia Records. Plot Summary from American Film Institute Catalog: "As Richard Dadier, a soft-spoken ex-serviceman, accepts his first teaching job in a tough New York City high school, he asks his new principal, Mr. Warnecke, about the school's discipline problem and is assured that at North Manual High, "there is no discipline problem." The other teachers, particularly the cynical Jim Murdock, who calls the all-male school a "garbage can" and cautions Dadier not to turn his back on the students, do not lessen his anxiety. That evening, Dadier celebrates his new job with his wife Anne, who, although deeply in love with her husband, worries not only that her pregnancy will make her unattractive to him, but that she will miscarry as she had once before. Dadier's first day teaching English is discouraging. The pupils, mostly lower-class juvenile delinquents, ignore his requests and call him "Daddy-O," and when he asks Gregory W. Miller, a bright but alienated black student, to use his leadership abilities to promote cooperation in the classroom, the young man just shakes his head. That afternoon, Lois Judby Hammond, another new teacher who seems attracted to Dadier, is nearly raped by one of the students. Dadier severely beats the boy, and the next day, the students greet him with threatening glares and angry silence. After work, Dadier accompanies Joshua Y. Edwards, a new math teacher who passionately loves jazz and swing, to a bar, where they have a drink too many and bemoan the students' hostility. While cutting through an alley to the bus stop, both teachers are brutally beaten by Dadier's student Artie West and his gang of hoodlums. Anne urges Dadier to leave the school, but he declares, "I've been beaten up, but I'm not beaten." While recuperating, Dadier visits his former professor, who assures him that students do want to learn, but that urban schools need more instructors who care. Dadier returns to school, and when the police question him, he refuses to identify his attackers. In class, Artie calls fellow student Pete Morales a "spic," whereupon Dadier remarks that calling one another names, like "spic, mick, and nigger," can lead to big trouble. Later the principal, acting on a confidential student complaint, accuses Dadier of bigotry, but Dadier angrily defends himself. Warnecke finally apologizes and puts Dadier in charge of the Christmas play. Soon afterward, West destroys Josh's prized record collection while his class looks on, leading the discouraged math teacher to resign. Meanwhile, Anne begins receiving anonymous letters and phone calls accusing her husband of infidelity. Unaware of Anne's growing suspicion, Dadier concentrates on his students. He convinces Miller and his singing group to perform their version of "Go Down, Moses" in the Christmas play, and he stimulates an animated class discussion by showing a "Jack and the Beanstalk" cartoon in class. Summarizing the discussion, Dadier encourages the young men to consider the real meaning of what they hear and to think for themselves. Miller later tells Dadier that because black people have limited options, he will drop out of school at term's end, but Dadier maintains that blacks can succeed in the modern world and that some teachers do care. At Christmas, Anne, tormented by the letters, gives birth prematurely, and when Dadier learns what has happened, he assumes the students are rsponsible for the letters and decides to resign. Defeated, Dadier bemoans that, after everything teachers must endure, they earn less even than cooks. Murdock, cured of his cynicism by Dadier's dedication, and Anne, admitting that she should not have doubted her husband, encourage Dadier to remain, and he does take heart when the doctor says his baby son is out of danger. Back at school, Dadier orders West to see the principal when the gang leader flagrantly cheats in class. West threatens him with a knife, ordering the other gang members to jump the teacher. To West's surprise, only Belazi obeys his orders. Following a scuffle, Dadier accuses West of having sent the anonymous letters and then drags him and Belazi to Warnecke's office. Later that day, Miller, having heard that Dadier plans to quit, promises to remain in school if Dadier will do the same." "Note: Before the opening credits are given, a rolling written introduction to the film states: "We, in the United States, are fortunate to have a school system that is a tribute to our communities and to our faith in American youth. Today we are concerned with juvenile delinquency--its causes--and its effects. We are especially concerned when this delinquency boils over into our schools. The scenes and incidents depicted here are fictional. However, we believe that public awareness is a first step toward a remedy for any problem. It is in this spirit and with this faith that [H]Blackboard Jungle was produced." "Evan Hunter's novel was serialized beginning with the Oct 1954 issue of Ladies Home Journal. According to an Apr 1954 NYT news item, M-G-M paid Hunter $95,000 for the rights to his novel. In May 1962, a HR news item reported that writers Murray Burnett and Frederick Stephani accused Hunter of plagiarizing their work, but their suit was dismissed. According to a modern source, director Richard Brooks was originally hired to direct M-G-M's Ben Hur and William Wyler to direct [H]Blackboard Jungle, but Brooks convinced Wyler to switch assignments with him. In his autobiography, Dore Schary, M-G-M's head of production, recalled that he was urged not to make the film by both Paramount executive Y. Frank Freeman and MPPA head Eric Johnston. Schary dismissed their concerns, but soon was asked by Loew's president Nicholas M. Schenk to reconsider. "I had only one argument for Schenk," Schary wrote. "'Nick, you're suggesting I give up on a film that might earn us nine or ten million dollars.' Nick asked me how much it would cost. I had a rough estimate of $1,200,000. He said go ahead." Schary added that the final cost of the film was $1,160,000. "In a 1983 NYT interview, Brooks recalled that M-G-M wanted one of their contract players, either Mickey Rooney or Robert Taylor, to play schoolteacher "Mr. Dadier." Brooks insisted upon casting new, unknown faces, and as a result, hired unpolished actors with little camera experience for many of the roles, thus infusing a raw realism into their performances. Among the actors making their screen debut in this picture were Vic Morrow, Rafael Campos, Dan Terrnaova, Danny Dennis and Jameel Farah (who later changed his name to Jamie Farr.) Although the studio wanted the film shot in color, Brooks insisted upon black and white because he feared that "color would beautify everything," according to the interview. A 6 Dec 1954 HR news item adds Victor Paul, Loren James, Bill Chaney, Lennie Smith and Mickey Martin to the cast, but their appearance in the final film has not been confirmed. "Upon its release, the film was greeted by controversy. According to an Apr 1955 DV news item, the school authorities of New Brunswick, NJ, objected to the depiction of school conditions in the film. As a result, the theater circuit was forced to add a disclaimer stating: "To our patrons, the school and situations you have just seen are NOT to be found in this area. We should all be proud of the facilities provided OUR youth by the Public School of New Brunswick..." According to a Mar 1955 HR news item, the film was banned in Memphis, and a Jun 1955 news item in Var reported that the film was banned in Atlanta because it was deemed "immoral, obscene, licentious and will adversely affect the peace, health, morals and good order of the city." " According to a 21 Mar 1955 HR news item, the Institute for Public Opinion sent postcards to film critics claiming that the film was "anti-public schools" and denying that the conditions depicted onscreen really existed. M-G-M's Schary responded by citing research and news accounts that supported the film's depiction of certain inner-city schools. Claire Boothe Luce, at the time the U.S. Ambassador to Italy, prevented the film's screening at the Venice Film Festival by threatening to walk out if it was shown. Luce claimed that if she attended a performance of the film, she would be "giving ammunition to Italian Communist and anti-U.S. propaganda." Finally, Schary wrote in his autobiography, "Senator Estes Kefauver came to Hollywood to investigate movies--he meant one movie, [H]Blackboard Jungle....He called me as his first witness. He explained that he was in Hollywood to learn whether we acted responsibly when making [this] film." Schary related that after providing Kefauver with volumes of data on juvenile delinquency, he asked the senator what he found objectionable about the film. "He admitted he had not yet seen it," Schary wrote. "I suggested that there seemed to be a lack of responsibility in his investigation." "The picture's soundtrack also created a stir. According to Brooks's NYT interview, a Boston theater ran the first reel in silence for fear that the rock and roll music on the soundtrack would over-stimulate the audience. "Rock Around the Clock," the song played beneath the film's credits, was one of the top ten songs of the year and played an important part in expanding the rock and roll market. In a modern source, Peter Ford, the son of the film's star, Glenn Ford, noted that Brooks borrowed the record from Peter's collection. The article goes on to say that M-G-M purchased limited rights to the song from Decca Records for $5,000. Under that agreement, the studio was granted the right to use the song only three times in the film. The film was nominated for the following Academy Awards: Best Original Screenplay, Best Film Editing, Best Cinematography (black and white) and Best Art Direction/Set Decoration (black and white). According top a 14 Dec 1954 HR news item, the Producers Theatre was to present a Broadway production based on the Hunter novel, but that production apparently never opened." Source citations: Variety 8 Jun 1955. Variety 2 Mar 55, p. 8. New York Times 15 Jan 1983. Hollywood Reporter 4 May 1962. New York Times 21 Mar 1955. New York Times 13 Apr 1954. Motion Picture Herald Product Digest 5 Mar 55, p. 345. Hollywood Reporter 21 Mar 55, p. 4. Hollywood Reporter 30 Mar 55, p. 4. Hollywood Reporter 28 Feb 55, p. 3. Hollywood Reporter 6 Decorations 54, p. 8. Hollywood Reporter 17 Decorations 54, p. 8. Hollywood Reporter 11 Nov 54, p. 1. Hollywood Reporter 12 Nov 54, p. 6. Hollywood Reporter 18 Nov 54, p. 11. Film Daily 28 Feb 55, p. 6. Daily Variety 22 Sep 1955. Daily Variety 29 Aug 1955. Daily Variety 21 Apr 1955. Daily Variety 20 Apr 1955. Daily Variety 28 Feb 55, p. 3. Box Office 5 Mar 1955. American Cinematographer 1 Jun 55, pp. 334-35, 358-59. AU - Brooks, Richard DA - 1955 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union self-regulation nationalism MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) Eisenhower administration motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism Cold War war Johnston, Eric capitalism motion pictures, and communism Eisenhower, Dwight D. presidents and new media motion pictures, and Dwight Eisenhower Eisenhower, Dwight D., and motion pictures motion pictures, and drinking military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and U.S. foreign policy MPAA, and foreign policy MPAA, and Eisenhower administration MPAA, and Cold War USSR motion pictures, and USSR propaganda democracy motion pictures, and democracy Luce, Clare Booth censorship and ratings motion pictures, and censorship media effects motion pictures, and media effects nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism motion pictures, and foreign policy LB - 35740 PB - Loew's Inc. PY - 1955 ST - Blackboard Jungle TI - Blackboard Jungle ID - 3213 ER - TY - MPCT AU - Cameron, James DA - 1997 KW - motion pictures and popular culture censorship and ratings digitization censorship, and digitization digitization, and censorship V-chip television motion pictures, and digital filters sexuality digital media digital cinema motion pictures self-regulation censorship LB - 29460 PY - 1997 ST - Titantic TI - Titantic ID - 2706 ER - TY - MPCT AB - Never on Sunday (1960), a comedy filmed in Greece, and written and directed by a notable member of the Hollywood blacklist, Jules Dassin, was about “the strong sexuality of a modern ‘free’ woman,” a prostitute played by Melina Mercouri, and the unsuccessful efforts by an American tourist (played by Dassin) to reform her. Despite not having a PCA seal, the movie was a financial hit. Made for about $150,000, it earned at least $5 million in the United States alone. When the film played in Atlanta, censors tried to ban it as obscene, but the ban was overturned when the Fulton County Superior Court ruled that the city’s censorship law was unconstitutional. By that time, the movie had played in more than 2,000 theaters in 175 American cities. AU - Dassin, Jules DA - 1959 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) motion pictures, and foreign films Production Code, and foreign films law motion pictures, and local censorship Never on Sunday (1960) motion pictures, and blacklist Production Code, and prostitution children LB - 36680 PB - Melinafilm, Lopert Films PY - 1959 ST - Never On Sunday (aka Pote Tin Kyriaki) TI - Never On Sunday (aka Pote Tin Kyriaki) ID - 3301 ER - TY - MPCT AB - This film was turned down by the U. S. movie industry's Production Code Administration because of its theme of homosexuality. However, it played without the PCA seal, opening in New York, Feb. 5, 1962. Plot summary from the American Film Institute Catalog: "'Boy' Barrett, a young English construction worker, is arrested for stealing a large sum of money from his firm. When he learns that the police know he used the money to pay a ring of blackmailers who threatened to expose him as a homosexual, he hangs himself rather than endanger the career of Melville Farr, a successful barrister with whom he had become emotionally, but not sexually, involved. Farr does become implicated, however, when the police discover that the blackmailers were using a photograph of them together to extort money from Barrett. Filled with remorse and angered by the existence of a law that makes homosexuals criminals, thereby making them easy prey for blackmailers, Farr decides to jeopardize both his marriage and his career by bringing those responsible for Farr's suicide to justice. Before his marriage Farr had admitted to his wife, Laura, that he had homosexual tendencies; now, forced to confess that these tendencies still exist, he offers Laura her freedom. Despite pressure from both the blackmailers and their victims, Farr cooperates with the police in tracking down the blackmailers--a sadistic young hoodlum, Sandy, and an embittered spinster, Miss Benham. Though fully aware that the scandal will ruin him, Farr insists upon prosecuting; as he prepares his case, Laura, who still loves him, realizes that her husband's need for her is stronger than any passing emotion he may feel, and she intimates that she will return to him when the trial is over." This movie, made in the United Kingdom, starred Dirk Bogard and open in London in Aug., 1961. Its New York opening was on 5 Feb 1962. AU - Dearden, Basil DA - 1961 (Great Britain); 1962 (USA) KW - censorship self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality foreign films, and sexuality motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings Johnston, Eric, and Production Code sexuality motion pictures, and sex Production Code, and sex Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality homosexuality, and motion pictures censorship, and homosexuality Production Code, and homosexuality motion pictures, and foreign films foreign films foreign films, and homosexuality non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Great Britain LB - 35360 PB - Pathé-America Distributing Co. PY - 1961 ST - Victim TI - Victim ID - 3175 ER - TY - MPCT AB - Making films abroad sometimes offered movie makers freedom to deal with topics in ways that might not have been possible in the United States. Cecil B. DeMille shot much of his epic film, The Ten Commandments, in Egypt where new movie making technologies such as 70mm film, CinemaScope, and VistaVision allowed him to emphasize the area’s spectacular settings. DeMille took inspiration from classical painters and paid much attention to the use of color in the film. In Egypt, DeMille found it possible to create, according to historian Peter Lev, “a level of sexual display scanty costumes and suggestive scenes which would have otherwise encountered censorship problems in the United States and many other countries,” concludes one film historian. There were other matters with which religious purists might have quarreled. DeMille’s movie dealt with thirty years of Moses’s life not chronicled in the Bible. And in it “emphasis on freedom and the blending of religious and political discourses,” it reflected contemporary American Cold War values. When Eric Johnston, president of the MPAA, negotiated a film exchange with the USSR in 1958, the Soviets declined to take this movie as part of the package. AU - DeMille, Cecil B. DA - 1956 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union Khrushchev, Nikita Eisenhower administration motion pictures USSR non-USA motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and foreign policy Eisenhower, Dwight D. presidents and new media Eisenhower, Dwight D., and motion pictures Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and USSR MPAA Motion Picture Export Association Khruschchev, Nikita, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Nikita Khruschchev Ten Commandments religion values motion pictures, and religion motion pictures, and values DeMille, Cecil motion pictures, and American-interest films hybrid films values motion pictures, and color color motion pictures, and VistaVision LB - 36090 PB - Paramount Pictures Corp. PY - 1956 ST - Ten Commandments TI - Ten Commandments ID - 3245 ER - TY - MPCT AB - The working titles of this film, which was one of the first post-World War II movies to deal with anti-Semitism in the United States, were The Brick Foxhole and Cradle of Fear. AU - Dymtryk, Edward DA - 1947 KW - censorship and ratings motion pictures motion pictures, and reform Hollywood Ten motion pictures, and anti-Semitism Hollywood LB - 34990 N1 - Production company: RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. PB - RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. PY - 1947 ST - Crossfire TI - Crossfire ID - 3140 ER - TY - MPCT AB - The movie John Paul Jones (1959), one of the many so-called American-interest or "runaway" films that were produced abroad with some American talent. Hollywood labor groups protested this film and especially the fact that the signing of the Declaration of Independence in the movies actually took place in Spain. Plot Summary from American Film Institute Catalog: "On a large Navy frigate, an officer tells new seamen about the legacy of the man who commanded the first ship to carry the U.S. flag into a European port, [H]John Paul Jones: In 1759, at age twelve, John, from a poor Scottish family, witnesses an English officer disperse townspeople playing the bagpipes, which are viewed as an instrument of war music. When the officer also insults the group by calling the kilt, forbidden by law, a "skirt," John hits the officer in the face with an egg. Desiring to be master of a ship, John goes to sea and by age seventeen is skilled in navigation. Seeking further experience, he serves on all manner of ships, including slavers, but decides that trafficking in slaves, while lucrative, is not for him. In 1773, John is master of a ship in the West Indies, but when a mutinous crew member dies from a cracked skull after John subdues him in a fight, the governor of Tobago suggests John change his name and leave. Complying, John adds the name "Jones" to his own and goes to Fredericksburg, Virginia to visit his brother William, who owns a business there. John learns from William's clerk and accountant, young Peter Wooley, that his brother died from an illness three months earlier. When John finds that two slave boys, Scipio and Cato, whom his brother planned to free, are in danger of being sold, John vows to see that they will be freed. Wooley suggests that John hire Patrick Henry, a friend of William's, as his lawyer. At a dance, when a British lieutenant haughtily condemns Colonial courage as being no better than the virtue of Colonial women, John slugs him. Afterward, the lieutenant's commanding officer, Capt. Pearson, apologizes for his conduct. When John attempts to flirt with socialite Dorothea Danders, whom Henry is courting, she warns against a "sudden and swift attack." Taken with Dorothea, John decides to stay in Virginia and buy a farm, but he does not take well to farm life. Dorothea's father, who is a member of the resistance with Henry, rejects John as a suitor because of their illustrious ancestors and John's questionable past. When the war begins, John joins the Continental Navy and, as second-in-command on a battleship in the Bahamas, presents a novel plan to use the Marines in a surprise attack on British troops in Nassau. After the Declaration of Independence is signed, John is assigned his first independent command. He learns that Tories have burned and destroyed his farm and carried off his servants to be sold in Jamaica. John's spirits are raised, however, when his Scottish friend, Duncan MacBean, playing the bagpipes, and Scipio and Cato, playing fife and drums, join Peter in welcoming John's ship. After sailing for Newfoundland, John captures eighteen ships, then gives supplies to Washington's army intended for the British commander General Burgoyne. After he learns that he no longer can command a ship because he is ranked low among captains, John goes to Valley Forge to deliver his resignation personally to General Washington. When John complains of favoritism and corruption, Washington, whose army suffers from hunger, mutiny and frostbite, castigates him. John then volunteers to serve in any capacity, and Washington sends him to France, hoping that a French alliance could break a possible blockade of the coasts. For his voyage, Washington suggests that John steal the British ship Ranger at Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and gather whatever crew he can get. The ship, on its arrival at Brest, is greeted by the first French cannon fire salute ever given to a ship flying the United States flag. In the company of Benjamin Franklin, John is celebrated in Paris as a hero. Aimee de Tellison, the illegitimate daughter of the king, Louis XVI, acts as John's guide to the city. Franklin encourages John to take over a frigate built in Holland and invade the British Isles, hoping that the English people will then protest the war and that insurance rates will rise, creating a financial burden for British commerce. After burning the ships and destroying the cannon at the harbor of Whitehaven, John speaks to the citizenry and relates that George III has likewise raided American shores. He vows not to harm any home or person if they make no attempt to fight, and a citizen leader grants them entry. After the raid, Lloyd's of London increases its rates on insuring ships, and members of the House of Commons decry the war. John is feted in Versailles, but at a meeting of the Marine Commission, the Ranger is ordered home as the result of a false report that John could not handle his men, sent by an aristocratic underling whom John had humiliated. After Franklin convinces John to remain in France without a ship, Aimee, moved by John's determination to build a new naval power, suggests to the queen, Marie Antoinette, that the Crown finance a frigate. When Franklin points out that the Crown would benefit from fleets John might capture, Louis agrees to the proposal if the ship sails under the American flag and uses as its name Le Bonhomme Richard, the French title of Franklin's most popular work, Poor Richard's Almanac. During the subsequent battle with Captain Pearson's new ship, The Serafis, the traitorous commander of a ship allied with John fires on Le Bonhomme Richard. As John's men are dying, Pearson asks if he is surrendering, and John calls out, "No sir, I have not yet begun to fight!" Though MacBean, Scipio, and many others on the ship die, Pearson ultimately surrenders because of a fire underneath the magazine. John is awarded a medal and sword at Versailles for his victory, but learns that because Aimee's father is of royal blood, she has been sent away. After the peace treaty is signed, John is told that present finances will not permit him to form an adequate sea force. While waiting for funds to be issued, he goes to Russia in 1790, as Empress Catherine has applied for the loan of his services. At St. Petersburg, Catherine tempts him with dancing girls, then, convinced of his sense of duty, assigns him to the Black Sea, where Russian ships and crews are in bad condition. After John wins the battle against the enemy's ships and fort, Louis bestows on him the rank of chevalier, which could allow him to marry Aimee. When John becomes very ill, he travels to Paris, where Aimee writes his last letter for him in which he dictates the qualities needed in a naval officer: he must be a gentleman and have a liberal education, fine manners, courtesy, sense of personal honor, tact, fairness and justice. The naval commander on the frigate finishes his tale, saying that John's spirit continues to serve and inspire the Navy." "Note: The opening credits contain the following statements: "This production is dedicated to Fleet Admiral Chester M. Nimitz, U.S.N., able inheritor of the John Paul Jones tradition. To him we owe much gratitude for his unflagging encouragement and inspiration. We thank the Department of Defense and the officers and men of the United States Navy for their cooperation: also the Government of Spain. We thank too, Mr. Victor Oswald, Production Adviser, for his many services." "According to Warner Bros. production notes and statements made in articles during the production, Samuel Bronston had the idea to make a film about [H]John Paul Jones in 1946 and found that, although various studios had registered the title from the late 1930s, those companies had dropped the idea because of the expense and lengthy screen time necessary to cover the subject adequately. "According to various news items, in 1939, Warner Bros. bought the rights to Clements Ripley's biographical novel about Jones, entitled Clear for Action, which was serialized later in 1939 in The Saturday Evening Post before being published as a book in 1940. James Cagney was to star in the Warner production with his brother, William Cagney, producing, and Michael Curtiz directing. In 1946, a LAT news item stated that Jack Warner gave Jerry Wald and Delmer Daves the "green light" for the project. In 1949, according to DV, the film was going to be produced by Lou Edelman with Cagney starring. " In Dec 1955, according to DV, Warner assigned the production rights to Admiralty Pictures Corp., a newly formed company of which Bronston was president. According to HR, Warner gave the property to Bronston in return for the rights to make a film about Charles Lindbergh, to which Bronston had a claim. The chairman of the board of Admiralty (a precursor to [H]John Paul Jones Productions, Inc.) was R. Stuyvesant Pierrepont, Jr. In addition to Pierrepont, the company was backed by Laurence and Nelson K. Rockefeller, the Charles Dana, Jr. family, James Watriss, Pierre DuPont III, Ernest Gross, C. D. Jackson, Frederick Stern and others, representing General Motors, Firestone Tire and Rubber Co., Eastman Kodak, Time, Inc., a Swiss banking firm and other industrial organizations. The backers were able to use assets frozen in Spain, France and Italy, according to news items, because filming was to be done in Europe, primarily in Spain. Bronston claimed that this film opened up an avenue for financing films that had been previously unavailable. "Jesse L. Lasky, Jr. was signed to do the screenplay in Dec 1955. According to HR and DV, he conducted extensive research with Navy officials in Washington and wrote a screenplay in 1956 based on the Ripley book. Later, when John Farrow was hired to direct, Farrow, who liked Lasky's screenplay, asked him to collaborate on a rewrite, but Lasky was unable to work on it at that time. In Dec 1958, while the film was in post-production, Lasky saw ads listing Farrow as sole writer and heard that Farrow was to get sole screenplay credit. Lasky filed a protest with the Writers Guild of America and ultimately received equal billing with Farrow for the screenplay. Ripley's name, however, does not appear on the film. According to a DV news item, in Jul 1956, Bronston signed Ben Hecht to write the script, but no information has been located to confirm that he actually worked on the script. At that time, William Dieterle, who had established a reputation for making biographical films, was assigned to direct. In 1956, Richard Todd and Richard Basehart were both considered for the title role, along with John Miljan for the role of George Washington and John Lupton for that of a French naval officer. "In Mar 1958, prior to shooting, the Hollywood American Federation of Labor Film Council, representing more than 24,000 members of film unions and guilds, threatened to boycott the film if it was to be shot totally abroad, as was then planned. The group also vowed to protest to President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Congress the Navy's cooperation with the producers, who, they claimed, planned to shoot abroad such historical scenes as the signing of the Declaration of Independence, Washington at Valley Forge, and a ball in Fredericksburg, Virginia. They stated, "We are not protesting the filming abroad of scenes legitimately laid abroad. But we do not think the American public will approve the photographing in Spain of the signing of the Declaration of Independence and other historical American events, especially when such foreign production deprives American craftsmen of sorely needed work." "According to a DV article, the Council had previously boycotted the 1956 Republic picture Daniel Boone, Trail Blazer (see above) because it was filmed in Mexico, although its setting was American, and claimed that the boycott was responsible for that film being withdrawn from release. HR stated that the group in the previous two years had made numerous motions for a consumer boycott of films made abroad by U.S. firms. HR speculated that "the tinder which sparked" this protest was the Warner Bros. publicity campaign for the film, which noted that the production hired 150 Spanish women for the roles of "Virginia belles," planning to have the women wear blonde wigs. The Council also threatened to contact the Daughters of the American Revolution and the American Legion concerning their protest. "In Apr 1958, DV reported that Bronston had agreed to shoot some scenes in Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania in response to the Council's action. Nevertheless, in Oct 1958, after shooting was completed, the Council voted to conduct a nationwide boycott upon the film's release and complained to the Navy concerning the use of Navy equipment and U.S. Marines in scenes depicting a beach landing filmed in Spain, according to HR. Bronston stated at the time that although they had planned to use Marines, he hired local extras instead when the Marines were sent to Lebanon unexpectedly. Bronston also said that twenty of the cast and twenty-two of the crew members, along with some of their families, were brought to Europe from the U.S. for the production. He claimed that had the film been made in the U.S., the cost would have been $10,000,000, rather than the actual production cost of $4,000,000. Although their appearance in the film has not been confirmed, contemporary HR news items add to the cast the following actors: John Stone, Pat Clavin, Stella Gallagher and Charles Lamb. Also added to the cast by a HR news item is Rosemarie Bowe, who was actor Robert Stack's wife from 1956 until his death in 2003. "According to news items and publicity for the film, shooting was done in Spain at the CEA Studio in Madrid, and at outdoor locations in Galicia, Andalusia, Rota, Benidorm and Denia. Sets for the Scottish village, Whitehaven, a wharf in Delaware and a dock site in Portsmouth, NH were constructed in and around Denia. Shooting was also done in Scotland, at the palace at Versailles, Parliament and King James's Palace in London, the Royal Palace in Madrid, where the throne rooms of Catherine the Great and of Louis XVI were shot, the summer palace at Aranjuez, and state buildings in La Granja, Spain. The film was edited, dubbed and scored in London. Fleet Admiral Nimitz was an adviser and consultant. Rear Admiral J. L. Pratt returned to active duty to act as a technical adviser. "Director Farrow had been a commander in the Canadian Navy and had directed a number of previous sea adventure films. His cousin, Alan Villiers, a British Naval officer during World War II, who also had been the captain of the Mayflower II (a replica of the original ship) on a recent transatlantic voyage, remembered seeing hulks of old sailing ships in Sicily during the war. Villiers oversaw the refurbishment of two of these ships in Ostia, Italy, and was an adviser during filming. Another ship built in Barcelona was also used in the film. According to NYT, ships from this film were later used in the 1962 film Billy Budd (see AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1961-70). John Charles Farrow and Patrick Villiers, two sons of Farrow and his wife, Maureen O'Sullivan, were in the cast. While production notes state that Bette Davis was paid $25,000 for four days' work, Louella Parsons related that she was to be paid $50,000. An early plan to have Hollywood celebrities who had served in the Navy, Marines or Coast Guard portray seamen of the past did not come to fruition. "In the latter part of 1958, Bronston and Barnett Glassman, who received associate producer credit on the film, traded charges in press and in court regarding ownership of the production company and Glassman's credit for the film. In Dec 1958, Var reported that nineteen litigations were pending regarding the company. The two men had worked together on earlier films. No information regarding the outcome of any of the suits has been located. After production, Bronston and Farrow formed a new company to make three films abroad, but this was Farrow's last film before his death in 1963. "For its release in France, the film was called Le capitaine Paul, which was the title of a novel by Victor Hugo about Jones. HR, in its review, criticized the portrayal of Jones, saying that the film's writers used "only those rumors as were flattering to their subject" while ignoring "other sources that were salty with accounts of brawls, love affairs and humor." Jones, according to HR, actually killed two mutineers in the West Indies. HR went on to state: "The film makes no effort to clear up some of the most fascinating enigmas about Jones." Var was critical of the portrayal of historical characters, stating, "They end, as they begin, as historical personages rather than human beings." Source citations: Variety 17 Jun 1959, p. 6. Variety 17 Decorations 1958. Variety 21 Feb 1949. Variety 8 Oct 1958. Time 29 Jun 1959. Saturday Review 20 Jun 1959. New York Times 17 Jun 1959. , p. 39. New York Times 17 Aug 1958. New York Times 7 Sep 1956. Motion Picture Herald Product Digest 13 Jun 1959. , p. 300. Los Angeles Times 9 Jul 1959. Los Angeles Times 21 Jun 1959. Los Angeles Times 24 Oct 1957. Los Angeles Times 27 Oct 1958. Los Angeles Times 11 Sep 1956. Los Angeles Times 8 Decorations 1956. Los Angeles Times 7 Mar 1956. Los Angeles Times 24 Jul 1956. Los Angeles Times 11 Jan 1956. Los Angeles Times 17 Feb 1956. Los Angeles Times 5 Sep 1946. Los Angeles Times 9 Feb 1939. Los Angeles Examiner 9 Jul 1959. Los Angeles Examiner 16 Aug 1957. Los Angeles Examiner 1 Mar 59, sec. 5, p. 6, 8. Los Angeles Examiner 4 Mar 1939. Hollywood Reporter 11 Jun 59, p. 3. Hollywood Reporter 8 Decorations 1958. Hollywood Reporter 12 Nov 1958. Hollywood Reporter 3 Nov 1958. Hollywood Reporter 10 Oct 58, p. 9. Hollywood Reporter 2 May 58, p. 9. Hollywood Reporter 22 Aug 1958. Hollywood Reporter 31 Mar 1958. Hollywood Reporter 19 Decorations 1957. Hollywood Reporter 10 Jul 1940. Hollywood Reporter 18 Sep 1939. Hollywood Reporter 7 Mar 1939. Harrison's Reports 13 Jun 59, p. 94. Film Daily 11 Jun 59, p. 6. Film Daily 9 Mar 1939. The Exhibitor 17 Jun 59, pp. 4598-99. Daily Variety 11 Jun 59, p. 3. Daily Variety 21 Apr 1958. Daily Variety 31 Mar 1958. Daily Variety 27 Jul 1956. Daily Variety 23 Decorations 55, p. 1, 4. Daily Variety 24 Jul 1956. Daily Variety 22 Feb 1956. Daily Variety 2 Mar 1949. Box Office 22 Jun 59, p. 6. BHCN 29 Jun 59, p. 5. Box Office 15 Jun 59, p. 3. Hollywood Reporter 22 May 1958, p. 4. Hollywood Reporter 12 Jun 1958, p. 1, 4. Hollywood Reporter 9 Jul 1958, p. 3. Hollywood Reporter 17 Jul 1958, p. 4. Hollywood Reporter 24 Jul 1958, p. 7. AU - Farrow, John DA - 1959 KW - motion pictures motion pictures, and American-interest films motion pictures, and labor labor motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, American-interest LB - 35770 PB - Warner Bros. PY - 1959 ST - John Paul Jones (aka Le capitaine Paul) TI - John Paul Jones (aka Le capitaine Paul) ID - 3216 ER - TY - MPCT AB - Plot summary from American Film Institute Catalog: "Jane Fosset, a 27-year-old Frenchwoman, leaves her provincial home, moves to London, and spends a loveless weekend with an unemployed actor. She later discovers that she is pregnant, and she moves into a squalid [H]L-shaped room in a Notting Hill boardinghouse and arranges to have an abortion. After one interview with a mercenary Harley Street "gynecologist," she decides to have the child. While staying at the boardinghouse, she becomes involved with a fellow lodger named Toby, an unsuccessful writer. Their affair delights most of the other tenants who have befriended her--prostitutes and actresses--but angers Toby's friend Johnny, a Negro jazz musician living in the room next to Jane's. Johnny has learned of Jane's pregnancy, and after listening to the sounds of lovemaking coming through the paper-thin walls, he tells Toby of Jane's condition. Outraged, Toby leaves, and Jane, in a moment of despair, tries to kill her baby by taking some pills given to her by Mavis, the elderly actress who lives downstairs. But the abortion attempt fails, and Jane accepts with relief the fact that her baby will live. Although Toby returns, he is incapable of accepting a child that he has not fathered. He visits Jane when the baby is born and presents her with a copy of his first finished story, "The [H]L-Shaped Room." After leaving the hospital to return to France, Jane leaves the story in Toby's room. A note is attached: 'Darling Toby, it's a lovely story, but it hasn't got an ending. It would be marvelous with an ending.'" "Note: Copyright length: 142 min. Released in Great Britain in 1962; running time: 142 min." AU - Forbes, Bryan DA - 1962 (Great Britain); 1963 (USA) KW - self-regulation motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion Production Code Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey, and abortion motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and PCA hybrid films motion pictures, and American interest films hybrid films, and abortion abortion, and American interest film Shurlock, Geoffrey LB - 15680 N1 - Production company: Romulus Films, Ltd. PB - Columbia Pictures; Davis--Royal Films International PY - 1962 ST - The L-Shaped Room TI - The L-Shaped Room ID - 3114 ER - TY - MPCT AB - This movie was based on the novel The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck (New York, 1939). Eric Johnston sometimes cited it as an example of how a film that was critical of American life and used by communist countries often backfired. "Even the tramps have cars" in America, C. L. Sulzberger reported in the New York Times. AU - Ford, John DA - 1940 KW - nationalism censorship and ratings motion pictures motion pictures, and reform motion pictures, and foreign policy propaganda Johnston, Eric capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Johnston, Eric, and Grape of Wrath motion pictures, and propaganda nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism LB - 34980 PB - 20th Century Fox Film Corp. PY - 1940 ST - The Grapes of Wrath TI - The Grapes of Wrath ID - 3139 ER - TY - MPCT AB - This film, which starred Peter Finch, deals with the homosexual relationship between Oscar Wilde and Lord Alfred Douglas, and legal and human difficulties it posed. AU - Hughes, Ken CY - Great Britain DA - 1960 KW - censorship self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality foreign films, and sexuality motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings Johnston, Eric, and Production Code sexuality motion pictures, and sex Production Code, and sex Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality homosexuality, and motion pictures censorship, and homosexuality Production Code, and homosexuality motion pictures, and foreign films foreign films, and homosexuality non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Great Britain Wilde, Oscar foreign films LB - 36450 PB - Warwick Film Productions, Viceroy Films Limited PY - 1960 ST - The Trials of Oscar Wilde (aka The Man with the Green Carnation) TI - The Trials of Oscar Wilde (aka The Man with the Green Carnation) ID - 3278 ER - TY - MPCT AB - By 1961 there were several movies in production in which homosexuality was a major theme, even though the movie industry's Production Code forbade this topic. These films included Otto Preminger’s Advise and Consent (Columbia, 1962), John Huston’s Freud (Universal, 1962), United Artists’ The Best Man (1964), starring Henry Fonda, United Artists’ The Children’s Hour (1961), and The Devil's Advocate. Montgomery Clift played Sigmund Freud in this film. Summary from American Film Institute Catalog: "In 1885, 30-year-old neurologist Dr. Sigmund Freud quarrels with his superior, Professor Theodore Meynert, over the nature of hysteria and takes a leave of absence from the Vienna General Hospital. In Paris, he studies under Professor Charcot, a pioneer in the use of hypnosis to demonstrate that disease can be mentally induced. Following his marriage to Martha Bernays, Freud becomes the protégé of Dr. Joseph Breuer, another advocate of hypnotism, and together they treat Cecily Koertner, a semi-paralyzed young woman who also suffers from insomnia and impaired vision. As a result of his sessions with both Cecily and Carl von Schlosser, a young man who assaulted his father because of an incestuous love for his mother, Freud determines that all neuroses stem from repressed sexuality. His revolutionary theory, partially based upon his own childhood recollections, offends the entire medical profession, including Breuer. Nevertheless, Freud continues experimenting with Cecily and eventually drops hypnosis in favor of a new technique, "free association," in which he is able to analyze her dreams and interpret the meaning of chance remarks she makes during their conversations. As Cecily's mental health gradually improves, Freud develops his theory of the Oedipus complex and delivers a lecture on the subject; his colleagues react with derisive shouts, but psychoanalysis is born." Note: Filmed in England. Also known as The Secret Passion. AU - Huston, John DA - 1962 KW - censorship self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings Johnston, Eric, and Production Code sexuality motion pictures, and sex Production Code, and sex Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality homosexuality, and motion pictures censorship, and homosexuality Production Code, and homosexuality Huston, John Production Code, and John Huston Huston, John, and Production Code motion pictures, hybrid motion pictures, American-interest motion pictures, and American-interest films LB - 35340 PB - Universal Pictures Co., Inc. PY - 1962 ST - Freud (aka The Secret Passion) TI - Freud (aka The Secret Passion) ID - 3173 ER - TY - MPCT AB - The best-selling novel Gentleman's Agreement , on which Darryl Zanuck's movies about anti-Semitism was based, was serialized first in Cosmopolitan (Nov 1946--Feb 1947) before it appeared in book form. AU - Kazan, Elia DA - 1948 KW - censorship and ratings motion pictures motion pictures, and reform Hollywood Ten motion pictures, and anti-Semitism Hollywood LB - 35000 PB - 20th Century Fox Film Corp. PY - 1948 ST - Gentleman's Agreement TI - Gentleman's Agreement ID - 3141 ER - TY - MPCT AB - This movie played a role in the relaxation of the Production Code on profanity (e.g., using such words as "damn" and "hell"). The film was suggested by the articles "Crime on the Waterfront" by Malcolm Johnson in The New York Sun (Nov--Dec 1948). Plot Summary from American Film Institute Catalog: "At the request of mob boss Johnny Friendly, longshoreman Terry Malloy, a former boxer, lures fellow dock worker Joey Doyle to the roof of his tenement building, purportedly to discuss their shared hobby of pigeon racing. Believing that Friendly only intends to frighten Joey out of his threat to speak to the New York State Crime Commission, Terry is stunned to see Joey topple from the building as he and his brother, Charley "the Gent," watch from across the street. As neighbors gather around Joey's body, his distraught sister Edie accuses parish priest Father Barry of hiding behind the church and not helping the neighborhood break free from the mob's grip. Listening nearby, Terry is disturbed by Edie's indictment and later joins Charley, Friendly's lawyer and accountant, at a meeting with Friendly and his lackeys. Friendly assures Terry that Joey's death was necessary to preserve his hold on the harbor, then directs dock manager Big Mac to place Terry in the top job slot the following day. The next morning, while waiting for the day's work assignment, the dock workers offer their sympathy to Joey's father Pop, who gives Joey's jacket to Kayo Dugan. Terry is approached by Crime Commission representative Eddy Glover, but refuses to discuss Joey. Edie comes down to the docks to apologize to Father Barry, but he admits that her accusation has prompted him to become more involved in the lives of the longshoremen. Father Barry asks some of the men to meet downstairs in the church, despite being advised that Friendly does not approve of union meetings. Later, in the warehouse, Charley asks Terry to sit in on the church meeting. When Terry hesitates, Charley dismisses his brother's fears of "stooling." Despite the sparse turnout, Father Barry adamantly declares that mob control of the docks must end and demands to know about Joey's murder. Several men bristle in anger upon seeing Terry at the meeting, and Kayo tells Father Barry that no one will talk out of fear that Friendly will find out. Father Barry insists the men can fight Friendly and the mob through the courts, but the men refuse to participate. Friendly's stooges break up the meeting by hurling stones through the church windows. After Pop and Kayo are attacked outside, Father Barry presses Kayo to take action and Kayo agrees. Terry insists on walking Edie home and, on the way, she hesitatingly tells him abut her convent upbringing and ambition to teach. At home, Pop scolds Edie for walking with Terry, whom he calls a bum, and demands that she return to college. Edie responds that she must stay to find out who killed Joey. Later that day Edie is surprised to find Terry on the roof with Joey's pigeons. Terry shows her his own prize bird, then asks her if she would like to have a beer with him. At the bar, Terry tells Edie that he and Charley were placed in an orphanage after their father died, but they eventually ran away. He took up boxing and Friendly bought a percentage of him, but his career faded. Swept up among wedding party revelers, Edie and Terry dance together until they are interrupted by Glover, who serves Terry with a subpoena to the Crime Commission hearings. Edie demands to know if Friendly arranged Joey's murder, and when Terry cautions her to stop asking questions, she accuses him of still being owned by the mobster. That evening, Friendly visits Terry, who is evasive about the church meeting, then surprised when Friendly reveals that Kayo testified before the commission. Charley criticizes Terry for seeing Edie, and Friendly orders Terry back to working in the ship hold. The next day in the hold, Terry attempts to speak with Kayo, but the older man brushes him aside, calling him one of Friendly's boys. Big Mac and one of his henchmen rig a crane to slip, and a load of boxes crashes down upon Kayo, killing him in front of Terry. Outraged, Father Barry gives an impromptu eulogy for Kayo, asserting that Kayo was killed to prevent him from testifying. After two of Friendly's henchmen begin pelting the priest with fruit and vegetables, Pop and Edie arrive and watch as Father Barry ignores the abuse and exhorts the men to believe in themselves and reject mob control. Terry furiously knocks out one of the henchmen, angering Friendly and Charley. Later, Father Barry returns Joey's jacket to Pop and Edie. That night, after Edie gives Joey's jacket to Terry, the guilt-stricken Terry tries but is unable to tell her about his part in Joey's murder. The next morning Terry seeks out Father Barry to ask for guidance as he believes he is falling in love with Edie, but is conflicted about testifying and about going against Charley. Father Barry maintains that Terry must follow his conscience and challenges him to be honest with Edie. When Terry meets Edie on the beach later, he relates the details of the night of Joey's murder, insisting that he did not know Joey would be killed, but Edie rushes away in distress. Later while tending his pigeons on the roof, Terry is visited by Glover and implies that he might be willing to testify. Their meeting is reported to Friendly, who orders Charley to straighten Terry out. That night, Charley takes Terry on a cab drive and chides him for not telling him about the subpoena. When Terry attempts to explain his confusion, Charley brusquely threatens him with a gun. Hurt, Terry reproaches his older brother for not looking after him and allowing him to become a failure and a bum by involving him with the mob. Charley gives Terry the gun and says he will stall Friendly. Terry goes to see Edie, and breaks down her apartment door when she refuses to let him in and demands to know if she cares for him. Edie tells Terry to listen to his conscience, which angers him, but the two embrace. When Terry is summoned to the street, Edie begs him not to go, then follows him. After the couple is nearly run down by a truck, they find Charley's body hung up on a meat hook on a nearby fence. Taking down his brother's body, Terry vows revenge on Friendly, and sends Edie for Father Barry. Armed, Terry hunts for Friendly at his regular bar, but Father Barry convinces him that the best way to ruin Friendly is in court and Terry throws away the gun. The next day at the hearings, Terry testifies to Friendly's involvement in Joey's death, outraging the mobster, who shouts threats at him. Back at home, Terry is scorned by the neighbors for testifying and discovers that his pigeons have been killed by a boy he once coached. Edie attempts to comfort Terry, advising him to leave, but Terry insists that he has the right to stay in his town. The next day Terry reports to work as usual, but is ignored by the men and refused work by Big Mac. In his office at the pier, Friendly, who is about to be indicted, swears vengeance on Terry. Terry confronts Friendly on the pier, declaring he is nothing without guns, and the two fall into a brutal fistfight. While Friendly's men help to thrash Terry, the dockworkers watch impassively as Edie arrives with Father Barry. Friendly orders the longshoremen to begin unloading, but the men refuse and demand that Terry be allowed to work, hoping the shipping owners will witness their refusal to obey Friendly and realize their intention to restart a clean union. Father Barry urges on the beaten Terry, who rises and defiantly stumbles down the pier and into the warehouse." "Note: The working titles of the film were Crime [H]on the Waterfront, Bottom of the River and Waterfront. The title was changed from Waterfront just before the film's release to avoid conflict with a half-hour syndicated television series of the same name that followed the adventures of a tugboat captain. Budd Schulberg based his story and screenplay on Malcolm Johnson's Pulitzer Prize-winning series of articles on longshoremen and union corruption, "Crime [H]on the Waterfront," which ran from Nov--Dec 1948 in The New York Sun. According to a modern article, he wrote about the film, Schulberg did additional research on New York and New Jersey waterfronts with longshoremen and Father John Corridan (the basis for "Father Barry") of St. Xavier's Church in Manhattan, and attended the New York Waterfront Crime Hearings, which were the basis for the script's climax. "An Aug 1949 HR news item noted that Twentieth Century-Fox was to bid for the rights to Johnson's series, which were held by independent producer Joseph Curtis, the son of Columbia vice-president Jack Cohn. A Jan 1951 NYT article indicated that Schulberg was at the time writing a waterfront crime story for Curtis Monticello Film Corp., which Robert Siodmak was to direct. According to a NYT article, in Dec 1952, Schulberg purchased Monticello's rights to Johnson's series and to a script Monticello was working on, then tentatively titled Bottom of the River. According to a HR article, Elia Kazan agreed to direct the film by mid-Apr 1953. In his autobiography, Kazan stated that he was especially interested in the story because an earlier project on waterfront corruption, The Hook, on which he was working with playwright Arthur Miller for Columbia, fell through. "Because Kazan was completing a film at Fox and contractually owed them another, he and Schulberg offered head of production Darryl F. Zanuck the Waterfront script. Feb 1953 correspondence between Zanuck and Kazan, which was reproduced in a collection of the producer's memos, indicates the studio's concern with the story's lengthy diatribes against union corruption. Zanuck suggested other changes in the script (which at that point included "Terry Malloy" having a young teenage son) and stressed that the story needed strong box-office appeal and powerful star personalities before the studio would commit to the production. Zanuck met with Schulberg about the script and wrote Kazan that if Marlon Brando was secured for the part of Terry, the studio could justify the budget for a top production. Brando, a member of Kazan's New York Actors Studio, had worked with him in two major productions, Warner Bros. A Streetcar Named Desire in 1951 and Twentieth Century Fox's Viva Zapata! in 1952 (see below). A May 1953 DV item reports that writer-photographer Sam Shaw filed suit for $60,000 against Twentieth Century-Fox and Schulberg, claiming he had served as a "go-between" in the story purchase and assisted in scripting. The outcome of the suit has not been determined. "Kazan stated in his autobiography that Zanuck eventually turned down the film because it was to be shot in black and white, in standard format, not in the new CinemaScope format used extensively at Fox since its introduction in 1953. Zanuck admitted in a Jul 1954 letter to Kazan that "CinemaScope was responsible...for my decision against the property...We had committed ourselves to a program of spectacles." In various contemporary and modern articles and interviews about the development and production of [H]On the Waterfront, Schulberg stated that after Zanuck's rejection, Warner Bros., M-G-M, Universal and Columbia all deemed the script too controversial and turned it down. "In mid-1953, independent producer Sam Spiegel agreed to take over production and arranged distribution through United Artists. In Sep 1953, according to various news items, interviews and autobiographies of Kazan and Schulberg, Frank Sinatra, a native of Hoboken, NJ, where much of the film was to be shot, was approached to play Terry. Sinatra met with Kazan to discuss the role, at the same time that Spiegel was in discussions with Brando. Kazan stated that Brando returned the script twice without reading it and that Spiegel claimed to be having difficulty convincing Brando to work with Kazan because the actor objected to the director's testimony before the House Committee on Un-American Activities in 1952. Kazan's autobiography indicates that Spiegel advised Kazan that Brando would raise more money than Sinatra, whose comeback film, Columbia's From Here to Eternity (see above) had just been released and Sinatra was officially dropped from consideration. "A modern Brando biography indicates that before the actor committed to the film, Kazan considered casting Actor's Studio alumnus Paul Newman, who at that time had not yet made a film but in Feb 1953 had caused a sensation on Broadway when he opened in Josh Logan's Picnic. Kazan cast the film primarily with members of The Actor's Studio, which he co-founded in the late 1940s. In addition to Brando, other members of the Actor's Studio cast included Karl Malden, Rod Steiger and Lee J. Cobb. The picture marked the motion picture debut of Eva Marie Saint, who was hired just before the start of production and had until then worked only on stage and television. The film also marked the debut of character actor Martin Balsam. Kazan also hired former prizefighters "Two-Ton" Tony Galento, Abe Simon and Tami Mauriello to play mob figures working for "Johnny Friendly." Leonard Bernstein agreed to score the film after viewing a rough-cut with Kazan and Brando. It was Bernstein's only film score. "In his autobiography, Kazan claimed that during the entire location shooting on the Hoboken docks, he had a bodyguard on-set out of concern that union members might be apprehensive that the film debased their profession. Kazan noted that many longshoremen were used as extras, thus adding credibility to the scenes. A Nov 1953 NYT article also indicates that a young local teen, John McComb, was signed during filming but his participation in the final film has not been confirmed. Modern sources add Eddie Barr as prop man and Roger Donoghue as technical advisor. "In later years, Kazan repeatedly praised Brando for his spontaneity during filming which he felt elicited great empathy for the role of the conflicted Terry. Brando also delivered one of the most quoted lines in Hollywood history, in the "taxicab scene" in which Terry tells his brother that if "Charley" had not sold him out: "I could'a had class, I could'a been a contender, I could'a been somebody." Kazan praised Brando for insisting on adding Terry's saddened motioning away of Charley's gun before delivering the speech, something the director thought added a richer dimension of poignancy. Brando states in his autobiography that he was so distressed by what he considered a poor performance on his part, that he departed a preview screening without comment. Kazan also frequently compared Terry's action to his own decision to testify before the House Committee on Un-American Activities. "According to information contained in the file on the film in the MPAA/PCA Collection at the AMPAS Library, after reading the script, PCA officials became concerned about the level of violence contained in the film. As a result, the scenes of Terry's beating were reduced substantially. In Apr 1954 the MPAA Board of Directors met to discuss the controversy surrounding Terry twice telling Father Barry "go to hell." In earlier correspondence between PCA head Joseph I. Breen and the MPAA New York head Eric Johnston, Breen wrote: "The expression "Go to Hell" is not used in a casual manner, as a vulgarism, or flippant profanity. It is used seriously and with intrinsic validity..." The Board of Directors approved the phrase, which caused some protest from other studios whose similar requests had been denied. "A HR Nov 1953 item disclosed that days before [H]On the Waterfront was to begin shooting, UA and Spiegel parted ways over casting and budget disputes and the producer finalized a distribution deal with Columbia. The film marked the first time Spiegel used his own name onscreen rather than "S. P. Eagle." The picture opened to high critical and public praise after its Jul 1954 New York City premiere at the Astor Theater. The HR review stated: "This brutal, violently realistic drama set against the sordid background of the New York waterfront, packs a terrific wallop that results in topflight entertainment....The story is as fresh and terrifying as today's newspaper.... Marlon Brando... delivers a performance that grabs your heart in a calloused fist and never lets go." DV described Brando's performance as "a spectacular show." NYT called the film "an uncommonly powerful, exciting and imaginative use of the screen by gifted professionals" and Brando's performance "a shatteringly poignant portrait... beautiful and moving.." "In Apr 1955, after [H]On the Waterfront's successful release and numerous critical accolades, Sinatra filed a breach of contract suit against Spiegel and Horizon-American Corp. for $500,000 for his failure to be cast as Terry. Spiegel and the co-defendants claimed there was never any written deal with Sinatra, only an oral agreement. The outcome of the suit has not been determined. In Dec 1954 Anthony De Vincinzo, who Schulberg admitted was one of the many longshoremen with whom he consulted while researching the story, sued Spiegel and Columbia for $1,000,000, claiming that his rights of privacy had been invaded. The suit charged that details of De Vincinzo's life were used in the creation of Terry including his boxing past, his work as a Hoboken longshoreman and his enthusiasm for pigeons without his consent. The suit was settled out of court for $25,000 in Jun 1956. "The film won Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Actor (Marlon Brando), Best Supporting Actress (Eva Marie Saint), Best Direction, Best Writing, Best Art Direction (b&w), Best Cinematography (b&w) and Best Editing. The film also received three nominations for Best Supporting Actor (Lee J. Cobb, Karl Malden and Rod Steiger) and a nomination for Best Music. Two months after the Academy Award presentation, in May 1955, Monticello Film Corp. demanded that the Academy take back Budd Schulberg's writing award. According to a HR item, Monticello had filed suit in Oct 1954 against Schulberg, Kazan, Spiegel, Horizon-American Pictures (Spiegel's company), Columbia and Malcolm Johnson, claiming that Schulberg was under their employ when he dramatized Johnson's series. The outcome of the suit has not been determined but the award remained with Schulberg. In 1998, the American Film Institute voted On the Waterfront as one of the top ten best films of the first hundred years of cinema." Source citations: Variety 14 Jul 54, p. 6. New York Times 29 Jul 54, p. 18. Motion Picture Herald Product Digest 17 Jul 54, p. 65. Hollywood Reporter 14 Jul 54, p. 3. Film Daily 14 Jul 54, p. 8. Box Office 24 Jul 1954. Daily Variety 14 Jul 54, p. 3. Hollywood Reporter 16 Apr 1953, p. 1. Hollywood Reporter 30 Apr 1954, p. 4. Hollywood Reporter 9 Aug 1949. New York Times 1 Jan 1951. New York Times 29 Decorations 1952. Hollywood Reporter 18 May 1953, p. 2. Daily Variety 18 May 1953. New York Times 22 Nov 1953. Hollywood Reporter 23 Nov 1953. Variety 25 Nov 1953. Daily Variety 3 Decorations 1953. New York Times 23 May 1954. Hollywood Reporter 19 Oct 1954, p. 4. Daily Variety 22 Decorations 1954. Los Angeles Examiner 4 Apr 1955. Variety 27 Apr 1955. Hollywood Reporter 26 Apr 1956. Daily Variety 29 Jun 1956. Hollywood Reporter 27 Nov 1953, p. 12. Hollywood Reporter 22 Jan 1954, p. 9. Variety 25 Jan 1999. Life 19 Jul 1954. Hollywood Reporter 27 Jan 1954, p. 6 G. Q. Oct 1994. AU - Kazan, Elia DA - 1954 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and miscegnation Kazan, Elia Production Code, and Elia Kazan LB - 35600 PB - Columbia Pictures Corp. PY - 1954 ST - On the Waterfront (aka Waterfront, Crime on the Waterfront, and Bottom of the River) TI - On the Waterfront (aka Waterfront, Crime on the Waterfront, and Bottom of the River) ID - 3199 ER - TY - MPCT AB - This was one of several "runaway" films made by American producers. This powerful picture about the aftermath of an atomic war was filmed in Australia and the United States, and based on Nevil Shute's novel On the Beach (New York 1957). The movie premiered in more than 20 cities worldwide including Moscow in late December, 1959. Plot Summary from American Film Institute Catalog: "In January 1964, the fallout from a nuclear war has obliterated life in the Northern Hemisphere and lethal clouds of irradiated dust are slowly making their way to the Southern Hemisphere, threatening the inhabitants of Australia. Dwight Towers, the captain of the American nuclear submarine U.S.S. Sawfish, which had been trolling the South Pacific during the conflict, contacts the Royal Australian Navy and is welcomed to their main harbor in Williamstown. Admiral Bridie assigns young Lt. Peter Holmes to liaison with Dwight and the Sawfish crew for a reconnaissance mission to track the deadly radiation circling the globe, which is predicted to reach Australia in five months. When Bridie admits that he has no idea how long the mission will take, Peter expresses his desire to be home with his anxious wife Mary and their infant daughter Jennifer when the fatal radiation reaches Australia. While the Sawfish is readied for the mission, Peter spends time with Mary, who insists they not discuss world events and live as if all were normal. When Peter admits that he has invited Dwight to spend the weekend with them, Mary decides to "fix him up" with the lively Moira Davidson. Moira obligingly meets Dwight at the train station and he is surprised when she provides a horse-drawn buggy to drive him to Holmes's house. That evening at a party thrown by Peter and Mary, scientist Julian Osborn drunkenly tells several guests that the war was a dreadful mistake that scientists continually warned against. Distressed by the talk, Mary demands that they must remain hopeful about the future. Later, after the party, a tipsy Moira informs Dwight that she and Julian have the reputation as the town drunks and asks him for details of how the Sawfish survived. Dwight's optimistic talk of his wife and two children and detailed plans for his son trouble Moira, because it is believed that everyone in America is dead. Continuing to drink heavily, Moira asks Dwight why Australia must linger, waiting for a slow death, then collapses, drunk. The next day, Dwight and Peter meet with a naval advisory panel that postulates the weather may have been disrupted enough by the nuclear explosions to have reduced the radiation to a potentially non-lethal level, thus sparing Australia. Bridie informs Dwight and Peter that the Sawfish will travel as far north into the Pacific as possible to take radiation readings to learn if this has occurred. That afternoon, Moira visits Dwight at the dock to apologize for her behavior the night of the party. To her surprise, Moira finds Julian on the dock and he reveals he has been asked to join the Sawfish. Bridie interrupts Moira's visit to report to Dwight that navy communications has picked up a garbled but steady telegraph message emanating from San Diego that must be investigated. Over the next few days before the mission, Dwight enjoys time with Moira, but when she questions him about his reluctance to get romantically involved with her, he explains that he has not been able to accept the deaths of his wife and children and continues to feel married. Meanwhile, Peter grows anxious at the thought of leaving Mary and Jennifer for so long and obtains suicide pills offered by the government. When he attempts to explain their use to Mary, she is horrified that he could consider killing Jennifer and refuses to listen to his appeal to be practical. Depressed by Dwight's emotional aloofness, Moira visits Julian the night before the mission and reveals that she has fallen in love with Dwight and is frightened to realize that as death looms, she is alone in an empty life. The Sawfish sets off on its mission and after several days surfaces in the northern Pacific Ocean amid icebergs. Julian takes radiation readings and reports to Dwight that the levels match those in the mid-Pacific. Realizing that this invalidates the panel's hopeful theory that Australia might somehow survive radiation poisoning, Peter confesses to Julian his anguish at knowing he will have to watch his loved ones die. Julian chastises him by pointing out that he has had the great fortune to love and be loved while others like him and Moira have wasted their lives. Days later, the Sawfish arrives in San Francisco and the officers are depressed to survey the stark, desolate streets of the city. After Yeoman Swain peers at his hometown through the periscope he flees through the escape hatch into the bay and swims to the city, declaring that he wants to die at home. Dwight waits overnight for Swain's return and then locates the sailor fishing in the bay. Via the submarine radio, Dwight asks Swain if he sure about his decision to remain alone and likely die a very unpleasant death, but the sailor reassures him that he will not suffer unduly as he has access to all of the drugstores in the city. Wishing Swain luck, Dwight orders the Sawfish to San Diego to learn the source of the continuing telegraph signals. During the journey the officers reflect on the war, but no one can recall how it began. Julian observes that mankind's path to destruction was set when they accepted that the only way to maintain peace was to amass an ever increasing supply of nuclear weapons. Upon arriving in San Diego, Dwight tracks the signal to a power plant and, dressed in an anti-radiation suit, sailor Sundstrom goes ashore to investigate. Upon exploring the plant, Sundstrom finds an empty office where a soda bottle has fallen over onto the telegraph and gotten caught in the window shade cord. The wind blowing the shade resulted in the bottle bouncing erratically on the telegraph key. Somewhat relieved by this explanation, the Sawfish turns back to Australia. Joining her father on his ranch, Moira waits for news of Dwight's return and is overjoyed when he arrives and admits he has been foolish to deny his feelings for her. A day later, Dwight dryly receives the news from Bridie that as the highest ranking surviving member of the American Navy, his embassy has promoted him to admiral. Moira then learns from Julian that he has indulged in a long-cherished fantasy of purchasing a race car, which he plans to drive in the national cup competition. When Moira observes the race is extremely dangerous, Julian admits the possibility of a quick death has occurred to him. Dwight and Moira attend the race and watch with horror as numerous drivers are killed or injured in fiery crashes, but to their amazement, Julian wins the competition. Dwight invites Moira away to a mountain retreat where he admits his love for her. As Australians begin reporting increasing signs of radiation illness, the government disperses the suicide pills. Some people turn to excessive partying while others listen with faint hope to religious messages as their end nears. Dwight asks his crew their wishes and they request to return to America to die at home. As Julian commits suicide by locking himself in his garage with his race car engine running, Dwight tells Moira that he must leave her. At their home, Mary at last apologizes to Peter for her behavior and before taking the suicide pills, the couple happily recalls their courtship and marriage. The next day, after an emotional farewell with Dwight, Moira watches the Sawfish sail away." "Note: The following written acknowledgment appears in the opening credits: "We acknowledge with appreciation the assistance given by the Royal Australian Navy and, in particular, by the officers and men of H.M.A.S. Melbourne and H.M.S. Andrew." The film's final scene depicts an empty square in front of a government building, with a banner hung by Salvation Army representatives stating "There is Still Time...Brother." Nevil Shute's novel [H]On the Beach was serialized in LAT (25 Aug--8 Sep 1957). Although a Nov 1958 HR item stated that James Lee Bartlett was working on the script, his contribution to the released film has not been confirmed. The film was shot on location in Australia, with the racing sequence filmed at Riverside International Raceway, CA. [H]On the Beach marked the feature film debut of Donna Anderson. A 10 Feb 1959 HR item adds Lyn Peters to the cast, but her appearance in the film has not been confirmed. "As part of the publicity campaign to emphasize the serious nature of [H]On the Beach, producer-director Stanley Kramer and United Artists arranged to stage a simultaneous world premiere on 17 Dec 1959 in more than twenty cities worldwide, including Moscow, according to the Filmfacts review. According to a 18 Dec 1959 HR item, the event marked the first time an American film had had a premiere in the Soviet Union. The same item noted that the premieres were specially sponsored in each of the cities, with the Red Cross sponsoring six locations. "Reviews of the film, all acknowledging nuclear war as the greatest threat of the times, were mixed: the NYT reviewer called it "deeply moving...it carries a passionate conviction that man is worth saving"; while Var's review described it as "a solid theatrical film...as heavy as a leaden shroud. The spectator is left with the sick feeling that he's had a preview of Armageddon, in which all contestants lost"; Cue called it "an elaborate mixture of the tremendous and the trivial--salting a vast amount of superficial fictional vacuities with a minute dose of solid substance"; and HR enthused that the film was "brilliantly executed," but wondered at length why none of the characters showed any interest in religion as the world ends. Many reviews praised the performance of dancer Fred Astaire as "Julian Osborn" in his first solely dramatic performance. Reviews also praised the artistic quality of the cinematography by Giuseppe Rotunno. "On the Beach received two Academy Award nominations, for Best Film Editing and Best Music (Score). In 2000 the Showtime cable network and an Australian company, Coote Hayes Productions, co-produced a three-part television miniseries of [H]On the Beach starring Armand Assante, Rachel Ward and Bryan Brown, directed by Russell Mulcahy. Unlike the feature film, the television series emphasized the graphic nature of the panic, destruction and death caused by atomic radiation." Source citations: Variety 2 Decorations 59, p. 6. Motion Picture Herald Product Digest 5 Decorations 59, p. 507. New York Times 18 Decorations 59, p. 34. Hollywood Reporter 2 Decorations 59, p. 3. Film Daily 2 Decorations 59, p. 10. Daily Variety 2 Decorations 59, p. 3. Box Office 21 Decorations 1959. Box Office 7 Decorations 1959. Los Angeles Times 9 Sep 1957. New York Times 21 Sep 1958. Variety 21 Oct 1959. Daily Variety 30 Nov 1959. Hollywood Reporter 18 Decorations 1959. Cue 19 Decorations 1959. New York Times 20 Decorations 1959. Hollywood Reporter 14 Nov 1958, p. 4. Hollywood Reporter 16 Jan 1959, p. 9. Hollywood Reporter 10 Feb 1959, p. 4. Hollywood Reporter 20 Mar 1959, p. 28. Hollywood Reporter 27 Mar 1959, p. 2. Filmfacts 1960, pp. 229-301. AU - Kramer, Stanley DA - 1959 KW - nationalism motion pictures motion pictures, and American-interest films hybrid films nationalism and communication motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and foreign policy LB - 36080 PB - United Artists PY - 1959 ST - On the Beach TI - On the Beach ID - 3244 ER - TY - MPCT AB - Shojiro Motoki, producer. AU - Kurosawa, Akira DA - 1954 KW - motion pictures, and violence +motion pictures and popular culture violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures Japan motion pictures, and Japan Japan, and motion pictures non-USA motion pictures LB - 29200 PB - Criterion Collection (DVD, 1998) PY - 1954 ST - The Seven Samurai TI - The Seven Samurai ID - 2691 ER - TY - MPCT AB - At the U. S. House of Representative Postal Operations subcommittee hearings in early 1960, the movie Suddenly, Last Summer (1960) came up for criticism. Committee members said the movie had generated many complaints. The picture was made abroad but the Hollywood Production Code had cleared the film after several lines were cut. MPAA president Eric Johnston said he saw the film three times. “You can read homosexuality into it, or you could read incest, if you wish, if you mind goes along those channels. But I don’t think there is anything like that in the picture,’” the New York Times reported. The Production Code Administration also was concerned about cannibalism. The movie starred Elizabeth Taylor, Katharine Hepburn, and Montgomery Clift. It was based on Suddenly, Last Summer from Garden District by Tennesse Williams (New York, 7 Jan 1958). Produced: 26 May--4 Sep 1959 at Shepperton Studios, England. Released: 00 Jan 1960; Los Angeles opening: 20 Dec 1959; New York opening: 22 Dec 1959. Plot Summary from American Film Institute Catalog: "In 1937, at the Lyons View State Asylum in New Orleans, Louisiana, Dr. John Cukrowicz performs a delicate experimental surgery known as a lobotomy. After the primitive conditions at the institution nearly derail the operation, however, John threatens to return to his practice in Chicago. In response, Dr. Hockstader, the head of Lyons View, shows John a letter from wealthy widow Mrs. Violet Venable, offering financial assistance in return for a meeting with the venerable surgeon. That afternoon, John visits Violet at her mansion in the Garden District, where she makes a grand entrance by descending in an elaborate, cage-like elevator. John is surprised by his benefactor's relative youth and by her obsession with her deceased son Sebastian. In the mansion's jungle-like garden, which Sebastian modeled after Michelangelo's "Dawn of Creation," Violet asks John to perform a lobotomy on her niece Catherine Holly, who she claims is suffering from visions and hallucinations. Catherine has been confined at St. Mary's, but has offended the nuns who run the hospital with her violence and obscenities. Violet is particularly distressed by Catherine's babbling a stream of obscenities regarding her son Sebastian, who Violet asserts, has "seen the face of God." After Violet describes a trip with Sebastian to the Galapagos Islands, where they witnessed flesh-eating birds devour newly hatched sea turtles, she tells John that she traveled with Sebastian every summer, except for the last one, when Sebastian went with Catherine and died of a heart attack on the day that Catherine lost her mind. Because Violet implies that her contribution to Lyons View is contingent upon Catherine receiving a lobotomy, John goes to St. Mary's to interview his prospective patient. There, Catherine insists that she is sane and portrays Violet's relationship with her son as unnatural. When John asks her about Sebastian's death, Catherine becomes hysterical and is only able to recall a white-hot beach and the pounding noise of tin musical instruments. John arranges for Catherine to be transferred to Lyons View, where Hockstader informs him that Violet has agreed to donate $1,000,000 on the condition that John lobotomize Catherine. At Lyons View, Catherine is allowed to wear her own clothes and live in the nurses' wing. When Catherine's mother Grace and brother George come to visit her, Grace tells John that Violet was shaken after receiving a letter from the authorities regarding Sebastian's death. After Grace asks to speak to her daughter alone, John leaves the room, and once he is gone, George confides to Catherine that Sebastian left them $100,000 in his will, but that Violet has decided to block probate until Grace signs the consent form for the lobotomy. Distraught, Catherine runs from the room and blunders into the men's ward, where her presence sparks a riot. After being rescued by an attendant, Catherine asks John if he plans to lobotomize her, and he appeals to her to trust him. Once she is sedated, Catherine mumbles about Sebastian's appetite for blondes and his treatment of people like "items on a menu." Violet then comes to speak to John, and after handing him a volume of Sebastian's poetry, explains that each year during their summer travels, Sebastian would write a poem. When John asks her about the letter from the Spanish authorities, she vehemently denies receiving it and says she was sent only a death certificate. John then asks Violet to see Catherine, who is just awakening from her sedation. When Violet accuses Catherine of usurping Sebastian's affection, Catherine retorts that he used them both as procurers, and after Violet became too old and unattractive, he decided to use Catherine as his bait. Becoming hysterical, Violet implores John to "cut that hideous story out of Catherine's brain," then faints. Agitated, Catherine wanders onto the balcony of the women's ward and is about to jump when an attendant restrains her. Pressured by Violet, Hockstader insists that John perform the lobotomy the following day, but John asks him for one last chance to jar Catherine's memory. The next day, John, Hockstader and a nurse escort Catherine to the Venable home, where John has arranged to meet Grace and George. After administering truth serum to Catherine, John leads her into the garden and prods her to remember what happened that last summer. After recalling that Sebastian suddenly announced that he was taking her and not his mother to Europe, Catherine revisits the events of that fateful summer: As they traveled through Italy, Sebastian became increasingly restless, and by the time they reached Spain, he had abandoned his nighttime soirees for afternoons at the public beach. One day, Sebastian forced Catherine to wear a bathing suit that when wet, became transparent. As men came to leer at Catherine's body, hungry young boys swarmed Sebastian, who passed out tips to lure them into the bathhouse with him. While Catherine and Sebastian were seated at a restaurant one blazing white day, hungry boys, barred from the establishment by a wire fence, began calling for bread. After Sebastian derided them as little beggars, the children began to serenade them with tin cans and brass plates. Agitated, Sebastian stormed out of the restaurant and started up a steep street, walking faster and faster in panic. Chased by the urchins, Sebastian became trapped in a maze of narrow streets. After ascending a "steep white street," Sebastian found himself in some ruins at the top of a hill where he was overtaken and devoured by the frenzied crowd. Upon completing her recitation of that terrible day, Catherine finds that her memory has suddenly been restored. The revelation about her son's true sexuality is too much for Violet, however, who loses her mind and comes to think that John is Sebastian. John calms Violet, then returns to the garden where he takes Catherine's hand and hand in hand, they walk toward the house." "Note: The film's opening and closing cast credits differ slightly in order. Suddenly, Last Summer was one of the two one-act plays by Tenneessee Williams that opened off-Broadway under the title Garden District. The other one-act play was entitled Something Unspoken. Williams' play was more explicit in dealing with "Sebastian's" homosexuality and his cannibalistic death. In a 25 May 1959 letter from PCA head Geoffrey Shurlock to producer Sam Spiegel, contained in the film's file in the MPAA/PCA Collection at the AMPAS Library, Shurlock told Spiegel that due to the homosexuality of the leading character, the explicit cannibalism and the blasphemous attitude toward God voiced by Sebastian and his mother, the film would be denied a seal of approval. In that letter, Shurlock suggested taking the finished picture to the appeals board for approval. Spiegel responded by saying that the homosexual "pays for his sins with his life," that all references to cannibalism would be eliminated (in the film, the word "devour" replaces references to cannibalism), and that no offense should be taken on religious grounds because the mother and son are "obviously psychopaths." Although the PCA file does not contain any specific references to the nature of the cuts, a Nov 1959 NYT article noted that Spiegel deleted unspecified scenes to win code approval, eliminating all explicit mention of homosexuality and cannibalism. Approval was finally granted after the matter was brought before the MPAA Code Review Board. According to a Dec 1959 HR news item, the National Catholic Legion of Decency criticized the MPAA for approving the film on the grounds that it involved "perversion." "According to HR news items, Vivien Leigh, who was initially to appear as "Mrs. Venable," bowed out of the production to star in a West End London revival of Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House. Following Leigh's departure, Margaret Leighton was considered for the role. A May 1959 "Rambling Reporter" item in HR states that producer Sam Spiegel planned to have Bobby Helpman play the role of Sebastian. In the film, Sebastian's image, photographed from the back, appears briefly as "Catherine" describes his death. Because his face is never shown, Helpman's appearance in the film cannot be confirmed. Although a Mar 1959 item noted that Steve Forrest was cast, he does not appear in the film. Although HR news items add the following actors to the cast: Sandra White, Sheila Raynor, Rory McDermot, Brenda Dunrich, Roberta Woolley and Joseph Arthur, their appearance in the released film has not been confirmed. Modern sources add Jake Wright Asst dir to the crew, but the extent of his participation in the film has not been determined. "According to a Dec 1959 HR news item, location filming was done along the Costa Brava in Spain. A 1960 article in The Daily Mail noted that the village pictured in the film was the village of Bagur in Catalonia, Spain. The HR item noted that all references indicating that the film was shot in Spain were deleted at the behest of the Spanish government, which objected to the depiction of local youths devouring a man. "The film was nominated for the following Academy Awards: Katharine Hepburn and Elizabeth Taylor were both nominated for Best Actress, and the film was also nominated for Best Art Direction-Set Decoration. According to modern sources, Hepburn did not get along with director Joseph L. Mankiewicz. Hepburn objected to Mankiewicz's treatment of Montgomery Clift, who was suffering from alcoholic depression at the time of the production. She also objected to her washed-out appearance in her final scene, which was created by the director's insistence that she be shot in a harsh light without the benefit of makeup. Modern sources add that in a letter to Williams, contained in a collection of his unpublished letters sent to the playwright, Hepburn wrote that at the end of the production, she spit on the floor to express her contempt for the "botching of his play." "In 1992, Columbia Pictures Television remade Williams' play as a television movie, directed by Richard Eyre and starring Maggie Smith, Rob Lowe and Natasha Richardson." Source citations: Variety 16 Decorations 59, p. 6. New York Times 23 Decorations 59, p. 22. Motion Picture Herald Product Digest 19 Decorations 59, p. 524. Daily Variety 16 Decorations 59, p. 3. Hollywood Reporter 16 Decorations 59, p. 3. Film Daily 16 Decorations 59, p. 6. Box Office 28 Decorations 1959. Box Office 21 Decorations 1959. Hollywood Reporter 28 Aug 1959. Hollywood Reporter 4 Mar 1959, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 16 Apr 1959, p. 4. Hollywood Reporter 19 May 1959, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 4 Decorations 1959, p. 1, 6. Hollywood Reporter 8 Decorations 1959, p. 1, 10. Hollywood Reporter 21 May 1959, p. 4. New York Times 6 Nov 1959. Daily Mail 1960. Los Angeles Times 20 Decorations 1959. Filmfacts 1960, pp. 319-21. Hollywood Reporter 21 Apr 1959, p. 4. Hollywood Reporter 18 May 1959, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 1 Jul 1959. Hollywood Reporter 6 Nov 1959, p. 1, 3. Saturday Review 2 Jan 1960. Time 11 Jan 1960. AU - Mankiewicz, Joseph L. DA - 1960 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Suddenly, Last Summer (1960) motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and American-interest film LB - 35890 PB - Columbia Pictures PY - 1960 ST - Suddenly, Last Summer TI - Suddenly, Last Summer ID - 3226 ER - TY - MPCT AB - This movie, a comedy starring David Niven, Mitzi Gaynor, and Carl Reiner, was originally rejected for a Production Code Administration seal because it deal with pre-martial sex. In the first appeal after the MPAA's Appeal Board had increased in size by Eric Johnston (added independent producers and directors), the PCA's ban was overturned after a line of dialogue adding compensating moral values was inserted into the movie. Based on the play Anniversary Waltz by Joseph Fields and Jerome Chodorov (New York, 7 Apr 1954). Plot summary from American Film Institute Catalogue: "In New York City, Chris Walters comes home from work early to surprise his wife Alice on their thirteenth wedding anniversary. Alice is taken aback, then pleased when Chris presents her with a diamond broach, but the couple's efforts to share their affection is interrupted by a phone call from Alice's mother, the arrival of the Walters' children, Okkie and Debbie, and inquiries from the maid, Millie. Chris is further frustrated when delivery men arrive baring a television set, a gift from Alice's parents, Lilly and Arthur Gans. Believing that the inane quality of television programming destroys family life, Chris adamantly refuses to accept the set, despite the children's and Alice's pleas. Later, when Alice frets about Chris's explosive temper, he apologizes and agrees to keep the set, then suggests they need to get away for time alone together. Recalling their courtship days, Chris and Alice decide to sneak out of the apartment and dine at their favorite diner, then go to the hotel they used to visit. Later that evening, as the Walters arrive back to the apartment, Okkie notes their return wryly. That night at the El Morocco club, Chris's partner Bud dines with potential client Jeanette Revere, who, being a four time divorcee, is amazed to hear of Alice and Chris's anniversary. Late the next afternoon, Arthur and Lilly arrive early for the celebratory anniversary dinner party. Upon seeing the television set, Arthur chastises Chris for holding out against one for so long. That evening as the families dine together at the party, Lilly frets over Arthur drinking and Chris grouses at the children for having the television on loudly. Arthur continues to wonder how Chris can hate television and Chris admits that he and his father-in-law have had a long history of disagreements. When Chris wonders why Arthur allowed Alice to date him, Arthur declares he always trusted Alice to do the right thing. Slightly drunk, Chris then offers a toast to the year before the couple were married, declaring they had none of marriage's responsibilities and all of the fun. Startled, the Ganses demand an explanation and despite Alice's efforts to interrupt, Chris gaily admits that he and Alice carried on romantically the entire year before their marriage. Incensed at having been made fools for believing in Alice's pre-marital innocence, the Ganses depart in an angry huff. Alice berates Chris and refuses to accept his half-hearted apology. When Alice turns on the television in an attempt to ignore her husband, he furiously kicks in the screen. The next morning over breakfast, Chris tells Millie that he was forced to sleep on the sofa all night and bemoans the difference that marriage and children make to a relationship. Bud arrives to excitedly reveal that Jeanette has agreed to sign with their firm, but Chris is uninterested in work. Bud is startled to see the wrecked television and mistaking Chris's moodiness for a hangover, cheerfully declares he will handle the new account. Chris then pleads for forgiveness from Alice, vowing to personally apologize to Arthur and Lilly. Alice accepts Chris's invitation to lunch at Rockefeller Center, but once there, wonders aloud if their marriage is in serious trouble. Chris admits that his volatile temper is largely responsible for their disagreements and promises to mend his ways. Upon arriving home later, the Walters are surprised to find a new television set with a note to Alice from Bud offering the set as a gift. Chris reacts angrily, but recalling his new promise, struggles to squelch his anger. Alice telephones her parents and Chris apologizes and invites the Gans to dinner. While waiting for Arthur and Lilly to arrive that evening, Chris plays chess with Okkie and wonders vaguely about Debbie's whereabouts. Alice then turns on the new set and after several grating advertisements, the show "Kids Council" comes on and the family is shocked to see Debbie petitioning a council of school children for assistance. To their horror, Debbie explains that her parents' constant bickering has steadily increased and she fears they may be considering divorce. While Alice and Chris frantically attempt to telephone the station to stop the show, the council members request more information on the arguments. When Debbie blithely declares that their latest angry row occurred over pre-marital relations, the show abruptly cuts off. Apoplectic, Chris kicks in the television screen. As Alice and Chris burst into a furious argument at who is responsible for Debbie's breech, Bud and Jeanette arrive to celebrate her signing with their firm. Moments later, Arthur and Lilly arrive, adding to the chaos. Bud and Arthur are stunned about the ruined television, which only further antagonizes Chris. Just then, Debbie arrives home, delightedly waving a hundred dollar bond given her by the television show's company. Chris demands to punish Debbie, but fearful, Alice intervenes, supported by Arthur and Lilly. Outraged, Chris stalks out of the apartment. Over the next two days, Bud attempts to convince the angry Chris to return home, as Alice struggles to make explanations to Debbie and Okkie. Late one afternoon, Lilly shows up at the Walters' apartment with a suitcase, tearfully admitting she has left Arthur after subjugating herself to his ways for thirty-five years. Moments later, Arthur arrives, denying that he has driven his wife away. Bud then appears to relate that Chris is anxious to return and is, in fact, waiting outside to come in. Okkie and Debbie greet Chris effusively while Alice angrily declares that no one has taken her feelings into consideration. To Chris's consternation, Alice begins packing to leave when the couple is interrupted by a phone call. Equally dismayed and delighted, Alice reveals that her doctor has just told her that she is pregnant. Uncertain what to do, Alice's doubts dissolve when a new television set, a gift from Chris, arrives. back to top "Note: The film's working title was Anniversary Waltz. The opening credits feature an animated greeting card, the front of which lists the film title, which then opens up to list the credits interspersed with cartoon figures of a middle-aged couple and jokes about married life. The closing credits feature the couple arriving in a cab at the Earle Hotel, where the husband and wife in the film conduct their romantic rendezvous. Hallmark Cards designed the title sequence. Makeup artist Herman Buchman's name is misspelled as "Buckman" in the opening credits. [H]Happy Anniversary was shot on location in New York City. The film was based on the 1954 play Anniversary Waltz, by Joseph Fields and Jerome Chodorov, the Broadway run of which starred MacDonald Carey and Kitty Carlisle and was directed by Carlisle's husband, Moss Hart. The Var review of the play noted that "...an unhappy minority might find it all pretty tasteless" and described the story as "a great night for tantrums." The HR review called the play's premiere "...an engagingly dark evening" and described the story as having a "certain busy prurience." "In the file on the film in the MPAA/PCA Collection at the AMPAS Library, correspondence from Edward Small Productions in Sep 1954 reveals his company's interest in producing a film of the play. The PCA indicated that they could not approve of the property as "the story [was] unacceptable, being a light comedy treatment of the subject of illicit sex." In Oct and Nov 1955 Desilu Productions and Sidney Franklin of Allied Artists, respectively, showed interest in the property, and each was given the same indication that unless changes were made, the PCA could not approve a treatment. "Throughout Jun and Aug 1956 George Schaeffer, representing Joseph Fields, corresponded with the PCA and its head, Geoffrey Shurlock, in an effort to overcome the play's narrative difficulties. A year later, Fields submitted several pages of a script, adapted by him and Chodorov, which were approved by the PCA. As the film began production in May 1959, a NYT article quoted Fields as stating that the play's joke of pre-marital sex had not been altered for the film and had, in fact, been accepted by the PCA. The article noted "a new frankness in situations and dialogue on the screen, which is being enforced by the unexpurgated production of such films as Anniversary Waltz." "In Sep 1959, the PCA tentatively awarded a Production Code seal to the film, which had been renamed [H]Happy Anniversary. By late Oct, however, Shurlock wrote to Fields that after screening the picture he had found it in violation of the code and could not issue the certificate. Shurlock wrote "It is our unanimous judgment that the unacceptability of this picture stems from an improper treatment of the pre-marital sex relationships between your two sympathetic leads... this relationship is presented as both acceptable and glamourous [sic]." A HR 28 Oct 1959 article states that United Artists would release the film without the seal in the event that an appeal did not bring about a reversal of the PCA ruling. " Only two previous studio films had been released without productions seals, The Moon Is Blue in 1953 and The Man with the Golden Arm in 1955 (see below), both Otto Preminger productions distributed by UA. The HR article notes that neither film suffered booking difficulties and each made money. UA announced that [H]Happy Anniversary would premiere in New York on 10 Nov and on 18 Nov in Los Angeles, regardless of the appeals board decision. On 6 Nov 1959, HR reported that UA had agreed to add a "wild line" of dialogue recorded by David Niven which, as stream of consciousness, would state "Chris's" regret for having taken "Alice" to a hotel before their marriage. The line is heard after the party, once Alice has angrily locked Chris out of the couple's bedroom. According to correspondence in the PCA file, this adjustment would provide the necessary "moral compensating value" and allow the certificate to be issued. An 11 Nov 1959 Var article noted that the original PCA press release indicated that this alteration made it unnecessary for the review board to vote on UA's appeal. The film's producers, however, indicated that the review board had overturned Shurlock's original decision, content with the addition of the wild line. "The Var article went on to note that "what puzzles some observers is how the addition of a comparatively frivolous laugh line such as the one to be inserted into Anniversary [sic] can seriously provide 'moral compensation.' Or, for that matter, why the Code chose to pick on Anniversary in the first place. Several of the execs on the review board represent companies which turned out, or will be releasing, pictures of a much 'stronger' nature, with themes ranging from rape and homosexuality to juvenile sex orgies, brothels, nymphomania, prostitution, etc." "Reviews of the film were mixed; the NYT lamented the "fuss" made by the PCA stating: "The consequence of this attention has been to give an illusion of substance to a conspicuously hollow little picture that is about as wicked as an adolescent's joke." The review further criticized the picture for presenting "supposedly adult characters... more childish and subnormal than its kids." Var, however, described the film as "chock full of laughs and suavely handled," and praised Mitzi Gaynor's singing of "I Don't Regret a Thing...." HR called the film "one of those effervescent comedies that sends everybody out of theatre feeling happier." Source citations: Variety 4 Nov 59, p. 6. Motion Picture Herald Product Digest 7 Nov 59, p. 477. Hollywood Reporter 30 Oct 59, p. 3. New York Times 11 Nov 59, p. 41. Film Daily 30 Oct 59, p. 6. Daily Variety 30 Oct 59, p. 3. Box Office 9 Nov 1959. Hollywood Reporter 28 Oct 1959, p. 1, 4. Variety 11 Nov 1959, p. 5, 20. New York Times 25 Jan 1959. New York Times 13 May 1959. Hollywood Reporter 6 Nov 1959, p. 1, 3. AU - Miller, David DA - 1959 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) children children and media television First Amendment Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Production Code, and Appeals Board Happy Anniversary LB - 35500 PB - United Artists PY - 1959 ST - Happy Anniversay (aka Anniversary Waltz) TI - Happy Anniversay (aka Anniversary Waltz) ID - 3189 ER - TY - MPCT AB - Vincente Minnelli’s movie Tea and Sympathy implied homosexuality, and was one of several movies during the 1950s that suggested that the Production Code was being applied less strictly in Hollywood during the late 1950s. Plot summary from Americaan Film Institute Catalog: "At his Chilton preparatory school ten-year reunion, writer Tom Robinson Lee reminisces about his eventful year at the school: As a new student, shy and sensitive Tom acquires a romantic crush on Laura, the wife of dormitory headmaster Bill Reynolds. In the dorm garden outside her downstairs apartment, Laura draws Tom out, learning that he barely knew his mother and has never before been in love, having lived the previous decade in a series of all-male boarding schools. After Tom reveals that he hopes to escort her to Saturday night's dance, which will follow opening night of the school play, Laura tries to teach him to dance, but Tom is too shy. Later, he follows her to the beach, where Laura sews with faculty wives Lilly Sears and Mary Williams. Although Bill and the other boys are roughhousing nearby, Tom prefers to sit with the ladies, and when some of the boys spy him helping them to sew, Tom earns the nickname "Sister Boy." When Laura later drops by to ask Bill to plan a vacation alone with her, he berates her for allowing Tom to sew, and reveals that he has invited some students to vacation with them. Upon returning to the dorm, the boys taunt Tom, even though his roommate, Al Thompson, a star athlete, comes to his defense. On Saturday afternoon, Tom competes in a tennis match that his father Herb has come to watch. When Herb hears the boys mocking Tom, however, he leaves the match, to Tom's dismay. Herb later tries to "help" his son by urging him to cut his hair into a fashionable crewcut and encouraging him to harass soda shop waitress Ellie Martin, as the other boys do. Later, Herb visits Bill, a friend from their Chilton days, and expresses shame that Tom is not "a regular fellow." Laura is distressed to overhear the men's hopes that the evening's bonfire, at which new boys, wearing pajamas, are roughed up by older students, will make a man of Tom. When she later complains to Bill, he reveals that Tom's outcast status is a stain on the dorm and a grievance to Herb, and that rather than becoming emotionally involved, her only role is to provide "[H]tea and [H]sympathy" to the boys. Laura brings up her first husband, a sensitive boy she married when they were eighteen, only to lose him the next year in the war, but the subject infuriates Bill. Upstairs, meanwhile, upon learning that Tom is to play a female in the school production, Herb forces him to decline the role. Tom is disappointed and humiliated, especially after Herb admonishes him to "fight tonight, or else." At the bonfire, the boys march Tom out to the field, but once there, refuse to touch him, a slight more shameful than the hazing that the other boys are enduring. Unable to bear it, Al rips off Tom's top, prompting the others to join suit. As Laura runs off in revulsion, Tom rushes back to the dorm. In her rooms later, Al confesses to Laura that his father has insisted that Al change roommates the following year, and when Laura threatens to besmirch Al's reputation to show him how easily false rumors can start, Al responds heatedly that she has nothing to lose and so cannot understand. Realizing the truth of Al's statement, Laura apologizes. Al then attempts to teach his friend how to appear manlier, but Tom knows that it is too late for him to gain the boys' comradeship, and refuses the lessons. After Al reveals that he will switch dorms, however, Tom, in desperation, considers his friend's parting advice: to visit Ellie, whose bad reputation will give credence to Tom's heterosexuality. Soon after at their apartment, Bill tears up a book of poetry Tom has given Laura. Laura begs to know why Bill hates Tom and what has driven a wedge in their young marriage, but Bill refuses to talk to her, stating only that he does not want Laura to see Tom alone. When Laura then hears Tom making a date with Ellie, however, she tries frantically to detain the boy, inviting him into the apartment and informing him about her husband, who was killed trying to prove his bravery to disbelieving peers. Tom, assuming Laura pities him, tries to leave, prompting her to beg him to dance. Instead, Tom asks why Bill hates him and his father is ashamed of him, and breaks down in tears. When Laura holds him, Tom impulsively kisses her, but runs off when Bill and some boys return early from their weekend mountain climb. Tom sneaks off to Ellie's, where he is awkward and repulsed by her slatternly ways. He tries to kiss her, but after he pulls away, she recalls his nickname and shouts "Sister Boy" at him. Tom breaks down, grabbing a knife from her kitchen drawer to attempt suicide. Ellie screams out to her neighbors, who call the campus police, and Tom is arrested. The next day, the campus hears the story of Tom's humiliation, and although Herb is at first proud of his son, when he learns that Tom pulled away from Ellie, he crumples in grief. Laura, overcome with sadness and anger, tells Bill in private that she blames him for bullying Tom by imposing a rigid definition of "manliness," and insists that real men can be gentle and considerate. She then declares that she is lonely and depressed and wishes she had helped Tom prove himself with her, after which Bill retorts that she wants to mother a boy rather than to love a man. When Laura asks why he refuses to let her love him, Bill storms off without reply. Laura looks for Tom in his room, only to discover a series of half-finished suicide notes. She searches the school grounds, finally locating him alone in the woods. There, Tom expresses his deep shame, and as Laura consoles him, her [H]sympathy and loneliness cause her to reach out for him. As they kiss, she says, "Years from now, when you talk about this-and you will-be kind." In the present, Tom visits Bill, who now lives alone in the dorm apartment. Bill, still cold, gives Tom a letter he found among Laura's belongings. In the garden, Tom reads the letter she wrote to him stating that she appreciates the loving novel he wrote about their relationship, but feels that she sacrificed Bill for Tom, because the boy was easier to save than the marriage. Now sad and alone, Laura wishes Tom a full and understanding life, and assures him that, as he wrote in his book, "the wife always kept her affection for the boy." "Note: Tea and Sympathy was based on the play of the same name by Robert Anderson, who also wrote the screen adaptation. Lead actors Deborah Kerr, John Kerr (who is unrelated to Deborah) and Leif Erickson recreated their roles from the 1953 Broadway production of the play, for which Deborah Kerr had won the Donaldson Award for best actress of the year and a special award for the best actress in her Broadway debut, and John Kerr had won the Donaldson Award and the New York Critics Award for best actor. "Director Vincente Minnelli's autobiography quotes a letter from Anderson stating that the play's themes included: "An essential manliness which...consists of gentleness, consideration...and not just of brute strength. Another point, of course, is the tendency for any mass of individuals to gang up on anyone who differs from it...Also a major point is that when a person is in terrible trouble, we have to give him more than [H]tea and [H]sympathy." "According to information in the file on the film in the MPAA/PCA Collection at the AMPAS Library, the play's inclusion of homosexuality, adultery and prostitution precipitated years of debate with the Production Code Administration, which at the time prohibited depictions of adultery and any depiction or inference of "sex perversion." After the play's success, several studios, including Samuel Goldwyn's company, Warner Bros., M-G-M, Twentieth Century-Fox and Columbia, approached PCA heads Joseph I. Breen and Geoffrey Shurlock about how to write a screenplay adaptation that could receive a seal. In numerous memos dated late 1953 found in the film's PCA file, Breen and Shurlock replied that the basic story was unacceptable. During a 29 Oct 1953 meeting between Shurlock, Goldwyn, Anderson and the play's New York director, Elia Kazan, Anderson stated that he would not change any of the "offending" elements. In the months that followed, several revisions were suggested to Shurlock by many writers, including making "Bill Reynolds" seem threatened by "Tom Robinson Lee's" interest in "Laura," rather than titillated by him; adding a punishment for Tom and Laura (which Shurlock rejected, saying it martyred them); and clarifying that Tom is not homosexual but merely different from the other boys. "DV reported on 16 Dec 1953 that Anderson was considering forming an independent company in order to produce a film version of the play without a Code seal. That version was to be directed by Kazan and be supported by The Playwrights Company, the theater group that had produced the Broadway play. That article asserted "If '[H]Tea' goes out without a Seal-as it is bound to do if done independently-the film will constitute another test of the Code and the extent to which exhibitors are willing to buck it." Later that month, Goldwyn was quoted in a Var piece as complaining that the Code was "behind the times." [The first major production to be released without a Code seal, The Moon Is Blue (see above), was released in Jul 1953.] In Apr 1954, NYT noted that Anderson still planned an independent production, to be filmed on the East Coast. "M-G-M bought the film rights to the play in Jul 1954. According to a Sep 1954 DV article, Anderson was paid $100,000 for the rights and would receive another $300,000 if he provided a script that gained approval from the Code. On 28 Apr 1955, after a revised script was once again denied a Code seal, the studio appealed the decision with the MPAA. By late Aug 1955, Shurlock and staff member Jack Vizzard agreed to a page-by-page review of the script, and on 1 Sep 1955, Sherlock sent a letter to M-G-M head Dore Schary assuring him that the script, if filmed exactly as written, would meet Code standards. After a 25 Sep 1955 NYT article stated that the play's main themes had not been significantly altered, National Catholic Legion of Decency leader Rev. Thomas F. Little sent a letter to Loew's, Inc. asking to see the script for himself. Shurlock responded to Little that his office was dismayed by the NYT article and that Schary had "disavowed its implications." After including Little's suggestion that Laura's final letter state that Tom is happily married, the film was awarded a Code seal on 20 Jul 1956, and the Legion eventually gave it a "B" rating. "The final film version differed from the play in that it removed the suggestion that Tom or Bill held any latent homosexual tendencies and did not include a scene in which Tom swims in the nude with a gay music teacher. In addition, the film adds a flashback framing structure, in which Tom returns to a school reunion and, after reminiscing about the past, reads the letter from Laura expressing her remorse at having slept with him, an act that destroyed her marriage. The play ended with Laura's famous line, "Years from now, when you talk about this-and you will-be kind." In the film, the line ends the flashback. "Although, as noted above, Erickson recreated the role of Bill from the Broadway production, on 31 Oct 1955, a "Rambling Reporter" item in HR stated that at that time, M-G-M wanted Burt Lancaster to play the role of Bill. An Apr 1956 HR news item listed Dick York as the film's star. According to a Jul 1956 NYHT article, the beach scene was filmed at Zuma Beach, CA. "Upon its release, the film garnered mainly positive reviews, although the LAT review asserted that the film would disappoint fans of the play. The NYT called the film "strong and sensitive" but pronounced the letter at the end "prudish and unnecessary." For her performance, Deborah Kerr received a BAFTA nomination for Best Actress of 1956." Source citations: Motion Picture Herald Product Digest 29 Sep 56, p. 90. Variety 26 Sep 56, p. 6. New York Times 28 Sep 56, p. 24. Film Daily 25 Sep 56, p. 6. Hollywood Reporter 25 Sep 56, p. 3. Box Office 6 Oct 1956. Daily Variety 26 Sep 56, p. 3. Box Office 29 Sep 56, p. 28. Hollywood Reporter 6 Apr 1956, p. 12. Hollywood Reporter 25 May 1956, p. 10. New York Times 25 Sep 1955. Daily Variety 2 Decorations 1953, p. 1, 11. Daily Variety 16 Decorations 1953. Variety 30 Decorations 1953. New York Times 4 Apr 1954. Daily Variety 20 Jul 1954. Daily Variety 22 Sep 1954. Hollywood Reporter 31 Oct 1955, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 4 Apr 1956, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 12 Apr 1956, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 8 Nov 1956, p. 6. Los Angeles Examiner 4 Oct 1956. Life 8 Oct 1956, pp. 139-141. Time 8 Oct 1956. New York Herald Tribune 1 Jul 1956. Los Angeles Times 4 Oct 1956. AU - Minnelli, Vincente DA - 1956 KW - censorship motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality motion pictures censorship and ratings sexuality motion pictures, and homosexuality motion pictures, and sexuality censorship, and homosexuality LB - 31600 N1 - Production company: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corp. [Loew's Inc.] PB - Loew's Inc. PY - 1956 ST - Tea and Sympathy TI - Tea and Sympathy ID - 2849 ER - TY - MPCT AB - This work is a video recording, produced by Kino International Corp. AU - Nekes, Werner CY - New York DA - 1989 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins LB - 6800 PB - Kino International Corp. PY - 1989 ST - Film Before Film TI - Film Before Film ID - 2058 ER - TY - MPCT AU - Peckinpah, Sam DA - 1972 KW - motion pictures and popular culture sexuality Meese Commission, and motion pictures women motion pictures, and women pornography, and motion pictures women, and motion pictures values media effects Meese Commission, and media effects motion pictures Meese Commission pornography LB - 29370 PB - Warner Bros. / Warner Home Video PY - 1972 ST - The Getaway TI - The Getaway ID - 2703 ER - TY - MPCT AB - By 1961 there were several movies in production in which homosexuality was a major theme, even though the movie industry's Production Code forbade this topic. These films included Otto Preminger’s Advise and Consent (Columbia, 1962), John Huston’s Freud (Universal, 1962), United Artists’ The Best Man (1964), starring Henry Fonda, United Artists’ The Children’s Hour (United Artists), and The Devil's Advocate. Summary from American Film Institute Catalog: "Washington is thrown into a turmoil when the seriously ill President of the United States asks the Senate to "Advise and Consent" to the appointment of Robert Leffingwell, a highly controversial figure, as the new Secretary of State. The President's chief support comes from Bob Munson, the Senate Majority Leader, while the principal opposition is raised by Seab Cooley, a southern senator who uses the testimony of a mentally unbalanced clerk, Herbert Gelman, to brand Leffingwell an ex-Communist. Although Leffingwell confesses the truth of the accusation to the President, his Communist affiliation is dismissed as a youthful indiscretion, and Leffingwell denies the accusation while testifying under oath before the Senate subcommittee. The committee chairman, Brigham Anderson, learns of the perjury and demands the withdrawal of Leffingwell's nomination. When the President refuses, Anderson decides that for the good of the country he must make the truth public. Before he can do so, however, he is threatened with blackmail by Fred Van Ackerman, an overambitious senator who warns Anderson that if he fails to approve the nomination, his own youthful indiscretion (a wartime homosexual experience in Hawaii) will be exposed. Unable to face the shame of his own past and unable to confess the truth to his wife, Anderson slashes his throat with a razor. Following the arrival of the tragic news, the Senate votes on Leffingwell's nomination. It ends in a deadlock, with the decisive vote going to the Vice President. As he ponders his decision, word arrives that the President has died. The once ineffectual Vice President is suddenly inspired by the monumental responsibility of his new office and announces that he will appoint his own Secretary of State." Based on the novel "Advise and Consent" by Allen Drury (Garden City, New York, 1959). AU - Preminger, Otto DA - 1962 KW - censorship self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings Johnston, Eric, and Production Code sexuality motion pictures, and sex Production Code, and sex Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality homosexuality, and motion pictures censorship, and homosexuality Production Code, and homosexuality Preminger, Otto Production Code, and Otto Preminger Preminger, Otto, and Production Code LB - 35330 PB - Columbia Pictures PY - 1962 ST - Advise and Consent TI - Advise and Consent ID - 3172 ER - TY - MPCT AB - This movie played a role in the relaxation of the Production Code on profanity (e.g., using such words as "damn" and "hell"). Plot Summary from American Film Institute Catalog: "Cindy Lou travels to a wartime parachute manufacturing plant to say goodbye to her sweetheart Joe. Scheduled to depart for military flying school the next day, Joe is overjoyed to see Cindy Lou and suggests they use his twenty-four-hour pass to get married. Cindy Lou accepts his proposal, even though her concern is aroused when [H]Carmen Jones, a lively and beautiful factory worker who is desired by practically every man at the plant, asks Joe to pick her up that night for a private farewell party. When Carmen fights with another worker for reporting her late arrival to the foreman, Sgt. Brown, whose attentions Carmen has spurned, cancels Joe's leave and orders him to deliver her to the authorities in Masonville. As Cindy Lou watches Joe and Carmen drive away, Sgt. Brown announces that Joe volunteered for the assignment. Riding in the jeep, Carmen suggests that she and Joe stop off for a meal and a little romance. Joe pushes her away, but this only intensifies her attraction to him. Anxious to return to Cindy Lou, Joe opts to take a shorter but more treacherous road to Masonville. The jeep ends up in the river, and Carmen, highly amused, suggests that they catch the Masonville train when it passes through her home town that evening. In her grandmother's house, Carmen gives Joe a peach and begins to brush the mud off his pants. Finally submitting to her charms, Joe kisses her passionately. The next morning, as he dons his shirt, Joe finds Carmen's farewell note, in which she explains that, although she loves him, she cannot tolerate being locked up in jail. Joe is put in the stockade for allowing his prisoner to escape, and Cindy Lou visits him just as a package from Carmen arrives. When Cindy Lou sees a rose inside, she leaves without a word. For weeks, Joe carries the rose with him, dreaming of Carmen as he works in the hot sun. Meanwhile, Carmen, having found work in a Louisiana night spot, waits impatiently for Joe's release. The club stirs with excitement as Husky Miller, a winning prizefighter, arrives with his entourage in an expensive car. Husky sings for the admiring crowd and then introduces himself to Carmen, who rebuffs him. Flustered, Husky orders his manager Rum to persuade Carmen to accompany him to Chicago. Rum and his cohort Dink, promising her diamonds, furs and an expensive hotel suite in exchange for her company, hand Carmen, along with her friends, Frankie and Myrt, train tickets to Chicago. Carmen is tempted but finally decides to remain at the club and wait for Joe's release. Just then, Joe arrives. Overjoyed, Carmen kisses and embraces him, but when he announces that he must depart immediately for flying school, she becomes enraged. Sgt. Brown appears, insults Joe, and starts to leave with Carmen, whereupon Joe gives him a severe beating. Realizing he will go to prison for striking a superior officer, Joe flees with Carmen to Chicago. Because the military police are after him for desertion, Joe remains hidden in a shabby, rented room, while Carmen secretly visits Husky's gym in the hope of obtaining a loan from Frankie. Dressed in satin and diamonds, Frankie claims she has no money of her own, but her efforts to persuade Carmen to leave Joe are fruitless. Carmen, still penniless, arrives at the boardinghouse with a full bag of groceries, leading Joe to wonder aloud how she could have obtained the necessary cash. Following their argument, Carmen visits Husky's hotel suite, where she joins her friends at cards. Drawing the nine of spades, Carmen assumes the card is an omen of impending death and abandons herself to a few final days of drinking and debauchery. Cindy Lou, still in love with Joe, reads about Husky's new girl friend in the newspaper and arrives at Husky's gym just before Joe appears. Brushing Cindy Lou aside, Joe orders Carmen to leave with him, and when she refuses, he threatens Husky with a knife. Carmen helps Joe to escape the military police, but later, during Husky's big fight, Joe finds Carmen in the crowd and pulls her into a storage room. Joe begs Carmen to return to him, but she maintains that their affair is over. Completely broken down, Joe strangles Carmen to death just before the police arrive." "Note: The film's opening title card reads: "Oscar Hammerstein's [H]Carmen Jones." On 26 Jun 1952, HR announced that theatrical producer Billy Rose had acquired the screen rights to Hammerstein's work and intended to make the film with an all-black cast. The news items also stated that Rose intended to "handle his own financing and release, with the premiere engagement of the film to take place at the Ziegfeld Theatre, where he will make his headquarters." According to a 9 Jul 1952 HR news item, Rose signed Elia Kazan to direct the picture. Rose apparently abandoned his plans and sold the rights, as a 23 Dec 1953 HR news item announced that Otto Preminger and Twentieth Century-Fox would be filming the project. "Although an 11 Mar 1954 HR news item stated that Hammerstein would be collaborating on the film's screenplay with an as-yet unnamed writer, only Harry Kleiner is credited onscreen as the screenwriter. According to Preminger's autobiography, he and Kleiner, who had been Preminger's student at Yale University, decided not to use the text of Hammerstein's musical, or the libretto of Bizet's opera as a basis for the script, but to go back to Prosper Mérimée's short story, while retaining Bizet's music and Hammerstein's lyrics. Preminger states that he first took the project to friends at United Artists, but they turned him down because they felt they could not risk backing an all-black film. "According to the Twentieth Century-Fox Records of the Legal Department at the UCLA Arts--Special Collections Library, Fox entered into a distribution deal with Preminger's Carlyle Productions in which Fox agreed to advance the film's negative costs, up to $825,000. Fox production head Darryl F. Zanuck was to have final script and cut approval. Legal records also state that Hammerstein, at the behest of Zanuck, submitted the script to Walter White, the executive secretary of the N.A.A.C.P., for comment. White praised the screenplay, but added that he was opposed to an "all-Negro" show in principle, because of his organization's ongoing fight for integration. Although a 23 Dec 1953 DV news item stated that Preminger planned to shoot the film in Hollywood, Chicago and South Carolina, studio records indicate that the picture was shot entirely on the RKO lot. "According to legal records, Katherine Hilgenberg was originally hired as the singing voice of "Carmen." Marilyn Horne, whose first name was misspelled in the onscreen credits, sang the part, however. Brock Peters, whose surname was misspelled "Broc" in the oncredits, was first considered for the role of "Husky Miller," according to legal records. "On 29 May 1953 HR noted that Dorothy Dandridge, Joyce Bryant and Elizabeth Foster were being considered for the title role. According to a 24 Oct 1954 NYT article, Preminger was reluctant to cast Dandridge because she seemed "too sweet, too regal." Dandridge convinced Preminger to hire her by dressing in flashy clothing and visiting the director, arguing, "Look, I know I can do it. I understand this type of woman. She's primitive, honest, independent, and real--that's why other women envy her." In the same article, Harry Belafonte, when asked if [H]Carmen Jones would lead to a greater utilization of black talent in films, replied, "Not really...but I think it will provide some help symbolically. It proves there's no corner of human drama that Negroes cannot play. However, I don't think Hollywood, as a whole, is geared to pioneering of this sort." "HR production charts and news items include the following actors and dancers in the cast, althought their appearance in the final picture has not been confirmed: Mme. Sul-te-Wan, Archie Savage, Carmen De Lavallade, June Eckstine, Max Roach, Sam McDaniels, Don Derricks, James Green, Don Blackman, Lonny Malone, Reuben Wilson, Jane Hanibal, Ramona Bruce, Vera Frances, Madie Comfort, Lawrence La Marr, Charles Fleming, Ruby Berkeley Goodwin, James Craig, Otis Greene, Orchid Oliver, Michael Wallace, Donna Rae Brown, Pat Taylor, Christyne Lawson, Ercelle Anderson, Gloria Jones, Pat Sides, Pola Dukes, James Truitte, Alvin Ailey, Clyde Webb, Archie Allison, Graham Johnson, Daniel Lloyd and Charles Carter. Modern sources credit John De Cuir as co-art director and Dimitri Tiomkin as co-music director. "A 1 Dec 1957 NYT article commented that the film titles designed by Saul Bass, which featured a sinuous animated flame flickering around a rose, introduced design, color and animation to the display of film credits. According to HR news items, Bass was awarded a special citation from the Los Angeles Art Directors Club and a gold medal from the New York Art Directors Guild for his work on [H]Carmen Jones. Dandridge received an Academy Award nomination as Best Actress and was also nominated by BAFTA for Best Foreign Actress. Herschel Burke Gilbert was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Music, Scoring of a Musical Picture, and the film won a Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture-Musical/Comedy. In 1992, [H]Carmen Jones was selected for the National Film Registry at the Library of Congress. "According to HR news items, the film at first had problems being exhibited in Europe because Preminger had not cleared the European rights to Bizet's music before production on the picture began. On 15 Nov 1954, HR noted that the rights to Bizet's score were in the public domain in the United States but were still privately owned in Europe. When Preminger received an invitation to screen the picture at the 1955 Cannes Film Festival, he planned to show it aboard an American aircraft carrier, which would constitute "extra-territorial grounds" so that he would not be "breaching technicalities" prohibiting showings on the Continent, according to a 20 Apr 1955 HR news item. By 26 Apr 1955, however, a special, out-of-competition screening was arranged so that it could be held on the main festival grounds. "Many films have been based on or inspired by the story and opera of Carmen, including two 1913 three-reel versions, one with Marion Leonard made by the Monopol Film Co., the other with Marguerite Snow, made by the Thanhouser Corp.; two 1915 versions, a Fox Film Corp. production, directed by Raoul Walsh and starring Theda Bara, and a Jesse L. Lasky production, directed by Cecil B. DeMille and starring Geraldine Farrar (see AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1911-20); Gypsy Blood, directed in 1918 by Ernst Lubitsch and starring Pola Negri; Loves of Carmen, produced by Fox Film Corp. in 1927, directed by Raoul Walsh and starring Dolores del Rio (see AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1921-30); the 1948 Columbia film The Loves of Carmen, directed by Charles Vidor and starring Rita Hayworth (see AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1941-50); a 1983 film produced in Spain entitled Carmen, directed by Carlos Saura; a 1983 France/Switzerland production entitled Prenom Carmen, directed by Jean-Luc Godard; Bizet's Carmen, a 1984 France/Italy production, directed by Francesco Rosi; and a 2001 MTV television production entitled MTV's Hip Hopera: Carmen, starring Mekhi Phifer and Beyoncé Knowles and directed by Robert Townsend." Source citations: Variety 6 Oct 54, p. 6. New York Times 29 Oct 54, p. 27. New York Times 1 Decorations 1957. New York Times 24 Oct 1954. Harrison's Reports 9 Oct 54, p. 163. Motion Picture Herald Product Digest 16 Oct 54, p. 179. Hollywood Reporter 28 Sep 54, p. 3. Hollywood Reporter 16 Jul 54, p. 11. Hollywood Reporter 22 Jul 54, p. 9. Film Daily 5 Oct 54, p. 10. The Exhibitor 20 Oct 54, p. 3856. Daily Variety 28 Sep 54, p. 3. American Cinematographer 1 Decorations 54, pp. 610-11, 625-29. Daily Variety 23 Decorations 1953. Box Office 16 Oct 1954. Hollywood Reporter 1 Oct 1954, p. 3. Hollywood Reporter 26 Jun 1952, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 9 Jul 1952, p. 1. Hollywood Reporter 23 Decorations 1953, p. 1. Hollywood Reporter 11 Mar 1954, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 29 May 1954, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 9 Jun 1954, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 11 Jun 1954, p. 4. Hollywood Reporter 18 Jun 1954, pp. 3-4. Hollywood Reporter 22 Jun 1954, p. 6. Hollywood Reporter 30 Jun 1954, p. 6. Hollywood Reporter 1 Jul 1954, p. 9. Hollywood Reporter 2 Jul 1954, p. 6. Hollywood Reporter 7 Jul 1954, p. 8. Hollywood Reporter 8 Jul 1954, p. 16. Hollywood Reporter 9 Jul 1954, p. 4. Hollywood Reporter 14 Jul 1954, p. 6. Hollywood Reporter 15 Jul 1954, p. 18. Hollywood Reporter 21 Jul 1954, p. 11. Hollywood Reporter 23 Jul 1954, p. 9. Hollywood Reporter 10 Sep 1954, p. 6. Los Angeles Times 2 Nov 1954. Los Angeles Daily News 2 Nov 1954. Newsweek 25 Oct 1954. Time 1 Nov 1954, p. 98. Motion Picture Daily 29 Sep 1954, p. 1, 11 New Yorker 6 Nov 1954. Hollywood Reporter 30 Sep 1954, p. 3. Hollywood Reporter 27 Oct 1954, p. 9. Hollywood Reporter 15 Nov 1954, p. 3. Hollywood Reporter 3 Feb 1955, p. 1. Hollywood Reporter 25 Feb 1955, p. 4 Hollywood Reporter 20 Apr 1955, p. 4. Hollywood Reporter 26 Apr 1955, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 27 Apr 1955, p. 3. AU - Preminger, Otto DA - 1955 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Preminger, Otto Production Code, and Otto Preminger motion pictures, and African Americans LB - 35610 PB - 20th-Fox Film Corp. PY - 1955 ST - Carmen Jones (aka Oscar Hammerstein's Carmen Jones) TI - Carmen Jones (aka Oscar Hammerstein's Carmen Jones) ID - 3200 ER - TY - MPCT AB - This movie dealt with a beautiful prostitute, played by Nancy Kwan, and was filmed in Hong Kong and England. It was one of a number of so-called hybrid or "runaway" films made during the 1950s and early 1960s. Its theme, prostitution, and sometime setting (a brothel) were at odds with the U. S. movie industry's Production Code. However, the film played in the country leading family theater, Radio City Music Hall, an indication that American public opinion was becoming more tolerant of such topics. Summary from American Film Institute Catalog: "When American Robert Lomax boards the ferry to Hong Kong, where he is going to start a new life as an artist, he sketches a striking Chinese woman. At first the young woman spurns his advances but she soon warms to him, telling him that her name is Mee Ling and that her father is wealthy. When the ferry lands, Robert attempts to follow Mee Ling but loses her in the crowd. He then proceeds to the Wanchai district, despite a policeman's warning that it is impoverished and disreputable. Robert is charmed by the bustling street life, however, and soon sees Mee Ling exiting the Nam Kok Hotel. When he inquires inside, the hotel owner, Ah Tong, replies that he does not know any Mee Ling, but responds excitedly to Robert's request to rent a room. Unknown to Robert, the hotel is the working quarters for prostitutes, known as "Wanchai girls," who solicit sailors and businessmen in the adjoining bar. Robert then wanders into the bar, where he sees Mee Ling, now dressed in a revealing dress, and Gwenny Lee, a Wanchai girl with whom Robert is chatting, reveals that the woman is actually Suzie Wong, the bar's most popular girl. When Robert approaches Suzie, she declares that she has never met him, even when he shows her the sketch he drew of her. Suzie finally admits that he is right, however, telling Robert that she likes to pretend that she is someone else. Suzie asks Robert if he wants her to be his "permanent girl friend," but Robert responds that he cannot afford her, despite his attraction to her. The next day, Robert calls on British banker O'Neill, to whom he explains that he grew tired of working as an architect and decided to fulfill his dream of being an artist. Robert has saved enough money to last for one year, and concedes that if he cannot achieve success, he will resign himself to architecture. While dictating letters of introduction for him, O'Neill introduces Robert to his daughter Kay, who is impressed by Robert's determination. Soon after, at the bar, Suzie propositions Ben Marlowe, an English businessman drinking to forget his marital woes. Robert admires Suzie's exuberant dancing, and later, unable to stop thinking about her, sends for her. Suzie tells her friends, Gwenny Lee, Minnie Ho and Wednesday Lu, that she will be Robert's girl, but learns that he wants her to model for him instead. Suzie is outraged and tells him that she will "lose face" with her friends because she is not attractive enough to seduce him. Robert insists, however, and after an evening of painting, escorts Suzie to a fancy restaurant. There, Suzie reveals that she is illiterate and that she became a prostitute after being abandoned at the age of ten. When they return to the hotel, Suzie confesses that she has feelings for him, but as Robert is about to kiss her, a sailor, looking for another girl, knocks on the door. Reminded of who Suzie is, Robert tells her to leave, but as the days pass, continues to use her as his muse. One evening, while a jealous Suzie insists on remaining in his room, Robert attends a dinner hosted by the O'Neills. Several of the racist guests deride Robert's enthusiasm for Chinese culture, but Robert refuses to accept their snobbery. Robert then takes Kay to his room to see his paintings and is embarrassed to find Suzie on the bed. After Kay departs, Robert orders Suzie out, but as she descends the staircase, she is beaten by a sailor whom she had spurned. Enraged, Robert trounces the sailor. Later, Robert takes Suzie to a floating restaurant, where they run into Ben and Kay. Upset when Robert agrees to show Kay his paintings again, Suzie talks Ben into taking her home. At the hotel, Kay is moved by Robert's work and volunteers to sponsor it in London. Robert agrees, but his mood sours when Suzie does not come to model the following day. When Suzie does show up, she provokes another argument with Robert about their relationship. Ben interrupts them to ask Suzie to become his mistress, and because she and Robert are still quarreling, Suzie accepts. As time passes, Suzie boasts about Ben's devotion, even claiming that he intends to divorce his wife and marry her. One afternoon, when Suzie arrives wearing westernized clothes, Robert tears them off, telling her that she looks like a "cheap European streetwalker." Ben summons Robert to his club soon after to tell him that he is returning to his wife, and persuades him to break the news to Suzie. Although Robert tells her gently, Suzie sobs, repeating her tale that she has a wealthy father and is not "a dirty street girl." Unable to stop himself, Robert takes Suzie in his arms and asks her to stay with him. Soon the couple is living together in the hotel, with Robert painting more enthusiastically than ever. He begins to grow curious, however, about Suzie's daily absences, and one morning, follows her up a hillside path to a small house, where he finds her holding a baby who she declares is hers. Explaining that the baby, named Winston after Winston Churchill, was fathered by a government official who did not want him, Suzie begs Robert not to send her away, and Robert embraces the child. His new family depletes his savings, however, and after both Kay and Suzie offer him money, he decides to give up painting and asks O'Neill to find him a job. When he informs Suzie, she offers to return to work, telling him that it is only like holding someone to dance. Horrified, Robert throws her out, although he quickly regrets his actions and spends days searching for her. One night, when he returns to his room, Kay is waiting to tell him that one of his paintings sold in London. Robert reveals that he has lost Suzie, but Kay, misunderstanding, assures him he can find another model. When Robert proclaims his love for Suzie, Kay counsels him to seek advice from her father, but she instead pressures O'Neill to help her win Robert for herself. Although O'Neill protests that association with Suzie would ruin him, Robert asserts that he would gladly marry her. After he leaves Kay's, Robert finds Suzie waiting for him outside the Nam Kok. Relieved when Robert embraces her, Suzie pleads with him to help her find Winston and explains that due to the heavy rains, many hillside houses have been demolished. Robert and Suzie force their way up the hill, only to discover that Winston has been killed in a landslide. Later, in a temple ceremony, Suzie's friends help her burn paper symbols, such as books and a toy rickshaw, enabling them to reach Winston in the afterlife and enrich his existence there. Suzie asks Robert to participate by writing a letter of introduction recommending Winston for a good job when he grows up. After he burns the letter, Robert asks Suzie to marry him, and they then leave the temple together." "Note: In the opening credits, the title card for the production companies reads: "A World Enterprise, Inc.--Worldfilm Limited Co-Production." Although numerous reviews refer to "Suzie Wong" and her friends as "yum yum" or "yum-yum" girls, that term is not used in the film. In the picture they are called "Wanchai girls," after the area in which they work as prostitutes. In 1957, trade paper news items announced that producer Ray Stark and his partner, Eliot Hyman, had purchased Richard Mason's novel from galleys for their company, Associated Artists, which would later become Seven Arts Productions. Stark and Hyman co-financed the Broadway production based on Mason's novel and owned the film rights to the property, according to the Var review of the play. The successful stage production, which opened in New York City on 14 Oct 1958, featured the Broadway debuts of France Nuyen as Suzie and William Shatner as "Robert Lomax." In Jul 1958, HR announced that Paramount would produce a film version of the play and novel in conjunction with Seven Arts. Although Stark had previously worked as a literary and talent agent, The [H]World of Suzie Wong marked his first experience as a motion picture producer. In a Dec 1960 NYHT article, Stark stated that the play, which did excellent business despite receiving poor notices, was valuable to him because he "saw faults which had to be corrected in the film...the play provided a framework for the film." Information in the Paramount Collection, located at the AMPAS Library, indicates that William Schorr was scheduled to co-produce the film with Stark. Although a 15 Jul 1959 HR news item added that Schorr had recently joined Stark's company, his contribution to the completed picture has not been confirmed. According to a studio press release, the picture marked the first time that screenwriter John Patrick toured Asia for research purposes, even though he had previously written the screenplays for the 1955 Twentieth Century-Fox film Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing (see above) and the 1956 M-G-M picture Teahouse of the August Moon (see above), both of which were set in Asia. According to an 18 Jun 1959 "Rambling Reporter" item, Paramount initially considered hiring British director Jack Clayton, who had recently helmed Room at the Top, to direct the film. Jean Negulesco was offically hired in late Oct 1959, according to HR, simultaneous to the casting of William Holden as Robert. [Holden had been Stark's client when Stark was an agent, according to a 19 May 1960 HR news item.] As noted by contemporary reviews, when Holden was cast as Robert, the character was changed from a young man to one nearing forty, with many reviews applauding the change, but others commenting negatively on Holden's age and haggardness in the film. The picture marked Holden's first since moving to Switzerland to avoid the high personal income taxes then faced by American citizens. As noted by HR news items and modern sources, Holden was highly criticized in film circles for his move and for insisting on working only in productions that were filmed abroad. Because The [H]World of Suzie Wong was shot in Hong Kong and the M-G-M Studios in Boreham Wood, Elstree, England, it qualified as a British quota picture, according to a Dec 1959 HR news item. Although Eurasian actress Nancy Kwan played Suzie in the finished film, the casting history of the role was complicated. Nuyen, who received acclaim for her Broadway performance as Suzie, was not immediately cast in the film, according to HR news items, which reported that Hyun Choo Oh, "Miss Korea" in the 1959 Miss Universe pageant, and Kwan, a dancer studying ballet in England, were among those considered for the role before Nuyen. In Sep 1959, HR noted that Stark and Patrick had just returned from a 17,000-mile location scouting trek through Honk Kong, Japan and the Philippines, during which they interviewed "hundreds" of Asian women for roles. In Dec 1959, HR announced that "after negotiating for months," Stark had secured Nuyen's services for the part. According to a Jul 1960 NYT article, when Nuyen was cast as Suzie for the movie, Kwan replaced her in the title role in a theatrical company touring America and Canada. The picture, which began shooting on 7 Jan 1960, was shut down in early Feb due to the illness of Nuyen, which caused her to drop out of the production, according to HR news items. Other contemporary sources reported that the main reason Nuyen left the film was due to clashes between the star and producer over how the role should be played, and that her departure was not voluntary. A 4 Feb 1960 HR news item reported that Stark was forced to conduct a "second global search for another Suzie," with a 10 Feb 1960 Var article stating that actresses considered to replace Nuyen included Natalie Wood, Nobu McCarthy, Lisa Liu, Rita Moreno, Grace Chang, Pascale Petit, Charita Soliz and Luz Valdez. On 15 Feb 1960, HR announced the casting of Kwan, who made her motion picture acting debut in the film. Only a few days after the casting of Kwan, production was again disrupted when Negulesco stepped down and was replaced by director Richard Quine. According to a HR news item, the change was made due to "differences between [Stark and Negulesco] over portions of the story still to be filmed." The switch to Quine caused problems for the production with the Directors Guild of America, according to a 19 Feb 1960 HR news item, because Quine "had failed to notify the Guild...before entering into negotiations to replace Negulesco." According to the news item, DGA regulations required that the "present director of a film be notified of another's intention to dicker for his spot." A DV item on the matter stated that possible disciplinary action against Quine was to be decided by the guild's board of directors. It has not been determined how much of Negulesco's work remained in the completed picture. The casting of Kwan necessitated that the production leave England, where interiors were being filmed, to reshoot the Hong Kong exteriors already done with Nuyen. Extensive location shooting in Hong Kong was redone in Apr and May 1960, at a cost of several hundred thousand dollars, according to contemporary reports. In a Mar 1960 LAT article, Stark asserted that both Kwan and Quine had been his first choices for the film anyway, but that Kwan had "lacked experience" when she was tested originally. Although a Jan 1959 HR news item stated that Ron Randell would reprise his Broadway role of "Ben Marlowe" for the film, Michael Wilding ultimately was cast in the part. A 10 Dec 1959 HR news item announced that Sir Ralph Richardson had been signed for the picture, presumably for the role of "O'Neill." Although a HR news item includes John Wallace in the cast, his appearance in the completed picture has not been confirmed. A studio press release reported that Juliet Yuen, the mother of the one-year-old child who played "Winston Wong," had an "important supporting role," but her appearance in the final film also has not been confirmed. An Apr 1960 Var article reported that members of the British Actors Equity Association were questioning the casting of Wilding's wife, socialite Susan Nell, in "a three-minute roll [sic], specially written into the picture." It has not been determined, however, if Nell, who was not a professional actress, appears in the completed picture. Yvonne Shima, who played "Minnie Ho," had played Suzie in the London stage presentation. The picture marked the screen debut of Jacqui Chan, who also appeared in the London version of the play, as well as the first appearance in an American film by British actress Sylvia Syms. According to Aug and Sep 1960 HR and LAEx articles, the picture was dubbed in Hamburg, West Germany at the Real Studios, because Holden was then in Germany filming the 1962 Paramount release The Counterfeit Traitor (see AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1961-70). According to information in the MPAA/PCA Collection at the AMPAS Library, Paramount submitted a copy of the screenplay to the PCA for approval in late Oct 1959 even though there were "lots of things still wrong with it," because the picture was being "rushed into production" abroad, with most of the crew and cast to be leaving shortly. The PCA replied that the basic story was unacceptable due to "the portrayal, both in theme and in detail, of the mechanics of prostitution and the use of a brothel as a locale." Also singled out by the PCA was the relationship between Suzie and Robert, which was deemed a "glorification of an illicit sex affair without any compensating moral values." Despite a mid-Nov 1959 conference between PCA and Paramount officials, the script was rejected again in late Nov for the same reasons. On 9 Dec 1959, PCA head Geoffrey I. Shurlock noted for the file that Paramount was "endeavoring to get Mr. Stark to shoot as many protection shots covering the unacceptable items discussed in our various letters and conferences," and also that because the picture was to go into production in Hong Kong in Jan, there was little the PCA could do until the finished picture was submitted for review. On 18 Aug 1960, Shurlock wrote to Paramount, stating that it was the "unanimous opinion" of the PCA staff that the completed picture could not be approved for a Code seal, due to the depiction of prostitution and the sexual relationship between Suzie and Robert. On 19 Aug 1960, however, the assistant of Paramount president Barney Balaban called Shurlock to express Balaban's distress over the rejection of the picture, which he considered "inoffensive." Shurlock then discussed with Paramount censorship liaison Luigi Luraschi the "involvement of the studio with the producer [Stark, who maintained control over the final product because he held the rights to the material], and the studio's inability to make any changes in the picture." Luraschi and another Paramount executive told Shurlock that the PCA's rejection of the picture had been leaked to the press, and upon their request, Shurlock issued another letter withdrawing the official rejection notice. When Luraschi asked for a review of the situation by the PCA Review Board of the MPAA, the board screened the film and decided that the picture could be approved without eliminations and released with a Code seal. The picture, which received a "B" rating from the National Catholic Legion of Decency, was listed as "restricted entertainment" in several areas of Canada. The Var review, noting the picture's controversial subject matter, stated: "Box office is going to reflect the moral stance of the filmgoing public. There is likely to be some controversy stirred up, and the result will be a stimulus to adults and a caution to parents." Apr 1961 DV items reported that Paramount encountered some difficulties in placing a newspaper advertisement that featured Kwan in a revealing dress, which had a long slit up to her hip. In an Aug 1960 article about the film's censorship difficulties, DV reported that an extra day's shooting had been set to "change the ending and bring added emotions into play," although the new ending was "reported to have nothing to do with the Code squabble." The article stated that the scene would include Kwan and "three Chinese girls featured in the film," but no further information about a possible alternate ending or additional shooting has been found. As noted by contemporary sources, Paramount arranged for special engagements of the picture in selected cities in Nov and Dec 1960, including New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia and San Francisco, so that The [H]World of Suzie Wong would be eligible for Academy Award consideration for 1960, although the picture's national release date was not until Feb 1961. According to several 1960 news items, IATSE planned to picket showings of the film in Los Angeles and New York to protest the trend toward "runaway productions" filmed abroad rather than in the United States. The union particularly intended to target Holden, who, as noted above, had begun filming abroad exclusively. Although a song entitled "Suzie Wong," written by James Van Heusen and Sammy Cahn, was used in the picture's exploitation, it was not included in the final release. The Los Angeles premiere at Grauman's Chinese Theatre, which was a benefit for the City of Hope, featured UCLA students of Asian descent pulling guests to the theater in rickshaws, according to reports about the event. The World of Suzie Wong received mixed reviews, with a number of critics remarking on the spate of films then in release that featured prostitutes as main characters, including Butterfield 8 (see above) and the Greek production Never on Sunday. Some reviews also criticized the picture's portrayal of the Chinese characters, with Time labeling it "a mad chow mein of Chinese-laundry English," and "a cruel jest to the undernourished minions of Asia's vast sex industry, many of them dead of disease or exhaustion long before they reach the heroine's comparatively advanced age: 21." Numerous reviews did praise the photography of the location sites, however, as well as the acting, especially Kwan's. The LAHE review commended her appearance as "one of the most enchanting first performances in a long time." In Nov 1960 and Feb 1961, HR and Var reported that Stark was selling his almost fifty percent interest in the film property to Hyman, who had maintained control of Seven Arts, although he was not directly involved in the picture's production. The Feb 1961 Var item stated that Stark's reasons for selling his interest in the high-grossing film were unknown, and that Paramount had offered to buy him out at one point but the deal was not consumated. Although in the 1960 Cosmopolitan article, author Richard Mason, who spent five months in Hong Kong researching his book, stated emphatically that the character of Suzie was totally fictitious, in Oct 1965, DV reported that Wong Yuet Lan had filed a $500,000 lawsuit against Paramount, Mason and the publishers of the novel. Wong, who claimed to be the "real" Suzie Wong, stated that the book and film made "unauthorized use of her name and incidents of her private life." In addition to the damages, Wong asked for an injunction against further distribution of the book and the film, which had been reissued "several times," according to the DV article. The outcome of the suit has not been determined." Source citations: Variety 16 Nov 60, p. 6. New York Times 11 Nov 60, p. 36. Motion Picture Herald Product Digest 12 Nov 60, p. 916. Film Daily 14 Nov 60, p. 10. Hollywood Reporter 10 Nov 60, p. 3. Daily Variety 10 Nov 60, p. 3. Box Office 21 Nov 1960. Box Office 14 Nov 1960. Filmfacts 16 Decorations 1960, pp. 285-87. Hollywood Reporter 12 Apr 1957. Daily Variety 16 Sep 1957. Daily Variety 26 Oct 1965. Variety 22 Feb 1961. Time 28 Decorations 1960. Films in Review Decorations 1960. Hollywood Citizen-News 16 Decorations 1960. Los Angeles Examiner 16 Decorations 1960. Los Angeles Times 16 Decorations 1960. Variety 8 Mar 1961. Daily Variety 7 Apr 1961. Daily Variety 10 Apr 1961. Life 24 Oct 1960. Newsweek 21 Nov 1960. New Yorker 10 Decorations 1960. Motion Picture Daily 18 Aug 1960. Film Daily 19 Aug 1960. New York Times 18 Aug 1960. New York Herald Tribune 15 Decorations 1960. Los Angeles Herald Express 16 Decorations 1960. Hollywood Reporter 22 May 1957, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 18 Jul 1958, p. 1. Hollywood Reporter 28 Jan 1959, p. 1. Hollywood Reporter 18 Jun 1959, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 30 Jul 1959, p. 1. Hollywood Reporter 24 Aug 1959, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 18 Sep 1959, p. 6. Hollywood Reporter 28 Oct 1959, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 13 Nov 1959, p. 1. Hollywood Reporter 4 Decorations 1959, p. 3. Hollywood Reporter 10 Decorations 1959, p. 3. Hollywood Reporter 18 Decorations 1959, p. 3. Hollywood Reporter 7 Jan 1960, pp. 6-7. Hollywood Reporter 25 Jan 1960, p. 3. Hollywood Reporter 4 Feb 1960, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 15 Feb 1960, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 18 Feb 1960, p. 1. Hollywood Reporter 19 Feb 1960, p. 3. Hollywood Reporter 27 May 1960, p. 10. Hollywood Reporter 16 Mar 1960, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 18 Mar 1960, p. 6. Hollywood Reporter 11 Aug 1960, p. 1, 3. Hollywood Reporter 3 Nov 1960, p. 2, 5-7. Hollywood Reporter 18 Nov 1960, p. 1. Hollywood Reporter 13 Decorations 1960, p. 4. Hollywood Reporter 16 Decorations 1960, p. 5-9. MFB Feb 1961, p. 26. Daily Variety 19 Feb 1960. Daily Variety 25 Aug 1960. Cosmopolitan Jun 1960, pp. 10-13. Hollywood Reporter 15 Jul 1959, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 15 Jan 1960, p. 16. Los Angeles Examiner 9 Feb 1960, pp. 1-2. Los Angeles Examiner 25 Sep 1960. Los Angeles Times 14 Mar 1960. New York Times 31 Jul 1960. Variety 10 Feb 1960. Variety 13 Apr 1960. Hollywood Reporter 29 Apr 1960, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 19 May 1960, p. 1. Hollywood Reporter 24 May 1960, p. 2. AU - Quine, Richard DA - 1961 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and prostitution Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code World of Suzie Wong motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and American-interest film Legion of Decency values Production Code, and prostitution sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures LB - 36470 PB - Paramount Pictures Corp. PY - 1961 ST - The World of Suzie Wong TI - The World of Suzie Wong ID - 3280 ER - TY - MPCT AB - This film, which starred Robert Morley, dealt with the trial that led to Oscar Wilde's downfall. This British film played in New York City in the summer, 1960, even though the theme of homosexuality was forbidden at the time by the U. S. movie industry's Production Code. AU - Ratoff, Gregory CY - Great Britain KW - censorship self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality foreign films, and sexuality motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings Johnston, Eric, and Production Code sexuality motion pictures, and sex Production Code, and sex Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality homosexuality, and motion pictures censorship, and homosexuality Production Code, and homosexuality motion pictures, and foreign films foreign films, and homosexuality non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Great Britain Wilde, Oscar foreign films LB - 36460 PB - Vantage Films (Great Britain) ST - Oscar Wilde TI - Oscar Wilde ID - 3279 ER - TY - MPCT AB - The Production Company for this film was Jerry Wald Productions, Inc. A Jerry Wald Production. Plot synopsis from the American Film Institute Catalog: "Plot Summary: After failing to make a successful career as a dancer in movies, Lila Green joins a second-rate vaudeville act. When the show arrives in the small Kansas town where Lila spent part of her childhood, Ricky Powers, the troupe's manager and Lila's lover, skips town with their money, and Lila moves in with an old friend, Helen Baird, and her young son, Kenny. The ardent but inexperienced Kenny becomes so attracted to Lila that he breaks off with his teenaged girl friend and asks Lila to marry him. Lila's happiness is shattered when she realizes that Kenny's promises are a result of youthful infatuation. Ricky returns to offer Lila a job--performing a striptease at a stag show--and she reluctantly agrees to do the act. Kenny watches the performance and becomes so disgusted with what Lila has been reduced to that he once more proposes. She refuses, however, knowing that their marriage would never work, and she decides also to forego her career to make a new life for herself." Actress Joanne Woodward played Lila Green. MPAA president Eric Johnston approved the title although warned 20th Century Fox to be careful of the advertising for the film and the potential public relations fall out from the public. AU - Schaffner, Franklin J. DA - 1963 KW - self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings Johnston, Eric, and Production Code sexuality motion pictures, and sex Production Code, and sex Johnston, Eric LB - 35160 PB - Twentieth Century--Fox Film Corp. PY - 1963 ST - The Stripper (aka Celebration and A Woman in July) TI - The Stripper (aka Celebration and A Woman in July) ID - 3156 ER - TY - MPCT AB - By 1961 there were several movies in production in which homosexuality was a major theme, even though the movie industry's Production Code forbade this topic. These films included Otto Preminger’s Advise and Consent (Columbia, 1962), John Huston’s Freud (Universal, 1962), United Artists’ The Best Man (1964), starring Henry Fonda, United Artists’ The Children’s Hour, and The Devil's Advocate. Gore Vidal wrote the screenplay for The Best Man. Summary from American Film Institute Catalog: "At a U. S. presidential nominating convention in Los Angeles, the leading presidential candidates are William Russell, former Secretary of State, and Joe Cantwell, an unscrupulous conservative senator. To avoid scandal, Russell and his estranged wife have reconciled for the duration of the campaign. Cantwell, however, plans to exploit Russell's past history of mental illness. Both candidates seek the endorsement of Art Hockstader, a devious former president, who dies during the convention. Although he is told that Cantwell was an active homosexual in the Army, Russell refuses to divulge this information to the press. Sickened by such slander, Russell ends his candidacy, throwing his support to a third contender. In so doing, he regains his wife's love." Based on the play The Best Man by Gore Vidal (New York, 31 Mar 1960). The film included newsreel footage of the 1960 U. S. presidential nominating conventions. AU - Schaffner, Franklin J. DA - 1964 KW - censorship self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings Johnston, Eric, and Production Code sexuality motion pictures, and sex Production Code, and sex Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality homosexuality, and motion pictures censorship, and homosexuality Production Code, and homosexuality LB - 35320 PB - United Artist PY - 1964 ST - The Best Man TI - The Best Man ID - 3171 ER - TY - MPCT AU - Spielberg, Steven DA - 1998 KW - +motion pictures and popular culture censorship and ratings digitization censorship, and digitization digitization, and censorship V-chip +television motion pictures, and digital filters violence Spielberg, Steven war World War II motion pictures, and World War II digital media digital cinema motion pictures self-regulation censorship LB - 29470 PY - 1998 ST - Saving Private Ryan TI - Saving Private Ryan ID - 2707 ER - TY - MPCT AB - During the late 1950s, film makers in both the United States and Europe began trying to treat the topic of homosexuality, even though the subject was forbidden by Hollywood Production Code. Eventually, in 1961, the Motion Picture Association of America relaxed its rules to allow treatment of the subject in a limited way. This low-budget movies, however, played in the United States before the MPAA's code was revised. The Production Code Administration rejected the film and the Roman Catholic Legion of Decency condemned it. Plot summary from American Film Institute Catalog: "In Southern California, handsome beatnik Duke and his young friend Boots terrorize a gas station attendant and then hitch a ride with salesman Ed Hogate. When Ed stops at a service station, the boys spot pretty Ann Carlyle. Duke, who guesses that Boots is homosexual, decides to seduce Ann in order to let the naïve Boots have his way with her. Holding Ed at knifepoint, Duke demands he follow Ann's car to her neighborhood, where the two young men break into the empty house next door. Upon discerning that Ann's husband Roger ignores her, Duke poses as a gardener in order to gain access to Ann's daily life. He soon befriends her and, after convincing her to invite Boots over, plies her with alcohol. The lonely, drunken Ann responds to Duke's sexual overtures, after which he carries her to the neighbor's bed for Boots to ravish. Boots, however, cannot go through with the act and races out of the house, where a furious Duke punches him. The two fall into the pool, fighting, and during the brawl Duke stabs Boots to death. Just then, Roger returns home and fights Duke. Roger has almost lost the fight when Ann appears with a gun drawn. She shoots Duke three times, killing him." The production company for this film was Kana Productions, Inc.; Daystar Productions. It opened in New York City, April 24, 1960. Note: No print of this film could be located. The above information was gleaned from contemporary reviews, news items and press materials. Although the Har review cites the film's title as Private Property!, no other source included the exclamation point. Private Property was the first film for producer Stanley Colbert and writer-director Leslie Stevens. The partners had previously written the stage play The Marriage-Go-Round, which Stevens produced and directed for Twentieth Century-Fox later in 1960. Kate Manx was Stevens' wife. According to several reviews, Private Property was produced for only $59,000 and was shot mainly at Stevens' home in Los Angeles. Before its release, the film was denied a Production Code seal and given a "C," or condemned, rating by the National Catholic Legion of Decency for "highly suggestive sequences, dialogue and music." However, as noted in a 17 Feb 1960 HR news item, the New York State Board of Censors passed the picture without edits. Press materials refer to Stevens as an "American New Wave" director, in reference to the French New Wave filmmakers who were earning acclaim at the time. A publicity line called the film "The most cussed and discussed film of our generation." Many reviews stated that although Private Property's subject matter was prurient, the filmmaking was excellent. Although Stevens was hailed as a rising young talent, he made only two more feature films." Source citations: Variety 13 Apr 60, p. 20. Motion Picture Herald Product Digest 30 Apr 60, p. 675. New York Times 25 Apr 60, p. 40. Hollywood Reporter 8 Apr 60, p. 3. Film Daily 27 Apr 60, p. 6. Daily Variety 8 Apr 60, p. 3. Box Office 11 Apr 1960. American Cinematographer Aug 60, pp. 486-87, 500-502. Hollywood Reporter 10 Jul 1959, p. 12. Harrison's Reports 30 Apr 1960, p. 72. Hollywood Reporter 14 Aug 1959, p. 6. Hollywood Reporter 17 Feb 1960, p. 2. Hollywood Reporter 12 May 1960, p. 2. Filmfacts 27 May 1960, pp. 97-99. Hollywood Reporter 21 Aug 1959, p. 16. AU - Stevens, Leslie DA - 1960 KW - censorship self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings Johnston, Eric, and Production Code sexuality motion pictures, and sex Production Code, and sex Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality homosexuality, and motion pictures censorship, and homosexuality Production Code, and homosexuality LB - 36510 PB - Citation Films, Inc. PY - 1960 ST - Private Property TI - Private Property ID - 3284 ER - TY - MPCT AB - In the 1930 motion picture Production Code, drug addiction and trafficking could not be shown. That prohibition was loosened to permit Columbia Pictures to produce a movie called To the Ends of the Earth (1948), starring Dick Powell, about international drug smuggling. The MPAA amended the Code’s restrictions on drugs to read: “The illegal drug traffic must not be portrayed in such a way as to stimulate curiosity concerning the use of, or traffic in, such drugs; nor such scenes be approved which show the use of illegal drugs, or their effects, in detail.” After the movie, though, the MPAA repealed this amendment and reinstated the total ban. In 1956, the MPAA again tried to eliminate its “flat prohibition” of the topic but in a way that would not encourage the use of illegal narcotics. Plot Summary from American Institute Catalogue: "In the year 1935, following a United Nations-sponsored meeting of the World Narcotics Commission, the U.S. Treasury Department, Bureau of Narcotics undertakes a crackdown on the worldwide opium trade. Assigned to the investigation is Treasury Department agent Mike Barrows, who is head of the department's San Francisco bureau. Mike is familiar with the ruthless ways of the drug traffickers, having witnessed an unmarked Japanese freighter jettison one hundred Chinese slaves off the San Francisco coast to gain enough speed to outrun a U.S. Coast Guard patrol. A life preserver bearing the name Kira Maru, and a view of the offending captain, as seen through binoculars, are the only clues Mike has to go on as he begins his investigation in Shanghai. There the captain of the ship is tried in absentia and is sentenced to only thirty days in prison if found, angering Mike. Following Mike out of the courtroom is Lum Chi Chow, the Chinese Commissioner of Narcotics, who later plays a recording for Mike of a man talking about the Kira Maru and the 200 slaves it transported to Egypt to plant poppies. Although the exact location of the Egyptian poppy field is unknown to investigators, Lum believes that it will be learned when the flowers are harvested, which must occur five days after the petals fall. Later, while searching notorious drug dealer Nicolas Sokim's rickshaw garage, Mike meets Ann Grant, the widow of an American engineer, who is about to send her young Chinese ward, Shu Pan Wu, to San Francisco. After Sokim fails in his attempt to throw Mike off his trail, he kills himself by ingesting poison. As it is unlikely that the drugs will reach Shanghai now that Sokim, the Chinese contact man, is dead, Lum sends Mike to Egypt, where the poppies are now ready for harvest. There Mike discovers a trail of evidence pointing to Ann's complicity in the elaborate drug smuggling operation. The already harvested opium, it is learned, is being transported across the desert in a camel caravan to Beirut, with $1,000,000 in narcotics hidden in the stomachs of the camels. Mike follows the packages containing the drugs to Havana, where the opium is to be refined before it is sent to the United States. Ann's connection with the smuggling operation appears certain when Mike discovers her and Shu Pan in Havana, but he decides to follow the drugs to their final destination before making any arrests. After watching the opium, which is now packed into butter cartons, being loaded onto a ship, Mike boards the ship for the journey to New York. En route, a fire is set in the ship's galley as a diversion, and the packages containing the drugs are thrown overboard with weights attached to them. When Mike discovers evidence that the drugs were ejected from the ship, he notifies the U.S. Coast Guard, which sends a patrol boat out to meet the ship. Mike forces Ann and Shu Pan to accompany him to the dumping site, where they discover a fishing boat already there to pick up the drugs. A gun battle ensues, during which Shu Pan makes a grab for Mike's gun, thereby revealing herself to be the head of the drug smuggling ring. The revelation does not surprise Mike, however, who has known the truth about Shu Pan ever since he witnessed her strange behavior during the shipboard fire. As Mike anticipated that Shu Pan would grab his gun, he loaded it with blanks, thus foiling her attempts to shoot him. With Shu Pan's arrest, Mike brings to an end a worldwide drug smuggling operation." "Note: Working titles for this film, which was presented in a semi-documentary style with occasional voice-over narration, were Assigned to Treasury and The 27th Day. The film contains the following written onscreen dedication: "A story based on actual incidents from the files of the United States Department of Treasury, to whom this picture is gratefully dedicated." According to 14 May 1947 HR news item, producer Sidney Buchman took over direction of the picture when Robert Stevenson fell ill, and when Stevenson left for London to fulfill a prior commitment to Alexander Korda. A Jan 1947 Box article indicates that the film was made with the approval of Treasury Department Narcotics Commissioner Harry J. Anslinger, who portrayed himself in the film. "According to an Aug 1946 LAT news item, business tycoon Jay Richard Kennedy sold his original story to Columbia for $100,000. A 13 Oct 1946 LAT article notes that Kennedy was inspired to write his story after learning about the international drug trade from Harry J. Anslinger. Contemporary news items noted that, in an unprecedented action, the PCA amended clauses prohibiting the detailed portrayal of drugs in film to accommodate this picture. The LAT article credits Kennedy and other "highly placed persons in the government" with having persuaded the PCA to amend its restrictions on such a picture. "According to the file for the film in the MPAA/PCA Collection at the AMPAS Library, the Production Code's provision concerning drugs, which stipulated that "illegal drug traffic must never be presented," was later amended to allow "the illegal drug traffic to be presented provided it does not stimulate curiosity concerning the use of or traffic in such drugs and provided that there shall be no scenes approved which show the use of illegal drugs or their effects in detail." "To the Ends of the Earth marked the film debut of Maylia, formerly known as Gloria Chinn, who was the wife of Chinese actor Benson Fong. Although a studio publicity item dated 4 Aug 1947 reported that Dick Powell's personal houseboy, Dick Watanabe, was set for a role in the picture, his appearance in the released film has not been confirmed. Some background footage was filmed in Shanghai, Cairo, Havana and New York. Studio publicity material indicates that the scene in which one hundred Chinese slaves are sent to their deaths in the Pacific Ocean was filmed in the Santa Catalina Island Channel, off the coast of southern California. Publicity material also notes that the marine gun fight sequence, which was directed by Larry Butler, was filmed in the Los Angeles Harbor. The Variety review indicates that the final cost of the film was approximately $2,000,000. Although studio records indicate that filming was completed on 19 Feb 1947, HR production charts suggest that production lasted until 23 May. Dick Powell and Signe Hasso recreated their roles for a Lux Radio Theatre broadcast of the story on 23 May 1949." Source citations: Box Office 11 Jan 1947. Box Office 24 Jan 1948. Daily Variety 19 Jan 48, p. 3. Film Daily 19 Jan 48, p. 3. Hollywood Reporter 18 Nov 46, p. 8. Hollywood Reporter 29 Nov 46, p. 14. Hollywood Reporter 28 Mar 47, p. 8. Hollywood Reporter 14 May 47, p. 11. Hollywood Reporter 23 May 47, p. 16. Hollywood Reporter 19 Jan 48, p. 3, 12 Hollywood Reporter 17 Feb 48, p. 6. Los Angeles Times 5 Aug 1946. Motion Picture Herald Product Digest 10 Jan 48, p. 4010. Motion Picture Herald Product Digest 24 Jan 48, p. 4030. New York Times 13 Feb 48, p. 26. Variety 21 Jan 48, p. 8. AU - Stevenson, Robert DA - 1948 KW - self-regulation drug abuse motion pictures, drug trade motion pictures motion pictures, and drugs drugs, and motion pictures censorship and ratings Production Code, and drugs PCA, and drugs Shurlock, Geoffrey, and drugs Production Code, and 1948 revision motion pictures, and drugs PCA Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) Shurlock, Geoffrey substance abuse Production Code Administration (PCA) LB - 35550 PB - Columbia Pictures Corp. PY - 1948 ST - To the Ends of the Earth (aka The Twenty Seventh Day, Assigned to Treasury) TI - To the Ends of the Earth (aka The Twenty Seventh Day, Assigned to Treasury) ID - 3194 ER - TY - MPCT AU - Stone, Oliver DA - 1987 KW - +motion pictures and popular culture Stone, Oliver capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures LB - 29450 PB - Trimark PY - 1987 ST - Wall Street TI - Wall Street ID - 2705 ER - TY - MPCT AB - This movie opened in New York City on June 27, 1961, and was one of several foreign films that dealt with themes that were outside Hollywood's Production Code as it was written in 1930. For example, prostitution and homosexuality were subjects that had been permitted with qualifications when the Code was revised in 1956 and 1961 respectively. Plot summary from American Film Institute Catalog: "Searching for a better life, Rosaria Parondi and her sons [H]Rocco, Simone, Ciro, and Luca, arrive in Milan from their impoverished farm in southern Italy. Recently widowed, Rosaria has come uninvited to join her oldest son, Vincenzo. Although not steadily employed, Vincenzo is engaged to Ginetta, the daughter of a middle-class family, but the engagement causes a rift with Rosaria, and Vincenzo leaves Milan with his fiancée. The Parondis move into a working-class section of the city and begin to experience the difficulties of city life and the pressure of unemployment. Simone, the most ambitious of the brothers, makes a name for himself as a prizefighter and takes Nadia, a disillusioned prostitute, as his mistress; but when he becomes possessive, Nadia tires of him and leaves. Eventually, Rocco is called into military service, and one day he sees Nadia, recently released from prison; the gentleness of Rocco awakens a new hope in her, and she promises to begin a new life. Upon returning to Milan, they find that Ciro has started to work at the Alfa Romeo auto factory and is supporting the family, while Vincenzo and Ginetta have returned to the city. Simone, who has turned to petty crime, learns that Rocco and Nadia are lovers and decides to take revenge. He brutally rapes Nadia while a group of fellow hoodlums forces Rocco to watch. Blaming himself for his brother's despair, Rocco persuades Nadia to return to Simone. Rocco, unable to find employment, enters professional boxing and goes to live with Vincenzo and Ginetta. Simone, evicted from his hotel, goes back to his mother, taking Nadia with him, but Nadia has returned to her former ways, and Rosaria soon throws her out. At the depths of despair, Simone cajoles money from his brothers and cavorts with his homosexual boxing patron, whom he robs. Rocco then signs a 10-year boxing contract in order to repay Simone's patron. The same day that Rocco wins his first fight, Simone finds Nadia, and when she rejects him again, he stabs her to death. At the family celebration of Rocco's victory, Simone confesses to Nadia's murder. The family, though shocked and grief-stricken, tries to protect Simone, but Ciro turns him over to the police. Luca, the youngest brother, cannot understand this act of betrayal; Ciro, now ostracized by the family, explains that Simone was doomed and that all of them were responsible. As he leaves his little brother, Ciro hopes that Luca, the only one still uncorrupted by city life, will return to the country where the Parondis' roots still lie." The movies was filmed on location in Milan and Rome. Opened in Rome in Oct 1960 as Rocco e i suoi fratelli; running time: 180 min; in Paris in Mar 1961 as Rocco et ses frères; running time: 165 min. One French source lists a 120 min version. Cocinor, a French production company affiliated with Marceau, is credited as co-producer in French sources. The production company was Titanus; Les Films Marceau. AU - Visconti, Luchino DA - 1961 KW - censorship self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality foreign films, and sexuality motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings Johnston, Eric, and Production Code sexuality motion pictures, and sex Production Code, and sex Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality homosexuality, and motion pictures censorship, and homosexuality Production Code, and homosexuality motion pictures, and foreign films foreign films foreign films, and homosexuality non-USA France France, and motion pictures motion pictures, and France LB - 36500 PB - Astor Pictures PY - 1961 ST - Rocco and His Brothers (aka Rocco et ses frères;Rocco e i suoi fratelli) TI - Rocco and His Brothers (aka Rocco et ses frères;Rocco e i suoi fratelli) ID - 3283 ER - TY - MPCT AU - Wertmuller, Lina DA - 1975 KW - motion pictures and popular culture sexuality Meese Commission, and motion pictures women motion pictures, and women pornography, and motion pictures women, and motion pictures values media effects Meese Commission, and media effects foreign films motion pictures Meese Commission pornography LB - 29380 PB - Italy / Columbia TriStar Home Video PY - 1975 ST - Swept Away (aka Swept Away by an Unusual Destiny in the Blue Sea in August) TI - Swept Away (aka Swept Away by an Unusual Destiny in the Blue Sea in August) ID - 2704 ER - TY - MPCT AB - This psychological drama was a remake of the 1936 film These Three, about schoolmistresses are publicly accused of bing lesbians by a vindictive pupil, despite the fact that one, Karen (played by Audrey Hepburn), has a boyfriend. The other schoolmistress, Martha (played by Shirley MacLaine), is eventually forced to acknowledge that she does in fact have feelings for Karen, with grevious consequences. By 1961 there were several movies in production in which homosexuality was a major theme, even though the movie industry's Production Code forbade this topic. These films included Otto Preminger’s Advise and Consent (Columbia, 1962), John Huston’s Freud (Universal, 1962), United Artists’ The Best Man (1964), starring Henry Fonda, United Artists’ The Children’s Hour (1961), and The Devil's Advocate. Summary from American Film Institute Catalog: "Karen Wright and Martha Dobie are the head-mistresses of a small private school for girls. Their major disciplinary problem is 12-year-old Mary Tilford, the granddaughter of the town's most influential citizen. When the child is punished for telling a lie, she runs to her grandmother and tells another--and much more devastating--lie from which it may be inferred that the two teachers are having an "unnatural" relationship. Although Mary herself only dimly understands what she has said, the effect upon her shocked grandmother is obvious; and Mary elaborates upon her story. Horrified, Mrs. Tilford takes Mary out of the school and urges other guardians and parents to do the same. Karen and Martha, forced into taking drastic action, bring a slander suit against Mrs. Tilford but lose the much-publicized case when their chief witness, Martha's irresponsible Aunt Lily, deserts them under pressure and refuses to testify in their behalf. Not only is the school destroyed, but Karen realizes that Mary's lie has even created doubts in the mind of her fiancé, Dr. Joe Cardin. After she has released him, Karen suggests to Martha that they go away somewhere to make new lives for themselves. But the scandal has brought to Martha the terrible realization that the child's lie has uncovered a suppressed emotion, and she hysterically confesses her love for Karen. Then, sick with despair, she hangs herself. The vicious lie is eventually exposed, but for Karen it is too late: following Martha's funeral, she walks silently past Joe, Mrs. Tilford, and the other repentant townspeople." Note: Based on the play The Children's Hour by Lillian Hellman (New York, 20 Nov 1934). William Wyler also directed the original filmed version of Lillian Hellman's play, These Three (United Artists, 1936). Working title: Infamous. AU - Wyler, William DA - 1961 KW - censorship self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings Johnston, Eric, and Production Code sexuality motion pictures, and sex Production Code, and sex Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality homosexuality, and motion pictures censorship, and homosexuality Production Code, and homosexuality Wyler, William Production Code, and William Wyler Wyler, William, and Production Code motion pictures, and lesbianism LB - 35350 PB - United Artists; Mirisch Company, Worldwide Productions PY - 1961 ST - The Children's Hour (aka Infamous; The Loudest Whisper) TI - The Children's Hour (aka Infamous; The Loudest Whisper) ID - 3174 ER - TY - GEN AB - After seeing a copy of the Illustrated London News, William Wordsworth wrote this sonnet: "Discourse was deemed Man's noblest attribute, And written words the glory of his hand; The followed Printing with enlarged command For thought -- dominion vast and absolute For spreading truth, and making love expand. Now prose and verse, sunk into disrepute, Must lacquey a dumb Art that best can suit The taste of this once-intellectual land. A backward movement surely have we here, From manhood, -- back to childhood; for the age -- Back towards caverned life's first rude career. Avaunt this vile abuse of pictured page! Must eyes be all-in-all, the tongue and ear Nothing? Heaven keep us from a lower stage!" AU - Wordsworth, William DA - 1846 KW - wood engraving journalism illustrations words vs. images magazines, and photography images vs. words magazines photography ref, secondary news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines illustrations, and newspapers illustrations, and magazines magazines, and illustrations newspapers, and illustration non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and illustrated journalism non-USA, and illustrated journalism images vs. print advertising and public relations advertising, and newspapers newspapers, and advertising magazines, and advertising advertising, and magazines Great Britain, and advertising advertising, and Great Britain photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving quotations quotations, and William Wordsworth ref, secondary ref, secular ref, eclectic ref, literary (British) advertising LB - 41530 PY - 1846 ST - Illustrated Books and Newspapers [sonnet] TI - Illustrated Books and Newspapers [sonnet] ID - 4252 ER - TY - HEAR AB - These hearings with supporting documents run 1,384 pages and includes testimony from several people in the entertainment and recording industries including Jack Valenti, Alan Greenspan, Sony president Joseph Lagore, MCA president Sidney Sheinberg, Screen Actors Guild president Charlton Heston, singer Beverly Sills, Charles D. Ferris (counsel to the Home Recording Rights Coalition), and others. By the mid- and late-1970s, pirated copies sold abroad of Hollywood movies had become a major concern for film leaders such as Motion Picture Association of America president Jack Valenti. By the early 1980s, the use of video recorders was bring a revolution in home entertainment in the United States. Movie industry leaders such as Valenti, for example, maintained that VCR users were making private libraries of films and using the VCR to fast forward through commercials, thereby threatening to undermine commercial films and television. These hearings have survey information on VCR (and audio cassette) use in the United States during the early 1980s. AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1982 DA - Nov. 30, 1981 and April 21, 1982 KW - music Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) MPAA corporations entertainment, home magnetic recording audio tape information technology home magnetic tape law law government television motion pictures motion pictures and popular culture VCRs audio cassettes sound recording sound recording, and audio cassettes sound recording, and magnetic tape home entertainment copyright intellectual property law law, and VCRs law, and audio cassettes law, and sound recording law, and information technology government hearings government documents government U. S. Congress U. S. Congress, Senate Judiciary Committee Valenti, Jack Music Corporation of America (MCA) Sony Corporation Heston, Charlton Greenspan, Alan Home Recording Rights Coalition Ferris, Charles D. Sheinberg, Sidney Lagore, Joseph information technology, and home law, and copyright information technology, and copyright hearings hearings, copyright home, and new media MCA Music Corporation of America (MCA) Congress, U. S. government reports LB - 12030 M1 - S. 1758 N1 - United States Senate PY - 1981 ST - Copyright Infringements (Audio and Video Recorders), Hearings before the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Ninety-Seventh Congress, First and Second Sessions on S. 1758 T2 - Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate TI - Copyright Infringements (Audio and Video Recorders), Hearings before the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Ninety-Seventh Congress, First and Second Sessions on S. 1758 ID - 445 ER - TY - HEAR AB - This statement came from a leading religious critics of motion pictures. Rev. Chase saw great moral damaged being caused by some types of films. AD - Washington, D. C.: Government Printing Office, 1914 DA - (March 20, 1914) KW - government hearings values Christianity Christianity Protestants values archives primary sources primary sources motion pictures religion values morality values religion law censorship and ratings censorship government government documents hearings, U.S. House censorship, federal censorship, federal commission Chase, Rev. William Sheafe motion pictures, and critics motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures morality,and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity Protestants, and motion pictures motion pictures and Protestants hearings critics values LB - 12950 N1 - Chase, William Sheafe, Rev. PY - 1920 SP - 21 ST - Statement T2 - Hearings, Committee on Education, United States House of Representatives, House of Representatives, Sixty-Third Congress, Second Session on Bills to Establish a Federal Motion Picture Commission TI - Statement ID - 472 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Eric Johnston told this congressional committee in 1960 that the movie industry's Production Code had been created to assure “breadth and diversity, not blind conformity.” Nor was it intended to guarantee “all films are suitable for the entire family.” No person qualified “to pass in advance on what the rest of us in America may read or not read, may hear or not hear, may see or not see.” Johnston expressed his opposition to government classification of films. During Johnston's presidency of the Motion Picture Association of America (1945-1963), the Production Code was revised and its enforcement liberalized. A copy of this statement is in the Johnston Papers, Folder 87, Box 7, MS 118, Eric A. Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA. KW - self-regulation Production Code government hearings values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives primary sources government values religion hearings primary sources primary sources, hearings Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Congress Production Code, and Eric Johnston Production Code, and decline of primary sources, Eric Johnston LB - 16590 N1 - Johnston, Eric ST - Statement T2 - Hearings, U. S. House of Representatives Postal Operations Subcommittee TI - Statement ID - 608 ER - TY - HEAR AB - These hearings considered charges that the motion picture industry's Classification and Rating Administration gave harsher ratings to independent producers than it did to the large movie studios that were members of the Motion Picture Association of America. Among those who testified were Jack Valenti and CARA chairman, Richard D. Heffner DA - March 24, May 12, June 15, July 21, 1977 (Washington, D. C.); April 14, 1977 (Los Angeles, CA) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) archives primary sources government law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification classification, and independent producers CARA, and independent producers rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and Congress hearings primary sources, hearings Valenti, Jack, and Congress Heffner, Richard, and Congress Valenti, Jack Heffner, Richard LB - 17660 N1 - United States House of Representatives PY - 1977 ST - Movie Ratings and the Independent Producer T2 - Committee on Small Business, House of Representatives, Ninety-Fifth Congress, First Session Subcommittee on Special Small Business Problems TI - Movie Ratings and the Independent Producer ID - 685 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Valenti testified at these congressional hearings investigating charges that Hollywood rated the films of independent producers more severely than it did the movies of large studios that were members of the Motion Picture Association of America. AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1977 DA - July 21, 1977 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) archives primary sources government law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA Heffner, Richard hearings, and Jack Valenti +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification classification, and independent producers CARA, and independent producers rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and Congress hearings primary sources, hearings Valenti, Jack, and Congress Heffner, Richard, and Congress rating system (U. S.), and origin LB - 20420 N1 - Valenti, Jack PY - 1977 SP - 210-23 ST - Testimony T2 - Hearings, "Movie Ratings and the Independent Producer," Committee on Small Business, House of Representatives, Ninety-Fifth Congress, First Session (July 21, 1977) Subcommittee on Special Small Business Problems TI - Testimony ID - 686 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Jack Valenti, who often too credit for the creation of the movie industry's rating system, which was adopted in 1968, here explains the system's origins and how it works. This Statement was made at a congressional hearing investigating charges that Hollywood rated the films of independent producers more severely than it did the movies of large studios that were members of the Motion Picture Association of America. AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1977 DA - March 24, 1977 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) archives primary sources government law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA Heffner, Richard hearings, and Jack Valenti +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification classification, and independent producers CARA, and independent producers rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and Congress hearings primary sources, hearings Valenti, Jack, and Congress Heffner, Richard, and Congress rating system (U. S.), and origins, hearings LB - 20430 N1 - Valenti, Jack PY - 1977 SP - 19-24 ST - Statement: The Movie Rating System -- How It Began -- Its Purpose -- How It Works -- The Public Reaction [March 24, 1977] T2 - Hearings, "Movie Ratings and the Independent Producer," Committee on Small Business, House of Representatives, Ninety-Fifth Congress, First Session Subcommittee on Special Small Business Problems TI - Statement: The Movie Rating System -- How It Began -- Its Purpose -- How It Works -- The Public Reaction [March 24, 1977] ID - 687 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Farber, who had worked for the movie industry's Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) as an intern and who had written a book entitled The Movie Rating Game (1972), testified before this hear which heard charges rated movies from indepedent producers more severely that it did films from major studios who were MPAA members. AD - Washington, D. C.: Government Printing Office, 1977 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U. S.) archives primary sources primary sources government law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA Heffner, Richard +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification classification, and independent producers CARA, and independent producers rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and Congress hearings primary sources, hearings Valenti, Jack, and Congress Heffner, Richard, and Congress rating system (U. S.), and enforcement rating system (U. S.), and X-rating CARA, and X-rated films LB - 17690 N1 - Farber, Stephen ProCite field[2]: Testimony SP - 78-90 ST - Movie Ratings and the Independent Producer T2 - Committee on Small Business, House of Representatives, Ninety-Fifty Congress, First Session Subcommittee on Special Small Business Problems TI - Movie Ratings and the Independent Producer ID - 688 ER - TY - HEAR AB - When the U. S. Senate, led by Senator Margaret Chase Smith, held hearing in 1968 on movie classification, Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, did not appear. He did provide a statement, however, that called any government classification scheme “intellectual and artistic tyranny.” He accused the hearings of duplicating the work of the President’s Commission on Obscenity and Pornography, recently appointed by his friend, Lyndon B. Johnson. A copy of this statement is in the Margaret Chase Smith Papers, Margaret Chase Smith Library, The Northwood Institute, Skowhegan, ME. KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings CARA Smith, Margaret Chase censorship and ratings archives primary sources government law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and classification Valenti, Jack classification, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and classification Smith, Margaret Chase, and classification Smith, Margaret Chase, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and Congress hearings primary sources, Jack Valenti LB - 17720 M1 - S. Res. 9 N1 - Valenti, Jack ProCite field[2]: Statement ST - Proposing a Study of Film Classification T2 - Hearings, Committee on Commerce, United State Senate, Ninetieth Congress, Second Session TI - Proposing a Study of Film Classification ID - 691 ER - TY - HEAR AB - In June, 1968, Maine Senator Margaret Chase Smith spearheaded a brief Senate hearing on motion picture classification. Smith believed that movies, television program, and their advertising had become too violent and sexual for children. She did not favor censorship but did want some kind of rating system to give parents warning. This material is in the Margaret Chase Smith Papers, Margaret Chase Smith Library, The Northwood Institute, Skowhegan, ME. AD - Washington, D. C.: Government Printing Office, 1968 DA - June 11, 1968 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) children, and media MPAA government hearings Valenti, Jack Smith, Margaret Chase primary sources archives government censorship and ratings primary sources hearings archives +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and classification +motion pictures motion pictures, and Congress Valenti, Jack, and Congress Smith, Margaret Chase, and movie classification critics children children, and motion pictures LB - 17730 M1 - S. Res. 9 N1 - Smith, Margaret Chase PY - 1968 SP - 1-58 ST - The Committee on Film Classification T2 - Hearings before the Committee on Commerce, United States Senate TI - The Committee on Film Classification ID - 692 ER - TY - HEAR AB - These hearings considered the need for a rating system for television programs. The senators heard testimony from representatives of several professional and health-oriented associations who argued violence on television had harmful effects on society, and especially on children. AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1997 DA - (Feb. 27, 1997) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack V-chip, and television social science research censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) archives primary sources media effects media violence government censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and television television, and rating system (U. S.) classification, and television television, and classification motion pictures, and rating system (U.S.) television, and censorship censorship, and television Valenti, Jack, and Congress Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) children, and media children television, and Congress violence violence, and mass media violence, and television violence, and motion picture violence, and Jack Valenti hearings primary sources, TV rating system (U. S.) system primary sources, Jack Valenti violence (TV), and Joanne Cantor violence (TV), and American Psychiatric Assocation violence (TV), and Traditional Values Coalition violence (TV), and American Psychological Assocation violence (TV), and American Academy of Childhood Adolescent Psychiatry violence (TV), and National Conf. of Catholic Bishops violence (TV), and Parents Television Council violence (TV), and Video Monitoring Services of Am. violence (TV), and Association of National Advertisers violence (TV), and American Medical Association violence (TV), and American Academy of Pediatrics television, and Joanne Cantor Cantor, Joanne television, and American Psychiatric Association television, and Traditional Values Coalition television, and American Psychological Association television, and Am. Academy of Childhood Adolescent Psychiatry television, and National Conf. of Catholic Bishops television, and Parents Television Council television, and Video Monitoring Services of Am. television,and Association of National Advertisers television, and American Medical Association television, and Academy of American Pediatrics v-chip television, and v-chip social science research television, and social science research motion pictures, and social science research Valenti, Jack, and social science research social science research, and television social science research, and motion pictures media effects television, and parents violence sexuality CARA LB - 18520 N1 - United States Senate PY - 1927 ST - Television Ratings System T2 - Hearings, Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate, One Hundred Fifth Congress, First Session TI - Television Ratings System ID - 745 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, delivered this Statement to a Senate hearing investigating the need for a rating system for television programs. DA - Feb. 27, 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) archives primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA media effects media violence government censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and television television, and rating system (U. S.) classification, and television television, and classification motion pictures, and rating system (U.S.) television, and censorship censorship, and television Valenti, Jack, and Congress Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) children, and media children television, and Congress violence violence, and mass media violence, and television violence, and motion picture violence, and Jack Valenti hearings primary sources, TV rating system (U. S.) system primary sources, Jack Valenti MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and television LB - 18530 N1 - Valenti, Jack PY - 1997 SP - 98-107 ST - Statement: TV Parental Guildelines: Helping Parents Monitor the TV Watching of Their Young Children, Simply, Easily, Efficiently T2 - Hearings, "Television Ratings System," Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate, One Hundred Fifth Congress, First Session (Feb. 27, 1997) TI - Statement: TV Parental Guildelines: Helping Parents Monitor the TV Watching of Their Young Children, Simply, Easily, Efficiently ID - 746 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, testified at these hearings which considered the need for a rating system for television programs. The senators heard testimony from representatives of several professional and health-oriented associations who argued violence on television had harmful effects on society, and especially on children. Valenti was reluctant to create a new rating system for television, arguing that it would be to complicated and time-consuming. DA - (Feb. 27, 1997) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack social science research censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) archives primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA media effects media violence government censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and television television, and rating system (U. S.) classification, and television television, and classification motion pictures, and rating system (U.S.) television, and censorship censorship, and television Valenti, Jack, and Congress Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) children, and media children television, and Congress violence violence, and mass media violence, and television violence, and motion picture violence, and Jack Valenti hearings primary sources, TV rating system (U. S.) system primary sources, Jack Valenti MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and television, social science research, and violence social science research, and TV violence media effects LB - 18540 N1 - Photocopy filed under "Television Ratings System." Valenti, Jack PY - 1927 SP - 108-45 ST - Testimony T2 - Hearings, "Television Ratings System," Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate, One Hundred Fifth Congress, First Session TI - Testimony ID - 747 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Jack Valenti, who often too credit for the creation of the movie industry's rating system, which was adopted in 1968, here explains the system's origins and how it works. Valenti's testimony was given at a congressional hearing investigating charges that Hollywood rated the films of independent producers more severely than it did the movies of large studios that were members of the Motion Picture Association of America. AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1977 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) archives primary sources government law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA Heffner, Richard hearings, and Jack Valenti +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification classification, and independent producers CARA, and independent producers rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and Congress hearings primary sources, hearings Valenti, Jack, and Congress Heffner, Richard, and Congress rating system (U. S.), and origins, hearings LB - 19580 N1 - Valenti, Jack SP - 1-62 ST - Testimony: The Movie Rating System -- How It Began -- Its Purpose -- How It Works -- The Public Reaction [March 24, 1977] T2 - Hearings, "Movie Ratings and the Independent Producer," Committee on Small Business, House of Representatives, Ninety-Fifth Congress, First Session Subcommittee on Special Small Business Problems TI - Testimony: The Movie Rating System -- How It Began -- Its Purpose -- How It Works -- The Public Reaction [March 24, 1977] ID - 792 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Here Richard D. Heffner, then head of the movie industry's Classification and Rating Administration, testifies that films made by independent producers are not rated more harshly than motion pictures made by large studios that were members of the Motion Picture Association of America. A copy of this testimony can be found in the Richard D. Heffner's Personal Papers, Private Collection, New York, NY. AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1977 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings government law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner CARA CARA, and Richard Heffner Valenti, Jack Heffner, Richard, and CARA censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and background Heffner, Richard, and Jack Valenti Heffner, Richard Heffner, Richard, and hearings hearings hearings, and Richard Heffner CARA, and independent producers Heffner, Richard, and independent producers Heffner, Richard, and Congress CARA, and independent producers LB - 19830 N1 - Heffner, Richard D. SP - 195-210 ST - Testimony T2 - Hearings, "Movie Ratings and the Independent Producer," Committee on Small Business, United States House of Representatives, Nineth Fifth Congress, First Session Subcommittee on Special Small Business Problems TI - Testimony ID - 815 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, was alarmed by the use of video recorders and thought they threatened Hollywood and the television industry. As the sale of VCRs burgeoned in America, he argued that the technology would irreparably damage the entertainment industry by undermining the intellectual property rights of writers and performers. It threatened Hollywood’s normal distribution patterns: the industry did not serve all markets at the same time, but distributed motion pictures sequentially, that is, films went first to theaters, then to pay TV, network TV, home video, hotels, airlines, schools, and so on. The timeshifting that videotape made possible gave consumers the ability to choose when to view a film, and that feature, together with the fast forward function by remote control that allowed viewers to edit out commercials, would destroy the advertising revenue that undergirded commercial television and film making, Valenti argued. “Now like a great tidal wave just beyond the shore line, this video recording machine and its tape threaten, profoundly, the life-sustaining protection on which the U.S. film and television industry depends: its copyright.” Video recorders were like “tapeworms” that would invade millions of homes “eating away at the very heart and essence of the most precious asset the copyright owner has, his copyright.” (emphasis in original text) AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1982 DA - (April 21, 1982) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration piracy video cassette recorders (VCRs) MPAA government hearings CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) magnetic recording audio tape National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA government videotape magnetic tape law copyright +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures VCRs +sound recording sound recording, and audio tapes audio cassettes Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and Congress hearings hearings, copyright hearings, Jack Valenti video piracy motion pictures, and video piracy Valenti, Jack, and video piracy copyright, and video piracy MPAA, and video piracy VCRs, and copyright motion pictures, and copyright MPAA, and copyright LB - 20140 M1 - S. 1758 N1 - Valenti, Jack PY - 1921 ST - Statement T2 - Hearings, "Copyright Infringements (Audio and Video Recorders)," Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Ninety-Seventh Congress TI - Statement ID - 837 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Geoffrey Shurlock, the newly appointed head of the movie industry's Production Code Administration, testifies about the relationship between movies and juvenile delinquency. DA - June 17, 1955 KW - self-regulation Production Code government hearings censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives government hearings hearings, Geoffrey Shurlock +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Shurlock, Geoffrey Production Code, and Geoffrey Shurlock Shurlock, Geoffrey, and Production Code (motion pictures) primary sources, and hearing primary sources primary sources, Geoffrey Shurlock motion pictures, and juvenile delinquency values LB - 20540 M1 - S. Res. 62 N1 - Shurlock, Geoffrey PY - 1955 SP - 185-210 ST - Statement, to "Juvenile Delinquency (Motion Pictures)" T2 - Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency TI - Statement, to "Juvenile Delinquency (Motion Pictures)" ID - 866 ER - TY - HEAR AB - This hearing, chaired by Senator Estes Kefauver, investigated the possible connection between motion pictures and juvenile delinquency. Geoffrey Shurlock, the head of the Production Code Administration, was among those who testified. AD - Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1955 DA - (June 15-18, 1955) KW - self-regulation Production Code Kefauver, Estes Kefauver committee government hearings censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) primary sources archives motion pictures government hearings hearings, Geoffrey Shurlock +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Shurlock, Geoffrey Production Code, and Geoffrey Shurlock Shurlock, Geoffrey, and Production Code (motion pictures) hearings motion pictures, and juvenile delinquency hearings, and movie violence hearings, and juvenile delinquency Kefauver Investigation values LB - 20550 M1 - S. Res. 62 N1 - United States Senate PY - 1955 ST - Juvenile Delinquency (Motion Pictures) T2 - Hearings, Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Eighty-Third Congress, Second Session Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency TI - Juvenile Delinquency (Motion Pictures) ID - 867 ER - TY - HEAR AB - This hearing, chaired by Senator Estes Kefauver, investigated the possible connection between pornography and obscene literature and juvenile delinquency. AD - Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1955 DA - (May 24, 26, 31, June 9, 18, 1955) KW - Kefauver, Estes Kefauver committee government hearings archives government hearings hearings, and pornography +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures primary sources, and hearing primary sources primary sources, Geoffrey Shurlock motion pictures, and juvenile delinquency hearings, and movie violence hearings, and juvenile delinquency Kefauver Investigation LB - 20560 M1 - S. Res. 62 N1 - United States Senate PY - 1924 ST - Juvenile Delinquency (Obscene and Pornographic Materials) T2 - Hearings, Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Eighty-Third Congress, Second Session Subcomittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency TI - Juvenile Delinquency (Obscene and Pornographic Materials) ID - 868 ER - TY - HEAR AB - This hearing, chaired by Senator Estes Kefauver, investigated the possible connection between televison programs and juvenile delinquency. AD - Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1954 DA - (June 5, Oct. 19-20, 1954) KW - Kefauver, Estes Kefauver committee government hearings media effects media violence media effects government +television television, and juvenile delinquency media effects, and television media effects, and juvenile delinquency violence violence, and television hearings hearings, juvenile delinquency Kefauver Investigation, LB - 20570 M1 - S. Res. 89 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality United States Senate PY - 1905 ST - Juvenile Delinquency (Television Programs) T2 - Hearings, Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Eighty-Third Congress, Second Session Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency TI - Juvenile Delinquency (Television Programs) ID - 869 ER - TY - HEAR AB - This hearing, chaired by Senator Estes Kefauver, investigated the possible connection between televison programs and juvenile delinquency. AD - Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1955 DA - (April 6-7, 1955) KW - Kefauver, Estes Kefauver committee government hearings media effects media violence media effects government +television television, and juvenile delinquency media effects, and television media effects, and juvenile delinquency violence violence, and television hearings hearings, juvenile delinquency Kefauver Investigation, LB - 20580 M1 - S. Res. 62 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality United States Senate ST - Juvenile Delinquency (Telvision Programs) T2 - Hearings, Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Eighty-Fourth Congress, First Session Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency TI - Juvenile Delinquency (Telvision Programs) ID - 870 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Lazarsfeld gives three reasons why so little was known about television at the time and what Congress should do to help improve understanding of this medium. DA - (April 7, 1955) KW - Kefauver, Estes Kefauver committee government hearings media effects media violence media effects government +television television, and juvenile delinquency media effects, and television media effects, and juvenile delinquency violence violence, and television hearings hearings, juvenile delinquency Kefauver Investigation Lazarsfeld, Paul media effects, and television television, and behavior LB - 20590 M1 - S. Res. 62 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality Lazarsfeld, Paul F. PY - 1907 SP - 87-103 ST - Statement T2 - Hearings, "Juvenile Delinquency (Telvision Programs)," Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Eighty-Fourth Congress, First Session, S. Res. 62 TI - Statement ID - 871 ER - TY - HEAR AB - These hearings investigated the connection between the motion picture industry and the portrayal of substance abuse in the movies. Critics during the period charged that Hollywood depicted drug use in a light or casual manner and rarely showed the negative consequences of substance abuse. Among those who testified were Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, and Richard D. Heffner, chair of the Classification and Rating Administration. DA - Oct. 24, 1985 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation government hearings CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack theaters theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) archives primary sources government substance abuse drug abuse law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA Heffner, Richard +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification classification, and independent producers CARA, and Jack Valenti rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and Congress hearings primary sources, hearings Valenti, Jack, and Congress Heffner, Richard, and Congress rating system (U. S.), and drug abuse drug abuse, and rating system (U. S.) drug abuse, and classification NATO rating system (U. S.), and NATO hearings, and Jack Valenti hearings, and Richard Heffner hearings, and drug abuse CARA, and appeals process +television television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and drug use LB - 21020 N1 - United States Senate PY - 1985 ST - Role of the Feature Film Industry in a National Effort to Diminish Drug Use Among Young People T2 - Committee on Governmental Affairs, United States Senate, Ninety-Ninth Congress, First Session Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations TI - Role of the Feature Film Industry in a National Effort to Diminish Drug Use Among Young People ID - 903 ER - TY - HEAR AB - As critics charged that Hollywood movies encouraged drug use, or at least treated the problem in a light manner, Motion Picture Association of America president Jack Valenti argued that such films favorable to drug use were the exception and that the movie industry was doing a good deal to combat substance abuse. DA - (Oct. 24, 1985) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack theaters theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) archives primary sources horror government substance abuse drug abuse law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA Heffner, Richard +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification classification, and independent producers CARA, and Jack Valenti rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and Congress hearings primary sources, hearings Valenti, Jack, and Congress Heffner, Richard, and Congress rating system (U. S.), and drug abuse drug abuse, and rating system (U. S.) drug abuse, and classification NATO rating system (U. S.), and NATO hearings, and Jack Valenti hearings, and Richard Heffner hearings, and drug abuse CARA, and appeals process +television television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and drug use hearings horror films horror films, and home entertainment +television television, and The Exorcist Gore, Al LB - 21030 N1 - Valenti, Jack PY - 1924 SP - 66-86 ST - Testimony T2 - Hearings, "Role of the Feature Film Industry in a National Effort to Diminish Drug Use Among Young People," Committee on Governmental Affairs, United States Senate, Ninety-Ninth Congress, First Session Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations TI - Testimony ID - 904 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Heffner, who was then head of the movie industry's Classification and Rating Administration (CARA), testified about how CARA rated movies that depicted substance abuse. Heffner did not believe that the subject matter of a film shoud guarantee a rating per se, but he favored giving the public more information explaining why ratings were given -- although on this latter point, he had to be careful because Jack Valenti resisted giving more information on the ratings. DA - (Oct. 24, 1985) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack theaters theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) archives primary sources primary sources government substance abuse drug abuse law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA Heffner, Richard +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification classification, and independent producers CARA, and Jack Valenti rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and Congress hearings primary sources, hearings Valenti, Jack, and Congress Heffner, Richard, and Congress rating system (U. S.), and drug abuse drug abuse, and rating system (U. S.) drug abuse, and classification NATO rating system (U. S.), and NATO hearings, and Richard Heffner hearings, and Richard Heffner hearings, and drug abuse CARA, and appeals process +television television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and drug use LB - 21040 N1 - Heffner, Richard PY - 1924 SP - 117-22 ST - Testimony, Hearings, "Role of the Feature Film Industry in a National Effort to Diminish Drug Use Among Young People" T2 - Committee on Governmental Affairs, United States Senate, Ninety-Ninth Congress, First Session Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations TI - Testimony, Hearings, "Role of the Feature Film Industry in a National Effort to Diminish Drug Use Among Young People" ID - 905 ER - TY - HEAR AB - The United States Senate held hearings on drug abuse and the entertainment industry in 1985. At these hearings, Marvin Goldman, who had been president of the National Organization of Theater Owners during the late 1970s, strongly recommended giving parents more data about why movie ratings were given. He thought it would be helpful to parents if they knew that a restricted, or R, rating had been given for substance abuse. DA - (Oct. 24, 1985) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack theaters theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) archives primary sources primary sources government substance abuse drug abuse law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA Heffner, Richard +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification classification, and independent producers CARA, and Jack Valenti rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and Congress hearings primary sources, hearings Valenti, Jack, and Congress Heffner, Richard, and Congress rating system (U. S.), and drug abuse drug abuse, and rating system (U. S.) drug abuse, and classification NATO rating system (U. S.), and NATO hearings, and NATO hearings, and Richard Heffner hearings, and drug abuse CARA, and appeals process Goldman, Marvin LB - 21050 N1 - Goldman, Marvin PY - 1924 SP - 126-28 ST - Statement, Hearings, "Role of the Feature Film Industry in a National Effort to Diminish Drug Use Among Young People" T2 - Committee on Governmental Affairs, United States Senate, Ninety-Ninth Congress, First Session Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations TI - Statement, Hearings, "Role of the Feature Film Industry in a National Effort to Diminish Drug Use Among Young People" ID - 906 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Most members of the Meese Commission agreed with researcher Dolf Zillmann who testified that prolonged exposure to non-violent pornography made both men and women more accepting of pre- and extramarital sex, generated discontent with one’s sexual partner, created doubts about marriage being one of society’s essential institutions, and destroyed trust between spouses or friends. Moreover, heavy use of pornography promoted a lack of sensitivity toward victims of sexual violence because it tended to trivialize rape and the sexual abuse of children, led people to believe that unusual sexual activities were normal, and decreased the belief that women should be equal to men in intimate relations. DA - Sept. 11, 1985 KW - children, and media government hearings media effects, and pornography social science research archives sexuality motion pictures government censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research pornography, nonviolent Meese Commission testimony primary sources hearings media effects media effects, and nonviolent pornography children children, and pornography pornography, and children pornography, and opponents pornography, and harmful effects LB - 22760 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality Zillmann, Dolf PY - 1985 SP - Folder: "Houston -- 9/11/85 (Part I)," Box 2, Records of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography, RG 60 (Justice Dept. Records), NARA 2, College Park, MD ST - [Testimony] Effects of Repeated Exposure to Nonviolent Pornography T2 - Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - [Testimony] Effects of Repeated Exposure to Nonviolent Pornography ID - 1001 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Most research appeared to show that viewing pornography, either on an occasional or long-term basis, heightened sexual arousal. Whether this effect had long-term consequences and whether those consequences harmed society was the subject of disagreement. Pornography did not change arousal patterns in viewers, Neil Malamuth noted in testimony before the Meese Commission, but a “surprising percentage of the population” was already prone to arousal by the combination of violence and sexuality and found violent pornography exciting. Malamuth argued that popular fiction portrayed aggression against men and women differently. Aggression against women generally included a sexual component not present in assaults against men. Men were seen as wanting to avoid being victimized, while women often seemed to invite victimization and hence, by implication, bore some responsibility for their treatment. These themes, so blatantly depicted in hard-core pornography, were subtly portrayed in mainstream fiction and advertising, and differed only in degree. They appeared in such PG-rated movies as Sam Peckinpah’s The Getaway (1972) and Lina Wertmuller’s R-rated Swept Away (1975) – movies shown widely on television. The violent images and themes appeared in such publications as Penthouse, which Malamuth charged had accented violence and sex in recent years, and in the advertising of other Penthouse-owned magazines such as Newlook. This type of material, including that found in mainstream outlets, could bring “relatively long lasting attitude changes” even when people are “not aware that they are being affected or they are being changed,” Malamuth’s research indicated. Malamuth emphasized context and the complex nature of behavior. He concluded that mass media and pornography by themselves were hardly inconsequential, but they were also not the only factors, nor were they perhaps even major causes of aggression against women. They were part of a complicated interaction. DA - Sept. 11, 1985 KW - government hearings media effects, and pornography social science research archives primary sources sexuality motion pictures government censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research pornography, nonviolent Meese Commission testimony primary sources hearings media effects media effects, and nonviolent pornography children children, and pornography pornography, and children pornography, and opponents pornography, and harmful effects children, and media LB - 22800 N1 - Malamuth, Neil PY - 1985 SP - Folder: "Houston -- 9/11/85 (Part I)," Box 2, RG 60 (Justice Dept. Records), National Archives and Records Administration (NARA 2), College Park, MD ST - Testimony, before Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Testimony, before Attorney General's Commission on Pornography ID - 1005 ER - TY - HEAR AB - In December, 1983, Edward Donnerstein, a professor in the Communication Arts Department at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, testified at the public hearing in Minneapolis in December, 1983, where the Catharine MacKinnon and Andrea Dworkin’s anti-pornography ordinance was being considered. Donnerstein stated that many men were aroused by depictions of women enjoying rape and other forms of aggression. Even short exposures of five to ten minutes could affect the attitudes of “very normal types of males” and make them more inclined to accept myths about rape. If one assumed that children learned “from Sesame Street how to count one, two, three, four, five, believe me,” he said, “they can learn how to pick up a gun and also learn ... about male/female relations.” If you could “measure sexual arousal to sexual images” and measure what attitudes males had about rape, you could “predict aggressive behavior with women, weeks and even months later,” Donnerstein suggested. Indeed, some researchers would argue, he said, that the connection between watching some kinds of violent images and callous and aggressive behavior toward women was “much stronger statistically than the relationship between smoking and cancer.” This testimony can be found in Folder 15, Box 69, Records of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography, RG 60 (Justice Dept. Records), National Archives and Records Administration (NARA II), College Park, MD. DA - Dec. 12, 1983 KW - government hearings media effects, and pornography women, and new media social science research archives primary sources +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures media effects sexuality violence magazines news and journalism books, periodicals, newspapers magazines government women feminism law censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research pornography, nonviolent Meese Commission testimony primary sources hearings media effects media effects, and nonviolent pornography children children, and pornography pornography, and children pornography, and opponents pornography, and harmful effects women, and pornography censorship feminists feminists, and pornography pornography, and women pornography, and feminists feminists, and censorship censorship, and feminists pornography, and Minneapolis Dworkin, Andrea MacKinnon, Catharine children, and media LB - 22810 N1 - Donnerstein, Edward PY - 1983 SP - Session I, Minneapolis, MN ST - [Testimony] Public Hearings on Ordinances to Add Pornography as Discrimination against Women TI - [Testimony] Public Hearings on Ordinances to Add Pornography as Discrimination against Women ID - 1006 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Despite his earlier testimony in Minneapolis suggesting a strong connection between watching violent pornography and aggression toward women, in October, 1985, Donnerstein said that although he believed that sexually violent materials might change attitudes, there was no evidence to indicate that it changed people’s behavior. It was “impossible,” he said, to prove that pornography caused sexual crimes. “The evidence just isn’t that clear-cut.” Donnerstein felt that the opponents of pornography misused his research. A point often missed was his finding that images showing women who did not enjoy being raped failed to arouse most men. Moreover, simply erotic images – explicit non-violent, non-degrading depictions – did not produce aggressive behavior. He told the Houston panel that “it was really the violent component in violent pornography which was the issue, not the sexual nature of the material.” But even in considering violent materials, one had to be careful about what conclusions could be drawn. This testimony can be found in Folder: "Houston -- 9/11/85 (Part I)," Box 2, RG 60 (Justice Dept. Records), National Archives and Records Administration (NARA 2), College Park, MD DA - Sept. 11, 1985 KW - government hearings media effects, and pornography women, and new media social science research archives primary sources sexuality motion pictures government women feminism censorship and ratings law censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research pornography, nonviolent Meese Commission testimony primary sources hearings media effects media effects, and nonviolent pornography children children, and pornography pornography, and children pornography, and opponents pornography, and harmful effects women women, and pornography censorship feminists feminists, and pornography pornography, and women pornography, and feminists feminists, and censorship censorship, and feminists violence children, and media LB - 22820 N1 - Donnerstein, Edward PY - 1985 ST - Testimony before the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography T2 - Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Testimony before the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography ID - 1007 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Court, an Austrialian reseacher, was one of several witnesses before the Meese Commission in 1985 to argue that pornography as seen through mass media had harmful effects on individuals and society. Court was critical of the conclusions made by the 1970 President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. This testimony can be found in Folder: "Houston -- 9/11/85," Box 2, RG 60 (Justice Dept. Records), National Archives and Records Administration (NARA 2), College Park, MD. DA - Sept. 12, 1985 KW - entertainment government hearings entertainment, home media effects, and pornography social science research archives primary sources sexuality motion pictures home entertainment government censorship and ratings non-USA home +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research pornography, nonviolent Meese Commission testimony primary sources hearings media effects media effects, and nonviolent pornography children children, and pornography pornography, and children pornography, and opponents pornography, and harmful effects home entertainment revolution pornography, and home entertainment Australia Australia, and pornography pornography, and Australia home, and new media violence sexuality children, and media LB - 22830 N1 - Court, John PY - 1985 ST - Testimony before the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography T2 - Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Testimony before the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography ID - 1008 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Playboy’s counsel, Burton Joseph, in testimony to the Meese Commission, presented a survey of studies prepared in 1984 for Canada’s Department of Justice that stated flatly that “no systematic research evidence available” suggested a causal relationship between morality and pornography in Canada. Nor did research show that there was a link between explicit materials and such crimes as rape or that viewing such materials harmed the average adult. This survey found “considerable evidence of conceptually cloudy thinking related to virtually every aspect of the work on the impact of pornography.” This material is found in Folder 22, Box 70, Records of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography, RG 60 (Justice Dept. Records), National Archives and Records Administration (NARA II), College Park, MD. DA - July 24-25, 1985 KW - government hearings advertising, and public relations social science research propaganda advertising archives primary sources sexuality sexuality media effects government freedom pornography, and supporters Playboy Playboy, and pornography pornography, and Playboy hearings testimony primary sources First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment public relations, and pornography public relations pornography, and public relations public relations, and First Amendment First Amendment First Amendment, and public relations pornography, and social science research media effects, and pornography pornography, and effects social science research, and pornography Meese Commission pornography, and defenders law sexuality violence pornography LB - 22860 N1 - Joseph, Burton PY - 1985 ST - Presentation to Attorney General's Commission on Pornography, Chicago, Illinois, July 24-25, 1985 T2 - Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Presentation to Attorney General's Commission on Pornography, Chicago, Illinois, July 24-25, 1985 ID - 1011 ER - TY - HEAR AB - By the time Jack Valenti testified in Los Angeles on October 17, 1985, the Meese Commission had heard plenty of testimony that condemned not only hard-core pornography but also violent mainstream motion pictures. Eager to disassociate Hollywood from the hearings, Valenti branded pornography an “outlaw industry,” contended that the rating system effectively shielded children from explicit materials, pronounced pornographic movies tedious, and predicted that interest in them would decline once the novelty had worn off. When Father Bruce Ritter of the Meese Commission asserted that the gap between PG-13 and R films had narrowed and that many R films amounted to soft-core pornography, Valenti acknowledged that the values behind the ratings changed with time. Midnight Cowboy had been given an X rating when it appeared in 1969, for example, but now, he said, it probably would receive no more than a PG-13. Asked if an X-rated movie in 1985 might not in the future become an R-rated picture, Valenti thought it doubtful, but admitted that because the system depended on consensus from many groups, “you have to lower sometimes the standards you might employ.” A copy of this testimony is in Folder: "Los Angeles -- 10/17/85 (Part I)," Box 4, Records of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography, RG 60 (Justice Dept. Records), National Archives and Records Administration (NARA II), College Park, MD. DA - (Oct. 17, 1985) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations social science research censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda advertising archives sexuality NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA media effects government freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification pornography, and MPAA MPAA, and pornography Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and Meese Commission Valenti, Jack, and pornography hearings testimony primary sources First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment public relations, and pornography public relations pornography, and public relations public relations, and First Amendment First Amendment First Amendment, and public relations pornography, and social science research media effects, and pornography pornography, and effects social science research, and pornography Meese Commission rating system (U. S.), and pornography CARA, and pornography rating system (U. S.), and Meese Commission CARA, and Meese Commission CARA violence sexuality pornography motion pictures LB - 22870 N1 - Valenti, Jack PY - 1917 ST - Testimony before the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography T2 - Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Testimony before the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography ID - 1012 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Peters was an L.A. dectective who talked to the Meese Commission about the technology and distribution of pornography. This material is in Folder: "Los Angeles -- 10/16/85 (Part I)," Box 3, Records of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography, RG 60 (Justice Dept. Records), National Archives and Records Administration (NARA II), College Park, MD. DA - Oct. 16, 1985 KW - entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) government hearings entertainment, home magnetic recording archives sexuality home entertainment government videotape magnetic tape +books, periodicals, newspapers home pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and legal pornography, and distribution pornography, and new technology pornography, and 8mm pornography, and 16mm pornography, and adult bookstore books, adult bookstores VCRs VCRs, and pornography pornography, and VCRs pornography, and video stores testimony hearings primary sources 8mm, and pornography 16mm, and pornography videotape, and pornography home entertainment revolution pornography, and home entertainment home, and new media 16mm 8mm books Meese Commission LB - 22880 N1 - Peters, Robert PY - 1985 ST - Testimony before Attorney General's Commission on Pornography T2 - Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Testimony before Attorney General's Commission on Pornography ID - 1013 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Peters was an L.A. dectective who talked to the Meese Commission about the technology and distribution of pornography. DA - Oct. 16, 1985 KW - entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) government hearings entertainment, home magnetic recording archives sexuality home entertainment government videotape magnetic tape +books, periodicals, newspapers home pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and legal pornography, and distribution pornography, and new technology pornography, and 8mm pornography, and 16mm pornography, and adult bookstore books, adult bookstores VCRs VCRs, and pornography pornography, and VCRs pornography, and video stores testimony hearings primary sources 8mm, and pornography 16mm, and pornography videotape, and pornography home entertainment revolution pornography, and home entertainment home, and new media 16mm 8mm books Meese Commission LB - 22890 N1 - Peters, Robert PY - 1985 SP - Folder: "Los Angeles -- 10/16/85 (Part I)," Box 3, Records of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography, RG 60 (Justice Dept. Records), National Archives and Records Administration (NARA II), College Park, MD ST - Statement to the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography T2 - Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Statement to the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography ID - 1014 ER - TY - HEAR AB - James Docherty was a police captain who told the Meese Commission in 1985 about the extent of pornography in Los Angeles in mass media. He also said that he had never come across a snuff film. DA - Oct. 16, 1985 KW - entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) government hearings entertainment, home magnetic recording archives primary sources sexuality media effects media violence violence home entertainment government videotape magnetic tape +books, periodicals, newspapers home pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and legal pornography, and distribution pornography, and new technology pornography, and 8mm pornography, and 16mm pornography, and adult bookstore books, adult bookstores VCRs VCRs, and pornography pornography, and VCRs pornography, and video stores testimony hearings primary sources 8mm, and pornography 16mm, and pornography videotape, and pornography home entertainment revolution pornography, and home entertainment pornography, and video ads violence, and pornography snuff films pornography, and snuff films home, and new media 16mm 8mm books Meese Commission LB - 22900 N1 - Docherty, James PY - 1985 SP - Folder: "Los Angeles -- 10/16/85 (Part I)," Box 3, Records of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography, RG 60 (Justice Dept. Records), National Archives and Records Administration (NARA II), College Park, MD ST - Testimony to Attorney General's Commission on Pornography T2 - Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Testimony to Attorney General's Commission on Pornography ID - 1015 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Bishop Norbert F. Gaughan testified before a U. S. Senate subcommittee investigation the portrayal of substance abuse in motion pictures. He pointed to movies that treated drug use in a light or favorable manner. DA - (Oct. 24, 1985) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings values Christianity Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) values archives primary sources primary sources government substance abuse drug abuse law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA Heffner, Richard +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification classification, and independent producers CARA, and Catholics rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and Congress hearings primary sources, hearings Valenti, Jack, and Congress Heffner, Richard, and Congress rating system (U. S.), and drug abuse drug abuse, and rating system (U. S.) drug abuse, and classification Catholic Church rating system (U. S.), and Catholic Church hearings, and USCC hearings, and Catholic Church hearings, and drug abuse CARA, and appeals process +television television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and drug use United States Catholic Conference (USCC) USCC critics values LB - 23950 N1 - Gaughan, Norbert F. PY - 1924 SP - 141-47 ST - Statement, Hearings, "Role of the Feature Film Industry in a National Effort to Diminish Drug Use Among Young People" T2 - Committee on Governmental Affairs, United States Senate, Ninety-Ninth Congress, First Session Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations TI - Statement, Hearings, "Role of the Feature Film Industry in a National Effort to Diminish Drug Use Among Young People" ID - 1055 ER - TY - HEAR AB - The United States Senate held hearings on drug abuse and the entertainment industry in 1985. It became apparent at these hearings that people wanted more information about why ratings were given. James Wall of the National Council of Churches and editor of Christian Century urged adding a short phrase to indicate sex, violence, language, or substance abuse. DA - (Oct. 24, 1985) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings values Christianity Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) archives primary sources government substance abuse drug abuse law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA Heffner, Richard +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification classification, and independent producers CARA, and Catholics rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and Congress hearings primary sources, hearings Valenti, Jack, and Congress Heffner, Richard, and Congress rating system (U. S.), and drug abuse drug abuse, and rating system (U. S.) drug abuse, and classification Catholic Church rating system (U. S.), and Protestants hearings, and USCC hearings, and Protestants hearings, and drug abuse CARA, and appeals process +television television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and drug use LB - 23960 N1 - Wall, James M. PY - 1924 SP - 148-51 ST - Statement T2 - Hearings, " Role of the Feature Film Industry in a National Effort to Diminish Drug Use Among Young People," Committee on Governmental Affairs, United States Senate, Ninety-Ninth Congress, First Session Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations TI - Statement ID - 1056 ER - TY - HEAR AB - The United States Senate held hearings on drug abuse and the entertainment industry in 1985. At these hearings, Marvin Goldman, who had been president of the National Organization of Theater Owners during the late 1970s, strongly recommended giving parents more data about why movie ratings were given. He thought it would be helpful to parents if they knew that a restricted, or R, rating had been given for substance abuse. DA - (Oct. 24, 1985) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack theaters theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) archives primary sources primary sources government substance abuse drug abuse law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA Heffner, Richard +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification classification, and independent producers CARA, and Jack Valenti rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and Congress hearings primary sources, hearings Valenti, Jack, and Congress Heffner, Richard, and Congress rating system (U. S.), and drug abuse drug abuse, and rating system (U. S.) drug abuse, and classification NATO rating system (U. S.), and NATO hearings, and Marvin Goldman hearings, and Marvin Goldman hearings, and drug abuse CARA, and appeals process +television television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and drug use LB - 23970 N1 - Goldman, Marvin PY - 1924 SP - 122-25 ST - Testimony, Hearings, "Role of the Feature Film Industry in a National Effort to Diminish Drug Use Among Young People" T2 - Committee on Governmental Affairs, United States Senate, Ninety-Ninth Congress, First Session Permanent Subcommitee on Investigations TI - Testimony, Hearings, "Role of the Feature Film Industry in a National Effort to Diminish Drug Use Among Young People" ID - 1057 ER - TY - HEAR AB - As critics charged that Hollywood movies encouraged drug use, or at least treated the problem in a light manner, Motion Picture Association of America president Jack Valenti argued that such films favorable to drug use were the exception and that the movie industry was doing a good deal to combat substance abuse. AD - 87-107 DA - Oct. 24, 1985 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack theaters theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) archives primary sources horror government substance abuse drug abuse law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA Heffner, Richard +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification classification, and independent producers CARA, and Jack Valenti rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and Congress hearings primary sources, hearings Valenti, Jack, and Congress Heffner, Richard, and Congress rating system (U. S.), and drug abuse drug abuse, and rating system (U. S.) drug abuse, and classification NATO rating system (U. S.), and NATO hearings, and Jack Valenti hearings, and Richard Heffner hearings, and drug abuse CARA, and appeals process +television television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and drug use hearings horror films horror films, and home entertainment +television television, and The Exorcist Gore, Al LB - 25740 N1 - Valenti, Jack PY - 1985 ST - Statement T2 - Hearings, "Role of the Feature Film Industry in a National Effort to Diminish Drug Use Among Young People," Committee on Governmental Affairs, United States Senate, Ninety-Ninth Congress, First Session Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations TI - Statement ID - 1167 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Actor William Shatner testified at this U. S. Senate hearing on motion pictures and drug abuse, and indicated that he favored a new rating ("SA") to indicated this topic in movies. DA - (Oct. 24, 1985) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack theaters theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) archives primary sources government substance abuse drug abuse law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA Heffner, Richard +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification classification, and independent producers CARA, and Jack Valenti rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and Congress hearings primary sources, hearings Valenti, Jack, and Congress Heffner, Richard, and Congress rating system (U. S.), and drug abuse drug abuse, and rating system (U. S.) drug abuse, and classification NATO rating system (U. S.), and NATO hearings, and Jack Valenti hearings, and Richard Heffner hearings, and drug abuse CARA, and appeals process +television television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and drug use hearings Gore, Al Shatner, William LB - 25750 N1 - Shatner, William PY - 1924 ST - Testimony T2 - Hearings, "Role of the Feature Film Industry in a National Effort to Diminish Drug Use Among Young People," Committee on Governmental Affairs, United States Senate, Ninety-Ninth Congress, First Session Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations TI - Testimony ID - 1168 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Here the American Psychiatic Association endorses the adoption of a rating system for television programs and points to the damaging effects of television violence. The Statement of Robert T. M. Phillips, Deputy Medical Director, American Psychiatric Association, appears in ibid., 237-39. DA - Feb. 27, 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack social science research censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) archives primary sources primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA media effects media violence government censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and television television, and rating system (U. S.) classification, and television television, and classification motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) television, and censorship censorship, and television Valenti, Jack, and Congress Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) children, and media children television, and Congress violence violence, and mass media violence, and television violence, and motion picture violence, and Jack Valenti hearings primary sources, TV rating system (U.S.) primary sources, Jack Valenti MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and television, new media effects social science research, and violence social science research, and TV violence American Psychiatric Association LB - 25790 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality American Psychiatic Association PY - 1997 SP - 240-44 ST - Statement, on the Television Parental Guidelines System T2 - Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate, One Hundred Fifth Congress, First Session TI - Statement, on the Television Parental Guidelines System ID - 1171 ER - TY - HEAR AB - This Statement was delivered at U. S. Senate hearings in early 1997 that considered the need for a rating system for television programs. Wilcox was Director for Children, Families and the Law, and spoke on behalf of the American Psychological Association (APA). At these hearings, the APA was one of several associations concerned with health and public welfare that urged creating a new rating system, and who also argued that violence in mass media had harmful effects on children. DA - (Feb. 27, 1997) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack social science research censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) archives primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA media effects media violence government censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and television television, and rating system (U. S.) classification, and television television, and classification motion pictures, and rating system (U.S.) television, and censorship censorship, and television Valenti, Jack, and Congress Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) children, and media children television, and Congress violence violence, and mass media violence, and television violence, and motion picture violence, and Jack Valenti hearings primary sources, TV rating system (U. S.) system primary sources, Jack Valenti MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and television, new media effects social science research, and violence social science research, and TV violence American Psychological Association LB - 25800 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality Wilcox, Brian PY - 1927 SP - 268-70 ST - Statement of Brian Wilcox, Director, Center for Children, Families and the Law, University of Nebraska, on Behalf of the American Psychological Association T2 - Hearings, "Television Ratings System," Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate, One Hundred Fifth Congress, First Session TI - Statement of Brian Wilcox, Director, Center for Children, Families and the Law, University of Nebraska, on Behalf of the American Psychological Association ID - 1172 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Stone's Statement, which reflected the views of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, argued that media violence is harmful to children and supported a rating system for television programs. DA - Feb. 27, 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack social science research censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) archives primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA media effects media violence government censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and television television, and rating system (U. S.) classification, and television television, and classification motion pictures, and rating system (U.S.) television, and censorship censorship, and television Valenti, Jack, and Congress Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) children, and media children television, and Congress violence violence, and mass media violence, and television violence, and motion picture violence, and Jack Valenti hearings primary sources, TV rating system (U. S.) system primary sources, Jack Valenti MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and television, new media effects social science research, and violence social science research, and TV violence American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry LB - 25810 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality Stone, Lawrence PY - 1997 SP - 273-78 ST - Statement of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry T2 - Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate, One Hundred Fifth Congress, First Session TI - Statement of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry ID - 1173 ER - TY - HEAR AB - This testimony is by one of the leading scholars of media effects, especially the effects of motion picture and television violence and horror. Here Cantor supported calls for a rating system for television programs. AD - Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1997 DA - (Feb. 27, 1997) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack social science research censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) archives primary sources primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA media effects media violence government censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and television television, and rating system (U. S.) classification, and television television, and classification motion pictures, and rating system (U.S.) television, and censorship censorship, and television Valenti, Jack, and Congress Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) children, and media children television, and Congress violence violence, and mass media violence, and television violence, and motion picture violence, and Jack Valenti hearings primary sources, TV rating system (U.S.) primary sources, Jack Valenti MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and television, new media effects social science research, and violence social science research, and TV violence rating system (U. S.), and critics violence sexuality LB - 25820 N1 - Cantor, Joanne PY - 1927 SP - 159-63 ST - Statement T2 - Hearings, "Television Ratings System," Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate, One Hundred Fifth Congress, First Session, pp. 159-63 TI - Statement ID - 1174 ER - TY - HEAR AB - This piece discussing communication research on media effects and its implications for rating systems was presented to this U.S. Senate hearing investigating in early 1997 the need for a television rating system. The television industry adopted a rating plan later that year. AD - Washington, D.C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1977 DA - (Feb. 27, 1997) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack social science research censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) archives primary sources primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA media effects media violence government censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and television television, and rating system (U. S.) classification, and television television, and classification motion pictures, and rating system (U.S.) television, and censorship censorship, and television Valenti, Jack, and Congress Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) children, and media children television, and Congress violence violence, and mass media violence, and television violence, and motion picture violence, and Jack Valenti hearings primary sources, TV rating system (U.S.) primary sources, Jack Valenti MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and television, new media effects social science research, and violence social science research, and TV violence sexuality LB - 25830 N1 - Cantor, Joanne Marina Krcmar PY - 1927 SP - 164-205 ST - Ratings and Advisories: Implications for the New Rating System for Television [June 28-29, 1996] T2 - Hearings, "Television Ratings System," Hearings before the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate, One Hundred Fifth Congress, First Session TI - Ratings and Advisories: Implications for the New Rating System for Television [June 28-29, 1996] ID - 1175 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Here the American Medical Association endorses the adoption of a rating system for television programs and points to the damaging effects of television violence. DA - Feb. 27, 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack social science research censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) archives primary sources primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA media effects media violence government censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and television television, and rating system (U. S.) classification, and television television, and classification motion pictures, and rating system (U.S.) television, and censorship censorship, and television Valenti, Jack, and Congress Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) children, and media children television, and Congress violence violence, and mass media violence, and television violence, and motion picture violence, and Jack Valenti hearings primary sources, TV rating system (U.S.) primary sources, Jack Valenti MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and television, new media effects social science research, and violence social science research, and TV violence American Medical Association LB - 25840 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality American Medical Association PY - 1997 SP - 334-41 ST - Statement, ... RE: Ratings System for Violence on Television T2 - Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate, One Hundred Fifth Congress, First Session TI - Statement, ... RE: Ratings System for Violence on Television ID - 1176 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Neuborne, then a Professor of Law at New York University, drafted this Statement for the Association of National Advertisers. He said that "while the effort to ban violent programming is undoubtedly well-intentioned, and while many persons understandably deplore the preoccupation with violence that pervades our mass culture, I believe that such an approach is clearly unconstitutional." DA - (Feb. 27, 1997) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations archives primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA media effects media violence government censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and television television, and rating system (U. S.) classification, and television television, and classification motion pictures, and rating system (U.S.) television, and censorship censorship, and television Valenti, Jack, and Congress Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) children, and media children television, and Congress violence violence, and mass media violence, and television violence, and motion picture violence, and Jack Valenti hearings primary sources, TV rating system (U. S.) system primary sources, Jack Valenti MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and television, new advertising, and violence advertising, and TV violence Association of National Advertisers advertising LB - 25850 N1 - Neuborne, Burt PY - 1927 ST - Statement [Re Television Ratings System] T2 - Hearings, "Television Ratings System," Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate, One Hundred Fifth Congress, First Session TI - Statement [Re Television Ratings System] ID - 1177 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Here a representative from the National Conference of Catholic Bishops testifies before the U. S. Senate on the need for a rating system for television programs. DA - (Feb. 27, 1997) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings values Christianity Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack social science research censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) archives primary sources primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA media effects media violence government censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship Catholic Church +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and television television, and rating system (U. S.) classification, and television television, and classification motion pictures, and rating system (U.S.) television, and censorship censorship, and television Valenti, Jack, and Congress Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) children, and media children television, and Congress violence violence, and mass media violence, and television violence, and motion picture violence, and Jack Valenti hearings primary sources, TV rating system (U.S.) primary sources, Jack Valenti MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and television, new media effects social science research, and violence social science research, and TV violence National Conference of Catholic Bishops Catholics, and TV violence television, and Catholics Catholics, and rating system (U. S.) Catholics, and TV rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and Catholics Valenti, Jack, and Catholics LB - 25860 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality Costello, Thomas J. PY - 1927 SP - 287-90 ST - Testimony on Behalf of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, Department of Communication T2 - Hearings, "Television Ratings System," Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate, One Hundred Fifth Congress, First Session TI - Testimony on Behalf of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, Department of Communication ID - 1178 ER - TY - HEAR AB - This Statement from a leader of the Traditional Values Coalition support the adoption of a rating system for television programs. DA - Feb. 27, 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings values Christianity Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack social science research censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) values archives primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA religion values morality media effects media violence government censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship Catholic Church +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and television television, and rating system (U. S.) classification, and television television, and classification motion pictures, and rating system (U.S.) television, and censorship censorship, and television Valenti, Jack, and Congress Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) children, and media children television, and Congress violence violence, and mass media violence, and television violence, and motion picture violence, and Jack Valenti hearings primary sources, TV rating system (U. S.) system primary sources, Jack Valenti MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and television, new media effects social science research, and violence social science research, and TV violence Traditional Values Coalition Catholics, and TV violence television, and Catholics Catholics, and rating system (U. S.) Catholics, and TV rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and Catholics Valenti, Jack, and Catholics values values, and television television, and values morality, and television television, and morality LB - 25880 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality Sheldon, Andrea PY - 1997 SP - 257-67 ST - Statement of Andrea Sheldon, Executive Director, Traditional Values Coalition T2 - Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate, One Hundred Fifth Congress, First Session TI - Statement of Andrea Sheldon, Executive Director, Traditional Values Coalition ID - 1179 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Here the American Academy of Pediatrics endorses the adoption of a rating system for television and points to the damaging effects of television violence. DA - Feb. 27, 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack social science research censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) archives primary sources primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA media effects media violence government censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and television television, and rating system (U. S.) classification, and television television, and classification motion pictures, and rating system (U.S.) television, and censorship censorship, and television Valenti, Jack, and Congress Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) children, and media children television, and Congress violence violence, and mass media violence, and television violence, and motion picture violence, and Jack Valenti hearings primary sources, TV rating system (U.S.) primary sources, Jack Valenti MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and television, new media effects social science research, and violence social science research, and TV violence American Academy of Pediatrics LB - 25910 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality American Academy of Pediatrics PY - 1997 SP - 342-45 ST - Statement, ... on the Television Ratings System T2 - Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate, One Hundred Fifth Congress, First Session TI - Statement, ... on the Television Ratings System ID - 1182 ER - TY - HEAR AB - This statement is from Joan Dykstra, the president of the National Parent-Teachers Association (PTA), before a Senate hearing on establishing a rating system for television programs. Dykstra said at the hearing that unless there were changes in industry policy, she was prepared to recommend that Congress “go far beyond the V-chip venturing into far more restrictive quagmires of safe harbor resolutions.” DA - Feb. 27, 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack social science research censorship and ratings rating system (U. S.) Partent Teacher Association (PTA) PTA primary sources archives NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA media effects violence media violence government children censorship and rating system (U. S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and television television, and rating system (U. S.) classification, and television television, and classification motion pictures, and rating system (U.S.) television, and censorship censorship, and television Valenti, Jack, and Congress Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) children, and media children television, and Congress violence violence, and mass media violence, and television violence, and motion picture violence, and Jack Valenti hearings primary sources, TV rating system (U.S.) primary sources, Jack Valenti MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and television, new media effects social science research, and violence social science research, and TV violence PTA television, and parents television, and PTA rating system (U. S.), and PTA LB - 25920 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality Dykstra, Joan SP - 50-54 ST - Statement of Joan Dykstra, President, National Parent-Teacher Association T2 - Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate, One Hundred Fifth Congress, First Session TI - Statement of Joan Dykstra, President, National Parent-Teacher Association ID - 1183 ER - TY - HEAR AB - As critics charged that television violence had harmful effects for children and called for a rating system for television programs, Jack Valenti argued that such a system would much too complicated and expensive to implement. AD - Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1997 DA - (Feb. 27, 1997) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack social science research censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) archives primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA media effects media violence government censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and television television, and rating system (U. S.) classification, and television television, and classification motion pictures, and rating system (U.S.) television, and censorship censorship, and television Valenti, Jack, and Congress Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) children, and media children television, and Congress violence violence, and mass media violence, and television violence, and motion picture violence, and Jack Valenti hearings primary sources, TV rating system (U. S.) system primary sources, Jack Valenti MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and television, social science research, and violence social science research, and TV violence media effects LB - 27790 N1 - Photocopy filed under "Television Ratings System." Valenti, Jack PY - 1927 SP - 95-108 ST - Statement T2 - Hearings, "Television Ratings System," Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate, One Hundred Fifth Congress, First Session, Feb. 27, 1997 TI - Statement ID - 1333 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Testimony of Jack Gleason, Acting Associate Administrator, Office of International Affairs, National Telecommunications and Information Administration, ... before the Subcommittee on Communications, Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate, July 30, 1997 DA - (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, July 30, 1997) KW - nationalism government hearings government +aeronautics and space communication satellites nationalism and communication Gleason, Jack hearings testimony government publications government documents LB - 8770 N1 - Gleason, Jack PY - 1930 ST - International Satellite Reform T2 - Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate Subcommittee on Communications TI - International Satellite Reform ID - 2242 ER - TY - HEAR KW - computers U. S.Congress surveillance law, and privacy Internet Congress, U. S. law censorship and ratings law censorship and ratings government regulation privacy +computers and the Internet regulation, and Internet privacy, and Internet censorship, and Internet government reports censorship children, and media children government documents Internet, and censorship Internet, and regulation LB - 9160 M1 - S. 1619 N1 - United States Senate, Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation ST - Internet Filtering Systems : Report of the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation on S. 1619 T2 - United States Senate, Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation TI - Internet Filtering Systems : Report of the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation on S. 1619 ID - 2283 ER - TY - HEAR AB - These hearings with supporting documents run 1,384 pages and includes testimony from several people in the entertainment and recording industries including Jack Valenti, Alan Greenspan, Sony president Joseph Lagore, MCA president Sidney Sheinberg, Screen Actors Guild president Charlton Heston, singer Beverly Sills, Charles D. Ferris (counsel to the Home Recording Rights Coalition), and others. By the mid- and late-1970s, pirated copies sold abroad of Hollywood movies had become a major concern for film leaders such as Motion Picture Association of America president Jack Valenti. By the early 1980s, the use of video recorders was bring a revolution in home entertainment in the United States. Movie industry leaders such as Valenti, for example, maintained that VCR users were making private libraries of films and using the VCR to fast forward through commercials, thereby threatening to undermine commercial films and television. These hearings have survey information on VCR (and audio cassette) use in the United States during the early 1980s. AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1982 DA - Nov. 30, 1981 and April 21, 1982 KW - music Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) government reports entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) MPAA corporations corporations corporations entertainment, home magnetic recording audio tape information technology home materials materials magnetic tape law law government +television +motion pictures motion pictures and popular culture VCRs audio cassettes +sound recording sound recording, and audio cassettes sound recording, and magnetic tape home entertainment copyright intellectual property law law, and VCRs law, and audio cassettes law, and sound recording law, and information technology government hearings government documents government U. S. Congress U. S. Congress, Senate Judiciary Committee Valenti, Jack Music Corporation of America (MCA) Sony Corporation Heston, Charlton Greenspan, Alan Home Recording Rights Coalition Ferris, Charles D. Sheinberg, Sidney Lagore, Joseph information technology, and home law, and copyright information technology, and copyright home, and new media MCA Music Corporation of America (MCA) Congress, U. S. LB - 12030 M1 - S. 1758 PY - 1981 ST - Copyright Infringements (Audio and Video Recorders), Hearings before the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Ninety-Seventh Congress, First and Second Sessions on S. 1758 T2 - Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate TI - Copyright Infringements (Audio and Video Recorders), Hearings before the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Ninety-Seventh Congress, First and Second Sessions on S. 1758 ID - 2550 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Critics of the Meese Commission (1985-86) argued that there was inadequate data on the effects of pornography, and the lack of scientific consensus made it difficult to formulate a sound national policy. Donald L. Mosher, a professor of psychology at the University of Connecticut who had contributed three studies to the Report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) , told the Meese Commission as much when he testified in 1985. AD - Folder: "Houston -- 9/11/85 (Part I)," Box 2, RG 60 (Justice Dept. Records), National Archives and Records Administration (NARA 2), College Park, MD DA - Sept. 11, 1985 KW - +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research pornography, nonviolent Meese Commission testimony hearings media effects media effects, and nonviolent pornography children children, and pornography pornography, and children pornography, and opponents pornography, and harmful effects motion pictures social science research children, and media LB - 29250 N1 - Mosher, Donald L. PY - 1985 ST - Testimony, before the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Testimony, before the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography ID - 2695 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Although the Meese Commission (1985-86) skewed its witness list to those who emphasized pornography’s negative effects, it did receive some testimony from those who offered alternative views, even though their voices were in the minority. Richard Green, the founding editor of Archives of Sexual Behavior and a past president of the Society for the Scientific Study of Sex, argued that some types of sex-related crimes had decreased in Denmark and Germany as people bought more erotica. Pornography combined with masturbation, he said, provided “an outlet for anti-social sexual impulses.” He contended that erotica could be educational and therapeutic. He also criticized laboratory research that used student subjects – the kind of studies done by Edward Donnerstein and Neil Malamuth, for example – saying that it was an unreliable way to predict behavior. AD - Folder: "Houston -- 9/11/85 (Part I)," Box 2, RG 60 (Justice Dept. Records), National Archives and Records Administration (NARA 2), College Park, MD DA - Sept. 11, 1985 KW - motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research pornography, nonviolent Meese Commission testimony hearings media effects media effects, and nonviolent pornography children children, and pornography pornography, and children pornography, and opponents pornography, and positive effects motion pictures social science research children, and media LB - 29240 N1 - Green, Richard PY - 1985 ST - Testimony, before Attorney General's Commission on Pornography TI - Testimony, before Attorney General's Commission on Pornography ID - 2714 ER - TY - HEAR AB - This Staff Report from the Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights of the U. S. Senate's Committee on the Judiciary notes that "as long as surveillance technology remains unregulated and continues to grow at an accelerating rate, the free and enriching exercise of the rights guaranteed by the Constitution and the Bill of Rights will inevitably be chilled to the point of immobility by the general awareness that Big Brother commands the tools of omniscience." (iii) This report and related documents run almost 1,300 pages and includes about 90 pages of annotated bibliography relating to surveillance, computers, privacy, and government information. This work provides and excellent starting point for anyone wishing to study the state of electronic surveillence in 1976. AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1976 KW - computers nationalism government hearings surveillance technology privacy law freedom democracy nationalism and communication bibliographies home and new media information storage military communication civil liberties surveillance, electronic television surveillance, and television television, and surveillance computers, and surveillance surveillance, and computers wiretapping surveillance, and night vision devices surveillance, and sensors photography photography, and surveillance surveillance, and photography sound recording magnetic recording surveillance, and tape recording magnetic recording, and surveillance telephones telephones, and wiretapping surveillance, and telephones telephones, and surveillance timelines, and surveillance technology military communication, and surveillance war war, and surveillance surveillance, and war bibliographies, and surveillance (1976) bibliographies, and computers (1976) bibliographies, and privacy government government, and computers computers, and government nationalism, and computers computers, and nationalism government, and surveillance surveillance, and government references, statistics, timelines, maps surveillance computers and the Internet home privacy timelines computers LB - 33160 N1 - United States Senate, Committee on the Judiciary ST - Surveillance Technology: Policy and Implications: An Analysis and Compendium of Materials: A Staff Report of the Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights T2 - Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Ninety-Fourth Congress, Second Session Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights TI - Surveillance Technology: Policy and Implications: An Analysis and Compendium of Materials: A Staff Report of the Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights ID - 2956 ER - TY - HEAR AB - These hearings covered three topics: 1) "The Impact Abroad of U. S. Private Information Mass Media"; 2) "The Impact Abroad of Special Activities of Selected Private U. S. Organizations"; and 3) "The Problems and Techniques of International Communications." There are several interesting witnesses and statements regarding the role of American mass media in the Cold War. In his statement, Walter Joyce, then managing editor of Printers' Ink, says that the United States "possesses the resources for persuasive communications in such quantity and quality that we could turn the Communist siren song into an ineffectual moan. Our technology in transmitting sound, pictures, and printed word is unmatched." (531) He notes that the "official output of communications by our Government is minute compared with the dissemination of news and entertainment by our commercial news services, motion pictures companies, television producers, and magazines, newspaper, and book publishers. This mass of international communications is primariy the export of the same matter criticized here for its sex, sensationalism, and inanity. Outside the United States more than 150 million persons a week pay to see American movies. There are more than 1,100 television stations in other free world countries, and their fare is heavily loaded with old shows from U. S. television producers." (532) He also notes that "books, as a communications medium, command special attention because they may be the most important ideological weapon of all. The Communists rely on them heavily." (534) In another statement, George Englund, and producer and director with MGM, notes the impact abroad of movie advertising. Indeed, the advertising campaigns, which often precede the arrival of movies by up to six months, must be taken into account in any effort to calculate the impact of American films abroad. (536) AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1963 DA - Sept. 11, 12, 13, 1963 KW - nationalism nationalism motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign relation nationalism and communication propaganda motion pictures, and propaganda Cold War Cold War, and motion pictures motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Cold War books, periodicals, newspapers government government hearings radio radio, and foreign relations propaganda, and radio radio, and propaganda Cold War, and radio radio, and Cold War shortwave radio radio, shortwave Cold War, and shortwave radio Sevareid, Eric advertising and public relations Cold War, and advertising advertising, and propaganda Printers' Ink propaganda, and advertising television television, and foreign relations television, and propaganda television, and foreign countries Cold War, and television television, and Cold War advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising government government hearings advertising war LB - 33250 N1 - United States House of Representatives, Committee on Foreign Affairs PY - 1963 ST - Winning the Cold War: The U. S. Ideological Offensive: Part V T2 - Committee on Foreign Affairs, House of Representatives, Eighty-Eighth Congress, First Session Subcommittee on International Organizations and Movements TI - Winning the Cold War: The U. S. Ideological Offensive: Part V ID - 2965 ER - TY - HEAR AB - This 1,073-page history of the U.S. House of Representative's Committee on Science and Technology cover the period from 1959 to 1979. Although this work is not particularly well written or organized, it does have a reasonably good index and offers students a decent starting point to study Congress's efforts to formulate policy relating to science and technology in the first two decades after the launching of Sputnik by the USSR. AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1980 KW - technology R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) nationalism Johnson, Lyndon Eisenhower administration nationalism and communication aeronautics and space communication military communication research and development NASA satellites Cold War Sputnik space program National Science Foundation (NSF) OTA rocketry presidents and new media space shuttle satellites, and weather social science research U-2 plane Outer Space Treaty (1967) technology, and foreign relations technology, and international cooperation OPEC Science, Technology, and Diplomacy Act (1978) labor Cold War, and labor government government hearings materials Carter, Jimmy Eisenhower, Dwight D. Kennedy, John F. Johnson, Lyndon Nixon, Richard Ford, Gerald transportation energy technology, and energy genetic engineering NSF science space communication technology and society surveillance war LB - 33260 N1 - United States House of Representative, Committee on Science and Technology ST - Toward the Endless Frontier: History of the Committee on Science and Technology, 1959-79 T2 - Committee on Science and Technology, U. S. House of Representative TI - Toward the Endless Frontier: History of the Committee on Science and Technology, 1959-79 ID - 2966 ER - TY - HEAR AB - This Report examines the American research university and its relation to the federal government. It discusses several specific topics: interdisciplinary resesarch, national laboratories, international cooperation, Department of Defense research, energy, space, education, computers, materials, social sciences, ethics, technology, and biotechnology. For example, with regard to biotechnology, the Report notes that "the possibility exists for producing potentially hazardous altered life-forms. This fact must be acknowledged although it should be recognized at the outset that the prime concerns today are not with direct threats to man, but rather with blurring species lines, possible loss of genetic diversity and integrity, and unanticipated environmental harm. Nevertheless, we cannot ignore the fact that new life forms, ranging from viruses to men themselves, thugh innocently conceived, could turn out to be dangerous." (69) In a section entitled "The Forty Year Vista" (125-42), the Report looks back four decades and ahead into the future for a similar length of time. A list of recommendations follows, as well as a bibliography of other Background Report (Appendix B) and other Task Force on Science Policy Hearings (Appendix c). AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1986 KW - technology R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) computers research and development nationalism information technology Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) government government reports nationalism and communication research and development telecommunications computers computers and the Internet information storage supercomputers information technology, and science strategic computing initiative Reagan administration, and technology NASA National Security Agency DARPA DARPA, and strategic computing initiative artificial intelligence artificial intelligence and biotechnology Reagan administration, and strategic computing initiative networks, and computers publishing, electronic computers, and electronic computing materials government reports social science research, and government biotechnology military communication aeronautics and space communication education values values, and science bibliographies technology, and unintended consequences biotechnology, and unintended consequences bibliographies, and science policy national security networks publishing Reagan administration social science research technology and society LB - 33290 N1 - United States House of Representatives, Committee on Science and Technology ST - American Science and Science Policy Issues: Chairman's Report T2 - Committee on Science and Technology, U. S. House of Representatives, Ninety-Ninth Congress, Second Session (Serial AA) TI - American Science and Science Policy Issues: Chairman's Report ID - 2967 ER - TY - HEAR AB - This Report was prepared by Jane Bortnick and Nancy R. Miller of the Congressioinal Research Service, Library of Congress, and transmitted to the Task Force on Science Policy in the Committee on Science and Technology in the U. S. House of Representatives (99th Congress). It attempts assess the impact, "in some cases revolutionary impact on science," by information technologies during the previous quarter century. The Report discusses Federal support for university research, the recent relationship between universities and industry, computers and telecommunication networks, electronic publishing, and databases. The work also mention recent money allocated for the Reagan's administration's strategic computing initiative (e.g., p. 20). AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1986 KW - R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) computers research and development nationalism information technology Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) government government reports nationalism and communication research and development telecommunications computers computers and the Internet information storage supercomputers information technology, and science strategic computing initiative Reagan administration, and technology NASA National Security Agency DARPA DARPA, and strategic computing initiative artificial intelligence artificial intelligence and biotechnology Reagan administration, and strategic computing initiative networks, and computers publishing, electronic computers, and electronic computing military communication national security networks publishing Reagan administration LB - 33280 N1 - Congressional Research Service, Library of Congress ST - The Impact of Information Technology on Science: Science Policy Study Background Report No. 5 T2 - Committee on Science and Technology, U. S. House of Representatives, Ninety-Ninth Congress, Second Session (Serial T) TI - The Impact of Information Technology on Science: Science Policy Study Background Report No. 5 ID - 2968 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Among the topics that witnesses tackled in these hearings were such questions as how supercomputers help scientists to solve complex problems more rapidly that was possible in the past. AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1986 DA - Sept. 10, 11, 12, 1985 KW - R & D computers research and development nationalism information technology government government hearings nationalism and communication research and development telecommunications computers computers and the Internet information storage supercomputers information technology, and science computer graphics Reagan administration, and technology motion pictures motion pictures, and computer graphics motion pictures, and special effects military communication digital media Reagan administration LB - 33300 N1 - United States House of Representatives, Committee on Science and Technology PY - 1985 ST - The Impact of the Information Age on Science: Science Policy Study -- Hearings Volume 10 T2 - Committee on Science and Technology, U. S. House of Representatives, Ninety-Ninth Congress, First Session TI - The Impact of the Information Age on Science: Science Policy Study -- Hearings Volume 10 ID - 2969 ER - TY - HEAR AB - On the first day of these hearings, military officers involved with defense-related research testified. On the second day, representatives from Singer Company and General Electric, and a general involved with the Strategic Defense Initiative testified. AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1985 DA - Sept. 26, 27, 1984 KW - R & D computers strategic defense initiative (SDI) nationalism government government hearings computers computer graphics computers and the Internet photography digital photography digital media flight simulators digital media, and flight simulators research and development military communication nationalism and communication SDI LB - 33320 N1 - United States Senate, Committee on Armed Services PY - 1984 ST - Development and Use of Training Simulators, Hearings before the Subcommittee on Tactical Warfare T2 - Committee of Armed Services , United States Senate, Ninety-Eighth Congress, Second Session (S. Hrg. 98-1205) Subcommittee on Tactical Warfare TI - Development and Use of Training Simulators, Hearings before the Subcommittee on Tactical Warfare ID - 2971 ER - TY - HEAR AB - This 69-page annotated bibliography covers the period from 1965 to 1969, although basic works published prior to 1965 are also included. It is divided into four sections: 1) articles; 2) books and documents; 3) periodicals; and 4) bibliographic aids. AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1970 KW - technology R & D technology and society nationalism government government reports bibliographies bibliographies, annotated bibliography, and technology and foreign relations (1970) nationalism and communication miltiary communication technology, and foreign relations aeronautics and space communication satellites research and development LB - 33330 N1 - Science Policy Research and Foreign Affairs Divisions, Legislative Reference Service, Library of Congress ST - Science, Technology, and American Diplomacy: A Selected, Annotated Bibliography of Articles, Books, Documents, Periodicals, and Reference Guildes T2 - Committee on Foreign Affairs, U. S. House of Representatives Subcommittee on National Security Policy and Scientific Developments TI - Science, Technology, and American Diplomacy: A Selected, Annotated Bibliography of Articles, Books, Documents, Periodicals, and Reference Guildes ID - 2972 ER - TY - HEAR AB - This document is Science Policy Study Background Report No. 2 -- Part B. The bibliography, which is unannotated, is organized by year and moves foward chronologically giving reports for each year from 1945 through 1985. AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1986 KW - R & D nationalism government government reports bibliographies bibliographies, and science nationalism and communication research and development military communication National Academy of Sciences LB - 33340 N1 - United States House of Representatives, Committee on Science and Technology ST - Bibliography of Reports by the National Academy of Sciences, 1945-1985: Report Prepared for the Task Force on Science Policy T2 - Committee on Science and Technology, U. S. House of Representatives, Ninety-Ninth Congress, Second Session (Serial V) Task Force on Science Policy TI - Bibliography of Reports by the National Academy of Sciences, 1945-1985: Report Prepared for the Task Force on Science Policy ID - 2973 ER - TY - HEAR AB - These hearings are interesting for the information they give about the state of satellite broadcasting during the 1960s and projections for how such broadcasts might be use worldwide during the early 1970s. For example, discussion focused on the possibility and desirability of direct television broadcasts into people's homes by means of satellites. A map is given (p. 152) of the projected telecommunications network for Central and South America during the early 1970s. AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1969 DA - May 13, 14, 15, 22, 1969 KW - technology National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) nationalism government government hearings aeronautics and space communication satellites nationalism and communication military communication nationalism, and satellites military communication, and satellites satellites, and foreign policy technology, and foreign policy satellites, and television television television, and satellites motion pictures motion pictures, and satellites satellites, and motion pictures propaganda propaganda, and satellites satellites capitalism satellites, and capitalism capitalism, and satellites radio satellites, and radio radio, and satellites telecommunications global communication NASA technology and society LB - 33350 N1 - United States House of Representatives, Committee on Foreign Affairs PY - 1969 ST - Satellite Broadcasting: Implications for Foreign Policy T2 - Hearings before the Subcommittee on National Security Policy and Scientific Developments of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, House of Representatives, Ninety-First Congress, First Session Subcommittee on National Security Policy and Scientific Developments TI - Satellite Broadcasting: Implications for Foreign Policy ID - 2974 ER - TY - HEAR AB - This 77-page Report provides a useful history of United States science policy, beginning with the impact of World War I and its aftermath, then moving to World War II and the Cold War. Chapter VI is devoted to "Sputnik and Its Aftermath, 1957-1965." Chapter VII is entitled "The 'Crisis' in Government/Science Relations, 1965-1975." The last chapter (VIII) looks at science policy under Presidents Carter and Reagan. The work contains a detailed "Chronology of Federal Science Policy Developments, 1787-1985." (79-120) AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1986 KW - Truman administration R & D National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) computers Soviet Union nationalism Johnson, Lyndon Eisenhower administration Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) government government reports nationalism and communication military communication satellites research and development Sputnik USSR satellites, and U.S. foreign policy DARPA NASA Bush, Vannevar National Science Foundation (NSF) chronology, federal science policy timelines, federal science policy (1787-1985) Roosevelt, Franklin D. Truman, Harry Eisenhower, Dwight D. Kennedy, John F. Johnson, Lyndon Nixon, Richard Ford, Gerald Carter, Jimmy Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration, and science policy presidents and new media presidents, and science aeronautics and space communication computers computers and the Internet references, statistics, timelines, maps NSF Reagan administration timelines chronologies Roosevelt, Franklin administration LB - 33360 N1 - United States House of Representatives, Committee on Science and Technology ST - A History of Science Policy in the United States, 1940-1985: Report Prepared for the Task Force on Science Policy T2 - Committee on Science and Technology, U. S. House of Representatives, Ninety-Ninth Congress, Second Session (Serial R) TI - A History of Science Policy in the United States, 1940-1985: Report Prepared for the Task Force on Science Policy ID - 2975 ER - TY - HEAR AB - These hearings considered defense appropriations for the 1986 fiscal year. Much testimony involves the Strategic Defense Initiative but there is also discussion of electronic combat (222), support for a National Communication System (303), "genetic engineering which can be used to develop chemical and biological detection system, vaccine antidotes" and robotic/artificial intelligence systems to optimize the results that human operators can obtain from machines and als permit remote controlled hazardous operations." (451) There is also a section (640-49) that deals with DARPA's Strategic Computing Program. Charts show the increasing in computing power from the early 1960s to the mid-1980s, and predictions that new supercomputers will be "many orders of magnitude beyond the capability of the most competent machines available today." (640) At the time, there were "nine completely new and different types of computers," including the Butterfly processor that were either on contract or new to being under contract. Part of this program involved expanding cooperation with universities "to develop a whole new generation of computer scientists who are in the parlance of this technology and are competent artificial intelligence experts." (648) It notes that in the past MIT, Carengie-Mellon University, University of Southern California, Stanford, and Berkeley have been centers for this kind of research and that plans call for expanding research to support to other universities. AD - Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1985 DA - March 6, 7, 8, 19, 20, 21, 26, 27, 28, 29, 1985; April 2, 3,4 , 16, 1985 KW - computers strategic defense initiative (SDI) nationalism military-industrial complex Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) government government hearings military communication nationalism and communication computers and the Internet aeronautics and space communication computers strategic computing initiative Reagan, Ronald presidents and new media Reagan administration, and strategic computing initiative SDI Reagan administration and SDI war war, electronic satellites DARPA DARPA, and SDA DARPA, and strategic computing initiative supercomputers education military-industrial-research complex integrated circuits transistors artificial intelligence and biotechnology artificial intelligence biotechnology digital media Digital Network, Strategic Air Command Reagan administration LB - 33370 N1 - United States House of Representatives, Committee on Armed Services PY - 1985 ST - Defense Department Authorization and Oversight Hearings on H. R. 1872: Department of Defense Authorization of Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1986: Part 4 of 7 Parts, Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation -- Title II T2 - Committee on Armed Services, U. S. House of Representatives, Ninety-Ninth Congress, First Session TI - Defense Department Authorization and Oversight Hearings on H. R. 1872: Department of Defense Authorization of Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1986: Part 4 of 7 Parts, Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation -- Title II ID - 2976 ER - TY - HEAR AB - These hearings contain testimony from movie industry leaders about foreign markets for American films and the effect of those markets on film making. Several people note here that movies were now being made that appealed to international audiences rather than to strictly U. S. audiences. At this time, few Hollywood studios could break even on just the U. S. and Canadian market and foreign receipts accounted almost 50 percent of the studios' revenue. AD - (Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1956) KW - nationalism motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and independent producers motion pictures, and foreign film motion pictures, and American-interest films CinemaScope VistaVision motion pictures, and CinemaScope censorship and ratings military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and military censorship motion pictures, and foreign markets nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism propaganda motion pictures, and Cold War Cold War war LB - 35180 ST - Motion-Picture Distribution Trade Practices -- 1956: Problems of Independent Motion-Picture Exhibitors T2 - Hearings before Subcommittee of the Select Committee on Small Business, United States Senate, Eighty-Fourth Congress, Second Session TI - Motion-Picture Distribution Trade Practices -- 1956: Problems of Independent Motion-Picture Exhibitors ID - 3157 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Myers notes that as Hollywood increasingly came to expand its foreign markets and to become dependent on the revenue they generated, that the nature and content of American movies changed. "The aim is to make pictures with universal appeal -- pictures that will appeal to auddiences at home and abroad. This policy has virtually eliminated the American family-type pictures and those featuring familiar American sports and customs. Recently I heard an exhibitor bemoan the fact that for more than 4 years he has not been offered a football picture, although the American people are football conscious for about 4 months every year. That is quite obviously due to the fact that football, as we know it, is as unfamiliar to foreign audiences as soccer is to most Americans." (6) Myers at the time was Chairman of the Board and General Counsel for the Allied States Association of Motion-Picture Exhibitors. AD - (Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1956) KW - nationalism motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and independent producers motion pictures, and foreign film motion pictures, and American-interest films CinemaScope VistaVision motion pictures, and CinemaScope censorship and ratings military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and military censorship motion pictures, and foreign markets nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism LB - 35190 N1 - Myers, Abram F. SP - 2-64 ST - Statement and Testimony T2 - Hearings, Motion-Picture Distribution Trade Practices -- 1956: Problems of Independent Motion-Picture Exhibitors, U. S. Congress. Senate. Subcommittee of the Select Committee on Small Business, Eighty-Fourth Congress, Second Session TI - Statement and Testimony ID - 3158 ER - TY - HEAR AB - In this Statement, Berger, who was Director of the Allied States Association of Motion Picture Exhibitors, commented on the importance of the movie theater in local communities. He said: "A motion-picture theater in every community is not a dispensable luxury but a necessity. Much of the community of life and activity center around it. Other merchants are dependant upon it for much of their trade. Theaters cause traffic and traffic makes trade. But more important than that, they constitute an educational and cultural center." 93) AD - (Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1956) KW - audiences nationalism motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and independent producers motion pictures, and foreign film motion pictures, and American-interest films CinemaScope VistaVision motion pictures, and CinemaScope censorship and ratings military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and military censorship motion pictures, and foreign markets nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism theaters motion pictures, and theaters motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures capitalism LB - 35200 N1 - Berger, Benjamin N. SP - 90-100 ST - Statement T2 - Hearings, Motion-Picture Distribution Trade Practices -- 1956: Problems of Independent Motion-Picture Exhibitors, U. S. Congress. Senate. Subcommittee of the Select Committee on Small Business, Eighty-Fourth Congress, Second Session TI - Statement ID - 3159 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Kalmenson was Vice President and General Sales Manager for Warner Bros. and discusses several aspects of movie distribution and new technology, including Warner Bros.'s use of 3D and CinemaScope during the 1950s. He notes that by 1956, more than 15,000 theaters in the United States were equipped with CinemaScope (337). AD - (Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1956) KW - nationalism motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and independent producers motion pictures, and foreign film motion pictures, and American-interest films CinemaScope VistaVision motion pictures, and CinemaScope censorship and ratings military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and military censorship motion pictures, and foreign markets nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism motion pictures, and 3D motion pictures, Warner Bros. LB - 35210 N1 - Kalmenson, Benjamin SP - 335-41 ST - Statement T2 - Hearings, Motion-Picture Distribution Trade Practices -- 1956: Problems of Independent Motion-Picture Exhibitors, U. S. Congress. Senate. Subcommittee of the Select Committee on Small Business, Eighty-Fourth Congress, Second Session TI - Statement ID - 3160 ER - TY - HEAR AB - In this Statement, Freeman, then Vice President of Paramount Pictures, commented on several matters including the need for studios to produce films that appealed to an international audience rather than merely an American audience. With the foreign market, he said, Hollywood would soon be out of business. It became necessary, therefore, to “search for material to fit the international market rather than the domestic market,” and to produce films that appealed to “universal” tastes rather than to specific American preferences. (353) He also discussed cooperation with the Pentagon and on such topics as VistaVision (something Paramount spent more than $3 million on during the mid-1950s). KW - nationalism motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and independent producers motion pictures, and foreign film motion pictures, and American-interest films CinemaScope VistaVision motion pictures, and CinemaScope censorship and ratings military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and military censorship motion pictures, and foreign markets nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism motion pictures, and 3D motion pictures, Paramount LB - 35220 N1 - Freeman, Y. Frank SP - 347-60 ST - Statement T2 - Hearings, Motion-Picture Distribution Trade Practices -- 1956: Problems of Independent Motion-Picture Exhibitors, U. S. Congress. Senate. Subcommittee of the Select Committee on Small Business, Eighty-Fourth Congress, Second Session TI - Statement ID - 3161 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Montague noted that as Hollywood came to depend more and more on revenue from foreign markets to make profits during the 1950s, studios had “to produce pictures palatable to tastes in England, Italy and Japan as well as here at home.” (395) Montague was Vice President and General Sales Manager for Columbia Pictures. AD - (Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1956) KW - nationalism motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and independent producers motion pictures, and foreign film motion pictures, and American-interest films CinemaScope VistaVision motion pictures, and CinemaScope censorship and ratings military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and military censorship motion pictures, and foreign markets nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism motion pictures, and 3D motion pictures, Columbia Pictures LB - 35230 N1 - Montague, Abraham SP - 389-400 ST - Statement T2 - Hearings, Motion-Picture Distribution Trade Practices -- 1956: Problems of Independent Motion-Picture Exhibitors, U. S. Congress. Senate. Subcommittee of the Select Committee on Small Business, Eighty-Fourth Congress, Second Session TI - Statement ID - 3162 ER - TY - HEAR AB - At these hearings, Picker said that he know of "no industry so dependent on the overseas market for its welfare and health." (403) The technology of filmmaking lent itself to widespread distribution. Duplicating the print required relatively little additional investment, especially when compared to the return it could bring. And when compared with other large industries, distribution costs were easily manageable. As an executive from United Artists commented in 1956, it was “no more expensive” (405) to deliver a print in Europe than it was to deliver one in Fort Worth or Syracuse. And film had the added advantage of being “the greatest single instrument for spreading the American way of life throughout the world. (404) AD - (Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1956) KW - nationalism motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and independent producers motion pictures, and foreign film motion pictures, and American-interest films CinemaScope VistaVision motion pictures, and CinemaScope censorship and ratings military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and military censorship motion pictures, and foreign markets nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism motion pictures, and 3D motion pictures, United Artists LB - 35240 N1 - Picker, Arnold SP - 400-20 ST - Statement T2 - Hearings, Motion-Picture Distribution Trade Practices -- 1956: Problems of Independent Motion-Picture Exhibitors, U. S. Congress. Senate. Subcommittee of the Select Committee on Small Business, Eighty-Fourth Congress, Second Session TI - Statement ID - 3163 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Phillips, a Paramount vice president, told a U. S. Senate subcommittee in 1956, that o compete successfully in the international arena for foreign markets, the studios must not be “hamstrung by being glued to old standards” (457) or to outmoded marketing techniques AD - (Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1956) KW - nationalism motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and independent producers motion pictures, and foreign film motion pictures, and American-interest films CinemaScope VistaVision motion pictures, and CinemaScope censorship and ratings military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and military censorship motion pictures, and foreign markets nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism motion pictures, and 3D motion pictures, Paramount LB - 35250 N1 - Phillips, Louis SP - 445-67 ST - Statement T2 - Hearings, Motion-Picture Distribution Trade Practices -- 1956: Problems of Independent Motion-Picture Exhibitors, U. S. Congress. Senate. Subcommittee of the Select Committee on Small Business, Eighty-Fourth Congress, Second Session TI - Statement ID - 3164 ER - TY - HEAR AB - These hearings investigated a wide range of media including motion pictures, radio, television, books, and more. In includes the March 6, 1953, testimony and statement of Eric Johnston, president of the Motion Picture Association of America. AD - (Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1953) KW - nationalism motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and independent producers motion pictures, and foreign film motion pictures, and American-interest films CinemaScope VistaVision motion pictures, and CinemaScope censorship and ratings military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and military censorship motion pictures, and foreign markets nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism propaganda motion pictures, and Cold War Cold War books, periodicals, newspapers television radio propaganda, and television propaganda, and motion pictures propaganda, and radio propaganda, and libraries television, and propaganda motion pictures, and propaganda radio, and propaganda Johnston, Eric war LB - 35260 ST - Overseas Information Programs of the United States, Part 2 T2 - Hearings before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Foreign Relations, United States Senate, Eighty-Third Congress, First Session TI - Overseas Information Programs of the United States, Part 2 ID - 3165 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Johnston, who was then president of the Motion Picture Association of America, discusses the role of foreign markets in the American film industry. For Johnston and many of the studio executives, the Production Code seemed more of a hindrance than a help in attracting a global audience. When Johnston testified before members of the U. S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee in 1953, he told Senator J. William Fulbright that the Production Code was “very rigid” and “far more rigid than the code of any other country. In fact,” he said, “most other countries don’t even have a code.” (280) Moreover, in dealing with perhaps 70 or 80 countries worldwide, it was “almost impossible to set up a standard formula,” (290) he told Senator Karl Mundt. The MPAA therefore advised studios on a country-by-country basis. One picture might be “suitable for Norway” but “unsuitable for Turkey, suitable for France but unsuitable for Indonesia.” (290) Johnston noted that the Code screened out “extreme brutality, sexiness” (280) and other elements that critics such as Norman Cousins objected to, but at the same time, he undoubtedly understood that that fact may have put American films at a competitive disadvantage abroad. In offering audiences sex and violence, the movies produced in other countries were “far worse.” (280) AD - (Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1953) KW - self-regulation nationalism motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and independent producers motion pictures, and foreign film motion pictures, and American-interest films CinemaScope VistaVision motion pictures, and CinemaScope censorship and ratings military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and military censorship motion pictures, and foreign markets nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism propaganda motion pictures, and Cold War Cold War propaganda, and television propaganda, and motion pictures television, and propaganda motion pictures, and propaganda Johnston, Eric Production Code television war LB - 35270 N1 - Johnston, Eric SP - 231-91 ST - Statement and Testimony T2 - Hearings, Overseas Information Programs of the United States, U. S. Congress, Senate. Subcommittee of the Committee on Foreign Relations, Eighty-Third Congress, First Session TI - Statement and Testimony ID - 3166 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Edwards tells Senator J. William Fulbright that the State Department did make films abroad that that "the ones that are produced abroad are invariably produced by local private concerns, so that the finished product will be completely in the visual idiom of the country." (212) Edwards was Director, Motion Picture Service, IIA, U. S. Department of State. DA - Nov. 20, 21, 1952 KW - audiences nationalism motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and independent producers motion pictures, and foreign film motion pictures, and American-interest films CinemaScope VistaVision motion pictures, and CinemaScope censorship and ratings military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and military censorship motion pictures, and foreign markets nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism theaters motion pictures, and theaters motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures capitalism LB - 35280 N1 - Edwards, Herbert T. PY - 1952 SP - 124, 211-2 ST - Testimony T2 - Hearings, Overseas Information Programs of the United States. U. S. Congress. Senate. Subcommittee on the Committee on Foreign Relations, Eighty-Second Congress, Second Session TI - Testimony ID - 3167 ER - TY - HEAR AB - In Rembusch's statement (Exhibit no. 11), there is a list of the top 150 grossing Hollywood films of all time (as of early 1956) (75-76). These are films that made $4 million or more. Rembusch also quotes from a 1954 industry analysis by Sindlinger & Co. on television: "Television made the living room a little theater-- with all the comforts of home, offering a new entertainment medium - free of admission price and free of admission tax.... It is not only the use of television, but also the economic factor of paying for the box that keeps people away from the theaters." (71) KW - audiences nationalism motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and independent producers motion pictures, and foreign film motion pictures, and American-interest films censorship and ratings military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and military censorship motion pictures, and foreign markets nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism theaters motion pictures, and theaters motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures Blackboard Jungle television motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures audiences motion pictures, and audience television, audiences audiences, and television theaters television, and theaters theaters, and television capitalism LB - 36070 N1 - Rembusch, Trueman T. SP - 66-86 ST - Statement T2 - Hearings, Motion-Picture Distribution Trade Practices -- 1956: Problems of Independent Motion-Picture Exhibitors, U. S. Congress. Senate. Subcommittee of the Select Committee on Small Business, Eighty-Fourth Congress, Second Session TI - Statement UR - (Washington, DC: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1956) ID - 3243 ER - TY - HEAR AB - The subcommittee was chaired by U. S. Representative Kathryn E. Granahan (PA) and investigated the self-regulation policies of the motion picture and publishing industries. MPAA president Eric Johnston, PCA director Geoffrey Shurlock, and movie industry Advertising Code Administration director Gordon S. White, testified. Among the topics covered were the lack of regulation in the U. S. of foreign films, sensational or controversial themes in such movies as Suddenly, Last Summer and Advise and Consent (e.g., homosexuality), and the possibility of setting up a classification system for American films (Eric Johnston opposed such a plan). KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) censorship self-regulation sexuality sexuality MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Production Code, and homosexuality censorship, and homosexuality advertising and public relations Production Code, and advertising code advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising White, Gordon, and movie advertising MPAA, and advertising MPAA, and Production Code critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign films motion pictures, and foreign markets audiences motion pictures, and audiences sexuality Production Code, and Appeals Board violence Production Code, and foreign films advertising children LB - 36140 ST - Self-Policing of the Movie and Publishing Industry T2 - Hearing before the Subcommittee on Postal Operations of the Committee on Post Office and Civil Service, U. S. House of Representatives, Eighty-Sixth Congress, Second Session TI - Self-Policing of the Movie and Publishing Industry UR - (Washington, D.C.: Goverenment Printing Office, 1960) ID - 3248 ER - TY - HEAR AB - In his statement and testimony, Eric Johnston, MPAA president, discusses the Production Code, foreign films in the United States, his opposition of a classification system for movies (although he agreed some movies were inappropriate for children), censorship in the U. S. and the USSR, and specific films that had caused controversy such as Suddenly, Last Summer, and themes as homosexuality. Johnston came out strongly against any form of government censorship. If the government began to censor movies, it might well lead to censorship in other areas such as scientific research, he said. Johnston also responds to suggestions about expanding the MPAA's Appeal Board to include people who reflect the public interest better than movie producers do. Johnston did not think that plan was practical. KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) censorship self-regulation sexuality sexuality MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Production Code, and homosexuality censorship, and homosexuality advertising and public relations Production Code, and advertising code advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising White, Gordon, and movie advertising MPAA, and advertising MPAA, and Production Code critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign films motion pictures, and foreign markets audiences motion pictures, and audiences sexuality Production Code, and Appeals Board violence Production Code, and foreign films advertising children LB - 36150 N1 - Johnston, Eric SP - 3-28 ST - Statement and Testimony T2 - Hearings, Self-Policing of the Movie and Publishing Industry, before the Subcommittee on Postal Operations of the Committee on Post Office and Civil Service, U. S. House of Representatives, Eighty-Sixth Congress, Second Session TI - Statement and Testimony UR - (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1960) ID - 3249 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Shurlock, the director of the movie industry's Production Code Administration, discusses the state of the Code and the 1956 revision of that document. Shurlock discusses his philosophy in interpreting the Code and the depiction of sin in the movies. He discusses five censorship cases involving the films Serenade, Gigi, From Here to Eternity, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, and Peyton Place. Other movies discussed include Suddenly, Last Summer, and Advise and Consent. KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) censorship self-regulation sexuality sexuality MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Production Code, and homosexuality censorship, and homosexuality advertising and public relations Production Code, and advertising code advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising White, Gordon, and movie advertising MPAA, and advertising MPAA, and Production Code critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign films motion pictures, and foreign markets audiences motion pictures, and audiences sexuality Production Code, and Appeals Board violence Production Code, and foreign films advertising children LB - 36160 N1 - Shurlock, Geoffrey ST - Statement and Testimony T2 - Hearings, Self-Policing of the Movie and Publishing Industry, before the Subcommittee on Postal Operations of the Committee on Post Office and Civil Service, U. S. House of Representatives, Eighty-Sixth Congress, Second Session TI - Statement and Testimony UR - 28-36, 39-54 ID - 3250 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Gordon White, the Director of the motion picture industry's Advertising Code Administration, discusses how the MPAA polices ads for films. A copy of the Advertising Code is attached to his testimony. KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) censorship self-regulation sexuality sexuality MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Production Code, and homosexuality censorship, and homosexuality advertising and public relations Production Code, and advertising code advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising White, Gordon, and movie advertising MPAA, and advertising MPAA, and Production Code critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign films motion pictures, and foreign markets audiences motion pictures, and audiences motion pictures, and Advertising Code sexuality Production Code, and Appeals Board violence Production Code, and foreign films advertising children LB - 36170 N1 - White, Gordon S. SP - 54-72 ST - Testimony T2 - Hearings, Self-Policing of the Movie and Publishing Industry, before the Subcommittee on Postal Operations of the Committee on Post Office and Civil Service, U. S. House of Representatives, Eighty-Sixth Congress, Second Session TI - Testimony ID - 3251 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Brandt was Governor of the Independent Film Importers and Distributors of America. He says that his association imports about 100 to 150 films a year (excluding films in the Chinese and German language without subtitles) and that only five or six get a PCA seal. (89) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) censorship self-regulation sexuality sexuality MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Production Code, and homosexuality censorship, and homosexuality advertising and public relations Production Code, and advertising code advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising White, Gordon, and movie advertising MPAA, and advertising MPAA, and Production Code critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign films motion pictures, and foreign markets audiences motion pictures, and audiences sexuality Production Code, and Appeals Board violence Production Code, and foreign films advertising children LB - 36180 N1 - Brandt, Richard SP - 72-90 ST - Statement and Testimony T2 - Hearings, Self-Policing of the Movie and Publishing Industry, before the Subcommittee on Postal Operations of the Committee on Post Office and Civil Service, U. S. House of Representatives, Eighty-Sixth Congress, Second Session TI - Statement and Testimony ID - 3252 ER - TY - HEAR AB - Twyman was Director of Community Relations for the Motion Picture Association of America. She discusses ways in which the movie industry tries to make the public aware of movies: 1) submitting films in advance to critics; 2) making movies available to independent national organizations for them to review; 3) special promotions for outstanding films; 4) informing educators. KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) censorship self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Production Code, and homosexuality censorship, and homosexuality advertising and public relations Production Code, and advertising code advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising White, Gordon, and movie advertising MPAA, and advertising MPAA, and Production Code critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign films motion pictures, and foreign markets audiences motion pictures, and audiences sexuality Production Code, and Appeals Board violence Production Code, and foreign films MPAA, and Twyman, Margaret G. MPAA, and Brandt, Richard MPAA, and Abram Myers advertising children MPAA LB - 36190 N1 - Twyman, Margaret G. SP - 92-110 ST - Statement and Testimony T2 - Hearings, Self-Policing of the Movie and Publishing Industry, before the Subcommittee on Postal Operations of the Committee on Post Office and Civil Service, U. S. House of Representatives, Eighty-Sixth Congress, Second Session TI - Statement and Testimony ID - 3253 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This brief piece talks about how the use of color transformed a dinner party and how color was being used in factories. DA - Aug. 1939 IS - 208 KW - color LB - 2470 N1 - See filed under Reader's Digest. PY - 1939 SP - 112 ST - The Magic Wand of Color T2 - Reader's Digest TI - The Magic Wand of Color VL - 35 ID - 335 ER - TY - JOUR AB - These excerpts taken from Future consider how color is being used in packinghouses, restaurants, operating rooms, classrooms, and in shoe manufacturing. DA - June, 1941 IS - 239 KW - color LB - 2490 N1 - See filed under Reader's Digest. PY - 1941 SP - 134-35 ST - Meet the Color Engineer T2 - Reader's Digest TI - Meet the Color Engineer VL - 38 ID - 337 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This 1969 article appeared in an issue devoted to the previous fifty years in the technology of cinema. This article notes, for example, that in 1898, William Randolph Hearst sent Gottlob Wilhelm "Billy" Bitzer to take motion pictures of the Spanish-American War in Cuba, but Bitzer failed "because he could find no way to transport his heavy camera equipment from the beacvhes to the inland areas where military operations were in progress." This failure led to the invention of the light, more portable Mutoscope camera, patened in July, 1899. DA - Jan. 1969 IS - 1 KW - R & D nationalism history nationalism Wilson, Woodrow radio wireless communication Wilson, Woodrow, administration presidents, and new media preservation motion pictures research and development war history, and new media history, and new media war non-USA motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, history of Wilson, Woodrow, and motion pictures motion pictures, and D. W. Griffith motion pictures, and G. W. (Billy) Bitzer motion pictures, and early technology Spanish-American War, and motion pictures Hearst, William Randolph, and motion pictures cameras, and motion pictures motion pictures, and camera improvements +nationalism and communication nationalism, and motion pictures history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history military communication military, and motion pictures cameras, and Mutoscope camera motion pictures, and Mutoscope camera history cameras Hearst, William Randolph Spain LB - 3270 PY - 1969 SP - 86-91 ST - The Film Artistry of D. W. Griffith and Billy Bitzer T2 - American Cinematographer TI - The Film Artistry of D. W. Griffith and Billy Bitzer VL - 50 ID - 415 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The writer of this piece takes the view that “as an educator,” film had “no equal.” He discusses changes in cinematography that are making it more accessible to a broader public and makes it possible to produced home movies. Already by this time, many schools were purchasing motion picture equipment as the technology became smaller and safer (e.g., inflammable film) and they had begun collecting educational movies for their libraries. The results, so claimed one publication for those working in art and design, were astounding. Now, thanks to films, even a child of only eight knew “far more of physiology, geology, geography, or bird and animal life the world over than most of his elders.” Even more amazingly, all this information had “been absorbed with no tax to the youthful mind or memory.” Not only can film teach history but it can capture the past. "There is another and intimate phase of this new art that makes an even broader appeal; we can have animated pictures of our loved ones; we can preserve for next year the beauty of this year's garden, and for the years to come the charms of childhood. Here is the great human appeal of the home movie. Here is the opportunity to visualize, at least, 'the touch of a vanished hand.'" DA - Sept. 1919 KW - history ref, Arts and Decoration education motion pictures motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures cameras, portable film film, inflammable history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and home movies home and new media cameras, and home movies film, and home movies ref, mag cameras home LB - 42720 PY - 1919 SP - 230 ST - Cinematography, a New Art for Amateurs T2 - Arts and Decoration TI - Cinematography, a New Art for Amateurs VL - 11 ID - 447 ER - TY - JOUR AB - If the photoplay was an art, said The Nation in 1913, it was “not a very high art” and one “created for the masses and largely by them.” Granted the medium had a “universal appeal,” the magazine said, but it was one that went directly to “elementary emotions.” The movies simply replaced “the old-fashioned melodrama” and it was doubtful that they imparted much in the way of serious knowledge. “To watch one of these exhibitions is like seeing an animated popular magazine, without the labor or turning the pages. And like the picture magazine it requires no thought and little attention.” The author says that movies are something more than just "popular" -- the are "intimate," and "To an extraordinary extent" they are "entering into the daily thought of the masses." They appeal to "all nations, all ages, all classes, both sexes" and the "crowds not only throng to the shows; they talk about them, on street corners, in the cars, and over the hoods of baby carriages." DA - Aug. 28, 1913 KW - critics words vs. images critics, and motion pictures democracy education democracy, and motion pictures education, and motion pictures ref, Nation ref, political ref, mag children and media media effects motion pictures, and emotions motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and universal appeal audiences motion pictures images vs. words LB - 42730 PY - 1913 SP - 193 ST - A Democratic Art T2 - The Nation TI - A Democratic Art VL - 97 ID - 452 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Articles criticizing Will H. Hays appear in this publication. DA - July 6, Aug. 3, Sept. 21, Nov. 2, Dec. 7, Dec. 28, 1929 KW - values Christianity Christianity Protestants values religion values morality values religion +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Hays, Will H. motion pictures, and critics Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity Protestants, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Protestants morality, and motion pictures critics LB - 13450 PY - 1929 T2 - Churchman ID - 516 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Contains articles critical of Will H. Hays and the motion picture industry. DA - 1929-1930 KW - values Christianity Christianity Protestants values religion values morality values religion +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Hays, Will H. motion pictures, and critics Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity Protestants, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Protestants morality, and motion pictures values, and motion pictures values LB - 13460 PY - 1929 T2 - Christian Century ID - 517 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This publication has a good deal about the content of motion pictures. Payne Fund Studies author Edgar Dale used this publication for plot summaries of 500 feature films between 1920 and 1930 for his book The Content of Motion Pictures (1935). DA - 1920-1930 KW - +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and content LB - 13560 PY - 1920 T2 - Harrison Reports ID - 526 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Daniel Lord edited this Catholic magazine for many years. Lord was the primary architect of the motion picture Production Code, and this publication gives insight into his ideas. DA - 1920-1950 KW - values Christianity religion values morality Catholic Church Catholic Church, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholic Church motion pictures, and critics motion pictures, and morality morality, and motion pictures Lord, Daniel A. +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture LB - 13770 PY - 1920 T2 - Queen's Work ID - 536 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Color was used in magazine advertising thoughout the twentieth century. During the late 1940s, the Saturday Evening Post has many examples of color advertising. DA - 1949 (late 1940s) KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers +books, periodicals, newspapers color color, and magazines magazines, and color advertising, and color color, and advertising advertising magazines LB - 17200 PY - 1949 T2 - Saturday Evening Post ID - 649 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This publication, aimed at women, is a good source for finding color advertisements. Color ads were used by magazines throughout the twentieth century. During the late 1940s and early 1950s, they were widely used. DA - late 1940s, early 1950s KW - women, and new media advertising, and public relations women propaganda public relations news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers +books, periodicals, newspapers color color, and magazines magazines, and color advertising, and color color, and advertising advertising magazines magazines, and women women, and magazines LB - 17210 PY - 1940 T2 - Ladies Home Journal ID - 650 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Playboy was a magazine that exploited such technology as color photography in its nude photographs of women. Its circulation rose sharply during the 1960s and it was influential in the youth culture of that decade. It feature articles from leading writers and intellectuals. Some, such as Arthur C. Clarke and Alvin Toffler, discussed the impact of new media on society. During the mid-1980s, the magazine became a target for Meese Commission and anti-pornography crusades. DA - 1950s-1990s KW - corporations magazines corporations sexuality pornography Playboy sexuality obscenity sexuality law censorship and ratings censorship color color, and magazines magazines, and color pornography, and magazines magazines, and pornography nudity nudity, and magazines magazines, and nudity +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines censorship, and magazines magazines, and censorship obscenity, and magazines magazines, and obscenity, Meese Commission anti-pornography crusade, Curtis Circulation Company K-Mart Wal-Mart Playboy, and circulation decline Hefner, Hugh anti-pornography crusade LB - 17220 PY - 1950 T2 - Playboy ID - 651 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In a case that had implications for Hollywood publicity, the Supreme Court in 1946 narrowed the federal government’s power to regulate sexual images in magazines when it unanimously overturned the postmaster general’s decision in 1943 to deny mailing privileges to Esquire on the grounds that it included cartoons, pictures, and other sexual material that reflected a “smoking-room type of humor.” Written by Justice William O. Douglas, the decision contributed to proliferation of so-called girlie publications. Esquire was also one of the early magazines after World War II that devoted space to showing pictures of partially nude women. KW - magazines Esquire magazine sexuality pornography obscenity sexuality law censorship and ratings censorship color color, and magazines magazines, and color pornography, and magazines magazines, and pornography nudity nudity, and magazines magazines, and nudity +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines censorship, and magazines magazines, and censorship Esquire case obscenity, and magazines magazines, and obscenity LB - 17230 SP - 1940s-1960s T2 - Esquire ID - 652 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This publication was among the male-oriented magazines that featured nude and semi-nude pictures of women during the 1950s and 1960s. These magazines often took advantages of recent developments in camera technology such as color photography. DA - 1950s, 1960s KW - magazines sexuality pornography obscenity sexuality law censorship and ratings censorship color color, and magazines magazines, and color pornography, and magazines magazines, and pornography nudity nudity, and magazines magazines, and nudity +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines censorship, and magazines magazines, and censorship obscenity, and magazines magazines, and obscenity LB - 17240 PY - 1950 T2 - Cavalier ID - 653 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This publication was among the male-oriented magazines that featured nude and semi-nude pictures of women during the 1950s and 1960s. These magazines often took advantages of recent developments in camera technology. DA - 1950s, 1960s KW - magazines sexuality pornography obscenity sexuality law censorship and ratings censorship color color, and magazines magazines, and color pornography, and magazines magazines, and pornography nudity nudity, and magazines magazines, and nudity +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines censorship, and magazines magazines, and censorship obscenity, and magazines magazines, and obscenity LB - 17250 PY - 1950 T2 - Rogue ID - 654 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This publication was one of many male-oriented magazines that featured nude pictures of women. The magazine exploited improvements in photography that had taken place during the 1950s and 1960s. DA - 1950s, 1960s KW - magazines sexuality pornography obscenity sexuality law censorship and ratings censorship color color, and magazines magazines, and color pornography, and magazines magazines, and pornography nudity nudity, and magazines magazines, and nudity +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines censorship, and magazines magazines, and censorship obscenity, and magazines magazines, and obscenity LB - 17260 PY - 1950 T2 - Stag ID - 655 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This publication was one of many male-oriented magazines that featured nude pictures of women. The magazine exploited improvements in photography that had taken place during the 1950s and 1960s. DA - 1960s KW - magazines sexuality pornography obscenity sexuality law censorship and ratings censorship color color, and magazines magazines, and color pornography, and magazines magazines, and pornography nudity nudity, and magazines magazines, and nudity +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines censorship, and magazines magazines, and censorship obscenity, and magazines magazines, and obscenity LB - 17290 PY - 1960 T2 - U. S. Male ID - 656 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This publication was one of many male-oriented magazines that featured nude pictures of women. The magazine exploited improvements in photography that had taken place during the 1950s and 1960s. DA - 1960s KW - magazines sexuality pornography obscenity sexuality law censorship and ratings censorship color color, and magazines magazines, and color pornography, and magazines magazines, and pornography nudity nudity, and magazines magazines, and nudity +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines censorship, and magazines magazines, and censorship obscenity, and magazines magazines, and obscenity LB - 17300 PY - 1960 T2 - Jaguar ID - 657 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This magazine is interesting for many reasons, among them its use of color, nudity, and appeal to women during the 1960s and 1970s. DA - 1960s, 1970s KW - magazines women, and new media women sexuality pornography obscenity sexuality law censorship and ratings censorship color color, and magazines magazines, and color pornography, and magazines magazines, and pornography nudity nudity, and magazines magazines, and nudity +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines censorship, and magazines magazines, and censorship obscenity, and magazines magazines, and obscenity women, and magazines magazines, and women pornography, and women LB - 17320 PY - 1960 T2 - Cosmopolitan ID - 658 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is about the first nude to appear on television. DA - Oct., 1968 KW - sexuality +television television, and nudity magazines, and nudity nudity nudity, and television magazines LB - 17400 PY - 1968 ST - TV's First Nude T2 - Playboy TI - TV's First Nude ID - 661 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This 1969 piece was part of an issue devoted to the previous fifty years in the technology of cinema. This article gives a brief history of sound in motion pictures. "Through the years, the art of sound recording improved, but only incremental changes were made in the equipment until the advent of magnet recording during 1947 and 1948." DA - Jan. 1969 IS - 1 KW - magnetic recording materials materials magnetic tape +sound recording +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and sound recording cameras, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures sound recording, and cameras cameras, portable sound recording, and portable sound recording, and magnetic tape magnetic sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magnetic sound recording cameras LB - 17600 N1 - See filed under American Cinematographer (1969). PY - 1969 SP - 84-85 ST - The Film Finds Its Voice T2 - American Cinematographer TI - The Film Finds Its Voice VL - 50 ID - 679 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This 1969 piece examines the use of color in movies. After World War II, better film and lighting made it easier to shoot movies on location. In 1949, Eastman Color introduced a multilayer negative and printing film stock that made it possible to use virtually any 35mm camera to shoot color features, even low-budget color movies. The breakthrough convinced Technicolor to do away with its unwieldy cameras. "The appearance of the market in 1949 of the Eastman Color single-strip negative and printing film stock was an event that literally revolutionized color filming and heralded the approach of the day (now at hand) when black and white theatrical features would all but disappear from the screens of the world." DA - Jan., 1969 IS - 1 KW - sex motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality corporations cinematography motion pictures lighting cameras color Technicolor Techniscope Eastman Kodak color, and low budet sex scences motion pictures, and sex sexuality lighting, and sex scenes color, and sex scenes sex scenes, low budget motion pictures, day for night photography motion pictures, and location shooting motion pictures, and Technicolor motion pictures, and Eastman Kodak motion pictures, and early color processes color, and early motion pictures motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures LB - 17840 N1 - See filed under American Cinematographer (1969). PY - 1969 SP - 80-83, 120-21, 168-71, 164-66, 178 ST - Color In The Motion Picture T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Color In The Motion Picture VL - 50 ID - 694 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This 1969 piece was part of an issue devoted to the past fifty years of cinema technology. This article gives an overview of developments in cinematography and serves as an introduction to other articles in this issue. DA - Jan., 1969 IS - 1 KW - context color +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and history of context, and movie technology LB - 17850 N1 - See filed under American Cinematographer (1969). PY - 1969 SP - 52-56, 106-07, 131, 144-46, 160-66 ST - Fifty Years -- Or More -- of Evolving Cinema Technique T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Fifty Years -- Or More -- of Evolving Cinema Technique VL - 50 ID - 695 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This 1969 piece is part of an issue devoted to the previous fifty years in the technology of cinema. This article discusses major development in the processing of film. The article concludes by noting that the "probably the most singificant postwar [World War II] development occurred in 1962 with Bell & Howell's introduction of an automatic additive color printer. This type of equipment has done more to influence the control and quality of uniformity than any other single recent development." DA - Jan., 1969 IS - 1 KW - corporations corporations cinema motion pictures celluloid film context color +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and history of context, and movie technology color motion pictures, and laboratories color, and motion picture labs Bell & Howell color, and Kodachrome film motion pictures, and Kodachrome film film, safety motion pictures, and safety film materials LB - 17860 N1 - See filed under American Cinematographer (1969). PY - 1969 SP - 104-05, 167, 174-76 ST - Highlights of Lab History T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Highlights of Lab History VL - 50 ID - 696 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This 1969 piece appeared in an issue devoted the previous fifty years in the technology of cinema. This article discusses the wide range of film widths used in the history of motion pictures DA - Jan., 1969 IS - 1 KW - cinema motion pictures celluloid film context color +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and history of context, and movie technology motion pictures, and film width film, and film width materials LB - 17890 N1 - See filed under American Cinematographer (1969). PY - 1969 SP - 98-99, 101, 103 ST - A Pot-Pourri of Film Widths and Sprocket Holes T2 - American Cinematographer TI - A Pot-Pourri of Film Widths and Sprocket Holes VL - 50 ID - 698 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This 1969 piece appeared in an issue devoted to the previous fifty years in the technology of cinema. This article deals with movie cameras and concentrates largely on the period before World War I (1914-18). DA - Jan., 1969 IS - 1 KW - corporations corporations context color +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and history of context, and movie technology cameras motion pictures, and cameras cameras, and motion pictures Bell & Howell cameras, and Bell and Howell cameras, and Mitchell LB - 17900 N1 - See filed under American Cinematographer (1969). PY - 1969 SP - 78-79, 116 ST - Milestone Movie Cameras T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Milestone Movie Cameras VL - 50 ID - 699 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This entire issue was devoted to widescreen cinema. It also included bibliography on the subject. DA - Summer, 1985 IS - 21 KW - +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and widescreen +bibliographies bibliographies, and widescreen cinema LB - 18220 PY - 1985 ST - [Widescreen Cinema] T2 - Velvet Light Trap TI - [Widescreen Cinema] ID - 731 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article profiles Jack Valenti, then assistant to President Lyndon B. Johnson. Valenti became president of the Motion Picture Association of America in 1966. DA - April 3, 1964 IS - 14 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti LB - 19610 PY - 1964 SP - 25-26 ST - The Little Man Who's Always There T2 - Time TI - The Little Man Who's Always There VL - 83 ID - 795 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses Jack Valenti's considerable admiration for President Lyndon B. Johnson. DA - July 9, 1965 IS - 2 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA addresses, Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti addresses LB - 19650 PY - 1965 SP - 19-20 ST - Of Extra Glands, Giant Agony And the Grey Stone Mountain [re Jack Valenti] T2 - Time TI - Of Extra Glands, Giant Agony And the Grey Stone Mountain [re Jack Valenti] VL - 86 ID - 799 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article deals with Jack Valenti, Lyndon Johnson, and the origins of Valenti's work with the Motion Picture Association of America. DA - May 9, 1966 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti LB - 19680 PY - 1966 SP - 26-27 ST - Presidency: Revolving Door at 1600 T2 - Newsweek TI - Presidency: Revolving Door at 1600 VL - 67 ID - 802 ER - TY - JOUR AB - An article about Jack Valenti leaving his position as assistant to President Lyndon B. Johnson to become president of the Motion Picture Association of America. DA - May 2, 1966 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and MPAA LB - 19750 PY - 1966 SP - 38-39 ST - Valenti Exits White House for MPAA Post T2 - Broadcasting: The Business Weekly of Television and Radio TI - Valenti Exits White House for MPAA Post VL - 70 ID - 807 ER - TY - JOUR AB - An article that reveals Jack Valenti's deep admiration of President Lyndon B. Johnson. DA - July 12, 1965 IS - 2 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and MPAA LB - 19760 PY - 1965 SP - 22 ST - A Top Aide's Close-Up of a President Who Never Says 'I'm Tired' T2 - U. S. News & World Report TI - A Top Aide's Close-Up of a President Who Never Says 'I'm Tired' VL - 59 ID - 808 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses Jack Valenti, former assistant to President Lyndon B. Johnson and then the new president of the Motion Picture Association of America. DA - Sept. 2, 1966 IS - 10 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA self-regulation Production Code National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA values religion Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and MPAA Valenti, Jack, and Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code, and Jack Valenti Alfie, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and Alfie Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Alfie Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? LB - 19770 PY - 1966 SP - 38 ST - Hollywood: The First 100 Days T2 - Time TI - Hollywood: The First 100 Days VL - 88 ID - 809 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses Jack Valenti's background, including is work with the Lyndon B. Johnson administration. Valenti was president of the Motion Picture Association of America. DA - Sept. 16, 1974 IS - 12 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and MPAA LB - 19780 PY - 1974 SP - 57 ST - MPAA's Jack Valenti: Parlayer of Power T2 - Broadcasting TI - MPAA's Jack Valenti: Parlayer of Power VL - 87 ID - 810 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article asks if Jack Valenti "will be more than a front man, a resplendent chief usher to the world. The biggest guns in the West didn't saddle him up to be a Trojan horse." ( 85) DA - July 4, 1966 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA self-regulation Production Code National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA values religion Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and MPAA Production Code, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and Production Code (motion pictures) Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Valenti, Jack, and quotation Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? LB - 19870 PY - 1966 SP - 84-85 ST - Who's Afraid ... of Jack Valenti? T2 - Newsweek TI - Who's Afraid ... of Jack Valenti? VL - 68 ID - 818 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article talks about Richard D. Heffner and public television. DA - April 29, 1963 KW - +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and background Heffner, Richard Open Mind, and Richard Heffner +television television, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and television Heffner, Richard, and Open Mind LB - 20170 PY - 1963 SP - 86 ST - Very Educational T2 - Newsweek TI - Very Educational VL - 61 ID - 839 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece discusses Richard Heffner and public television. Heffner, who described himself as a Jeffersonian liberal, later became head of the motion picture industry Classification and Rating Administration. DA - Sept. 17, 1962 KW - values education community democracy +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures +television Heffner, Richard television, and education Heffner, Richard, and television Heffner, Richard, and TV and education television, and values values, and television Heffner, Richard, and values democracy, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and democracy Heffner, Richard, and public television democracy, and television television, and democracy education, and television values LB - 20200 PY - 1962 SP - 58 ST - Funny Thing Happened T2 - Newsweek TI - Funny Thing Happened VL - 58 ID - 841 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses what research seemed to show about the impact of watching violence on television and in other forms of mass entertainment. By the time the average person had reached 18 years of age, they had seen literally thousands of murders enacted on TV and movies. DA - Feb. 21, 1977 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations violence media effects media violence sexuality censorship and ratings children +television children, and media television, and violence violence violence, and television advertising, and television advertising, and children television, and advertising television, and children media effects, and TV violence advertising LB - 20460 PY - 1977 SP - 62-63 ST - What TV Does to Kids T2 - Newsweek TI - What TV Does to Kids VL - 89 ID - 860 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article examines legal issues involving X-rated entertainment and cable television. DA - Fall, 1973 IS - 1 KW - entertainment Federal Communications Commission (FCC) entertainment, home values sexuality obscenity religion values morality home entertainment regulation values community law censorship and ratings censorship home court cases law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures +television FCC, and television television, and FCC cable TV, and FCC FCC, and cable TV censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship? motion pictures, and freedom motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures censorship, and community standards community standards, and censorship pornography pornography, and television pornography, and theaters pornography, and community standards, theaters motion pictures, and cable television television, and motion pictures FCC indecency law, and indecency cable television, and indecency indecency, and cable television morality, and cable television pornography, and television television, and pornography home entertainment revolution pornography, and home X-rated films cable home, and new media values LB - 20510 PY - 1973 SP - 107-24 ST - X-Rated Motion Pictures: From Restricted Theatres and Drive-ins to the Television Screen? T2 - Valparaiso University Law Review TI - X-Rated Motion Pictures: From Restricted Theatres and Drive-ins to the Television Screen? VL - 8 ID - 863 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This issue has information about the origins of the motion picture rating system, formally adopted later in 1968. Theater owners -- NATO was their major national organization -- were principal participants in the formulation and acceptance of this new rating plan. DA - June, 1968 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) theaters theater owners censorship and ratings rating systems (non-USA) rating system (U.S.) NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), origins NATO MPAA LB - 21170 PY - 1968 SP - 1-2 ST - Directors Approve Voluntary Classification at Scottsdale Meeting T2 - National Association of Theatre Owners, Inc., Newsletter TI - Directors Approve Voluntary Classification at Scottsdale Meeting VL - 3 ID - 918 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article deals with the American film industry's attempts to combat video piracy. Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, estimated that 9,000 to 10,000 video rental stores in Japan handle tapes that have pirated, and that the stores often make copies for customers. Worldwide, Valenti estimated that the American movie industry loses about a billion dollars each year to illegally copied cassettes. DA - Feb. 18, 1987 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) piracy video cassette recorders (VCRs) MPAA magnetic recording motion pictures Hollywood materials materials videotape magnetic tape law copyright law non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture Japan VCRs video piracy video piracy, and Japan Japan, and VCRs Japan, and video piracy Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and video piracy Valenti, Jack, and Japan Hollywood, and foreign commerce copyright, and video piracy intellectual property law, and video piracy LB - 21610 PY - 1987 SP - 4A (Foreign Trade Section) ST - Japanese Urged to Control Video Cassette Tape Piracy T2 - Journal of Commerce TI - Japanese Urged to Control Video Cassette Tape Piracy ID - 929 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Penthouse, together with Playboy, was a magazine that exploited such technology as color photography in its nude photographs of women. During the mid-1980s, the magazine became a target for Meese Commission and anti-pornography crusades. DA - 1970s-1990s KW - corporations morality magazines corporations sexuality pornography sexuality Penthouse obscenity sexuality law censorship and ratings censorship color color, and magazines magazines, and color pornography, and magazines magazines, and pornography nudity nudity, and magazines magazines, and nudity +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines censorship, and magazines magazines, and censorship obscenity, and magazines magazines, and obscenity, Meese Commission anti-pornography crusade Curtis Circulation Company K-Mart Wal-Mart Penthouse and circulation decline Moral Majority LB - 22140 PY - 1970 T2 - Penthouse ID - 947 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This magazine, oriented toward a mass audience, is interesting for many reasons. With regard to movies and pornography, critics of the movie industry such as Maine Senator Margaret Chase Smith used its pages to attack sex and violence in films. Later, critics of the 1970 Presidential Commission on Obscenity and Pornography attacked research that said erotica was not harmful and restrictions on it should be loosened. DA - 1960s-1980s KW - classification self-regulation CARA censorship and ratings rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) sexuality motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture pornography pornography, and critics Smith, Margaret Chase censorship censorship, and motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) critics LB - 22150 PY - 1960 T2 - Reader's Digest ID - 948 ER - TY - JOUR AB - According to testimony at the Meese Commission hearings, this Penthouse-owned magazine carried advertisements that show/promoted violence against women. DA - 1980s KW - women, and new media advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations sexuality media effects media violence pornography women violence violence, and women advertising advertising, and violence women, and violence media effects media effects, and violence LB - 22250 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1980 T2 - Newlook ID - 953 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This magazine, the female version of Playboy, exploited such technology as modern photography in its nude picture of men. During the mid-1980s, the Meese Commission targeted it as part of an offensive against pornography. DA - 1985-87 KW - magazines sexuality pornography sexuality obscenity sexuality law censorship and ratings censorship color color, and magazines magazines, and color pornography, and magazines magazines, and pornography nudity nudity, and magazines magazines, and nudity +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines censorship, and magazines magazines, and censorship obscenity, and magazines magazines, and obscenity, Meese Commission anti-pornography crusade Playgirl, and circulation decline Playgirl LB - 23040 PY - 1985 T2 - Playgirl ID - 1028 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This publication was critical of Hollywood's relationship to substance abuse and pornography, and also of the movie industry's adoption of a new rating category, PG-13, in 1984. DA - 1985 KW - classification self-regulation CARA censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating systems (non-USA) Protestants values motion pictures Hollywood values religion law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and motion pictures Wall, James National Council of Churches motion pictures, and critics Hollywood, and religion rating system (U. S.), and Protestants rating system (U. S.), and religion Hollywood, and critics Protestants, and drug abuse religion, and drug abuse PG-13 religion, and PG-13 Wall, James, and PG-13 critics Protestants Christianity LB - 23300 PY - 1985 T2 - Christian Century ID - 1030 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This publication give insight into Christian criticism of motion pictures during the 1980s and 1990s. DA - 1980s - 1990s? (Christian Film and Television Commission) KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation Production Code values Christianity Christianity CARA Valenti, Jack religion values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) motion pictures values religion motion pictures and popular culture classification motion pictures, and age classification motion pictures, and classification Christians, and religion Christians, and movie ratings religion, and movie ratings Baehr, Ted Christian Film and Television Commission Mahony, Roger Production Code (1992) Valenti, Jack, and Christians critics LB - 24980 PY - 1980 T2 - Movieguide ID - 1099 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article deals with the investigation into charges of sexual misconduct against Father Bruce Ritter, who had been a member of the Meese Commission. DA - May 9, 1990 KW - sexuality pornography Meese Commission Ritter, Bruce Covenant House, and Bruce Ritter Ritter, Bruce, and pornography pornography, and Bruce Ritter Meese Commission, and Bruce Ritter LB - 26970 PY - 1990 SP - 487 ST - Ritter Probe Ends T2 - Christian Century TI - Ritter Probe Ends VL - 107 ID - 1255 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article deals with Father Bruce Ritter's resignation from Covenant House following a sex scandal. DA - Mar. 14, 1990 KW - sexuality pornography Meese Commission Ritter, Bruce Covenant House, and Bruce Ritter Ritter, Bruce, and pornography pornography, and Bruce Ritter Meese Commission, and Bruce Ritter LB - 26980 PY - 1990 SP - 273 ST - Ritter Resigns T2 - Christian Century TI - Ritter Resigns VL - 107 ID - 1256 ER - TY - JOUR AB - These volumes contain technical papers prepared by scientists who worked in areas related to photolithography, and provide information for those interested in the scientific evolution of this technology. KW - computers photography communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution materials computers +photography and visual communication microelectronics lithography +computers and the Internet +photography and visual communication lithography, photolithography photolithography computers, chips computers, scientific process miniaturization microelectronics revolution materials LB - 1840 T2 - Proceedings of the Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers VL - 80, 100, 135, 174, 221, 333, 334, 394, 470, 538, 633, 1086, 1185, 1262, 1466, 2726, 3051, 3334 ID - 1580 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The movies did not result from "the discovery of a new principle" but rather were depended mainly on "the celluloid film and the electric light." (107) The article quotes extensively from another piece by H. F. O'Brien in The Electric Journal which is about studio lighting and the use of such equipment as the Cooper Hewitt Mercury Vapor tube. Some studios use portable motor generators that are mounted on trailers. O'Brien predicted even greater advances in set lighting during the coming years. DA - July 10, 1920 KW - ref, secondary ref, Literary Digest motion pictures electricity electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity motion pictures, and lighting lighting lighting, and electricity lighting, and Cooper Hewitt Mercury Vapor lights motion pictures, and Cooper Hewitt Mercury Vapor lights LB - 42770 PY - 1920 SP - 107-13 ST - Electricity in the Movies T2 - Literary Digest TI - Electricity in the Movies VL - 66 ID - 1589 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article follows up on a earlier editorial in The Independent (April 1914) called "The Birth of a New Art." In the year since that editorial, this piece says, "the motion picture has developed so rapidly in beauty and freedom as to leave no room for doubt of its artistic capabilities." Audiences are no longer drawn simply by moving pictures novelty and by scientific interest but because they prefer it over melodramas, problems plays, or musical comedies. Although movies still lack color and sound compared to the stage, they have several advantages over traditional theater. Movies can use all of the out-of-doors, can change scenes more often, can travel easily into the future or back into the past (like "Wells's time-machine"). Cameras can use close-ups and read facial expressions, and movies can visualize an actors thoughts. Special effects can be expensive and spectacular because, unlike in the stage, they only have to be paid for once. The article predicts that movies "will become a permanent part of the intellectual and esthetic life of the nation." DA - April 5, 1915 IS - 3461 KW - theater stage motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures magazines motion pictures, and metaphors metaphors, and motion pictures cameras, and close-ups motion pictures, and history motion pictures, and differences with stage magazines ref, secondary metaphors cameras ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent LB - 90 PY - 1915 SP - 21 ST - The Progress of the Motion Picture T2 - The Independent TI - The Progress of the Motion Picture VL - 82 ID - 1593 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article argues that motion pictures are a new art form and that they do "for the drama what printing did for literature." (438) The movies make "possible for the first time the unlimited reproduction of actual events. This world of ours," it argues, "is in constant motion, and no static art can adequately represent it." "We have now for the first time the possibility of representing, however crudely, the essence of reality -- that is motion," the article says, and it goes on to cite Henri Bergson. "'Bergson has shown us what a paralyzing influence static conceptions of reality have had upon history of philosophy and how futile have been all attempts to represent movement by rest.'" (source not given) In short, "the moving picture may mark a new epoch in the history of culture." (438) The magazine says that henceforth it will review on a regular basis motion pictures just as it would good plays and books. The article notes that there are no standards in the press on what constitutes movie criticism. The article comments on the popularity of movies sets in the western United States, and notes that a new type of actor has emerged, one who be prepared to face real physical danger in filming. "Cleverness in improvization is his chief asset." (439) This article appeared earlier in "The Birth of a New Art," The Independent, 78, no.3409 (April 6, 1914), 8-9. DA - June 1914 IS - 6 KW - history duplicating technologies metaphors actors acting actors acting motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and motion motion pictures, and actors actors, and motion pictures critics motion pictures, and critics motion pictures, and westerns motion pictures, and printing press quotations quotations, and motion pictures duplicating technologies, and motion pictures motion pictures, and duplicating technologies motion pictures, and pulpit ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion Bergson, Henri motion pictures, and movement LB - 100 PY - 1914 SP - 438-39 ST - A New Art Being Developed in the Movies T2 - Current Opinion TI - A New Art Being Developed in the Movies VL - 56 ID - 1599 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This issue of Scientific American is devoted to assessing the significance of microelectronics. It includes the following articles: Robert N. Noyce, "Microelectronics"; James D. Meindl, "Microelectronic Circuit Elements"; William C. Holton, "The Large-Scale Integration of Microelectronic Circuits"; William G. Oldham, "The Fabrication of Microelectronic Circuits"; David A. Hodges, "Microelectronic Memories"; Hoo-Min D. Toong, "Microprocessors"; Lewis M. Terman, "The Role of Microelectronics in Data Processing"; Bernard M. Oliver, "The Role of Microelectronics in Instrumentation and Control"; John S. Mayo, "The Role of Microelectronics in Communication"; Carver A. Mead, "Microelectronics and Computer Science"; Alan C. Kay, "Microelectronics and the Personal Computer." DA - Sept. 1977 IS - No. 3 KW - computers microprocessing preservation communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution archives history, and new media history, and new media communication revolution, and second industrial revolution history computers and the Internet computers, personal computers microelectronics libraries libraries, and information storage information storage information storage information processing Information Age history +computers and the Internet personal computers computers, personal microelectronics revolution communication revolution second industrial revolution microprocessors information processing, and computers history, and microelectronics revolution information storage, and microelectronics history, break with LB - 3720 PY - 1977 T2 - Scientific American VL - 237 ID - 1760 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The entire issue is devoted to theme entitled, "Toward the Year 2000: work in progress." The volume groups contributors around five "problems areas" -- "the adequacy of the governmental structure, the changing nature of values and rights, the structure of the intellectual institutions, the life-cycle of the individual, and the international system." Contributors include: Daniel Bell, "The Year 2000 -- The Trajectory of an Idea"; Ernst Mayr, "Biological Man in the Year 2000"; Gardner C. Quarton, "Deliberate Efforts to Control Human Behavior and Modify Personality"; Harry Kalven, Jr., "The Problems of Privacy in the Year 2000"; John R. Pierce, "Communication"; Samuel P. Huntington, "Political Development and the Decline of the American System of World Order"; Ithiel De Sola Pool, "The International System in the Next Half Century"; and many others including Daniel P. Moynihan, David Riesman, Margaret Mead, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Daniel Ellsberg, Erik H. Erikson, and Karl W. Deutsch. DA - Summer, 1967 IS - no. 3 KW - technology USSR nationalism integrated circuits transistors law, and privacy law communication revolution genetics +future and science fiction non-USA values +aeronautics and space communication surveillance satellites privacy information processing Information Age +artificial intelligence and biotechnology communication revolution +nationalism and communication global communication integrated circuits genetic engineering privacy surveillance future Soviet Union, and collapse of privacy, and photography privacy, and microphones +television satellites, and communication television, and cable cable, television television, and satellites information processing, and computers Bell, Daniel Pool, Ithiel De Sola Brzezinski, Zbigniew Deutsch, Karl Riesman, David technology and society values, and technology future, year 2000 Soviet Union cable LB - 4180 PY - 1967 T2 - Daedalus: Journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences VL - 96 ID - 1806 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This issue has a number of short articles on "The Internet: Bringing Order from Chaos." The articles include: Clifford Lynch, "Searching the Internet'; Michael Lesk, "Going Digital," on the advantages and difficulties of electronic libraries; Paul Resnick, "Filtering Information on the Internet"; Marti A. Hearst, "Interfaces for Searching the Web"; and Brewster Kahle, "Preserving the Internet," on archiving material from the World Wide Web. DA - March 1997 IS - no. 3 KW - computers archives digitization law censorship and ratings libraries libraries, and information storage information storage information storage Information Age +computers and the Internet digital technology digital media +information storage information storage censorship censorship, and Internet electronic preservation libraries, electronic world wide web information processing digital media electronic media information storage, and World Wide Web World Wide Web, and information storage Internet LB - 4520 PY - 1997 T2 - Scientific American VL - 276 ID - 1839 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This issue is devoted to considering ethical questions involving new media technologies. Articles include: Thomas W. Cooper, "New Technology Effects Inventory: Forty Leading Ethical Issues"; Adam Clayton Powell III, "Satellite Imagery: The Ethics of a New Technology"; Donald B. Kraybill, "Plain Reservations: Amish and Mennonite Views of Media and Computers"; and David J. Gunkel, "Virtually Transcendent: Cyberculture and the Body." DA - 1998 IS - no. 2 KW - R & D ethics computers nationalism law, and privacy law research and development war war values surveillance Luddism +computers and the Internet cyberculture values, and information technology ethics, and information technology luddism, and new media computers, and amish computers, and Mennonites critics +aeronautics and space communication +artificial intelligence and biotechnology satellites surveillance privacy satellites, and reconnaissance +nationalism and communication +military communication computers cyberspace ethics LB - 4590 PY - 1998 T2 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics: exploring questions of media morality VL - 13 ID - 1846 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece quotes from a circular distributed by the Southeastern Tariff Association about the dangers of fire from celluloid films. DA - Aug. 29, 1907 IS - 3065 KW - ref, mag motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, and fire motion pictures, and celluloid celluloid materials materials, and celluloid theaters, as fire hazard ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent LB - 150 PY - 1907 SP - 527 ST - The Moving Picture Hazard T2 - The Independent TI - The Moving Picture Hazard VL - 63 ID - 1922 ER - TY - JOUR DA - Feb. 20, 1873 KW - materials television, and history of +television television, and origins selenium +electricity seeing at a distance? LB - 6760 PY - 1873 SP - 303 ST - Effect of Light on Selenium during the Passage of an Electric Current T2 - Nature TI - Effect of Light on Selenium during the Passage of an Electric Current ID - 2054 ER - TY - JOUR DA - Dec. 9, 1875 KW - non-USA television, and history of +television television, and origins Germany Germany, and television television, and Germany LB - 7280 PY - 1875 SP - 112 ST - Science in Germany T2 - Nature TI - Science in Germany VL - 13 ID - 2098 ER - TY - JOUR DA - May 1923 KW - radio +television television, and origins +radio radio movies television, and baseball LB - 7460 PY - 1923 SP - 67 ST - To Broadcast Baseball by Radio Movies T2 - Popular Science TI - To Broadcast Baseball by Radio Movies VL - 102 ID - 2116 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by discussing the kinematograph and the "problem of color reproduction. We believe it may be fairly called solved, for moving objects are now photographed in their natural colors, altho not all of them are correctly represented." (108) It notes that the "Italians have taken most enthusiastically to the motion picture," (109) and it gives several examples of spectacles that have been filmed. "The kinetoscopist seems competent to make real anything in the lower regions that Dante or Doré could imagine; the demons fight in mid-air, doomed souls see visions of the sins that brought them there....." (109) The scenes are filmed with "sufficient of the horrible to send women of very sensitive nerves into a faint or out of the theater." (109) According to the author of this article, the kinetoscopy "is not only a new form of the drama and a new method of journalism," but also "a new instrument of science, comparable in importance to the telescope and microscope." (109) Film has enabled man to control space and time. "When man acquired control of spatial relations by means of lenses enabling him to enlarge or reduce to suit his purpose, the realm of the invisible was opened to his gaze in both directions, toward the stars and toward the atoms. Now he has for the first time brought time under the same control as space, and by means of the magic strip of film can retard, accelerate or reverse the course of events at will. He has acquired a 'time machine' almost equal to that imagined by Wells years ago." (109) The article argues that "it is wrong to regard such an instrument as this as a mere means of entertainment, and it is a great mistake to impose upon it, now in its infancy, such legislative restrictions as would confine it to the theater and practically exclude it from the school, the church, and the family circle." (110) DA - Jan. 11, 1912 IS - 3293 KW - journalism history photography ref, mag motion pictures color color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures photography and visual communication modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and time time and timekeeping time, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magic motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures news and journalism metaphors motion pictures, and metaphors motion pictures, and time machine metaphors, and time machine metaphors, and movies as telescope metaphors, and movies as microscope motion pictures, as time machine motion pictures, and telescope motion pictures, and microscope motion pictures, as telescope motion pictures, as microscope quotations quotations, and movies as time machine ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent LB - 170 PY - 1912 SP - 108-10 ST - The Moving Picture Movement T2 - The Independent TI - The Moving Picture Movement VL - 72 ID - 2291 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This work is a review of Hugo Münsterberg's book The Photoplay (1916). The writer takes exception to some of Münsterberg's arguments. For example, "When the thesis extends to the claim that the popular devices developed conform to extensions of the intrinsic mental movement, giving it a new and precise expression, serious doubts arise. The argument becomes rather academic, like a retrogressive prophecy: what is, must be. The 'close-ups' follow the same mechanism that brought about the opera-glass; while the 'cut-backs,' which picture the reflections of the hero or heroine upon a tender past, represent the play of the reflective imagination of the spectator...." (29) DA - June 22, 1916 IS - 721 KW - Münsterberg, Hugo Munsterberg, Hugo ref, mag motion pictures motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology Münsterberg, Hugo motion pictures, and Hugo Münsterberg motion pictures, and Lindsay, Vachel motion pictures, and Vachel Lindsay ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary (conservative) ref, Dial LB - 220 PY - 1916 SP - 28-29 ST - The Psychology of the 'Movies' T2 - The Dial TI - The Psychology of the 'Movies' VL - LXI ID - 2397 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This brief article criticizes the recent showing of the Jack Johnson heavyweight boxing match and applauds the exhibitors who withdrew the film. "Much criticism has been made of the moving picture theaters, and doubtless much has been deserved. It is, however, a fact that the past few years have brought a decided improvement. There is yet much of melodrama and crude humor, but there is also a great deal that is artistic and instructive." This piece talks about the uses of film for educational purposes in the U.S., France, Germany, and Belgium. It notes the powerful impact motion pictures have had on scientific study. It concludes: "No one pretends that all the moving pictures are worthy of approval. Many persons believe in a rigid censorship. In the absence of it, parents can exercise a wise supervision for their own families." DA - Aug. 4, 1910 IS - 31 KW - children censorship words vs. images motion pictures, and sports ref, mag motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings religion religion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion images vs. words education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and boxing ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated (youth) ref, illustrated ref, Youth's Companion LB - 240 PY - 1910 SP - 402 ST - Moving Pictures T2 - Youth's Companion TI - Moving Pictures VL - 84 ID - 2643 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the growing influence of motion pictures and the growing relationship between the movies and newspapers and advertising. "We reproduce half a page from a single newspaper in Chicago in which almost four hundred cinema 'first nights' are announced for one day! The movie, for better or worse, is growing to be one of the greatest influences in our national life." (176) Part of the popularity of movies is traced to "a feasible and accessible revolt against drawing-room drama...." (176) The articles points to criticism that "everything in the motion picture ... is sacrificed to attention." Even the story of the birth of Christ is filmed with a "bacchanalian feast" and "highway robbery." (178) The article suggests, though, that the problems of movies will "eventually solve itself, without censorship." (178) DA - Sept. 1914 IS - 3 KW - journalism censorship advertising and public relations motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures religion religion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion advertising advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary LB - 250 PY - 1914 SP - 176-78 (APS Online) ST - The Growing Fascination of the Film Play T2 - Current Opinion TI - The Growing Fascination of the Film Play VL - LVII ID - 2679 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the Academy Award winners for Cinematography in 1966. Included are the work of Haskell Wexler and Ted Moore. The article discusses how cameras are less obtrusive than earlier. In "Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolff" (1966), hand-held cameras and zoom lens were used. The article also considers Ted Moore's creative use of the camera in "Moll Flanders." He captured "the rich hues of Henry VIII's lusty court and contrasts them effectively with the almost monochromatic austerity of the religiously circumscribed morality that pertained at the time. He records the subtle lushness of rural England, composing each scene like an oil painting by an Old Master. Yet his camera is never static, never reticent to move in pace with action that ranges from spiritual to physical, weaving on film a multi-colored tapstry of light brought to life by the currents of a decisive moment in history." DA - May, 1967 IS - 5 KW - history lenses, zoom transistors sex motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality cinematography +motion pictures cameras motion pictures, and cameras cameras, and motion pictures zoom lenses cameras, and zoom lenses cameras, hand-held mobile cameras mobile cameras mobile cameras, transistorized transistors, and cameras cameras, and transistors movie, Who's Afraid of Va.Wolff motion pictures, and academy awards movie, Moll Flanders sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sex scenes, and cameras cameras, and sex scenes (Moll Flanders) movie, Man for All Seasons Wexler, Haskell cinematography Moore, Ted color color, and motion pictures color, and sexuality sexuality, and color history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history history, and color color, and history cameras, new models (1966) lighting lenses LB - 29880 PY - 1967 SP - 356-58 ST - Academy Award Winner for Cinematography T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Academy Award Winner for Cinematography VL - 48 ID - 2718 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This study, conducted by Richard Manville Research, found that leading advertisers believed that color ads were much more effective than black-and-white ads. The advertisers thought that color was 84 percent more effective for outdoor advertising, 52 percent more effective for magazines, 50 percent better for Sunday supplements, 47 percent for TV, and 38 percent for newspapers. The advantages included better product identification, more realistic appearance of what was being promoted, and stronger emphasis on the quality of the product. There were concerns, though, with color advertising on television -- poor quality of the color, the high cost involved, and the fact that few people owned color sets in 1956. The advertisers, though, clearly believed that color would be used more and more in the near future. About 90 percent of those who received the questionnaire in this study had seen a TV program in color and about two thirds of them thought that color TV ads were good to excellent. DA - April 27, 1956 KW - color advertising and public relations television books, periodicals, newspapers color, and television television, and color advertising, and color color, and advertising newspapers, and color ads color, and newspapers magazines, and color ads color, and magazines color, and billboards capitalism capitalism, and color media media effects media effects, and color ads advertising newspapers magazines news news and journalism LB - 29690 PY - 1956 SP - 21-23 ST - Advertisers report on value of color in all media T2 - Printers' Ink TI - Advertisers report on value of color in all media ID - 2720 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This articles discusses the Academy Award winners for Cinematography for 1967: Bonnie and Clyde, The Graduate, In Cold Blood (based on Truman Capote's novel), Doctor Dolittle, and Camelot. DA - April, 1968 IS - 4 KW - lenses, zoom transistors sex motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality cinematography cameras +motion pictures motion pictures, and cameras cameras, and motion pictures zoom lenses cameras, and zoom lenses cameras, hand-held mobile cameras mobile cameras mobile cameras, transistorized transistors, and cameras cameras, and transistors movie, In Cold Blood motion pictures, and academy awards movie, The Graduate (1967) sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sex scenes, and cameras cameras, and sex scenes (The Graduate) movie, Bonnie and Clyde cinematography color color, and motion pictures color, and sexuality sexuality, and color violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence violence, and Bonnie and Clyde Bonnie and Clyde The Graduate (1967) In Cold Blood violence, and In Cold Blood lenses LB - 29900 PY - 1968 SP - 262-64 ST - The Five Best Photographed Motion Pictures of 1967 T2 - American Cinematographer TI - The Five Best Photographed Motion Pictures of 1967 VL - 49 ID - 2745 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that Eastman Kodak not only recorded man's first trip to the moon in Apollo 11 but before that Kodak photography systems had covered five unmanned Lunar Obiter missions. Every manned space flight since John Glenn's Feb. 20, 1962, flight into space, had used film made in Rochester, NY. The article discusses the use of color film in covering the Apollo 11 landing in 1969. DA - Oct., 1969 IS - 10 KW - National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) corporations corporations cinematography aeronautics and space communication color photography photography, and space flights NASA color, and space photography Apollo 11 color, and Apollo 11 Eastman Kodak Kodak Eastman Kodak, and space photography photography, and moon missions motion pictures LB - 29910 PY - 1969 SP - 988-90 ST - The Role of Kodak in Documenting the Space Program T2 - American Cinematographer TI - The Role of Kodak in Documenting the Space Program VL - 50 ID - 2746 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this interview, cinematographer Haskell Wexler discusses how the movie "The Thomas Crown Affair" was filmed on location. He explains the use of zoom lens, hand-held cameras, hidden cameras, cameras operated by remote control, and the use of lighting. Director Norman Jewison wanted the characters to "play chess with sex" and used only two large soft lights to create a "dreamy, sexy mood." (p. 743) For a scene shot inside a sauna devoid of steam, Wexler filmed using a red light which suggested heat. (p. 770) Wexler says that he used a 50mm lens made by Angenieux with a speed of F/.95, the "fastest lens I've ever seen." (p. 786) DA - Oct., 1968 IS - 10 KW - lenses, zoom sex motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories cinematography motion pictures cameras lighting sexuality special effects motion pictures, and lighting lighting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and special effects sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sexuality lighting, and sex scenes location shooting motion pictures, and location shooting movie, Thomas Crown Affair Thomas Crown Affair cameras, hidden zoom lenses cameras, and zoom lenses cameras, hand-held Wexler, Haskell oral histories lighting, and sex scenes sex scenes, and lighting Jewison, Norman cameras, and fast lens lenses LB - 29940 PY - 1968 SP - 740-43, 770-71, 786-87, 793-94 ST - The Boston Location Filming of 'The Thomas Crown Affair' T2 - American Cinematographer TI - The Boston Location Filming of 'The Thomas Crown Affair' VL - 49 ID - 2749 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This articles discusses working with 16mm film. It notes that "while it is true that non-theatrical productions are shot in both 35mm and 16mm, and on 16mm negative as well as 16mm reversal, most non-theatrical production such as industrial films, in-plant film-making, contract film reports, etc., are in 16mm and the bulk of this is shot on 16mm reversal film, both color and black-and-white." (112) DA - Feb., 1967 IS - 2 KW - cinematography motion pictures 16mm cameras cameras, 16mm photography, 16mm motion pictures, industrial motion pictures, documentaries 16mm film photography LB - 30100 PY - 1967 SP - 112-14, 140 ST - What You Should Know About 16mm Workprint Editing T2 - American Cinematographer TI - What You Should Know About 16mm Workprint Editing VL - 48 ID - 2765 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This one-page piece notes that the cost-conscious Ingelwood, CA, police department used a "Fairchild 900 8mm single system sound movie camera" to make a training film. DA - March, 1968 IS - 3 KW - corporations corporations Eastman Kodak cinematography sound recording 8mm cameras cameras, 8mm sound recording, and 8mm cameras magnetic recording 8mm, and magnetic sound recording education education, and 8mm film Eastman Kodak, and 8mm film motion pictures LB - 30190 PY - 1968 SP - 198 ST - 8mm Sound-on-Film Camera Records Mock Riot T2 - American Cinematographer TI - 8mm Sound-on-Film Camera Records Mock Riot VL - 49 ID - 2774 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article comments on a "new method of playing back any existing movie or videotape material through a standard TV receiver." The process, demonstrated a month earlier, was CBS's Electronic Video Recording system (EVR), and it promised "many important applications" and it promised "to create almost as great a film boom in certain areas as the Super-8 format." (398) The article says CBS was "preparing to convert titles in their film libraries to EVR cartridge format" (421) and that one company CBS owned, Baily Films and Film Associates, had 450 separate movie titles. This development was expected to have "a powerful impact on education, business, entertainment, the arts, and information processing industries. Its applications are almost numberless." (421) EVR did not record images from television sets, "but only plays back pictures previously produced on standard film or videotape and then transferred to an EVR cartridge." (398) DA - April, 1969 IS - 4 KW - corporations corporations cinematography television videotape CBS, and video recording Electronic Video Recording System (CBS) education education, and video recording television, and video recording VCRs, and origins video cassettes, origins magnetic recording video recording, and education 16mm film 8mm films 16mm film, and video recording 8mm films, and video recording 16mm film libraries Super-8 8mm, and Super-8 CBS motion pictures electronic media cameras video cassette recorders (VCRs) magnetic tape 16mm 8mm VCRs LB - 30210 PY - 1969 SP - 398-99, 421 ST - CBS Introduces Its Electronic Video Recording System T2 - American Cinematographer TI - CBS Introduces Its Electronic Video Recording System VL - 50 ID - 2776 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This issue has several articles on 8mm film. It notes that the commercial application of this format is expanding and that 8mm has moved from simply something for amateur hobbyists to increasing areas of commercial application. DA - April, 1963 IS - 4 KW - 8mm 8mm, and sound recording sound recording sound recording, and 8mm film cameras, and 8mm 8mm, and projectors 8mm, and cameras cinematography cameras motion pictures LB - 30410 PY - 1963 SP - 223 ST - 8mm Sound Film: ... A Survey of Progress to Date T2 - American Cinematographer TI - 8mm Sound Film: ... A Survey of Progress to Date VL - 44 ID - 2796 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that the demand for 8mm film predicted two or three years earlier had not materialilzed by 1963 and it attempts to explain why this is so. It notes that the Calvin Company marketed an 8mm projector during the early 1950s and that more than 1,000 projectors were sold. Interest in 8mm increased in 1960 with the introduction of a half dozen 8mm magnetic sound projectors. DA - April, 1963 IS - 4 KW - 8mm 8mm, and sound recording sound recording sound recording, and 8mm film cameras, and 8mm 8mm, and projectors 8mm, and cameras cinematography cameras motion pictures LB - 30420 PY - 1963 SP - 224, 237 ST - Report on 8mm T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Report on 8mm VL - 44 ID - 2797 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the potential for 8mm film in producing newsreels for television. News cameramen found that the 8mm cameras have advantages because they are lighter and more compact. It notes that in 1963, there was increasing use of 8mm film in television news programs and that its quality compared favorably with 16mm film. It notes that KPHO-TV in Phoenix, AZ, has been experimenting with a Fairchild sound camera and projector. DA - April, 1963 IS - 4 KW - 8mm 8mm, and sound recording sound recording sound recording, and 8mm film cameras, and 8mm 8mm, and projectors 8mm, and cameras news and journalism television television, and 8mm film television news, and 8mm film cameras cameras, and 8mm film television, and 8mm cameras news, and 8mm film cameras, portable news, and portable 8mm cameras newsreels, and television television, and 8mm newsreels cinematography motion pictures news LB - 30430 PY - 1963 SP - 227, 230, 232, 234-35 ST - TV News Film - New Role for 8mm T2 - American Cinematographer TI - TV News Film - New Role for 8mm VL - 44 ID - 2798 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This interesting article discusses early efforts to enhance moon photographs by digital means. It covers the work of such people as Dr. Robert Nathan, who headed Caltech's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) video digital (computer) data research for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). It notes that the quality of enhancement pictures is constantly being improved by computer research engineers at JPL at the California Institute of Technology. The article says that "computer enhancement began in 1963 after Nathan saw Russian pictures of the Moon's far side." (48) Ranger VII first video-scanned the moon's surface for the United States in July, 1964. During 1964 and 1965, Rangers VII, VIII, and IX took more than 17,000 pictures of the moon's surface. Researchers at the JPL increased the yield of photo data analysis from 5 percent to 95 percent of its maximum potential. The article notes the future potential for film makers. "Although the application of this technique of resolution enhancement to cinematography might, at first appraisal, seem remote, the method actually represents an enormous potential in certain specialized areas of film production. The unique demands of instrumentation, medical and technical documentation are often such that really sharp original cinematography becomes all but impossible." (49) As for obstacles to progress in this areas, the article says that "to date, the methods has been confined to single-frame photographs. However, since a motion pictures is nothing more than a multiple series of single 'still' frames, further extension of the process is technically quite feasible." (40) The article goes on to say that: "The main drawback, at present, is one of volume. The enhancement technique currently in use is a slow process. It is likely that an Analog Hybrid capability would have to be designed in order to accelerate this technique for use with motion pictures. Such thinking on the problem is being followed through at the moment." (49) The technology involved at this time was quite large. The process involved a "reassembly printer -- a huge machine about the size of a truck (7 feet high by 5 feet wide by 12 long)." (50) The article notes that Boeing was the prime contractor for NASA and that Eastman Kodak was involved with the film processing. DA - Jan., 1967 IS - 1 KW - National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) computers corporations corporations corporations Eastman Kodak Boeing Corporation cinematography digital media photography and visual communication aeronautics and space communication photography, digital digital photography, and origins digital photography, and CalTech Jet Propulsion Lab NASA NASA, and digital photography digital photography, and NASA Nathan, Robert, and digital photography digital photography, and Robert Nathan motion pictures, and digital photography digital photography, and Ranger VII military communication military communication, and digital photography magnetic recording magnetic recording, and digital photography digital photography, and magnetic recording computers and the Internet digital photography, and computers computers, and digital photography computers, and space communication Eastman Kodak, and digital photography digital photography, and Eastman Kodak Boeing, and digital photography digital photography, and Boeing motion pictures photography computers LB - 30120 PY - 1967 SP - 48-50 ST - How Technology from the Moon Will Advance Photography on Earth T2 - American Cinematographer TI - How Technology from the Moon Will Advance Photography on Earth VL - 48 ID - 2811 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article criticizes the motion picture rating system which appeared to be more willing to give a severe rating (NC-17) to films with bad language and non-violence sex, than it to movies with high levels of violence. The article begins by discussing Oliver Stone's Natural Born Killers (1994), and the 150 cuts he had to make in order not to get an NC-17 rating. Time Warner Inc. owned both the magazine in which this article appeared and the studio that made Natural Born Killers. DA - Aug. 29, 1994 KW - Natural Born Killers (1994) Classification and Rating Administration self-regulation rating system (U.S.) sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Natural Born Killers motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures nudity, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising language motion pictures, and language nudity CARA, and nudity motion pictures, and nudity Stone, Oliver public relations, and Oliver Stone Stone, Oliver, and public relations advertising, and Natural Born Killers Natural Born Killers, and advertising CARA NC-17 rating controversies CARA, and critics rating system (U. S.), and critics motion pictures sex advertising and public relations LB - 25510 PY - 1994 SP - 68 ST - Murder Gets an R; Bad Language Gets NC-17 T2 - Time TI - Murder Gets an R; Bad Language Gets NC-17 VL - 144 ID - 2815 ER - TY - JOUR AB - During the late 1960s, an Egyptian-born cinematographer, Fouad Said, created the Cinemobile, which made it easier to shoot movies and television programs on location. With the aid of the Bendix Corporation, a company that specialized in automobile and aviation equipment, and Lockheed, Said built a mobile movie studio about the size of a paneled truck that at first was used to film television shows and low-budget motion pictures. By 1969, the Cinemobile Mark V, which was built in Europe and shipped to Hollywood, was the size of a double-deck bus. It carried several hundred pieces of equipment, had an electronic kitchen that served sixty people, and could be loaded into a cargo jet and flown to most locations within 24 hours. Such studios as 20th Century Fox and Warner Bros.- Seven Arts saw that this studio on wheels could save them significant sums in larger budget productions. DA - March 15, 1969 KW - motion pictures -news motion pictures, and new technology motion pictures, and 1960s motion pictures, and location shooting Cinemobile Said, Fouad, and Cinemobile motion pictures, and cinemobile motion pictures, and internationalization LB - 30670 PY - 1969 SP - 152-54 ST - Mini-Gadget Movie Van Rolls into Hollywood T2 - Business Week TI - Mini-Gadget Movie Van Rolls into Hollywood ID - 2828 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This short piece relective of the Catholic Church's views on television and movies, warns about "the constant danger that culture will indeed be 'vulgarized' by the steady encroachment of the picture-technique." This piece also mention that on December 20, 1955, 250 alumni from the Graduate College at Princeton University met to dicuss "The Communication of Ideas." DA - Jan. 14, 1956 IS - 16 KW - values television values, and television regulation regulation, and television Catholics, and television television, and Catholics religion television, and religion religion, and television motion pictures motion pictures, and religion religion, and motion pictures communication history, and Princeton Catholic Church censorship and ratings LB - 32020 PY - 1956 SP - 427 ST - TV and an Age of Pictures T2 - America TI - TV and an Age of Pictures VL - 94 ID - 2837 ER - TY - JOUR AB - During the late 1950s and 1960s, movies from France, Italy, Sweden, Germany, Japan, and Argentina dealt explicitly with sex. Often these films were renamed and advertised for American audiences in ways that exaggerated their sexual content. Early on foreign film exhibitors realized that “the raw, unvarnished approach to sex” would attract not only the raincoat crowd but also “discriminating” customers who wanted “primitive honesty” in the treatment of sex. DA - July 23, 1952 KW - motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign films sexuality television motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures foreign films, and sexuality sexuality, and foreign films foreign films LB - 31450 PY - 1952 SP - 18 ST - Art, Exploitation Audiences Bait for TV: Only Sex Lure 'Em Back T2 - Variety TI - Art, Exploitation Audiences Bait for TV: Only Sex Lure 'Em Back ID - 2839 ER - TY - JOUR AB - One way that the major Hollywood studios got around the motion picture Production Code during the 1950s and 1960s was by creating subsidiary companies. Those companies, unlike the Hollywood majors, were not committed to the Code. DA - March 13, 1968 KW - self-regulation Hollywood motion pictures censorship and ratings foreign films sexuality motion pictures, and foreign films foreign films, and sexuality Hollywood, and subsidiaries Production Code, and subsidiaries PCA, and subsidiaries censorship, and subsidiaries censorship, breakdown of PCA Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) censorship Production Code Administration (PCA) LB - 31500 PY - 1968 SP - 7 ST - All Majors Have Subsids T2 - Variety TI - All Majors Have Subsids ID - 2842 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that with the demise of the Production Code, movie makers "enjoy a heady new freedom from formula, convention and censorship." (66) The article discusses several films including: Blow-Up, Reflection in a Golden Eye,In the Heat of the Night, The Graduate, and Bonnie and Clyde. Film makers and other artists put a premium on experiment in both life and art and in "the questioning of moral traditions, the demythologizing of ideals, the pulverizing of esthetic principles ...." (67) DA - Dec. 8, 1967 KW - self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality motion pictures censorship and ratings Production Code, breakdown of Bonnie and Clyde Reflections in a Golden Eye (1967) Blow-Up sexuality violence motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and violence freedom Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 31620 PY - 1967 SP - 66-68, 73-74, 76 ST - The Shock of Freedom in Films T2 - Time TI - The Shock of Freedom in Films ID - 2851 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This one of several articles in mainstream magazines publicizing Brigitte Bardot and her movie And God Created Woman. DA - Nov. 18, 1957 KW - magazines Bardot, Brigitte magazines, and sexuality sexuality women women, and magazines magazines, and sexuality motion pictures motion pictures, and Brigitte Bardot LB - 31710 PY - 1957 SP - 83-84, 87-88 ST - U. S. Gets a Look at Brigitte T2 - Life TI - U. S. Gets a Look at Brigitte VL - 43 ID - 2856 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This one of several articles (several appeared in Life alone) in mainstream magazines publicizing Brigitte Bardot and her movie And God Created Woman. The magazine devoted three pages of non-nude color photographs to the actress designed to accentuate her “charged charms.” DA - June 30, 1958 KW - magazines Bardot, Brigitte magazines, and sexuality sexuality women women, and magazines magazines, and sexuality motion pictures motion pictures, and Brigitte Bardot color photography photography, and color color, and sexuality sexuality, and color LB - 31720 PY - 1958 SP - 50-52 ST - Charged Charms of Brigitte: Bardot Boom Balloons in the U. S. T2 - Life TI - Charged Charms of Brigitte: Bardot Boom Balloons in the U. S. VL - 44 ID - 2857 ER - TY - JOUR AB - One of several articles in mainstream U. S. magazines publicizing Brigitte Bardot after her movie And God Created Woman. DA - June 30, 1958 KW - magazines Bardot, Brigitte magazines, and sexuality sexuality women women, and magazines magazines, and sexuality motion pictures motion pictures, and Brigitte Bardot LB - 31730 PY - 1958 SP - 57-58 ST - A Lot More than Meets the Eye: Critics to the Contrary, B. B.'s Appeal Is Not Limited to Her Body T2 - Life TI - A Lot More than Meets the Eye: Critics to the Contrary, B. B.'s Appeal Is Not Limited to Her Body VL - 44 ID - 2858 ER - TY - JOUR AB - One of several articles in mainstream U. S. magazines publicizing Brigitte Bardot after her movie And God Created Woman. DA - Sept. 8, 1958 KW - magazines Bardot, Brigitte magazines, and sexuality sexuality women women, and magazines magazines, and sexuality motion pictures motion pictures, and Brigitte Bardot LB - 31740 PY - 1958 SP - 45-46, 48, 51 ST - Zing Go the Strings of Brigitte's Heart T2 - Life TI - Zing Go the Strings of Brigitte's Heart VL - 45 ID - 2859 ER - TY - JOUR AB - One of several articles in mainstream U. S. magazines publicizing Brigitte Bardot after her movie And God Created Woman. This piece is about Brigittes' younger sister. DA - Nov. 24, 1958 KW - magazines Bardot, Brigitte magazines, and sexuality sexuality women women, and magazines magazines, and sexuality motion pictures motion pictures, and Brigitte Bardot LB - 31750 PY - 1958 SP - 101-02 ST - Any More at Home Like Brigitte? T2 - Life TI - Any More at Home Like Brigitte? VL - 45 ID - 2860 ER - TY - JOUR AB - One of several articles in mainstream U. S. magazines publicizing Brigitte Bardot after her movie And God Created Woman. DA - Jan. 7, 1958 KW - magazines Bardot, Brigitte magazines, and sexuality sexuality women women, and magazines magazines, and sexuality motion pictures motion pictures, and Brigitte Bardot LB - 31760 PY - 1958 SP - 62-64ff ST - Brigitte Conquers America T2 - Look TI - Brigitte Conquers America VL - 22 ID - 2861 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that "few Americans have ever seen one, but the videotape recorder is playing a steadily bigger part in their lives." (90) There is a huge potential market for recorders but at this time, that potential is still largely unrealized. DA - Feb. 19, 1965 IS - 8 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) sound recording magnetic recording VCRs television television, and VCRs VCRs, and television motion pictures, and VCRs motion pictures home and new media home, and VCRs home LB - 31850 PY - 1965 SP - 90, 92 ST - Taping Untapped Markets T2 - Time TI - Taping Untapped Markets VL - 85 ID - 2867 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that "in France the transmission of photographs over a telegraph-wire is now practical for newspaper work, and pictures sent in this way appear in the Paris papers. L'illustration is taking the lead, and one station is installed at its Paris office and another at Monte Carlo. " The article then quotes from an article in the Scientific American that describes this process. DA - Dec. 12, 1912 IS - 50 KW - photography ref, mag telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph news and journalism photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography non-USA France France, and photography photography, and France ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, illustrated (youth) ref, Youth's Companion LB - 270 PY - 1912 SP - 690 ST - Photographs by Telegraph T2 - Youth's Companion TI - Photographs by Telegraph VL - 86 ID - 2872 ER - TY - JOUR AB - These pages give examples of videotape recorders that were available to purchase in 1966 from such companies as Ampex, Concord, Sony, Panasonic, and Wollensak. DA - Oct. 1966 IS - 4 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) sound recording magnetic recording VCRs television television, and VCRs VCRs, and television motion pictures, and VCRs motion pictures home and new media home, and VCRs VCRs, and Sony VCRs, and Ampex VCRs, and Panasonic home LB - 31930 PY - 1966 SP - 145-46 ST - Videotape Recorders T2 - Popular Photography TI - Videotape Recorders VL - 59 ID - 2877 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that the prerecorded video cassette could become "a revolutionary new medium." (42) The article notes that there are several film libraries putting movies on tape -- many of the films are high quality but also such movies as I'm Curious Yellow are being put on the new format. CBS's Electronic Video Recording (EVR) sold in 1970 for about $795 but the price is predicted to come down to about $300 in 1972. DA - Aug. 10, 1970 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) sound recording magnetic recording VCRs television television, and VCRs VCRs, and television motion pictures, and VCRs motion pictures home and new media home, and VCRs casettes, video video cassettes videotape, EVR (CBS) I'm Curious Yellow home videotape magnetic tape LB - 31950 PY - 1970 SP - 42-43 ST - A New Medium -- and a Lot of Messages T2 - Newsweek TI - A New Medium -- and a Lot of Messages VL - 76 ID - 2879 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Between 1948 and 1952, Ohio TV stations played more than 1,800 movies, and between 500 and 600 of them had never been submitted to censors. Another 484 had been cut before they had appeared in movie theaters only to have the cuts restored before they were aired on TV. Five films that had been rejected outright by the Ohio Board of Censors were televised. DA - Jan. 6, 1954 IS - 5 KW - motion pictures television censorship and ratings motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures television, and uncensored movies censorship, and TV movies censorship LB - 31980 PY - 1954 SP - 1 ST - Uncut Features Aired Freely Into Homes But Censored for Screens T2 - Variety TI - Uncut Features Aired Freely Into Homes But Censored for Screens VL - 193 ID - 2882 ER - TY - JOUR AB - As the sales of television sets increased, more and more people watched movies at home. By 1956, almost 4,200 feature motion pictures (more than 5,200 hours of films) were being shown nationwide on television each week. Less than two years later, more than 200 million people were watching free films on television each week compared to 46 million people who bought tickets at movie theaters. DA - Feb. 7, 1958 KW - motion pictures television censorship and ratings motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures LB - 32000 PY - 1958 SP - 88-90 ST - What TV Is Doing to the Movie Industry T2 - U. S. News & World Report TI - What TV Is Doing to the Movie Industry VL - 47 ID - 2884 ER - TY - JOUR AB - “Beware Elvis Presley,” the Catholic publication America counseled in 1956. The harmful effects of his music on the young were bad enough when limited to records. “Unfortunately,” the magazine said, “Presley makes personal appearances.” And those appearances were denounced in many local newspapers as “downright obscene” and little more than a “strip-tease with clothes on.” It was one thing to hear Presley’s music, another to read about his performances, but when he began appearing on television in 1956, he was seen and heard by millions. For Presley’s critics, it was an assault on people's homes. If only television and other media “would stop handling such nauseating stuff,” the editors of America lamented, “all the Presleys of our land would soon be swallowed up in the oblivion they deserve.” DA - June 23, 1956 KW - popular culture rock n' roll sound recording censorship and ratings home and new media rock-n-roll critics magnetic tape recording critics, and rock-n-roll Presley, Elvis television television, and Elvis Presley television, and rock-n-roll home and new media home, and Elvis Presley home, and rock-n-roll home magnetic recording magnetic tape LB - 32030 PY - 1956 SP - 294-95 ST - Beware Elvis Presley T2 - America TI - Beware Elvis Presley VL - 95 ID - 2886 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In the hands of a producer like Howard Hughes, the technology became a potent weapon to challenge censorship. Hughes, who earlier had defied the Production Code by sensationalizing Jane Russell in The Outlaw, saw another opportunity for the actress in the three-dimensional movie The French Line (RKO, 1954), which was filmed in Technicolor. It premiered in late 1953, in St. Louis’s huge Fox Theater to a standing-room-only audience that included Jack Vizzard from the PCA who had been sent there by Breen, and police officers who had been sent there by the city’s chief of police. Although this article does not say so, it was probably no accident that Hughes chose St. Louis. The city had no official censorship board but it was the home of the Code’s author, Daniel Lord, and many other Catholics. Advertising inundated newspapers, radio, television, and billboards proclaiming “J. R. in 3-D. That’s all, brother,” and “Jane Russell in 3 Dimension -- and What Dimensions!” The opening was uneventful in that the police took no action. The movie’s appearance followed on the controversy created by Preminger’s The Moon Is Blue, and it also appeared at a time when the influential National Theatre Owners of America was urging modernization of the Code. DA - Jan. 6, 1954 KW - self-regulation National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) motion pictures censorship and ratings PCA Breen, Joseph Production Code, and French Line Hughes, Howard French Line (1954) motion pictures, and 3D censorship, and French Line censorship, and 3D films Vizzard, Jack, and French Line Breen, Joseph, and French Line Russell, Jane censorship, and Jane Russell censorship, and Howard Hughes NATO NATO, and Production Code Production Code, and NATO Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) censorship Production Code Administration (PCA) LB - 32360 PY - 1954 SP - 1 ST - Silent Police Watch 'French Line' Unreel T2 - Variety TI - Silent Police Watch 'French Line' Unreel VL - 193 ID - 2897 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Light weight, high intensity lighting units made it possible to film in color, even in low levels of light. In 1955, the 16mm Super High-Intensity Color-Modified Studio Carbon doubled the usable light studios had for filming. Lighting improved during the early 1960s when studios adopted a modified version of the Sylvania Sun Gun, a miniature, high-intensity light original developed for amateur film makers. By the late 1960s, studios had gained even better lighting with tungsten-halogen lamps. This article appeared in an issue that was devoted to fifty years of innovation in cinema and this piece deals with motion picture lighting from its origins to the 1960s. Among the topics covered are incandescent lighting, the introduction in 1955 of the 16mm Super High-intensity Color-Modified Studio Carbon, and the Sylvania Sun Gun (1961). DA - Jan. 1969 IS - 1 KW - location shooting cinematography motion pictures motion pictures, and location shooting location shooting, and motion pictures lighting motion pictures, and lighting lighting, and motion pictures cameras lighting context color +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and history of context, and movie technology lighting, and 16mm 16mm film, and lighting 16mm 16mm film LB - 32600 PY - 1969 SP - 94-97, 108, 119, 177 ST - The Evolution of Motion Picture Lighting T2 - American Cinematographer TI - The Evolution of Motion Picture Lighting VL - 50 ID - 2917 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the Academy Award winners for Cinematography in 1966. Included are the work of Haskell Wexler and Ted Moore. The article discusses how cameras are less obtrusive than earlier. In "Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolff" (1966), hand-held cameras and zoom lens were used. The article also considers Ted Moore's creative use of the camera in "Moll Flanders." He captured "the rich hues of Henry VIII's lusty court and contrasts them effectively with the almost monochromatic austerity of the religiously circumscribed morality that pertained at the time. He records the subtle lushness of rural England, composing each scene like an oil painting by an Old Master. Yet his camera is never static, never reticent to move in pace with action that ranges from spiritual to physical, weaving on film a multi-colored tapstry of light brought to life by the currents of a decisive moment in history." DA - May, 1967 IS - 5 KW - history lenses, zoom transistors sex motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality cinematography +motion pictures cameras motion pictures, and cameras cameras, and motion pictures zoom lenses cameras, and zoom lenses cameras, hand-held mobile cameras mobile cameras mobile cameras, transistorized transistors, and cameras cameras, and transistors movie, Who's Afraid of Va.Wolff motion pictures, and academy awards movie, Moll Flanders sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sex scenes, and cameras cameras, and sex scenes (Moll Flanders) movie, Man for All Seasons Wexler, Haskell cinematography Moore, Ted color color, and motion pictures color, and sexuality sexuality, and color history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history history, and color color, and history cameras, new models (1966) lighting lenses LB - 29880 PY - 1967 SP - 356-58 ST - Academy Award Winners for Cinematography T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Academy Award Winners for Cinematography VL - 48 ID - 2921 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses computer images shown at the Association for Computing Machinery's Special Interest Group on Computer Graphics (SIGGRAPH) in 1985. It notes that while the results resembled surrealistic painting or photographs, "the methods used require more mathematics than arrtistry." (68) The article goes on to say that "The basic techniques by which this translation is accomplished were laid out in the late '60s and early '70s by two University of Utah professors, Ivan Sutherland and David Evans, in fulfillment of a contract for the U. S. Department of Defense. Their task: to build a flight simulator for pilot training that would show on a screen the same unfolding landscape the piolot would see from the air. To do this, the Utah scientists first had to program nto the computer a precise mathematical model of every tree, house and mountain in the flight path." (68) DA - Aug. 5, 1985 KW - computers computers motion pictures computer graphics motion pictures, and computer graphics special effects special effects, and motion pictures special effects, and computers motion pictures, and special effects computers and the Internet photography digital photography digital media flight simulators digital media, and flight simulators digital media, origins LB - 33310 PY - 1985 SP - 68-69 ST - Artistry on a Glowing Screen: The New, Natural Look in Computer Graphics T2 - Time TI - Artistry on a Glowing Screen: The New, Natural Look in Computer Graphics ID - 2970 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Catherine Lutz and Jane Collines argue in their book Reading National Geographic that magazine has provided one of the most important ways in which Americans have learned about life outside their borders. But the photographs in this publication reflect a bias. "The photograph can be seen as a cultural artifact because its makers and readers look at the world with an eye that is not universal or natural but tutored. It can also be seen as a commodity, because it is sold by a magazine concerned with revenues. The features of the photographs, and the reading given them by others, can tell us about the cultural, social, and historical contexts that produced them.” The authors estimate that 37 million people worldwide see each issue of this publication. "Its subscription rate is the third largest for magazines in the United States--following TV Guide and Reader’s Digest. The magazine is used by schools as a teaching tool; it is subscribed to by middle-class parents as a way of contributing to the education of their children; its high prestige value affords it a place on coffee tables; its high-quality printing and binding and its reputation as a valuable reference tool mean that it is rarely thrown away, more frequently finding its way into attics and secondhand bookstores. “It has always been private, but has powerful ties to government; it is a ‘scientific’ institution, yet dependent on the sales and popularity of its magazine; its photographs are realistic, yet highly stylized. Through its long history, the national Geographic Society has strategically deployed realist codes and has fashioned claims to objectivity in order to secure its position as both ‘scientific’ and ‘popular.’” DA - 1910s-1960s KW - nationalism color nudity magazines magazines, and nudity nudity, and magazines color, and magazines magazines, and color photography values photography and visual communication photography and visual communication nationalism and communication books, periodicals, newspapers values, and photography values, and magazines photojournalism photography, and bias audiences, and photography audiences, and magazines audiences nationalism, and magazines nationalism, and photography magazines LB - 34730 PY - 1910 T2 - National Geographic ID - 3111 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article defends U.S. ambassador to Italy Clare Booth Luce's decision to oppose the showing of MGM's movie The Blackboard Jungle at the Venice film festival. The article begins: "Probably the deepest trouble of the contemporary U. S. is its inability to produce a reasonably accurate image of itself. In plays, movies, novels, it cruelly caricatures its life, parades its vices, mutes its excellences. This tendency, far more than Communist propaganda, is responsible for the repulsive picture of U. S. life in the minds of many Europeans and Asians." Luce,refused to attend the Venice Film Festival because she felt the movie showed the U. S. in a bad light. The Festival dropped the film from its program and producer Dore Schary accused Luce of censorship. DA - Sept. 12, 1955 IS - 11 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union self-regulation nationalism MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) Eisenhower administration motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism Cold War war Johnston, Eric capitalism motion pictures, and communism Eisenhower, Dwight D. presidents and new media motion pictures, and Dwight Eisenhower Eisenhower, Dwight D., and motion pictures motion pictures, and drinking military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and U.S. foreign policy MPAA, and foreign policy MPAA, and Eisenhower administration MPAA, and Cold War USSR motion pictures, and USSR propaganda democracy motion pictures, and democracy Luce, Clare Booth censorship and ratings motion pictures, and censorship media effects motion pictures, and media effects nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism motion pictures, and foreign policy LB - 34790 PY - 1955 SP - 26 ST - The Image of the U. S. T2 - Time TI - The Image of the U. S. VL - 66 ID - 3121 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article gives a brief biography of Johnston, then president of the MPAAA and Economic Stablization Administrator. It says that as MPAA president "his chief objective has been opening up foreign markets for American films." (29) DA - Feb. 2, 1951 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Johnston, Eric motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign market motion pictures, and Eric Johnston MPAA LB - 34860 PY - 1951 SP - 28-29 ST - Eric Johnston on the Price-Wage Tightrope... T2 - U. S. News & World Report TI - Eric Johnston on the Price-Wage Tightrope... VL - 30 ID - 3128 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article presents four views about writing for motion pictures. Frank Crane argues that movie producer "exploit actors at the expense of authors."(98) George Middleton, a playwright, says that at the present time, "no self-respecting dramatist can ... afford to bother with the movies. Thomas H. Ince says scenario writing provides great opportunities for college undergraduates. Rob Wagner argues that "not one-half of one percent of scenarios submitted to motion-picture producers are available for any purpose." DA - Aug. 1918 IS - 2 KW - ref, secondary critics motion pictures motion pictures, and writers ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion LB - 300 PY - 1918 SP - 98-99 ST - Distinguished Witnesses Indict and Defend the Screen Drama T2 - Current Opinion TI - Distinguished Witnesses Indict and Defend the Screen Drama VL - LXV ID - 3326 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This short article says that "we are now getting for the first time real pictures of real war." It is not the romantic, glamorous version given by artists and poets but "now stands revealed in all its dreary nakedness." Real war is "nine-tenths ... ninety-nine hundredths of it," is "mere ditch-digging, and firing at an invisible target and convalescing in the hospital and carting and being cheerful in adversity. "What the painters have palmed off upon us before the rise of photography is not real war, or at most, only a small part of it." DA - April 5, 1915 IS - 3461 KW - photography ref, mag motion pictures military communication motion pictures, and military military communication, and motion pictures war motion pictures, and war war, and motion pictures photography and visual communication war, and photography photography, and war motion pictures motion pictures, and war war, and motion pictures ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent LB - 320 PY - 1915 SP - 5 ST - 'Real War' and War As It Is T2 - The Independent TI - 'Real War' and War As It Is VL - 82 ID - 3328 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article on page 80 discusses recent developments in newspaper illustration. It talks about the role of the photographer in newspaper illustration and how the artists who draws pictures is being used less and less. It also notes that wood-engraving is being replaced by photo-engraving. "At present we are casting off -- ungratefully it would seem -- the experience of the life time of the wood-engraver, and are setting in its place an art half-developed, half-studied, full of crudities and discords. The illustrations which succeed in books and newspapers succeed, for the most part, from sheer ability on the part of the artist; they are full of ability, but, as a rule, are bad examples for students to copy. 'Time is money' with these brilliant executants; they have no time to study the value of a line, nor the requirements of the processes, and so a number of drawings are handed to the photo-engravers -- which are often quite unfitted for mechanical reproduction -- to be produced literally, in a few hours. It is an age of vivacity, daring originality, and reckless achievement in illustration." (80) The article also comments on the important of electric lighting. "It enables the photographic operator to be independent of dark and foggy days, and to put a search-light upon objects which otherwise could be utilized. So far, good. To the illustrator this aid is often a doubtful advantage." (80) DA - Feb. 17, 1894 IS - 947 KW - wood engraving journalism magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, mag electricity home and new media electricity, and newspapers electricity, and books newspapers, and electricity magazines, and electricity photography and visual communication quotations news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and Daily Graphic photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving ref, secondary ref, secular ref, American Architect home LB - 390 PY - 1894 SP - 78-80 ST - The Art of Book and Newspaper Illustration. 1 T2 - American Architect and Building News TI - The Art of Book and Newspaper Illustration. 1 VL - 43 ID - 3335 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This brief article comments on a series of films designed to persuade girls to conform strictly to "the moral code and the conventions...." (484) "The films bring out clearly the point that 'who pays' for any deviation from the path of propriety is not the one most to blame, but that the disastrous consequences spread widely." (484) DA - June 14, 1915 IS - 3471 KW - ref, mag motion pictures religion religion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion values women women, and sexuality sexuality, and women motion pictures, and women women, and motion pictures sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sexuality ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent sexuality LB - 420 PY - 1915 SP - 484 (APS Online) ST - Morals Thru the Movies T2 - The Independent TI - Morals Thru the Movies VL - 82 ID - 3338 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discussing the status of electricity in 1894: “…with the exception of the telegraph and if we add a few years more this branch will then also be largely included almost every application of electricity worth noting has had its birth or development in these two decades [1874-1894]; and it does not require the gift of prophecy to predict that even thousands of years hence the last quarter of this century will stand out in the annals of progress as the age of Pericles does now in the records of antiquity.” (265) DA - March 3, 1894 IS - 9 KW - ref, mag electricity telegraph electricity, and telegraph telegraph, and electricity modernity electricity, and modernity modernity, and electricity metaphors metaphors, and age of Pericles electricity, and age of Pericles ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Electrical World LB - 460 PY - 1894 SP - 265-71? ST - Electrical Firmament, 1874-1894: Will There Be as Many New Stars in the Next 20 Years? T2 - Electrical World TI - Electrical Firmament, 1874-1894: Will There Be as Many New Stars in the Next 20 Years? VL - XXIII ID - 3342 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article provides an account of legal thinking about the relationship between movies and privacy at the end of World War I. DA - Jan. 1919 IS - 3 KW - photography ref, secondary motion pictures law privacy motion pictures, and privacy privacy, and motion pictures law, and privacy law, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and privacy privacy, and photography ref, secondary ref, secular ref, law ref, Yale Law Journal LB - 600 PY - 1919 SP - 269-72 ST - Moving Pictures and the Right of Privacy T2 - Yale Law Journal TI - Moving Pictures and the Right of Privacy VL - 28 ID - 3355 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article attempts to provide an explanation for the new invention of moving pictures. One interesting piece of information is the speed with which photographs can be taken and then shown when run through a projector. “Forty-six impressions are taken each second, which is 2,760 a minute and 165,600 an hour; or, as Mr. Dickson has graphically put it, ‘were the spasmodic motions added up by themselves, exclusive of arrest, on the same principle that a 800/801 train record is computed independent of stoppages, the incredible speed of twenty-six miles an hour would be shown.’” (quotation pp. 800-801) The article goes to conclude: “As to the future of this most ingenious and interesting bit of mechanism, time only will demonstrate whether it is to be a mere scientific toy or an invention of real practical value.” (801) DA - June 14, 1894 IS - 24 KW - photography motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space ref, secondary motion pictures, instantaneous motion pictures, and number of pictures electricity sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity photography and visual communication photography, instantaneous photography, and speed of ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Electrical World LB - 890 PY - 1894 SP - 799-801 ST - The Kineto-Phonograph T2 - The Electrical World TI - The Kineto-Phonograph VL - XXIII ID - 3384 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article says that “Colonel Roosevelt has certainly had, and certainly is having, a great and, it must be said, a historic career. He is one of those men of whom, as we have hinted, the future historian must take decided cognizance. His is such an overmastering personality that we go the length of expressing the hope that moving pictures of him may be preserved in safe custody for future reference. What would the public of this country give to-day to see Abraham Lincoln or George Washington in their habits as they lived, in moving picture form?…” DA - Oct. 22, 1910 IS - 17 KW - nationalism journalism history celebrity photography ref, secondary motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures Roosevelt, Theodore motion pictures, and Theodore Roosevelt Roosevelt, Theodore, and motion pictures nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures presidents and new media photography and visual communication personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality celebrity culture ref, secondary ref, secular ref, movie magazine ref, Moving Picture World LB - 13330 PY - 1910 SP - 920 ST - Theodore Roosevelt: The Picture Man T2 - Moving Picture World TI - Theodore Roosevelt: The Picture Man VL - 7 ID - 3493 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Moving Picture World quotes critic of movies comparing them to dime novels: “What, indeed, is the moving picture show but dime-novel literature flashed on a screen by means of magic lanterns and purveyed to youthful minds pictorially for half the old price? It is in the dime novel that its enormous popular vogue had its source and it is by dime-novel standards that its moral influence must be measured.” (452) (emphasis in original text) The article goes on to refute this view. DA - Aug. 27, 1910 IS - 9 KW - children Marked censorship words vs. images ref, secondary motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children images vs. words motion pictures, and dime novels dime novels dime novels, and motion pictures values values, and dime novels values, and motion pictures critics critics, and motion pictures ref, secondary ref, secular ref, movie magazine ref, Moving Picture World LB - 14140 PY - 1910 SP - 452-53 ST - The ‘Dime Novel’ Picture. More ‘Newspaper Neurasthenics’ T2 - Moving Picture World TI - The ‘Dime Novel’ Picture. More ‘Newspaper Neurasthenics’ VL - 7 ID - 3571 ER - TY - JOUR AB - At a time when many actors were reluctant to have their photographs shown in connection with moving pictures, this article suggest that attitudes about movie actors and photography was changing. The article reports that “Numerous have been the requests from exhibitors for photographs of the principal actors in the films. These requests have been showered on all the leading manufacturers and The Moving Picture World by exhibitors who desired the photographs for lobby display. For various reasons the manufacturers have held aloof from this form of advertising, but the Kalem Company has solved the problem by preparing a handsome lobby display of the members of their stock company, which they advertise in this week’s Moving Picture World. It is to be hoped that sufficient exhibitors will avail themselves of the offer to enable the Kalem Company to furnish these frames at the exceedingly low price advertised. “Managers of picture theaters and nickelodeons all over the country are making repeated urgent requests upon the producers of moving picture subjects for photographs of the principal actresses and actors taking part in them. Heretofore requests of this character have come from love-smitten patrons of the places. The managers of the places now see a big advertising advantage in the display of such photographs in the lobbies of their theaters. …It is conceded that all good products in the advertising line should receive hearty support from all quarters, but the people who play the parts in the pictures see the matter in a different light, and for that reason the work of transforming the lobbies of the picture places into photograph galleries is progressing very tardily. It is a matter of delicate sentiment with the actors and actresses. While the pictures have attained a distinct prominence in the theatrical field and are now recognized as a standard attraction, the people playing the parts in them are very sensitive about having their identity become known…. These people are only too glad to play the parts and do their work with the same zeal exercised in regular theatrical productions, but all of them try to shield their identity.” The use their voices on stage but have to work in pantomime in movies. The article says that “pantomimic work makes the people playing the parts feel that their artistic reputations would suffer should it became known that they were playing parts in moving picture studios….” DA - Jan. 15, 1910 IS - 2 KW - fame celebrity actors acting photography ref, secondary motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality photography, and movie stars advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising actors, and status of advertising, and movie actors theaters theaters, and photography photography, and theaters ref, movie magazine ref, Moving Picture World advertising LB - 14700 PY - 1910 SP - 50 ST - Photographs of Moving Picture Actors. A New Method of Lobby Advertising T2 - Moving Picture World TI - Photographs of Moving Picture Actors. A New Method of Lobby Advertising VL - 6 ID - 3625 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article says that “Our advertisement pages, for some time past, have announced the imminent introduction of kinemacolor to the American public, and this week we are in receipt of a batch of literature bearing on the subject…. “…We never expect to see the time when color will wholly replace monochrome in the picture, any more than oil paintings or water color paintings will displace black and white work in graphic art. There are numerous subjects made by the moving picture which are best translated in monochrome….” DA - July 23, 1910 IS - 4 KW - photography ref, news motion pictures color color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures photography and visual communication color vs. black-and-white motion pictures, and black-and-white kinemacolor motion pictures, and kinemacolor ref, movie magazine ref, Moving Picture World LB - 15260 PY - 1910 SP - 182 ST - Color and the Picture T2 - Moving Picture World TI - Color and the Picture VL - 7 ID - 3682 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Charles Urban discusses Kinemacolor in a Jan. 25, 1910 letter to Moving Picture World. DA - Feb. 19, 1910 KW - Urban, Charles photography ref, news motion pictures color color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures photography and visual communication color vs. black-and-white motion pictures, and black-and-white kinemacolor motion pictures, and kinemacolor Urban, Charles, and color movies motion pictures, and Charles Urban color, and Charles Urban education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures ref, movie magazine ref, Moving Picture World LB - 15270 PY - 1910 SP - 262 ST - Correspondence: Charles Urban Gives All His Time to Kinemacolor T2 - Moving Picture World TI - Correspondence: Charles Urban Gives All His Time to Kinemacolor ID - 3683 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that the public prefers black and white picture (like Biograph’s) but that as matters progress, B&W will be relegated to obscurity as the public comes to want color pictures. “In reference to the article which we printed last week on the subject of orthochromatic moving pictures, several of our friends who are actually engaged in the making and development of the pictures have, in some sort, joined issue with us. They say that the public is at present not educated up either to the perception or the appreciation of moving pictures in which the tone values correctly rendered. In other words, from the purely pictorial standpoint, the public does not know a good picture when it sees it. “…We concede that the public is not quite ripe for appreciating moving pictures with correct tone values. But that time will surely come. “And it will come, oddly enough, because of the public’s present preference, that has been pointed out to us by our friends in the manufacturing end of matters a preference for the black and white picture the black and white picture, let us say, of the Biograph kind. This type of picture is deservedly popular, because it gives a fine, rich deposit in the shadows and clear, delicate lights. It has, one might call it, the engraving-like quality which we all appreciate. All the same, however, the human eye is not accustomed to monochrome. Nature, itself, as we have pointed out before, is polychromatic and not monochromatic, that is to say, it is composed of many colors or luminosities or depths or shades. Any convenient term can be chosen for expressing our meaning. And sure enough as the education of the public in moving pictures progresses it will demand that it pictures on the screen shall not be monochromatic, but shall correspond to nature. The result would be that the black and white picture will be relegated to comparative obscurity. Already the change is apparent and is in progress. You have, as we pointed out last week, pictures of the Gaumont and Urban-Eclipse type which are orthochromatic in quality. Then you have the Pathe colored picture, also the tinted picture….” One might compare this article to Richard Abel's comments about audience preference for black and white film in westerns -- perhaps a reaction to the use of color by Pathé. DA - Feb. 19, 1910 IS - 6 KW - Urban, Charles photography ref, news motion pictures color color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures photography and visual communication color vs. black-and-white motion pictures, and black-and-white kinemacolor motion pictures, and kinemacolor Urban, Charles, and color movies motion pictures, and Charles Urban color, and Charles Urban color, and Pathé Pathé, and color movies ref, movie magazine ref, Moving Picture World Pathé LB - 15280 PY - 1910 SP - 245 ST - Black and White Pictures. Do the Public Prefer Them? T2 - Moving Picture World TI - Black and White Pictures. Do the Public Prefer Them? VL - 7 ID - 3684 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses a recent article in Harper's Weekly on "Morals and the Moving Pictures," and said that this publication (Moving Picture World) had already thoroughly covered this subject. It also notes a recent piece in the Review of Reviews (July 16, 1910) on "The Living Picture Revealing Nature." The article concludes by saying that these reviews and others "are interesting, showing the growing power of the moving pictures everywhere, and when journalists and periodicals write so truthfully and commendatory they may depend upon help from the Moving Picture World.” (quotation, p. 341) DA - Aug. 13, 1910 KW - science journalism journalism censorship magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news motion pictures news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values censorship and ratings censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship photography and visual communication actors acting censorship ref, movie magazine ref, Moving Picture World LB - 15850 PY - 1910 SP - 340-41 ST - The Moving Picture World and the Periodicals T2 - Moving Picture World TI - The Moving Picture World and the Periodicals ID - 3741 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the growing number of periodicals and books that cover moving pictures. “The periodical literature of the moving picture increases and expands with its popularity. Four years ago no periodical publication, specially treating of the moving picture, was in existence. Now, throughout the world, there are probably twenty or thirty publications which take charge of the interests of the industry. In the United States there are four; in Great Britain there are two; in Paris there are one or two; Germany, two or three; Italy, one or two; Sweden, Russia, Spain, Australia, each have moving picture publications.” (235) The article also cites growing number of books and specific authors such as Marey's work on Movement, Hopwood's book Living Pictures, and others including C. F. Jenkins and Cecil Hepworth. DA - July 30, 1910 IS - 5 KW - journalism journalism magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news motion pictures news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines non-USA Great Britain France Germany Russia Spain Australia Italy Sweden non-USA, and movie periodicals Great Britain, and movie periodicals France, and movie periodicals Germany, and movie periodicals Russia, and movie periodicals Spain, and movie periodicals Australia, and movie periodicals Sweden, and movie periodicals Italy, and movie periodicals photography and visual communication ref, movie magazine ref, Moving Picture World LB - 15860 PY - 1910 SP - 235-36 ST - Motograph History in the Making T2 - Moving Picture World TI - Motograph History in the Making VL - 7 ID - 3742 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, which uses racist language no doubt common for its time (e.g. Asians are referred to "the yellow races"), notes that instantaneous photography which, for example, can capture the opening of a rose, reveals that "Oriental Art" had captured something of the natural world that western art had missed. "Instantaneous photography catching animals and birds in every possible motion, has shown that some how the slant eye of the Oriental had caught some of those positions the European eye had failed to detect; the 'grotesque' position were positively true; the 'impossible' was actually life like. DA - July 16, 1910 IS - 3 KW - science art photography ref, secondary motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures science, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science motion pictures, and instantaneous photography motion pictures, and race photography and visual communication photography, and art art, and photography quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing ref, movie magazine ref, Moving Picture World LB - 16240 PY - 1910 SP - 132-33 ST - The Living Picture Revealing Nature T2 - Moving Picture World TI - The Living Picture Revealing Nature VL - 7 ID - 3777 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by explaining the distinction between "telephotography, or the photography of objects at a distance," and "phototelegraphy, or the transmission of a photographic image between distant points by means of electricity." (689) The article then discusses the telephoto lens, how it works and its limitations. Among the disadvantages: "Except at low magnifications the definition given by a telephoto lens is not equal to that given by an ordinary high-class lens of the same focal length. Also, as the amount of light passed is greatly decreased by the introduction of the 'negative' element, the telephoto lens is relatively a slow lens. Indeed the orginary rule for exposure is that the exposure which would be necessary if the front of 'positive' lens were used along must be multiplied by the square of the magnifications. If the manification is ten or twelve diameters, instantaneous telephotography become hopelessly impossible. But, both as regards definition and shortness of exposure, the telephoto lens, if properly handled, will do a great deal more than even experts seemed to think possible a few years ago." (690) Still, the telephoto lens is somewhat unpopular. It generally needed a long hood to prevent reflections internally from the lenses' surfaces. The article, though, points out that the telephoto lens gives "new power" to the photographer. (690) Naturalists and others who wish to photograph nature will be empowered, as will architects and engineers. The article also discusses the advantages this instrument can give to the military and especially the navy. It also says that telephotograhy will "render Press photography much less of a glaring nuisance to public characters than it is under ordinary conditions." (691) DA - June 13, 1908 IS - 3336 KW - journalism fame celebrity celebrity culture magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality cameras cameras, and zoom lens zoom lens, and cameras cameras, and telephoto lens telephotography, and limitations electricity electricity, and photography photography, and electricity military communication telephotography, and military military communication, and telephotography telegraph telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph modernity modernity, and photogaphy photography, and modernity new way of seeing photography, and space and time space and time photography, and time photography, and space photography, and travel photography, and exposure time news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines newspapers, and telephotography telephotography, and newspapers personality ref, secondary ref, secular ref, eclectic ref, literary (British) ref, Living Age telephotography LB - 37050 PY - 1908 SP - 689-91 ST - Telephotography T2 - Living Age TI - Telephotography VL - 257 ID - 3806 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article offers a useful summary, in outline form, of the case both for and against motion pictures as seen by many people in early 1917. On the affirmative side that movies provide a "desirable" form of entertainment are arguments that they fulfill a need for inexpensive amusement, are valuable for educational purposes in numerous areas, are socially valuable in reform and health campaigns, are good because liquor dealers oppose them, are useful because they can be used for good purposes by schools, churches, government, and industry. On the negative side are arguments that the movies are immoral, lower public taste and standards, harmful socially and physically, are a factor in causing Americans to behave extravagantly, and are a form of entertainment with minimal educational value. At the end of this article is a bibliography that supports both the affirmative and negative sides. DA - March 5, 1917 IS - 3561 KW - Münsterberg, Hugo Munsterberg, Hugo children censorship ref, secondary motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures audiences audiences, and theaters theaters, and audiences theaters, as fire hazards critics critics, and motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and crime motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology Münsterberg, Hugo motion pictures, and Hugo Münsterberg motion pictures, and Lindsay, Vachel motion pictures, and Vachel Lindsay ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent motion pictures, and critics words vs. images images vs. words LB - 37080 PY - 1917 SP - 426-27 ST - Motion Pictures: A Brief for Debate T2 - The Independent TI - Motion Pictures: A Brief for Debate VL - 89 ID - 3808 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article provides an interesting commentary on the state of talking motion pictures in 1913 as well as differences between movies and live theater. The article begins by speculating that a combination of the phonograph and moving pictures might eliminate real actors "from the domain of the sonant arts." (297) Thomas Edison, it is noted, has been predicting the future lies with the combination of these two technologies and talking films will open great entertainment (e.g., opera) to the poor. But there are still serious problems with talking films. 1) The volume is often not loud enough to be heard by everyone. 2) "The spectator feels that the words spoken were uttered by the figure on the screen, but it is difficult to forget that they are being transmitted through a phonograph. An illusion of vocal reality has not yet been reached." (297) (emphasis added) 3) Complex scenes are difficult to stage. Placing the phonograph in an area where it can best record sound is very hard to do. The article ends by citing an article in The Metropolitan by Will Irwin on the "subtle and important differentiations between screen play and stage play. In real drama, we are told, the field of vision gradually recedes in scope. The spectator is looking into a capital V from above. The view of the moving-picture lens, on the other hand, widens in scope. The spectator is looking into the capital V from below. The best modern drama, if recorded unchanged by the moving-picture camera, would seem disproportionate and ineffective." (298) (here Irwin is being paraphrased) DA - April 1913 IS - 4 KW - theater stage ref, secondary motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Thomas Edison Edison, Thomas, and talking films phonograph phonograph, and motion pictures motion pictures, and phonograph modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion LB - 37100 PY - 1913 SP - 297-98 ST - Dehumanizing the Stage T2 - Current Opinion TI - Dehumanizing the Stage VL - 54 ID - 3810 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by says that "there are few people who know that letters and pictures can be sent by telegraph." It then discusses the "curious invention by which a photograph or letter in facsimile can be transmitted from San Francisco to New York in half an hour." The invention was called the "telediagraph" and the author notes that its inventor, E. A. Hummel, agreed two years earlier to "give the exclusive use of the apparatus to a syndicate of six American newspapers for a period of two years." In other words, a half dozen newspapers were using this system between 1899 and 1901. That agreement expired April 19, 1901, allowing the "picture-telegraphing machines" to "be installed in every telegraph office in the world," the article states. (9) The article notes that not only newspapers will use this machine but also the police. One advantage of the telediagrph is that it "can send a picture to many widely distant cities simultaneously." (10) The author reports that he watched the telediagraph in operation in the offices of the New York Herald. (11) It was also being used by the Chicago Herald. (13) The article points out the similarities and differences between the telediagraph and the phonograph. "The mechanism which moves both the roller and arm in the phonograph is essentially the same as that which moves the corresponding portions of the telediagraph. "But there all resemblance between the two machines ceases, for the telediagraph works like an ordinary dot-and-dash telegraphing instrument. Like the familiar telegraph 'transmitter' and 'receiver' in ordinary telegraphy, the telediagraph consists of both 'sending' and 'receiving' instruments. But in the telediagraph both sender and receiver are similar in appearance, and are operated upon practically identical principles." (12) Hummel says that pictures can also be sent by transatlantic cable. The article explains that the "circuit system used in the telediagraph is what telegraphers call a closed-circuit system." (16) DA - April 1901 IS - 6 KW - journalism fame celebrity celebrity culture magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time electricity, and photography photography, and electricity telediagraph, and photographs newspaper syndicates newspapers, and syndicates newspaper syndicates, and photographs photography, and newspaper syndicates facsimile telegraph, and facsimile facsimile, and telegraph seeing at a distance telegraph, and seeing at a distance sound recording phonograph phonograph, and telegraph telegraph, and phonograph cable, transatlantic, and photographs photography, and transatlantic cable Hummel, E. A., and telediagraph personality ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Frank Leslie's ref, Leslie's cable LB - 37130 PY - 1901 SP - 9-17 ST - Sending Pictures by Telegraph T2 - Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly TI - Sending Pictures by Telegraph VL - 51 ID - 3813 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article offers a description of how an improved hand camera works. DA - Dec. 15, 1906 IS - 24 KW - ref, news cameras cameras, and movement cameras, and portability motion pictures, and movement cameras, hand photography and visual communication photography, and cameras ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific American motion pictures photography LB - 37150 PY - 1906 SP - 452-53 ST - An Improved Hand Camera T2 - Scientific American TI - An Improved Hand Camera VL - 95 ID - 3815 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article draws on George Bernard Shaw's article in Metropolitan Magazine entitled "What the Films May Do to the Drama," and quotes Shaw predicting that moving pictures "will compete so successfully with the spoken drama that it will drive it to its highest ground and close all paths to it except those in which its true glory lies -- that is, the path of high human utterance of great thoughts and great wit, of poesy and of prophecy, or, as some of our more hopelessly prosaic critics call it, the Path to Talk." Shaw believed that even better things will be achieved once the phonograph and cinema are synchronized successfully. These developments will lead to the increasing fame of actors and actresses. No longer will the great performer "be condemned to the inhuman task of playing his great parts for hundreds of consecutive nights, 'nor to relinquish his art under the strain of excessive and useless repetitions of his parts as an actor.' We shall hear no more of the 'fugitive fame' of the actor's art. The Hamlet of Forbes Robertson, for instance, filmed and recorded, may delight posterity, generation after generation:" [quotation from article's author] [quoting Shaw] "'If this come to pass, the actor's fame will spread both in time and space. This is occurring already. I have never seen Max Linder in the flesh; nor have I even been within miles of the American Vitagraph company of players. Yet I am as familiar with their persons and their acting as I was in my youth with Buckstone's Haymarket Company or later on with Augustin Daly's Company.'" (my emphasis) Shaw laments there were not films to capture their work and they says: "'What a life it will be when all the theaters will be picture theaters, and all the players immortal.'" Shaw looked "forward ... to that delightful time when all the great orations and political speeches are filmed and recorded for the benefit of Democracy .... He concludes" [quotation from article's author" [Shaw quotation] -- "'I shall not be at all surprised if the cinematograph and phonograph turn out to be the most revolutionary inventions since writing and printing, and, indeed, far more revolutionary than either; for the number of people who can read is small, the number of those who can read to any purpose much smaller, and the number of those who are too tired after a day's work to read without fall asleep enormous. But all except the blind and deaf can see and hear; and when they begin to see farther than their own noses and their own nurseries, people will begin to have some notion of the sort of world they are living in; and then we, too, shall see -- what we shall see.'" (my emphasis) DA - June 1915 IS - 6 KW - theater stage history history fame fame celebrity metaphors actors acting ref, secondary future and science fiction motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures future, and motion pictures motion pictures, and talking films Shaw, George Bernard Shaw, George Bernard, and motion pictures Shaw, George Bernard, and talking films Shaw, George Bernard, and movie stars motion pictures, and George Bernard Shaw history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures historical preservation historical preservation, and George Bernard Shaw historical preservation, and George Bernard Shaw motion pictures, and historical preservation Shaw, George Bernard, and sound recording sound recording, and George Bernard Shaw sound recording, and historical preservation historical preservation, and sound recording phonograph phonograph, and history history, and phonograph motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars actors, and status of motion pictures, and printing press motion pictures, and writing motion pictures, and revolutionary motion pictures, and stars (origins) duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and motion pictures motion pictures, and duplicating technologies ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion future LB - 37160 PY - 1915 SP - 411 ST - Bernard Shaw's Utopian Vision of the Films of the Future T2 - Current Opinion TI - Bernard Shaw's Utopian Vision of the Films of the Future VL - 58 ID - 3816 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article contrasts motion pictures and the more limited possibilities of the stage. "This new art holds out to us the promise of escaping, not only from the constricting unities of time and place, but also from the immediate hamper of mechanical contrivances. It borrows the world itself for its stage, the high Alps for its proscenium arch, and the deserts of the earth for the boards upon which it plays. In the flicker of an eyelash it bring together the eternal ice and the sun-scorched tropics. With its magic of light and shade it can bring forth at command the legions of Titus storming the walls of Jerusalem or the mordant jaws of a modern dredge gnawing a pathway across the backbone of a continent. For it a thousand years are as a day. The fall of an empire and the fading of a rose, the tides of Fundy and the spring-drawn sap in a growing vine -- these are one and all within its field. With the pageantry of life itself for stage property and all history for a back-drop, who is bold enough to prophesy the final limitations of the moving-picture machine? (444) (my emphasis) The author says that movie makers are adding "Pageantry to pantomime," and that few actors of the stage are able to make the transition to motion pictures. The author says that "In the moving-picture world an hour ago is almost ancient history. What to-morrow holds is only a matter for prophecy." (445) (my emphasis) Motion pictures will bring history alive, the article argues. "History under the skillful touch and dramatic genius of moving-picture artists may for all of us thus become a present fact. The school-boy of to-morrow may read his Caesar with eyes fixed upon the soldiers of Vercingetorix, may watch the camp-fires along the Roman wall, may see Michael Angelo [sic] building the defenses of Florence, may march with bloody Alva through the stricken Netherlands, follow the fortunes of Hudson to the north, suffer hardship with Marion the Swamp Fox, or camp with Grant at Appomattox. History, a thing alive, will come to him out of the brains of scholars, a ray of prisoned light and a flickering procession of ghostly shadows thrown upon a whitened screen." (445) (emphasis added) DA - June 27, 1914 KW - theater stage magic history fame fame celebrity actors acting ref, secondary future and science fiction future, and motion pictures motion pictures, and future motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars quotations quotations, and motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and magic magic, and motion pictures special effects, and motion pictures history, and break with past quotations, and history ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, literary ref, Outlook history, break with future history motion pictures special effects LB - 37170 PY - 1914 SP - 444-45 ST - The Moving Picture of To-Morrow T2 - Outlook TI - The Moving Picture of To-Morrow ID - 3817 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article reports on a recent article in Scientific American by Austin C. Lescarboura on microphotography, and it subtitle reads: "Micro-Photoplays Are the Newest Things Recorded in the Rapid Development of Cinemaphotography." (186) It starts by saying that "A drop of water taken from a stagnant pond is rich in motion-picture possibilities," and notes that prior to World War I, this kind of cinematography was practically monopolized by the French. (186) "As the French have already proven, among other unique demonstrations, it is possible to show various disease germs and how they affect the human system. The circulation of the blood can be filmed along with other functions of the human body that in performance are invisible to the naked eye." (187) DA - March 1918 IS - 3 KW - science medicine photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing ref, news motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures science, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science France non-USA France, and motion pictures motion pictures, and France motion pictures, and microphotography medicine, and motion pictures motion pictures, and medicine ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion LB - 37180 PY - 1918 SP - 186-87 ST - Filming Tiny-Tad Pictures with the Aid of a Microscope T2 - Current Opinion TI - Filming Tiny-Tad Pictures with the Aid of a Microscope VL - 64 ID - 3818 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This publication notes that it plans to giver\ readers sixteen additional pages of illustrations using "a new process of photogravure printing," and "without diminishing the space devoted to printed matter." Two of the illustrated pages will be devoted to advertising. These pictures will be more than mere entertainment and will try to do for readers "precisely what vivid writing does -- bring vividly before them the character of man, the representation of an action, a historical background, or an event of current history." The article says that the Outlook "proposes to do this once every month; and to combine, by the development of the process of printing photogravures, a fine quality of art with timely news interest. Until very recently it was possible to print the photogravure only on a flat press; it can now be printed on a rotary press; and this makes it possible to extend the use of the process from the art publications to the weekly newspaper." DA - Nov. 10, 1915 KW - rotogravure journalism illustrations magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media photography, and rotogravure process rotogravure process rotogravure process, and photography rotogravure process, and newspapers newspapers, and rotogravure process journalism, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and journalism photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers photography, and advertising advertising, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and high speed newspapers, and presses duplicating technologies photogravure process photogravure process, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and photogravure process illustrations, and magazines books, periodicals, newspapers rotogravure process, and history history, and rotogravure process illustrations, and newspapers advertising, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and advertising photogravure process, and advertising advertising, and photogravure process ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, literary ref, Outlook advertising history LB - 37340 PY - 1915 SP - 577 ST - Pictures and News T2 - Outlook TI - Pictures and News ID - 3833 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses telephotography. It discusses its use in the Spanish American War and suggests that it has great potential for military applications. The article talks about how this kind of photography works, the exposure time required, and the fact that anyone can use it. It mentions photographic plates with pictures that have been magnified seven times. Of the Spanish American War, the author says: "During the late war with Spain, the desirability of procuring photographic negatives with the aid of a telephotograph became very apparent. Mr. Dwight L. Elmendorf, of New York city, who has made a special study of this method of photography, followed the campaigns in Cuba, both on sea and land, and with the aid of the telephotographic camera obtained some remarkable photographs of troops in action. Many of these photographs were taken at a great distance from the scene of action, so that the photographer was in comparative safety while engaged in taking the views. The results obtained, however, do not justify this supposition, as, from all appearances, the men appear to be in close proximity to the camera, and one would judge that the intrepid photographer was having a hot time of it. There are immense possibilities of a very practical nature in the use to which this method of photography can be put, and it should prove of great value in warfare in determining the nature of the enemy's country, in making observations of special objects and fortifications, and in obtaining a record of the positions of troops while maneuvering or in action, while they are at a considerable distance." With regard to exposure time, the article says that the "time of exposure is, of course, much longer with the telephotographic attachment than with the photographic lens alone: that is, it is approximately proportional to the square of the magnification. For example: If, with the photographic lens alone, the exposure would be 1/44 of a second, with the telephotograph adjusted to magnify eight times, it would require an exposure of one second; but there is considerable latitude in exposure in a telephotograph, and it is well enough to give a little more time than the rule calls for." As for easy of use: "The principles underlying the use of the camera for this kind of photography are so simple that there is no reason why any one having any taste for photography should not quickly become accustomed to its manipulation, with results that will be found most novel and gratifying. The expense if trifling, as the ordinary camera and lens may be used, the extra length being obtained by means of the box extension at the back of the ordinary camera." DA - April 1, 1899 IS - 13 KW - telephotography journalism fame celebrity celebrity culture magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality cameras cameras, and zoom lens zoom lens, and cameras cameras, and telephoto lens telephotography, and limitations military communication telephotography, and military military communication, and telephotography modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing photography, and space and time space and time photography, and time photography, and space photography, and travel photography, and exposure time news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines newspapers, and telephotography telephotography, and newspapers war war, and photography war, and telephotography telephotography, and war photography, and Spanish American War Spanish American War,and telephotography telephotography, and exposure time photography, and exposure time personality ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific American LB - 37370 PY - 1899 SP - 202-03 ST - Telephotography T2 - Scientific American TI - Telephotography VL - 80 ID - 3836 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article summarizes and uses excerpts from Dr. A. Gradewitz article "The 'Telephot,' a Novel Apparatus for Photographing at Great Distances," in the Scientific American, June 27, 1903. See under Gradewitz. DA - Aug. 1903 IS - 2 KW - telephotography journalism fame celebrity celebrity culture magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality cameras cameras, and zoom lens zoom lens, and cameras cameras, and telephoto lens telephotographyy, and limitations modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing photography, and space and time space and time photography, and time photography, and space photography, and travel photography, and exposure time news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines newspapers, and telephotographyy telephotographyy, and newspapers telephotographyy, and exposure time photography, and exposure time military communication telephotographyy, and military military communication, and telephotographyy instantaneous photography telephotographyy, and instantaneous instantaneous photography, and telephotographyy photography, and telephot cameras, and portable color color, and telephotographyy telephotographyy, and color personality ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Literature LB - 37400 PY - 1903 SP - 149 ST - The 'Telephot' T2 - Current Literature TI - The 'Telephot' VL - 35 ID - 3839 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article explains Arthur Korn's invention for sending picture electrically over telegraphy wires. "The problem of transmitting pictures, drawings, signatures, and the like over considerable distances is old; in fact, it dates back to the fifties of the nineteenth century. Many attempts have been made to solve it, but with scant need of success. Now, however, the difficulty seems overcome, judging from a lecture given on October 28, 1905, by Prof. Korn, of Munich, before the Electrotechnischen Verin (Electrontechnical Union) of Berlin, accompanied by demonstrations with the apparatus itself. Prof. Korn's apparatus is able to transmit a perfect copy of a carte de visite within a brief space of ten minutes, and, should it be found practicable by the German postal authorities, who are now testing it, it will inaugurate a new era in connection with press work, criminal investigation, transmission of photographs of fugitives from justice, etc. We will now describe the apparatus itself...." (417) As regard the speed of this invention which "can also be used for the transmission of handwriting": "At present from 500 to 600 words can be transmitted per hour, giving an exact replica of the original; or a stenographed message of 3,000 words can also be telephotographed in the same time." (418) DA - Nov. 25, 1905 IS - 22 KW - post office journalism future magazines, and photography facsimile magazines photography ref, news electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and photography photography, and electricity photography and visual communication motion pictures electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines television telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph future and science fiction telephotography Korn, Arthur, and telephotography seeing at a distance modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity Tesla, Nikola materials materials, and selenium non-USA Germany Germany, and photography by wire Germany, and telegraph telegraph, and Germany facsimile, and telegraph telegraph, and facsimile duplicating technologies postal service postal service, and facsimile facsimile, and postal service postal service, and telegraph telegraph, and postal service ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific American LB - 37420 PY - 1905 SP - 417-18 ST - Korn's System of Electrical Telephotography T2 - Scientific American TI - Korn's System of Electrical Telephotography VL - 93 ID - 3841 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article says that a "Swiss inventor, Eugen Frikart, has taken out a patent on a method of electric telephotography, which should attract considerable attention." It is an improvement on the apparatus devised by the German inventor Arthur Korn because Frikart's invention "can transmit .... pictures and writing over still greater distances without any metallic connection between the sending and the receiving station, the transmission taking place on the same principle as wireless telegraphy. It is possible, for instance, to transmit from Bern to Berlin, in five minutes, a facsimile of a piece of manuscript, without using any conductor. The transmission can take place at any time of the day, no optical apparatus being necessary. Further, only the instrument for which the picture is intended can receive it." The article says this invention should be of assistance to ships at sea and to law enforcement authorities. The article concludes by saying that "There are still many difficulties which the new invention has to combat, but it is hoped that it will soon reach the same state of perfection as the wireless telegraph." DA - April 18, 1908 IS - 16 KW - wireless communication post office journalism future magazines, and photography facsimile magazines photography ref, secondary electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and photography photography, and electricity photography and visual communication motion pictures electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines television telegraph wireless photography and visual communication wireless, and photography photography, and wireless future and science fiction telephotography Frikart, Eugen, and telephotography seeing at a distance modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity non-USA Germany Germany, and photography by wire Germany, and telegraph telegraph, and Germany facsimile, and telegraph telegraph, and facsimile duplicating technologies postal service postal service, and facsimile facsimile, and postal service postal service, and telegraph telegraph, and postal service materials materials, and selenium Great Britain Great Britain, and photography by wire Switzerland, and telegraph Switzerland, and facsimile telephotography, and Eugen Frikart Korn, Arthur, and telephotography telegraph, and wireless wireless, and telegraph telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific American Switzerland LB - 37450 PY - 1908 SP - 276 ST - Electric Telephotography T2 - Scientific American TI - Electric Telephotography VL - 98 ID - 3844 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by calling "the instantaneous photograph of moving objects in their nature colors" the "eighth wonder of the world." These pictures "were not the hand-colored cinematograph pictures which we have all seen, in which each of the thousands of separate films that make up a group of pictures is laboriously colored by the brush of a deft worker, a process taking a week or ten days at the least. Nor were they the Lumiere color photographs on glass, which astonished the world a year or two ago with the first real color photography, and were everywhere acclaimed as the greatest advance in photography since the days of Niepce and Daguerre. The Lumiere process required from sixty to a hundred times longer exposure than the ordinary photographic plate, and instantaneous work was out of the question. And here was a process that produced color motion pictures in one-half the time required for the taking of the ordinary instantaneous motion picture, with practically absolute fidelity to the real coloration of rapidly moving objects. The Lumiere process was wonderful; the Kinemacolor process, which is the name given to the new motion pictures, is marvelous." (767) Two Englishmen, Charles Urban and George Albert Smith, invented the Kinemacolor process. The article says that "the first motion picture put on the screen in the exhibition of this process (just introduced into America) which was given for the Spectator's enlightenment was of an English harbor at sunset. A ship lay at anchor, her white paint glistening.... The scene was realistic to the last degree -- and the colors in all their natural hues were painted by Science, not by Art." (767) The article discusses other films. "All seemed absolutely alive, the brightest colors and the neutral tints being shown with convincing fidelity; and one had the feeling that realism in art had at last come to its own." (767) Some people refused to believe that these pictures where not hand-colored. "But even more original and beautiful were the pictures of flowers" which showed not only "the brilliant beauty of fresh bloom, but actually the opening their blossoms before one's eyes, from the tightly closed bud to the full panoply of the most gorgeous dahlia or Chinese lily." (767) The author argues that such images cannot help but have a positive impact on children. "Truly when one had thus, as it were, assisted 767/768 at the birth of a flower, a feeling of genuine awe came over one, and the thought, too, that a child who should see these wonderful things must not only have his soul awakened to beauty, but to the knowledge that science brings us close to the divine. Against the undoubted harm that has come to some children who have loved the moving-picture show not wisely but too well should be set the awakening of the imagination that must come from seeing pictures such as these, under proper auspices." (767-68) The article offers other examples, many showing "scenes in foreign lands ... -- all presented with the same startling fidelity to the colors of the actual objects." (768) Like magic carpets, the article notes, movies could transport audiences “in a twinkling to distant places” but the work of “practical men” (768) in producing such things as color films exceeded fairy tales. DA - Dec. 3, 1910 IS - 14 KW - science children photography ref, secondary color color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures photography and visual communication color, and Lumiere process quotations quotations, and color movies photography, instantaneous photography, and instantaneous color Lumiere process, and color photography photography, and exposure time Lumiere process, and exposure time color, and kinemacolor kinemacolor process, and motion pictures kinemacolor process, and color films modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel motion pictures, and new art form children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, literary ref, Outlook kinemacolor kinemacolor, and George Albert Smith kinemacolor, and Charles Urban motion pictures, as magic carpet metaphors metaphors, and movies as magic carpet ref, Outlook photography, and instantaneous cameras, and instantaneous quotations quotations, and color films quotations, and science and the divine cameras motion pictures LB - 37490 PY - 1910 SP - 767-68 ST - The Spectator T2 - Outlook TI - The Spectator VL - 96 ID - 3848 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article comments on the difficulties in taking pictures of extremely rapid movement. It reports that in Germany, a "picture has been taken ... in one ten millionth part of a second." It also notes that the "fastest moving-picture machine at present takes pictures at the rate of two thousand per second," compared to the "ordinary moving picture" which "takes some sixteen pictures as second, and the interval between exposures is skipped." (emphasis added) The camera man who can take 2,000 pictures a second thus "shows us many wonders of nature which the human eye has never looked upon." The significance of this rapid speed camera work may be no less important that the worlds shown by the microscope and telescope. The article quotes an excerpt from Francis A. Collins' book The Camera Man (1916), and notes that a picture has been taken of an electric spark and also a moving picture of a bee's wings in flight. Such visual information may have great practical effect. Quoting Collins, the article says: "It is conceivable that the flying machine of the future may be constructed, or operated on some entirely new principle discovered by the scientific camera man." DA - Dec. 1916 IS - 6 KW - science medicine history photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures photography, and exposure time quotations, and exposure time motion pictures, and medicine medicine, and motion pictures non-USA Germany Germany, and instantaneous photography electricity electricity, and instantaneous photography photography, and electricity aeronautics and space communication photography, and airplanes quotations, and camera speed ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion LB - 37510 PY - 1916 SP - 397 ST - Progress of the Race Between Nature and the Scientific Camera T2 - Current Opinion TI - Progress of the Race Between Nature and the Scientific Camera VL - 61 ID - 3850 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is about Italian actress Eleonara Duse, who critics in Europe felt surpassed Sarah Bernhardt in subtlety. She retired at the peak of her success which make her a "semi-mythical figure," according to this article. She is now considering returning in the movies because, according to an excerpt quoted here from the Boston Transcript, she believed "that from this mute stage, which has in its favor the rare and enviable element of the approbation of the most numerous and humble portion of the world's population, in the dark and crowded halls, new expression of esthetic beauty and moral beauty may manifest themselves...." Later, this article quotes Matilde Serao, who wrote of Duse: "'Her unforgettable eyes have ever that internal depth of poignant melancholy which she made as penetrating as a subtle sound.'" DA - July 1917 IS - 1 KW - theater stage fame fame celebrity actors acting ref, secondary celebrity culture fame personality motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars audiences media effects motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures media effects, and audiences media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and acting acting, and facial expression motion pictures, and not facing camera acting, and not facing camera acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting quotations quotations, and facial expression women women, and beauty women, and cameras women, and acting acting, and women ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion motion pictures LB - 37530 PY - 1917 SP - 27 ST - Can the Camera Immortalize the Melancholy Mask of Eleonora Duse? T2 - Current Opinion TI - Can the Camera Immortalize the Melancholy Mask of Eleonora Duse? ID - 3852 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This poem reads: "She shows all emotions -- love, anger, surprise, Fear, hatred -- the way she knows best: By rapidly blinking her beautiful eyes And gracefully heaving her chest." DA - Feb. 3, 1917 IS - 2083 KW - theater stage fame fame celebrity actors acting ref, secondary celebrity culture fame personality motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and acting acting, and facial expression motion pictures, and not facing camera acting, and not facing camera acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting quotations quotations, and movies stars ref, secondary ref, secular ref, humor ref, Puck motion pictures LB - 37550 PY - 1917 SP - 24 ST - The Movie Star T2 - Puck TI - The Movie Star VL - 81 ID - 3854 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by saying that "It is said that out of one thousand girls in a given area, nine hundred have at one time or other secretly or openly craved prominence on the screen." And sometimes directors have hired inexperienced people because "a man or woman simply ... has a camera face." (259) Personality is often more important than beauty in explaining an actor or actress's appeal, personality that is expressed by the face. "The essential requirement, of course, is to have features that photograph well. In every-day life, a little droop of the mouth or a peculiar angle to the eyebrows may add charm and character to a face, yet on the screen, we read, these lines may have the very opposite effect. As to eyes, certain shades of blue will not do at all, and we are told that as a rule black eyes photograph dull and lifeless. Brown eyes are better, while 'blue-green eyes, with a rim of yellow around the pupil, are best of all, as they retain their expression and animation.' Also 'black hair is not apt to photograph so well as brown, red and blond, tho much depends upon the shade and quality.'..." (260) "...Thomas Ince, speaking for the producers, insists that 'the homely woman with character and lively intelligence has a better chance to become a photoplay star than the pretty, expressionless vacuum with neither,' and this shrewd producer points to the growing number of people seen on the screen who are barely good-looking, but 'who are able to run the gamut of human emotion by merely altering the expression' and who, by reason of the personality expressed in their faces, 'are rendered more than handsome and more than beautiful.' They are in greatest demand and, with few exceptions, draw the biggest salaries. Upon them to a large extent depend the great vogue of the movies." (260) (emphasis added) DA - April 1918 IS - 4 KW - theater fame celebrity photography, and celebrity culture actors acting photography ref, secondary celebrity culture fame personality photography, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology theater and stage photography, and stage stage, and photography photography, and celebrity celebrity, and photography fame, and photography photography, and fame motion pictures, and stars audiences media effects photography, and audiences audiences, and photography sexuality photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing photography, and acting acting, and facial expression acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting women women, and beauty women, and cameras women, and acting acting, and women advertising and public relations photography, and public relations photography, and advertising photography, and advertising photography and visual communication quotations quotations, and personality Ince, Thomas, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Thomas Ince quotations, and facial expression ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion advertising motion pictures stage LB - 37600 PY - 1918 SP - 259-60 (APS Online) ST - Have You a Camera Face? If Not, Do You Ever Wonder Why? T2 - Current Opinion TI - Have You a Camera Face? If Not, Do You Ever Wonder Why? VL - 64 ID - 3859 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article says that each day five million visit the 20,000 theaters in the United States. The movie industry employs about a half million people and as an industry ranks with copper, tin, iron, petroleum, coal, and furniture. "Perhaps an even more striking comparison is with the printing and publishing business, which is one of the oldest and most widely distributed of all industries. Motion pictures utilize more than a third as much capital as is used by that great business." Only the automobile industry has shown such amazing growth in recent years. The movies are potentially a powerful educational tool and "a new weapon in the hands of social reformers and sanitary engineers." The article ends by quoting a excerpt from the National Board of Censorship which reads in part: "'The motion picture is a form of book, a form of art museum, a method of propaganda, and a method of scientific instruction. It is more economical, being a labor saving device, than any other available form of public instruction. It appeals to the interests, where a book may only appeal to the abstract faculties of the mind. Before many years have passed, the motion picture will have created somewhat of a revolution in methods of public school instruction. "'Even from the standpoint of moral regulation, it is likely that more can be accomplished ultimately through a large development of the educational film than through any conceivable censorship.... If motion pictures became extensively used in churches, schools, and social centers, a new motion picture audience would be created and a new standard of taste would quickly ensue.'" DA - June 14, 1913 IS - 7 KW - theater stage history censorship words vs. images images vs. words ref, secondary motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures audiences censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures images vs. print capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business motion pictures, as books motion pictures, as museums motion pictures, as propaganda propaganda propaganda, and motion pictures motion pictures, and propaganda nationalism and communication audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences transportation motion pictures, and automobiles automobiles, and motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures National Board of Censorship motion pictures, and social reformers theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures metaphors ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, reform ref, Outlook automobiles nationalism LB - 37610 PY - 1913 SP - 348 ST - The Growth of the 'Movies' T2 - Outlook TI - The Growth of the 'Movies' VL - 104 ID - 3860 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article about the movies reflects class and racial biases of the time. The writer says that the "influential potentialities of the moving picture cannot be too seriously considered. Undeveloped people, people in transition stages, and children are deeply affected by them." (694) Children are presented in the movies with "changed and sometimes viciously altered versions of the classics and history...." (695) It goes to say that "Especially is this injurious to the more or less rudderless being whom we must educate into a good citizen, the child of alien parents who too often is contemptuous of the habits and maxims of his parents and ignorant of anything American but the hybrid pavement life of a polyglot city. The version of life present to him in the majority of moving pictures is false in fact, sickly in sentiment, and utterly foreign to the Anglo-Saxon ideals of our Nation. In them we usually find this formula for a hero: He must commit a crime, repent of it, and be exonerated on the ground that he 'never had a mother' or 'never had a chance' -- or perhaps because he was born poor. The heroine is in most cases the familiar passive, persecuted heroine of melodrama." (695) While there are exceptions to this kind of entertainment, so of high quality, in most movies of the day "the average screen drama plays upon the weakest, most illogical prejudices and sentimentalities of the less thinking classes far more than the old-fashioned melodrama." (695) (emphasis added) DA - June 26, 1916 KW - nationalism history citizenship children censorship motion pictures, and Americanization ref, secondary motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children motion pictures, and class censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings quotations quotations, and motion pictures quotations, and class quotations, and racism motion pictures, and psychology history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures Americanism motion pictures, and Americanism Americanism, and motion pictures citizenship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and citizenship motion pictures, and Anglo-Saxonism heroes motion pictures, and heroes motion pictures, and anti-urban bias anti-urbanism, and motion pictures actors acting ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, literary ref, Outlook LB - 37650 PY - 1916 SP - 694-95 ST - 'Movie' Manners and Morals T2 - Outlook TI - 'Movie' Manners and Morals ID - 3864 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This work begins by mentioning other works that discuss the lives of actors and then turns to devote most of its attention to a book recently published by an anonymous author entitled The Seamy Side: A Story of the True Conditions of Things Theatrical (1906). The author of this article says that "in the not too distant past, the stroller was looked upon as a vagrant and social outcast. A marked change has taken place in this view. Prima donnas are frequently represented as paragons of virtue, and theatrical stars are expected to shine in the social world." (84) The Seamy Side, however, challenges this positive view. "Lack of real culture, brutality, egotism and utter disregard for marital ties are laid at the door of the theater" ... where "even the leaders in the profession trade as much in their beauty as in their talent.... Drunkenness, drug habits and all-around rottenness reign ... supreme in the stage world," according to this book, facts that press agents attempt to hide. The latter half of this article (85-86) then presents the protests against this book, including the refutation offered by J. Harry Benrimo in the Times Saturday Review. Benrimo's acting company had been criticized in The Seam Side. Alan Dale, writing about the book in the Cosmopolitan, is also noted. (86) DA - July 1907 IS - 1 KW - theaters stars (actors) theater public relations press agents journalism fame entertainment, and journalism entertainment celebrity anti-theatrical bias critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater actors acting actors acting morality magazines ref, secondary theater theater, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and theater personality fame, and theater theater, and fame theater, and stars values values, and theater theater, and values actors, and status of anti-theatrical prejudice theater, and bias against audiences, and theaters theaters, and audiences acting, and bias against censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship morality, and theater theater, and morality women women, and theater theater, and women critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and professional acting motion pictures, and stars (origins) quotations news and journalism actors, and journalism journalism, and actors actors, and newspapers newspapers, and actors magazines, and actors actors, and magazines fan magazines magazines, fan press agents, and actors actors, and press agents advertising and public relations actors, and public relations public relations, and actors false leaders false leaders, and actors actors, as false leaders entertainment, and news entertainment, and journalism journalism, and entertainment news, and entertainment celebrity culture, and journalism celebrity culture, and newspapers newspapers, and celebrity culture journalism, and celebrity culture motion pictures, and The Seamy Side censorship ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Literature advertising audiences motion pictures news press LB - 37670 PY - 1907 SP - 84-86 ST - Are the Lives of Actors Immoral? T2 - Current Literature TI - Are the Lives of Actors Immoral? VL - 43 ID - 3866 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article reviews volumes V and VI of the Cambridge History of English Literature, edited by A. W. Ward and A. R. Waller. It notes that one chapter is devoted to "Puritan Attack Upon the Stage." (243) DA - Oct. 22, 1910 IS - 3459 KW - theaters stars (actors) theater fame celebrity anti-theatrical bias critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater actors acting actors acting morality ref, secondary theater theater, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and theater personality fame, and theater theater, and fame theater, and stars values values, and theater theater, and values actors, and status of anti-theatrical prejudice theater, and bias against audiences, and theaters theaters, and audiences acting, and bias against censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship morality, and theater theater, and morality women women, and theater theater, and women critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and professional acting theater, and Puritan attack Puritans, and stage censorship ref, secondary ref, secular ref, eclectic ref, literary (British) ref, Living Age audiences LB - 37680 PY - 1910 SP - 239-43 ST - The Growth of the Drama T2 - Living Age TI - The Growth of the Drama VL - 267 ID - 3867 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This is an ad for a new book by Margaret Turnbull, published by Harper in 1918, entitled The Close-Up. The description of the book in this ad reads: "Tells the story of a simple, everyday New York girl who became a movie star over night out in the golden West. It is the story of her triumphs and successes -- of her hardships and struggles -- of the friends she makes in this strange world of make-believe -- and of the gay, devil-may-care life she leads for a time. "The story is big and colorful with very real and very human people -- people who love life and get the most out of it -- in whose natures there are depths of kindliness and helpfulness often unsuspected beneath masks of frivolity and temperament. And there are some real actresses in it, too -- people you will recognize by what the book tells about them." DA - Dec. 4, 1918 KW - fame celebrity anti-theatrical prejudice actors acting ref, secondary motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality motion pictures, and close-ups photography, and close-ups actors, and status of anti-theatrical bias actors, and bias against ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, literary ref, Outlook actors photography LB - 37720 PY - 1918 SP - 547 ST - [Newspaper Advertisement for The Close-Up] T2 - Outlook TI - [Newspaper Advertisement for The Close-Up] ID - 3871 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the qualities that make for success before the motion picture camera. It cites Thomas Brady who said: "...As to looks, 498/499 a broad face, big eyes, and loads of hair - in the case of girls or women -- are good. A narrow face will not do. There is a girl now playing in New York who, up to a year ago, was considered a great stage beauty. The moving-picture makers all went crazy over her. A test was made of her, and it was found that her features -- she had a Roman nose and beautiful eyes - did not photograph well because they were too narrow..." The article then notes that Mary Pickford was one who made the successful transition from stage to screen and that the had recently signed a contract to be paid $2,000 a week for an entire year whether she worked or not, and that she was allowed to pick her own plays. DA - March 3, 1915 KW - theater stage fame celebrity actors acting ref, secondary motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality Brady, Thomas Pickford, Mary motion pictures, and Mary Pickford motion pictures, and Thomas Brady theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, literary ref, Outlook photography LB - 37770 PY - 1915 SP - 498-99 ST - Faces That Aid Fortune T2 - Outlook TI - Faces That Aid Fortune ID - 3876 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece offers reviews of several books including Alexander Black's A Capital Courtship (New York: Charles Schribner's Sons, 1897). (285-86) It notes (286) that the work has photographs of Grover Cleveland and William McKinley at their desks in the White House. DA - Dec. 1897 IS - 5 KW - celebrity celebrity culture photography ref, secondary motion pictures presidents and new media Cleveland, Grover Cleveland, Grover, and photography Cleveland, Grover, and picture plays photography, and Grover Cleveland photography, and presidents photography and visual communication photography, and William McKinley McKinley, William, and photography personality Black, Alexander ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Nassau Literary Magazine McKinley, William LB - 37850 PY - 1897 SP - 280-86 ST - Book - Talk T2 - Nassau Literary Magazine TI - Book - Talk VL - 53 ID - 3884 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that cinema has become an "international language" and that several countries -- Great Britain, Australia, Canada -- "have protested against the corruption of their national ideals thru the influence of American-made films." The British are concerned that U. S. films are undermining their authority in India. "The British administration in India has been for some years concerned over the number of young Hindus who prefer to go to America for study instead of England, but these are few compared with the millions who may be infected with Americanism thru the film." The author of this piece writes: "Let me make the films of a nation and I care not who makes its laws; this is the twentieth century form of the old aphorism.... Apparently the time will come when it may be said that the hand that turns the cinema rules the world." DA - Sept. 18, 1916 IS - 3537 KW - nationalism censorship motion pictures, and Americanization ref, secondary motion pictures nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and critics Great Britain Australia Canada India Great Britain, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Great Britain Australia, and U.S. films Canada, and U. S. films India, and U. S. films Great Britain, and U. S. films motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings media effects audiences, and media effects media effects, and audiences Americanism motion pictures, and Americanism Americanism, and motion pictures ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent audiences LB - 37900 PY - 1916 SP - 402 ST - The Film in Politics T2 - The Independent TI - The Film in Politics VL - 87 ID - 3889 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article says that while the "superior person despises the picture post-card," such people often fail to understand the "charm" and the "imaginative sense" that underlies this form of communication. The intelligent collector of post cards, with their imperfect photographs, "is constantly, in the imagination, traversing the whole world." (310) DA - July 30, 1904 IS - 3134 KW - post office postal service ref, secondary modernity modernity, and photography postcards, and modernity new way of seeing postcards, and space and time space and time postcards, and time postcards, and space postcards, and travel postcards quotations quotations, and postcards ref, secondary ref, secular ref, eclectic ref, literary (British) ref, Living Age LB - 37970 PY - 1904 SP - 310-14 ST - The Picture Post-Card T2 - Living Age TI - The Picture Post-Card VL - 242 ID - 3896 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that Parliament has closed a loophole that exempted non-commercial 16mm film clubs from censorship relating to using inflammable film. "Film censorship has never been popular. In fact, Parliament has never accepted it in principle, and it is still nominally a matter for local authorities who have added censorship clauses to the licenses they issue under an Act of 1909. But this Act was to make 'better provision for securing safety' and it has applied only to inflammable films. In this way, thousands of film societies, clubs and other non-commercial exhibitors, who use the 'non-flam' 16mm. film, have been exempt from control and censorship. Now that loophole is to be closed, unless the Government can be persuaded to amend the new Cinematograph Bill which had its second Reading in the House of Lords last week. The Bill has followed a private report to the Home Office from the Magistrates' Association, which pointed out that the need to-day was not to ensure physical safety -- 'Non-flam' is used in commercial cinemas now -- but 'to safeguard morals.' "There are two aspects of the Bill which 16mm. users find particularly distasteful. It extends the 1909 Act in a way which would enable local authorities to refuse permission for a film society showing unless certain safety provisions are met -- and this seems scarcely necessary in view of the excellent safety record of 16mm. And the exemptions which were written into the Bill are quite inadequate to guarantee the independence of 16mm. users. An exhibition is to be exempt if it is private or free -- an ambiguous definition which does not deal with the problem of 'guest' tickets -- or if it is given by an organisation which has a 'non-profit' certificate of exemption from Entertainments Tax. But this clause would make the liability to censorship 262/263 dependent, not on the Cinematograph Act, but on the Finance Act of 1946. At present, such exemptions are given to organisations which have a charitable purpose or are 'partly educational.' It would be open to future Chancellors artibitrarily to change that definition. It may be possible to secure amendments to these clauses when the Bill comes before the House of Commons, and we are glad to see that the National Council of Civil Liberties has convened a conference on March 8, at the Memorial Hall, at which users of 16mm. film can work out a common policy to defend themselves and their audiences from this renewed attempt -- the last was in 1934 -- to impose a censorship that could be crippling." DA - March 8, 1952 IS - 1096 KW - censorship ref, secondary motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and technological censorship censorship, and technology 16mm motion pictures, and 16mm film celluloid materials motion pictures, and fire hazards 16mm film, and fire hazard non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures Great Britain, and 16mm film Great Britain, and film censorship censorship, and 16mm film 16mm film, and censorship ref, secondary ref, secular ref, political ref, New Statesman and Nation 16mm film LB - 37980 PY - 1952 SP - 262-63 ST - Film Censorship T2 - New Statesman and Nation TI - Film Censorship VL - 43 ID - 3897 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by saying that the French have taken the lead in improving artistic design and production of posters. Photography, however, has not yet played as big a role in posters as many assumed in 1895. "The great advances made in poster-work in the United States have been due to three things: to improved processes of lithography, to the great national spirit of competition, and to the growing number of young American artists who do not consider it beneath their artistic dignity to draw a circus pictures, provided they draw it well, who have turned the lithographers' rooms in New York, Cleveland, Boston, Cincinnati, and Chicago into veritable 'ateliers.'" (422) The quality of "show posters" for theater and circuses is of much higher quality than it was with woodcuts were used. The article discusses lithography. "Very nearly all the lithographic stone used for poster-work in this country is imported from Bavaria," it says. (422) The article focuses on black-and-white posters as "the color scheme has yet to be evolved." (423) It considers how color is added to black-and-white schemes. Better presses and the need for speed effect the nature of lithography and newspaper reporting. "Neither plan may produce a classic work, but both plans do produce work that is full of the color and life of the moment and the man." (423) As many as 12 to 20 artists may work on the same drawing and must blend their styles "into a harmonious whole." (423) The author says that "the younger illustrators have gone boldly into the new swirl with a flat-tint brush in each hand, and in the impressively grotesque and the extravagantly attractive have out-Chereted Cheret." (422) The article concludes by saying that one "need only a glance at the New York bill-boards to show that the show posters of to-day are full of a chic, spirit, good drawing, and excellent detail not always found in many things that attain the dignity of gilt frames and gallery exhibitions." (423) DA - May 1895 IS - 5 KW - wood engraving theater Chicago, IL ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones wood engraving, and posters posters, and wood engraving photo engraving advertising and public relations advertising, and posters posters, and advertising advertising, and theater theater, and advertising France France, and posters posters, and France France, and advertising advertising, and France lithography lithography, and posters posters, and lithography color posters, and color color, and posters photography, and posters posters, and photography Chéret, Jules, and posters posters, and Jules Chéret quotations, and color posters color, and grotesque posters color, and circus posters posters, and circus modernity, and color posters quotations, and color posters ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Literature quotations advertising Chéret, Jules modernity photography posters LB - 38000 PY - 1895 SP - 422-23 ST - Art Growth in Posters T2 - Current Literature TI - Art Growth in Posters VL - 17 ID - 3899 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by saying that on July 1, 1907, in Germany, a "new law goes into effect ... prohibiting the photographing of any person or his property without his express permission." (108) The article continues: "But Germany leads the world in this matter of State control. The Government tends to prohibit everything that can be prohibited and many things that cannot. Photography belongs in the latter class.... There are undeniably abuses in our present free and unlimited practice of photography, but they are not such as can be remedied by law without improper interference with the rights of the camera. What these are cannot be exactly stated, for our mentors of morals and manners have neglected the subject. "As regards photography in public it may be laid as a fundamental principle that one has a right to photograph anything that he has the right to look at.... Of course a person has no right to snapshot a stranger in a ridiculous or embarrassing position any more than he has a right to gaze into the window of a private house when the window shade has been accidentally left up, but when one appears in public it is always with the expectation and often with the purpose of being seen, and nowadays he must also anticipate being photographed...." (108) DA - July 11, 1907 IS - 3058 KW - ethics ethics celebrity celebrity culture photography, and celebrity culture photography ref, secondary modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing photography and visual communication Germany Germany, and photography photography, and Germany law law, and privacy privacy, and law law, and photography photography, and law privacy privacy, and photography photography, and privacy photography, and ethics values, and photography values ethics, and photography celebrity culture photography, and celebrity celebrity, and photography ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent LB - 38010 PY - 1907 SP - 107-09 ST - The Ethics and Etiquet of Photography T2 - The Independent TI - The Ethics and Etiquet of Photography VL - 63 ID - 3900 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article comments on several topics including the use of Civil War photographs by newspapers. "The reprinting in the newspapers of pictures of the battle of Gettysburg published fifty years ago in the illustrated weeklies of that time brings home the fact that photography has to a certain extent changed the character of war illustration. Greater fidelity to fact is seen in present-day illustration of military matters. The chaos of fighting men, fancifully pictured by the military artists of the past, is not acceptable to readers nowadays, educated as they are by the camera." (641) DA - July 19, 1913 IS - 12 KW - ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing photography, and space and time space and time photography, and time photography, and space photography, and travel history and new media history, and photography photography, and history news and journalism newspapers, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and history history, and newspapers photography, and Civil War Civil War, and photography war war, and photography photography, and war military communication military communication, and photography photography, and military communication ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, Outlook history LB - 38020 PY - 1913 SP - 641-42 ST - By the Way T2 - Outlook TI - By the Way VL - 104 ID - 3901 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article warns readers, especially youth, of the dangers of electricity. "One of the new and not uncommon dangers of modern life is that of getting in the way of a powerful current of electricity and receiving the entire discharge through the body," it begins. DA - Feb. 9, 1905 IS - 6 KW - ref, secondary electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity electricity, and electrocution children and media children, and electricity electricity, and children ref, illustrated ref, illustrated (youth) ref, secondary ref, secular ref, Youth's Companion children LB - 38060 PY - 1905 SP - 72 ST - Electric Shock T2 - Youth's Companion TI - Electric Shock VL - 79 ID - 3905 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that recently study of the phonograph as an instrument of science has started at universities. One use is to record "American dialects and aboriginal languages." It reports that "A standard instrument has been devised called the 'Archive Phonograph,' by which the record of two minutes' speech, taken on a flat wax disk, is made permanent and duplicable by depositing on it by electricity a think film of nickel." Expeditions have been sent to Croatia, Slavonia, Lesbos, and Brazil. DA - March 12, 1903 IS - 2832 KW - history ref, secondary history and new media phonograph, and history history, and phonograph history, and sound recording sound recording, and history historical preservation sound recording, and phonograph sound recording, and historical preservation telephones electricity, and sound recording electricity, and phonograph ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent electricity phonograph sound recording LB - 38070 PY - 1903 SP - 639 ST - Recording Vanishing Tongues T2 - The Independent TI - Recording Vanishing Tongues VL - 55 ID - 3906 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by asking: "How about queens after the war? Who will care for them?" It ends: "What is the use of having a queen if she doesn't know how to wear clothes or act like a movie star?" DA - Nov. 7, 1918 IS - 1880 KW - celebrity celebrity culture actors acting ref, secondary quotations quotations, and movie stars motion pictures motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity culture ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Life LB - 38100 PY - 1918 ST - Queens T2 - Life TI - Queens VL - 72 ID - 3909 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the growing trend of corporations to hire press agents in an effort to put forth the most favorable publicity, this at a time when many believed these companies were involved in corruption. "'Publicity Campaigning' ... is a new form of advertising -- the highest form that has yet been developed in this land of the advertiser," the author writes. Starting in late November, 1906, companies began using "Electric Talks," which "took the form of a daily display advertisement, regularly paid for as an advertisement, three columns wide and twelve or thirteen inches deep, a new one every day, printed in each of the three daily newspaper of Roanoke [Va] ... and .. number consecutively." (225) The author, who was involved in these campaigns, continues: "We started out by telling in these 'Electric Talks' just what the company had already done to provide a street railway and an electrical service for Roanoke by extending its lines to new sections and in various other ways it had helped to build up the city, to foster its growth, and to bring more people and more businesses to it...." (225) DA - July 29, 1909 IS - 3165 KW - press agents ref, secondary advertising and public relations advertising, and newspapers newspapers, and advertising newspapers, and public relations newspapers, and press agents newspapers, and corporations press agents public relations, and newspapers public relations, and corporations electricity electricity, and Electric Talks advertising, and Electric Talks news and journalism news, and advertising advertising, and news advertising, and newspapers ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent advertising news press public relations LB - 38110 PY - 1909 SP - 224-28 ST - Publicity Campaigning by a Campaigner T2 - The Independent TI - Publicity Campaigning by a Campaigner VL - 67 ID - 3910 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This brief article reports that "a half-tone picture of President Harper of Chicago University was recently sent by telegraph from New York to Chicago." The story was reported earlier in such newspapers as the Chicago Daily Tribune (April 13, 1901, p. 1). DA - May 29, 1901 IS - 22 KW - ref, secondary telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph facsimile photography, and facsimile facsimile, and telegraph telegraph, and facsimile electricity electricity, and photography photography, and electricity photography, and halftones telegraph, and halftones half tones, and telegraph ref, religious ref, Presbyterian ref, Christian Observer photography LB - 38200 PY - 1901 SP - 21 ST - Pictures by Telegraph T2 - Christian Observer TI - Pictures by Telegraph VL - 89 ID - 3919 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article says that newspaper offices in five major cities now have installed technology that can transmit pictures by telegraph wire. The inventor is Ernest A. Hummell. "Two new words have been added to our vocabulary. These are made necessary by the invention of an apparatus for transmitting pictures by telegraph. It is called a telediagraph, which is the best word to express 'long distance drawing,' and is analogous to the word telegraph, which expresses the idea of long-distance writing. Following the analogy, the product is a telediagram. The inventor has succeeded in transmitting pictures from Chicago to Boston, and is looking for immediate returns from his invention. The machines are very complicated and require the utmost care in adjusting one to another and in synchronizing them. There are now five of them installed in newspaper offices in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, and St. Louis, and furnish additional evidence of the powers of electricity when utilized by science. Pictures may be sent from Chicago to Boston, exactly as they are drawn, in less time than it takes to make the original drawing. The greatest difficulty experienced in former efforts to send pictures by electricity was found in making the transmitting instrument and the receiving instrument run together. This has been overcome by making them run by clockwork. The inventor is Ernest A. Hummell, born in Germany thirty-four years ago, and now living at St. Paul, Minnesota. He is an expert watchmaker, and has succeeded in perfecting his new invention without borrowing money or in any manner impairing his rights in it." DA - May 3, 1899 IS - 18 KW - wood engraving journalism magazines, and photography ref, secondary telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph facsimile photography, and facsimile facsimile, and telegraph telegraph, and facsimile electricity electricity, and photography photography, and electricity photography, and halftones telegraph, and halftones half tones, and telegraph news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving Hummell, Ernest, and pictures by wire Germany, and pictures by wire Germany non-USA non-USA, and pictures by wire ref, religious ref, Methodist ref, Zion's Herald magazines photography LB - 38220 PY - 1899 SP - 552 ST - Telediagraph and Telediagram T2 - Zion's Herald TI - Telediagraph and Telediagram VL - 77 ID - 3921 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the invention by Ernest Hummell of St. Paul, MN, to see pictures over telegraph lines. It says that "The Western Union Telegraph Company furnished a wire for sending a picture from Key West by cable to Punta Rassa, a distance of 150 miles, and thence by wire to Jacksonville, and on to Savannah, Washington, Philadelphia, and New York, a total distance of 2,000 miles. "The [New York] Herald of Saturday contains the result in the shape of a picture of General Maximo Gomez and one of the cruiser Montgomery entering the harbor of Havana. "Mr. Hummel, who is a jeweler of St. Paul, Minnesota, is the inventor of a receiver and transmitter by which the pictures are sent. The receiving machine is said to look very much like a miniature printing press. The Herald describes the operation as follows: ...." (seven paragraphs are reprinted from the Herald article). DA - April 7, 1898 IS - 14 KW - wood engraving journalism magazines, and photography ref, secondary telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph facsimile photography, and facsimile facsimile, and telegraph telegraph, and facsimile electricity electricity, and photography photography, and electricity photography, and halftones telegraph, and halftones half tones, and telegraph news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving Hummell, Ernest, and pictures by wire New York Herald, and pictures by wire New York Herald, and photography duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and photography duplicating technologies, and facsimile photography, and New York Herald telegraph, and New York Herald New York Herald, and facsimile facsimile, and New York Herald Western Union Western Union, and pictures by wire ref, religious ref, Presbyterian ref, New York Evangelist magazines photography LB - 38230 PY - 1898 SP - 35 ST - Pictures by Wire T2 - New York Evangelist TI - Pictures by Wire VL - 69 ID - 3922 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the facsimile telegraph invented by Herbert R. Palmer, M. E. Thojas, and Dr. William P. DunLany, and made by the International Electrography Company in Cleveland, OH. It notes that it took about 80 minutes to prepare a picture to send to newspapers on a 1,500-mile circuit and that the transmission itself took about 10 minutes. (374) "In the reproduction of a very fine-meshed picture, the stylus of the transmitting machine and the pen of the receiving machine will rule 80 lines per inch. Coarser pictures are transmitted at the rate of 40 lines per inch, or in 4 minutes. The space occupied by a cut in a newspaper could be filled by an equivalent number of words telegraphed by an ordinary operator at a speed of 25 or 30 words per minute. Hence, the time required in transmitting a picture by means of the electrograph is exactly the same as that consumed in telegraphing a verbal message. About 40 minutes are required to prepare the zinc plate for transmission and about 30 minutes to prepare the picture reproduced by the receiving machine for newspaper printing. On a 1,500-mile circuit 80 minutes suffice to prepare a zinc enlargement, transmit the picture, and reduce the picture reproduced for the press. Of this time not more than 10 minutes are consumed in transmission. Machines with cylinders thirty inches in length, having two carriages, are now in the course of construction and are to be used in duplex transmission, one picture being sent simultaneously each way over a single wire. A machine thus receives and sends a picture at the same instant. With two instruments at each end of the line, a quadruplex transmission is possible, four pictures being sent over the wire simultaneously. Thus the average time of transmitting a picture is reduced to two minutes' wire service. That these speeds can be practically attained has been proven time and time again by severe tests made over the Western Union, American Telephone and Telegraph Company, and the Associated Press wires." (374) DA - June 15, 1901 IS - 24 KW - wood engraving journalism magazines, and photography ref, secondary telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph facsimile photography, and facsimile facsimile, and telegraph telegraph, and facsimile electricity electricity, and photography photography, and electricity photography, and halftones telegraph, and halftones half tones, and telegraph news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving Palmer, Herbert, and pictures by wire AT&T, and pictures by wire Western Union, and pictures by wire Associated Press, and pictures by wire ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific American Associated Press AT&T magazines photography Western Union LB - 38240 PY - 1901 SP - 373-74 ST - The Electrograph -- A New Facsimile Telegraph T2 - Scientific American TI - The Electrograph -- A New Facsimile Telegraph VL - 84 ID - 3923 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the differences between moving pictures and the live stage. It begins by saying that "the cinematograph is doing for the drama what the printing press did for literature, bringing another form of art into the daily life of the people. Plays are now within reach, literally, of the 713/714 poorest, as are good books and good pictures. The secret of cheapness in art as in other things is mechanical multiplication. So long as a play required for each presentation the active co-operation of a considerable number of more or less talented persons it could never be cheap, and in its better forms it was necessarily accessible to a comparatively small part of the population. But once on a celluloid film a spectacle can be reproduced indefinitely, the good as cheaply as the poor, and superiority is no longer handicapped. The same effect is shown in the field of literature. Among the dollar and a half books published every year there is a large proportion of trash or worse, but the volumes sold for fifty cents or less comprise the world's best literature." (713-14) The article lists other advantages of movies over vaudeville and melodrama on the live stage. These include: 1) spaciousness and distance -- matters are not confined to a narrow stage; movies have a "third dimension" as "characters have a gradual approach and recession" (714); 2) there is more realistic scenery; 3) moving pictures can show what is happening in two places simultaneously; 4) actors no longer have to speak what is being written -- e.g., reading aloud a letter that is being written; 5) moving pictures make close ups of action or faces possible (714); 6) "Ghosts, visions and transformation scenes are accomplished in a manner truly magical" (715); 7) silent moving picture presentation is international -- no translations needed from other languages; 8) "first nights" or openings are no longer confined to a privileged few; 9) replication of actors' performances is no problem and does not diminish the artistic value of the product the way a replica of a valuable painting might. Finally, 10) moving pictures give performances "the permanence of a painting or a statue. Dramatic art may have a true history and make real progress now that direct comparisons can be made with the past. The great actor will still have fame but his head will not be turned by constant personal adulation. It is not the least of the advantages of the cinematograph that dead men cannot rise to receive the applause that follows their death-scene." (715) The article also discusses the disadvantages of moving pictures when compared to the stage: 1) "flickering and jerky action" (715); 2) pantomime, although work is advances on making good talking films; 3) lack of good color -- "The problem of photography in natural colors may be regarded as solved altho it cannot in its present stage stand the quick exposure and great enlargement necessary for moving pictures." (715) The article concludes by predicting that good "stereoscopic colored speaking moving picture drama" will be available in the future and that "It will be a new form of fine art not unworthy to rank with the elder arts." (715) DA - Sept. 29, 1910 IS - 3226 KW - theater stage history class children metaphors actors acting actors acting ref, secondary motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel quotations quotations, and motion pictures quotations, and sound recording democracy democracy, and motion pictures motion pictures, and democracy class, and motion pictures, motion pictures, and class audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences motion pictures, and media effects media effects, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures history and new media history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history motion pictures, and printing press duplicating technologies motion pictures, and duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and motion pictures books, periodicals, newspapers materials materials, and celluloid duplicating technologies, and celluloid celluloid, and duplicating technologies books, and duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and books motion pictures, and close ups acting, and close ups color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and movies sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sound recording motion pictures, and talking films phonograph phonograph, and motion pictures motion pictures, and phonograph celluloid ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent acting, and facial expression books LB - 38260 PY - 1910 SP - 713-15 ST - The Drama of the People T2 - The Independent TI - The Drama of the People VL - 69 ID - 3925 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the remarkable growth and changes in moving pictures over the past five years or so. "From a chaser in a vaudeville show to seven hundred nights on Broadway is a long way for the motion picture to go in five short years. From a free and rather unwelcome supplement to a ten-twenty-thirty variety to a two-dollar admission price in a famous theatre; from a vulgar mechanical chase to a gigantic dramatic play; from an eye-straining blur to an eye-filling spectacle; from slapstick to Shakespeare; from a theatrical by-product to a six-hundred-million-dollar industry -- that's where the motion picture has gone." (14) What did audiences like to see and what was the future likely to hold, the article asks? Based on mail, "house to house ... investigations," (15) and reports from theater managers, about 70 percent of audiences when to movies for drama. Another 15 to 20 percent liked comedy best. "Stray individuals find most nourishment in the cartoons, the news weeklies, the travelogues and the educational pictures. The play, in pictures as on the stage, is the thing!" (15) This article says that publicity is important in letting audiences know whether or not the film is of sufficiently high quality that they will want to see it. McClure Pictures will let people know the picture is up to McClure's high standards. "The motion picture of the future is to be the advertised picture, the real Superpicture!" this article concludes. (87) DA - Oct. 1916 IS - 6 KW - class ref, secondary motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel quotations quotations, and motion pictures quotations, and sound recording democracy democracy, and motion pictures motion pictures, and democracy class, and motion pictures, motion pictures, and class audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences motion pictures, and travelogues education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and education newsreels motion pictures, and newsreels advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, reform ref, McClure's advertising news and journalism travel, and motion pictures travel LB - 38270 PY - 1916 SP - 14-15, 87 ST - Movies of the Future T2 - McClure's Magazine TI - Movies of the Future VL - 47 ID - 3926 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article refers to a movie called "All Aboard the Magic Carpet," which advertising the advantages of "A.B. C. Travelers' Cheques." (A2) The magic carpet apparently refers to the cheques, not movies as a form of communication. DA - July 1916 IS - 1 KW - ref, secondary motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel quotations quotations, and motion pictures advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising motion pictures, as magic carpet quotations, and magic carpet metaphors ref, secondary ref, secular ref, economic ref, Bankers' Magazine advertising LB - 38280 PY - 1916 SP - A2-A4 ST - Moving Picture Advertising T2 - Bankers' Magazine TI - Moving Picture Advertising VL - 93 ID - 3927 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article laments that movie censorship seems to have become an "institution" and says that while it may be a military necessity during World War I, "it always involves a dangerous infringement of personal liberty." American have "purer plays and purer periodicals than European countries," even though they censor their press and theater. The author asks what would have become of photography if had been censored 50 years ago? It would be dominated by "a few rich and powerful organizations" and not the democratic pastime it is in 1916. The article says that movie camera technology will soon be affordable for almost everyone and that censorship cripples the potential democratization of this art. "Now the motion picture camera will soon be made cheap enough so that almost any one can afford one. If not interfered with by censorial laws it will in a few years be the common custom to take motion pictures of home and street scenes, to exhibit these in school, church and theater within a few hours after taking, and to mail them cheaply to any part of the country for exhibition in the family circle or in public. But this very desirable democratizing of the art will be impossible under a national or state censorship where one has to pay a fee of some ten dollars for every new film or two dollars for every duplicate, and have them shown to the censors before being exhibited in public." The article says that motion pictures are "more than a means of amusement and more than a method of education. It is one of the most powerful forms of propaganda yet discovered. Some day there will, we hope, be films attacking the entrenched wrongs of modern society, as 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' attacked slavery, for which it was not allowed to circulate in the South...." Censorship makes this seem unlikely. "Does anyone suppose that our political appointees would ... stand for the freedom of the film against the pressure of vested interests and popular prejudice? No, we should have again what Shakespeare calls 'art made tongue-tied by authority,' and the old battle which has been won by the press would have to be fought over again for the screen." DA - May 22, 1916 IS - 3520 KW - class censorship censorship ref, secondary motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel quotations quotations, and motion pictures democracy democracy, and motion pictures motion pictures, and democracy class, and motion pictures motion pictures, and class censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and technological censorship censorship, and technology photography and visual communication photography, and censorship censorship, and photography critics critics, and movie censorship propaganda propaganda, and motion pictures motion pictures, and propaganda cameras cameras, and mobility censorship, and mobile cameras quotations, and movie censorship quotations, and Shakespeare education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and education motion pictures, and reform ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent photography LB - 38300 PY - 1916 SP - 265 ST - An Unamerican Innovation T2 - The Independent TI - An Unamerican Innovation VL - 86 ID - 3929 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses a new film which is a biography of Theodore Roosevelt. "The biographical photoplay is a new and intensely interesting development of the cinema art," it says. And this moving picture bring Roosevelt "into almost personal intimacy with every family in the land." (30) [emphasis added] The article goes on to say that "as the human and appealing Roosevelt picture flashes across the screen, one drinks in the entertainment and the impressive scenes, without giving much thought to the mechanics of the film. "Yet, almost as interesting as the picture itself is the story of the way the material was gotten together so that Colonel Roosevelt as a living, breathing personality might flash before the moving picture audiences of the world." (31) The article goes on to say that the film is accurate in historical detail and it discusses the actors chosen to play Roosevelt, William McKinley, and John Hay. [emphasis added] The article's subtitle reads: "The Greatest Film of the Year." (31) DA - Feb. 1919 IS - 2 KW - nationalism journalism history celebrity photography ref, secondary motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures Roosevelt, Theodore motion pictures, and Theodore Roosevelt Roosevelt, Theodore, and motion pictures nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures presidents and new media photography and visual communication personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality celebrity culture quotations quotations, and celebrity quotations, and biographical films McKinley, William McKinley, William, and motion pictures motion pictures, and William McKinley actors acting ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, reform ref, McClure's LB - 38310 PY - 1919 SP - 30-31 ST - Roosevelt -- In the Movies T2 - McClure's Magazine TI - Roosevelt -- In the Movies VL - 51 ID - 3930 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This rather poorly written article explains the judicial reasoning justifying the censorship of moving pictures. It says it is "startling ... in its novelty" the "claim .. made for freedom of speech in the product of a mechanical device on a curtain in a motion-picture theater." (307) It discusses the displaying of "personality" by a machine and quotes U. S. Supreme Court Justice McKenna on the difference between books and writings, and motion pictures. McKenna said (quoting him) that moving pictures "may be mediums of thought, but so are many things. So is the theater, the circus and all other shows and spectacles." (307) McKenna says that "common sense" does not support granting movies protection as a form of free speech. Films may be entertaining but (perhaps quoting McKenna) they are "capable of evil, having power for it, and greater because of their attractiveness and manner of exhibition." (307) This article notes that like one who writes books, the maker of films may also encourage "obscenity, anarchy or revolution," but unlike the writer who appeals to the intellect, the film maker "produces something for the other senses than the intellectual sense, which the state in the interest of decency, order and government may regulate or suppress." (308) Thus, it is justifiable that "the state ... appoint its administrative boards and give them large discretion to the end of obtaining results which are the aim of legislation, but not in said boards legislation itself." (308) The article goes on to say that "it ought to be that a film to be sold for exhibition ought to be deemed as much in the mass of local property as a barrel of whiskey or a sack of flour in the hands of a local merchant ...." (308) DA - April 23, 1915 IS - 17 KW - censorship ref, secondary motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings law law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law laws, and movie censorship censorship, and Mutual case censorship, and U.S. Supreme Court critics critics, and motion pictures ref, secondary ref, secular ref, law ref, Central Law Journal LB - 38320 PY - 1915 SP - 307-08 ST - Freedom of Speech and Boards of Censors for Motion Picture Shows T2 - Central Law Journal TI - Freedom of Speech and Boards of Censors for Motion Picture Shows VL - 80 ID - 3931 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by saying that "no one ever admits that he goes to be photographed of his own volition.... But behind this screen hides vanity, perhaps; or the desire to see himself as others see him. He wishes to get out of the island of self and have an exterior glimpse at his personality. In the uncertainty of life some record should be left for posterity, even if the man portrayed be ... commonplace...." The article says that photographic portraits "each represents a distinct personality" but that those pictured "all are as it were in a trance...." The subject, "seated in a chair ... feels at once the spell of the studio. The camera, always mysterious, points at him." The photographer is more likely to get a natural image when he takes a picture of someone when they are not aware that they are being photographed. DA - Aug. 12, 1909 IS - 1398 KW - fame celebrity celebrity culture ref, secondary modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing photography, and space and time space and time photography, and time photography, and space photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality personality ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Life photography LB - 38330 PY - 1909 SP - 224 ST - Being Photographed T2 - Life TI - Being Photographed VL - 54 ID - 3932 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that by early 1899, 17,000 photographs of Pope Leo XIII had been taken with his approval. "Upon the announcement of the recent illness of Pope Leo XIII, it was found that with one exception no authentic photograph of the Pope had been taken during the past six years. Within a few months however no less than 17,000 photographs of the Pope have been taken in the loggia and gardens of the Vatican with the aid of the 'Biograph' camera. "Mr. William Kennedy Laurie Dickson, representing the Mutoscope and Biograph Syndicate, Limited, of London, England, the English connection of the American Mutoscope Company, went to Rome for the purpose of obtaining moving photographs of the Pope. He had credential from Cardinal Gibbons, Monsignor Martinelli, Archbishop Ireland, and other noted prelates in the United States, and by special permission of the Pope he secured nine series for the 'Biograph' and 'Mutoscope,' and these scenes were exhibited on December 14, at Carnegie Music Hall, New York city, in the presences of Archbishop Corrigan and other distinguished clergymen of the Roman Catholic faith. They had previously been shown to Monsignor Martinelli in Washington and given his approval." (24) DA - Jan. 14, 1899 IS - 2 KW - fame celebrity celebrity culture ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality religion photography, and religion religion, and photography photography, and Pope Leo XIII Pope Leo XIII, and photography Dickson, W.K.L. Dickson, W. K. L., and photography photography, and Roman Catholics personality ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific American photography LB - 38350 PY - 1899 SP - 24 ST - The Biograph in the Vatican T2 - Scientific American TI - The Biograph in the Vatican VL - 80 ID - 3934 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The article begins by saying: "It is generally supposed that miracle and morality plays exist nowadays only survivals in such isolated communities as Oberammergau and as revivals on such occasions as the Oxford Pageant and the Been Greet performances. Really they have sprung up as a form of popular entertainment in the United States, quite spontaneously, ignored by antiquarians and without benefit of clergy. No summer resort, street fair, or recreation annex of an exposition is regarded as complete without one, and some of the amusement parks have two or three, running continuously afternoon and evening, seven days a week.... "The effective display of modern stage effects and electric lighting demanded grander themes than ordinary life afforded, so the Bible was drawn upon for appropriate material. At the Louisiana Purchase Exposition 'Creation' was introduced on the Pike and drew immense crowds at the unusually high price of fifty cents apiece. This was a revolving panorama presenting tableaus of the seven days of creation, beginning when the earth was without form and void and ending with the honeymoon of Adam and Eve. Appropriate passages from the first chapters of Genesis were recited during the spectacle. The success of this led to the establishment of other biblical spectacles and finally plays in which the vices and virtues were personified.....(351) This article notes that some of the miracles plays use "life-size colored moving pictures of scenes in the life of Christ." (352) DA - Aug. 8, 1907 IS - 3062 KW - censorship words vs. images ref, secondary motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings images vs. words quotations, and censoring films values religion theater, and values theater, and religion religion, and theater values, and theater education education, and theater theater, and education quotations quotations, and religious theater electricity electricity, and theater theater, and electricity motion pictures, and religion religion, and motion pictures ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent theater LB - 38420 PY - 1907 SP - 351-53 ST - Modern Miracle Plays T2 - The Independent TI - Modern Miracle Plays VL - 63 ID - 3941 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article recounts how the Newark Evening News covered a yacht race on Aug. 25, 1903, and using a Kodak camera took pictures which were then developed aboard ship in about ten minutes. The race finished at 11 a.m. The pictures, once developed, were attached to a carrier pigeon which flew them to the paper. By 3:45 p.m. "a half-tone plate was completed, by the usual half-tone process, placed on the press, and a few minutes later the paper appeared, containing a picture of the morning's yacht race." The article notes that using carrier pigeons got better results than "wireless telegraphy." DA - Jan. 23, 1904 IS - 4 KW - wood engraving journalism journalism fame celebrity ref, secondary magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality quotations newspapers, and photographs photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving presidents and new media photography, Kodak photography, and carrier pigeons photography, and telegraph telegraph, and photography ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific American telegraph LB - 38470 PY - 1904 SP - 63 ST - Rapid Photographic Manipulation for Newspaper Illustration T2 - Scientific American TI - Rapid Photographic Manipulation for Newspaper Illustration VL - 90 ID - 3946 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This three-page announcement says that the magazine will be published with illustration, the it will carry material on "the edge of the future," (94) and that it will focus on the "newest knowledge." (96) DA - June 1893 IS - 1 KW - wood engraving journalism journalism fame celebrity ref, secondary magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality quotations magazines, and photographs photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and magazines magazines, and half tones wood engraving, and magazines magazines, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and magazines magazines, and photo engraving ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, reform ref, McClure's LB - 38480 PY - 1893 SP - 94-96 ST - Announcement: McClure's Magazine Is Published Monthly with Illustrations T2 - McClure's Magazine TI - Announcement: McClure's Magazine Is Published Monthly with Illustrations VL - 1 ID - 3947 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, which first appeared in the Washington Star, discusses three methods used to illustrate newspapers. "The illustration of newspapers is a new branch of art," it says. The article explains how the three methods work. They methods are: 1) the "chalk method"; 2) the "zinc process," which was superior for fine work such as portraits and sketches; and 3) photo engraving, "which somewhat resembles the zinc method." DA - Feb. 14, 1891 IS - 7 KW - wood engraving journalism journalism illustrations fame celebrity ref, secondary magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality quotations newspapers, and photographs photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving newspapers, and chalk process newspapers, and zinc process illustrations, and chalk process illustrations, and zinc process ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific American illustrations LB - 38530 PY - 1891 SP - 101 ST - How Newspaper Picture Are Made T2 - Scientific American TI - How Newspaper Picture Are Made VL - 64 ID - 3952 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article prints excerpts from a recent sermon by Baptist minister A. C. Dixon (1854-1925) in which he denounced modern amusements. Apparently there was not much that Dixon liked in modern entertainment. The theater, he said was "'a great black evil institution.'" He went on to say that "'The theatre is a make-believe institution, though superior in intellectual cultivation to the gaming table or the dance. Here and there you find a good actor or a good actress, but the general tendency of the stage is towards immorality.'" Dixon maintained that "There is not a moral theatre on this globe. There are moral plays and moral actors, but there is not anywhere a moral theatre." He denounced modern plays and said that no more than five in 200 were such that "'a self-respecting man could read to a daughter or wife.'" The American theater was "'even worse than in China or Japan, because women do not appear on the stage in those countries. The American stage or the stage of the world is the only place where a black stain on a woman's character will make popular. Women on the stage make fortunes by associating their names with evil, and amusement managers will crowd their theatres with people who come just to see who is advertised as of that repute.'" Part of Dixon's objections to theater appears to be rooted in the stage's appeal to the senses. "'The theatre, through the eye and ear, does for the audience what the dance does through the sense of touch. The average modern play is full of suggestion and innuendo for both eye and ear. Undress that would not be tolerated in any respectable home, even among brothers and sisters, is common on the stage. Conversation which off the stage would mark a woman as unfit for decent company, and postures from which the face of modest virtue would turn in disgust in any other place, are not only tolerated, but are known by theatre managers to be the popular features of a play.'" Dixon did not like dancing, card playing, or many other amusements either. The "'modern social dance'" was not an expression of joy in the biblical or even pagan sense. People did "'not dance because they are happy, but they go to the ball for a good time.'" Dixon ended on a dour note: "'The pleasure seeking spirit does not, in the long run, bring pleasure. It fosters selfishness, makes ugly character and degenerates into a life of debauchery. It ends in hatred of all life and in a sense of failure, which is positive pain, and is certain, sooner or later, to banish all pleasures and fill life with disappointment and sorrow.'" Dixon concluded: "'For me to live, is Christ.'" DA - Oct. 3, 1903 IS - 12 KW - theater stage entertainment entertainment, and journalism children anti-theatrical prejudice censorship critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater ref, secondary theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures actors, and status of actors, and bias against theater, and bias against anti-theatrical bias values morality values, and theater religion law censorship and ratings censorship Baptist church censorship, and theater theater, and Baptists Baptists, and theater theater, and censorship Baptists, and censorship censorship, and Catholics quotations quotations, and bias against theater children and media children, and theater theater, and children audiences audiences, and theater theater, and audiences quotations, and status of actors censorship, and commercial entertainment quotations, and values behind censorships critics critics, and theater theater, and critics modernity news and journalism news, and entertainment news, and theater journalism, and entertainment journalism, and theater critics, and news critics, and journalism modernity, and the press censorship, and modernity modernity, and censorship religion, and Baptists censorship, and Baptists censorship, and A. C. Dixon Dixon, A. C., and theater Dixon, A. C., and amusements sexuality sexuality, and theater theater, and sexuality women women, and theater theater, and women religion, and women women, and religion quotations, and women in theater words vs. images images vs. words ref, religious ref, Quakers ref, Friend actors journalism motion pictures news theater LB - 38660 PY - 1903 SP - 92 ST - The Ethics of Amusements T2 - The Friend: A Religious and Literary Journal TI - The Ethics of Amusements VL - 77 ID - 3965 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece is reprinted from Gentlemen's Magazine and comments on the appearance and spread of illustrated newspapers in Great Britain. It begins: "A new mania in journalism. The newspaper has arrived at the illustrated phase. Comic literature has come out of this epidemic tolerably successfully; the magazines have got down to a dead level of bad drawing and worse engraving; and now comes the turn of the more serious publications -- the newspapers. We shall soon see what they make of it. The growing taste for pictures, and the demand for art education, has recently brought into existence to illustrated papers, which are, in every respect, novelties in journalism. We allude to the Graphic and the Illustrated Midland News." (204) DA - April 23, 1870 IS - 204-06 KW - wood engraving journalism ref, secondary news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving critics critics, and pictorial journalism newspapers, and illustrations illustrations, and newspapers newspapers, and artists art, and newspapers words vs. images images vs. words critics, and illustrated newspapers critics newspaper illustrations, origins Great Britain non-USA Great Britain, and illustrated newspapers non-USA, and illustrated newspapers ref, secondary ref, secular ref, eclectic ref, literary (British) ref, Littell's Living Age art illustrations magazines photography LB - 38690 PY - 1870 ST - Illustrated Newspapers T2 - Littell's Living Age TI - Illustrated Newspapers VL - 1351 ID - 3968 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article comments on the beauty of Italian actresses Eleonora Duse and especially what is convey through her face and eyes as seen in her photographs. "In many respects the face of this celebrated actress is typical of the wonderful nation to which she belongs. Italy and art are almost synonymous terms." (25) As for her eyes, "We would not say there is a cast in these eyes, but if anyone else said so we would not contradict the statement. At all events there is not the straight, staid, settled expression that we expect in people who are governed by reason and a sense of moral obligation. But what depths of passion! what a wealth of love! Such a nature chases in allegro molto time over the whole gamut of joy and sorrow, and alas! the final note is almost sure to be one of pain." (26) Then follows a description of her face: "This mouth is aid. It tells of deep feeling, of intense desires, of hidden lava that may burst forth and burn its way to the consummation of a purpose. It says nothing of hope, nothing of mirth."(26) And -- "The chin is strong, resolute, and tenacious. It bespeaks the kind of will that seizes with a firm grip and retains its hold. The ear is artistic. The forehead shows a comprehensive and versatile intelligence...." (26) As for marriage, "To add to her misfortunes, or rather to crown the bitterness of her early life, she is said to have made the terrible mistake in marriage which so often happens among the devotees of art." (26) Still, she has "reached the summit of international fame" (26) and no doubt, considerable wealth, also. DA - April 1896 IS - 4 KW - status of actors stars (actors) photography fame entertainment celebrity anti-theatrical prejudice celebrity culture ref, secondary women women, and theater theater, and women values values, and acting values, and women women, and values censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship actors acting actors, and status of theater, and bias against actors, and bias against acting, and women women, and acting entertainment, and immorality morality, and theater anti-theatrical bias sexuality women, and photography photography, and women women, and beauty photography, and beauty religion, and antitheatrical bias celebrity photography, and celebrity celebrity, and photography photography, and beauty beauty, and photography sexuality, and photography photography, and sexuality sexuality, and actresses acting, and sexuality fame, and photography photography, and fame non-USA non-USA, and beauty non-USA, and actresses Italy Italy, and actresses Italy, and beauty Duse, Eleonora, and acting acting, and Eleonora Duse stars, and Eleonora Duse quotations, and actresses quotations, and eyes acting, and eyes censorship ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Phrenological Journal ref, health quotations acting, and facial expression morality religion theater LB - 38810 PY - 1896 SP - 25-26 ST - Eleonora Duse: A Study from Photographs T2 - The Phrenological Journal and Science of Health TI - Eleonora Duse: A Study from Photographs VL - 101 ID - 3980 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This is a review of Frederic McKay and Charles E. L. Wingate, eds., "Famous American Actors of To-day" (T. Y. Crowell & Co., 1896?). The reviewer notes that there are many actors who have not "established any title to fame, although all of them have enjoyed a greater or less amount of local popularity." This book "demonstrates the melancholy truth that the race of famous American actors is all but extinct, without affording any reasonable ground for hope that it may be renewed in the near future." DA - Dec. 19, 1896 IS - 774 KW - theater stage journalism fame celebrity celebrity culture critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater ref, secondary celebrity culture theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures celebrity, and actors actors, and celebrity fame, and actors actors, and fame actors acting actors, and fame before movies quotations quotations, and actors fame actors, and status of news and journalism actors, and journalists journalism, and actors personality actors, and personality personality, and actors book reviews, and famous actors quotations, famous actors extinct ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, literary (art) ref, Critic motion pictures LB - 38820 PY - 1896 SP - 400 ST - 'Famous American Actors of To-day' T2 - The Critic: A Weekly Review of Literature and the Arts TI - 'Famous American Actors of To-day' VL - 26 ID - 3981 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by saying that "Nobody with any knowledge of the facts will deny that the American theater, considered merely as a rational means of entertainment, without reference to its relations to literature and art, is in a most forlorn and debased condition. Tragedy, high comedy, the historical and romantic drama, have been virtually banished from the stage, or find few worthy interpreters, and have been replaced to a large extent by worthless melodramas, the extravagant buffooneries of so-called farce-comedies, or the feverish and unwholesome society play, in which the most vicious topics are discussed openly under the pretense of solving social problems." (635) The author sees various causes of this decline. Death has taken away many talented writers and actors. Theater managers assumed that "the people do not want an elevated stage; that they wish to be amused, not instructed; and that all that he and his fellows can do is to follow the general economic law of supply and demand, and cater to the public taste. This, on the face of it, looks plausible, but there never was a more fallacious bit of special pleading. The simple fact is that managerial ignorance, vulgarity, and greed are more largely responsible for current theatrical evils than all other causes put together." (636) Theater managers "with scarcely an exception, do not possess even the rudiments of a liberal education. They know nothing of art, literature, or acting, and care nothing about them." (636) The creation of theater circuits is having a devastating effect on the stage, according to the author. "The establishment of this unenlightened theatrical monopoly has worked and is working serious mischief. The organization of theatrical circuits extending all over the country is not only fatal to the competition which is essential to progress, but, by a system of rotation, enables plays of small value to be kept upon the stage for two or three years. This practice not only acts as a bar to new productions, but confines thousands of actors to one part for season after season, depriving them of all opportunities of improvement, confirming them in all sorts of mannerism and slovenliness, and encouraging them to cultivate a special line, instead of seeking to acquire that power of versatility which is the one supreme test of excellence in their profession." (636) The article condemns the lack of sound criticism of the stage and laments "the absurd prominence given to the sayings and doing of minor theatrical folk -- a class which includes a large number of the vainest and emptiest of created mortals. It is strange that the modern actor, without managers, instructors, or critics, and discussed with so much reverence, should degenerate?" (636) Writers are to blame, too, because they have settled for "writing for a market instead of for fame." (636) DA - Aug. 1895 IS - 4 KW - theaters stars (actors) theater fame celebrity anti-theatrical bias critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater actors acting actors acting morality magazines ref, secondary theater theater, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and theater personality fame, and theater theater, and fame theater, and stars values values, and theater theater, and values actors, and status of anti-theatrical prejudice theater, and bias against audiences, and theaters theaters, and audiences acting, and bias against censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship morality, and theater theater, and morality theater, and degenerate quotations quotations, and degenerate theater modernity modernity, and theater modernity, and melodrama melodrama, and theater audiences audiences, and theater theater, and audiences theaters, and managers critics critics, and theater quotations, and theater manager greed quotations, and vain actors censorship ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Century LB - 38850 PY - 1895 SP - 635-36 ST - The Degenerate Stage T2 - Century Illustrated Magazine TI - The Degenerate Stage VL - 50 ID - 3984 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Joseph Jefferson, who was an accomplished comedian of the English-speaking theater, maintained that it was "absurd" that literary men should envy the popularity accorded actors. Quoting Shakespeare to show the actor's plight ("'The poor player that struts and frets his hour on the stage and then is heard no more.'"), Jefferson says: "Yes, sir, there is nothing so useless as a dead actor." An actor's fame begins to die when the actor dies. He "'lives only in the memory of those who saw him act, but ... is dead as dead can be in the memory of the sons whose fathers saw him play.'" This reality is in contrast to "the painter, the sculptor, the author," who "'all live in their works after death.'" Actors should live in the moment. The "'must have their reward now, in the applause of the public, or never. If their names live, it will be because of some extraneous circumstances'," said Jefferson. One might compare this assessment of the actor's fame with that given in "The Tragedy and the Compensations of the Actor's Career," Current Literature, XLII, No. 2 (Feb. 1907), 188-89. DA - May 26, 1906 IS - 21 KW - theater stage fame celebrity celebrity culture ref, secondary celebrity culture theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures celebrity, and actors actors, and celebrity fame, and actors actors, and fame actors acting actors, and fame before movies quotations quotations, and actors fame actors, and status of actors, and Joseph Jefferson ref, secondary ref, secular ref, outdoor ref, Forrest and Stream motion pictures LB - 38880 PY - 1906 SP - 842 ST - Joseph Jefferson on the Actor's Fame T2 - Forest and Stream TI - Joseph Jefferson on the Actor's Fame VL - 66 ID - 3987 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article comments on the nature of the actor's fame at a time when it was unlikely people could either hear or see the actor's performances after his death. It begins with a story about Michelangelo who was "said to have once gratified a whim of his own or of some exacting patron by carving a statue of snow. It may have been his masterpiece, but, under the warm rays of the sun, it quickly melted into a shapeless lump, leaving no record of its beauty. 'And this is what the actor does ever night,' Lawrence Barrett used to say; 'he is forever carving a statue of snow.'" (188) The article cites actor Joseph Jefferson's observation that the work of painters, sculptors, and writers live on after their deaths, unlike that of the actor. It then reprints an excerpt from an article in Munsey's Magazine by Prof. Brander Matthews on the nature of the actor's fame. Matthews saw two advantages coming to the actors, however. One was that he was often given great wealth and fame while he was alive. (188) Matthews pointed out that the actor, because of a statue made of him, is well known but the sculptor is likely to be unknown. Similarly, the actor may be famous for his performance in a play but the audience is unlikely to know who the author of the play was. (189) A second advantage of the actor was that once dead, his reputation was unlikely to change. By contrast, the reputation of the painter, sculptor, and writer is likely to rise or fall in the years following his death -- all because his work has survived after him. (189) The article quotes from poem by Campbell: "For ill can poetry express Full many a tone of thought sublime, And painting, mute and motionless, Steals but a glance of time. 188/189 But by the mighty actor brought, Illusion's perfect triumphs come -- Verse ceases to be airy thought And sculpture to be dumb." (188-89) This article my be compared with the comedian Joseph Jefferson's assessment of the fleeting nature of the actor's fame in "Joseph Jefferson on the Actor's Fame," Forest and Stream, 66, No. 21 (May 26, 1906), 842. DA - Feb. 1907 IS - 2 KW - theater stage fame celebrity celebrity culture ref, secondary celebrity culture theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures celebrity, and actors actors, and celebrity fame, and actors actors, and fame actors acting actors, and fame before movies quotations quotations, and actors fame actors, and status of actors, and Joseph Jefferson quotations, and Michelangelo on fame modernity, and acting acting, and motion pictures painting, and motion motion, and painting motion pictures, and acting ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Literature modernity motion, and acting acting, and motion motion pictures painting LB - 38890 PY - 1907 SP - 188-89 ST - The Tragedy and the Compensations of the Actor's Career T2 - Current Literature TI - The Tragedy and the Compensations of the Actor's Career VL - 42 ID - 3988 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article condemns the so-called "new journalism" and says that "if the average American journalist ever had such a thing as a conscience, it was killed long ago, and its place taken by a simulacrum of hypocritical accent and leering mien. This effective modern substitute for a conscience in journalism has discovered the secret of preaching virtue in such a manner that it nowise interferes with the practice of vice. It will, for example, devote one editorial column to deploring the brutal tendencies of the age, and fill twenty columns of the same issue with the highly-colored account, from all possible points of view, of the latest event in the annals of the prize-ring. It will take the high moral ground upon the evils of partisanship, and at the same time gloss over the corruption of the party in whose interests its own are wrapped up...." (2) The article notes criticism made recently by the Baltimore Yearly Meeting of Friends" condemning newspaper for publishing "'pictures and advertisements, both personal and medical, which so insidiously lead the innocent and unsuspecting from the path of virtue,'" and calling on publisher to raise the "'moral tone'" of Sunday newspaper to make them "'a power for good among the people.'" (3) This article also note efforts in Illinois and New York legislatures to pass laws to regulate newspapers by "making it an offence to publish portraits without the consent of the persons portrayed." (3) It urges people to stop buying newspapers that are dishonest, have a "vulgarity of tone," and reflect "pernicious sensationalism." (3) Such a newspaper, the article says "pollutes the home." (3) This article asserts that it is an "undeniable fact that most newspapers published in our large cities are so devoid of principle that they constitute a perpetual menace to every genuine interest of our civilization.... There is no more important work to be done for our civilization to-day than that of shaming such newspapers either out of existence or into amended lives, and the responsibility for that work is shred by all alike." (4) DA - April 16, 1897 IS - 260 KW - journalism entertainment, and journalism entertainment magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary books, periodicals, newspapers democracy newspapers, and democracy democracy, and newspapers news and journalism critics critics, and newspapers newspapers, and critics critics, and journalism journalism, and critics modernity modernity, and newspapers newspapers, and modernity new way of seeing journalism, and entertainment entertainment, and journalism newspapers, and entertainment entertainment, and newspapers violence media effects newspapers, and violence violence, and newspapers violence, and magazines media effects, and violence new journalism newspapers, and new journalism privacy journalism, and privacy privacy, and journalism sensationalism newspapers, and sensationalism sensationalism, and newspapers quotations quotations, and decay of journalism ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, literary (conservative) ref, Dial LB - 38920 PY - 1897 SP - 2-4 ST - The Decay of American Journalism T2 - The Dial TI - The Decay of American Journalism VL - 22 ID - 3991 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article responds to a previously published piece in this magazine by Walter P. Eaton which severely indicted the American theater and theatrical managers. This article notes that newspapers provide a dual picture of the theater. Quoting Mrs. Leslie Carter: "'While in one column of the newspaper appears an interview with some celebrated "star" of the church, in which the public is warned against the danger of certain plays in the theater, in another column, on the same page, the newspaper gives its readers a blood-curdling and hideous picture of 670/671 some actual drama in real life that would be quite impossible of representation on any stage because of its moral ugliness.'" (670-71) The article quotes Miss Jeannette Gilder's in Putnam's Monthly saying that "'A censorship is a futile officer.'" (670) It also begins by citing Jane Addams who extolled the American stage for attacking serious social problems on which the church and press were silent. Addams listed about a dozen plays that fell into this category. (669) DA - June 1909 IS - 6 KW - theater stage public relations journalism fame entertainment, and journalism entertainment celebrity critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater ref, secondary celebrity culture theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures celebrity, and actors actors, and celebrity fame, and actors actors, and fame actors acting actors, and fame before movies quotations quotations, and actors fame actors, and status of news and journalism actors, and journalists journalism, and actors personality actors, and personality personality, and actors actors, and public relations public relations, and actors advertising and public relations actors, and stars (origins) Addams, Jane, and theater journalism, and entertainment entertainment, and journalism newspapers, and theater theater, and newspapers theater, and managers theater managers, and decadence ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Literature Addams, Jane advertising motion pictures theater LB - 38930 PY - 1909 SP - 669-71 ST - The Theatrical Muck-Raker Answered T2 - Current Literature TI - The Theatrical Muck-Raker Answered VL - 46 ID - 3992 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This work reviews Paul Terry Cherington's book Advertizing as a Business Force (Doubleday, Page, 1913?). It also notes that the psychologist Hugo Münsterberg has recently analyzed the psychology of advertising. This article says that the "most striking characteristic of the 'new advertizing' is its alliance with art." (406) The article goes on to say that "The invasion of the new spirit of artistic endeavor in the field of the advertisement has been brought about, its champions tell us, by aiming not for the literal illustration of a commodity but to awaken the imagination: not for mere representation but for the creation of a spiritual and esthetic atmosphere by a decorative effect. Thus the new spirit in advertizing seems to parallel quite closely -- and perhaps dangerously -- the new spirit in the fine arts." (406) The article notes that public interest in posters and placards has been revived recently in Europe, especially in Berlin, and in the United States by the International Art Service in the Aeolian Building in New York City. This article comments on the ever-present billboard and says it "has been despised and rejected by champions of civic beauty...." (406) DA - May 1913 IS - 5 KW - Münsterberg, Hugo Munsterberg, Hugo magazines illustrations billboards art ref, secondary advertising and public relations advertising, and new art form advertising, and psychology Münsterberg, Hugo advertising, and Hugo Münsterberg color color, and advertising advertising, and color art, and advertising advertising, and art illustrations newspapers, and illustrations magazines, and illustrations advertising, and illustrations modernity modernity, and advertising advertising, and modernity new way of seeing new way of seeing, and advertising advertising, and new way of seeing posters advertising, and posters posters, and advertising advertising, and billboards billboards, and advertising ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion quotations, and despised billboards advertising quotations LB - 38940 PY - 1913 SP - 406--08 ST - The New Art of Advertizing -- or the Redemption of the Billboard T2 - Current Opinion TI - The New Art of Advertizing -- or the Redemption of the Billboard VL - 54 ID - 3993 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This story begins with the parable of a fisherman who finds a bottle on the seashore and opens it to release an evil "jinn" who vowed to take revenge on whoever releases him. The fisherman manages to trick the jinn into returning to the bottle. In modern time, the jinn represents the movies. "This is a parable, it is plain to see, of the motion picture. Man's scientific curiosity is always getting him into trouble. It got him into trouble when he discovered gunpowder, the printing-press, the steam-engine; it has got him now into trouble when he has discovered the means of picturing motion on a screen. This modern jinn, which has been dubbed the movie, seemed as innocuous at first as so much smoke; but it has threatened something more valuable than life -- good morals and good taste. It is like every other such discovery -- it has incalculable potency for service. The thing to do is not to deplore the discovery, but to follow the example of the fisherman, and by the exercise of quick wit and sound judgment make this huge force a ready slave of humanity." (387) This author goes on to say that "In some way the moving-picture business must be put under restraint by the public." (387) DA - June 20, 1914 KW - immorality censorship ref, secondary motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and immorality immorality, and motion pictures metaphors, and Aladdin metaphors, and jinn motion pictures, and magic jinn audiences, and motion pictures quotations quotations, and evil jinn ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, literary ref, Outlook metaphors audiences LB - 38960 PY - 1914 SP - 387-88 ST - The Morals of the Movies T2 - Outlook TI - The Morals of the Movies ID - 3995 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article states that in late 1895, Boston had nine playhouses and that 9,000 people attended plays each day and perhaps 54,000 attended in a typical week. (879) It goes on to say that "the present condition of the theater is, as a whole, demoralizing," and that during the past two years "the moral decadence of the theater has been startling." It quotes the dramatic critic H. A. Clapp as calling it a "'brainless theater.'" (879) Most Christian churches oppose the theater, the article claims. "The confessed demoralizing influence of the theater has kept the majority of Christian churches opposed to it as an institution, and that is their position today. Yet the playhouse is not now more positively antagonized by the churches than was the novel in the early part of this century; and now, while immoral and intellectually debasing stories have an immense circulation, novels fill our Sunday school libraries and the high and powerful mission of fiction is discussed freely in our churches, novelists themselves being invited to set forth the relation of their work to the life of the spirit." (880) DA - Dec. 5, 1895 IS - 49 KW - theaters stars (actors) theater stage literature fame celebrity anti-theatrical bias critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater actors acting actors acting morality magazines ref, secondary theater theater, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and theater personality fame, and theater theater, and fame theater, and stars values values, and theater theater, and values actors, and status of anti-theatrical prejudice theater, and bias against audiences, and theaters theaters, and audiences acting, and bias against censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship morality, and theater theater, and morality theater, and degenerate quotations quotations, and degenerate theater modernity modernity, and theater religion religion, and live theater stage and theaters, and number of theaters theaters, and number of live stage audiences audiences, and theater audiences, and live theater attendance religion, and antitheatrical bias quotations quotations, and degenerate theater literature, and morality values, and modern literature theater, and modern literature morality, and modern literature values, and the novel censorship ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, Congregationalist-title LB - 38980 PY - 1895 SP - 879-80 ST - Reforming the Theater T2 - Congregationalist TI - Reforming the Theater VL - 80 ID - 3997 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This section, part of a longer article on Jewish influence, says that "the activities of American Jews ... extend far beyond the borders of New York," and that "the business of relaxation and entertainment for more than 90,000,000 Americans is almost exclusively a Jewish industry." (144) It continues: "One needs to go back only twenty-five years to discover how completely Jews have eliminated all other races in the amusement field. Just glance, for a moment, at the names of the great theatrical 'magnates' of a generation ago. They were nearly all Irish or plain Anglo-Saxon.... A similar roster now would show an overwhelming majority of Jewish names. It is not only in the matter of race, however, that these old-time 'magnates' differed from the new. In many cases they represented an altogether different theatrical type. Nearly all were primarily theatrical managers and only secondarily business men; many, indeed, had earned their apprenticeship as actors and playwrights. They understood writing as a technical art, and approached the business of entertaining the public largely from an artistic standpoint. The Jewish managers who control the industry now, however, are nothing but business men. A few exception, of course, must be made; certainly no one would say that such men as David Belasco and Charles and Daniel Frohman are primarily commercialists. With practically all the rest, however, the modern theater is simply merchandise, like ready-made clothing and women's cloaks. Whereas the old managers started their careers on the stage, it is significant that nearly all of the new managers started in the box-office or in one of the occupations closely allied to the theater." (144) Later, the article says that "In vaudeville and moving pictures the Jews have likewise made large fortunes." (145) Other subheadings in this piece are entitled "Protestant and Catholic Children Now Taught by Jewesses; Jewish Policemen and Firemen" (143-44); "Jews in Control of the Big Department-Stores" (145-46); and "Jews Control the Whisky Business." (146-47). DA - March 1913 IS - 5 KW - theater Jews Chicago, IL censorship ref, secondary motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings anti-Semitism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and anti-Semitism religion values religion, and motion pictures values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion motion pictures, and Jews Jews, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values censorship, and Jews Jews, and censorship censorship, and religion religion, and censorship motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures religion, and theater values, and theater theater, and religion theater, and Jews Jews, and theater theater, and values ref, secondary ref, secular ref, reform ref, illustrated ref, McClure's anti-Semitism LB - 38990 PY - 1913 SP - 144-45 ST - [Jewish Control of the Theaters] T2 - McClure's Magazine TI - [Jewish Control of the Theaters] VL - 40 ID - 3998 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, which appeared in a magazine that was one of the early users of illustration, deplores the over use of pictures. "We can scarce get the sense of what we read for the pictures," it says, "we can't see the ideas for the illustrations. Our world is simply flooded with them. They lurk in almost every form of printed matter; they assault from the bill-boards, from the innocent and useful fences and necessary barn roofs; they are part and parcel of every kind of advertisement.... And these pervasive pictures run an extraordinary and comprehensive gamut, from the atrocious and villainous, through many degrees of commonness and mediocrity, up through various stages of good and better, to the really excellent, to the noble and the best." The images in the Sunday newspapers come in for criticism. "But it is more than a far cry, it is an incalculable distance, from the beauty and perfection of kindred arts and kindred minds, to the pictorial squalor, say, of the Sunday newspapers, of which the 'Funny Page' is the dearest monstrosity ever foisted upon a patient and long-suffering public. For young and undeveloped minds and eyes to come into frequent, to say nothing of constant, contact with this sorry stuff, with its wretched coloring and worse than wretched subjects, is simply to sow the place of taste with salt, and to make any later and lovely growth utterly impossible." More than the quality and more than the sheer volume of pictures posed a problem, according to this editorial. The images could curtail thinking. "But it is not the quantity and quality of to-day's illustrations that may be questioned so much as illustration itself. For even if it were far better than it is, and were more sparingly and effectively used, it would still be of doubtful value. 'You're not seeing that with the eye only,' remarked a scientific man once in the course of conversation, 'but with the eye aided by the brain -- the eye plus the power of visualization.' And he was right! 'All original thought is done in images,' said [Jacob] Molescott: and it therefore become of prime importance not to pre-empt the growing and developing mind by poor, tawdry, and irrelevant pictures. Illustration, rightly used, is a fine mental stimulant; but improperly and over used it becomes simply a mental drug. And it would be safe to say that a young mind, overfed pictorially, will scarcely be likely to do any original thinking. ...To see and not perceive, to give the effects of certain forms of illustration, which are apt to stunt, if they do not kill, the imagination. Indeed, one may often gauge the range and quality of a child's apprehension and imagination by its independence of the pictured page." Unfortunately, only "rarely does an illustration lift and really illumine its subject." The article draws a parallel between acting and illustrating when it says that "there is close analogy between the art of acting and that of illustration." There is an important difference between the written text and the illustration. "Compare the average text with the average illustration, and the reflective person will see why illustration may prove detrimental, why it may preclude thought and prevent visualization. To try to image forth for one's self, to become conversant with, and ready in, apt illustrations of a subject, whether they be of picture, symbol, metaphor, or simile, is all part of thinking. And thinking is a living process, both a science and an art: it is the athletics of the mind. Not only are pictures that corrupt the mind to be avoided, but all such as do not actually aid in this process of thinking are reprehensible and enfeebling to the mind." The editorial concludes by giving examples of illustrations "that call upon the highest faculties of the mind" and says they are "a far cry from the modern illustrator who harshly and superficially reads the matter submitted to him, and then makes a picture bearing little or no relation to the subject." DA - July 29, 1911 IS - 2849 KW - wood engraving Sunday newspapers journalism illustrations decadence words vs. images magazines, and photography images vs. words magazines photography ref, secondary news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines illustrations, and newspapers illustrations, and magazines magazines, and illustrations newspapers, and illustration images vs. print advertising and public relations advertising, and newspapers newspapers, and advertising magazines, and advertising advertising, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving quotations quotations, and over-illustration magazines, and illustrations Sunday newspapers, and illustrations illustrations, and Sunday newspaper photography, and Sunday newspapers color color, and Sunday newspapers Sunday newspapers, and color quotations, and wretched coloring color, and values values, and color children and media Sunday newspapers, and children children, and Sunday newspapers media effects media effects, and Sunday newspapers Sunday newspapers, and media effects quotations, and illustrations as drug modernity modernity, and illustrations illustrations, and modernity color, and decadence decadence, and color decadence, and Sunday newspapers Sunday newspapers, and decadence words vs. images ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Harper's Weekly advertising children values LB - 39000 PY - 1911 SP - 8 ST - Over-Illustration T2 - Harper's Weekly TI - Over-Illustration VL - 55 ID - 3999 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the plans of Achille Ricciardi who plan to begin a "theater of color." (612) "He proposes a transformation of the static scenic settings by the plastic use of illumination in providing a vivid and living background to emphasize the content of plays already written and suited to such interpretation. In realizing his effects, Ricciardi has developed several interesting devices. He projects his light on the stage from the sides, from above and also from concealed sources in the floor, whereby a figure walking above is suddenly and unexpectedly cast into strong illumination. Most of his side-lights, explains Oliver M. Sayler, in the Boston Transcript, are passed through water contained in glass boxes and chemically colored. The effect of ... rippling light is also obtained through this device." (612) The article provides a lengthy excerpt from Ricciardi talking about the Theater of Color: "'The appearance and developments of colors constitute the essence of my theater. Among our predecessors color belonged to the technic of the stage rather than that of the 612/613 drama.... We aim to make of the stage not a cornice, but a part of the drama, its visible element, not merely its exterior. We should remember that the stage has a dual structure; architectural, which limits the space of the action, and spiritual, which fuses the psychological motives with the surroundings. Moving color modifies forms without disfiguring them. In an atmosphere of successive colors the emotional intensity of the drama reaches it proper pitch without alteration of the phonetic value or the style of the dialog, as in opera.... In considering color as psychological background, we must remember that music gives the sensation of tempo and painting the impression of space, and that the only element which can arouse the sensations of tempo and space at the same time is the magic element of color freed from form. In answer to the objection that the same color will not suggest the same emotional reactions to different people, I replay that we are all children as regards our color sensibilities, which are simple and primitive and therefore more likely to be similar than different. Red is cheerful and white is pure; these conceptions are found in all languages and prove the universal intellectual nature of the sense of color. I believe that a deep blue with a sickle of green will give the impression of a landscape more successfully than painted cardboard and bad white lead.'" (613) The author of this article discusses specific colors. "A taste for red is almost always associated with passion and the sensual pleasures of life," it says. (613) DA - Nov. 1921 IS - 5 KW - theater theater religion religion, and color magic emotion decadence censorship censorship censorship ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color color, and inadequacy of language color, in history color, and theory color, and language color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and poetry color, and religion religion, and color values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations theater and stage color, and theater theater, and color Ricciardi, Achille, and color color, and Achille Ricciardi Italy non-USA Italy, and color in theater non-USA, and color in theater lighting lighting, and theater theater, and lighting censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color magic, and color color, and magic color, and music media effects color, media effects media effects, and color ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion LB - 39130 PY - 1921 SP - 612-13 ST - Broadway to Have a New 'Theater of Color' T2 - Current Opinion TI - Broadway to Have a New 'Theater of Color' VL - 71 ID - 4012 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The subtitle for this article reads: "The New Drama of the Grotesque and the New Theater of Color." The latter part of the article discusses the Italian Achille Ricciardi, who as early as 1906 called for a "theater of color." The article reprints an excerpt from the Boston Transcript (perhaps by Isaac Goldberg) concerning Ricciardi's ideas. Quoting from the Transcript article: "'...We have too long been content to use color merely as a decorative element, overlooking the fact that, so to speak, it has a life of its own, a rich treasury of emotive connotations, and may be employed as a distinctly psychological factor, with traditions, combinations and climaxes all its own. In a fairly long preliminary discussion he [Achille Ricciardi] enters into an abridged history of color-values, carefully distinguishing previous attempts from his own. He insists that his innovation possesses primary esthetic significance. "Even the color of the clothes determines the psychology of the dramatic person .... In the development of the drama the color of the costumes follows the ascent of the emotions. Every event takes place in the special atmosphere, with its individual color...." (29) "'...Do colors affect all persons the same way? And granted this, do colors affect all persons in the same way at the same time? If not, how can full use of the colors as a psychological factor be made? It should be remembered that Ricciardi is not concerned primarily with color as decoration or as symbol, but as a vital factor such as sound is in music. The innovator seems to feel the validity of this objection, for toward the close of his exposition he asserts that certain values of color -- he call them moral -- are widespread, such as red and blue for happy moods, and white for purity. Moreover, color in motion, production of contrasts, and so on, possess psychological effects of their own, and doubtless the words of the piece could suggest subtly the influences intended. Color, then, is here not the equivalent of other sensations; "but it modifies their tone and thus creates something sui generis."' (29) "'Ricciardi seems to establish very firmly this position as the genuine innovator in this regard. By this time his experiments, intended to be made in France, may have already taken place. It is of interest to note how constant is the deference of both Scardaoni and Ricciardi (as well as more than one other of the innovators) to Greek models and ancient procedure. Behind all the agitation is a yearning for freedom. To Ricciardi, as to Scardaoni, there is something of the rite in drama; the former would even seek his ideal stage upon the Mediterranean, thus returning to the open air of the ancients. What better stage, indeed, for the pageantry of color!'" (29) DA - July 1919 IS - 1 KW - theater theater religion religion, and color magic emotion decadence censorship censorship censorship ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color color, and inadequacy of language color, in history color, and theory color, and language color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and poetry color, and religion religion, and color values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations theater and stage color, and theater theater, and color Ricciardi, Achille, and color color, and Achille Ricciardi Italy non-USA Italy, and color in theater non-USA, and color in theater lighting lighting, and theater theater, and lighting censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color magic, and color color, and magic color, and music media effects color, media effects media effects, and color color, as psychological factor quotations quotations, and color quotations, color as yearning for freedom ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion LB - 39170 PY - 1919 SP - 28-29 ST - Laughter and Color in the New Italian Drama T2 - Current Opinion TI - Laughter and Color in the New Italian Drama VL - 67 ID - 4016 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article comments on the changing relationship between the actor and the drama or play. "In the elder days of art it was the custom to admire the work and ignore the artist. Nowadays we admire the artist and ignore his work.... It is like a banquet where the toastmaster takes up all the time by his introduction of the speakers." DA - Dec. 25, 1916 IS - 3551 KW - Los Angeles ref, secondary actors acting motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity motion pictures audiences audiences, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and audiences motion pictures, and actors actors, and status of quotations quotations, and status of actors quotations, and acting ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent actors, and movie stars origins movie stars origins LB - 39210 PY - 1916 SP - 515 ST - Our Pampered Artists T2 - The Independent TI - Our Pampered Artists VL - 88 ID - 4020 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Quoting Hugo Münsterberg regarding his apprehensions about the photoplay: "'It is not the dangerous knowledge which must be avoided, but it is the trivializing influence of a steady contact with things which are not worth knowing.'" Münsterberg also is quoted to the effect that simply punishing the villain at the end of the film may not be enough to prevent the film from having a harmful moral influence. "'Certainly it is not enough to have the villain punished in the last few pictures of the reel. If scenes of vice or crime are shown with all their lure and glamor the moral devastation of such a suggestive show is not undone by the appended social reaction. The misguided boys or girls feels sure that they would be successful enough not to be trapped.... The true moral influence must come from the positive influence of the play itself.'" (Münsterberg quoted) DA - April 1917 IS - 4 KW - Münsterberg, Hugo Munsterberg, Hugo censorship censorship ref, secondary motion pictures motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology Münsterberg, Hugo motion pictures, and Hugo Münsterberg critics critics, and motion pictures quotations quotations, and trivializing knowledge censorship and ratings censorship, and crime Münsterberg, Hugo, and censorship motion pictures, and morality motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures media effects media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects media effects, and Hugo Münsterberg Münsterberg, Hugo, and media effects ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion LB - 39220 PY - 1917 SP - 258 ST - Originality the Crying Need of the Photodrama as Münsterberg See It T2 - Current Opinion TI - Originality the Crying Need of the Photodrama as Münsterberg See It VL - 62 ID - 4021 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by saying that "It appears that the public has been deceived, or at least misled, by such savants as Hugo Münsterberg and Vachel Lindsay into believing that there are fundamental elements of art in the photodrama and that it is destined to take rank eventually as an eighth art in the cultural world. As a matter of fact, we read with a degree of surprise, the movies have no concern with art at all. There sole concern is with life, and the trouble is that the public has been taught to expect more of them than they have been or ever will be able to deliver. Such, at least, is the interesting assertion made by one motion-picture magnate who has no illusions about the industry and who has been making a confidant of William Marion Reedy." This person was recently quoted in the St. Louis Mirror and a excerpt from his interview is reprinted in this article. This person emphasized movies' education value in teaching geography and other subjects in the schools. DA - Oct. 1917 IS - 4 KW - Münsterberg, Hugo Munsterberg, Hugo Lindsay, Vachel censorship censorship ref, secondary motion pictures motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology Münsterberg, Hugo motion pictures, and Hugo Münsterberg critics critics, and motion pictures quotations quotations, and trivializing knowledge censorship and ratings censorship, and crime Münsterberg, Hugo, and censorship motion pictures, and morality motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures media effects media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects media effects, and Hugo Münsterberg Münsterberg, Hugo, and media effects Lindsay, Vachel, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Vachel Lindsay education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and education ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion LB - 39230 PY - 1917 SP - 251 ST - Can the Making of Motion Pictures Ever Be a Fine Art? T2 - Current Opinion TI - Can the Making of Motion Pictures Ever Be a Fine Art? VL - 63 ID - 4022 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article talks about the effect of colored lights in the theater. Color "light exerts not only a therapeutic and sanative influence, but an emotional one as well." The article considers a recent lecture by Charles R. Clifford, reprinted in The Illuminating Engineer, on how "the whole history of dramatic expression on stage will have to be written anew by an authority competent to realize and apply chromotherapeutic principles." Clifford argued that "'the effect of color upon the nerve force of the nervous is more distinctly shown than the effect of music.'" (Clifford quoted) The article then discusses the various emotional effects of different colors (e.g., yellow provokes laughter, green contentment, red stimulation, etc.) and the likelihood that moonlight is a factor in causing many people to fall in love. Audiences in the theater are rarely aroused by music the way they are by color. "It is the engineer who controls the lights who makes and unmakes the art of the playwright -- and why? Because, replies our expert, the play is always seen by artificial light." DA - May 1910 IS - 5 KW - theater theater emotion decadence ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color color, in history color, and theory color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations theater and stage color, and theater theater, and color censorship and ratings media effects color, media effects media effects, and color color, and sensuality sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color lighting lighting, and color color, and lighting color, and Charles Clifford color, and music lighting, and theater theater, and lighting censorship ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Literature LB - 39290 PY - 1910 SP - 515 ST - A Chromotherapeutic Key to Dramatic Art T2 - Current Literature TI - A Chromotherapeutic Key to Dramatic Art VL - 48 ID - 4028 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article talks about research on people who think in color. Just as some people apparently hear -- e.g. music -- in color, some people associate days of the week or other matters with specific colors. However, this trait appears to be highly individualistic in that different people might associate different colors with a particular day of the week (e.g., Tuesdays). Scientists have little explanation. The answers explaining why some people think in color is "extremely disappointing, for we have no satisfactory explanation of any of these matters," the article says. (182) Thinking in color is something akin to genius because it cannot be taught or "conferred by training or education." (183) DA - Sept. 1914 IS - 3 KW - media effects emotion decadence ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color color, in history color, and theory color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations color, and little known about ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion LB - 39330 PY - 1914 SP - 181-83 ST - A Physiologist's Analysis of the Mind That Thinks in Colors T2 - Current Opinion TI - A Physiologist's Analysis of the Mind That Thinks in Colors VL - 57 ID - 4032 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article has some lovely quotations and metaphors about the values of books. "In coming with golden keys to the great doors of life, in opening the ways to long vistas of wonder and beauty, in the interpreting and transforming and glorifying touch, mighty magicians are to be found in the libraries of the world. Books are full of magic. 697/698 They come to us with a mystic wand, and if we surrender to their spell they transport us to a new world. It will be worth our while to think informally and somewhat discursively of the Magic of a Book. In the first place, a library is like an enchanted forest. In the branches of its trees there perch large flocks of ideas, like flocks of birds, and the skillful hunter can come home after a day of sport, his hunting bag full of game. He can bring home as many ideas as he can carry. To go hunting for ideas is the rarest sport in all the world and to capture a live idea makes a day indeed notable." (697-98) This article continues: "Another characteristic of the magic to be found in libraries is the fashion in which some books have imprisoned emotions and set them singing like birds in a cage...." (700) Then: "Going farther, we may say that the magic of a great book is seen in the subtle metempsychosis by which it can take us inside other lives.... The power of cutting an entrance into men's souls was the possession of Robert Browing....." (701) Books can expand our experience and allow us to transcend time and place. "Now the thing which ... books do is just the thing we need to do and find it hard to do, the breaking of the barriers of our own lives so that we actually experience the meaning of other lives. In exact literalness you can speak of the thousand-souled Shakespeare; but the important thing is that he makes the reader have a thousand souls. He multiples his personality -- or, rather, he increases it -- by a sort of amazing geometrical progression. Then a book has the power of abolishing time and space.... "Historical novels may be both good history and good fiction and a revelation of human life at the same time...." (703) "But space as well as time is abolished if in the sense of which we are speaking space is not a sort of time spread out geographically.... The supreme books of the world not only bring ideas for the mind, an enrichment of the emotional nature and an enlargement of the sympathies; they also bring food for the will." (703) Finally, although "Thought and feeling and purpose and power are imprisoned in the books of the world," (706), the this article also concludes that "the magic of the book may be seen in the books which have the keys to Paradise." Here the Bible is held up as the "apex and supreme glory," a library in itself. DA - Sept. 1914 KW - magic books, periodicals, newspapers books, and magic magic, and books quotations quotations, and books quotations, and books as magic metaphors metaphors, and books quotations, books as enchanted forest ref, religious ref, Methodist ref, Methodist Review ref, secondary books LB - 39340 PY - 1914 SP - 696-706 ST - The Magic of a Book T2 - Methodist Review TI - The Magic of a Book ID - 4033 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article comments on Reverend Dr. Thomas B. Gregory, who said that D. W. Griffith's movie Birth of a Nation was a masterpiece and demonstrates for the first time the educational possibilities of cinema. According to this piece, Gregory believed that he had seen a literal recreation of history. "That the story as told by the picture is true the Reverend Doctor Gregory is ready to swear on the Bible, the Koran, and Zend and all the other 'Holy Scriptures' put together. He know it is true because he lived through the actual realities themselves. He saw the real carpet-baggers, the real 'New Voters,' the real reconstruction 'Statesmen,' the real Ku Klux Klanners. He is prepared to say that not one of the more than five thousand pictures that go to make up the wonderful drama is in any essential way an exaggeration. They are and all faithful to historic fact, he says, so that, looking upon them, you may feel that you are beholding that which actually happened." DA - April 1915 IS - 4 KW - history ref, secondary motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures Griffith, D. W. motion pictures, and D. W. Griffith motion pictures, and Birth of a Nation history, and Birth of a Nation Birth of a Nation, and history motion pictures, and Thomas Gregory Birth of a Nation, and Thomas Gregory quotations, and movie history quotations quotations, and Birth of a Nation motion pictures, and Birth of a Nation ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion Birth of a Nation history LB - 39480 PY - 1915 SP - 251 ST - Arrival of a New Stage in the Art of the Movies T2 - Current Opinion TI - Arrival of a New Stage in the Art of the Movies VL - 58 ID - 4046 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by quoting William A. Brady who said that "if pictures go on as they have been going on in the last ten years, it will mean the death of the spoken drama." It then discusses an editorial response to Brady's ideas in the New York Evening Post. "The American drama has always been a drama of action, as opposed to words," the Current Opinion article says. The decline of serious drama has been caused by commercial writing. "Dream of huge profits, efforts to please every diverse type of audience from coast to coast, writing for the millions, our playwrights, as this authority points out, have been compelled to go very thin on character, ideas, dialog, to concentrate on action, and action reduced to its elementary terms. These influences are the true ones leading to the death of the spoken drama, the drama of ideas as well as action. This is the effect of Big Business in the American theater." The article quotes from the Post editorial to the effect that the movie and serious drama do not have to be in conflict. "'By satisfying the elementary appetite for "action," it [the movie] may yet drive pistol-waving from the theater and leave the stage clear for a real spoken drama. People will go to the movies for one thing and to the theater for another. And the dramatist who is relieved from the demand for something doing every minute may give us plays that are spoken in a more real sense than the "spoken" drama of crooks and detectives.'" DA - Dec. 1915 IS - 6 KW - theater stage ref, secondary words vs. images theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures images vs. words motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and William Brady Brady, William, and motion pictures critics critics, and motion pictures quotations quotations, and death of spoken drama motion pictures, and death of spoken drama ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion motion pictures LB - 39490 PY - 1915 SP - 405 ST - Camera Drama vs. Spoken: The Latest War in the American Theater T2 - Current Opinion TI - Camera Drama vs. Spoken: The Latest War in the American Theater VL - 59 ID - 4047 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by referring to an editorial in The Independent after the appearance of Birth of a Nation and saying that the motion picture ranked "printing in the scope of its influence and that it possest [sic] possibilities of artistic development which would enable it in some respects to surpass painting and stage drama." The article comments on the progress made during the past year by cinema and notes that "crowds are not drawn by novelty or by scientific interest, they are not tricked into coming by advertising; they have compared the motion picture with the melodrama, the problem play or the musical comedy as an evening's entertainment and prefer it." The author compares and contrasts movies and live theater. Unlike the live theater, films lack sound and color. However, motion pictures have certain advantages over theater: 1) they can use the outdoors for background; 2) they can change scenes often; 3) they are like H. G. Wells's time machine in that they can go back in time and also into the future; 4) they can reveal the mind of character in two ways, one my bring the camera close to show facial expressions, the other by "visualizing his memories or imaginings"; 5) they can show the same special effects every night with no additional cost over the original showing. There are problems with this new art form. For example, there is a tendency "to put in too much motion." Too often the filmmaker "employs a sensational catastrophe as a substitute for a logical plot." Nevertheless, the movies have come to stay this article says. "The motion picture has established itself and in some form or other will become a permanent part of the intellectual and esthetic life of the nation." The subtitle of this article is "A Review of New and Important Motion Pictures. The Progress of the Motion Picture." DA - April 5, 1915 IS - 3461 KW - theater stage history ref, secondary motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and printing press quotations quotations, and sensational catastrophe motion pictures, and Birth of a Nation acting acting, and facial expression motion pictures, and personality critics critics, and movie action history and new media history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history metaphors metaphors, and time machine metaphors, and movies as time machine ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent actors LB - 39500 PY - 1915 SP - 21 ST - The Moving World T2 - The Independent TI - The Moving World VL - 82 ID - 4048 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the growing importance of military photography and notes that during the Spanish-American War and the Boer War that pictures were widely used in the illustrated press. Most military photographs, though, were not shown to the public. Many were of mundane matters which might give an idea of enemy terrain and troop movements and progress. The article discusses the use of cameras in balloons used by the American, British, and Russian military. The article also devotes a paragraph each to the use of camera technology by France and Germany. Cameras are becoming an important part of many military units. In addition to balloons, the article notes that bicycles were also mounted with cameras used for surveillance purposes. Other modern improvements include the use of magnesium lamps for night photography, better dark room tents, and telephotographic attachments for cameras. In short, much had changed over the past 10 or 15 years. DA - Aug.16, 1902 IS - 7 KW - ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing photography, and space and time space and time photography, and time photography, and space photography, and travel history and new media history, and photography photography, and history news and journalism newspapers, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and history history, and newspapers photography, and Spanish American War Spanish American War, and photography war war, and photography photography, and war military communication military communication, and photography photography, and military communication Boer War, and photography photography, and Boer War nationalism and communication photography, and nationalism nationalism, and photography non-USA non-USA, and military photography Germany France Russia Germany, and military photography France, and military photography Russia, and military photography Great Britain Great Britain, and military photography cameras lighting lighting, and magnesium lamps cameras, and telephoto lens telephotography ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific American history nationalism Spain LB - 39510 PY - 1902 SP - 101 ST - Military Photography T2 - Scientific American TI - Military Photography VL - 87 ID - 4049 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the meaning of different colors and points out that some people believe that "colors themselves have an inherent meaning of their own." (26) Thus "Blue means not only beauty, but also truth, faith and all the greater virtues.... Scarlet in all its deeper shades is the wickedest of colors, the very rogue of the rainbow." Gray, rose, violet, green yellow, brown, white, black also represent different values "but all this is only the primer of color meanings. Experts can read a sunset much as your true music lover can expound an opera by Wagner. The color cult is as interesting as the study of palmistry, for every shading, like each delicate tracing on the palm, is a different indication." (27) The article notes that actors and the theater use color. "Not only are color harmonies and blendings studied, but the peculiar occult significance that attaches to each." (27) Sarah Bernhardt and Mme. Duse are among the actresses who "have made an art of this color idea." (27) DA - Oct. 1901 IS - 1 KW - theater theater religion religion, and color media effects emotion decadence ref, secondary color color, and values values, and color values actors actors, and color color, and actors quotations quotations, and color meanings color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and poetry color, and religion religion, and color values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations theater and stage color, and theater theater, and color ref, illustrated ref, secondary ref, secular ref, secular (women) ref, Pictorial Review ref, illustrated acting LB - 39560 PY - 1901 SP - 26-27 ST - Color Studies T2 - Pictorial Review TI - Color Studies VL - 3 ID - 4054 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by saying that "it has been asserted, and the theory has many disciples, that color exercises a great influence over character.... Of all colors, red is the one round which innumerable superstitions have gathered and it has exercised a vast influence, for good and evil, among all sorts and conditions of people from the dawn of civilization down to the present day." The author comments on color and the uncivilized. "History tells us of the partiality of uncivilized man for bright colors. They appear to excite in savages the pleasure they do in children, for primitive peoples received education mostly through the senses." (124) Continuing, the article asserts that "Brilliant colors have always pleased warlike people and it is therefore natural that red should be the favorite. In its most vivid tints it has a great effect upon the senses: the color of blood excites to action and encourages to combat. At the present day red pigment is used by all uncivilized races...." (125) The article notes superstitions that have grown up around the color red -- e.g., "antipathy to red hair ... in England and Wales among the peasantry...." (125) In ancient times, color was assumed to cure disease. (126) DA - Oct. 10, 1908 IS - 3353 KW - theater theater religion religion, and color media effects emotion decadence ref, secondary color color, and values values, and color values actors actors, and color color, and actors quotations quotations, and color meanings color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and poetry color, and religion religion, and color values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations theater and stage color, and theater theater, and color color, and red color, and savages color, and the uncivilized quotations, and bright colors quotations, and education thru senses violence violence, and color color, and violence ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, literary (British) ref, Living Age acting LB - 39580 PY - 1908 SP - 124-26 ST - The Color Red T2 - Living Age TI - The Color Red VL - 259 ID - 4056 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Although this article is concerned mostly with discussing people who are exceptional actors and actresses, such as Mme. Gabrielle Rejane, it begins by discussing "Personality vs. Art," and lamenting the fact that personalities have become much better known that characters they represent or the dramas in which they perform. "Probably the most pronounced feature of the stage to-day, and the success of certain men and women upon it, is the large part that personality plays in comparison to art and essential verity.... Take half the actresses upon our stage, and you will find that it is rather a vogue than a reputation that they possess. You do not think of them as Juliets and Lady Teazles and Desdemonas, or whatever the character may be, but as Miss So-and-So. It is the same with actors. As a matter of fact, we have precious few real actors and actresses, but very many attractive personalities exhibited in a series of plays chosen to emphasize those very traits. Plays are 'built' upon these characteristics. This fact has been mentioned several times in this column...." (69) Such actresses as Mme. Rejane, however, are the exception and who, although "possessing a very marked personality, rises above that personality." (69) DA - Jan. 1905 IS - 1 KW - stars (actors) theater fame celebrity ref, secondary theater theater, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and theater personality personality, and theater motion pictures, and theater fame, and theater theater, and fame theater, and stars actors, and personality personality, and actors non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and actors Great Britain, and theater theater, and Great Britain actors, and Great Britain personality vs. art quotations, and actors quotations, and personalities ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Literature quotations acting actors motion pictures LB - 39590 PY - 1905 SP - 69-71 ST - The Drama T2 - Current Literature TI - The Drama VL - 38 ID - 4057 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by saying that "there never was a time ... when personality was more regarded, or when individual character and achievement were so much celebrated." Certain people "are the objects of popular attention, if not of adulation, to an extent never exceeded." The press accounts for some of this fame. "The newspapers are continual evidence of it. They print daily the portraits of those to whom public attention is being directed. Men and women have their pictures carried broadcast, upon the presumption that everyone wants to see how they look. The old aphorism, 'Principles, not men,' is completely reversed. It is 'Men, not principles,' in our day. The general intoxication over the success of Admiral Dewey in sinking the Spanish ships could hardly be measured, at the time, yet it is liable at any moment to be outdone, if occasion should arise. Movements in mass seem to be responsive to and sympathetic with individuals, and probably we never placed so high an estimate on 'personal magnetism.'" The article warns, though, that elevating personality in this manner is "often very ephemeral. A 'popular idol' can hardly remove his hat before the cheers are transferred to someone else -- the procession moves so fast. ... We see thus that the applause men get is often very fleeting. Many of those who have their pictures in the daily newspapers to-day will not accomplish the like triumph ever again..... The glory of this world, if it be based on works not enduring, will be transitory, indeed." The author concludes by offering examples of people who have achieved enduring fame -- Martin Luther, George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, William Shakespeare, Homer. The fame of poets is long lasting. "Let us regard the personalities that are lasting, and imitate them." DA - Dec. 7, 1901 IS - 49 KW - fame fame celebrity ref, secondary celebrity culture celebrity, and newspapers personality personality, and newspapers newspapers, and personality fame, and newspapers newspapers, and fame newspapers, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality personality, and magnetism fame, and magnetism newspapers, and portraits fame, and portraits photography, and portraits personality, and portraits quotations quotations, and ephemeral fame personality vs. character fame, and character ref, religious ref, Quakers ref, Friends' Intelligencer news and journalism photography LB - 39620 PY - 1901 SP - 776 ST - Fame that Endures T2 - Friends' Intelligencer TI - Fame that Endures VL - 58 ID - 4060 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article summarizes and reprints excerpts from an early article that Theodore Dreiser published in Pearson's (New York). In the final analysis, according to Dreiser, personality seems "to be a sense of power resting on a feeling of wisdom and usefulness or right to be." (article's words, not Dreiser's) Dreiser believed that people were born with personality. Quoting from him: "'The truth is, all good things are gifts -- a voice, strength of body, vigor of mind, vision, the power to lead, as in war, any art, beauty, charm.'" (Dreiser quote, 175) This article maintains that "Mr. Dreiser welcomes the tendency in America to-day to emphasize personality rather than character." (175) Then quoting Dreiser again: "'Men do better once they realize their genuine limitations and cease reaching after the moon.'" (175) Intellect or knowledge alone does not make some people's personality strong but also (quoting Dreiser) "'the vital energy to apply them or the hypnotic power of attracting attention to them -- in other words, personality.'" DA - March 1919 IS - 3 KW - fame celebrity ref, secondary celebrity culture celebrity, and newspapers personality personality, and newspapers newspapers, and personality fame, and newspapers newspapers, and fame newspapers, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture personality, and magnetism fame, and magnetism quotations quotations, and personality personality vs. character fame, and character Dreiser, Theodore personality, and Theodore Dreiser ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion news and journalism photography LB - 39630 PY - 1919 SP - 175-76 ST - The Secret of Personality as Theodore Dreiser Reveals It T2 - Current Opinion TI - The Secret of Personality as Theodore Dreiser Reveals It VL - 66 ID - 4061 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article considers how photography and compete with paintings and drawings in producing portraits. It says that "the complete imitation of reality is possible in a picture and, except for the absence of color, is achieved as a matter of course in a photograph." (503) Yet, the photograph often fails to capture the personality of the one be pictured. "The very impartiality of the camera lead it into error, since it has to represent in monochrome two different classes of fact -- namely, facts of color and facts of light and shade; and these facts, produced in reality by the action of light, cannot in any pictorial imitation of reality be both exactly and fully represented." (503) The black and white photo often misrepresents color and also light and shade. If a portrait painter is seeking primarily to "represent character, he will probably find that form is more essential to his subject than color, and he will therefore subordinate color to exact definition." (504) Even color photography, when it become easily used, will not allow the photo to compete with a good portrait. "Thus it is clear that a photograph cannot in any way compete with a fine portrait, and it will be able to compete even when color photography becomes as perfect as it can be...." (505) DA - May 22, 1909 IS - 3385 KW - fame celebrity ref, secondary celebrity culture celebrity, and photography personality personality, and photography photography, and personality fame, and photography photography, and fame photography, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture personality, and magnetism fame, and magnetism color color, and personality personality, and color photography, and portraits personality, and portraits photography, and reality ref, secondary ref, secular ref, eclectic ref, literary (British) ref, Living Age fame photography LB - 39640 PY - 1909 SP - 503-05 ST - Photographs and Pictures T2 - Living Age TI - Photographs and Pictures VL - 261 ID - 4062 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is an extract from the Edinburgh Review (July, 1907). It notes that photogravure has influenced black-and-white art in two directions. "It has encouraged direct pen-drawing as counter-distinguished from the etching of the earlier day, and almost transformed its character. Pen-drawing has of course always existed; we find numerous examples of it among the Italian masters, though (for the reasons which were explained above) with these it is rarely naturalistic. Rembrandt practised it; but for his own behalf, not as a 'public' art. Until the invention of photogravure (this, too, was in the sixties) there were no adequate means for reproducing such work. The other form of black-and-white art which has been directly influenced, almost created, by the new 'processes,' is drawing by washes in ink or Indian ink. There were no means of reproducing these, and so using them in illustration, until photogravure was invented." (55) The article then considers Joseph Pennell, a master draughtsman, talking about the atmosphere created in pen-and-ink drawing. The author argues that two things distinguish modern art -- "its sensitiveness and its unintellectuality. The former is in some fashion the counterpart of the latter. Most modern artists would triumphantly accept the charge of being non-intellectual; only they would translate it into another phrase -- non-literacy. It is the boast, in many regards the legitimate boast, of modern art that it is not literary, that it does not confound two different arts, that it does not tell stories in its pictures, nor appeal to the vulgar emotion of simple curiosity. And it would claim to be much more sensible or sensitive than was the art which immediately preceded it to those emotions which rightly belong to art, to fine tones of color, to harmonies, to all the elements that distinguish real impression got from outward objects, from what we 'know' concerning them. We have seen how modern black-and-white has upon its side freed itself from many bonds which came from literature, has freed itself to a large extent from the tyranny of the line whose title rests much more on its aptness in the giving of information than in the gratification of an artistic sense. One cannot say but that this is a good, if this were all: what is not so good remains behind. For often this artistic sensitiveness degenerates into a sort of hysteria, a sort of delight in all that is intellectually stupid, because it is there not outside the regions of art; and the, passing over as hysteria does to the opposite of its first state, it turns into a pleasure in insensibility, a coarse blotchings, in fantastical ugliness and all other kinds of tomfoolery, such as we find in Beardsley and his school. (56) "For the 'unintelligence' of modern art, however, that is not so much its special characteristic: it but sadly reflects the unintelligence and unintellectuality of modern life generally -- of modern society, which is marked by a decadence in almost every branch of literature. In that field, in place of the greater histories of an earlier time, works which were literally monuments, it gives us 'treatises' or handbooks; or else those gossipy, half-informed volumes of which the libraries are full. ... This unintellectuality is reflected likewise in art; and, with all other branches of it, the art of drawing in black-and-white." (56) DA - Aug. 17, 1907 IS - 1651 KW - wood engraving modern art decadence ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving books, periodicals, newspapers photography, and books books, and photography photography, and zinc plates words vs. images images vs. words quotations quotations, and increase in pictures quotations, and half tones photography, and cameras cameras cameras, and photo engraving photography, instantaneous photography, and photogravure photogravure photography, and art modern art, and photography modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing photography, and space and time space and time photography, and time photography, and space Pennell, Joseph photography, and modern art modernity, and decadence decadence, and modern art decadence, and modernity critics critics, and modern art non-USA Great Britain color color, and modern art color, and decadence decadence, and color images vs. words words vs. images ref, secondary ref, secular ref, American Architect books news and journalism photography LB - 39660 PY - 1907 SP - 55-56 ST - Black-and-White T2 - American Architect and Building News TI - Black-and-White VL - 92 ID - 4064 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is good in that it cites several cases and writings pertaining to "right of privacy" prior to 1902. The author attempts to show "that the right of privacy as a legal doctrine enforceable in equity has not, down to this time [1902], been established by decisions." (321) The author comments on the origins of this phrase: "The history of the phrase 'right of privacy' in this country seems to have begun in 1890, in a clever article in the Harvard Law Review -- already referred to -- in which a number of English cases were analyzed, and, reasoning by analogy, the conclusion was reached that -- notwithstanding the unanimity of the courts in resting their decisions upon property rights in cases where publication is prevented by injunction -- in reality such prevention was due to the necessity of affording protection to thoughts and sentiments expressed through the medium of writing, printing and the arts, which is like the right not to be assaulted or beaten; in other words, that the principle, actually involved though not always appreciated, was that of an inviolate personality, not that of private property." (321) The article notes that a response this article in the Harvard Law Review (by Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis) appeared in the Northwestern Review (vol. 3, p. 1). It then discusses several English cases cited by Warren and Brandeis to see if they marked "a departure from the established rule which had been enforced for generations...." (321) DA - Sept. 1902 IS - 9 KW - ref, secondary law privacy law, and privacy law, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and privacy privacy, and photography court cases court cases, and privacy privacy, and court cases quotations quotations, and privacy quotations, and Louis Brandeis home and new media home, and privacy privacy, and home advertising and public relations advertising, and privacy privacy, and advertising privacy, and Samuel Warren ref, secondary ref, secular ref, law ref, Albany Law Journal advertising home photography LB - 39720 PY - 1902 SP - 319-28 ST - Right of Privacy: New York Court of Appeals T2 - Albany Law Journal TI - Right of Privacy: New York Court of Appeals VL - 64 ID - 4070 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article summarizes and excerpts material from an earlier article, apparently in Engineering, about the state of making color motion pictures in 1913. The article begins by discussing how moving pictures work -- a succession of photographs, 16 separate pictures taken during one second, or about 16,000 photographs shown in the course of about 16 minutes. It then talks about the earlier days when films were colored by hand. It offers an excerpt from the Engineering article (quoting from that piece): "'With the introduction of three-color photography it becomes possible to obtain results vastly superior to those above described, and a notable step in advance was achieved by the introduction of the "Kinemacolor" process, which, however, is based, not on the ideal three-color system, but on one with two colors only. Many attempts have been made to apply triple projection methods to cinematography, but so fare with indifferent success.'" (184) This article notes that in 1913 there were "only two ways of reproducing natural colors in picture or lantern sides: -- The 'additive,' which relies on the fact that red, green, and blue-violet light combine together to form white.... The alternative process is styled the 'subtractive,' being empl0yed to produce three-color prints from blocks or other lantern slides...." (184) The Engineering article also discusses the Zoechrome process which shows promise in the making of future color motion pictures. Current Opinion concludes: "There can be no question as to the importance in the future of the economical production of color pictures. Of all the systems to which reference has been made the only ones that have hitherto achieved commercial success are the Bicolor and the Kinemacolor processes. The large measure of perfection attained by both these systems and the excellence of the pictures produced in the case of such scenes of Oriental pageantry and the Delhi Durbar will induce the public to look forward with interest to the time when the three -color process can be adapted to cinematograph purposes." (184) DA - Sept. 1913 IS - 3 KW - ref, secondary motion pictures color color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and three-color process color, and three-color process photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography color, and the Oriental motion pictures, and Kinemacolor color, and Kinemacolor motion pictures, and Zoechrome process color, and Zoechrome process motion pictures, and two color process color, and two color process Kinemacolor, and two color process ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion kinemacolor photography LB - 39780 PY - 1913 SP - 183-84 ST - The Doom of the Old Black and White Moving Pictures T2 - Current Opinion TI - The Doom of the Old Black and White Moving Pictures VL - 55 ID - 4076 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the status of home movies, especially in Great Britain. It notes that "the difficulties as regards cost, insurance, safety, and other elements are great," but that it has already been demonstrated that moving pictures can be used for educational purposes in small school rooms. Two invention in Great Britain, the pathescope and the Bettini machine, show promise for home use. Among the problems with home movies are fire hazard from using celluloid film. This has been solved by using acetate film and film with different perforation than normal celluloid film. Another problem is the cost and to elevate this issue the idea of film libraries where movies can be exchanged is proposed. The article reprints an excerpt from Chamber's Journal: "'The pathescope is a small machine, occupying no more space than a phonograph, which can be set up on a table, and, as with the magic lantern, the size of the picture may be varied within certain limits by the distance between the projector and the screen. Hitherto the great objection against this development has been the combustible nature of the celluloid film; but this drawback has been completely overcome by the use of a non-inflammable film made from acetate of cellulose. Though the picture thrown from this base is not so clear and fine as that obtainable with the celluloid, with the home machine and the small picture the defect is not so pronounced as in the case of a large picture in a hall. In order to insure that only a non-inflammable film shall be used, the edges of the film have a varied perforation; that is to say, there are more holes on one edge than on the other. Accordingly the inflammable film with the standard perforation gauge cannot be used. This is a very interesting development, but it suffers from the great disadvantage that the films are costly. To meet this objection, the idea of a library has been evolved, the films being exchanged from time to time as is done with books. The establishment of depots in the large centers will facilitate the exchange of films; but as users in country districts can effect an exchange only by post, it is doubtful if the project will survive the first wave of enthusiasm. Mr. Edison has perfected a similar small machine for the home; but as the films must also be purchased, the expense, coupled with the fact that the novelty soon wears off, is an adverse factor. The true solution of the kinematograph-at-home idea would seem to rest in the Bettini invention, as the cost is trifling. The inventor of this system has discovered a means of using a non-inflammable film base, in preference to glass, so that the disadvantage of breakability is absent. The pathescope, however, is the first commercial application of the idea upon rational lines, and undoubtedly there are many homes in which animated pictures will appear as a diversion.'" DA - April 5, 1913 KW - home home history electricity ref, secondary motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures home and new media motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures cameras cameras, portable cameras, home movie cameras Edison, Thomas, and home movie cameras home entertainment modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Thomas Edison education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures home, and electricity electricity, and home electricity, and home entertainment non-USA, and home movies Great Britain non-USA Great Britain, and home movies motion pictures, and acetate film film, and acetate celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid home entertainment, and celluloid home entertainment, and acetate film home entertainment, and fire hazards home entertainment, the Bettini machine home entertainment, and pathescope Bettini machine, and home movies pathescope, and home movies materials materials, and acetate film materials, and celluloid film, and gauge ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, literary ref, Outlook Edison, Thomas, and home theater film LB - 39790 PY - 1913 SP - 784 ST - Movies at Home T2 - Outlook TI - Movies at Home ID - 4077 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by pointing out that the current generation is not the first to have discovered sex but that "while we have not discovered sex, if can be said perhaps that we are to-day approaching it in a somewhat different spirit than has obtained in the past." (120) The current films about white slavery are not nearly as immoral as the musical comedies which are built on marital infidelity. "No one in these post-Victorian days publicly objects, apparently through fear of being thought prudish and unsophisticated, to the musical comedies founded upon the glorification of marital infidelity. Yet between these white slave films, pointing a moral which he who runs may read, and the 'wit' and cynicism of the average musical farce, skillfully and successfully staged to appeal to the immature in age, mind, and morals, there is a guld as wide as the seven seas." (121) The white slave films do not so much promote immorality as hysteria this article says. "The most valid objection to the reproduction of the best of these films is not that they promote immorality, but that they promote hysteria." Quotatin Mrs. Barclay Hazard, head of the New York branch of the National Florence Crittenton Assocation: "'All this talk about the poisoned needle that has been filling the papers is nothing but the result of the hysteria which is brought about by the state of mind people are getting into through the constant discussion of these subjects.'" (121) The article comments on the power of movies to discuss social topics compared to print media. It argues that "much can be said for the 'movies' as purveyors of social information which cannot be said for fiction and the drama. The 'movies' are intensely democratic -- emphatically more so that the legitimate stage or even the ubiquitous novel. They can be made accurate without offering to the adolescent mind opportunity or time for the intimate self-comparison and analysis which results from the reading of fiction. They can be made interesting without the alluring presentation of physical reality inseparable from the enactment of such themes upon the stage...." (121) The article concludes: "These films will not teach morality to the immoral. They will not by themselves inculcate high ideals. That is the business of the church and the home. They certainly will aid, we believe, in destroying the glamour of baseness. There are more ways than one of circumventing the devil." (122) DA - Jan. 17, 1914 KW - theater stage prostitution children censorship photography ref, secondary motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures white slavery, and motion pictures motion pictures, and white slavery prostitution, and motion pictures motion pictures, and prostitution words vs. images images vs. words democracy motion pictures, and democracy democracy, and motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, literary ref, Outlook advertising LB - 39840 PY - 1914 SP - 120-22 ST - The White Slave Films T2 - Outlook TI - The White Slave Films ID - 4082 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes the rapidly growing popularity of movie -- three-quarters of million people attend them every day in Chicago, it says. "It is a mushroom growth that has developed almost over night, and we have not yet had time to view it in all its bearings." (129) The article discusses the social and educational implications of the movie theater "It is, in a sense, the culmination of the process of substituting pictures for words, -- of actual images for the images which the stimulated mind creates, -- which was inaugurated when the photographic illustration began to invade our magazines and to disfigure our newspapers. It shows in a very striking way the demoralizing modern tendency to seek lines of least resistance in every form of activity, to convert education into amusement, and work into play, without giving the least thought to the way in which the process softens the mental fibre and saps the character. Generally speaking, the picture performs its proper function when it supplements the word, printed or spoken, and perverts its function when it would become a substitute. For the picture never can really be a substitute for the word, which is equivalent to calling it a substitute for thought, and the intuitional elements which it supplies to the mental process are a poor exchange for the analytical elements of logical interpretation which reading and listening demand." (130) (my emphasis) The article cast doubt on the educational value of films or their ability to recapture history. "A great deal of nonsense has been written about the moving picture as an educational agency. If kept strictly in its place as an adjunct to the methods that demand application and concentration, it may serve a useful subordinate purpose. The historical scene as realized from a close study of the sources may be vivified by this form of dramatic presentation, although the setting and the action are necessarily 'faked.' What the imaginative picture in the school text does for the child may be done for him more realistically by the projection of the film on the screen. But all that he will get from it at best is a series of fleeting impressions, and no opportunity is offered him to study the details of scenery and costume and architecture. The fleeting impression, however, can never make a serious contribution to the work of education." (130) Scientific films with microscopic views of subject matter might be more valuable if they have the proper explanation accompanying them. The author of this piece sees slightly more value in the travel film. "By its means, one may become a traveled observer with a minimum of effort, and its success is attested by the large use which the travel-lecturers make of it. The real traveller, of course, finds his delight in leisurely contemplation of the foreign scene, dwelling at length upon its details, and giving the impression time to fix itself upon the memory. The arm-chair traveller in the picture play-house can do nothing like this, and can retain but a jumbled recollection of what has been shown him. But even such travel is better than none at all...." (130) Great literature offers possibilities for moving pictures. "Literature offers a boundless field for this new kind of illustration, and its exploitation, guided by artistic conscience, may add much to our enjoyment of the great works of fiction and poetry." (130) Movies offer great temptations to appeal to "vulgar and depraved tastes," and so "some sort of censorship is demanded by the interests of public morality." (131) Noting that some sort of legal regulation movies operates now in most major cities, the author says that "Censorship as an official institution is never an unmixed good, and is capable of developing into a greater evil than any it seeks to avert, as we have seen in the cases of English licensing of plays and the Russian treatment of the press. The present danger in this country seems to lie in the sort of official stupidity which lays down general rules, and then applies them undeviatingly in all cases -- a procedure which would have the ludicrous result of placing Shakespeare's 'Julius Caesar' under the ban because scenes of violence and murder are in general prohibited." Modern censors "catch not only the vicious and vulgar in their net but also the merely tragic which, distressing as it may be to view, remains an essential part of life, and must not be left out of the scheme if we are to pretend to picture either the history of civilization or the conceptions of the great creative writers. It is not legitimate to throw upon the screen anything which may be described in a printed book that is published without legal interference?" (131) DA - Feb. 16, 1914 IS - 664 KW - theater stage history celebrity ref, secondary photography, and celebrity culture words vs. images photography photography and visual communication ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space images vs. words theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures personality motion pictures, as shadows history and new media personality motion pictures, and personality motion pictures, and fame celebrity, and motion pictures celebrity culture photography, and celebrity celebrity, and photography metaphors actors acting education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and education children children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children theaters critics critics, and newspaper illustrations critics, and movie images news and journalism newspapers, and illustrations pictorial journalism critics, and pictorial journalism quotations quotations, and images vs. words quotations, and pictorial journalism history and new media history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history motion pictures, and travel motion pictures, and literature media literacy media literacy, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media literacy quotations, and evils of censorship ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, literary (conservative) ref, Dial children, and media LB - 39850 PY - 1914 SP - 129-31 ST - The Cinematograph Craze T2 - The Dial TI - The Cinematograph Craze VL - 56 ID - 4083 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The article comments on the National Convention of Moving Picture Men and its opposition to movie censorship. The article argues that such "censorship is a real necessity, if the morals of the public are to be protected at all." It contends that moving pictures are much more dangerous to morality than the more traditional live theater. "You see a vulgar word, a corrupt sentiment, or moral impurity, given to the people from the old-fashioned theater, was bad enough to do untold harm, but when it comes to putting vulgarity before the people in pictures, and moving pictures at that, which makes the evil seem to be a living reality, the danger is increased by many fold." The National Convention's opposition to film censorship "is as bold as the wicked one could ask," this article says, "and we dare say it is even a bolder stand than the devil himself would favor, not that he objects to it, per se, but because it so plainly shows the purpose of these men, that they are determined to make money out of the business, if in doing so they have to poison the whole moral element of all human society." The article continues by saying that "It is money at any price, no matter what the best interests of the community, the Church, and the home may have to say as to the matter." The article ends by drawing a parallel from the Bible. "It was immorality that destroyed Sodom. Just as well as it was immorality that destroyed Achan and Simon and many others. The danger faces us to-day. What shall we do? Stand still, or shall we meet the enemy and stop him?" DA - July 23, 1914 IS - 30 KW - theater stage ref, secondary censorship motion pictures motion pictures, and values values, and motion pictures religion religion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion critics critics, and religion censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings values motion pictures, and Protestants critics, and movie morality theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures words vs. images images vs. words quotations quotations, and evil in movies actors acting actors, and bias against theater, and bias against quotations, and movies as moral poison motion pictures, and anti-Semitism anti-Semitism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and immorality ref, religious ref, Christian Church ref, Herald Gospel of Liberty anti-Semitism theater LB - 39880 PY - 1914 SP - 932 ST - The Daring of the Wicked T2 - Herald of Gospel Liberty TI - The Daring of the Wicked VL - 106 ID - 4086 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses Professor Simon N. Patten's (University of Pennsylvania) observations on coming into a city have a vacation in the country. "The change was distinctly for the worse," it says. "They had left a mountain-camp in the morning, happy and care-free, and they had become, without knowing it, formal and irritable as they returned to civilization." (185) On a "brightly-lighted street" in the town's center, Patten "something strange...." "It seemed to have only one side: and the people's faces were turned one way. The side to which people flocked was light; the other side was, comparatively speaking, dark." (185) On the dark side of town were the "very Institutions of Civilization itself" (quoting Patten) (186) -- the library, high school, and church. The work presents an excerpt from Patten's work (here titled "Product and Climax. By Simon Nelson Patten, New York: B. W. Huebsch") (186 n). Quoting Patten, it was on the "'wrong side', where all the right things were assembled'" Patten then describes the "right" side of the street where people were attracted: Quoting Patten: "'It was festooned with lights and cheap decorations meant only for fair weather;... beside penny shows and the gay vestibules of nickel theaters. Opposite the barren school yard was the arcaded entrance to the Nickelodeon, finished in the white stucco, with the ticket seller throned in a chariot drawn by an elephant trimmed with red, white and blue lights. A phonograph was going over and over its lingo, and a few picture machines were free to the absorbed crowed which circulated through the arcade as through the street. Here were the groups of working girls -- now happy "summer girls" -- because they had left the grime, ugliness and dejection of their factories behind them, and were freshened and revived by doing what they like to do....'" (186) The article paraphrases Patten when it says "How strange it was the stimulation of pleasure should be the only part of life for which there existed no distinctive institution!" (187) This article laments the spread of industrial civilization, and says that "It is when fatigue, dejection, indifference, bitterness and disease are dominant that the dark side of the street brightens up and the moral agencies take heart again. Their constituency, Professor Patten affirms, is the devitalized. Their message is to those who battle against industrial civilization calls for the solace of religion and the alms of charity...." (187) Patten likened the movies to the saloon. "The next higher form of climax lies in the melodrama and its allied cheap shows, such as the nickel theater or 'moving picture' show. These latter are rated by Professor Patten as 'the first amusement to occupy the economic plan that the saloon has so long exclusively controlled.' Their enormous popularity is proof that they appeal to the foundation qualities of man. They are, moreover, upbuilding, from Professor Patten's point of view, for the pictures they present of exciting adventures rouse the imaginative and concentration which have lapsed in humdrum toil. A conservative estimate puts the number of people in New York City who daily visit the nickelodeon at 200,000. Here is a tremendous factor in the imaginative life of the people, for good or for ill." (188) Patten also likens movies to sports. Quoting Patten: "'In the lower realm, where religion and morality do not act, amusements and sports are the only effective motives to elevate men. Sport is the beginning of inspiration, just as amusement is the lower round of regeneration.'" (188) DA - Aug. 1909 IS - 2 KW - ref, secondary electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time color electricity, and color color, and electricity advertising and public relations electricity, and advertising advertising, and electricity metaphors metaphors, and light and civilization critics critics, and modern entertainment Patten, Simon, and urban life anti-urbanism electricity, and anti-urbanism electricity, and Simon Patten women women, and movie theaters theaters critics, and theaters motion pictures motion pictures, and urban life critics, and Nickelodeons color advertising, and color color, and advertising color, and urban life motion pictures, and Simon Patten motion pictures, and saloons theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures phonograph sound recording sound recording, and phonograph phonograph, and motion pictures motion pictures, and phonograph ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Literature advertising LB - 39920 PY - 1909 SP - 185-88 ST - Amusement as a Factor in Man's Spiritual Uplift T2 - Current Literature TI - Amusement as a Factor in Man's Spiritual Uplift VL - 47 ID - 4090 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article laments the spread of colored billboards that are offensive to good taste and which defile the beauty of nature. "The dweller in large cities finds his aesthetic sensibilities constantly affronted by the insistent demands on his attention by advertisements that flaunt their announcements at every turn. Whether he saunters upon the surface, betakes himself to the elevated cars, or drops into the subway, these vari-colored posters, whose color schemes offend good taste, claim his notice.... If we walk abroad these offensive billboards stare at us with all their ugliness; if we take train for some distant city we find the entire route lined with signs, and, while we may object to this defacement of the landscape, the discordant note in a beautiful view -- and it always happens that the most assertive signs are set up in the most picturesque places -- we cannot cease to admire the skill of the advertiser who so persistently repeats his story between New York and Washington,, that it is indelibly fixed on one's memory." The story concludes by lamenting that the city committee in New Bedford has permitted advertisers to cover the fence about the municipal building. DA - July 22, 1908 IS - 1700 KW - billboards art advertising and public relations color color, and advertising advertising, and color art, and advertising advertising, and art modernity modernity, and advertising advertising, and modernity new way of seeing new way of seeing, and advertising advertising, and new way of seeing posters advertising, and posters posters, and advertising advertising, and billboards billboards, and advertising color, and billboards ref, secondary ref, secular ref, American Architect critics critics, and billboards advertising LB - 39930 PY - 1908 SP - 31 ST - The Assertive Billboard T2 - American Architect and Building News TI - The Assertive Billboard VL - 94 ID - 4091 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, appearing an a Congregationalist magazine, attacks what it sees as the perversity of modern novelists and their tendency to "agitate us with bloodstains, impossible situations and startling results. This is not literature. It is sensationalism reduced to a literary formula," the article contends. (2126) The authors of modern "fiction are not masters of the wisdom of life. They are primary interpreters who show only the prominent, bizarre features of existence." (2127) "To see things in their true relation is intelligence, to be able to depict them so is art. This is why novels dealing with plague spots in society never are the best forms of fiction. Writers of this class have their minds focused upon excesses and abominations, things exceptional to the common order, and so developed as to sustain no true relation to the whole of society as it really exists." (2126) The article concedes, however, "That such novels do good is beyond question, even when, as Maurice Thompson once complained, the 'moral purpose' sticks out 'like the sting of a wasp.'" Still, the article says, that in present-day "such novels are not nearly so interesting or so effective as they once were." (2126) The article describes the typical man and woman in the modern novel. "But not only is the modern novelist disposed to select extreme situations where there is some moral sickness, or where social disorder or political congestion renders conditions abnormal, but he shows a preference for artificially developed types. If not the more vulgarly vicious, it is the elegantly sensuous man and the exquisitely pagan woman who figure most frequently as the leading characters in his books. And when we 2126/2127 meet one of these calmly poised scamps wandering about in the ball room of the numerous society novels, we generally understand that he has a satyr hoof, concealed somewhere, and that often his lovely companion is only a poetic variation on the well-known scarlet women." (2126-2127) The article suggests that depicting people in a natural, rather than artificial, settings is best. "Just so, the legitimate business of the literary artist is to select a credible situation, and to depict the individual in it who is typical of his kind. And the best setting for such characters is the original one of woods and fields. These are the only really native environment of mankind." (2127) The article contends that the modern novelist is uninterested in depicting the "the average life, the commonplace." (2127) The article compares the modern novelist's "charlatan imagination" and stories to the colored billboard. "His conditions are false, and his characters are posters that flare out upon the billboards of literature, highly colored prevarications of the human nature they are supposed to represent." (2127) DA - Sept. 3, 1903 IS - 2857 KW - literature ref, secondary modernity modernity, and literature literature, and modernity new way of seeing literature, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and literature color metaphors metaphors, and modern novels modernity, and novels novels, and modernity values values, and modern novels novels, and values morality, and novels censorship and ratings censorship, and modern novels values, and degenerate literature critics critics, and modern literature quotations quotations, and perverse modern literature color, and billboards color, and posters ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent censorship morality novels LB - 39940 PY - 1903 SP - 2126-27 ST - Literary Perversities of Modern Novelists T2 - The Independent TI - Literary Perversities of Modern Novelists VL - 55 ID - 4092 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article comments on the invention of Peter Cooper Hewitt's mercury-vapor lamp. "This light is considered beneficial on account of the absence of red rays, which are considered injurious to the eyesight. Its chief claim to consideration is its high efficiency, as seven times the amount of electrical energy would be consumed to obtain the same illumination from the ordinary incandescent lamp. As a practical source of illumination the lamp seems up to the present [1903] to be only moderately successful." (818) The article also says that the mercury-vapor lamps can be useful in the area of wireless telegraphy. (819) DA - Oct. 1903 IS - 112 KW - wireless communication ref, secondary electricity lighting mercury vapor electric light lighting, and Cooper Hewitt lighting, and mercury vapor motion pictures, and lighting motion pictures, and Cooper Hewitt lighting Hewett, Peter Cooper ref, religious ref, Catholic modernity modernity, and motion pictures electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time electricity, and time electricity, and space vacuum tubes vacuum tubes, and lighting lighting, and vacuum tubes lighting color color, and mercury-vapor lamps electricity, and mercury-vapor lamps wireless wireless telegraphy telegraph, and wireless wireless telegraphy, and mercury-vapor lamps mercury-vapor lamps, and wireless telegraphy ref, religious ref, Catholic ref, American Catholic Review motion pictures telegraph LB - 39950 PY - 1903 SP - 818-19 ST - The Mercury-Vapor Electric Lamp T2 - American Catholic Review TI - The Mercury-Vapor Electric Lamp VL - 28 ID - 4093 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article laments that new methods of recording human experience means that increasingly trivial or unimportant events and people are being reported to the public. "It is under this reign of recording realism that dialect has been chased up into all its myriad variations. It is the insistence of the recording spirit that has brought not merely the ugly, but the loathsome, into the record. There has been a sort of religion of the commonplace, as well as a religion of the beastly, the putrescent, and the obscene." (634) Changes in technology have made possible an explosion of cheap publications. "The processes of chemical engraving in the lower forms of the industry have been so cheapened, and ordinary printing is also so much less costly, that there is a glut in the manufacture of pictures, books, and all periodicals. It might at first be thought that the power to print must exceed the material for printing. But it has become evident that the quantity of matter that may be printed is quite sufficient to keep all the presses going; it is only in quality that there is any deficiency. The material for record is inexhaustible," the article says. (634) The article continues: "As to the recording activity of the new journalism, its frantic attempts to keep pace with the passing human show have already arrived at the stage of epileptic contortion, partly for the reason that the material is endless.... The millions of John Joneses may thus supply the press with enough material to keep it busy; but there are tens of thousands of John Joneses who have become, to some extent, notorious or distinguished. Any day of their lives may furnish material for public record; if nothing else happens, they can at least give expression of an 'opinion.' (634) "With the standard of intrinsic values lowered, with little or no selection, except a selection of the unfittest it is no wonder that the sensational press is getting to be the epileptic press, the general excuse for sensationalism being that happens may be printed. Of course, it is not true that anything that happens may be printed. The courts have a word to say about that, and there is a line drawn by the publishers and by the public, though sometimes the line is lost in the mire." (634) The author concludes: "And as for the printing-press -- but that is settling itself; for the time is at hand when every man will be his own publisher, author, and editor, illustrating his own work with his own snap-shots. When this time actually arrives, every man will simply read his own writings in 'proof,' and no man will have time to read the writings of any other. Then we shall all begin again, and the art of selecting from the world's thought and doings what is really worthy of record and worthy of examination will once more be exalted among men." (635) DA - Feb. 1897 IS - 4 KW - journalism ref, secondary news and journalism critics critics, and newspapers critics, and journalism words vs. images images vs. words ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated photography and visual communication journalism, and photography photography, and journalism journalism, and the trivial quotations, and everyman a publisher ref, Century quotations photography LB - 40010 PY - 1897 SP - 634-35 ST - The Recording Tendency and What It Is Coming To T2 - Century Illustrated Magazine TI - The Recording Tendency and What It Is Coming To VL - 53 ID - 4099 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece reports on the theoretical work of Professor Christine Ladd-Franklin at Columbia University. Ernest Brennecke has written about her earlier in World Magazine. "The Ladd-Franklin theory, simply stated, is that there have been in the evolution of life on our planet three stages in the development of color-vision. The first is the black-and-white stage: Living things learned to distinguish between light and darkness and saw the world, but not in color. In the second stage, the longer light-rays gave the sensation of blue and the shorter rays yellow. In the third, the longer yellow rays began to look red and the shorter yellow rays green...." (219) DA - Aug. 1, 1923 KW - ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion color color, and theory color, and Ladd-Franklin theory LB - 40050 PY - 1923 SP - 219-20 ST - Science Lays Bare the Mystery of Color T2 - Current Opinion TI - Science Lays Bare the Mystery of Color ID - 4103 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article argues that the quality of the theater has declined because of two developments. One is the rising attention given to the actor who has come to overshadow the writer or poet who creates the drama or story. The other factor is the growing important of the "scenic artist" or carpenter who creates increasingly elaborate stage designs. These sets threatened to overwhelm not only the story (i.e., writer) but even the actor. The author argues that "the drama dies because it has confused its functions; it has wasted its true strength to enhance a spurious beauty, and it resembles a man who should sacrifice both brain and muscle to increase by an inch or two the growth of his beard." (277) With regard to the changing status of the actor and the role of scene makers, this article maintains that a "brief retrospect will show that when the theatre commanded an intelligent admiration, the poet was an omnipotent and unquestioned master. The simple decoration of the Greek stage was ordained by a holy tradition. The actors, whose heads were hidden in conventional masks, and whose feet were propped on clumsy patterns, could neither ogle nor strut. They were neither discussed nor advertised. Nobody knew their names nor cared about their visages.... Yet soon after Shakespeare's day the actor and scene-shifter begun to raise their heads.... Thus the servant already encroached upon the master's province. The poet, eclipsed by the actor, the carpenter and the musician, saw his supremacy threatened." (277) As performers became more popular, their salaries increased and with that fact "the general excellence of a performance presently surrendered to the advancement of the popular actor...." (278) Although by the 18th century the author had by no means lost all his influence, "the history of the stage thus ... became the history of the player...." (278) The relationship between actor and writer had been altered. "At the outset, ... the actor was paid by the theatre to perform a certain task; now he hires the author to fit him with a part. It is a strange reversal of the roles, and it explains the dire malady which has long beset our playhouses. What man of letters would accept the new conditions and 278/279 see his work cut and slashed t suit the interpreter? What would the printer say if his frame-maker and colorman signed his canvas and assumed the glory of his work? Would the very minimus among the poets permit the printer and paper-maker to 'create' his poems, and set their names upon his title-page? Of course neither the painter nor the poet would submit to so monstrous an outrage, and as no playwright can hope for success who does not obey the actor, so the making of plays has fallen out of distinguished hands and is picked up by the odd cobblers and patcher, who are supposed to entertain us." (278-79) The author has a low regard for the contemporary actor in 1901. "And what is the modern actor," this article asks, whom we have won in exchange for the vanished poet? He is distinguished from the ancient by a gentlemanly incompetence.... In fact, he has been told by the tongue of flattery that he has but to stride the stage as a drawing-room and his elegance will be paten to all...." (279) Actors, the author says, have "So long ... been pampered with wealth and flattery that they have quite forgotten the exigency of their art." (282) Even worse for the theater is the rising influence of the carpenter, in the author's view. "But the pompous actor, who, with his vain desire to be pointed at with the finger, strides the Strand like a conqueror, is not the sole ruin of the stage.... For the carpenter and upholsterer destroy the very essence of the theatre, which is illusion. The city of make-believe should not be built of brick and stone.... There is but on possibility of dramatic illusion -- the consistent and harmonious suppression of reality...." (280) The tradition balance between the playwright, actor, and scenic artist has been upturned and confused. Shakespeare may be performed but "Two boys, with their legs painted brown, wrestle on the stage; or lovers interrupt the action with their silent blandishments. Then a pause: the great man enters, the crowd is frozen to immobility, and the text of Shakespeare is not spoken, but interpreted (or created) with nods, winks and jerks of the elbow. Nothing is achieved simply. A perpetual commentary of crowd, speech or gesture converts the best play into a sort of pantomime. And the actor is no longer all-sufficient; as we have seen, he killed the dramatist long since, and it is only because he is his own manager that he has not already surrendered to the stage-carpenter. But when once he lets go his supremacy he will have a short shrift. For the upholsterer is to-day the essential artist of the stage, and he will esteem the actor no more highly than the actor esteemed the dramatist. Thus the balance is overturned, and the three elements which we have named pitifully confused. No longer are action and ornament the handmaidens of poetry. Poetry is a poor excuse for false splendor, and action -- in its own belief the foremost of the arts -- is made ridiculous by vanity." ( 281) The high salaries paid actors and their unwillingness to tolerate rivals to their fame make it difficult to put together a company of players which is necessary for a truly national theater. And the carpenter's work limits the number of plays that can be performed because "the extravagance of the upholsterer has made long runs inevitable...." (281) The author praised the Théatre Francais where the "method of Moliere is still reverenced, and no actor may pass the stately portals unless he has conquered his craft, can speak and walk, and is willing to subordinate his vanity to the common good." (281) But this article is pessimistic about whether or not the level of theater will be improved and this kind of national theater achieved in England. "We are not optimistic. Destiny and experience are against us, and the people long ago ceased to chafe at the domination of the actor." The theatre could "be the home of a beautiful and delicate art," but unfortunately it "is generally nothing more than a scene of vulgar 'pleasures taken in common.'" (283) This article originally appeared in Blackwood's Magazine. DA - Aug. 3, 1901 IS - 2978 KW - theater fame celebrity ref, secondary ref, secular ref, eclectic ref, literary (British) ref, Living Age theater and stage theater and stage, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and theater and stage personality personality, and theater and stage theater and stage, and personality fame, and theater and stage theater and stage, and fame theater and stage, and stars actors acting words vs. images images vs. words quotations actors, and bias against theater, and bias against actors, and writers actors, and fame actors, and status of quotations, and actors over writers non-USA Great Britain non-USA, and theater and stage Great Britain, and theater and stage non-USA, and actors Great Britain, and actors quotations, and vulgar pleasure taken in common theater LB - 40070 PY - 1901 SP - 276-83 ST - The Shadow on the Stage T2 - Living Age TI - The Shadow on the Stage VL - 230 ID - 4105 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the use of electricity and colored lights at the Paris Exposition in 1900. "The Electrical Palace and Fountain occupy one end of the Champ de Mars and constitute the central feature of this part of the Exposition grounds. By day, the ensemble presents a highly decorative effect, but it is at night that it appears to best advantage, when the crest of the Electrical Palace is outlined by thousands of incandescent lamps of varying colors, and the various cascades and jets of the fountain are brilliantly illuminated." Later the article says that "For the illumination four colors are used -- red, yellow, blue, and white; the lamps of different colors are arranged alternately, and for each color there is a separate circuit which passes to a mechanism in the basement, which allows each color to be thrown on at will...." DA - Oct. 13, 1900 IS - 15 KW - progress ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific American electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time color electricity, and color color, and electricity non-USA France France, and color France, and electricity non-USA, and color non-USA, and electricity color, and world fairs electricity, and world fairs color, and progress electricity, and progress progress, and electricity progress, and color color, and Paris Exposition electricity, and Paris Exposition LB - 40080 PY - 1900 SP - 231 ST - Electrical Palace and Fountain at the Paris Exposition T2 - Scientific American TI - Electrical Palace and Fountain at the Paris Exposition VL - 83 ID - 4106 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the use of electricity and color at the Pan American Exposition held in Buffalo, NY, in 1901. The Board of Architects and the Exposition Company discussed the use of color in considerable detail. The treatment of sculptural groups around the Government Building were designed "to suggest man in his primitive state...." (53) "The Electric Tower, the crowning achievement of man, is dedicated to the great waterways and the power of Niagara, which is utilized to generate current which will run the Exposition. The "beautiful emerald-green hue of the water as it curls over the crest of Niagara Falls" was used "on some portion of every building." (53) Color was used to represent different states of man's civilization. "Taking it for granted ... that as we enter the grounds from the Park through the forecourt, the causeway bids welcome to the visitors and the countries taking part in the Exposition, and we would come upon the elementary conditions, that is, the earliest state of man suggested on one side and primitive nature on the other," and here the "strongest primary colors" were used. As visitors advanced "up the grounds, the colors should be more refined and less contrasting, and the tower, which is to suggest the triumph of man achievement, should be the lightest and most delicate color...." (53) Continuing, the article says that "the Electric Tower is very light ivory, and is enriched in the capitals, brackets, finials, stars, pinnacles, with gold, and is crowned with a gilded figure of the 'Goddess of Light.' The panels have the brightest fresh blue-green..., suggesting the water as it curves over the crest of Niagara....." (53) Color was used purposefully on other buildings too. "In the Electricity Building light shades of green and violet bunting are used.... In the Agriculture Building the colors used are intended to suggest autumn and spring...." (54) DA - Nov. 16, 1901 IS - 1351 KW - progress ref, secondary ref, secular ref, American Architect and Building News electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time color electricity, and color color, and electricity color, and world fairs electricity, and world fairs color, and progress electricity, and progress progress, and electricity progress, and color color, and Pan-American Exposition electricity, and Pan-American Exposition LB - 40090 PY - 1901 SP - 52-54 ST - Coloring and Decorating the Pan-American Exposition T2 - American Architect and Building News TI - Coloring and Decorating the Pan-American Exposition VL - 74 ID - 4107 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In describing the Paris Exposition, this article discusses the use of electric light and color. The use of color is linked to the Oriental. "Persian imagery alone could adequately describe the wonders of these palaces of Water and Light with their wealth of translucent color. It is not hard to imagine that as Parisians claim mortal eyes have not gazed yet on anything nearly approaching their equal. All that is powerful and grand, awe-inspiring and beautiful in electricity is here apotheosized." (23) The article goes on to explain that "Another striking feature of the Champ de Mars is the Luminous Palace, the work of M. Pousin. It has been described as 'an opium dream,' and it certainly is as Oriental as a vision of Tom Moore's. M. Pousin is a painter who has devoted himself to the study of stained glass. He finds in glass his whole delight and ambition, as he says himself glass is more transparent than air, more opaque than metal, and one has every nuance of color, softness, subtlety, depth, solidity at command. It can be milky opaline, iridescent, black as night or metallic, and all forms are possible to it. M. Pousin is an enthusiast; he has raised the Palais Lumineux on some rocks in the middle of the lake near the Tour Eiffel...." (23) DA - Sept. 1900 IS - 1 KW - progress ref, secondary ref, secular ref, secular (women) ref, Pictorial Review ref, illustrated electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time color electricity, and color color, and electricity non-USA France France, and color France, and electricity non-USA, and color non-USA, and electricity color, and world fairs electricity, and world fairs color, and progress electricity, and progress progress, and electricity progress, and color color, and Paris Exposition electricity, and Paris Exposition metaphors metaphors, and color as opium dream color, and the Oriental color, as drug World's Fairs Paris Exposition (1900) LB - 40100 PY - 1900 SP - 22-23 ST - Festivities at the Paris Exposition T2 - Pictorial Review TI - Festivities at the Paris Exposition VL - 2 ID - 4108 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This brief article reports that Professor Leonard T. Troland of Harvard University maintains that color films strain the eyes less than black and white ones. As early as 1914, Troland had written a paper on the problem of flicker and the movie picture jumping which caused eye strain. Troland is quoted as saying that "The more natural a picture is, it seems, the easier it is for the oculo-motor system to make the images 'appear as they should.' In black and white pictures violent contrasts often have to be used in order to get the effect of depth and reality, and such contrasts tire the eyes. Colors on the other hand express contrasts in a harmless way and also improve the truthfulness of the pictures.'" (8) Troland acknowledges that there had been problems with earlier color films. The article reports that "When motion picture in color were first introduced about fifteen years ago annoying fringes of red and green on the edges of moving objects disturbed the enjoyment of the pictures and critics said that they were much worse for the eyes than the black and white performances. The trouble was that the red and green components were not photographed simultaneously and the effect was a doubling of the image on the screen which the eye muscles struggle to make into one again. This upset the normal balance of what Prof. Troland calls the ocular reflexes." (8) Troland says that in recent years the double images and fringing in color motion pictures has been improved, if not eliminated. (8) DA - Sept. 11, 1926 IS - 283 KW - Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Technicolor ref, secondary Troland, Leonard color Troland, Leonard, and color color, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and visual sensation color, and media effects media effects media effects, and color Troland, Leonard, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Leonard Troland Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and hedonism values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and eye strain Troland, Leonard, and eye strain motion pictures LB - 40270 PY - 1926 SP - 8 ST - Colored Movies Hurt Eyes Less Than Black and White Ones T2 - The Science News-Letter TI - Colored Movies Hurt Eyes Less Than Black and White Ones VL - 9 ID - 4125 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article says that several companies are interested in making color movies and that they may supersedes black and white films. It notes that the cost of color movies is greater but may not be a huge factor in the total cost of such films. It notes that these films can be duplicated indefinitely, unlike the hand-color films. It notes that there are shortcomings to these films in that such colors as "Pure lemon yellow, cobalt blue and the pure purple shades are not available ... -- at least not until some three-color process is perfect" (6), but that many patrons don't seem to care. "These shortcomings, nevertheless, are not noticed by the cinema patron, who spends most of his time appraising the flesh tints anyway!" (6) The article continues: "The color of film costs several times the figure for black and white. However, when even the cheapest comedies cost five dollars per second of theater exhibition time, or in other words five dollars per foot of film, the added expense does not rate high when compared to other costs. Unlike the hand-tinted films of previous years, the new films may be duplicated in positive indefinitely without continued repetition of the great initial cost." (6) DA - Jan. 23, 1926 IS - 250 KW - ref, secondary color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color sexuality sexuality, and color movies motion pictures, and sexuality duplicating technologies color, and duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and color movies motion pictures LB - 40380 PY - 1926 SP - 5-6 ST - Color Movies Coming in Vogue T2 - Science News-Letter TI - Color Movies Coming in Vogue VL - 8 ID - 4136 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article reports that "Motion pictures in which the actors 'stand out from the screen' and appear in relief have been produced with experimental apparatus devised by Dr. Herbert E. Ives of the Bell Telephone Laboratories in New York. Dr. Ives reported his experiments before the meeting of the National Academy of Sciences. "The apparatus for producing such pictures is quite elaborate. Instead of a lens, the camera uses a four-foot concave mirror, like those used in reflecting telescopes. It reflects the image of what it 'sees' on a transparent screen consisting of 200 minute concave grooves. Here photographic records of successive exposures are made, not on motion picture film, but on small photographic plates. "Prints from these negatives are then mounted on a large disk, which brings them in slow succession into position in the projecting machine, while another smaller disk, rapidly rotating, flashes light through the lens. The projection screen consists of 200 quarter-inch transparent rods, whose front and rear surfaces focus the light to form the apparently solid moving images in the projection space. "Immediate commercial application is hardly expected, Dr. Ives stated, because of the difficulty of obtaining the extreme accuracy of all mechanical and optical adjustments necessary for successful operation." DA - April 30, 1932 IS - 577 KW - ref, secondary 3-D motion pictures, and 3-D 3-D, and motion pictures motion pictures, and 3-D Bell Laboratories Bell Laboratories, and 3-D films 3-D, and Bell Laboratories motion pictures LB - 40770 PY - 1932 SP - 273 ST - Elaborate Apparatus Makes Three-Dimension Movies T2 - Science News-Letter TI - Elaborate Apparatus Makes Three-Dimension Movies VL - 21 ID - 4174 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is reprinted from the New York Mercury where its full title was "Color in Beauty -- A Society Woman." DA - Dec. 1890 IS - 6 KW - emotion decadence Marked women women, and color color, and women color in literature color, and research on color color color, in history color, and theory color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations censorship and ratings media effects color, media effects media effects, and color color, and sensuality sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Literature LB - 40870 PY - 1890 SP - 419-21 ST - Color in Beauty T2 - Current Literature TI - Color in Beauty VL - 5 ID - 4186 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This ad reads: "110 days of glorious adverture in 22 ports in 14 countries. Interesting lands, strange people, all the color and mysticism of the Orient. Palatial President Liners. Commodious outside rooms. A world-famous cusine. Sailings every Saturday from San Francisco (every fortnight from Boston and New York)." (33) DA - Oct. 21. 1926 IS - 2294 KW - billboards art color, and Orientalism color, and mysticism mysticism, and Oriental mysticism, and color advertisement advertisement, and color color, and advertisement advertising and public relations color color, and advertising advertising, and color art, and advertising advertising, and art modernity modernity, and advertising advertising, and modernity new way of seeing new way of seeing, and advertising advertising, and new way of seeing posters advertising, and posters posters, and advertising advertising, and billboards billboards, and advertising color, and billboards ref, secondary ref, secular ref, Life advertising LB - 40890 PY - 1926 SP - 33 ST - $1250 and UP Round the World [advertisement] T2 - Life TI - $1250 and UP Round the World [advertisement] VL - 88 ID - 4188 ER - TY - JOUR DA - Oct., 1936 KW - Kalmus, Herbert censorship censorship Marked motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Technicolor, and Natalie Kalmus Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color censorship, and Natalie Kalmus ref, secondary color, and primitives color, and cinematographers color, and novelty lighting lighting, and color color, and lighting LB - 40960 PY - 1936 SP - 414, 424-26 ST - Just What Is So Mysterious about Color T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Just What Is So Mysterious about Color ID - 4195 ER - TY - JOUR DA - Jan., 1880 IS - 6 KW - ref, secondary quotations quotations, and poetry of nature LB - 41180 PY - 1880 SP - 239-47 ST - Poetry of Nature -- Tintern Abbey T2 - Nassau Literary Magazine TI - Poetry of Nature -- Tintern Abbey VL - 36 ID - 4217 ER - TY - JOUR DA - May 13, 1916 IS - 3510 KW - art Marked advertising and public relations color color, and advertising advertising, and color art, and advertising advertising, and art modernity modernity, and advertising advertising, and modernity new way of seeing new way of seeing, and advertising advertising, and new way of seeing billboards posters advertising, and posters posters, and advertising advertising, and billboards billboards, and advertising color, and billboards ref, secondary ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent quotations, and billboards electricity electricity, and electric signs advertising, and architecture advertising quotations LB - 41340 PY - 1916 SP - 369-70 ST - The Cultivation of Obliviousness T2 - The Independent TI - The Cultivation of Obliviousness VL - 85 ID - 4233 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the way selenium cells change their "resistance to a current of electricity when exposed to light." DA - May 1917 IS - 5 KW - color electricity electricity, and color color, and electricity color, and selenium electricity, and selenium television color, and television color, and selenium television, and selenium television, and color ref, secondary ref, Current Opinion ref, secular ref, literary LB - 41380 PY - 1917 SP - 339 ST - A New Conception of Color Vision T2 - Current Opinion TI - A New Conception of Color Vision VL - 62 ID - 4237 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article speculates on the influence that photography is having on political and religious power as photographers publish pictures of previous private moments of Queen Victoria, Pope Leo XIII, and "the daily doings of the Presidential family," (155) and other people of less renown. The article concludes: "What effect is all this publicity to have upon the average man, woman, and girl? But, particularly, what effect is all this familiarity to have upon the world's sentiment with regard to royalty and high ecclesiastical authority? As to these latter matters, surely there will be palpable effects. Can the sense of awe continue as great when there is so little left of the unknown? One thing is sure: the sentiment toward kings and courts and Vaticans can never remain the same in these new and remarkable conditions. The relation between the former and their subjects and followers may be none the less affectionate, even reverent; it may become more human, more close. But the mystery having departed, there can hardly be the old stress. When the mind is no longer awed and clouded by the dim and the unknown the appeal to reason must be reinforced. So far as publicity has to do with authority, secular or sacred, we believe the change effected is very great and likely to increase; and we believe that this change is, on the whole, better for humanity." (156) [emphasis added] DA - Nov. 1903 IS - 1 KW - wood engraving journalism journalism fame celebrity nationalism and communication photography, and nationalism photography, and religion photography, and authority nationalism, and photography religion, and photography photography, and Pope Leo XIII ref, secondary magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality quotations newspapers, and photographs photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving photography, and Century ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Century motion pictures, and Pope Leo XIII religion, and Pope Leo XIII photography, and Queen Victoria Great Britain non-USA photography, and Great Britain Great Britain, and photography presidents and new media photography, and presidency advertising and public relations public relations, and news news and journalism public relations, and journalism public relations, and religion public relations, and nationalism privacy privacy, and photography photography, and privacy media effects photography, and media effects media effects, and photography democracy democracy, and photography photography, and democracy advertising nationalism public relations religion LB - 41510 PY - 1903 SP - 155-56 ST - Some Effects of Modern Publicity T2 - Century Illustrated Magazine TI - Some Effects of Modern Publicity VL - 67 ID - 4250 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This brief article makes reference to "chromo-civilization," a term used by E. L Godkin, and compares it to "green fruit." "As a people, we have passed the salad days when we were green in judgment. Our taste is ripening. Our sense of fitness is maturing. That sort of intellectual green fruit -- of immature poetry, art, music, ornament -- that 'chromo-civilization' in which we once took delight, is losing its power to hold us." (386) DA - June 19, 1880 IS - 25 KW - metaphors emotion decadence color in literature color, and research on color color color, in history color, and theory color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations censorship and ratings media effects color, media effects media effects, and color color, and sensuality sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Harper's Bazaar chromo-civilization color, and chromo-civilization metaphors, and color as green fruit color, as intellectual green fruit LB - 41670 PY - 1880 SP - 386 ST - June T2 - Harper's Bazaar TI - June VL - 13 ID - 4265 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this review of Edwin Lawrence Godkin's Reflections and Comments (New York: C. Scribner's Sons, 1895), the reviewer comments on Godkin's essay on "Chromo-Civilization": In "Chromo-Civilization" we have a vivid picture of the results of a 'sentimental religion,' with its 'vague aspiration,' 'lachrymose sensibility' and lack of all that braces and fortifies character. Much the same lesson is conveyed in the essay entitled 'The Church and Good Conduct,' while in 'The Comparative Morality of Nations' the author discusses the specific differentiation of that which we call the normal ethical type...." (123) DA - Feb. 22, 1896 IS - 731 KW - metaphors emotion decadence color in literature color, and research on color color color, in history color, and theory color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations censorship and ratings media effects color, media effects media effects, and color color, and sensuality sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Harper's Bazaar chromo-civilization color, and chromo-civilization metaphors, and color as green fruit color, as intellectual green fruit Godkin, E. L., and chromo-civilization chromo-civilization, and E. L. Godkin news and journalism journalism, and E. L. Godkin journalism LB - 41680 PY - 1896 SP - 123 ST - 'Reflections and Comments' T2 - The Critic: A Weekly Review of Literature and the Arts TI - 'Reflections and Comments' VL - 25 ID - 4266 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses a case before the Supreme Court of New York regarding a woman whose photograph was used in an advertisement even though the woman had not given her permission. The article says that "To print the likeness of a young woman and post it in public places is to invite public criticism and inflict an injury to her feelings by giving her an unenviable notoriety." The article goes on to say the case will apply "only to private individuals, but it might well be extended to men of public fame."(996) DA - Aug. 8, 1900 IS - 32 KW - ref, secondary law privacy law, and privacy law, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and privacy privacy, and photography court cases court cases, and privacy privacy, and court cases quotations quotations, and privacy quotations, and Louis Brandeis home and new media home, and privacy privacy, and home advertising and public relations advertising, and privacy privacy, and advertising privacy, and Samuel Warren ref, secondary ref, religious ref, Methodist ref, Zion's Herald photography, and fame photography, and notoriety women women, and privacy privacy, and women photography, and women women, and photography advertising, and women women, and advertising advertising home photography LB - 41720 PY - 1900 SP - 996 ST - Invasion of Privacy T2 - Zion's Herald TI - Invasion of Privacy VL - 78 ID - 4270 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses a woman who was awarded $6,000 by the U.S. Court in New York because her photograph had been used by the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Company for advertising, even though the company had not told the woman for what purpose her picture would be used. The article says the "appearance of the advertisements gave Miss Wynne unplesant notoriety among her fellow workers, and finally obliged her to give up her employment." (136) The article says the judgment in this case was "a stroke for decency and good order." (136) DA - May 23, 1908 IS - 4 KW - ref, secondary law privacy law, and privacy law, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and privacy privacy, and photography court cases court cases, and privacy privacy, and court cases quotations quotations, and privacy quotations, and Louis Brandeis home and new media home, and privacy privacy, and home advertising and public relations advertising, and privacy privacy, and advertising privacy, and Samuel Warren ref, secondary ref, religious ref, Methodist ref, Zion's Herald photography, and fame photography, and notoriety women women, and privacy privacy, and women photography, and women women, and photography advertising, and women women, and advertising advertising home photography LB - 41730 PY - 1908 SP - 135-36 ST - A Victory for Decency T2 - Outlook TI - A Victory for Decency VL - 89 ID - 4271 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article comments on statements about movies made by the influential museum director and librarian John Cotton Dana, and by Edwin H. Blashfield who had written an article in the New York Times Magazine (March 4, 1917), p. SM8. Excerpts from Dana are also included in this article. The article begins by saying that “To attend a motion-picture play is to be primitive; to listen to an orator is to be a cave man; to read is to be civilized. It is the printed page on which we must put our hopes for progress rather than on the spoken word. As for the sense of sight on which the whole structure of the photodrama, of course, depends it is the most primitive and automatic of the faculties, and therefore, says John Cotton Dana, in the New York Sun, is responsible for the ‘frightful’ popularity of the photoplay, ‘appealing as it does, to the appetites and fancies of prehistoric man.’…” (256) The article reprints an except from Dana’s remarks: “‘The movie eye is primeval, while the ear of the happy auditor is merely Pliocene. But by so much as Pliocene antedates the birth a few thousand years ago of the art of writing, by so much does hearing surpass in case the practice of the art of reading. The movie was born almost in the mud of the world’s first seas; the orator, the master of the ear, has had his way with men a million years or two, and long practice has made submission to him easy; but reading was painfully conquered only yesterday, and must be reconquered by each new generation…. The movie's-seeing habit provokes no cerebration.’” (256) This article paraphrases Dana saying that “In other words, producers of films and managers of photoplays have unconsciously tapped the prehistoric man and have found the vein as wide as all humankind and marvelously rich.” (256) It then quotes Dana saying: “‘My indictment does not lie against the obvious stupidity, dullness, inanity and frightful banality of the movie play itself, not against the pardonable tho lamentable activities of the movie promoter…. My argument against it lies elsewhere, to wit, in the constitution of man himself….’” (256) Further quoting Dana: “‘We see by nature, we talk by nurture. Every normal man can see and understand the movies, no matter how unintelligent he may be. A few chosen spirits learn to talk, and a few more learn to understand the talkers. Obviously, then nearly all of our fellows prefer the movie to the spoken word…. It grows by he very ignorance and the lack of reading power on which it feeds. It makes daily more difficult the one supremely important task, that of making all men readers, and therefore more intelligent and therefore more self-restrained.’” (257) A brief paragraph is devoted to Blashfield’s article in which he says that the motion picture is a bridge between civilized man and prehistoric man. DA - April, 1917 IS - 4 KW - journalism history words vs. images history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures images vs. words critics quotations motion pictures, and quotations education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity quotations ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion quotations, and movies appeal to primitive critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and critics Brisbane, Arthur, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Arthur Brisbane audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences censorship and ratings censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and Arthur Brisbane Houston, Herbert Houston, Herbert, and movie censorship Brisbane, Arthur, and movie censorship Dana, John Cotton, and movie censorship quotations, and reading reading reading, and motion pictures motion pictures, and reading censorship LB - 41820 PY - 1917 SP - 256-57 ST - Do Motion Pictures Merely Feed Our Prehistoric Appetites? T2 - Current Opinion TI - Do Motion Pictures Merely Feed Our Prehistoric Appetites? VL - 62 ID - 4280 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article argues that motion pictures are a new art form and that they do "for the drama what printing did for literature." (8) Moving deserved to be considered a new art form, even more than the printing press, which was essentially "a mechanical extension of an old art, ... the art of calligraphy." (8) The movies make "possible for the first time the unlimited reproduction of actual events. This world of ours," it argues, "is in constant motion, and no static art can adequately represent it. There is no such thing as still life, or still anything else in the whole universe. Everywhere and always there is motion and only motion and any representation of reality at rest is a barefaced humbug." (8) "We have now for the first time the possibility of representing, however crudely, the essence of reality, that is motion," the article says, and it goes on to cite Henri Bergson. "'Bergson has shown us what a paralyzing influence static conceptions of reality have had upon history of philosophy and how futile have been all attempts to represent movement by rest.'" (source not given) In short, "the moving picture may mark a new epoch in the history of culture." (8) The magazine says that henceforth it will review on a regular basis motion pictures just as it would good plays and books. The article notes that there are no standards in the press on what constitutes movie criticism. This article may have been written by the magazine's literary editor, Edwin E. Slosson. DA - April 6,1914 IS - 3409 KW - history duplicating technologies motion pictures, and motion metaphors actors acting actors acting motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and motion motion pictures, and actors actors, and motion pictures critics motion pictures, and critics motion pictures, and printing press quotations quotations, and motion pictures duplicating technologies, and motion pictures motion pictures, and duplicating technologies motion pictures, and pulpit ref, secondary ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent Bergson, Henri motion pictures, and movement Slosson, Edwin, and journalism LB - 41830 PY - 1914 SP - 8-9 ST - The Birth of a New Art T2 - The Independent TI - The Birth of a New Art VL - 78 ID - 4281 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In one area, early silent cinema usually drew unfavorable reviews when compared to the live stage. That was in the ability to depict the inner life of human beings, the psychological underpinnings of drama. Silent films, usually produced in black and white, relied heavily on pantomime which offered a poor substitute for the words spoken and emotions registered by live actors [on stage]. These films seemed incapable of entering “the subjective world of the soul.” Pictures were “the province of melodrama; the legitimate stage is the province of motivated drama, high comedy and tragedy,” said H. M. Hedges. “For drama, great drama, the only thing of importance is human personality in conflict…. How can the struggle of a soul be adequately portrayed by pantomime?” (333) This article is a summary with excerpts from H. M. Hedges, "A Laocoon for the Movies," The Play-Book, 2, no. 8 (Jan. 1915), 20-23. DA - May 1915 IS - 5 KW - theater stage motion pictures, and modernity critics censorship words vs. images metaphors actors acting motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and printing press motion pictures, as new literary form theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures images vs. words motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and novels censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and new way of seeing motion pictures, and drama motion pictures, and nature motion pictures, and character motion pictures, and words quotations quotations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and quotations motion pictures, and subjective world of soul motion pictures, and psychology ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion LB - 41860 PY - 1915 SP - 333 ST - Why the Movies and the Drama Must Take Different Roads T2 - Current Opinion TI - Why the Movies and the Drama Must Take Different Roads VL - 58 ID - 4285 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article present excepts three people: Richard A. Rowland who was covered in the Motion Pictures Magazine; Channing Pollock, who wrote in Photoplay Magazine; and Arthur Stringer, the novelist, poet, and playwright for films, who also wrote in Photoplay Magazine. Quoting from Stringer's excerpt on the photoplay: "'Since it feeds the mind through the eye, and not through the ear, we have fallen into the habit of speaking of it as the silent drama, and we have hybridized its methods by imposing upon it the emotionalizing accompaniment of music and the elucidating sign-post of the sub-title, overscrolling the picture itself with printed text precisely as the medieval painters once overscored their paintings with vebal explanations. But the motion-picture is not silent drama. It is not drama, in the first place, any more than it is animated sculpture, and we can call it silent only as we confuse it with drama, wherein of course, the actors have the power of speech. But this new, this novel, the revolutionary art which has been tossed 370/371 into the world speaks, not in words, but in action and scenic impression. It is quite vocal enough, only we haven't yet taken the trouble to acquaint ourselves with its amazingly impressive alphabet. In other words, we have deferred fixing on settled values for its different counters of expression. (370-71) "'We have vacillatingly put off honoring it with a technique of its own, with that give and take between artist and audience essential to all art, in which so much of the human response hinges on making the spectator an unconscious co-worker with the creator himself. This give and take we have readily enough recognized in the older arts, where a sculptor cannot carve an eyelash, or a painter on a flat canvass cannot show a drawing-room relief, or a playwright cannot show a drawing-room without one of its walls knocked out. We accept those limitations and glory in the illusion whereby they are overcome. But this marvelous new art of sun-writing has been the Orphan-Annie of the older arts. We have tried to tog it out in the buskin of the drama and lace it up in the slightly shoddy shoes of the written story. In do so, we have mongrelized its technique, insinuating into it the mechanics of the stage and imposing upon it the clumsily spelled-out textual legends of the story-writer -- which, after all, is a good deal like sticking real chicken feather in the tail of an oil-painting of a golden eagle.'" (371) DA - June 1919 IS - 6 KW - theater stage motion pictures, and modernity critics censorship words vs. images metaphors actors acting motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and printing press motion pictures, as new literary form theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures images vs. words motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and novels censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and new way of seeing motion pictures, and drama motion pictures, and nature motion pictures, and character motion pictures, and words quotations quotations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and quotations motion pictures, and printing press motion pictures, as new language motion pictures, and Arthur Stringer ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion motion pictures, as revolutionary art quotations, and movies as sun-writing motion pictures, as sun-writing motion pictures, and sculpture motion pictures, and painting LB - 41960 PY - 1919 SP - 369-71 ST - Is the Photoplay Heading toward Disaster -- and Why? T2 - Current Opinion TI - Is the Photoplay Heading toward Disaster -- and Why? VL - 66 ID - 4295 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article summarizes research that appeared in the German scientific publication Prometheus (Berlin). It argues that the "penny-in-the-slot machines" that showed moving pictures were likely to damage the eyesight of children. "If the use of the moving picture as a form af amusement becomes very general, as it threatens to become, the next generation may be incapable of using the sense of sight with exactitude," this piece says. It recommends avoiding, "as far as possible, all straining of the sight through these instruments. They are accused of lowering the vitality of many children who have frequent recourse" to these machines. The article says that more than ever before, sight is important helping people reconcile with their physical surroundings. DA - Sept. 1906 IS - 3 KW - motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and damaged eyesight censorship and ratings motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures media effects media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Literature censorship children LB - 41990 PY - 1906 SP - 336 ST - A New Peril to Eyesight T2 - Current Literature TI - A New Peril to Eyesight VL - 41 ID - 4297 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins with the snide remark that the title "is the Greek for it. In vulgar American it is 'the talky movies.' But whatever we call it it is not yet altogether satisfactory." (584) The words and pictures are still unsynchronized. The article also reports that efforts to produce color films is less than perfect. Too often “the maiden’s blush extends over the foliage in the background.” (584) DA - Sept. 4, 1913 IS - 3379 KW - motion pictures color sound technology motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and sound technology color, and motion pictures sound technology, and motion pictures phonograph, and motion pictures motion pictures, and phonograph sound technology, and phonograph phonograph ref, religious ref, reform ref, Congregationalist ref, Independent LB - 42000 PY - 1913 SP - 584-85 ST - Photo-Cinematograph Apparatus T2 - The Independent TI - Photo-Cinematograph Apparatus VL - 75 ID - 4298 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article quotes extensive from Thomas A. Edison on the educational value of motion pictures. “The best schoolhouse is the screen; the best teacher is the film,” the Wizard of Menlo Park claimed. “Human teachers will be needed only to help guide and direct the minds of the pupils, but the pictures will do the instructing.” (234) Edison thought the movie schoolhouse was one of the best hopes to prevent future wars. Edison saw movies as a pictorial supplement to newspapers. "The newspaper is the university of the masses," he said (234) He did not believe the daily newsreel would ever supplement the newspaper in the United States. "This is the land of the newspaper; we are a nation of newspaper readers," said Edison. (234) The subtitle of this article is "Thomas A. Edison Foresees the Day When Movie Films Will Supplant Text-Books." DA - April 1919 IS - 4 KW - journalism motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism motion pictures, and newsreels journalism, and motion pictures education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and education Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Thomas Edison children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion democracy democracy, and motion pictures motion pictures, and democracy children LB - 42030 PY - 1919 SP - 234-35 ST - Motion-Picture Schoolhouses to Prevent Future Wars T2 - Current Opinion TI - Motion-Picture Schoolhouses to Prevent Future Wars VL - 66 ID - 4301 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses Alexander Konta's ideas for historical preservation and the creation of the Modern Historic Records Association. Konta pointed out how very little was really know of ancient Egypt, Greece, and the Middle Ages because records were either not kept or were destroyed. He then asked "'What is this advanced civilization of our doing for the enlightenment of the historians of the far distant future?'" (313, Konta quoted) The Egyptians, he said, "'at least wrote on stone to a far greater degree than we do, who trust the accounts of our current history to the most perishable of mediums of preservation -- paper.'" (313, Konta quoted) Konta when on to say that "'the written word will always be the chief source of information for historians.'" He suggested: "'why not make it imperishable by photographing the written word after it has been printed in books and newspapers and preserve the plate in a fireproof vault? Why not do the same thing with documents of State? It is the same with portraits of the great men of the past. Look at the contradictions, the uncertainties. How little we know of how they looked!'" (313, Konta quoted) Konta urged documenting more than great men or important events, however. He said that "'history is not longer past politics, or past wars, or past leaders. It is a matter of all that the oldtime historians neglected, of the daily life of the common people, or their economic arrangements and social ways of the pioneer, the settler, the trader on the frontier. These are records that we purpose to preserve for posterity as well as the documentary evidence of so-called "great" events. And mind you, these records will be most needed, and be most serviceable, if our present civilization continues to develop without breaks or interruptions. We cannot make too many records of the present to leave to posterity, and we cannot make them too durable.'" (313, Konta quoted) Konta proposed to use the most modern communication technology of the time to preserve the past. "'Why not enlist the services of the phonograph and the moving picture machine, of all the reproductive mechanical inventions of the present era?'" he asked. (313, Konta quoted) He argued that filming important speeches and recording them on the phonograph would enhance their value for historians who might otherwise have only the printed version of the speech. "'The time is coming when the phonographic reporter and perhaps the vitagraph reporter as well will take their places beside the stenographers in the parliaments of men.'" (313, Konta quoted) Konta's goal was "'to create for posterity a "living picture" of our era such as we should like to have of the life and the men and the events of the past. The word "history" in the name of our association is employed in the widest modern sense. It includes science and mechanics, art and music, our daily life in town and country in all its significant phases, as well as the politics that will be past to-morrow. And while waiting for posterity to come we shall make duplicates of our records and use them in our schools and lecture rooms.'" (313, Konta quoted) DA - Sept. 7, 1911 IS - 36 KW - history history motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures sound recording, and historical preservation historical preservation, and sound recording phonograph phonograph, and history history, and phonography phonograph, and historical preservation historical preservation, and phonograph Konta, Alexander, and historical preservation historical preservation, and Alexander Konta Modern Historic Records Association paper materials, and paper paper, and historical preservation historical preservation, and paper parchment materials, and parchment materials, and paper history, and paper historical preservation, and paper photography historical preservation, and photography history, and photography photography, and historical preservation ref, New York Observer and Chronicle ref, Presbyterian ref, religious LB - 42110 PY - 1911 SP - 313-14 ST - An American Pantheon Suggested: Current History to be Preserved for Posterity T2 - New York Observer and Chronicle TI - An American Pantheon Suggested: Current History to be Preserved for Posterity VL - 89 ID - 4310 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses Thomas Edison's kinetoscope and a rather lengthy excerpt from an interview with Edison discussing how he built this device. A word about definitons: "The kinetograph is the machine which takes the photographs, and the kinetoscope the machine which displays them to the eye," this article explains. (442) Edison describes the difficulties in determining how many photographs needed to be taken each second to give the illustion of true motion. At first, 25 photographs were taken but this was not adequate and the number was increased to 45 or 46. Edison assumed from the outset that moving pictures would have a special importance in preserving history. He was not satisfied with the kinetoscope, a box that required a single viewer to look moving pictures through a “peephole about two inches long and half an inch broad, covered with glass,” and announced in May, 1894, that his goal was to project the moving images on a big screen so that a large number of people could watch them at the same time. He then hoped to combine the moving pictures with the phonograph so that the personalities projected on the screen “might be heard plainly.” Once these two things had been accomplished, he predicted, it would be possible to catch a speaker’s “every gesture … and every inflection of … voice” and “exhibit both to admiring audiences a hundred years after he is dead.” (443) A great person would “never die if his pictures and speeches are saved for posterity by the kinetograph and the phonograph,” Edison said. Of the kinetoscope, Edison claimed that it was mainly "a work of sentiment" on his part and he doubted if there was "much money in it." (443) This article was published originally in the New York Sun. DA - May 1894 IS - 5 KW - history motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and new art form Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures Edison, Thomas, and kinetoscope motion pictures, and Thomas Edison history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures sound recording phonograph motion pictures, and history motion pictures, and phonograph phonograph, and motion pictures phonograph, and Thomas Edison history, and sound recording history, and phonograph phonograph, and history sound recording, and history cameras cameras, and kinetoscope ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Literature LB - 42140 PY - 1894 SP - 442-43 ST - Wonders of the Kinetoscope T2 - Current Literature TI - Wonders of the Kinetoscope VL - 15 ID - 4313 ER - TY - JOUR AB - By 1890, several New York newspapers including the Times, Sun, Herald, and World had installed Rogers and Mergenthaler typesetting machines. Century magazine also soon adopted the machinery as did a syndicate of New York book publishers. The syndicate planned to use 50 to 100 typesetting machines to produce “all the body matter of cheap publications” and it expected to double its annual output of novels, cutting their price in half. DA - Sept. 20, 1890 IS - 12 KW - woodcuts wood engraving magazines linotype magazines, and illustrations news and journalism illustrations, and journalism journalism, and illustrations illustrations, and newspapers newspapers, and illustrations magazines, and illustrations illustrations, and magazines illustrations, and wood engraving wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving journalism, and presses newspapers, and presses stereotyping presses presses, and rotary books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and woodcuts materials materials, and paper newspapers, and paper ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific American illustrations, and rotary presses illustrations, and cylinder presses woodcuts, and cylinder presses cylinder presses, and woodcuts presses, and stop cylinder illustrations, and stop cylinder press magazines, and ink illustrations, and ink printing printing, and hand setting type magazines, and typesetting printing, and typesetting presses, and web press printing, and web press freedom freedom, and printing processes newspaper, and typesetting newspapers, and linotype linotype, and newspapers linotype, and magazines magazines, and linotype books, and linotype linotype, and cheap novels books illustrations journalism print LB - 42160 PY - 1890 SP - 176 ST - A Revolution in Printing T2 - Scientific American TI - A Revolution in Printing VL - 63 ID - 4315 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Well into the twentieth century the general public had “not yet lost its feeling of awe for all things electrical” (558), this article says, and for many people electric energy remained a “mysterious” force. The article reprints an excerpt from a recent piece in the Electrical Review which argues that it is mistaken to think of electrical phenomena as incomprehensible. DA - June 1905 IS - 6 KW - ref, secondary electricity electricity, as mysterious electricity, as awesome ref, Current Literature ref, secular ref, literary LB - 42240 PY - 1905 SP - 557-58 ST - The 'Mystery' of Electricity T2 - Current Litearture TI - The 'Mystery' of Electricity VL - 38 ID - 4323 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that perhaps two-thirds to three-fourths of movie audiences were youth "of all ages, from high-school pupils down to youngsters of nor more than five years; but most ... of the grade-school age, say from seven to twelve years of age." These blasé little 'movie fans' were watching material comparable to the dime novel and "cheap love stories." Only "there is no reading that present or can present things so vividly as the moving-picture screen presents them...." It is the parents' responsibility to supervise what their children watch. DA - March 3, 1921 IS - 9 KW - censorship and ratings motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects media effects, children and movies motion pictures, and parents motion pictures, and dime novels children, and motion pictures audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and children ref, secondary ref, Youth's Companion ref, secular ref, illustrated (youth) censorship children LB - 42270 PY - 1921 SP - 134 ST - Children and the 'Movies' T2 - Youth's Companion TI - Children and the 'Movies' VL - 95 ID - 4326 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by saying that "The increased use of electricity in every branch of industry is surprising even to the most ardent advocates of this mysterious form of energy. Not only has electricity invaded the territories occupied by all other forms of energy, but it has actually created new fields of its own. This is particularly marked by the present electrical invasion of our homes, where labor-saving devices were never thought of until electricity showed its wonderful adaptability to all classes of work." (349) It then discusses several items such as electric fans, sewing machine motors, curling irons, hair-drying machines, milk warmers, electric dish washers, broilers, knife polishing machines, and more. DA - April 28, 1906 IS - 17 KW - home electricity electricity, and home home and new media home, and electricity ref, secular ref, scientific ref, secondary ref, Scientific American electricity, as mysterious women electricity, and women women, and electricity women, and electric devices in home LB - 42300 PY - 1906 SP - 349-50 ST - Some Novel Uses of Electricity T2 - Scientific American TI - Some Novel Uses of Electricity VL - 94 ID - 4329 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Steam power and electricity, said this editorial in The Independent in 1904, had helped to increase “mobility, … infinitely varied opportunity,” the “contact of mind with mind,” and create a “restless” (1399) era that called for “a new moral education.” This call for a “new … education” brings to mind Henry Adams commentary in his autobiography on the impact of the dynamo, or electricity. The editorial reads in part: "This is a 'restless' age, and why? Because, in the first place, it is an age in which a marvelous economic prosperity has created an astounding concentration of population. Altho birth rates are diminishing throughout the civilized world, the death rates are falling even more rapidly, and the multiplication of human beings since the beginning of the nineteenth century has been, as the English statistician Lonstaff remarks, 'A phenomenon absolutely unique in history.' Industrial evolution, which has made it possible for a relatively small part of the population to supply food and raw material to a relatively large part, has stimulated the growth of great cities and manufacturing towns. Steam and electricity have made possible a mobility of human beings and a development of communication among them not less amazing than the growth of population itself. "Now, mobility and communication are necessarily disintegrating. In modern society they are combined with a multiplication of opportunities. One immediate consequence is that while great urban aggregations of population continually grow larger, the individuals composing them are continually arriving and departing.... "We live, then, in a 'restless age because of mobility, of communication, of infinitely varied opportunity, of contact of mind with mind. These conditions have come to stay. We shall not go back to the age of the narrow and sheltered life, of humdrum and stupidity. Efforts to create social stability in the sense of unchanging individual relations are foredoomed to fail. All that we can hope to accomplish is to convert mere restlessness into systematized and progressive activity." (1399) DA - June 16, 1904 IS - 2898 KW - progress electricity transportation transportation, and steam power steam power, and transportation electricity, and transportation transportation, and electricity quotations quotations, and electricity electricity, and quotations electricity, and Christianity education education, and electricity electricity, and education values religion religion, and electricity values, and electricity electricity, and values electricity, and religion modernity electricity, and modernity modernity, and electricity modernity, and steam power electricity, and mobility modernity, and mobility modernity, and cities steam power, and mobility modernity, and progress progress, and modernity progress, and electricity electricity, and progress ref, secondary ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent steam power LB - 42320 PY - 1904 SP - 1399-1400 ST - The Restless Age T2 - The Independent TI - The Restless Age VL - 56 ID - 4331 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, the substance of which originally appeared in the New York Herald, discusses Thomas Edison's plans for the "kinetograph." "The popular preacher, the eminent public speaker, with it can all be brought to the home," it says. (451) The kinetograph, Edison says, is "merely a mechanical eye" that can record an "original scene" so that it to audiences "as true as life." (Edison quoted, 453) The article says that Edison has been experiment with a camera, run by electric motor, that takes 46 impressions each second. (452) At this speed, "2,760 photographs can be taken each minute and 82,800 every half-hour." (452) Edison notes that it can record prize fights and that he hoped to have a demonstration ready for the Chicago Exposition. (454) DA - July 1891 IS - 3 KW - home history motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and movement history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures democracy democracy, and entertainment sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures kinetoscope Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and biography Dickson, W. K. L., and kinetoscope kineto-phonograph motion pictures, and sound motion pictures, and phonograph phonograph Dickson, W. K. L. ref, secondary kinetoscope, and phonograph electricity electricity, and Thomas Edison motion pictures, and magic motion pictures, as mysterious home, and new media home, and motion pictures motion pictures, and home kinetograph Edison, Thomas, and kinetograph ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Literature LB - 42370 PY - 1891 SP - 451-54 ST - The Wonderful Kinetograph T2 - Current Literature TI - The Wonderful Kinetograph VL - 7 ID - 4336 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article reports on the increasing use of cameras to record daily events. It asks "To what lengths is the camera going as a factor in modern life?" (13476) It then says that "The psychology of the trained photographer, whose instinctive impulse, when a shot is fired or a magazine explodes, is to press the button of his camera, would be an interesting study, but the fact that the omnipresence of the machine is rapidly creating a complete pictorial mirror of life is more important." (13476) The article notes that cinematograph manufacturer Pathé Fréres has set up a daily news service using motion pictures. "The enterprise, which goes by the name of The Animated Gazette, is a complete news organization, with an editor, Mr. Steer, who has abandoned the old methods of Fleet Street for the new journalism and a staff of 5,000 'photo-correspondents' scattered pretty well over the world." (13477) The piece predicts that "There is little doubt that the new idea will soon be at work in America." (13477) DA - Oct. 1910 KW - wireless communication wireless journalism journalism ref, secondary photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines cameras cameras, and availability cameras, portable cameras, and journalism books, periodicals, newspapers newsreels journalism, and newsreels photography, and science modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures electricity electricity, and photography photography, and electricity wireless, and photography photography, and wireless telegraph telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph war ref, World's Work journalism, animated metaphors metaphors, and camera as mirror quotations quotations, and mirror of life newsreels, and Pathé Frères photojournalism non-USA non-USA, and Great Britain non-USA, and photojournalism Great Britain, and photojournalism photojournalism, and non-USA photojournalism, and Great Britain ref, British Great Britain magazines photography LB - 42410 PY - 1910 SP - 13476-77 ST - Animated Journalism T2 - World's Work TI - Animated Journalism VL - 20 ID - 4340 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses recent research about how people read. It says that with training one can cut the amount of time they spend reading by half or three-quarters. "That such an economy is attainable is indicated by investigations in the psychology of reading that have been recently carried on in many laboratories in this country and Europe. These show that ease and rapidity of reading depend more upon the knack of managing the movements of the eyes that on intellectual ability or quickness of perception. Among men and women of the same degree of education some read four or five times as fast as others, and in general the rapid readers can remember more of what they read and also reproduce it with fewer mistakes than the slow readers." (982) The article discusses eye movement in reading an says that the eye "has to come to a full stop and focus at intervals of ten letters so." (982) It compares eye movement with a motion picture saying that it "is the same as with motion pictures. If the ribbon of photographic films were run thru the machine continuously there would be only a blur on the screen. Each picture has to be brought to a full stop for an instant and then the films jerked along to the next." (983) According to this piece, "in reading the eye is at rest much more than it is in motion; about ten times as long." (983) Such research suggests that shorter lines are more easily read than longer one in newspapers and in other printed material. "If the lines are of unsuitable length, and especially if they are irregular, as those alongside of inserted cuts, the reading is slow and tiresome. The best length of line has been found by laboratory tests and practical experience to be that adopted in The Independent and the best newspapers; that is, about 64 millimeters. A line longer than 90 millimeters should never be used, altho if the type is enlarged in proportion and the page is held far enough away the angular movement may be the same." (983) Still "it requires more time to read the same number of words in a long line than in a short one, and the eye is frequently confused on swinging back to the left in finding the proper line. Besides this, the eye is strained in reading in a wide column, because the focus has to be changed from the ends to the middle, and differently for the two eyes, especially if the book is not held squarely in front. "Theoretically a still shorter line than those here used would be better...." (983) The article speculates that it is easier to reading lines arranged "perpendicularly instead of horizontally" as in Japanese or Chinese. (983) DA - April 30, 1908 KW - reading words vs. images history and new media motion pictures, and reading reading, and motion pictures motion pictures news and journalism reading, and journalism journalism, and reading motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures images vs. words critics quotations education reading, and education education, and reading modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity ref, secondary ref, Independent ref, religious ref, Congregationalist ref, reform media effects media effects, and reading history journalism LB - 42470 PY - 1908 SP - 982-83 ST - How We Reading T2 - Independent TI - How We Reading VL - 64 ID - 4346 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This brief article begins by saying that "Producing a motion picture film containing 100 pictures of a camera shutter exposure of the order of 1-100th second, each picture showing a distinct location of the shutter leaves at intervals of 1-1000th second and allowed an exposure of but 1-30000th second, appears at first to be a difficult task. Yet an apparatus for just such a purpose has been developed in the research laboratory of a leading American camera manufacturer for the purpose of testing camera shutters." (589) DA - June 3, 1916 IS - 1 KW - photography and visual communication photography modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing photography, and space and time space and time photography, and time photography, and space history and new media history, and photography photography, and history news and journalism newspapers, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and history cameras, and speed of electricity photography, and speed of photography, and magnesium photography, and lighting lighting, and photography photography, and high speed cameras, and shutter speed photography, and shutter speed ref, secondary ref, secular motion pictures, and shutter speed motion pictures, and speed of camera cameras history lighting motion pictures LB - 42480 PY - 1916 SP - 589 ST - Making a Motion Picture of a One Hundreth Second Shutter Exposure T2 - Scientific American TI - Making a Motion Picture of a One Hundreth Second Shutter Exposure VL - 114 ID - 4347 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece is a lengthy editorial about the proper relation of color to drawing in art, and it introduces a symposium on the subject that included essays by the painter Carroll Beckwith and Elliott Daingerfield, who was a well-known landscape painter. The magazine, The Art World, was opposed to "the growing vice of untruthful drawing" (170) in modern art and the tendency to elevate color over form in painting. It considered the drawing engaged in by modernists to be "aesthetically" and "socially vicious" (171) and the magazine saw itself as "making a most vigorous war" against this type of art. (171) It opposed "rebellious artists" who did what they pleased, and considered the debate over color and its relationship to form as part of "the age-long fight between reason and riot, between self-restraint and self-indulgence." (172) This editorial begins by pointing out that there are six elements of art -- "conception, composition, expression, drawing, color, and technique." (170) Color was considered to be fifth in importance of those elements. The author quotes a platitude which said that "Drawing is the mother of living form while color is its glorification." (170) Color glorified form and Nature is the foundation on which the use of color should be built. "When nature creates any living thing she first make the form, and always of an agreeable linear design -- then she colors the form. Color alone is not her aim. It is form plus color, color being the glorification of the form." (170) Later, the editorial says that "in any Standard of Art, color becomes fifth in importance -- the surface technique being the least important." (175) In the symposium, which Beckwith and Daingerfield took differing views of color, editorial sides with Daingerfield's position on the relation of color and form. The editorial argues against the use of color in modernism and the lack of precision in drawing by artists. The author (or authors) consider themselves "engaged in a fierce battle against the growing vice of untruthful drawing in the world of art." (170) "To draw perfectly in order to give life to a figure has been the ideal of every great artist from Pheidias down," says the editorial. (171) The editorial quotes Daingerfield who said that "weak men never learn how to draw because nothing in art is so difficult as to draw correctly and expressively...." (Daingerfield quoted, 170) Among the artists reflecting this trend was Delacroix, who is described as "a rebel," or "anarchistic rebel against common-sense." (172) Delacroix reflected a growing trend in art. The advocacy of ideas about art that he embodied marked "the birth in art about 1850 of 'modernism,' a word coined by Baudelaire and defined and hurrahed by him into a movement. The result was the appearance of the successive phases of 'modernism': impressionism, neo-impressionism, post-impressionism, cube-ism, tube-ism, future-ism, etc., in which color was gradually more and more so worshipped and drawing step by step so despised that there is to-day not one painter in ten who really is able truthfully to draw a human figure, not to speak of drawing as Rembrandt, Holbein, Velasquez or even Raphael, Titian or Veronese drew." (173) This was a type of "degenerate art." (174) In addition to Delacroix, other modern artists including Monet come in for criticism. Of Monet's "Rouen Cathedral," the editorial calls it "a badly drawn 'color orgie,'...." (175) Monet would not be forgotten, the editorial predicted, but his reputation would rest on his early work "before he became a 'color experimenter.'" (176) A caption beneath the painting "The Fisherman" (by ?) reads: "An example of insane drawing by a cynical 'modernistic' charlatan. A specimen of the degenerate and vicious 'deformation of the form' the combating of which is one of the main purposes of The Art World. Commenting on the relation of color and Nature: "Nature's supreme spiritual purpose is to stir up emotions. For that purpose she uses form and color. But the form and its linear composition is more important as a means of stirring our emotions than color...." (171) Quoting Augustus Thomas who said: "A word or phrase, act or symbol thrills us in proportion to its capacity -- as an explosive agent -- to touch and fire a center of associated emotional memories." (Thomas quote, 171) It has become a "commonplace," the editorial says, that a colored picture would be even more "emotion-stirring" than a black and white one. (171) The editorial concludes by saying that great American art will only emerged "by agreeing with nature that, before we think of color in art we must first insure the life and beauty of the form, which can only be obtained by the utmost possible truth of drawing, even though we ultimately must follow nature's plan and glorify the form by means of the color." (176) A "work of art is great in ratio of its power of stirring the highest emotions of the largest number of cultured people for the longest period of time." (174, emphasis in original text) DA - Dec. 1917 KW - emotion decadence ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color, in history color, and theory color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and passion color, and sensations media effects color, media effects media effects, and color color, and sensuality lighting lighting, and color color, and lighting color, and music censorship ref, secular ref, Art World ref, secondary color, and dope color, and inebriation metaphors color, as inebriation color, as dope color, and Nature color, and magic color, and barbarism color, and red color, and yellow color, and morality color, and immorality color, as viewed by an artist color, and form color, and drawing color, and Carroll Beckwith color, and Elliott Daingerfield ref, and antimodernist art color, and Delacroix color, and Monet color, and Renoir LB - 42540 PY - 1917 SP - 170-76 ST - Color versus Drawing in Art: A Symposium T2 - Art World TI - Color versus Drawing in Art: A Symposium VL - 3 ID - 4353 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This brief article attempts to assess the extent of the motion picture industry in 1913. It says there are more than 20,000 theaters and they attract about 5 million people each day. The movie industry already ranks with investments made in copper, tin, and sheet iron product, with petroleum refining, and anthracite coal mining. "Perhaps an even more striking comparison is with the printing and publishing business, which is one of the oldest and most widely distributed of all industries. Motion pictures utilize more than a third as much capital as is used by that great business." (29) This piece says that only "the manufacture of automobiles has recently shown such astonishing growth" (29) as movies which were shown commercially for the first time only 17 years earlier. Films also have become influential in education. "They reveal new possibilities to teachers of history and science, and they put a new weapon in the hands of social reformers and sanitary engineers.... Both commercially and educationally they are a remarkable and most useful addition to the resources of modern civilization." (29) DA - May, 1913 KW - motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business ref, secondary ref, World's Work ref, reform motion pictures, and print culture theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and education LB - 42600 PY - 1913 SP - 29 ST - The Motion Picture Industry T2 - World's Work TI - The Motion Picture Industry VL - 26 ID - 4359 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This brief article comments on the importance of red throughout history and observes that there was a good deal of superstition associated with it and that it was often associated with the primitive or uncivilized. "History and archaeological research have disclosed the fact that the ancients were particularly fond of bright colors, especially of red. Relics of painted pottery antedate the classical period of the Homeric cycle. "The savage receives the greater part of his education through his senses, and therefore brilliant colors make a great impression upon him, and red most of any. This color of blood is a great stimulant to deeds of valor, and warlike tribes have invariably worn a profusion of that color. Red is now generously used by all uncivilized peoples. The skin is painted red by the New Zealander; red turbans are worn in India; and African tribes willingly exchange their precious ivory for red calico. ...."In olden times the efficacy of red as a cure all for disease was strictly followed...." ....."In the west of Scotland and in the West Indies it is customary to wrap a bit of red cloth or flannel around children's throats to ward of the whooping-cough...." (31) DA - Sept. 26, 1908 KW - religion religion, and color media effects emotion decadence ref, secondary color color, and values values, and color values actors actors, and color color, and actors quotations quotations, and color meanings color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and poetry color, and religion religion, and color values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations color, and red color, and savages color, and the uncivilized color, and children children and media children, and color red quotations, and color red quotations, and education thru senses violence violence, and color color, and violence ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Harper's Weekly color, and inadequacy of language color, in history acting children LB - 42610 PY - 1908 SP - 31 ST - The Significance of the Color Red T2 - Harper's Weekly TI - The Significance of the Color Red VL - 52 ID - 4360 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article laments the impact of electric signs used for advertising in Times Square and elsewhere in New York City. The electric signs are better than the traditional billboards in that at night they don't blot out the countryside. "It was inevitable when once the electric incandescent and arc light lights had been perfected, that their peculiar fitness as instruments of advertising should ultimately be recognized. The electric sign, if it be arranged with any degree of taste, is not the form of Brobdingnagian billboards strewn out along the railroad routes of the country, the average electric sign is a thing of positive beauty. Moreover, being displayed at night, it does not tell its story at the expense of surrounding country or background, being in this respect superior to the railroad billboard, which more often than not is spread, like an ugly smear, right across the beauty of an otherwise attractive landscape. "But even a good thing may be carried too far, and this is what is happening just now in the matter of electric sign advertising. We have in mind the creation of an enormous and most unsightly steel-and-terra cotta tower in Times Square, in this city, which rises sheer from the roof of an otherwise attractive building and extends some hundreds of feet above the sidewalk. This tower, whose surface is entirely unbroken by window, cornice, pilaster, or column, is to be covered, unless the hopes of its projectors are doomed to disappointment, throughout the whole vast width and height of it, with mammoth electric signs. By night, the affair will have a certain spectacular attractiveness and an undoubted commercial value -- but by day! It would be difficult to conceive of an object more vulgarly obtrusive and more exasperatingly ugly than this bald shaft of steel and masonry, grid ironed from top to bottom by the framework and wiring that go to make up electric sign paraphernalia. "Unfortunately, the permit for this structure, obtained during the previous city administration, is of such a character that Superintendent Miller of the Building Department confesses himself to be powerless to prevent or even modify the construction. We are hardily in sympathy with Mr. Brunner, vice-president of the Art Commission, in his conviction that the time has come when a systematic effort should be made to prevent the erection of unsightly electric signs, not only in Broadway, but throughout the whole city." (230) DA - Sept. 24, 1910 IS - 13 KW - electric lighting billboards art ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific American advertising and public relations color color, and advertising advertising, and color art, and advertising advertising, and art modernity modernity, and advertising advertising, and modernity new way of seeing new way of seeing, and advertising advertising, and new way of seeing posters advertising, and posters posters, and advertising advertising, and billboards billboards, and advertising color, and billboards critics critics, and billboards electric signs electricity electricity, and electric signs quotations quotations, and billboards critics, and electric signs advertising, and electric signs color, and electric signs electric signs, and New York City advertising LB - 42620 PY - 1910 SP - 230 ST - Electric Sign Monstrosities T2 - Scientific American TI - Electric Sign Monstrosities VL - 103 ID - 4361 ER - TY - JOUR AB - “The effects of our chromatic revolution are everywhere apparent,” begins this brief article. It notes an increasing tendency to use color in public buildings, textiles, homes, and in consumer goods. It is the “chemists, laboratory men, and researchers” who are most responsible for “ushering in our new age of color.” The chemists liberated “scores of new hues from the gummy darkness of coal tar and other plentiful substances.” The article notes that there have been some “unwelcome innovations, imported crudities which, as to both color and design, smack of Bolshevistic fondness for ugliness in the raw. And yet for the most part our plunge into the field of color has been a happy experience and one which we need not repent so long as we submit to the restraint of reasonably good taste.” This article might be read in conjunction with Alexander Bakshy’s “Color in Modern Life,” Current History (July 1934). DA - Jan. 21, 1928 KW - billboards color motion pictures electricity printing news and journalism books, newspapers, periodicals color, and newspapers color, and magazines newspapers, and color magazines, and color color, and dyes color, and chemists color, and architecture architecture, and color color, and textiles textiles, and color color, and billboards billboards, and color color, and bolshevism bolshevism, and color values color, and values values, and color ref, secondary ref, Saturday Evening Post ref, secular color, and red books Books, Periodicals, Newspapers magazines print LB - 42690 PY - 1928 SP - 22 ST - The New Age of Color T2 - Saturday Evening Post TI - The New Age of Color VL - 200 ID - 4368 ER - TY - JOUR AB - “We live in a world of color,” begins this article. “Not only is color a natural characteristic of all forms of nature, but Man endeavors to surround himself with even more color by dyeing his textiles, painting his houses and structures and in fact coloring almost everything that he fabricates not excepting his own person.” Color in nature has both utilitarian and decorative purposes. The “brilliant colors of the feathers of birds are for decorative effect only and play a part in sexual attraction.” This piece discusses color as it appears in other aspects of nature and concludes that mankind is still a long way away from being able to replicate nature’s hues. “It is strange that these coloring matters which give such lasting colors in flowers produce only fugitive results when used on textile fabrics. They are all complex substances and one of the real marvels of nature is the ease with which the plant builds up these coloring matters. The chemist succeeds in synthesizing them with great difficulty only, and by methods so complex that it is obvious that we are not even on the road toward learning how the plants do it.” (390) DA - June 1924 KW - ref, secondary ref, Scientific American ref, scientific color color, and nature color, and sexuality color, and textiles color, and dyes LB - 42700 PY - 1924 SP - 390 ST - Color in Nature T2 - Scientific American TI - Color in Nature VL - 130 ID - 4369 ER - TY - JOUR AB - “The world is spending millions for color today and, as a result, is rapidly changing from a dull, drab sphere into a gay and cheerful place garbed in all the hues of the rainbow,” (490) begins this article which is richly illustrated with several color pictures. In the United States alone, approximately $50 million of worth of dyes are used annually. The dyestuffs helped to sell $6-7 billion of merchandise each year. It is the color, the article says, that sells many of these goods. Because “color exerts a psychological influence on all of use,”(490) decisions to buy or not to buy are often strongly related to color. There are assumptions here, which seem common in much literature talking about color during the early 20th century, about the effect of various colors. Red is “the symbol of war, hate, danger and courage while orange signifies warmth, harvest and autumn. Green is linked with victory, safety and sickness and we associate yellow with cowardice and deceit.” (490) Blue has “a cooling effect.” (490) A machine known as the Colorcable uses “a simplified system of code letters” and “can transmit thousands of separate colors over regular telegraph or cable communications,” according to this piece. “In this manner it is possible, for example, to send the most popular shades exhibited in a Paris style show to New York in a few hours, and even a few minutes.” (492) The expanding use of dyes has made color available to a much wider population whereas earlier it had only been the very rich or royalty that afford to own richly colored goods. (494-95) In 1938, however, virtually everything is decorated with color a “miracle … wrought largely by coal and chemistry.” (495) The article discusses how new colors have been unlocked from coal tar by chemists. “Locked in this evil-smelling gooey tar were hundreds or even thousands of colors waiting to be released by the magic hand of the chemist.” (495) DA - Oct. 1938 KW - color advertising and public relations color, and advertising advertising, and color capitalism capitalism, and color color, and capitalism color, and dyes color, and chemists color, and 1930s color, and architecture architecture, and color color, and textiles textiles, and color ref, secondary ref, Popular Mechanics ref, secular ref, scientific ref, illustrated ref, color illustrated color, and psychology color, and red color, and blue color, and green color, and theater color, and telegraph telegraph, and color color, and cable color, and chemistry color, and coal tar advertising telegraph LB - 42710 PY - 1938 SP - 489-96, 128A ff? ST - The Age of Color T2 - Popular Mechanics TI - The Age of Color VL - 70 ID - 4370 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article has excerpts from a panel on "Runaway Technology" at the Fourth Annual Hollywood Festival of World Television, April 9-12, 1967. Aller was business manager for IATSE Cameraman's Union (Local 659) in Hollywood; DiGiullio was vice president of the Mitchel Camera Corporation; and Mohr was director of photography and vice president of IATS Local 659. Aller noted that more film used for newsreels than in making theatrical and TV productions. DiGiullio argues that there is much obsolete capital equipment and that the industry needs to modernize. AU - [ Aller, Herb AU - DiGiullio, Edmund M. AU - Forman, Milton AU - ], Hal Mohr DA - June, 1967 IS - 6 KW - cinematography television newsreels news and journalism news, and newsreels motion pictures television, and Hollywood cameras, and military military communication military communication, and 400-cycle generator cameras news LB - 30300 PY - 1967 SP - 418-19, 424, 431 ST - Echoes from the Hollywood Festival of World Television T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Echoes from the Hollywood Festival of World Television VL - 48 ID - 2785 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this speech to the American Society of Cinematographers, Bradbury discusses his love of movies and comments on the difference between watching a film on a large screen in a theater and watching it on television. The "trouble is," he said, "when you see it in the theatre it's one thing -- when you see it on the TV screen it's another, because when you see it on TV you hold King Kong in your lap. When you're in the theatre, King Kong hold you in his lap. A very important difference, isn't it." (67) He goes on to celebrate the exploration of space. "I want to sell people on the inevitability and the beauty and the distinction of the Space Age," he said, in part because it was "a religious movement whereby man relates himself to the Universe by which God -- the moving hand of God -- relates Himself to Himself." (69-70) "We're going to be on the Moon -- and then, right on off to Mars and from Mars to Alpha Centauri in 100 to 200 years." (69) AU - [Bradbury, Ray] DA - Jan., 1967 IS - 34-35, 65-70 KW - cinematography future and science fiction motion pictures motion pictures, and space age motion pictures, and science fiction motion pictures, and science Bradbury, Ray Bradbury, Ray, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Ray Bradbury future LB - 30110 PY - 1967 ST - Ray Bradbury on 'Film in the Space Age' T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Ray Bradbury on 'Film in the Space Age' VL - 48 ID - 2766 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Cousins, who was editor of the Saturday Review, argued that American movies when shown abroad projected a terrible image of the United States and its citizens. It based this conclusion on having attended American movies abroad and having talked with "American officials abroad." Although he does not mention specific movies, he writes: "In a foreign setting American movies have a meaning and an effect which are difficult to imagine back home. Every word, every gesture becomes almost part of a score card for or against Americans.... You realize that what you are seeing is more than mere entertainment: it is a projection of America, and, as such, of vital importance to the American people at a time when tey are spending millions of dollars to create good will abroad and a real understanding of themselves.... What is involved here is a major matter hitting squarely upon America's stake in world public opinion." (24) Hollywood movies often reinforce the Soviet Union's propaganda that tried "to split off world public opinion from America, to create a deep distrust of Americans as individuals and as a nation, to picture us as selfish, degenerative, depraved, ruthless, acquisitive, anti-humanitarian, and anti-cultural." (25) AU - [Cousins, Norman] N. C. DA - Jan. 21, 1950 KW - Truman administration Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union self-regulation nationalism MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism Cold War war Johnston, Eric capitalism motion pictures, and communism Truman, Harry presidents and new media motion pictures, and Harry Truman Truman, Harry, and motion pictures motion pictures, and drinking military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and U.S. foreign policy MPAA, and foreign policy MPAA, and Truman administration MPAA, and Cold War USSR motion pictures, and USSR propaganda democracy motion pictures, and democracy media effects motion pictures, and media effects LB - 34750 PY - 1950 SP - 24-25 ST - The Free Ride T2 - Saturday Review TI - The Free Ride VL - 33 ID - 3117 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This is the second of three articles that Norman Cousins wrote in early 1950 attacking the impact of Hollywood movies abroad. Here he argues that "Soviet propaganda against the United States was not nearly as damaging as the grotesquely distorted view of the American people being created abroad by our own motion pictures.... The 'kiss-kiss, bang-bang' standard formula of the Grade-B movie is building up an image of the American people that our officials abroad are finding difficult to correct or offset -- at any price." According to Cousins, "the effect of our movies abroad is actually the direct opposite from the one we described." Moreover, "American movies set up false standards for the measurement of a democracy." (20) AU - [Cousins, Norman] N. C. DA - Jan. 28, 1950 KW - Truman administration Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union self-regulation nationalism MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism Cold War war Johnston, Eric capitalism motion pictures, and communism Truman, Harry presidents and new media motion pictures, and Harry Truman Truman, Harry, and motion pictures motion pictures, and drinking military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and U.S. foreign policy MPAA, and foreign policy MPAA, and Truman administration MPAA, and Cold War USSR motion pictures, and USSR propaganda democracy motion pictures, and democracy media effects motion pictures, and media effects LB - 34760 PY - 1950 SP - 20-21 ST - The Free Ride, Par II T2 - Saturday Review TI - The Free Ride, Par II VL - 33 ID - 3118 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This is the third of three article that Cousins wrote in early 1950 arguing that Hollywood movies were creating an impression "of America as a nation consisting largely of quick killers and quick kissers, with a collective intelligence at ceiling zero and practically no contact with civilized values." The movies were doing as much, or more, damage to the U. S. abroad as was Soviet propaganda. Cousins says that movies seems to be made for audiences with "the average mentality ... of a twelve-year-old," but that since the end of World War II the American public has become much more highly educated and needs more responsible and intelligence entertainment. Since the 1920s, he writes, "the mechanical and technical advances in motion pictures have been superb, but the overall policy and story material are just about where they were when sound was introduced." (22) AU - [Cousins, Norman] N. C. DA - Feb. 4, 1950 IS - 4 KW - Truman administration Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union self-regulation nationalism MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism Cold War war Johnston, Eric capitalism motion pictures, and communism Truman, Harry presidents and new media motion pictures, and Harry Truman Truman, Harry, and motion pictures motion pictures, and drinking military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and U.S. foreign policy MPAA, and foreign policy MPAA, and Truman administration MPAA, and Cold War USSR motion pictures, and USSR propaganda democracy motion pictures, and democracy media effects motion pictures, and media effects LB - 34770 PY - 1950 SP - 22-23 ST - The Free Ride, Part III T2 - Saturday Review TI - The Free Ride, Part III VL - 33 ID - 3119 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article, director Richard Fleischer, and Visuals Designer Fred Harpman, discuss the making of "The Boston Strangler" (1968), which starred Tony Curtis and Henry Fonda. The movies was about Albert DeSalvo who admitted to murdering 13 women between 1962 and 1964. 20th Century-Fox produced the film in Panavision and subdued color, and "an intricate technique in which multiple images appear simultaneously in varying configurations upon the wide-screen frame." (202) "The Boston Strangler" was the first feature film to use this technique in an extensive fashion. About 35 percent of the movie uses the multiple-image technique. AU - [Fleischer, Richard AU - Harpman], Fred DA - Feb., 1969 IS - 2 KW - motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures color motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and subdued color motion pictures, and multiple-image technique movie, Boston Strangler Boston Strangler cinematography special effects special effects, and multiple-image technique LB - 30280 PY - 1969 SP - 202-05, 228 ST - Multiple-image Technique for 'The Boston Strangler' T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Multiple-image Technique for 'The Boston Strangler' VL - 50 ID - 2783 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article prints excerpts from a pamphlet by Josiah W. Leeds on the demoralizing effects of some theater exhibitions. Leeds deplored the fact that women acted on stage and noted that this development was but two centuries old. "'Yet it is only within the last two centuries ... that the public's sense of propriety has so far weakened as to tolerate this degrading innovation of woman's appearance as a stage dancer and actress,'" Leeds said. (174) In India and China, he asserted, "it is only those women who have lost their good name who will consent to appear as actresses or dancers upon a public stage." (174) Leeds was against dancing. "'No man in India would allow his wife or daughter to dance, and as to dancing with another man, he would forsake her forever, as a woman lost to virtue and modesty, if she were to attempt it. In their observation of white women, there is nothing that so much perplexes them as the fact that fathers and husbands will permit their wives and daughters to indulge in promiscuous dancing. No argument will convince them that the act is such as a virtuous female should practise, or that its tendency is not licentious. The prevalence of the practice in 'Christian' nations makes our holy religion -- which they suppose must allow it -- to be abhorred by many of them, and often it is cast in the teeth of our missionaries when preaching to them. But what would these heathens say, could they enter our opera houses and theatres, and see the shocking exposure of their persons which our public women there present before mixed assemblies! Yet they would be ten times more astonished, that ladies of virtue and reputation should be found there, accompanied by their daughters, to witness the sight, and that, too, in the presence of the other sex!'" (174) Leeds comments on the role of Sunday papers and advertising in promoting "theatre news ... stage gossip and scandal." (175) He had little regard for the private lives of actors. "'One of the most convincing statements that I ever read, in proof of the position that the theatre is not a safe school of morals, was furnished by an article upon "Divorces of the Stage," written by a theatre-goer, who had given a great deal of attention to the domestic life of actors and actresses.'" (175) As long as women are on stage and as long they continue to dance, "'the feeders of impure pictorial representations will thrive and their produce increase'," Leeds laments. (175) AU - [Leeds, Josiah W.] DA - Dec. 21, 1895 IS - 22 KW - theater morality entertainment anti-theatrical prejudice critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater ref, secondary religion religion, and theater theater, and religion women women, and theater theater, and women values values, and acting values, and women women, and values censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship actors acting actors, and status of theater, and bias against actors, and bias against acting, and women women, and acting entertainment, and immorality morality, and theater anti-theatrical bias dancing, and women women, and dancing quotations quotations, and immoral theater quotations, and women acting newspapers Sunday newspapers, and theater advertising and public relations advertising, and values advertising, and theater advertising, and morality theater, and advertising modernity, and theater modernity theater, and modernity censorship ref, religious ref, Quakers ref, Friend advertising news news and journalism LB - 38750 PY - 1895 SP - 174-75 ST - The Relation of the Press and the Stage to Purity T2 - The Friend: A Religious and Literary Journal TI - The Relation of the Press and the Stage to Purity VL - 69 ID - 3974 ER - TY - JOUR AU - [Lucas, George] (interview by Benjamin Bergery AU - Bosley), edited by Rachael K. DA - Sept. 2001 IS - 9 KW - special effects, digital motion pictures and popular culture digitization digital cinema Lucas, George special effects, and digitization cameras, and digital cinema motion pictures, and digitization digitization, and motion pictures cameras digital media motion pictures special effects LB - 29500 PY - 2001 SP - 66-75 ST - Digital Cinema, By George T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Digital Cinema, By George VL - 82 ID - 2728 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Here the evangelist Billy Sunday says that "I believe that moving pictures shows (notwithstanding the so-called censorship) are ruining more women and children, and weaning them from the holy influences of Church and Sunday-school, than all the saloons of our rum-cursed cities. If you don't think so, study the shameful posters in front of these theaters. The low price of admittance brings them in reach of tens of thousands of children who never went to theaters before, and the average character is as bad or worse than the high-priced kind. There are a few harmless pictures shown, but these serve only as bait to the devil's hook. "No wonder that our young girls and women, in their shameful styles of dress, are throwing away the modest ways of the charming girls of forty years ago! "The National Board of Censorship for moving pictures endorse the nude and semi-nude. No red-blooded man, Christian or non-Christian, art or no art, can willingly look upon such pictures without defilement. Such censorship is satanic." Sunday goes on to say that moving pictures should not be left to the devil but that pastors should "get a good stereopticon" and show some of the "splendid slides of the "Life of Christ," the tragedy of His death, and other Bible subject.'" AD -. AU - [Sunday, Billy] DA - July 30, 1914 IS - 31 KW - children censorship ref, secondary motion pictures religion religion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion Sunday, Billy, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Billy Sunday critics, and motion pictures critics children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings posters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and posters theaters theaters, and children children, and theaters advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising children, and movie posters children, and movie advertising advertising, and children quotations quotations, and evil movies quotations, and Billy Sunday stereopticons motion pictures, and stereopticons ref, religious ref, Christian Church ref, Herald Gospel of Liberty advertising children posters LB - 37920 PY - 1914 SP - 966 ST - [Moving Picture Shows] T2 - Herald of Gospel Liberty TI - [Moving Picture Shows] VL - 106 ID - 3891 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Freddie Young, the Director of Photography, discusses interior location filming for a new James Bond film (in Technicolor), "You Only Live Twice" (1967). The article are notes taken by the Editor of American Cinematographer at a symposium of the British Society of Cinematography AU - [Young, Freddie] DA - Sept., 1967 IS - 9 KW - cinematography motion pictures motion pictures, and location shooting lighting motion pictures, and lighting motion pictures, and interior lighting (1967) movie, You Only Live Twice You Only Live Twice (1967) Technicolor color color, and movie lighting motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures LB - 30230 PY - 1967 SP - 641, 665-67 ST - Filming Actual Location Interiors ... Now T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Filming Actual Location Interiors ... Now VL - 48 ID - 2778 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the spread and impact of electricity on the United States in the seventeen years between the Centennial in 1876 and the Chicago World's Fair in 1893. "At the Centennial, with the exception of the telegraph and a little electro-plating, there was absolutely no commercial application of electricity. Now scarcely a single detail of daily life that is not permeated by and dependent upon it." (3) At the 1893 exhibit, the steam engine was "banished" and the electric motor reigned. (3) The spread of telephones was evident in 1893. There were 800 miles of underground telephone wires connecting the exhibits at the World's Fair alone.(3) In the United States, in early 1983 there were more than "400,000 miles of telephone lines ... in active service, exclusive of 100,000 miles of underground cable line." (8) These lines served "200,000 subscribers, from 1,351 exchanges, operating 552,000 instruments, requiring the attention of 10,000 employees, and involving the investment of over $165,000,000 of capital. Upon these lines over 600,000,000 conversations annually take place." (8) The article discusses the switchboard and its use at the World Fair and more broadly in the economy. (9, 11) The storage battery "was not only unknown, but was unimagined" in 1876, and only a few dreams of an electric railway. The article says that in the United States in 1893 there were "2,500 isolated plants ... devoted to the business of illumination. These figures take no account of the foreign plants, for which actual statistics are not obtainable. A conservative estimate, however, would place the total electrical illuminating power of the world at the present time at about one hundred and fifty million candle power." (5) The article notes the progress of wireless communication and reports that "already intelligible messages have been transmitted across more than five miles of space with out the aid of any wire, or other conducting circuit, simply by means of electro-magnetic waves impelled through the luminous ether. Thus, compared to the possibilities so opened to the imagination, the present method of telephonic communication sinks into insignificance." (13) The author comments on the progress of converting heat energy directly into electricity. (13-14) Abbott believed that "The greatest scientific attainment of this century was the discovery of the correlation of energy, which informs us that all the forms of force with which we are acquainted, such as light, heat, sound, electricity, chemical action, the attraction of gravitation, and mechanical motion, are mut-15/16 ually interconvertible, so that any manifestation of force can be transformed into any other form; and could the inevitable friction wastes of mechanics be avoided the change would be accomplished absolutely without loss...." (15-16) The author asks if the next seventeen years (1893-1910) will see progress on such a great scale as the last seventeen. (12) This article is illustrated with several pictures from the Chicago World's Fair. AU - Abbott, Arthur V. DA - Nov. 1893 IS - 5 KW - wireless communication electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time electricity, and time electricity, and space electricity, and travel lighting lighting, and electricity electricity, and lighting telephones telephones, and electricity electricity, and telephones General Electric Company Westinghouse Corporation telephones, and number of calls wireless radio radio, and wireless electricity, and wireless wireless, and electricity home and new media electricity, and home home, and electricity ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Frank Leslie's ref, Leslie's electricity, and storage batteries home LB - 37950 PY - 1893 SP - 2-16 ST - Electricity Up to Date: From the Centennial to the White City T2 - Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly TI - Electricity Up to Date: From the Centennial to the White City VL - 36 ID - 3894 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article offers a sour appraisal of photography. "One conscienceless epigrammatist somewhere has said that 'photography is the George Washington of the arts.' Washington was never so slandered before, for if there be anything that shuns things as they are and clings to things as they are not, anything which distrots the real and lives in a world of its own, it is the art of photography. It drags down what we call beautiful; it often elevates the ugly; the weather-beaten hovel is as likely to grow romantic under its deceptive touch as the stately mansion is to depreciate in value; whilte the faces of those we love or admire are, in the hands of the unskillful, set down to posterity with more disfigurement than ingeious Indian artists could devise. "A human being, in fact, is neve more unreal than when being photographed...." (471) Later, the author says that "the camera makes friends; true, but it imposes on good nature to comply with the numerous requests a village community will make, sometimes with provoking interation, especially at a time -- which every amateur photographer stumbles over occsionally -- when he has a run of bad pictures in succession, an event which iss sure to come at some inopportune time...." (478) AU - Adams, I. Howe DA - Sept. 1890 IS - 6 KW - ref, mag photography and visual communication photography photography, and art critics ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, outdoor ref, Outing LB - 380 PY - 1890 SP - 476-80 ST - Photography, or the Manchausen of the Arts T2 - Outing, an Illustrated Magazine of Recreation TI - Photography, or the Manchausen of the Arts VL - 16 ID - 3334 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, illustrated with a number of pictures, discusses the progress in photogaphing out-of-doors and at night using magnesium powder. "In 'flash' light photography the most remarkable achievements are, undoubtedly, those which have been accomplished out of doors and at night. "Here a larger amount of magnesium is required, and, of course, since so much of the light is lost in the surrounding darkness, powerful reflectors must be used." (259) Among the images is the Statue of Liberty at night. (259) AU - Adams, W. I. Lincoln DA - Jan. 1891 IS - 4 KW - ref, sec photography and visual communication photography modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing photography, and space and time space and time photography, and time photography, and space photography, and travel lighting photography, and lighting lighting, and photography photography, and magnesium magnesium, and photography materials materials, and magnesium ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, outdoor ref, Outing LB - 38030 PY - 1891 SP - 259-64 ST - Flash Light Photography: Concluded T2 - Outing, an Illustrated Monthly Magazine of Recreation TI - Flash Light Photography: Concluded VL - 17 ID - 3902 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, published in early 1892, says that there has been rapid improvements in photography over the past two years, so "that it is now possible for the instantaneous photographer to accomplish results which were unattainable even two years ago." (404) The article is devoted to describing the work of John C. Hemment, a former athlete (skater) who uses instantaneous photography to show athletic events. Races, for example, that were once considered dead heats to the naked eye are shown to have clear winners and losers when instantaneous photography is used at the finish line. Hemment used an "ingenious hand box" camera to replace reliance on the tripod. (406) The article is illustrated with six photographs by Hemment of athletes in action. AU - Adams, W. I. Lincoln DA - Feb. 1892 IS - 5 KW - personality fame fame ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality cameras cameras, and athletes cameras, and sports athletes, and cameras sports, and cameras athletes, and celebrity culture celebrity culture, and athletes athletes, and fame fame, and athletes cameras, instantaneous photography, instantaneous athletes, and instantaneous photography celebrity culture, and instantaneous photography cameras, portable cameras, hand held photography, and hand-held cameras ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, outdoor ref, Outing celebrity photography LB - 39690 PY - 1892 SP - 404-08 ST - Photography and Athletics: First Paper T2 - Outing, an Illustrated Monthly Magazine of Recreation TI - Photography and Athletics: First Paper VL - 19 ID - 4067 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is a follow-up on an earlier article that appeared in this magazine in Feb. 1892. In this piece, Adams describes the process photographer John C. Hemment used to take instantaneous pictures of athletes in action. Hemment discusses how he develops his pictures. Hemment used a hand camera which produced photographs that technically "were not only as perfect as could be if a prolonged exposure were given in every case," by the pictures were "also caught with such a precision that just the particular attitude of the subject or subjects which were desired is depicted, and that particular phase of the sport or feat is brought out which is most characteristic or pictorial." (447) The article notes that even pictures taken in weak light turn out well. Hemment "uses the quickest working exposing shutter, the most rapid lens and the most sensitive dry plate," Adams reports. (449) To those who said that Hemment could not develop his photos fast enough, he says that he "devoted three hours in bringing up only four plates of rapid exposure." (449) He predicts that in the future all important racing events will have their on official photographer. The article says that in March, 1892, most large newspapers already have their own "regular staff photographer" and that "many papers have several photographers connected with them, and some have extensive photographic establishments where the work of the photographer can be finished and prepared for the press. A very large number have their regular 'photographic' editor, in addition to the 'sporting' editor, 'exchange' editor, etc." (449) Adams concludes by saying: "The instantaneous photographer is also a familiar figure now on the occasion of any athletic performance of importance. His value as an impartial judge is being more widely recognized every day." (449) The article is illustrated with eight photographs of athletic events. AU - Adams, W. I. Lincoln DA - March 1892 IS - 6 KW - personality fame fame ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality cameras cameras, and athletes cameras, and sports athletes, and cameras sports, and cameras athletes, and celebrity culture celebrity culture, and athletes athletes, and fame fame, and athletes cameras, instantaneous photography, instantaneous athletes, and instantaneous photography celebrity culture, and instantaneous photography cameras, portable cameras, hand held photography, and hand-held cameras photography, and speed of development cameras, and lens photography, and dry plate newspapers, and athletes newspapers, and photography photography, and newspapers athletes, and newspapers news and journalism ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, outdoor ref, Outing celebrity photography LB - 39700 PY - 1892 SP - 445-49 ST - Photography and Athletics: Second Paper T2 - Outing, an Illustrated Magazine of Recreation TI - Photography and Athletics: Second Paper VL - 19 ID - 4068 ER - TY - JOUR AB - These issues are devoted to new approaches to writing the history of computing. Agar contributes an "Introduction: History of Computing: Approaches, New Directions and the Possibility of Informatic History," and an article, "Digital Patina: Texts, Spirit and the First Computer." Paul N. Edwards article is "Y2K: Millennial Reflections on Computers as Infrastructure." Other articles includ Robert W. Seidel, "'Crunching Numbers': Computers and Physical Research in the AEC [Atomic Energy Commission] Laboratories"; Geoffrey C. Bowker, "Archival Technology in the Historical Sciences: 1800-1997"; and Paul Atkinson, "Computer Memories: The History of Computer Form." AU - Agar, Jon, ed. DA - 1998 IS - 1-2 KW - computers primary sources preservation labor history, and new media computers office office, and new media office +computers and the Internet infrastructure, and computers archives, and new technology computers, and history history, and computers archives, and computers Edwards, Paul Seidel, Robert archives, and new media archives, and infrastructure infrastructure, and archives infrastructure history archives LB - 2720 PY - 1998 ST - History of Computing: Approaches, New Directions T2 - History and Technology: An International Journal TI - History of Computing: Approaches, New Directions VL - 15 ID - 360 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Aitken, Hugh G. DA - Oct. 1994 KW - law regulation radio +radio regulation, and radio radio, and spectrum allocation radio, and regulation censorship and ratings LB - 5800 PY - 1994 SP - 686-716 ST - Allocating the Spectrum: The Origins of Radio Regulation T2 - Technology and Culture TI - Allocating the Spectrum: The Origins of Radio Regulation VL - 35 ID - 1965 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This brief piece has a paragraph listing "several important papers on the nature of life and life processes" that Leonard Troland wrote. AU - Alexander, Jerome DA - Sept. 16, 1932 IS - 1968 KW - Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Technicolor Münsterberg, Hugo Munsterberg, Hugo ref, secondary Troland, Leonard color Troland, Leonard, and color color, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and visual sensation color, and media effects media effects media effects, and color Troland, Leonard, and hedonism Troland, Leonard, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and book review book review, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and Hugo Munsterberg Munsterberg, Hugo, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and psychology Troland, Leonard, and physics Troland, Leonard, and obituary obituaries, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and motion pictures Troland, Leonard, and metaphysics LB - 40310 PY - 1932 SP - 255 ST - Professor Troland and Dr. Kunz T2 - Science TI - Professor Troland and Dr. Kunz VL - 76 (New Series) ID - 4129 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Viola Allen says that the chief qualities an actress must have "are born with her: she must have health, strength, a good physique, brains, aptitude, imagination, memory and judgment. These aside from a generous share of instinctive talent and a goodly quantity which we call magnetism. Therefore is the true actress born and not made. I have not placed personal beauty in the category of essentials, because it is not an essential, but an undisputed aid. I say this because one need only to go over the list of the greatest actresses to see at once that they were not and are not all beautiful women. Genius always rises above personal beauty, but it must be true genius. And as there is so little of absolute genius in the world, an attractive face becomes an assistance to the actress." The article points out that the "actress has not time for social life." AU - Allen, Viola DA - May 1899 IS - 6 KW - photography fame entertainment celebrity anti-theatrical prejudice celebrity culture critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater ref, secondary women women, and theater theater, and women values values, and acting values, and women women, and values censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship actors acting actors, and status of theater, and bias against actors, and bias against acting, and women women, and acting entertainment, and immorality morality, and theater anti-theatrical bias sexuality women, and photography photography, and women women, and beauty photography, and beauty religion, and antitheatrical bias celebrity photography, and celebrity celebrity, and photography photography, and beauty beauty, and photography sexuality, and photography photography, and sexuality sexuality, and actresses acting, and sexuality fame, and photography photography, and fame personality, and magnetism acting, and magnetism actresses, and magnetism acting, and charisma censorship ref, secondary ref, secular ref, women ref, Ladies' Home Journal morality personality religion theater LB - 38830 PY - 1899 SP - 2 ST - What It Means to be an Actress T2 - Ladies' Home Journal TI - What It Means to be an Actress VL - 16 ID - 3982 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this book review of Leonard Troland's Fundamentals of Human Motivation (New York: Van Nostrond, 1928), Gordon Allport wrote that Troland's book suggests that "the time is ripe for a recrudescence of hedonism, purified and enriched by a century of discovery, and founded at last on a standard neural physiology." (510) Allport commented on Troland's theories about sexual motivation. "There is probably no treatment of the psychophysiology of sex motives more complete than Troland's. It is a pity that the argument is widely scattered through the book, instead of gathered into consecutive chapters. It is well worth reprinting as a separate contribution. Characteristic of the author's method, this theory takes its point of departure in Sherringtonian psychology, postulates both the nerve centers and the functions necessary to account for the phenomena observed, and rigorously follows through the consequences of these postulates, until a highly original and quite plausible schema of sexual motivation is complete." (512) Although Allport challenged some of Troland's ideas, he concluded that the work has a "remarkable richness and strength. Disagreement in this case itself a tribute." (513) AU - Allport, Gordon W. DA - 1928-1929 KW - ref, secondary Troland, Leonard color Troland, Leonard, and color color, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and visual sensation color, and media effects media effects media effects, and color Troland, Leonard, and hedonism Troland, Leonard, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and book review book review, and Leonard Troland LB - 40250 PY - 1928 SP - 510-13 ST - [Book Review] T2 - Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology TI - [Book Review] VL - 23 ID - 4123 ER - TY - JOUR AB - During the 1960s, movie makers found technology that gave them greater flexibility and freedom. Zoom lens, hand-held cameras, hidden cameras and microphones all made film makers more mobile and better able to record motion smoothly and capture spontaneity, action, sexuality, and violence in ways that gave movie and TV audiences a greater sense of realism. And the new technology also gave cameramen the “ability to use reality as adjunct,” observed critic Hollis Alpert, “as highly convincing background to a film’s fictional or imaginative purpose.” AU - Alpert, Hollis DA - Sept. 6, 1969 KW - motion pictures cameras special effects television television, and camera motion pictures, and cameras cameras, and motion pictures cameras, television LB - 32660 PY - 1969 SP - 43? ST - SR Goes to the Movies: The Film of Social Reality T2 - Saturday Review TI - SR Goes to the Movies: The Film of Social Reality VL - 52 ID - 2925 ER - TY - JOUR AB - See also Electricity, 6 (March 14, 1894), 110-11. AU - Amstutz, Noah W. DA - Feb. 28, 1894 KW - television, and history of +television +telegraph telegraph, visual seeing at a distance television, and origins LB - 6480 PY - 1894 SP - 77-80 ST - Visual Telegraphy T2 - Electricity TI - Visual Telegraphy VL - 6 ID - 1988 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This work survey's research showing a causal link between violence in mass media and aggressive behavior on the part of some children. AU - Anderson, Craig A. AU - Bushman, Brad J. DA - March 18, 2002 KW - media research syntheses press motion pictures meta-analyses media effects violence (see also: media violence) violence media effects violence media violence censorship and ratings children +television television, and violence violence, and television social science research social science research, and violence violence, and social science research violence, and pornography pornography, and violence media effects media effects, and TV violence media violence, meta-analyses social science research, and literature review social science research, and meta-analysis violence, and children children, and media children, and media violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures social science research, and press coverage press coverage, and social science research violence, and press coverage media violence, and American Medical Association media violence, and American Psychological Association media violence, and American Academy of Pediatrics media violence, and American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry media violence, and American Academy of Family Physicians media violence, and American Psychiatric Association American Psychiatric Association, and media violence American Academy of Family Physicians, and media violence American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, and media violence American Academy of Pediatrics, and media violence American Psychological Association, and media violence American Medical Association, and media violence American Academy of Pediatrics American Medical Association American Psychiatric Association American Psychological Association pornography American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry LB - 28140 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 2002 SP - 1-2 ST - The Effects of Media Violence on Society T2 - Science TI - The Effects of Media Violence on Society VL - 30 ID - 1363 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is a meta-analysis of research done on the effects of violent video games. Although video games were relatively new and empirical research on them is not as developed as on television, for example, video games had become a business surpassing motion pictures by 2001. AU - Anderson, Craig A. AU - Bushman, Brad J. DA - Sept. 2001 IS - 5 KW - media research classification self-regulation CARA syntheses censorship and ratings press motion pictures meta-analyses media effects violence (see also: media violence) violence media effects violence media violence video games censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +television television, and violence violence, and television social science research social science research, and violence violence, and social science research violence, and pornography pornography, and violence media effects media effects, and TV violence media violence, meta-analyses social science research, and literature review social science research, and meta-analysis violence, and children children, and media children, and media violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures social science research, and press coverage press coverage, and social science research violence, and press coverage video games, and violence children, and video games media effects, and video games video games, and media effects video games, and social science research social science research, and video games video games, and violence violence, and video games video games, and children rating system (U. S.), and video games video games, and rating system (U. S.) video games, and meta-analyses meta-analyses, and video games pornography LB - 28150 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 2001 SP - 353-59 ST - Effects of Violent Video Games on Aggressive Behavior, Aggressive Cognition, Aggressive Affect, Psysiological Arousal, and Prosocial Behavior: A Meta-Analytic Review of the Scientific Literature T2 - Psychological Science TI - Effects of Violent Video Games on Aggressive Behavior, Aggressive Cognition, Aggressive Affect, Psysiological Arousal, and Prosocial Behavior: A Meta-Analytic Review of the Scientific Literature VL - 12 ID - 1364 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article on special effects for the television series "Star Trek," consists of brief pieces by Howard A. Anderson, President of Howard A. Anderson Co.; Linwood G. Dunn, ASC, President of Film Effects of Hollywood, Inc.; and John Westheimer, ASC, President of Westheimer Company. AU - Anderson, Howard A. AU - Dunn, Linwood G. AU - Westheimer, John DA - Oct., 1967 IS - 10 KW - cinematography television special effects television, and special effects location shooting motion pictures, and location shooting movie, Star Trek (TV series) Star Trek (TV series) color color film, and TV special effects special effects, and television special effects and blue matting motion pictures LB - 30060 PY - 1967 SP - 714-17 ST - Out-of-this-world Special Effects for 'Star Trek' T2 - American Cinenatographer TI - Out-of-this-world Special Effects for 'Star Trek' VL - 48 ID - 2761 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is about Jack Valenti (before he moved to the motion picture industry), and about his admiration for President Lyndon B. Johnson. AU - Anderson, Patrick DA - Feb. 20, 1966 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti LB - 19660 PY - 1966 SP - 28-29, 64, 66, 71-72 ST - Born Hero-Worshiper Who Serves His Hero T2 - New York Times Magazine TI - Born Hero-Worshiper Who Serves His Hero ID - 800 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author discusses his efforts to bring Dante's classic to the screen "with a surrealistic underscoring in the art work" using 16mm color film. Describing his efforts as a "labor of love" (25) He saw the motion picture as a way of extending the work of traditional artists, to communication their "emotions and ideas..... Motion pictures are equivalent to a series of canvases. When projected they represent the artist as truly as though his work hung on a gallery wall." (52) AU - Angelo, Emedio DA - Jan., 1964 IS - 1 KW - cinematography motion pictures cameras color motion pictures, and 16mm 16mm 16mm, and color color, and 16mm color film motion pictures, and 16mm color film motion pictures, and art LB - 30160 PY - 1964 SP - 24-25, 51-52 ST - 'Dante's Inferno' As(?) Experimental Film Project in 16mm Color T2 - American Cinematographer TI - 'Dante's Inferno' As(?) Experimental Film Project in 16mm Color VL - 45 ID - 2771 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author writes that Innis's work, "in perpetual tension between ... two locations -- Canada and 'the West' -- begins to clear a space for a post-colonial reformation of thought through a theory of communication." AU - Angus, Ian DA - 1993 IS - 1 KW - nationalism imperialism values non-USA Innis, Harold, and orality Canada Innis, Harold, and critics Innis, Harold, and values values, and Harold Innis +nationalism and communication Innis, Harold, and nationalism cultural imperialism Innis, Harold, and post-colonial thought values Innis, Harold LB - 3400 PY - 1993 SP - 16-42 ST - Orality in the Twilight of Humanism: A Critique of the Communication Theory of Harold Innis T2 - Continuum: The Australian Journal of Media & Culture TI - Orality in the Twilight of Humanism: A Critique of the Communication Theory of Harold Innis VL - 7 ID - 428 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This issue is devoted to the work of Canadian historian and political economist, Harold A. Innis. There are several articles that deal with Innis' work as well as an excerpt from Innis's unpublished "History of Communication" that deals with printing in China during the ninteenth and twentieth centuries. Essays include the editors Introduction; Ian Angus, "Orality in the Twilight of Humanism: A Critique of the Communication Theory of Harold Innis"; Roman Onufrijchuk, "Introducting Innis: McLuhan Concluding: The Innis in McLuhan's 'System'"; Alison Beale, "Harold Innis and Canadian Cultural Policy in the 1940s"; Paul Heyer, "Empire, History, and Communications Viewed from the Margins: The Legacies of Gordon Childe and Harold Innis"; Hart Cohen, "Margins at the Centre: The Application of Innis' Concept of Bias to the Development of Aboriginal Media"; Brian Shoesmith, "An Introduction to Innis' 'History of Communication'"; Harold A. Innis, "Printing in China in the 19th and 20th Century"; Sut Jhally, "Communications and the Materialist Conception of History: Marx, Innis and Technology." AU - Angus, Ian and Brian Shoesmith, eds. DA - 1993 IS - 1 KW - nationalism Asia print printing non-USA Innis, Harold +nationalism and communication China China, and Harold Innis printing, and China China, and printing Innis, Harold, and History of Communication McLuhan, Marshall, and Harold Innis Innis, Harold, and Marshall McLuhan Canada Canada, and Harold Innis Innis, Harold, and Karl Marx Innis, Harold, and new media McLuhan, Marshall LB - 3300 N1 - See filed under Continuum (1993). PY - 1993 ST - Dependency/Space/Policy: A Dialogue With Harold A. Innis T2 - Continuum: The Australian Journal of Media & Culture TI - Dependency/Space/Policy: A Dialogue With Harold A. Innis VL - 7 ID - 418 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses violence in such movies as Oliver Stone's Natural Born Killers (1994), the NC-17 rating, and the adequacy of the motion picture rating system. AU - Ansen, David DA - Aug. 29, 1994 KW - Natural Born Killers (1994) Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Natural Born Killers motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures nudity, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising language motion pictures, and language nudity CARA, and nudity motion pictures, and nudity Stone, Oliver public relations, and Oliver Stone Stone, Oliver, and public relations advertising, and Natural Born Killers Natural Born Killers, and advertising LB - 25490 PY - 1994 SP - 54 ST - Raw Carnage or Revelation? The Overkilling Fields T2 - Newsweek TI - Raw Carnage or Revelation? The Overkilling Fields ID - 1145 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article seeks to refute critics who argue that the modern theater is decadent. The author explains his intent: "This is the endeavor I am about to make with regard to the dramatic movement of our time. That there has been a marked movement during the past twenty-five years in the Anglo-American drama it is impossible to doubt. In the following pages I shall briefly trace its history: for the moment, it may be sufficient to point to the most recent phase of the movement -- the number of more or less idealistic enterprises which are maturing or have lately matured on both side of the Atlantic...." (3) The author argues that drama is "not decadent." (4) Archer asks "Is this idealistic impulse an attempt to rescue the drama from a state of abject and intolerable decline? or is it merely the latest manifestation of a general and decisive advance? I myself, without any shadow of hesitation, hold the latter opinion; but the former is, if not the more common view, at least the view of a not insignificant minority. We constantly hear talk of the decadence of the drama, and lamentations over its by-gone glories. Let us see if we can find any reasonable grounds for this frame of mind. Let us try to discover what it really means." (4) Archer discusses "The Reign of Scribe, and the Ibsen Revolution," (7-9), "The Free Theaters" (9), "Ibsen and Nationalism" (9-10), "Two Wave of Progress" (10-11), "The Stage Society" (11-12), "London, Dublin, and Manchester" (12-13), "The Nineteenth Century in America" (13-14), "1899 and 1907 -- A Contrast" (14-15), "From James Herne to Donald Robertson" (15), and "The New Theater" (15-16). AU - Archer, William DA - Nov. 1909 IS - 1 KW - theaters stars (actors) theater fame celebrity anti-theatrical bias critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater actors acting actors acting morality magazines ref, secondary theater theater, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and theater personality fame, and theater theater, and fame theater, and stars values values, and theater theater, and values actors, and status of anti-theatrical prejudice theater, and bias against audiences, and theaters theaters, and audiences acting, and bias against censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship morality, and theater theater, and morality critics, and defenders of theater nationalism and communication theater, and nationalism nationalism, and theater Great Britain non-USA Great Britain, and theater theater, and Great Britain non-USA, and theater theaters, and non-USA censorship ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, reform ref, McClure's audiences nationalism LB - 39310 PY - 1909 SP - 3-16 ST - The New Drama and the New Theater T2 - McClure's Magazine TI - The New Drama and the New Theater VL - 34 ID - 4030 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author askes if there was "a pictorial accompaniment to the scientific revolution" of the seventeenth century. He observes that "the visual side of seventeenth-century was not confined to text illustrations. There was also widespread use of visual symbolism -- allegories, emblems, personifications -- found primarily on elaborate engraved title pages." Ashworth focuses on physics and develops several themes. First, it was "apparent that seventeenth-century physics -- at least the physics of moving or standing bodies -- was without a doubt the science with the least and poorest illustrations, and it is in strong contrast ... with cosmology, optics, pneumatics, magnetism, and even mathemathics." Second, he notes that "some images that seem significant to us today were almost totally ignored in the seventeenth century." Subjects that were illustrated included "the discovery of parabolic trajectories, and the problem of free fall from a tower." AU - Ashworth, William B., Jr. DA - 1987 IS - 2 KW - photography science iconography science, and iconography iconography, and science (17th century) science, and visual culture +photography and visual communication LB - 3050 PY - 1987 SP - 267-97 ST - Iconography of a New Physics T2 - History and Technology TI - Iconography of a New Physics VL - 4 ID - 393 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article gives "an historiographic overview ... of the field of history of computing" framed around such categories as "components, hardware units, systems, and software," recognizing that such organization "naturally leads to a greater concentration on the technical rather than the social history of information technology." Aspray suggests additional topics that he believes deserve more study: e.g., "theory of computing, algorithm design, data structures, artificial intelligence, robotics, computer graphics, and information and control theory, together with a number of other topics taught in our graduate and increasingly in our undergraduate computer science curricula." He argues that "the most general trend in the historiography of computing is the preponderance of attention to the 'producer' (supply side) as opposed to the 'consumer' (demand side). I cannot think of a single major historical study on consumers," he writes. This article appears in a special issue of History and Technology devoted to "Informati on Technologies and Socio-Technical Systems." Other authors include Daniel R. Headrick, Alan Q. Morton, Hans Dieter Hellige, and James S. Small. AU - Aspray, William DA - 1994 IS - 1 KW - computers computers +computers and the Internet computers, and history of computers, and future research computers, and producers computers, and consumers computers, and historiographic overview LB - 3090 N1 - See filed under History and Technology (1994) PY - 1994 SP - 7-19 ST - The History of Computing Within the History of Information Technology T2 - History and Technology TI - The History of Computing Within the History of Information Technology VL - 11 ID - 397 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author notes that librarians and administrators are being forced to "reinvent the library" in the wake of new technologies. "The old question of what constitutes a research collection remains but is transferred to a new medium." Atkinson was then associate university librarian at Cornell University, Ithaca. AU - Atkinson, Ross DA - Summer, 1995 IS - 90 KW - computers computers libraries information storage digital media education libraries, and new media libraries, and digital media archives archives, and digital technology computers and the Internet computers, and libraries libraries, and computers LB - 29810 PY - 1995 SP - 43-62 ST - The Academic Library Collection in an On-Line Environment T2 - New Directions for Higher Education TI - The Academic Library Collection in an On-Line Environment ID - 2737 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article examines early newsreel footage of President William McKinley between 1896 and 1901. He discusses the 1896 campaign film McKinley at Home, the coverage of the State funeral after the president's assassination in Buffalo in 1901, and The Execution of Czolgosz which dealt with McKinley's assassin. The author argues that such "early cinema significantly altered Americans' understanding of the relation between public and private." (798) The articles also discusses the role of moving pictures as "visual newspapers" (815) during the Spanish-American War. (814-16) "Seeing the news," Auerbach maintains that thinking of a film as a "visual newspaper" (a term borrowed from Charles Musser) needs to be set into a historical context to understand how "seeing the news on screen" differed from "reading it in print." (799) Cinema had the capacity of make national news, and also to break down barriers between privacy and publicity. Conceptually, Auerbach draws on theorists from the Frankfurt School, and such writers as Tom Gunning, Harold Innis, Juergen Habermas, Charles Musser. AU - Auerbach, Jonathan DA - Dec. 1999 IS - 4 KW - history surveillance seeing at a distance law, and privacy law preservation newspapers postmodernism modernism modernism modernity modernism journalism history, and new media community democracy news and journalism visual communication privacy news news modernity history motion pictures democracy and media public sphere new way of seeing history, and motion pictures visual v. print media news, and motion pictures newsreels presidents, and new media McKinley, William privacy, and motion pictures modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and news newspapers, and motion pictures visual culture presidents, and new media McKinley, William, and motion pictures news and journalism privacy privacy, and journalism journalism, and privacy McKinley, William, and photography motion pictures, and William McKinley McKinley, William photography, and William McKinley motion pictures, as visual newspapers journalism, and motion pictures Frankfurt School, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Frankfurt School media effects McKinley, William, and assassination Frankfurt School photography LB - 42120 PY - 1999 SP - 797-832 ST - McKinley at Home: How Early American Cinema Made News T2 - American Quarterly TI - McKinley at Home: How Early American Cinema Made News VL - 51 ID - 4311 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article reports on the Paris Exposition in 1900, and notes the use of electricity. For many people, electricity appeared to be something exotic and often akin to magic. [At the Palace of Illusion at Paris Exposition , this article says, a combination of “electricity and mirrors” revived the Arabian nights for a thousand people at a time." There was "a Mareorama by means of which passengers travel throughout the Mediterranean with the sights and sounds of the sea, as well as the illusion of entering the harbors of Constantinople, Naples, Venice, and other cities...." (578) AU - Augustus DA - Nov. 8, 1900 IS - 45 KW - spectacles progress electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time color electricity, and color color, and electricity non-USA France France, and color France, and electricity non-USA, and color non-USA, and electricity color, and world fairs electricity, and world fairs color, and progress electricity, and progress progress, and electricity progress, and color color, and Paris Exposition electricity, and Paris Exposition World's Fairs Paris Exposition (1900) panoramas panoramas, and Paris Exposition motion pictures, and Paris Exposition Paris Exposition, and motion pictures Paris Exposition, and panoramas spectacles, and Paris Exposition theater theater, and Paris Exposition travel motion pictures, and travel travel, and panoramas travel, and World's Fairs travel, and Paris Exposition quotations motion pictures transportation LB - 42590 PY - 1900 SP - 577-78 ST - The Paris Exposition -- V T2 - New York Observer and Chronicle TI - The Paris Exposition -- V VL - 78 ID - 4358 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Ayrton, William E., and John J. Perry DA - April 22, 1880 KW - seeing at a distance modernism +future and science fiction television, and history of new way of seeing +television television, and origins future seeing at a distance +electricity electricity, and seeing by new way of seeing, and electricity LB - 6500 PY - 1880 SP - 589 ST - Seeing by Electricity T2 - Nature TI - Seeing by Electricity VL - 7 ID - 2011 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author laments the relatively recent spread of newspapers and novels with un-Catholic or anti-Catholic themes but warns of an even more recent development, the movies. The movies, he says, should be easier to censor than novels (which are bought in private) because they are public. "The great importance of novels in the modern world is, I believe, a thing that must be now recognized: the great importance of the press has been fully recognized by the highest ecclesiastical authorities, more than recognized -- strenuously insisted upon. But the importance to which newspapers and novels have attained is comparatively recent, and, unfortunately is principally due to the fact that they are immeasurably more read than any other printed matter. That fact I, for one, deplore; nevertheless it cannot be ignored. Hence the enormous importance of trying to provide a Catholic press that shall really rival in attraction that which is not only non-Catholic, but un-Catholic, and to provide the huge body of fiction readers with novels, tales, romances, etc., which shall be at least harmless to Catholic readers, and shall not be obnoxious to the many great objections that the mass of non-Catholic current fiction may be accused of. But there is another sphere of influence, of absolutely recent growth and of daily increasing extension. "Quite young people must remember the time when picture shows were of no importance; people who are scarcely middle-aged can remember a time when such shows did not exist at all. Already any considerable town in the 'civilized' world is full of them, and even in the smaller towns and in villages they are seen and will soon be more and more seen. Villagers crowd into the towns near to them to see these shows: and we are told that as much money is spent in seeing them as used to be spent on drink. Probably that statement is short of the truth, for thousands of decent and quiet folk, who never did spend much of their wages in drink, see no objection to buying this easy form of recreation." (99) The author expresses alarm over the great hold that movies have on millions of people and not that many youth who do not "read even the most morbidly sensational newspapers" attend the movies regularly. (100) After explaining his objections to modern literature and film, the author asks "Can anything be done?" (105) "We cannot, of course, hope to monopolize the picture teaching of the world, but we can try to get our share of it, to enlarge our share industriously everywhere to get hold of this weapon also, and make it more and more operative in our hands. Nor would it appear that such an enterprise would be either so difficult or so costly as the other enterprise -- of opposing a Catholic press to a non-Catholic or anti-Catholic press...." (106) The author calls for mobilizing public opinion on the side of "what is wholesome and of good repute as any official censorship is ever likely to exercise" to opposed "the ideas of crime, violence and low standards as to marriage." (109) "It would be cowardly and indolent to do nothing because it might seem hopeless to succeed everywhere and altogether. No vigilance committees have secured the total suppression of vice anywhere; they can but do their best, and their best is better than nothing. No censorship has ever put down all immoral books, but many immoral books are suppressed, and to suppress objectionable picture shows is less difficult than to destroy an evil book, because they work in public and the worst books can only be sold in secret; indeed, it may almost be said that the worst books are only sold to them who are at pains to seek them out. Nor is local effort very powerful against a book that is objectionable, but local effort could be made almost omnipotent against an objectionable picture show." (109) AU - Ayscough, John DA - Jan. 1914 IS - 153 KW - children censorship words vs. images ref, secondary motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings images vs. words quotations, and censoring films values religion motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and religion religion, and motion pictures values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Catholics, and motion pictures education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and education children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing modernity, and religion religion, and modernity Catholics, and modernity modernity, and Catholics newspapers, and religion religion, and newspapers motion pictures vs. liquor quotations ref, religious ref, Catholic ref, American Catholic Quarterly Review Catholic Church news and journalism LB - 38410 PY - 1914 SP - 99-109 ST - Picture Teaching T2 - American Catholic Quarterly Review TI - Picture Teaching VL - 39 ID - 3940 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Baird, John Logie DA - April 1925 KW - +radio television, and history of +television wireless communication seeing at a distance wireless, seeing by television, and origins LB - 6510 PY - 1925 SP - 142-43 ST - Television, or Seeing by Wireless T2 - Discovery TI - Television, or Seeing by Wireless VL - 6 ID - 2021 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Ray Stannard Baker discusses three inventions by Peter Cooper Hewitt: 1) a new electric lamp or vacuum lamp; 2) a new, inexpensive way of converting alternating currents into direct electrical current; and 3) "an electric interrupter or valve" which is significant for wireless telegraphy. As for the vacuum lamp, Baker says that the "light was different from anything ever seen before, grateful to the eyes, much like daylight, only giving the face a curious, pale-green, unearthly appearance. The cause of this phenomenon was soon evident; the 172/173 tubes were seen to give forth all the rays except red, -- orange, yellow, green, blue, violet -- so that under its illumination the room and the street without, the faces of the spectators, the clothing of the women lost all their shades of red; indeed, changing the very face of the world to a pale green-blue.... Here was an entirely new sort of electric light. The familiar incandescent lamp, the invention of Thomas A. Edison, though the best of all methods of illumination, is also the most expensive. Mr. Hewitt's lamp, though not yet adapted to all the purposes of its peculiar color, produces eight times as much light with the same amount of power. It is also practically indestructible, there being no filament to burn out; and it requires no special wiring. By means of this invention electricity, instead of being the most costly means of illumination, becomes the cheapest -- cheaper even than kerosene. No further explanation than this is necessary to show the enormous importance of this invention." (172-73) An advantage of this lamp over Edison's light is that it is much cooler. "The waste of power in the incandescent lamp is known to be due largely to the conversion of a considerable part of the electricity used into useless heat. An electric lamp bulb feels hot to the hand. It was therefore necessary to produce a cool light; that is, a light in which the energy was converted wholly or largely into light rays and not into heat rays." (175) Hewitt discovered the uses of mercury vapor and that "when once the high resistance of the cold mercury was overcome, a very much less powerful current found ready passage and produced a very brilliant light: the glow of the mercury vapor." ((176)(emphasis in original text) Baker discusses the problems associated with the absence of red light rays which gave "a very strange impression of a redless world." (176) He notes that Hewitt was hoping to use red rays "thereby producing a pure white light." (176) The new lamp, though, appeared to "have a peculiar and stimulating effect on plant growth." (176) Regarding the conversion of ac to dc, Baker says that the "chief pursuit of science and invention in this day of wonders is the electrical conquest of the world, the introduction of the electrical age. The electric motor is driving out the steam locomotive, the electric light is superseding gas and kerosene, the waterfall must soon take the place of coal." (173) Baker considered the electric interrupter or value the "most wonderful" of these three inventions. (173) It can "be called the enacting clause of wireless telegraphy," he writes. (174) This invention promises to improved on the method of sending messages across the Atlantic used by Marconi. (177) "'What I have done,' said Mr. Hewitt, 'is to perfect a device by means of which messages can be sent rapidly and without the loss of current occasioned by the spark gap. In wireless telegraphy the trouble has been that it was difficult to keep the sending and the receiving instruments attuned. By the use of my interrupter this can be accomplished.'" (178) Baker concludes by saying that "the possibilities of the mercury tube, indeed of incandescent gas tubes in general, have by no means been exhausted. A new door has been opened to investigators, and no one knows what science will find in the treasure-house-- perhaps new and more wonderful inventions, perhaps the very secret of electricity itself...." (178) AU - Baker, Ray Stannard DA - June 1903 IS - 2 KW - words vs. images electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing images vs. words lighting mercury vapor electric light lighting, and Cooper Hewitt lighting, and mercury vapor Cooper Hewitt lighting color, and lighting lighting, and color Cooper Hewitt lighting, and color color, and Cooper Hewitt lighting telegraph telegraph, and wireless wireless telegraphy electricity, and cool light lighting, and cool light quotations quotations, and electricity Cooper Hewitt, Peter metaphors metaphors, and new door opened ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, reform ref, McClure's color wireless communication LB - 39830 PY - 1903 SP - 172-78 ST - Peter Cooper Hewitt -- Inventor: Three Great Achievements in Electrical Science T2 - McClure's Magazine TI - Peter Cooper Hewitt -- Inventor: Three Great Achievements in Electrical Science VL - 21 ID - 4081 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Bakshy, a drama and film critic, here comments on the “enormously important place in modern life” (444) that color had come to hold in 1934. He begins by quoting Ruskin in The Stone of Venice in which he says that “the purest and most thoughtful minds are those which love color most.” (Ruskin quoted, 444) He ends this piece by noting that color is often associated with the emotional Oriental mind as opposed to the more logical Western mind which put form above color. Was there some kind of “radical change … to be expected in our general attitude toward life? … Are we then heading for a civilization rules by emotion rather than intellect?” he asks. (448) The author says that “our life has been invaded by prismatic color in all the endless variety of its shades and combinations,” (444) and these colors have come into both homes and the workplace. Two factors help to explain this explosion of chromatic color. One is that “chemists and electricians discovered the means of producing color in large quantities and cheaply,” (444) he says. The second, and perhaps more important factor in color’s spread, is “because manufacturers of many articles found in color a new allurement for buyers.” (444) This “ever-increasing use of color” (446) in advertising resulted from “overproduction” by American manufacturers. (446) It was a way of making goods more alluring, and a way of disguising products of poor quality or of giving a misleading impression of a product’s quality. (444) Color, Bakshy says, is also especially apparent in textiles. He notes that since the end of World War I it was more difficult to get dyes from Europe. This fact forced finding a solution of “fixing uniform shades of color with the seasonal changes of fashions.” (445) The Textile Color Card Association of the United States was established in 1915 and its “Standard Color Card of America” listed 128 colors. (445) It helped to keep American textiles from being dominated by British and other foreign textiles. The dyestuffs industry has been essentially a post-World War I development in the United States. Prior to the war, about 90 percent of the dyes Americans consumed came from foreign countries. By 1930, the U. S. imported only 18 percent of its domestic consumption of and 6.2 percent of the quantity of dyes used. (448) In 1934, the U. S. was an important exporter of dyes. Color in advertising in 1934 was readily noticeable in newspapers and magazines, but “because of the technical difficulties of printing newspapers in colors, magazines have run ahead of newspapers, though the latter have gradually been catching up,” Bakshy reported. (446) One needed only to look at the Sunday rotogravure sections of the New York Times. (446) Bakshy said that “next to magazines and newspapers, color in advertising is particularly prominent in posters and billboards.” (446) While there were objections to the “indiscriminate use” of colored posters and billboards, (446) less offensive were “the colored lights which have been transforming the principal streets of our cities into a fairyland of scintillating glamour particularly the electric gas-filled tubes of various colors, with their soft glow and easy adaptability to any desired pattern. Entire buildings, moreover, are sometimes illuminated by flood-lighting for advertising purposes and lend enchantment to the urban scene at night.” (446) Colored electric lighting has made the theater more visually beautiful. As an art form, “color music” is still in its “rudimentary stage.” (447) Advances have comes in using color in printing, photography, and movies. The goal has been to use color as one means toward the “approximation of visual reality.” (447) Why there have been technical advances in accomplishing this approximation in color photography and motion pictures, “the goal is still far from attained.” (447) Much greater technical advances have come in color printing. Bakshy says that “color printing has had a tremendous influence on modern culture, for it has become the principal means by which the knowledge of art reaches the masses of the people.” (447) Magazine illustrations and poster art have been especially important in this regard. It has led to “a new and important, if unduly commercialized, medium” giving artists news means of expression and the “ability to disseminate appreciation of art among the people.” (447) AU - Bakshy, Alexander DA - July 1934 KW - theater rotogravure rotogravure process billboards color motion pictures electricity printing news and journalism books, newspapers, periodicals color, and newspapers color, and magazines newspapers, and color magazines, and color electricity, and color color, and electricity advertising and public relations color, and advertising advertising, and color capitalism capitalism, and color color, and capitalism color, and dyes color, and chemists color, and 1930s color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and architecture architecture, and color color, and textiles textiles, and color color, and Textile Color Card of America (1915) color, and billboards billboards, and color color, and electric signs color, and New York Times color, and rotogravure rotogravure, and color posters, and color color, and posters metaphors metaphors, and fairyland color, and electric fairyland color, and theater theater, and color color, and music music, and color ref, secondary ref, Current History ref, secular advertising books Books, Periodicals, Newspapers magazines music posters print LB - 42680 PY - 1934 SP - 444-48 ST - Color in Modern Life T2 - Current History TI - Color in Modern Life VL - 40 ID - 4367 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This study examined the relationship that self-selection of pornographic materials via the Internet had with attitudes toward women, acceptance of rape myths, and likelihood of harassing a female. Participants were allowed to use a computer with preset site options based on the percentage of bookmarks being pornographic ranging from 0 percent pornographic to 80 percent pornographic. Contrary to expectations they did not find any differences in attitudes toward women, likelihood of sexual harassment, and rape myth acceptance between the four conditions. Although this study does not demonstrate a relationship between exposure to pornographic materials on the Internet and negative effects the authors the authors indicate that their still exists a great deal of concern regarding the issue of Internet pornography. --Michael Boyle AU - Barak, A., W. A. Fisher, S. Belfry, and D. R. Lashambe DA - 1999 IS - 1 KW - computers women, and new media women social science research sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence violence Internet computers Boyle, Michael pornography media effects pornography, and rape myths violence, and pornography pornography, and violence women, and pornography pornography, and women +motion pictures and popular culture pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects media effects, and violence media effects, and motion pictures violence, and computers +computers and the Internet pornography, and computers computers, and pornography Internet, and pornography pornography, and Internet LB - 1190 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1999 SP - 63-91 ST - Sex, guys, and Cyberspace: Effects of Internet pornography and individual differences on mend’s attitudes toward women T2 - Journal of Psychology & Human Sexuality TI - Sex, guys, and Cyberspace: Effects of Internet pornography and individual differences on mend’s attitudes toward women VL - 11 ID - 207 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the work of Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen, the progress photography made possible by the vacuum tube, and the x-ray. "In less than thirty days absolutely new scientific terms were aparently adopted into the daily language of the newspapers" Barnard writes. It notes that "general newspaper public" and its acceptances of these seemingly miraculous discoveries. "The vacuum tube has opened up a new country and yet the X rays may be only new manifestations of the law of motions that entends from sun to sun and, however strange these new things appear, they are yet a part of the Creator's universe." (79) AU - Barnard, Charles DA - April 1896 IS - 1 KW - photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication cameras vacuum tubes photography, and x-rays x-rays photography, and vacuum tubes vacuum tubes, and photography vacuum tubes, and x-rays ref, secondary ref, secular ref, educational ref, reform ref, Chautauquan LB - 180 PY - 1896 SP - 75-79 ST - The New Photography T2 - The Chautauquan TI - The New Photography VL - 23 ID - 2296 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Readers who are willing to wade through the ponderous opening of this article will be rewarded with an interesting discussion of how two periodicals, Frank Leslie's Illustrated Weekly and Harper's, used illustrations and how those pictures changed from the mid-1850s through the assassination of President William McKinley in 1901. "Illustrated journalism," the authors write, intervened "between readers and the world," and provided readers "with an artificial archive of memory images -- a primitive form of total recall of the sort that contemporary scholars ascribe to later visual media." (64) Throughout much of this period, artists played a central role in creating illustrations that appeared in the press. During the 1890s, though, photography, and with it a greater sense of realism, assumed much greater importance. This development led to a shift from "personage" which depicted "a relatively fixed set of traits that spring from social class, race, position of power, physiognomy, style of dress, and personality," to "person," (72) in which both leaders and ordinary people in natural poses assumed increased prominence. "The fixity and materiality of the personage, even the character of great men, is quite alien to the photographic age," the authors maintain. (73) The decline of this earlier "regime of illustrated journalism" implied, the authors write, "the loss of the republican ethos of citizenship." (79) This article discusses the processes and difficulties of reproducing pictures during the late 19th century. Early on, "woodcuts and wood-engravings were the favorite media for printers of news illustrations." (62) The process of making these illustrations "was a collective and routinized one" and each picture "required the skilled intervention of several artists." (62) Pictures rarely lacked text next to them. Usually, although not always, the illustrations used were chosen on the "basis of what pictures were available." (63) The authors discuss four genres of illustration (64-70) often found in these two magazines: 1) "prominent people"; 2) "the wonders of nature"; 3) "the built environment': and 4) "noteworthy events." (64) They identify seven modes of illustrated used by Leslie's and Harper's: 1) sketches; 2) drawings or "fine drawings"; 3) photographs, "all in a clean, mechanical rendering at first reproduced as engravings, and later as halftones" (65); 4) cartoons; 5) editorial icons; 6) maps; and 7) technical drawings. (65) Barnhurst and Nerone discuss the "civic gaze," or "images ... created to represent incidents as they would be viewed 70/71 by a citizen not directly involved, but paying close attention at a distance." (70-71) They consider how Leslie's depicted the assassination of James A. Garfield. The drawing of Garfield's face as he is hit by the bullet "was based on the sketch artists' interviews with people on the scene; the journalists themselves had not been present by arrived two hours after the shooting." (72) Engraving even provided "rather gruesome depictions of his corpse being autopsied and embalmed." (73) Such "illustration of Garfield's autopsy and embalming ... reinforced the President's body as a symbol of state," the author contend. (79) By the time of William McKinley's assassination in 1901, photography was used extensively and "the position of subjectivity changed quite dramatically. By the turn of the century, subjectivity floats in the air around great events -- a fly on the wall, not connected to any identifiable social or political subject. The emphasis has moved from a public (being those with the franchise) to a more generic 'public view' available at closer quarters, revealing emotion in the moment and emphasizing the human face and body frozen in action or reaction." (72) Leslie's published dozens of photos of McKinley when he was alive and also of his assassin , Leon Czolgosz. The authors argued that "the year 1890 may be taken as a watershed, a moment of change in the practice of illustrated journalism.... Photography was ... the picturing tool most congenial to the realism of the news periodical literature. The landmark moment in the marriage of social realism, journalism, and photography was the publication of Jacob Riis's How the Other Half Lives in 1890." (74) This article is vague on when the daily newspaper press began to use photographs merely saying that "In the 1890s, papers such as Pulitzer's World, Hearst's[sic] and the Chicago Daily News, carried illustration like those in Leslie's but on a daily basis and more cheaply." (77) Actually, the daily press probably did not begin using photograph until early 1897, when Stephen Horgan at the New York Tribune devised a method that make such picture possible on the high-power rotary presses of daily newspapers. By 1901, a "new regime of realism embodied in photography" had "fundamentally recast" the role of illustration in the press. "The condition for the rise of photojournalism, then, was the rejection of the regime of illustrated journalism, with its obsolescent (and perhaps too republican) collusion in the explicit artistry of storytelling." (77) "What consequences flow from the loss of the regime of illustrated news?" Barnhurst and Nerone ask. "As a result of its marriage with realism, press photography embraced a notion of reportage that required the effacement of authorship. If photographers simply operate the machinery revealing reality, they cannot be held accountable for what the camera exposes. Unlike artists and authors, who hold responsibility for their vision of the world, photojournalists are witnesses and bystanders to events ostensibly beyond their control. Thus, the realist regime effectively removed any clear lines of responsibility, hiding news work in what has been called the fog of documentary force." (78) One result of this realism were increased images of ordinary people and ordinary life. "Realism in art welcomed into the canon of imagery the depiction of ordinary life, as opposed to great scenes from history, mythology, and literature -- a move that preceded the shift we observed in the illustrated papers.... Certainly a kind of visual intelligence disappears when readers forget about the authored artistry of pictures, and succumb to what philosophers call naive realism." (78) Finally, the authors believe that "a more important loss was the disappearance of an implied model of citizenship. The new regime divides the reader or viewer from the world in way normatively distinct from those of the old regime. Journalism driven by narrative carried along in its wake the reader, who anticipated sequence, emplotment, and resolution. Realist press photography trades away temporal narrative in exchange for other things, such as immediacy and emotional impact. Photojournalism is exciting and startling but, by doing more, it may, in fact, do less to bring readers into the storytelling of 78/79 news...." (78-79) AU - Barnhurst, Kevin G. AU - Nerone, John DA - Spring 2000 IS - 1 KW - wood engraving personality magazines illustrations fame citizenship ref, secondary news and journalism photography and visual communication photojournalism news, and pictorial press books, periodicals, newspapers Riis, Jacob magazines, and illustrations illustrations, and magazines illustrations, and newspapers newspapers, and illustrations photography, and magazines photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing photography, and space and time space and time photography, and time photography, and space photography, and travel presidents and new media presidents, and photography photography, and presidents Garfield, James, and newspaper illustrations McKinley, William, and newspaper illustrations McKinley, William, and photography photography, and William McKinley photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality nationalism and communication photography, and citizenship citizenship, and photography newspapers, and citizenship citizenship, and photography history and new media history, and newspaper illustrations history, and photography history, and magazine illustrations quotations quotations, and photojournalism celebrity history McKinley, William nationalism news photography LB - 39910 PY - 2000 SP - 59-79 ST - Civic Picturing vs. Realist Photojournalism: The Regime of Illustrated News, 1856-1901 T2 - Design Issues TI - Civic Picturing vs. Realist Photojournalism: The Regime of Illustrated News, 1856-1901 VL - 16 ID - 4089 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article provides an account of the National Board of Review which censored motion pictures prior to the creation of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors Association (MPPDA) or as it was better known, the Hays Office which was run from 1922 to 1945 by Will H. Hays. AU - Barrett, Wilton A. DA - Nov. 1926 KW - censorship ref, secondary censorship, and National Board of Review motion pictures, and National Board of Review motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings ref, secondary ref, secular ref, political ref, Annals of AAPSS LB - 14060 PY - 1926 SP - 175-86 ST - The Work of The National Board of Review T2 - Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences TI - The Work of The National Board of Review VL - 128 ID - 3564 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article examines the large volume of research that shows that watching media violence can have harmful efffects and notes that it is largely dismissed by the entertainment industry and much of the public. AU - Barry, David S. DA - Summer, 1993 IS - 3 KW - motion pictures media effects media violence violence censorship and ratings children media effects violence, and media violence, and children children, and media children, and media violence violence, and research +television television, and media effects media effects, and television television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and violence LB - 27120 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1993 SP - 37-43 ST - Screen Violence and America's Children T2 - Spectrum TI - Screen Violence and America's Children VL - 66 ID - 1269 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is informative about court cases from the Paramount decision in 1948 through the 1960s that weakened the power of motion picture censors. AU - Bates, Roy Eugene DA - Feb. 1970 KW - self-regulation Production Code United States v. Paramount Pictures (1948) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) Paramount Pictures context values religion law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures context, and censorship law, and movie censorship Production Code, and decline of Paramount Pictures case (1948) motion pictures, and Paramount Pictures case (1948) motion pictures, and antitrust LB - 16600 PY - 1970 SP - 618-56 ST - Private Censorship of Movies T2 - Stanford Law Review TI - Private Censorship of Movies VL - 22 ID - 609 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Baughan starts by saying that movies, which are shown in semi-darkness, have "a curious hypnotic effect" and that they engage "the mind agreeably." (448) But there is more that explains their appeal because "that hypnotic calm, produced by music and the bewildering rapidity of the pictures, is not the chief reason for the popularity of the cinematograph. It has opened a new world to those who do not read or who cannot afford to go to a theatre except in discomfort, and it has opened a different world." (448) Baughan believed that some movies had were educational and that the educational potential of film had scarcely been touched. Motion pictures were also a powerful form of propaganda. "As a medium for propaganda its powers give one pause. The newspaper is ineffectual compared with it...." (449) Despite efforts to uses the talents of artists, writers, and dramatists, the artists side of cinema was "in a state of chaos." (449) The author explains the difference between a novel or play and a motion picture which he believes is a "very different medium of expression." (450) It is difficult for the filmmaker to enter into psychoanalysis on screen. "Psychological suggestion is not impossible on screen," (451) provided the actor has the talent to pull it off. Baughan says that "the cinematograph has nothing to do with words." (451) "The real aim of the cinematograph is not to tell a tale, but to show one. Pictures in action are its medium of expression. They may and do suggest words, but the spectator must make them for himself. A novel, on the other hand, may suggest pictures by means of words -- just the opposite of the cinematograph -- but that depends on the imagination of the reading. Drama gives you both pictures and words, but then it lacks the power of explanation of the novel and the cinematograph, and is fenced round by all kinds of difficulties of time and space...." (451) The "novel describes; the camera depicts," Baughan said. (452) Moving pictures have "unlimited possibilities" (451) in turning out travel pictures. Baughan commented on film acting and its magnification of personality. "Film-acting is a very subtle art, differing in many respects from stage-acting. A player in a theatre has to condition his art by the distance the audience is from him. The film-player, on the other hand, is quite close to the camera in thos pictures which are not merely landscapes and interiors with figures. The photograph when projected on the screen is vastly magnified. The faintest twitching of the lips can be seen quite plainly. Also it is possible to touch up negatives so that the expression is intensified. The stage-player has an audience which, to a great extent, reacts on him; the film-player acts without spectators. The absence of the voice as a medium of expression is a great loss to the film-player; but, on the other hand, he is free from the paralysing sensation that his acting is not 'getting over' the footlights. Although a film-actor has to learn how to carry himself, and, above all, how to keep these movements in a tempo considerably slower than normal (for the cinematograph exaggerates the quickness of movement), yet his principal aim should be naturalness. Given an expression face and, of course, imagination, and the necessary training of gesture, and the camera will do the rest. (454) "The two arts of film acting and stage actors are very different, "but of screen-acting one can at least say that it has unlimited powers of expression. The difficulty is to give full scope to these powers. Being divorced from words, a dramatic crisis must necessarily be more brief than on the stage. Also it must be such a crisis that words are not necessary. The film-producer has not quite understood that, or perhaps his art is conditioned by the poor standard of intelligence in the average lover of the moving pictures...." (454) Further commenting on movie audiences, the author says that "the trouble at present is that the cinematogrph does not attract the most intelligent type of people." (455) Too many movies "continue to be made that are inspired by nothing but stupidity and brutality." (455) Such movies are not so much immoral as they "pander to the love of brutality that lurks beneath what we are pleased to call civilisation." (456) Movie making needs to attraction more intelligent people. "The technical side of the cinematograph is in its infancy, comparatively speaking. The best brains of the world must in the end be attracted to an art which makes such a powerful appeal to democracy. The intellectual rulers of mankind cannot afford to ignore an art which appeals to millions and speaks a universal language to all the peoples of the world." (456) Baughan starts by saying that movies, which are shown in semi-darkness, have "a curious hypnotic effect" and that they engage "the mind agreeably." (448) But there is more that explains their appeal because "that hypnotic calm, produced by music and the bewildering rapidity of the pictures, is not the chief reason for the popularity of the cinematograph. It has opened a new world to those who do not read or who cannot afford to go to a theatre except in discomfort, and it has opened a different world." (448) Baughan believed that some movies had were educational and that the educational potential of film had scarcely been touched. Motion pictures were also a powerful form of propaganda. "As a medium for propaganda its powers give one pause. The newspaper is ineffectual compared with it...." (449) Despite efforts to use the talents of artists, writers, and dramatists, the artistic side of cinema was "in a state of chaos." (449) The author explains the difference between a novel or play and a motion picture which he believes is a "very different medium of expression." (450) It is difficult for the filmmaker to enter into psychoanalysis on screen. "Psychological suggestion is not impossible on screen," (451) provided the actor has the talent to pull it off. Baughan says that "the cinematograph has nothing to do with words." (451) "The real aim of the cinematograph is not to tell a tale, but to show one. Pictures in action are its medium of expression. They may and do suggest words, but the spectator must make them for himself. A novel, on the other hand, may suggest pictures by means of words -- just the opposite of the cinematograph -- but that depends on the imagination of the reading. Drama gives you both pictures and words, but then it lacks the power of explanation of the novel and the cinematograph, and is fenced round by all kinds of difficulties of time and space...." (451) The "novel describes; the camera depicts," Baughan said. (452) Moving pictures have "unlimited possibilities" (451) in turning out travel pictures. Baughan commented on film acting and its magnification of personality. "Film-acting is a very subtle art, differing in many respects from stage-acting. A player in a theatre has to condition his art by the distance the audience is from him. The film-player, on the other hand, is quite close to the camera in thos pictures which are not merely landscapes and interiors with figures. The photograph when projected on the screen is vastly magnified. The faintest twitching of the lips can be seen quite plainly. Also it is possible to touch up negatives so that the expression is intensified. The stage-player has an audience which, to a great extent, reacts on him; the film-player acts without spectators. The absence of the voice as a medium of expression is a great loss to the film-player; but, on the other hand, he is free from the paralysing sensation that his acting is not 'getting over' the footlights. Although a film-actor has to learn how to carry himself, and, above all, how to keep these movements in a tempo considerably slower than normal (for the cinematograph exaggerates the quickness of movement), yet his principal aim should be naturalness. Given an expression face and, of course, imagination, and the necessary training of gesture, and the camera will do the rest. (454) "The two arts of film acting and stage actors are very different, "but of screen-acting one can at least say that it has unlimited powers of expression. The difficulty is to give full scope to these powers. Being divorced from words, a dramatic crisis must necessarily be more brief than on the stage. Also it must be such a crisis that words are not necessary. The film-producer has not quite understood that, or perhaps his art is conditioned by the poor standard of intelligence in the average lover of the moving pictures...." (454) Further commenting on movie audiences, the author says that "the trouble at present is that the cinematograph does not attract the most intelligent type of people." (455) Too many movies "continue to be made that are inspired by nothing but stupidity and brutality." (455) Such movies are not so much immoral as they "pander to the love of brutality that lurks beneath what we are pleased to call civilisation." (456) Movie making needs to attraction more intelligent people. "The technical side of the cinematograph is in its infancy, comparatively speaking. The best brains of the world must in the end be attracted to an art which makes such a powerful appeal to democracy. The intellectual rulers of mankind cannot afford to ignore an art which appeals to millions and speaks a universal language to all the peoples of the world." (456) AU - Baughan, E. A. DA - Sept. 1919 KW - reading ref, secondary ref, Fortnightly Review motion pictures words vs. images motion pictures, and reading education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and education motion pictures, as hypnotic motion pictures, and words motion pictures, and reading reading, and motion pictures motion pictures, and stage motion pictures, and theater motion pictures, and acting motion pictures, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magnification of personality motion pictures, and close-ups acting, and close-ups motion pictures, as universal language actors, and magnification of personality children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and propaganda propaganda propaganda, and motion pictures motion pictures, and travel motion pictures, and audiences democracy motion pictures, and democracy democracy, and motion pictures acting actors children images vs. words LB - 42800 PY - 1919 SP - 448-56 ST - The Art of Moving Pictures T2 - Fortnightly Review TI - The Art of Moving Pictures VL - 112 ID - 2014 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In these three essays, Bazin considers widescreen motion pictures in the context of the threat posed to cinema by television. The essay reprinted are "Will CinemaScope Save the Cinema" (1953), "The End of Montage" (1954), and "A Little too Late" (1955). AU - Bazin, André DA - Summer 1985 IS - 21 KW - widescreen theory seeing at a distance postmodernism modernism motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and widescreen widescreen, and motion pictures theory, and motion pictures motion pictures, and theory theory, and widescreen cinema critics new way of seeing LB - 2620 N1 - See filed under Velvet Light Trap. PY - 1985 SP - 8-16 ST - Three Essays on Widescreen T2 - Velvet Light Trap TI - Three Essays on Widescreen ID - 350 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article examines Innis's comments and work on behalf of Canadian arts and sciences. AU - Beale, Alison DA - 1993 IS - 1 KW - nationalism education non-USA Innis, Harold +nationalism and communication Canada Canada, and Harold Innis nationalism, and education nationalism, and Canada Canada, and nationalism education, and nationalism Innis, Harold, and nationalism LB - 3350 PY - 1993 SP - 75-90 ST - Harold Innis and Canadian Cultural Policy in the 1940s T2 - Continuum: The Australian Journal of Media & Culture TI - Harold Innis and Canadian Cultural Policy in the 1940s VL - 7 ID - 423 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the special effects for the movie "The Trip" (1967),and the efforts to recreate what an acid trip might look like to a LSD user. Peter Fonda and Susan Strasberg starred. The article notes that "Jack Nicholson's script called for considerable use of strobe lights in the nightclub sequence." (1976) Beck was an electronic and optical engineer who had been involved with "light shows" as a hobby and who pioneered techniques for the so-called "happenings" and discotheques of the mid-1960s. He discusses working with a 16mm camera in this movies. The movie attempted to capture the "visual illusions and the hallucinations which Peter Fonda experiences"(177) on an acid trip. Beck says that the movies tried "to use the classic dream images and symbols which had been researched by Dr. Karl Jung, the noted psychologist." (178) The makers of this film make interesting psychological assumptions what their film techniques can accomplish. "The reason for the rapid flicker rate was psychological," Beck wrote. "Research on subliminal stimulation has shown that as little as one frame of a film, 1/24th of a second, of data can be registered by the unconscious mind and can cause an impression to be made on the consciousness of the beholder." (178) As for the movie's sex scenes: "A great deal of the sensuality which came through in the controversial love sequence was due to the art work of Dr. Henry Hill, the psychedelic artist, who granted us permission to photograph some of his paintings, which we then projected onto the bodies of the actors. It is undoubtedly this combination of art and life that caused film reviewer Richard Whitehall to say that these were the most sensual love scenes that he had ever seen on film." (178) As for the techniques used in this movies, "such as the adjustment of light flickerings to the natural psychological constants of the epileptic flicker rate and the alpha rhythm of the brain, the emotional impact of a production can be greatly heightened -- especially in psychological terms. For these rapid images rush past the natural mental 'censors' (in the Freudian sense) and go directly into the unconscious, much in the manner of hypnosis. We are all well acquainted with the great amount of research done by psychologists in the area of subliminal psychopenetration. Yet this area of human capability has hardly been touched," Beck argued. (196-97) Part of Beck's "fun and games" in this film, he said, was in "exploring ... techniques that might tap these basic unconscious wells of imagery." He was "convinced that the future of creative film production lies in this direction, and that many such techniques will be extensively explored in the future." (197) He lamented that his "light-show" techniques had been mislabeled "psychedelic." Of the so-called "happenings" of the mid-1960s, he referred to them as the "Theatre of the Now." The treatment of drug use in this 1967 movies (which appeared after the demise of the motion picture Production Code) stands in contrast to Otto Preminger's 1955 black-and-white movie starring Frank Sinatra, The Man With the Golden Arm. For its time, Preminger's movie was a breakthrough in the way Hollywood treated drug addiction. AU - Beck, Bob DA - March, 1968 IS - 3 KW - sex motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality cinematography motion pictures cameras lighting sexuality special effects motion pictures, and lighting lighting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and special effects sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sexuality lighting, and sex scenes location shooting motion pictures, and location shooting movie, The Trip The Trip motion pictures, and drugs values sex scenes, and lighting lighting lighting, and sex scenes censorship and rating history, and break with censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and special effects cameras cameras, 16mm 16mm cameras color color, and motion pictures color, and psychedelic effects subliminal stimulation motion pictures, and subliminal stimulation motion pictures, and psychology censorship and ratings 16mm censorship history LB - 30040 PY - 1968 SP - 176-79, 196-97 ST - Creating 'Psychedelic' Visual Effects for The Trip T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Creating 'Psychedelic' Visual Effects for The Trip VL - 49 ID - 2759 ER - TY - JOUR AB - James Carroll Beckwith (September 23, 1852 – October 24, 1917) was a well-known American portrait painter. This article was written shortly before his death. In the article, Beckwith advances of general rules for using color. He divides colors between warm and cold. (176) Beckwith said that mastery of color came from the heart, not intellect. "Recently I was asked if there were 'intellect in color.' I am rather of the opinion that color is pure Emotion, as form and line are Mind. [my emphasis] One could be taught that certain combinations were harmonious and other were reverse; but the mastery of color must come from the heart, as the mastery 177/179 of drawing, form, finds its source in the brain. To attain completeness in our painter-art requires the amalgamation of these two forces which are in our nature." (177, 179) This article was part of a symposium on color that appeared in this issue of Art World. AU - Beckwith, Carroll DA - Dec. 1917 KW - emotion decadence ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color, in history color, and theory color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and passion color, and sensations media effects color, media effects media effects, and color color, and sensuality lighting lighting, and color color, and lighting color, and music censorship ref, secular ref, Art World ref, secondary color, as pure emotion color, and form color, and drawing ref, and antimodernist art ref, Art World LB - 42530 PY - 1917 SP - 176-79 ST - Color T2 - Art World TI - Color VL - 3 ID - 4352 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This obituary of Leonard T. Troland provides an excellent account of his scholarly career. Troland achieved distinction in two distinct areas. One was psychology where he was a professor at the time of his death. As a graduate student between 1912 and 1915, he worked with Hugo Munsterberg and E. B. Holt. He also took classes with Bertrand Russell and Josiah Royce. The other area of distinction for Troland was in theoretical and applied physics. As a undergraduate he took courses on optics with D. F. Comstock, and later co-author a book with Comstock entitled The Nature of Matter and Electricity. Troland worked with Comstock, Herbert Kalmus, and others to become a co-inventor of Technicolor. At the time of his untimely death in 1932, Troland was working for Technicolor, Inc. AU - Beebe-Center, J. G. DA - Oct. 1932 IS - 4 KW - Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Technicolor Münsterberg, Hugo ref, secondary Troland, Leonard color Troland, Leonard, and color color, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and visual sensation color, and media effects media effects media effects, and color Troland, Leonard, and hedonism Troland, Leonard, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and Hugo Munsterberg Munsterberg, Hugo, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and psychology Troland, Leonard, and physics Troland, Leonard, and obituary obituaries, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and motion pictures Troland, Leonard, and death obituaries, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and obituary Munsterberg, Hugo LB - 40290 PY - 1932 SP - 817-20 ST - Leonard Thompson Troland: 1889-1932 T2 - American Journal of Psychology TI - Leonard Thompson Troland: 1889-1932 VL - 44 ID - 4127 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Here Bell introduces an issue of Daedalus devoted to theme: "Toward the Year 2000: work in progress." The volume groups contributors around five "problems areas" -- "the adequacy of the governmental structure, the changing nature of values and rights, the structure of the intellectual institutions, the life-cycle of the individual, and the international system." See also Bell's "Coda: Work in Further Progress" (985ff) at the end of this issue which attempt to pull together themes in this issue. AU - Bell, Daniel DA - Summer, 1967 IS - 3 KW - nationalism +future and science fiction community democracy non-USA future global communication democracy and media values +nationalism and communication LB - 4190 PY - 1967 SP - 639-51 ST - The Year 2000 --- The Trajectory of an Idea T2 - Daedalus TI - The Year 2000 --- The Trajectory of an Idea VL - 96 ID - 1807 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Belton, who has written a book on widescreen cinema, here examining the marketing of CinemaScope. AU - Belton, John DA - Summer 1985 IS - 21 KW - advertising, and public relations widescreen propaganda public relations motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and widescreen widescreen, and motion pictures advertising, and motion pictures CinemaScope advertising, and CinemaScope advertising LB - 2590 N1 - See filed under Velvet Light Trap. PY - 1985 SP - 35-43 ST - CinemaScope: The Economics of Technology T2 - Velvet Light Trap TI - CinemaScope: The Economics of Technology ID - 347 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Bennett suggests that labor educators could make use of buttons, pins, badges and other ephemera to teach about labor history and politics. Bennett uses materials he has obtained at flea markets and elsewhere to discuss key moments and issues in labor history. For example, he notes, the equilateral triangle on all Knights of Labor artifacts “can be used to remind students that the Knights of Labor admitted workers no matter what their industry, craft, or skill level. There were no separate symbols for carpenters, glass blowers, telegraphers, or shoemakers.” In the early stages of the Congress of Industrial Organizations, the letters CIO figure prominently, suggesting “workers knew they were joining the CIO as well as a union within their industry,” Bennett writes. Bennett also discusses what can be said from buttons, pins and badges about the evolution of individual unions, the railroad brotherhoods, unions and World War II, and labor and politics. The article includes eight pages of illustrations of buttons and pins. --Phil Glende AU - Bennett, John W. DA - Fall 1978 IS - 2 KW - Glende, Phil labor labor, and memorabilia LB - 840 N1 - See also: office PY - 1978 SP - 114-30 ST - Using Union Memorabilia as a Teaching Aid T2 - Labor Studies Journal TI - Using Union Memorabilia as a Teaching Aid VL - 3 ID - 172 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Cinematographer David Tattersall and a group of imaging experts offer an assessment of the digital cameras and techniques George Lucas used on Star Wars: Episode II, a movie that was then in production. AU - Bergery, Benjamin DA - Sept. 2001 IS - 9 KW - special effects, digital motion pictures and popular culture digitization digital cinema Lucas, George special effects, and digitization cameras, and digital cinema motion pictures, and digitization digitization, and motion pictures cameras digital media motion pictures special effects LB - 29540 PY - 2001 SP - 76-83 ST - Framing the Future T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Framing the Future VL - 82 ID - 2732 ER - TY - JOUR AB - “The relationship between education and broadcasting in the United States -- unlike Great Britain, Japan and a number of Third World nations -- has been minimal; its significance almost nil. The many and complex reasons for this (which this writer has explored at some length elsewhere) come down to the vested interest which American education had long had in perpetuating a highly labor-intensive, low-productivity system of schooling. But whatever the reasons for the way things would eventually turn out, during radio’s earliest years, when broadcasting first exploded into America’s consciousness and living rooms during the early ‘20s, and then especially during the period of television’s ‘gestation’ -- the years between its emergence from the laboratory and its ‘take-off’ in 1948 -- the nation’s periodical press bespoke the positive promises which each of these broadcast media held for education. Here, as has so often been the case, press perceptions -- the education press, itself, not excluded -- of ‘things educational’ had little relation to reality.” AU - Berkman, Dave DA - Dec. 1992 IS - 12 KW - religion community democracy values radio +radio education, and radio democracy and media values, and radio periodicals, and radio radio, and periodicals education radio, and education +television television, and education television, and periodicals periodicals, and television LB - 5810 PY - 1992 SP - 26-31 ST - The Promise of Early Radio and Television for Education -- as Seen by the Nation’s Periodical Press T2 - Educational Technology TI - The Promise of Early Radio and Television for Education -- as Seen by the Nation’s Periodical Press VL - 32 ID - 1966 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Berkowitz, a professor of psychology, is interested in the linkage between news reports of sensational violent crime and subsequent events of a similar nature. The implications of research on this topic, according to him, seem to indicate that “real and factional depictions by the media of violence – killings, shootings, or suicides – can prompt audience members to act aggressively toward others or themselves. The present essay also argues that some of the now familiar effects of violent scenes on television and movie screens are similar to those producing the suggesto-imitative assaults discussed by [Gabriel] Tarde and documented in the research into the contagion on violence just mentioned. In addition to these negative consequences, the mass media can also promote pro-social behavior.... A comprehensive account of media effects should deal with both positive and negative influences.” Berkowitz notes that critics of film and television violence believe that children learn to use aggression, or at least favor it, in solving interpersonal problems, and that also that violence in mass media makes some people indifferent to the suffering that results from real violence. Berkowitz also suggests another damaging result of media violence: “people can get ideas from the communications reporting violent incidents and, for a short time afterward at least, these thought can help foster antisocial behavior.” Reprinted in Stephen Prince, ed., Screening Violence (New Brunswick, N. J.: Rutgers University Press, 2000), 205-36. AU - Berkowitz, Leonard DA - 1984 IS - 3 KW - media effects media violence violence +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures media effects media effects, and violence +television television, and violence violence, and television LB - 12600 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1984 SP - 410-27 ST - Some Effects of Thoughts on Anti- and Pro-social Influences of Media Events: A Cognitive-Neoassociation Analysis T2 - Psychological Bulletin TI - Some Effects of Thoughts on Anti- and Pro-social Influences of Media Events: A Cognitive-Neoassociation Analysis VL - 95 ID - 2606 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article by Jerry Berman and Daniel Witzner is an example of the optimism and enthusiasm that many people feel about the Internet and its potential to reinvigorate democracy around the world. The authors argue that the Internet provides a unique platform for increased deliberation and participation. Because of the informal and decentralized nature of the network, information can flow freely in ways that are different than traditional media outlets. The diversity and scope of opinions and resources are set in sharp contrast to the limited and centralized information sources of the past. Berman and Witzner argue that the adaptability and flexibility of the Internet are its greatest assets. As society changes, the Internet can change along with it, enhancing and driving much of the debate. Another asset, according to the article, is the bi-directional, interactive nature of the Internet. Each user is both a producer and consumer of information. Users from around the world create a “true diversity of opinion and ideas in online forums.” The article ends with a discussion of issues related to full access. There is currently a large gap between individuals who have access and those who don’t. Factors include the cost of computer hardware, the cost of online service, and the cost of the underlying infrastructure that does not exist in all parts of the world. The authors urge governments to ensure that full access is possible for everyone. --Rob Rabe AU - Berman, Jerry, and Daniel J. Witzner DA - Fall 1997 IS - 3 KW - computers interactivity digital media digitization community democracy computers values +computers and the Internet Rabe, Rob democracy and media democracy, and Internet values, and Internet interactive media digital divide computers, and democracy LB - 9370 PY - 1997 ST - Technology and Democracy T2 - Social Research TI - Technology and Democracy VL - 64 ID - 2304 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Bernays argues for using modern public relations concepts to communicate with union members and the public at large. Bernays stressed three key areas for labor education initiatives in the immediate post-war era: Educate workers on union objectives, strengthen the involvement of unions in civic and governmental affairs, and sell the union to rank-and-file members. In addition, Bernays argued for three additional strategies: Make the public understand the value of unions to the country, make the employer understand the value of unions to business, and make the worker understand the industrial system. “A public that understands what unions have done for the good of the country is going to be more open-minded and friendly to union programs. If the public does not understand the value of unions, it will be guided by prejudice, untruth and distortions.” --Phil Glende AU - Bernays, Edward L. DA - March-April 1947 IS - 2 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising Glende, Phil labor public relations labor, and public relations public relations, and labor Bernays, Edward L., and labor labor, and Edward Bernays labor Bernays, Edward LB - 890 PY - 1947 SP - 19-21 ST - Labor Education as a Problem in Public Relations T2 - Labor and Nation TI - Labor Education as a Problem in Public Relations VL - 3 ID - 177 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Bernays, an early pioneer of public relations and a nephew by marriage to Sigmund Freud, discusses his ideas about using modern media to influence public opinion. AU - Bernays, Edward L. DA - May, 1935 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising public relations advertising values context community democracy public relations context, and public relations propaganda, and public relations public relations, and propaganda motion pictures, and public relations +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture values media democracy and media public relations media effects propaganda values, and media public opinion motion pictures, and public relations LB - 13280 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1935 SP - 82-87 ST - Molding Public Opinion T2 - Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science TI - Molding Public Opinion VL - 179 ID - 500 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This short article by Edward Bernays, often called the father of public relations, is interesting as an introduction to the concept of engineered consent. Bernays described the scientific methods and practical procedures used by public relations professionals to assess the audience, shape the message and deliver various forms of content to the public sphere. The entire article is phrased in terms of using these methods for social good; in fact, Bernays argued that leadership and organization are only possible in a mass media society if these principles are used. He wrote, “The engineering of consent is the very essence of the democratic process.” The article is useful because it shows the level of planning and research that go into a public relations campaign. People in this field have done a great deal of research in group psychology and media effects, and can produce very sophisticated and powerful messages. Bernays recognized that these same methods could be used for negative, or anti-democratic, purposes. However, the article plays down the threatening aspects of public relations methods, and instead points out the usefulness and benefits of their socially responsible use. The field of public relations and engineering consent has taken on a different image in the years since this article was written. Critics see these methods being used to manipulate and misinform. However, it is important to understand that their persuasive methods were developed with largely good intentions. Bernays may have underestimated the intelligence of the public and its ability to make good political or social judgments, but the driving force behind his efforts was to give them the information they need to take part in the democratic process. --Rob Rabe AU - Bernays, Edward L. DA - March 1947 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising context community democracy values media democracy and media public relations media effects propaganda values, and media public opinion motion pictures, and public relations public relations context, and public relations propaganda, and public relations public relations, and propaganda motion pictures, and public relations +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture LB - 9380 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1947 ST - The Engineering of Consent T2 - Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences, TI - The Engineering of Consent VL - 250 ID - 2305 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article was among those written by social, legal, and political conservatives in the aftermath of the 1970 Report by the President Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. They warned that pornography dehumanized society, eroded self-restraint, undermined democratic government, and, when disseminated through mass media, could even destroy civilization. The 1970 Report of the President Commission on Obscenity and Pornography argued that pornography and erotica were essential harmless and that restrictions imposed on them by society should be loosened. AU - Berns, Walter DA - Winter, 1971 KW - conservatives sexuality motion pictures mass media First Amendment media effects crime freedom law censorship and ratings censorship pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and crime crime, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment critics LB - 22370 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1971 SP - 3-24 ST - On Pornography: -- Pornography vs. Democracy: The Case for Censorship T2 - Public Interest TI - On Pornography: -- Pornography vs. Democracy: The Case for Censorship VL - 22 ID - 965 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Graham Berry examines the transformation in the motion picture business over the previous 15 years. By 1914, a substantial supporting media had grown up around the movies. "When twenty-four sheet posters announce picture plays on every cor- 608/609 ner, when electric letters over the entrances of usurped theatres flash the names of film companies and stars, when a well-known periodical advertises in the street cars as a contest for moving-picture patrons 'Which is your favorite leading man?' when in a syndicate of large American dailies is published from week to week a story-version by one of our most popular novelists simultaneously with the picture-version in the theatres, when the news-stands display several periodicals devoted to news of the motion -picture world -- even the man in the street (who, in spite of his location, is never supposed to see anything!) can no longer remain oblivious to the fact that he is perambulating in the midst of an enormous industry. Then he begins to wonder how it happened and what all this represents." (608-09) (emphasis added) Berry says that there are about 20,000 movie theaters in the U. S. and Canada. (609) He discusses movies as a trade organization and the "plant" where films are produced. In the making of moving pictures, great waste and realism go hand-in-hand. (615) Editing is required to make the film watchable and sometimes more than half of the origin movies is cut out. (616) The Vitagraph Company was then releasing about six movies a week and putting four other into storage. (618) At this time, "Eighty per cent of the theaters change their programmes daily." (619) The author concludes by commenting on the rise of movie stars such as John Bunny. As late as 1910, no top-rank actors would take part in movies. Now, because of the money and increased fame, there is no shortage of good actors in films. By 1914, the much larger salaries were important but the "infinitely wider audience acts as a significant lure in itself. As short a while ago as 1910 not a single prominent actor was willing to enter a film studio, now there are some stars who never leave it. That the extent of the audience has something to do with this is proved by the fact that certain stars in all the companies are now constantly featured. The personal following of a man like John Bunny has probably never been equaled in the history of the world. He is probably known by more kinds of people than any one who ever lived before. In a little Russian village there is a notice at the door of the moving-picture theatre, 'No programme is complete without our dear Pockson.' Pockson is Bunny, 'the man who makes them laugh.' A man stopped him on Broadway the other evening. 'You are John Bunny,' he said. 'I got acquainted with you in Mombasa. There isn't a nigger in the place who doesn't scream when he sees you!'" (620) (emphasis added) AU - Berry, Graham DA - Aug. 1914 IS - 6 KW - stage journalism journalism fame celebrity actors acting magazines, and photography magazines ref, secondary Bunny, John news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines photography and visual communication capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality motion pictures, and stars (origins) stage and theater motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures quotations quotations, and movies stars quotations, and John Bunny electricity electricity, and movie advertising advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising Vitagraph motion pictures, and Vitagraph race, and motion pictures motion pictures, and racism quotations, and actors' fame motion pictures, and race ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Bookman advertising motion pictures photography race LB - 37660 PY - 1914 SP - 908-20 ST - The Budget of the Movies T2 - The Bookman TI - The Budget of the Movies VL - 39 ID - 3865 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article, author Michael D. Bess discusses the "technologies of human enhancement" (114) in three important areas: pharmaceuticals, prosthetics and informatics, and genetics. Bess argues that "today we are in the early stages of an epochal shift that will prove as momentous" as early "important watersheds in human history" such as the use of metal tools, the rise of agriculture, and the use of steam power. (114) "This time around," he writes, the new techniques and technologies are not being applied to reinventing our tools, our methods of food production, our means of manufacturing. Rather, it is we ourselves who are being refashioned." (114) These changes are "raising profound questions about what it means to be human." (114) Where earlier transformations took place over long period of time, what is occurring now taking place much faster. "This time around ... the radical innovations are coming upon us suddenly, in a matter of decades. Contemporary society is unprepared for the dramatic and destabilizing changes it is about to experience, down this road on which it is already advancing at an accelerating pace." (115) What is at hand is "one of the great disjunctions in human history." (125) With regard to the use of pharmaceuticals, the use of steroids in athletics obviously comes to mind. But people are using them "in increasingly sophisticated and powerful ways to reshape their bodies and minds.... In the process, our society's sense of what constitute normal ability and basic mental well-being is being destabilized." (118) Bess notes that the Defense Advance Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and the military are much involved in using prosthetic technologies for human enhancement in ways that will affect the future battlefield. Research in genetics is proceeding rapidly and "genetic enhancement of basic human traits is no longer a topic of fantasy," Bess maintains. (121) Bess sees four challenges confronting us. First, biotechnological modifications, which come to us in small ways, will increasingly add up with the result being a world "in which the very meaning of the word 'normal' is constantly shifting." (123) Second, in the near future, citizens will be able to choose for themselves extraordinary capabilities and traits. "Over the coming century, some of us -- perhaps many of us -- will be increasingly merging with our machines, while at the same time modifying our own biology in every deeper ways." (123) By 2050, our world will likely "include a wide variety of truly hybrid beings, part genetically modified human, part machines." (123) No one can accurately predict what such people in the future will look like. A third challenge is the potential for social disruptions caused by these enhancement technologies. "It is not at all clear whether a population of highly enhanced humans can coexist peacefully alongside a population of unmodified humans." (124) Finally, these new enhancement technologies threaten "the moral ideals of equality and human dignity," Bess writes. (124) "A central moral challenge of the coming decades will be to prevent the technologies of enhancement from eroding the foundations of equality and human dignity on which our political and social systems rest." (125) The challenge will be to see that not just the privileged few have access to these technologies. (126) Bess concludes by saying that "it is not just our weaponry that threatens us, but our technologies of healing as well." (126) AU - Bess, Michael D. DA - Jan. 2008 IS - 1 KW - future biotechnology artificial intelligence and biotechnology genetics infomatics future and science fiction second industrial revolution military communication nationalism and communication DARPA DARPA, and human enhancement values freedom democracy values, and artificial intelligence freedom, and artificial intelligence democracy, and artificial intelligence artificial intelligence, and values biotechnology, and freedom biotechnology, and democracy military communication, and biotechnology nationalism and communication, and artificial biotechnology, and values biotechnology, and democracy biotechnology, and freedom nanotechnology values, and biotechnology freedom, and biotechnology democracy, and biotechnology biotechnology, and values artificial intelligence, and freedom artificial intelligence, and democracy military communication, and artificial intelligence nationalism, and biotechnology Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) nationalism LB - 80 PY - 2008 SP - 114-26 ST - Icarus 2.0: A Historian's Perspective on Human Biological Enhancement T2 - Technology and Culture TI - Icarus 2.0: A Historian's Perspective on Human Biological Enhancement VL - 49 ID - 7 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Betancourt, Gilbert DA - Aug., 1937 KW - Kalmus, Herbert censorship censorship Marked motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Technicolor, and Natalie Kalmus Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color censorship, and Natalie Kalmus ref, secondary color, and primitives color, and cinematographers color, and novelty lighting lighting, and color color, and lighting LB - 40950 PY - 1937 SP - 317, 352 ST - Present Color Trend Is Toward Subdued Hues T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Present Color Trend Is Toward Subdued Hues ID - 4194 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article, the author who was Head of Engineering Research at Universal Pictures Corporation, talks about special effects and the traveling matte, blue-screen technique. AU - Beyer, Walter DA - Jan., 1964 IS - 1 KW - corporations corporations cinematography motion pictures special effects motion pictures, and special effects MGM special effects, and MGM special effects, traveling matte photography LB - 30010 PY - 1964 SP - 34-40, 42, 44-45 ST - Traveling Matte Photography and the Blue-Screen System: Part II -- Specifications for Equipment and Photography T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Traveling Matte Photography and the Blue-Screen System: Part II -- Specifications for Equipment and Photography VL - 45 ID - 2756 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article, the author who was Head of Engineering Research at Universal Pictures Corporation, talks about special effects and the traveling matte, blue-screen technique. See also ibid., Sept., 1964, pp. 502ff; and ibid., Oct., 1964, pp. 565ff. AU - Beyer, Walter DA - April, 1964 IS - 4 KW - corporations corporations cinematography motion pictures special effects motion pictures, and special effects MGM special effects, and MGM special effects, traveling matte photography LB - 30020 PY - 1964 SP - 208-210, 226-27 ST - Traveling Matte Photography and the Blue Screen System: Part III -- Special Photographic Phase T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Traveling Matte Photography and the Blue Screen System: Part III -- Special Photographic Phase VL - 45 ID - 2757 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article was among those written by social, legal, and political conservatives in the aftermath of the 1970 Report by the President Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. They warned that pornography dehumanized society, eroded self-restraint, undermined democratic government, and, when disseminated through mass media, could even destroy civilization. The 1970 Report of the President Commission on Obscenity and Pornography argued that pornography and erotica were essential harmless and that restrictions imposed on them by society should be loosened. AU - Bickel, Alexander AU - Kauffmann, Stanley AU - McWilliams, Wilson Carey AU - Cohen, Marshal DA - Winter, 1971 KW - conservatives sexuality motion pictures mass media First Amendment media effects crime freedom law censorship and ratings censorship pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and crime crime, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment critics LB - 22380 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1971 SP - 25-44 ST - On Pornography: II -- Dissenting and Concurring Opinion T2 - Public Interest TI - On Pornography: II -- Dissenting and Concurring Opinion VL - 22 ID - 966 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Bidwell, Shelford DA - June 4, 1908 KW - photography television, and history of +photography and visual communication seeing at a distance +television television, and origins +electricity +telegraph telegraph, visual LB - 6570 PY - 1908 SP - 105 ST - Telegraphic Photography and Electric Vision T2 - Nature TI - Telegraphic Photography and Electric Vision VL - 78 ID - 2035 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, written by a writer-artist who helped to develop the "picture play," offers an insightful account of how moving pictures changed in the space of about two decades between 1894 and 1915. It begins with President Grover Cleveland asking "What is a picture play?" (64) The author had "used the term in an outline of my mission at the White House" probably sometime in 1895 or 1896. While gaining access to Cleveland was difficult, once at the White House, Black had the president's cooperation. "An so he found an actual bill that was to be signed, and we worked out the series of pictures quite in accordance with the allusions in the story." (64) Black hoped to capture reality. "The truth is that my first notion of a play on a white sheet was influenced from the beginning by the conviction that the effect should be of real life; that is to say, not only as to the actual celebrities who might be mentioned in the story, but as to all the other characters, for which I sought those who in each case 'looked the part,' rather than people of the stage made up to look the part." (65) Black prepared a story of about 14,000 words, about the length of a normal stage play. "The idea of drama on a white sheet was a result of my earlier experiences in exploiting photographs of life in an illustrated talk called 'Ourselves as Others See Us.'" (66) Black continues: "Why not choose characters to illustrate a consecutive story? Why not take a series of pictures with the same setting so that lantern slides might be made to register perfectly enough to give the effect of slow movement in the figures? Muybridge and others had done this with short series. Edison had expanded the idea in much longer series in his kinetoscope." (66) Although Black was told that photographs, especially of groups, were likely to capture his subjects in an unnatural way, he proceeded. "Miss Blanch Bayliss, whose face had been known to admirers of A. B. Wenzell's drawings, was the heroine in more than title.... (66) Black discusses the hand camera he used and the use of arc lamps. Indoor scenes proved challenging. He talks about the problems associated with dissolving one lantern slide into another. (67) Black's picture play projected about four images per minute which gave the impression of slow motion. "The elemental slow motion effect of these first picture plays, while basically the same [as later moving pictures], made, of course, but a limited call on this faculty of the eyes [the illusion of motion], for the changes occurred but four times in a minute. It was a hand-whittled effect compared with the work of exquisite machinery." (68) Black laments that he did not use the "close up" in his play. "Speaking of realism, let me confess that I hampered myself by the severe logic of the play form. A pictured curtain rose and fell. There were three acts and a 'curtain call.' The picture space had the form of a proscenium arch. I endeavored to keep the figures the same height throughout. While there seems to be less than the needed nicety in the opening and closing of the modern screen play, there can be no doubt of the big advantage gained by forgetting the state in concentrating on one or two figures, and in giving them the full screen for all the emphasis there may be in this method. The interest of the spectator is now, and should be, the basis of treatment. If a ring on the heroine's hand is the focal point of interest, enlarging that hand to the limits of the screen, so that hand and ring are clearly to be studied by the man in the back seat, is as if the narrator had invited you forward to the very verge of the action, or had come toward you fully to meet the curiosity of the moment. A use of this method would have saved me much labor." (68) (my emphasis) Black discusses how one can project a character's thoughts on screen. Referring to his earlier picture play: "While the 'Dream of Fair Women' in 'Miss Jerry' introduced the illustration of a character's thoughts 68/69 by the simple use of the superimposed image, blended and retired, a vast range of illusion was impossible in this halting method. The perfected motion picture machine opened the door to modern inventive device. A stupendous industry, backed by millions in money, with armies of trained camera actors, led by masters of the new medium of expression, have introduced an astonishingly powerful elements into the field of pictorialized fiction." (68-69) Black speculates on why it took so long for full-length pictures to appear. Early films were difficult to watch for more than five minutes and difficult to duplicate. There were great techological improvements between 1894 to 1915, comparable to the change from the medieval hand-made pamphlet to the modern newspaper. "Oddly it was more than sixteen years after the slow-motion 'Miss Jerry' that full length plays in full motion began to appear. "The delay had not been due to mechanical difficulties alone. It is true that the first full motion pictures were trying to the eyes, so trying that five minutes seemed to approximate the limit of sustained attention. But the picture play as a popular institution had to find itself-- and its audiences. The immense duplication was too fantastically unthinkable even for a dream. Everything associated with a picture play and its putting forward was to me a matter of nicety, of cautious delicacy, of lantern difficulties, of special skill in the operator, of laboriously synchronized smoothness. "Of course, I was told that if I wanted to get rich I must duplicate my plays. This was just as plain at the end of five years as at the beginning. The thought of a single duplicate gave me a chill. Artistically the plays might have been duplicated, but artistically I could not have afforded to duplicate them on any basis that would have been profitable. This is to say that only a good reader (they forgave bad reading in the author) in partnership with a highly skilled operator could have worked out the salvation of the idea. And this explains why the first picture plays remained for so many years a one-man experiment. "To-day no reader is needed; and the modern projection machine runs by a motor. The contrast is as wide as between a medieval pen-made pamphlet and a modern newspaper." (69) (my emphasis) When one understands the nature of moving pictures as they have evolved in 1915, Black says it hardly unreasonable to pay a movie star like Mary Pickford $2,000 a week "when you consider that this art which needs no translator is distributed to the ends of the earth, and may be presented in the smallest village precisely as it appears in the finest theater. "Literally the screen play has made all the world a stage -- and an auditorium. Because it is an art, it can be vulgar as well as powerful.. Because it holds the attention of so many millions of eyes and minds, it can misuse its power. Because it must be spawned so prodigiously, it is always in danger of becoming thin and cheap. Those are trite misgivings. I have no doubt they said the same sort of thing about the first printing types. The interesting fact to realize -- and this is trite, too -- is that the picture play has only passed from the period of infancy to that of ambitious and sometimes ungainly youth. As a field for the exercise of the human imagination it surely offers an extraordinary challenge." (69) AU - Black, Alexander DA - Oct. 1915 IS - 574 KW - theater stage Muybridge, Edward Muybridge, Eadweard fame facial expressions celebrity metaphors actors acting actors acting photography ref, secondary motion pictures presidents and new media Cleveland, Grover Cleveland, Grover, and photography Cleveland, Grover, and picture plays photography, and Grover Cleveland photography, and presidents photography and visual communication president, and motion pictures Cleveland, Grover, and motion pictures Cleveland, Grover, and lantern slides Muybridge, Edward, and motion pictures Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and kinetoscope kinetoscope motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars (origins) photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality cameras cameras, hand motion pictures, and slow motion quotations quotations, and close-ups close-ups, and motion pictures motion pictures, and close-ups theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures acting, and facial expression actors, and facial expression facial expressions, and acting motion pictures, and narrative (origins) motion pictures, and duplication motion pictures, and historical analogies duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and motion pictures motion pictures, and duplicating technologies motion pictures, and distribution motion pictures, and printing press Pickford, Mary Black, Alexander picture plays ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, McBride's LB - 16450 PY - 1915 SP - 64-69 ST - Making the First Picture Play: The Forerunner of the Movie Drama Described by the Pioneer Screen Playwright T2 - McBride's Magazine TI - Making the First Picture Play: The Forerunner of the Movie Drama Described by the Pioneer Screen Playwright VL - 96 ID - 3797 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Alexander Black, who was the inventor of the "Picture Play" and literary editor of the Brooklyn Times, discusses how to create the Picture Play in this short article. "Allow for about fifty words for each picture -- that is to say, for each change in the grouping of characters," he advises. AU - Black, Alexander DA - Oct. 1898 IS - 11 KW - stereopticons art photography ref, secondary motion pictures presidents and new media photography and visual communication president, and motion pictures Black, Alexander picture plays motion pictures, and picture plays motion pictures, and new art form photography, and picture plays stereopticons, and picture plays art, and photography photography, and art actors acting ref, secondary ref, secular ref, women ref, literary (women) ref, Ladies' Home Journal LB - 37000 PY - 1898 SP - 25 ST - How to Give a Picture-Play T2 - Ladies' Home Journal TI - How to Give a Picture-Play VL - 15 ID - 3801 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Black predicts that the speed of photography will become faster and that photography will move toward the ideal of "instantaneous photography by any light sufficient for the eye." (359) He talks about taking moving pictures in the light of the home to capture family members and to display these the way pictures are displayed in a family album. "In this way we shall have, not an instant of arrested motion, but a series of moments such as we watch in a conversation, and we may, by averaging these, get a broader, truer impression such as the wise painter seeks to express." (359) Greater speed in photography and discovering a way to transmit "these pictures by wire" will mean "we shall watch war at the library table -- yes, and hear the shells over the same wire." (359) Black sees the day when "we shall have photography in colors ... not merely iridescent surfaces or combination color plates, but the real things, an image in the colors of nature. This color photography will probably be more in the form of a positive, like the ferrotype plate (tintype), than in the form of a negative." (359) Possibly by 1912, we should "have literal copies of works of art, faithful to color as the present useul copies are faithful to form and tone. The value of these in art education would be very great." (359) Black concludes by saying that "photography must be the great pictorial historian of the future; not absolutely truthful and impartial, for no historian can be that. ... But no historian will be more versatile, more indefatigable, more captivating to the fancy, more suggestive to the thinker, more helpful toward pictorial truth." (360) AU - Black, Alexander DA - July 18, 1901 IS - 29 KW - celebrity celebrity culture ref, secondary photography motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing photography, instantaneous photography and visual communication photography, and speed of color color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures motion pictures, and personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and photography photography, and personality photography, and motion pictures lighting lighting, and photography photography, and lighting education education, and color photography art, and color photography history and new media history, and photography photography, and history personality ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated (youth) ref, Youth's Companion art history LB - 38340 PY - 1901 SP - 359-60 ST - Glimpses into the Future: VII -- Some Photographic Possibilities T2 - Youth's Companion TI - Glimpses into the Future: VII -- Some Photographic Possibilities VL - 75 ID - 3933 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Alexander Black begins by discussing the difficulties of photographing a baby before the invention of portable, handheld cameras. These more portable detective cameras allow the photographer to capture lifelike, often rapid, movement. Black writes that "Before the 'detective' appeared there had been no means of catching those quickly vanishing phases of character and action which we now so delight to study; and the discovery that the portable picture-box could be carried and operated without exciting suspicion, among the children (or among their elders either, for that matter), was a promising discovery. It was like striking a new vein of precious metal in an abandoned mine. It opened up opportunities for picturing much that was curious, much that was beautiful, and, above all, much that was true...." (1023) (emphasis in original text) Later, Black says that "The amateur photographer is the historian of the summer boarding-house." (1033) AU - Black, Alexander DA - Oct. 1890 IS - 12 KW - personality ref, news cameras cameras, and movement cameras, and portability motion pictures, and movement cameras, hand photography and visual communication photography, and cameras Black, Alexander, and portable cameras cameras, and handheld cameras, and detective photography photography, and handheld cameras history and new media photography, and history history, and photography photography, and personality personality, and photography photography, and truth values values, and photography photography, and values children and media children, and detective cameras photography, and children children, and photography ref, educational ref, illustrated (youth) ref, literary (youth) ref, St. Nicholas ref, secondary ref, secular Black, Alexander children history motion pictures LB - 41700 PY - 1890 SP - 1022-34 ST - Through a Detective Camera T2 - St. Nicholas: An Illustrated Magazine for Young Folks TI - Through a Detective Camera VL - 17 ID - 4268 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Blackwood describes techniques used to influence public opinion and implies that union members and others should recognize these techniques to counteract idea advertising by big business. Blackwood provides examples of 14 strategies for influencing opinion, including an “appeal to the emotions,” especially hope and fear. He notes, for instance, that General Motors tried to generate fear among small property owners during the sit-down strike of 1937. “The most predominant pattern,” Blackwood writes of idea advertising, “lies in the adroit use of works, the creation of symbolism which results in glittering generalities.” He notes that advertisers tied their pro-business and anti-union advertising campaigns in the 1940s to symbolism connected to basic values such as freedom, democracy, and Americanism. --Phil Glende AU - Blackwood, George DA - Fall 1950 IS - 4 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations values Glende, Phil labor advertising values, and advertising advertising, and labor labor, and advertising advertising, and anti-labor values LB - 860 N1 - See also: office PY - 1950 SP - 25-27 ST - The Advertising of Ideas T2 - Labor and Nation TI - The Advertising of Ideas VL - 7 ID - 174 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author, who was then president of Wheaton College, a private, interdenominational Christian college, begins by asking "What out Christian people to do about the theater?" He also asks "Is the theater essentially evil?" and "If it is not essentially evil, but if attendance upon it works harm and evil to weak Christian, what then is the duty of a Christian who thinks himself strong?" Blanchard says that no theater "makes it a rule to exclude adulteries and murders from its list of dramatic representations." Blanchard has a low regard for the theater and for actors. He argues that "the business of furnishing amusement to people is in itself doubtful, if not distinctly evil in character. It is a sad fact that those who live to furnish amusement for other people seem to deteriorate in character. An owner and manager of two theaters not a great while since told me that he would not permit is wife and daughters to know actors and actresses. He employed them to amuse the community, but he would not welcome them into his home. In some way they had become such persons as he did not wish his family to know." Blanchard suggests that the very process of acting in dramas that deal with adultery and murder are damaging. "Is it possible for a man to play for five years, in twenty-five dramas, that he is the husband of twenty-five or thirty different women without suffering spiritual harm? Is it possible for a woman to play that she has been seduced and become an outcast without being morally injured? It is possible for a woman who is married to play that she is married to other persons than her husband and to act the situation as vividly as possible, so as to awaken the interest and applause of the audience without harm? Is it possible for a man to play a murderer or a thief without being injured in character, and is it possible for people to look on while men and women are playing these things without themselves being injured?" Opera, according to the author, was not better than a live play. "Take the stories of the operas for example. Give to them the attraction of beautiful dressing, charming music, handsome people, and is it possible for adultery and murder, which is the stock in trade of these dramatic representations, to fail of doing their deadly work in the souls of men?" Part of the problems from Blanchard's point of view was that cheap theater appealed to a lower class of people. "No theater could live on the moneys gathered from the few high-toned plays patronized by intelligent Christian people. The plays must strike lower down, they must attract another class of people, people who have little sense of responsibility to God for their time or money. This is the only class who can afford a sufficient patronage to make the theater, as an institution, a success." Blanchard says the theater is especially harmful to the young. "The cheap theater of our time, the five and ten-cent theater, is coining money for the proprietors and which is perhaps ruining as many young people as almost any one instrumentality of evil in our time. If you wish to know what goes on within, take a look at the pictures which are exhibited without...." AU - Blanchard, Charles A. DA - April 23, 1914 IS - 17 KW - children anti-theatrical bias censorship actors acting ref, secondary critics critics, religious motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures actors, and bias against actors, and status of theater, and bias against anti-theatrical prejudice quotations critics, and acting critics, and actors critics, and theater quotations, and actors audiences audiences, and immoral plays media effects audiences, and media effects media effects, and audiences theater, and class children and media theater, and children children, and theater critics ref, religious ref, Christian Church ref, Herald Gospel of Liberty theater LB - 39260 PY - 1914 SP - 527 ST - The Christian and the Theater T2 - Herald of Gospel Liberty TI - The Christian and the Theater VL - 106 ID - 4025 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses how Israeli combat photographers and three NBC camera crews shot about 150,000 feet (or 75 hours) of film in about three to four weeks in the 1967 Israeli-Arab war. Much of the film was 16mm with a magnetic stripe for sound. AU - Block, Jerry DA - Dec., 1967 IS - 12 KW - lenses, zoom magnetic recording news and journalism television newsreels television, and newreels television, and new film cinematography war war, and television television, and war television, and Israeli-Arab War (1967) NBC, and news 16mm 16mm film, and Israeli-Arab War (1967) 16mm film, and TV news television, and 16mm film magnetic tape television, and magnetic tape (1967) sound recording sound recording, and portable cameras sound recording, and 16mm cameras sound recording, and newsreels cameras, and zoom lenses zoom lenses war, and newsreels (1967) cameras motion pictures news lenses 16mm film NBC LB - 30390 PY - 1967 SP - 866-68 ST - How NBC-TV Newsreel Crews Filmed the Israeli-Arab War T2 - American Cinematographer TI - How NBC-TV Newsreel Crews Filmed the Israeli-Arab War VL - 48 ID - 2794 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The authors write that the used "the literature on self-efficacy and vividness to predict and explain the conditions under which vivid information will be more persuasive than nonvivid information in health communication." The focus on information about sexually transmitted diseases. AU - Block, Lauren G. and Punam Anand Keller DA - 1997 IS - 1 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations public relations advertising propaganda media effects media effects, and vividness propaganda, and vividness advertising, and vividness advertising LB - 3280 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1997 SP - 31-54 ST - Effects of Self-Efficacy and Vividness on the Persuasiveness of Health Communications T2 - Journal of Consumer Psychology TI - Effects of Self-Efficacy and Vividness on the Persuasiveness of Health Communications VL - 6 ID - 416 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article from the American Bar Association deals with efforts by Playboy and Penthouse to fight efforts by anti-pornography groups to have those magazines removed from stores. The magazine sued Attorney General Edwin Meese and the Meese Commission to prevent it from creating a "blacklist" of pornography distributors. AU - Blodgett, Nancy DA - July 1, 1986 KW - presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality sexuality values obscenity Meese Commission law censorship and ratings censorship pornography law, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and pornography pornography, and Reagan judges obscenity, and pornography Meese, Edwin, and pornography pornography, judicial setbacks Playboy pornography, and Playboy Playboy, and pornography Reagan, Ronald LB - 27590 N1 - See 72 A.B. A. J. 28. PY - 1986 SP - 28 ST - Porno Blacklist? Magazines Fight Meese Panel T2 - ABA Journal TI - Porno Blacklist? Magazines Fight Meese Panel VL - 72 ID - 1313 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article talks about the hard-core pornographic movie Deep Throat (1972),about the fact that it has played in mainstream theaters, and that it has become "chic" for well-known personalities -- Johnny Carson, Mich Nichols, Jack Nicholson -- to attend. One the film "broke in the society columns, it was O.K. to go," one patron is quoted as saying. AU - Blumenthal, Ralph DA - Jan. 21, 1978 KW - values sexuality pornography sexuality sexuality values obscenity law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures X-rated films motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and motion pictures Playboy Penthouse obscenity, and pornography motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures law, and pornography Deep Throat (1972) movie Knight, Arthur, and pornography pornography, and Arthur Knight values values, and pornography LB - 20970 PY - 1978 SP - 28, 30, 32-34 ST - Porno chic T2 - New York Times Magazine TI - Porno chic ID - 898 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This talk before the American Society of Cinematographers by Joseph E. Bluth, then Vice President and General Manager of Technicolor Vidtronics Division (Eastman Kodak?), discusses Technicolor's color videotape-to-film transfer process. Bluth notes that "if you were to analyze what is recorded on a piece of tape and the standards by which a color signal is placed on tape you would immediately be aware of the fact that there are some very severe limitations in extracting this information and putting it onto film. It is not like a simple black-and-white signal where you have one entity -- one signal to, in effect, transfer." (803) AU - Bluth, Joseph E. DA - Nov., 1967 IS - 11 KW - cinematography television videotape television, and videotape television, and film videotape, and film color videotape, and color television, and color videotape motion pictures magnetic tape magnetic recording LB - 30200 PY - 1967 SP - 803, 816, 818-20 ST - More Facts About Vidtronics T2 - American Cinematographer TI - More Facts About Vidtronics VL - 48 ID - 2775 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Boeringer, Pierre N. DA - July 1896 IS - 163 KW - billboards art Marked ref, secondary advertising and public relations color color, and advertising advertising, and color art, and advertising advertising, and art modernity modernity, and advertising advertising, and modernity new way of seeing new way of seeing, and advertising advertising, and new way of seeing posters advertising, and posters posters, and advertising advertising, and billboards billboards, and advertising color, and billboards ref, secondary ref, secular ref, Overland Monthly advertising LB - 40860 PY - 1896 SP - 41-52 ST - The Advertiser and the Poster T2 - Overland Monthly and Out West Magazine TI - The Advertiser and the Poster VL - 38 ID - 4185 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article was among those written by social, legal, and political conservatives in the aftermath of the 1970 Report by the President Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. They warned that pornography dehumanized society, eroded self-restraint, undermined democratic government, and, when disseminated through mass media, could even destroy civilization. The 1970 Report of the President Commission on Obscenity and Pornography argued that pornography and erotica were essential harmless and that restrictions imposed on them by society should be loosened. AU - Bonniwell, Bernard L. DA - Sept., 1971 KW - conservatives sexuality motion pictures mass media First Amendment media effects crime freedom law censorship and ratings censorship pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and crime crime, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment critics LB - 22400 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1971 SP - 97-104 ST - The Social Control of Pornography and Sexual Behavior T2 - Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science TI - The Social Control of Pornography and Sexual Behavior VL - 397 ID - 968 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Bordwell writes: "An adequate theoretical account of widescreen filmmaking does not yet exist, but the most important step toward it was taken by a tradition that is usually considered 'Bazinian.' The Cahiers du cinéma critics of the 1950s and early 1960s and the Movie critics of the 1960s have left us a rich legacy of ideas about the aesthetics of the wide screen. It is worthwhile to glance back at this 'mise en scene' criticism (as I shall call it) in order to assess its theoretical premises and conclusions -- to ask, even, to what extent it is accurately called 'Bazinian.'" AU - Bordwell, David DA - Summer 1985 IS - 21 KW - widescreen theory seeing at a distance postmodernism modernism motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and widescreen widescreen, and motion pictures theory, and motion pictures motion pictures, and theory theory, and widescreen cinema critics new way of seeing LB - 2610 N1 - See filed under Velvet Light Trap. PY - 1985 SP - 18-25 ST - Widescreen Aesthetics and Mise en Scene Criticism T2 - Velvet Light Trap TI - Widescreen Aesthetics and Mise en Scene Criticism ID - 349 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by saying that as late as 1911, the identities of moving picture actors were either kept secret or considered to be relatively unimportant. As the "star system" began to emerge, however, identities became more important and were publicized in such publications as the Moving Picture World, Moving Picture News,Motography, and other trade journals. Souvenir postcards were also used to publicize actors and actresses. The cards were often given away free as a means of advertising and enticing patrons into the theater. Bowers notes that few of these postcards were apparently used to send messages through the postal system. Rather "the vast majority were kept as sourvenirs." (40) This article's final pages (41-45) are illustrations of these cards and the personalities they publicized. AU - Bowers, Q. David DA - 1989 IS - 1 KW - journalism illustrations history celebrity ref, secondary photography motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures presidents and new media photography and visual communication personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality celebrity culture actors acting magazines photography photography and visual communication motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines fan magazines magazines, fan ref, news motion pictures, and cameras motion pictures, and acting acting, and cameras acting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pantomime motion pictures, and movie stars movie stars movie stars, and cameras movie stars, and acting movie stars, and facial expression personality, and magnification of acting, and facial expression sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and stars (origins) illustrations newspapers, and illustrations women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women women personality movie stars, and postcards motion pictures, and postcards advertising and public relations advertising, and postcards celebrity culture, and postcards illustrations illustrations, and movie postcards advertising LB - 40170 PY - 1989 SP - 39-45 ST - Souvenir Postcards and the Development of the Star System, 1912-1914 T2 - Film History TI - Souvenir Postcards and the Development of the Star System, 1912-1914 VL - 3 ID - 4115 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author writes: "Taking examples from the science of geology in the 1830s and floristics over the past two decades, it is argued that the technology of infomation storage and retrieval dominant at the time serves as both means of archiving scientific results and as metaphor for the interpretation of the earth as an archival system. It is maintained that the interplay between means and metaphor provides a site for the importation and exploration of techniques from communities of scientific and work practice both in the ordering of scientific information and in its interpretation. It is further tentatively argued that when the technology infrastructural to information storage changes, this leads to radical discontinuities in scientific models." AU - Bowker, Geoffrey C. DA - 1998 IS - 1-2 KW - computers primary sources preservation labor archives history, and new media computers history office office, and new media office +computers and the Internet infrastructure, and computers archives, and new technology computers, and history history, and computers archives, and computers archives, and new media archives, and infrastructure infrastructure, and archives +information storage information storage, and new media history, break with archives, and historical interpretation infrastructure history archives LB - 2730 PY - 1998 SP - 69-87 ST - Archival Technology in the Historical Sciences, 1800-1997 T2 - History and Technology TI - Archival Technology in the Historical Sciences, 1800-1997 VL - 15 ID - 361 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article, the Rev. W. H. Bowling talks about moving pictures combined with the phonograph to produce talking films. AU - Bowling, W. H. DA - June 25, 1910 IS - 25 KW - ref, news motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures phonograph phonograph, and motion pictures motion pictures, and phonograph quotations ref, secondary ref, secular ref, movie magazine ref, Moving Picture World LB - 15760 PY - 1910 SP - 1095 ST - The Living Voice with the Living Picture T2 - Moving Picture World TI - The Living Voice with the Living Picture VL - 6 ID - 3732 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article describes a process of transmitting images that differs from the one developed by professor Arthur Korn in Germany. "With the apparatus of Prof. Korn, of Munich, described in these columns, only photographs of faces can ben transmitted to a distance, since pictures of busts and landscapes give poor results, owing to insufficient distinctness. This problem, however, has been solved in a much more perfect manner by a Frenchman, M. Edouard Bélin, as has been sown by the experiments performed by him in the laboratory of the Société Française de Photographie. The transmitting apparatus of this ingenious inventor is wholly mechanical in all its details. A carbon print of the photograph to be telegraphed is placed on a revolving cylinder, while a stylus traveling over this print imparts to the line conductor by means of a lever current differences corresponding with the differences of relief, through a rheostat." AU - Boyer, Jacques DA - Dec. 21, 1907 IS - 25 KW - post office journalism future magazines, and photography facsimile magazines photography ref, secondary electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and photography photography, and electricity photography and visual communication motion pictures electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines television telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph future and science fiction telephotography Belin, M. Edouard, and telephotography seeing at a distance modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity non-USA Germany Germany, and photography by wire Germany, and telegraph telegraph, and Germany facsimile, and telegraph telegraph, and facsimile duplicating technologies postal service postal service, and facsimile facsimile, and postal service postal service, and telegraph telegraph, and postal service materials materials, and selenium Great Britain Great Britain, and photography by wire Great Britain, and telegraph Germany, and facsimile Great Britain, and facsimile France France, and photography by wire France, and telegraph France, and facsimile France, and facsimile Belin process, and telephotographyy Belin process, and telegraph Belin, M. Edouard, and telephotographyy ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific American LB - 37440 PY - 1907 SP - 456-57 (APS Online) ST - The Belin Process of Telephotography T2 - Scientific American TI - The Belin Process of Telephotography VL - 97 ID - 3843 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This is a condensed version of an article that appeared in The New Yorker. It considers the theories of Raymond G. Twyeffort about color and clothes. Twyeffort was a past president of the National Association of Merchant Tailors of America. "The wearing of red, Twyefflrt claims, actually makes a man strong and dynamic, just as yellow makes him gay, green makes him amorous and blue soothes him. Dress American businessmen in scarlet, he says, and business will boom...." AU - Boyer, Richard O. DA - Jan., 1940 IS - 213 KW - color color, and clothing LB - 2500 N1 - See filed under Reader's Digest. PY - 1940 SP - 102-05 ST - Color Nut T2 - Reader's Digest TI - Color Nut VL - 36 ID - 338 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Bragdon, Claude DA - June 13, 1917 IS - 2164 KW - art Marked advertising and public relations color color, and advertising advertising, and color art, and advertising advertising, and art modernity modernity, and advertising advertising, and modernity new way of seeing new way of seeing, and advertising advertising, and new way of seeing billboards posters advertising, and posters posters, and advertising advertising, and electric signs billboards, and advertising color, and billboards ref, secondary ref, secular ref, American Architect quotations, and color color, and music electricity electricity, and electric signs advertising, and architecture color, and electricity electricity, and color lighting electricity, and lighting color, and red color, and blue color, and green advertising quotations LB - 41350 PY - 1917 SP - 363-68 ST - An Art of Light T2 - American Architect TI - An Art of Light VL - 111 ID - 4234 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins with the intriguing statement that "Criticism of film to the present day [1976] has largely proceeded as if all films were made in black and white. Few theorists or filmmakers even comment on the use of color in a film much less consider the structural possibilities that color opens for the filmic text. Jean-Luc Godard through his work is a stunning exception. Scanning his color films one immediately senses an unparalleled rigor in the organization of color. Overall, one might say, the color appears 'artificial' or stylized with respect to the more familiar 'natural' or postcard color of traditional films. But this generalization is unsatisfactory." (20) Branigan then proceeds to analyze the Godard's color strategies in his film Deux ou trois chose que je sais d'elle [Two or Three Things I Know About Her] (1966-67). Branigan says that "Almst all color theorists -- even those holding expressionist views of the nature of art -- maintain that color has neither an absolute perceptual base, nor an absolute meaning (emotional or intellectual): color depends on relationships and comparisons, and in this regard its closest analogue may be music." (21) For Sergei Eisenstein, "the reassembly of color in a text is an explicitly ideological enterprise which reveals, in one light or another, the dominant ideology. There arises then the possibility that a textual system of color -- as a 'discourse' involving repetition, variation, permutation -- may actually propose new ways of reading color and color organizations, and so may recast cultural formulations," Branigan says. (21) Branigan analyzes Godard's use of color "in terms of four major tendencies: color tends to appear as a certain of solid color, in a regular shape, with an arbitrary relationship to the surface of its object, and in primary opposition to other colors. It is important to note that not every color in Deux ou trois choses fits these specifications. This demonstrates that pertinent oppositions, when they appear, become structurally significant in terms of Godard's overall color system. In order to throw that color system into relief, I will employ various traditional color 'rules' (conventions, codes) as a background set." (21) Here he draws on the discussion about "traditional rules of color harmony" in Elizabeth Burris-Meyer's Color and Design in the Decorative Arts (1935) and Fabor Birren's Principles of Color (1969) (p. 31, n. 7) Branigan hopes that his approach "will provide a point of entry to a system of representation and ideology radically opposed to that of classic Hollywood film." (21) Branigan concludes: "The colors of Deux ou trois choses cannot be read in terms of charater psychology, the exigencies of drama, or of verisimilitude. Instead, color -- divorced from its natural (probable) object through such strategies as the above -- becomes an element of equal significance with the other elements of the text. The consistent use of color strategies means the consturction of forms -- positions and differences -- which are the very foundation of the articulation of color in a pictorial system. Deux ou trois choses is one of the few color films which, to borrow Eisenstein's phrase, is in color and not merely colored." (30) AU - Branigan, Edward DA - 1976 IS - 3 KW - media effects emotion ref, secondary motion pictures color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures France non-USA France, and motion pictures non-USA, and motion pictures motion pictures, and France color, and France motion pictures, and non-USA Godard, Jean-Luc, and color films motion pictures, and Jean-Luc Godard color, and Sergei Eisenstein Eisenstein, Sergei, and color values color, and values values, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color motion pictures, and ideology motion pictures, and classic Hollywood films color, and classic Hollywood films color, and ideology ref, secondary ref, secular ref, Wide Angle LB - 39860 PY - 1976 SP - 20-31 ST - The Articulation of Color in a Filmic System: Deux ou trois choses que je sais d'elle (Two or Three Things I Know About Her) T2 - Wide Angle TI - The Articulation of Color in a Filmic System: Deux ou trois choses que je sais d'elle (Two or Three Things I Know About Her) VL - 1 ID - 4084 ER - TY - JOUR AB - "The usual legal analysis divides obscenity into three phases," the author writes. "(1) the period prior to 1957; (2) the Roth Period, 1957-73; and the (3) Miller Period, from 1973 to the present. Although such a conceptualization is valid, it is too narrow to convey the nature of the conflict over pornography in the United States during the past forty years. The Supreme Court provided the overall legal framework, or at least set the out boundaries, but the battle over pornography has been inextricably intertwined with the changes in American society for the past half century. Supreme Court decisions have been the highly visible portion of the iceberg: the real struggle has been at policymaking and enforcement level in all levels of government." Brigman's essay attempts to "go beyond the standard legal framework and include the political factors that have impacted on the laws as written and as interpreted by the courts." (150) AU - Brigman, William E. DA - 1997 IS - 3 KW - Clinton, Bill Roth v. U. S. (1957) Clinton, William Jefferson Bush, George H. W. pornography censorship and ratings sexuality law values religion motion pictures freedom media effects children and media censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship photography and visual communication values, and pornography Roth case (1957) Miller v. California Meese Commission court cases Jenkins v. Georgia Paris Adult Theatre I v. Slaton Reagan, Ronald Reagan, Ronald, and pornography pornography, and Ronald Reagan Bush, George H. W. Bush, George H. W., and pornography Clinton, William Clinton, William, and pornography obscenity law, and obscenity Supreme Court, U. S., and pornography pornography, and U.S. Supreme Court politics, and pornography pornography, and politics children Clinton Administration photography politics Reagan administration censorship LB - 30560 PY - 1997 SP - 149-70 ST - Politics and the Pornography Wars T2 - Wide Angle TI - Politics and the Pornography Wars VL - 19 ID - 2813 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece covers virtual reality entertainment and media convergence. It discusses innovations in these areas. AU - Brittan, David DA - May/June 1992 IS - 4 KW - computers corporations corporations corporations television, and digital motion pictures digitization computers +motion pictures and popular culture +television multimedia media convergence digital communication motion pictures, and digital media television, and digital media +computers and the Internet computers, and media convergence computers, and digital media digital media digital media, and computers AT&T Bell Laboratories virtual reality motion pictures, and vitual reality video games video games, and virtual reality LB - 27350 PY - 1992 SP - 42 ST - Being There: The Promise of Multimedia Communications T2 - Technology Review TI - Being There: The Promise of Multimedia Communications VL - 95 ID - 1290 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the ways in which digital video cameras are changes movie making. This technology has the potential to bring a major transformation in motion pictures. AU - Broderick, Peter DA - Nov. 2000 IS - 5 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography projection motion pictures home entertainment Hollywood digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema digitization computers 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movie +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality Hollywood, and digital movies digital movies, and Hollywood media convergence Hollywood, and media convergence media convergence, and digitial movies LB - 26200 PY - 2000 SP - 61-63, 66-69 ST - Moviemaking in Transition: Digital video cameras and editing equipment are transforming the way movies and made -- and even which movies get made T2 - Scientific American TI - Moviemaking in Transition: Digital video cameras and editing equipment are transforming the way movies and made -- and even which movies get made VL - 283 ID - 1211 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the use of light weigh mobile cameras to film skiers going 40 mph in the movie "Caprice." It discusses the Arriflex, Model 11-B, equipped with a 50mm lens and a CinemaScope anamophis lens. It considers the how the camera offers anti-vibration features to make the picture steady. The author says that he used his arms and legs and shock absorbers. He notes that "individual location presented little or no problem." (633) AU - Brolin, Don DA - Sept., 1966 IS - 9 KW - Steadicam location shooting cinematography +motion pictures cameras motion pictures, and cameras cameras, and motion pictures cameras, hand-held mobile cameras mobile cameras movie, Caprice Caprice (1966) cinematography location shooting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and location shooting cameras, anti-vibration Steadicam, origins cameras LB - 29920 PY - 1966 SP - 630-33 ST - Mobile Camera Mount Aids in Filming of High-Speed Ski Sequences for 'Caprice' T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Mobile Camera Mount Aids in Filming of High-Speed Ski Sequences for 'Caprice' VL - 47 ID - 2747 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses Willard G. Bleyer and the founding of the School of Journalism at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. The context of Bleyer's efforts was the rapidly changing media environment. Electricity, photography and moving pictures (and newsreels), telephones, improvements in transportation, the growth of public relations and advertising, all posed challenges to good journalism. Bleyer believe journalists needed professional training and standards no less than did medical doctors and lawyers. AU - Bronstein, Carolyn AU - Vaughn, Stephen DA - June, 1998 KW - ethics advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations propaganda advertising public relations values news and journalism news news and journalism ethics context news and journalism context, and journalism motion pictures, and journalism +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures journalism, and new media news, and new media public relations, and journalism journalism, and public relations advertising, and journalism journalism, and advertising journalism, and profesionalization ethics, and journalism journalism, and ethics journalism advertising values LB - 15540 PY - 1998 SP - 1-36 ST - Willard G. Bleyer and the Relevance of Journalism Education T2 - Journalism and Mass Communication Monographs TI - Willard G. Bleyer and the Relevance of Journalism Education VL - 166 ID - 567 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the use of film for educational purposes. It considers the history of educational films and factors limiting their use. The author predicts that by 1950, schools will have 100,000 16mm projectors, an increase from the 35,000 sound projectors in use in 1947. AU - Brooker, Floyde E. DA - Nov., 1947 KW - censorship and ratings public relations advertising propaganda values motion pictures education community democracy community law audiences motion pictures and popular culture regulation, and motion pictures audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values media effects media effects, and motion pictures propaganda, and motion pictures education, and motion pictures education, and 16mm film 16mm film, and education motion pictures, and 16mm film motion pictures, and projectors motion pictures, and educaton democracy, and motion pictures community, and motion pictures 16mm regulation public relations advertising and public relations 16mm 16mm film LB - 3030 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality See filed under Annals.... (1947). PY - 1947 SP - 103-09 ST - Motion Pictures as an Aid to Education T2 - The Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science TI - Motion Pictures as an Aid to Education ID - 391 ER - TY - JOUR AB - U. S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Henry B. Brown told the graduating class at Yale Law School in 1895 that steam power electricity were among those invention “destined to revolutionize the world, and in comparison with which all the prior discoveries since the Christian era were of minor importance.” (642) It had already “profoundly affected the inner life of the people,” he said. (642) Brown, who would write the landmark Supreme Court decision Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) which justified separate equal facilities for blacks and whites, goes on in this address to discuss universal suffrage (which he linked to “municipal corruption” [650], corporate greed, trusts, “the tyranny of labor” (654, emphasis in original text), railroads. AU - Brown, Henry B. DA - Aug. 1895 KW - electricity transportation transportation, and steam power steam power, and transportation electricity, and transportation transportation, and electricity quotations quotations, and electricity electricity, and quotations electricity, and Christianity law law, and electricity electricity, and law ref, secondary ref, secular ref, social ref, literary ref, Forum steam power LB - 42310 PY - 1895 SP - 641-57 ST - The Twentieth Century T2 - Forum TI - The Twentieth Century ID - 4330 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article chronicles the career of Jack Valenti, from his Houston origins, to working with Lyndon Johnson in the White, to his position as head of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA). The author is essentially kind to Valenti; little of a critical nature comes through in this piece. She notes the role that Lew Wasserman had in Valenti's selection as MPAA head and in Valenti's subsequent work. This work makes some use (briefly) of Richard D. Heffner Oral History at Columbia University. Heffner was head of CARA. The author is listed as a staff writer for The New Yorker and is working on a book about the Music Corporation of America (MCA). AU - Bruck, Connie DA - Aug. 13, 2001 KW - music Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation corporations Johnson, Lyndon corporations Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) MCA presidents, and new media censorship and ratings Johnson administration law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Valenti, Jack motion pictures, and Jack Valenti Heffner, Richard, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and Richard Heffner CARA CARA, and Jack Valenti CARA, and Richard Heffner Valenti, Jack, and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew Music Corporation of America (MCA) Valenti, Jack, and Lyndon Johnson Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and public relations Heffner, Richard Music Corporation of America (MCA) MCA LB - 20990 PY - 2001 SP - 42-54, 56-59 ST - The Personal Touch T2 - The New Yorker TI - The Personal Touch ID - 900 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Brzezinski in 1968 wrote that "men living in the developed world will undergo during the next several decades a mutation potentially as basic as that experienced through the slow process of evolution from animal to human experience. The difference, however, is that the process will be telescoped in time -- and hence the shock effect of the change may be quite profound. Human conduct will become less spontaneous and less mysterious -- more predetermined and subject to deliberate 'programming.' Man will increasingly possess the capacity to determine the sex of his children, to affect through drugs the extent of their intelligence and to modify and control their personalities. The human brain will acquire expanded powers, with computers becoming as routine an extension of man's reasoning as automobiles have been of man's mobility. ... "...Cybernetics and automation will revolutionize working habits, with leisure becoming the practice and active work the exception -- and a privilege reserved for the most talented. The achievement-oriented society might give way to the amusement-focused society, with essentially spectator spectacles (mass sports, TV) providing an opiate for increasingly purposeless masses." AU - Brzezinski, Zbigniew DA - Jan. 1968 IS - 1 KW - computers USSR nationalism values preservation communication revolution history, and new media communication revolution, and second industrial revolution war non-USA history home, and new media home values +television +aeronautics and space communication home, and information technology labor information technology +nationalism and communication global communication values, and information technology postindustrial society Bell, Daniel change, acceleration of labor automation computers satellites television, and satellites education, and information technology information technology, and home cybernetics labor, and automation computers, and Department of Defense America, and global revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution Soviet Union Third World change +computers and the Internet computers education leisure, and new media history, break with computers, and human nature +artificial intelligence and biotechnology labor labor, and new media values, and new media satellites, and nationalism nationalism, and satellites military communication leisure LB - 2070 PY - 1968 SP - 16-26 ST - America in the Technetronic Age T2 - Encounter TI - America in the Technetronic Age VL - 30 ID - 1603 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This work discusses the growing popularity of erotica and pornography in mass media, this in the context of the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. AU - Buckley, Tom DA - Feb. 8, 1970 KW - sexuality motion pictures mass media media effects crime pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and supporters pornography, and crime crime, and pornography LB - 22320 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1970 SP - 32-46 ST - Oh! Copenhagen T2 - New York Times Magazine TI - Oh! Copenhagen ID - 960 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author recounts early indications that the Soviet Union was planning to launch a satellite in 1957. He presents new material from the Soviet government's publication for radio amateurs, Radio. He describes instructions given to Soviet radio amateurs for tracking satellites. He then considers the fact that western radio amateurs, as well as intelligence agencies and scientists were unsuccessful in picking up clues about Soviet plans. "To complete the picture, contemporary assessments of the scientific values of amateur radio observations of the early satellites are surveyed. The article concludes by discussing the surprise aspect of the first sputniks in the light of the fresh information presented, and by noting some still unanswered historical questions." AU - Bulkeley, Rip DA - 1999 IS - 1 KW - USSR nationalism Soviet Union, and space Soviet Union, and satellites satellites non-USA +radio +aeronautics and space communication Sputnik Soviet Union Soviet Union, and amateur radio Soviet Union, and Sputnik Sputnik, and amateur radio radio, amateur radio, and satellites satellites, and amateur radio +nationalism and communication nationalism, and amateur radio nationalism, and satellites LB - 3130 PY - 1999 SP - 67-102 ST - Harbingers of Sputnik: The Amateur Radio Preparations in the Soviet Union T2 - History and Technology TI - Harbingers of Sputnik: The Amateur Radio Preparations in the Soviet Union VL - 16 ID - 401 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The authors argue that despite the fact that there are hundreds of studies showing a correlation between violence in mass media and damaging social effects, and that there is a consensus among researchers on this issue, the press has reported a weak correlation and lack of consensus among researchers. The authors write: "Fifty years of news coverage on the link between media violence and aggression have left the U. S. public confused. Typical news articles pit researchers and child advocates against entertainment industry representatives, frequently giving equal weight to the arguments of both sides. A comparison of news reports and scientific knowledge about media effects reveals a disturbing discontinuity: Over the past 50 years, the average news report has changed from claims of a weak link to a moderate link and then back to a weak link between media violence and aggression. However, since 1975, the scientific confidence and statistical magnitude of this link have been clearly positive and have consistently increased over time. Reasons for this discontinuity between news reports and the actual state of scientific knowledge include the vested interests of the news, a misapplied fairness doctrine in news reporting, and the failure of the research community to effectively argue the scientific case." AU - Bushman, Brad J. AU - Anderson, Craig A. DA - June/July 2001 IS - 6/7 KW - media research syntheses democracy and media democracy press motion pictures meta-analyses media effects violence (see also: media violence) violence media effects violence media violence news and journalism censorship and ratings children news and journalism +television television, and violence violence, and television social science research social science research, and violence violence, and social science research violence, and pornography pornography, and violence media effects media effects, and TV violence media violence, meta-analyses social science research, and literature review social science research, and meta-analysis violence, and children children, and media children, and media violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures social science research, and press coverage press coverage, and social science research violence, and press coverage journalism, and media violence critics journalism pornography LB - 28130 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 2001 SP - 477-89 ST - Media Violence and the American Public: Scientific Facts Versus Media Misinformation T2 - American Psychologist TI - Media Violence and the American Public: Scientific Facts Versus Media Misinformation VL - 56 ID - 1362 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The authors discuss what research has shown about the likely effects of large amounts of violence and sex in mass media and how this knowledge can be applied to rating entertainment. AU - Bushman, Brad J. AU - Cantor, Joanne DA - 2003 KW - media research computers classification self-regulation CARA syntheses sexuality television, and V-chip sex censorship and ratings +sound recording music motion pictures meta-analyses media effects violence (see also: media violence) violence media effects violence media violence Internet video games censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +television television, and violence violence, and television social science research social science research, and violence violence, and social science research violence, and pornography pornography, and violence media effects media effects, and TV violence media violence, meta-analyses social science research, and literature review social science research, and meta-analysis violence, and children children, and media children, and media violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures +computers and the Internet Internet, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and Internet video games, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and video games rating system (U. S.), and music music, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and television television, and rating system (U. S.) cable TV, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and cable TV V-chip V-chip, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and V-chip +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and children children, and rating system (U. S.) parents, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and parents violence, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and violence sex, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and violence cable pornography LB - 28160 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 2003 ST - Media Ratings for Violence and Sex: Implications for Policy Makers and Parents [in press] T2 - American Psychologist TI - Media Ratings for Violence and Sex: Implications for Policy Makers and Parents [in press] ID - 1365 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The authors discuss what research has shown about the likely effects of large amounts of violence and sex in mass media and how this knowledge can be applied to rating entertainment. AU - Bushman, B. J. AU - Cantor, J. DA - 2003 KW - media research computers +television television, and violence violence, and television social science research social science research, and violence violence, and social science research violence, and pornography pornography, and violence media effects media effects, and TV violence media violence, meta-analyses social science research, and literature review social science research, and meta-analysis violence, and children children, and media children, and media violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures +computers and the Internet Internet, and ratings rating systems, and Internet video games, and ratings rating systems, and video games rating systems, and music music, and ratings rating systems, and television television, and rating system (U.S.) cable TV, and ratings rating systems, and cable TV V-chip V-chip, and ratings rating systems, and V-chip +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and rating system rating systems, and motion pictures rating systems, and children children, and ratings parents, and rating system (U.S.) rating systems, and parents violence, and ratings rating systems, and violence sex, and ratings rating systems, and violence Cantor, Joanne cable children Internet media violence motion pictures music pornography sex self-regulation video games violence sexuality LB - 28160 PY - 2003 SP - 130-41 ST - Media Ratings for Violence and Sex: Implications for Policy Makers and Parents [in press] T2 - American Psychologist TI - Media Ratings for Violence and Sex: Implications for Policy Makers and Parents [in press] VL - 58 ID - 2818 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article examines the origins of electrical engineering in France and its connection to the telegraph. "The key figure in the development of French electrical engineering institutions prior to the 1890s was the State Telegraph Administration," Butrica writes. AU - Butrica, Andrew J. DA - 1987 IS - 4 KW - nationalism labor engineering electric lighting electrical engineering non-USA office office, and new media office France France, and telegraph +telegraph telegraph, and electrical engineering electrical engineering, and telegraph telegraph, and France +electricity electricity, and France electrical engineering, and France +nationalism and communication nationalism, and telegraph France, and infrastructure infrastructure, and France infrastructure LB - 2440 PY - 1987 SP - 365-80 ST - Telegraphy and the Genesis of Electrical Engineering Institutions in France, 1845-1895" T2 - History and Technology TI - Telegraphy and the Genesis of Electrical Engineering Institutions in France, 1845-1895" VL - 3 ID - 332 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article provides a history of newspaper illustration beginning with the Illustrated London News in 1842. In that year the paper published the first "candid" picture of Queen Victoria. Some critics argued that the picture invaded the Queen's privacy, was unpatriotic, and maybe even illegal. Butterfield quotes William Wordsworth's sonnet "Illustrated Books and Newspapers," and the says that the pictorial press probably reached a peak during the 1880s and 1890s. Butterfield discusses James Gordon Bennett's New York Herald and the illustrations it used for Andrew Jackson's funeral. The article also covers other early illustrated publications including Gleason's..., Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, the Daily Graphic, Police Gazette, and the use of cartoons. There is also brief discussion of illustrations in Joseph Pulitzer's New York World, and William Randolph Hearst's New York Journal. The author says little about the role of photography, jumping the from the late nineteenth century to the early 1960s. AU - Butterfield, Roger DA - June 1962 IS - 4 KW - wood engraving journalism words vs. images magazines, and photography images vs. words magazines photography ref, secondary news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines illustrations, and newspapers illustrations, and magazines magazines, and illustrations newspapers, and illustration non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and illustrated journalism non-USA, and illustrated journalism images vs. print advertising and public relations advertising, and newspapers newspapers, and advertising magazines, and advertising advertising, and magazines Great Britain, and advertising advertising, and Great Britain photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving quotations quotations, and William Wordsworth ref, secondary privacy, and photography photography, and privacy privacy privacy, and news news, and privacy journalism, and privacy journalism, pictorial pictorial journalism Bennett, James Gordon, and illutration illustrations, and James Gordon Bennett advertising Bennett, James Gordon illustrations news LB - 41540 PY - 1962 SP - 9 pages ST - Pictures in the Papers T2 - American Heritage Magazine TI - Pictures in the Papers VL - 13 ID - 4253 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author of this article reveals an anti-urban, anti-modern bias and an admiration for Anthony Comstock. Boxton discusses a number of social evils plaguing society including "Sins committed in the name of pleasure, with an accompaniment of music and wine, and under the shadow of night where the trail of the serpent can easily be covered, attract little attention to their awful character and fearful results. It is the black plague of modern civilization. Yet it flourishes in all our great cities unmolested, and is permitted to grow luxuriant as the passion of many may require." (39) The author goes on to say that "No form of sin writes its language so quickly and indelibly as sensuality." (40) Buxton argues that "the family is the integral part of the state," and that "Without the family there may be a horde but there can be no nation." (40) Social evil, especially prostitution, "discourages home-making by seducing men and women to sensual indulgence which disqualifies the poor dupes from the holy estate of matrimony." (40) The house of prostitution is especially deplorable but "Large sections of nearly all our great cities are given over to this vice. The loathsome and degrading French forms of the evil have lately been adopted. These houses, the moral ulcers of municipal life, are the objective points of attack." (40) Buxton discusses various approaches to social evil -- a policy of "tacit consent" (40), methods of regulation, a license system, methods of suppression (40-43), and then turn to considering the "causes of the social evil." (43) Among the causes are (a) "violation of the hygienic laws (43-44); (b) "Artificial and stimulated life" (44); (c) "Impure literature" (44-45); and (d) "obscene pictures." (45) As for the artificial and stimulated life, much of it is tied to urban living and "the stifling dance house, the crowded theater, the sensuous opera, the beer-garden, saloon, and bawdy house received the inmates. Two articles of commerce are found in or near all these places -- liquor and lust. When passion is inflamed by the former and the judgment dethroned, modesty is stabbed and virtue destroyed." (44) As for impure literature, Buxton reveals himself to be an admirer of Anthony Comstock (44-45). Obscene pictures were apparently at every turn. "In thousands of places in all our large cities, displayed in shop-windows and saloons, may be seen illustrations of vile character. At all hours of the day and evening groups of men and boys are found eagerly feasting their eyes upon this savory dish of wickedness." (45) Theater advertising -- billboards in color -- were a particular problem. "The display of theatrical bill-boards is no less an evil. The illustrations are nearly of life size, and with the addition of flesh tone make the appeal to the baser nature still stronger. [emphasis added] The advertising is so public that he, who would escape the debauch of imagination cannot. If the picture of the stage is such, what must the reality be upon which young men and women gaze, without blushing! Remove all obscenity in language and action from the stage, put actors in clothing suitable to a family parlor, the theater could not live a year. Exposure of the body in immodest attire; suggestions of the vile in language, look, and act; gross familiarity of the sexes upon the stage; these are the chief attractions of the modern theater. In other words, people spend money for the very purpose of inflaming passion!" (45) The author links the house of prostitution to the theater and other urban institutions. "So long as the shop-windows, bill-boards, and the stage continue to educate the beastly part of human nature, the house of ill-fame will be an essential feature of modern civilization. Inflammable material cannot be thrown upon a fire without flames appearing in some quarter." (46) [emphasis added] All these things serve to lead young boys astray. Buxton calls for "organized virtue" (47) and see the church, the ballot-box and the school-house as lines of defense from social evil. "Excessive individualism prevails among good people. They hold themselves aloof from united action." (47) The author says there is a need for "a powerful national organization for the suppression of vice, with branches in every city and town...." (47) As for women, "the abandoned, lewd woman does more than destroy life, she murders character," Buxton argues. (49) Lust and liquor have become too popular. "Government should make it easy to do right and hard to do wrong. We have faith in human nature, sinful though it be. Give the people a chance to be virtuous and they will be virtuous," the author concludes. (50) AU - Buxton, Edwin O. DA - July 1893 KW - theater entertainment anti-theatrical prejudice censorship critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater ref, secondary religion religion, and theater theater, and religion women women, and theater theater, and women values values, and acting values, and women women, and values censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship actors acting actors, and status of theater, and bias against actors, and bias against acting, and women women, and acting entertainment, and immorality morality, and theater anti-theatrical bias dancing, and women women, and dancing quotations quotations, and immoral theater quotations, color posters newspapers Sunday newspapers, and theater advertising and public relations advertising, and values advertising, and theater advertising, and morality theater, and advertising modernity, and theater modernity theater, and modernity theater, and anti-urbanism posters, and color color, and theater posters color color, and immorality quotations, and moral ulcers Comstock, Anthony censorship, and Anthony Comstock children and media children, and immoral pictures children, and theater billboards media effects, and color billboards modernity, and immorality modernity, and theater modernity, and urban life censorship ref, secondary ref, secular ref, political ref, American Journal of Politics ref, reform advertising children media effects morality news news and journalism posters LB - 38760 PY - 1893 SP - 39-50 ST - The Social Evil and Its Remedy T2 - American Journal of Politics TI - The Social Evil and Its Remedy VL - 3 ID - 3975 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Catholics, it should be said, adopted a more complex set of attitudes about movies and American culture after World War II. Whereas during the 1920s and 1930s they often were “almost exasperatingly certain about the rightness of their view of the world,” by the late 1950s, when it came to motion pictures and other forms of culture, Catholics assumed an attitude of “confident ambivalence” and believed the outlook was fitting for the world they lived in. This change in attitude reflected, in part, Cold War beliefs in the United States that associated censorship with Soviet communism and totalitarianism, both of which Catholics strongly opposed. As if to keep pace with changing attitudes among Catholics, the Legion of Decency became more flexible. It altered its classification scheme in 1957 to expand the films that adolescents could attend, and for the first time recommended films for Catholics. It soon abandoned its pledge requirements and changed its name to the National Catholic Office of Motion Pictures. From the article's Abstract: "The writers examines the roles and strategies of the Legion of Decency and the National Organization for Decent Literature (NODL), two American Catholic organizations involved with the control of popular media. She maintains that although they were separate organizations, they both exemplify the transition in mid-century American Catholicism from 'innocence' to 'maturity,' from defensive complacency to confident ambivalence. Their strategies, she contends, were part of the means by which the Catholic community defined itself economically, socio-politically, religiously, and theologically. The Legion and the NODL ... were frequently motivated by their attempts to reconcile the traditional aspects of such traditions as Neo-Thomism and Mystical Body theology with the American traditions of empirical investigation and individual discernment. The organizations ... ultimately worked in some ways to reinforce dominant cultural values and in others to pose persistent challenges to those values." AU - Cadegan, Una M. DA - April, 2001 IS - 2 KW - values Christianity Christianity papal encyclicals Pope Pius XI Pope Pius XII Pope Pius XII, and 1957 encyclical Miranda Prorsus, and Pope Pius II (1957) Catholic Church, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholic Church motion pictures, and censorship Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity television motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures television, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and television radio radio, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and radio home, and television critics values, and television television, and values radio, and values home, and radio values, and radio motion pictures, and values values, and motion pictures Legion of Decency National Organization for Decent Literature Catholic Church censorship and ratings home censorship LB - 32090 PY - 2001 SP - 252-82 ST - Guardians of Democracy or Cultural Storm Troopers? American Catholics and the Control of Popular Media, 1934-1966 T2 - Catholic Historical Review TI - Guardians of Democracy or Cultural Storm Troopers? American Catholics and the Control of Popular Media, 1934-1966 VL - 87 ID - 2892 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Wexler was the cinematographer for such movies as Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966), for which he won an Academy Award, and The Thomas Crowne Affair (1968). He was a veteran of cinema-verite and made civil rights and anti-Vietnam documentaries. One of his from Hollywood films was Stakeout on Dope Street (Warner Bros., 1958), and he also worked with filmmaker Roger Corman on the movie about racism, The Intruder (1962). AU - Callenbach, Ernest and Albert Johnson DA - Spring, 1968 IS - 3 KW - motion pictures cameras cinematography Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Thomas Crown Affair LB - 32620 PY - 1968 SP - 10 ST - The Danger Is Seduction: An Interview with Haskell Wexler T2 - Film Quarterly TI - The Danger Is Seduction: An Interview with Haskell Wexler VL - 21 ID - 2919 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article provides an overview of self regulation in radio, television, and advertising. For example, the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) adopted a Television Code in 1951. It was based on the movie industry’s Production Code and the Radio Code that had emerged during the New Deal. The TV Code had its greatest impact on programs, movies broadcast on television, and commercials during the 1950s, 1960s, and into the 1970s. It relied heavily on complaints from viewers, although it never had total participation by all members of the TV industry. Overall, its enforcement was ineffectual. The punishment for violating the Code was that the offending station could not display the NAB’s “seal of good practice.” Few, if any, stations were denied the seal and only the rare viewer would have noticed even if they had been. After deregulation, the NAB discarded the Television Code in 1983. This article also discusses such topics as cigarette advertising and advertising for children. From the article's Abstract: "Self-regulation has been portrayed as superior to government regulation for addressing problems of new media such as digital television and the Internet. The literature on self-regulation is reviewed to define what is meant by the term, to identify the purported advantages and disadvantages of self-regulation, and to identify the conditions needed for its success. The effectiveness of self-regulation is then analyzed by examining instances were self-regulation has been employed in connection with the media. It is concluded that self-regulation rarely lives up to the claims made for it, although in some cases, it has been useful as a supplement to government regulation. Five factors are identified that may account for the success or failure of self-regulation: 1. industry incentives, 2. the ability of government to regulate, 3. the uses of measurable standards, 4. public participation, and 5. industry structure." AU - Campbell, Angela J. DA - May, 1999 IS - 3 KW - computers Federal Communications Commission (FCC) television motion pictures law censorship and ratings television, and censorship censorship, and television censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship FCC FCC, and television television, and FCC television code censorship, and television code television, and TV code radio censorship, and radio radio, and censorship FCC, and radio radio, and FCC radio, and radio code censorship, and radio code self regulation censorship, and self regulation rating systems, and self regulation advertising and public relations self regulation, and advertising advertising, and self regulation digitization digitization, and self regulation self regulation, and digitization computers and the Internet Internet, and self regulation self regulation, and Internet censorship, and Internet Internet, and censorship advertising digital media regulation Internet censorship LB - 31990 PY - 1999 SP - 711-72 ST - Self-Regulation and the Media T2 - Federal Communications Law Journal TI - Self-Regulation and the Media VL - 51 ID - 2883 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article deals with Jack Valenti, the new president of the Motion Picture Association of America. Canby commented that there remained “about Valenti-in-action a good deal of the Houston huckster, tempered by the Valenti-the-small-town-boy-who-made-good-and-enjoys-every-minute-of-it.” The article gives a good deal of background on Valenti and the Motion Picture Association of America. It notes that Valenti, unlike Louis Nizer who had campaigned to be MPAA president, did not have a past connection to the Production Code. Valenti was much more willing to move the industry in new directions. AU - Canby, Vincent DA - April 23, 1967 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA self-regulation National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and MPAA Production Code, and decline of Production Code, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and Production Code Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 19600 PY - 1967 SP - 38-39, 42, 44, 47, 49, 52, 57, 59 ST - Czar of the Movie Business T2 - New York Times Magazine TI - Czar of the Movie Business ID - 794 ER - TY - JOUR AB - As restrictions were relaxed on American productions, foreign films that showed in the United States -- and American -financed) movies that had been filmed in foreign locations -- challenged the Production Code. [note that those after 1966 came after the Code was dead.] Some of them scored “handsome boxoffice returns,” film critic Vincent Canby notes in this article. AU - Canby, Vincent DA - May 12, 1965 KW - self-regulation Hollywood motion pictures censorship and ratings foreign films sexuality motion pictures, and foreign films foreign films, and sexuality Hollywood, and subsidiaries Production Code, and foreign films censorship, breakdown of Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) censorship LB - 31610 PY - 1965 SP - 1 ST - Talent Appeal Big with Yanks T2 - Variety TI - Talent Appeal Big with Yanks VL - 238 ID - 2850 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is by one of the leading scholars of media effects, especially the effects of motion picture and television violence and horror. Here she discusses how ratings systems can be made more effective by using research on media effects. AU - Cantor, Joanne DA - May, 1998 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation CARA television, and V-chip Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings motion pictures media effects media violence violence censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification media effects violence, and media violence, and children children, and media children, and media violence violence, and research +television television, and media effects media effects, and television television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and violence rating system (U. S.), and controversies rating system (U. S.), and television television, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and research V-chip Valenti, Jack, and television rating system (U. S.) television rating system (U. S.), and Jack Valenti LB - 27130 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1998 SP - 54-69 ST - Ratings for Program Content: The Role of Research Findings T2 - Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science TI - Ratings for Program Content: The Role of Research Findings VL - 557 ID - 1270 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Cantor, one of the leading researchers on the effects of violence and fear in mass entertainment, discusses the influence of horror movies, especially on children. She delivered this paper at the International Communication Association meeting, 2003. AU - Cantor, Joanne DA - 2004 IS - 2 KW - media research fear +television television, and violence violence, and television social science research social science research, and violence violence, and social science research violence, and pornography pornography, and violence media effects media effects, and TV violence media violence, meta-analyses social science research, and literature review social science research, and meta-analysis violence, and children children, and media children, and media violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures children, and fear fear, and media effects media effects, and fear social science research, and fear fear, and social science research fear, and Poltergeist fear, and Jaws Poltergeist, and children Jaws (the movie), and children fear, and children motion pictures, and fear television, and fear fear, and television fear, and motion pictures children media violence motion pictures pornography violence Poltergeist LB - 28170 PY - 2004 SP - 283-304 ST - "I'll Never Have a Clown in My House! -- Frightening Movies and Enduring Emotional Memory T2 - Poetics Today: International Journal for Theory and Analysis of Literature and Communication TI - "I'll Never Have a Clown in My House! -- Frightening Movies and Enduring Emotional Memory VL - 25 ID - 2767 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Although the title suggests this piece will deal mostly with the Internet, the best part of it deals with the development of a national communications network that emerged during the 1890s, if not before. “Roughly a hundred years ago the modern era of communication begins. A precise date is unnecessary but the decade of the 1890s can serve as the approximate moment when, in the United States, space and time were enclosed, when it became possible to think of the nation as everywhere running on the same clock of awareness and existing within a homogeneous national space. This ‘communications revolution,’ presaged by the growth of the telegraph and the penny press in the decades before and after the Civil War, decisively began in the 1890s with the birth of the national magazine; the development of the modern mass, urban newspapers; the domination of news dissemination by the wire services; and the creation of early, primitive forms of electronic communication. Together these instruments constituted the infrastructure of a nationwide system of signaling tied to a largely local network of telephony. By the 1920s, the dominant tendencies of this revolution were clear, although they continued to work themselves out even into the 1970s.” “Since the late 1970s, we have been undergoing a similar communications revolution but one whose scalar dynamic is at the global rather than the national level, a revolution producing in the words of the former chairman of Citicorp, ‘the twilight of sovereignty.’...” “The precise dating of the shift from a modern to a postmodern organization of communication can be roughly set in the 1970s when the combination of cable and satellite undercut the network system on which the national hegemony of communication was built. The Internet represents a further development in the integration of this complex of technologies that have withdrawn the coordinates of time and space and with it categories of human identity and structure of social relations.” AU - Carey, James W. DA - Spring, 1998 IS - 1 KW - computers nationalism space (spatial) and communication aeronautics and space communication time and timekeeping time labor communication revolution news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers journalism communication revolution, and second industrial revolution news and journalism non-USA office office, and new media office geography news general studies +nationalism and communication +aeronautics and space (spatial) communication communication revolution space (spatial) time +telegraph +telephones magazines newspapers wire services electronic media infrastructure television, and cable satellites Internet cable television, and cable +computers and the Internet +television +books, periodicals, newspapers global communication second industrial revolution twilight of authority critics cable postmodernism satellites magazines, national nationalism, and cable nationalism, and satellites LB - 210 PY - 1998 SP - 28-34 ST - The Internet and the End of the National Communication System: Uncertain Predictions of an Uncertain Future T2 - Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly TI - The Internet and the End of the National Communication System: Uncertain Predictions of an Uncertain Future VL - 75 ID - 1417 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Carroll, Noël DA - Summer 1988 IS - 4 KW - psychology Münsterberg, Hugo Munsterberg, Hugo history fame ethics children celebrity art Marked ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography photography, and new art form photography, and psychology Münsterberg, Hugo photography, and Hugo Münsterberg Munsterberg, Hugo, and photography photography, and art art, and photography values ethics photography, and values photography, and ethics ethics, and photography values, and photography photography, as magic modernity photography, and modernity modernity, and photography new way of seeing new way of seeing, and photography photography, and time and space quotations quotations, and modernity critics critics, and modernity Munsterberg, Hugo motion pictures motion pictures, and Hugo Münsterberg Münsterberg, Hugo, and motion pictures new way of seeing, and motion pictures motion pictures, and new way of seeing actors acting photography photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and special effects acting, and facial expression acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting media effects motion pictures, and media effects media effects, and motion pictures history and new media history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history pictorial journalism news, and pictorial journalism acting, and close-ups cameras, and close-ups motion pictures, and stereoscope motion pictures, and 3-D 3-D, and motion pictures quotations quotations, and psychological effect of movies audiences media effects, and audiences audiences, and media effects motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures children and media media effects, and children children, and media effects motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures censorship and ratings motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures Münsterberg, Hugo, and censorship censorship, and Hugo Münsterberg media literacy media literacy, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media literacy media literacy, and Hugo Münsterberg Münsterberg, Hugo, and media literary motion pictures, and psychology psychology, and motion pictures Münsterberg, Hugo, and psychology Münsterberg, Hugo, and art motion pictures, as art 3-D censorship news LB - 40880 PY - 1988 SP - 489-99 ST - Film/Mind Analogies: The Case of Hugo Munsterberg T2 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism TI - Film/Mind Analogies: The Case of Hugo Munsterberg VL - 46 ID - 4187 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Ceruzzi, Paul E. DA - July 2005 IS - 3 KW - technology computers corporations corporations computers and the Internet integrated circuits transistors Moore's Law technological determinism Intel Corp. Moore, Gordon technology and society LB - 33570 PY - 2005 SP - 584-93 ST - Moore's Law and Technological Determinism: Reflections on the History of Technology T2 - Technology and Culture TI - Moore's Law and Technological Determinism: Reflections on the History of Technology VL - 46 ID - 2996 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Chamberlain is interested in the problems of preserving film and television, sources from which future history can, and should be, written. He writes: "I want to examine the physical record of the process of innovation, and the disposition of those records generated both today and in the future after they cease to have any direct and profitable use." (227) He notes, also, that a March, 1981 editorial in IEEE's Spectrum, pointed to this issue as a national problem. AU - Chamberlain, Stephen C. DA - March 1982 IS - 3 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) magnetic recording preservation history and new media preservation motion pictures archives materials materials VCRs magnetic tape cinema motion pictures celluloid film +television +motion pictures and popular culture television, and history history, and television film, and history history, and film history, and nonprint media historical preservation preservation, and television preservation, and film +information storage information storage, and film information storage, and television VCRs, and preservation +sound recording preservation, and sound recording history, and sound recording history, and new media history LB - 2370 N1 - See filed under SMPTE Journal (1982) (1985). PY - 1982 SP - 227- ST - Preserving the Present for the Future T2 - SMPTE Journal TI - Preserving the Present for the Future VL - 91 ID - 325 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This is an informative piece on Will H. Hays and the motion picture Production Code. Champlin was a film critic for the Los Angeles Times. AU - Champlin, Charles DA - Oct. 1980 IS - 1 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation self-regulation Production Code Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings values Production Code (motion pictures) values religion law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship Hays, Will H. Breen, Joseph Production Code (motion pictures) CARA CARA, and Production Code (motion pictures) Cruising Heffner, Richard +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures censorship, and PCA Valenti, Jack LB - 20950 PY - 1980 SP - 42-46, 86, 88 ST - What Will H. Hays Begat: Fifty Years since His Code Rule Hollywood T2 - American Film TI - What Will H. Hays Begat: Fifty Years since His Code Rule Hollywood VL - 6 ID - 896 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article says that during the past 19 years, the movies have become the fifth largest industry in American and that "the motion-picture play -- or the photoplay, as it is technically called, -- far more than the stage play, has become the amusement of the nation." (17) The author goes on to say that "Indeed, the photoplay offers to the writer his widest means of artistic expression." And, "Better would it be to exclaim: 'I care not who makes the laws of the nation, if I may write its 'movie' plays!'" (17) Chatfield-Taylor dismisses critics who consider the movies to be only "vulgar clap-trap" for they "know little of the possibilities of this new form of theatrical art. Scarcely eighteen years old, it is only within the last five years -- it might almost be said within the past year, -- that the photoplay has been developed into the multiple reel play, or the feature film, so-called." (18) He then considers the differences in write a stage play and a photoplay. The requirements of movie acting differ from those on stage. "The slow, studying actor, whom the stage manager can by patience whip into a part, or the actor who depends upon reading rather than acting for his effects, will fail ignominiously before the camera," the author says. The "actor must possess a face which in the technical language of the 'movie' studio 'registers' effectively; more than one actor who succeeded because of his good looks on the regular stage has failed in the 'movies' because his features do not photograph well." (20) AU - Chatfield-Taylor, H. C. DA - June 24, 1915 IS - 697 KW - theater stage fame fame celebrity actors acting motion pictures, and photoplays ref, secondary celebrity culture fame personality motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars audiences media effects motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and acting acting, and facial expression motion pictures, and not facing camera acting, and not facing camera acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting ref, Dial ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary (conservative) motion pictures LB - 37620 PY - 1915 SP - 17-20 ST - The 'Movies' Old and New T2 - The Dial TI - The 'Movies' Old and New VL - 59 ID - 3861 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Chen, Jo-Shui DA - Oct. 1998 KW - computers Asia history and new media preservation archives computers non-USA +computers and the Internet China computers, and libraries preservation, and electronic media computers, and libraries (China) +information storage information storage, and China history LB - 680 PY - 1998 SP - 53-57 ST - A Tentative Discussion of the Application of the Electronic Database of Classical Chinese Texts in the Institute of History and Philology T2 - Disquisitions of the Past & Present (Ku chin lun heng) TI - A Tentative Discussion of the Application of the Electronic Database of Classical Chinese Texts in the Institute of History and Philology VL - 1 ID - 156 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses how cameramen were filming the Vietnam War. "Today, the state of the art is nearly as sophisticated as the supersonic airborne weapons systems it serves. To supply 'instant intelligence' on Vietnam missions, for example, color motion pictures shot by Air Force fighter-bombers are being processed in the field." (658) It was possible to produce a print within 45 minutes after a plane returned from a mission. Usually, though, film shot in the morning was available for viewing by commanding officers that evening, and within 24 hours, individual combat pilots could view film shot on their last mission. This article mentions the "Helivision," "a gyro-mounted camera which eliminates the effect of aircraft vibration during photography." (660) It also discusses the use of a 70mm camera with a rotating prism, used intially for mapping. Formerly film from the 70mm camera took 20 to 30 days to process and was virtually useless for combat situations. Now, a positive print could be made only 40 minutes after technicians in the field get the raw film. AU - Cherry, Dick DA - Sept., 1968 IS - 9 KW - lenses, zoom Steadicam news and journalism television cameras cameras, portable cameras, portable motion pictures, and portable cameras war war, and portable cameras news and journalism news, and portable cameras cameras, and zoom lenses zoom lenses cinematography military communication cameras, and anti-vibration Steadicam, origins 70mm 70mm, and combat film Helivision cameras, and Helivision news, and war film motion pictures news lenses LB - 30270 PY - 1968 SP - 658-61, 706-07 ST - The Vietnam War as Filmed by U. S. Air Force Cameramen T2 - American Cinematograher TI - The Vietnam War as Filmed by U. S. Air Force Cameramen VL - 49 ID - 2782 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article examines the "technological differences between each of the major widescreen processes that were instituted by the Hollywood film industry between 1952 and 1962." AU - Chisholm, Brad DA - Summer 1985 IS - 21 KW - widescreen motion pictures materials 70mm +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and widescreen widescreen, and motion pictures 70mm, and widescreen widescreen, and 70mm materials LB - 2540 N1 - See filed under Velvet Light Trap. PY - 1985 SP - 67-74 ST - Widescreen Technologies T2 - Velvet Light Trap TI - Widescreen Technologies ID - 342 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Chiu, Chiung-You DA - Sept. 2000 KW - computers Asia print print culture archives non-USA China +computers and the Internet print v. electronic (China) +information storage information storage, and libraries (China) LB - 670 PY - 2000 SP - 6-17 ST - History and Future of Electronic Publishing T2 - Information Management for Buddhist Libraries (Fochiao tu shu kuan kuan hsun) TI - History and Future of Electronic Publishing VL - 23 ID - 155 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Chu, Li DA - Sept. 1992 KW - nationalism Third World non-USA nationalism and communication Third World, and new media national development, and communication LB - 700 PY - 1992 SP - 111-29 ST - Re-Examination of the Model of 'Communication and National Development' T2 - Mass Communication Research (Hsinwenhsue yanjiu) TI - Re-Examination of the Model of 'Communication and National Development' VL - 46 ID - 158 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author offers a dour assessment of both the theater and the press. She begins by talking about a mother who took her daughters to the theater but they had to leave "blushing all over." Then there was another mother who took her 15-year-old boy to the theater. "The play in question was a dream of color and of art, but its voluptuous beauty could not cover its sensuality." Another lady is quoted as saying that "'it could not fail to leave foul marks upon the soul of every one who listened to it.'" Clark then takes on French literature and the modern press. First, "it must be remembered that the whole literature of the French is tainted with moral impurity.... To the wholesome Saxon mind, the very idea of the French drama is repugnant. It revels in a heated and noxious atmosphere which sickens our honest nostrils." But French culture has also infected other parts of modern life. "There are lectures and readings and concerts, tho the echoes of French prurience have largely invaded our music also. Amusement, if it cannot be found without debilitating and debasing us, had better be dispensed with," Clark advises. Then there was the press, the "large daily journals." "These papers stand constantly on the very verge of obscenity, and print every day, in blunt English, tales of shame and crime, elaborated to nauseous detail; tales which, from every possible motive, should be untold, or mentioned only in the coldest and briefest manner. The sole effect of these sensational narratives is to corrupt society. Creatures whom decent people never wish to know or to see, are pictured, with their homes, their relatives, their very cats and dogs, in these widely read pages. Their silly or wicked deeds are recited at length under enormous 'scare-type' heads. Unspeakable men and women, most of them fit only for our prisons and reformatories, are thus often made the topics of town talk." Clark says that the "four or five 'great journals'" in American cities "as now conducted" are "powerful engines, deliberately planned to inflame the lowest curiosity and the basest passions of men, in order that the owners themselves may become rich.... But nothing which these scavengers of vice could do can atone for their salacity, and for the manner in which they search out and unfold demoralizing tales of crime...." AU - Clark, Kate Upson DA - Dec. 10, 1896 IS - 2506 KW - journalism children anti-theatrical bias censorship actors acting ref, secondary critics critics, religious motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings modernity modernity, and theater theater, and modernity sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures actors, and bias against actors, and status of theater, and bias against anti-theatrical prejudice quotations critics, and acting critics, and actors critics, and theater quotations, and actors audiences audiences, and immoral plays media effects audiences, and media effects media effects, and audiences theater, and class children and media theater, and children children, and theater critics critics, and French literature theater, and French literature values values, and French literature immorality, and French literature modernity, and French literature news and journalism critics, and newpapers quotations, and newspapers journalism, and critics critics, and journalism privacy privacy, and newspapers newspapers, and privacy values, and newspapers quotations, and immoral French literature quotations, and immoral theater women women, and theater color color, and sensuality sensuality, and color color, and immoral theater modernity, and French literature obscenity, and newspapers ref, Independent ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, reform immorality obscenity theater LB - 39280 PY - 1896 SP - 7 ST - A Tainted Drama and Press T2 - The Independent TI - A Tainted Drama and Press VL - 48 ID - 4027 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Clark examines the problem for union public image and suggests approaches, activities and materials that can be used in labor education to address labor’s image at the local level. For example, for addressing media in shaping labor’s image, Clark recommends use of a slide/tape program entitled Changing Labor’s Image: Unions, the Media, and Public Opinion, produced at Penn State University, and the UAW pamphlet The Media Business. He also recommends using real examples of distorted, biased or inaccurate reporting about such issues as strikes to illustrate the importance of mass media image. Clark argues that national unions are working to shape public image but that it rarely occurs on the local level. “It is at this point that union members have the greatest opportunity, through day-to-day contact, to tell labor’s side of the story,” Clark writes. Suggestions include a public relations committee in the union local, having designated spokesmen, writing letters to the editor, and using cable and public television to reach a local audience. --Phil Glende AU - Clark, Paul F. DA - Fall 1989` IS - 3 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising Glende, Phil labor +television labor, and public television public relations public relations, and labor labor, and public relations pamphlets, and labor labor, and pamphlets labor, and news pamphlets LB - 880 N1 - See also: office PY - 1989 SP - 48-68 ST - Union Image-Building at the Local Level T2 - Labor Studies Journal TI - Union Image-Building at the Local Level VL - 14 ID - 176 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Clarke looks into the not-too-distant future and sees a time when artificial intelligence will likely surpass human intelligence. "Though we have to live and work with (and against) today's mechanical morons, their deficiencies should not blind us to the future. In particular, it should be realized that as soon as the borders of electronic intelligence are passed, there will be a kind of chain reaction, because the machines will rapidly improve themselves. In a very few generations -- computer generations, which by this time may last only a few months -- there will be a mental explosion; the merely intelligence machine will swiftly give way to the ultraintelligent machine." Clarke traces fears about intelligence machines back to the late 19th century. In this piece, he also discusses artificial intelligence and automation, noting that machine may alleviate our need to work. He suggest that automation may have created more jobs than it has destroyed. In the future, Clarke predicted that few towns or cities will exist. "Most homes will be completely self-contained and mobile, so that they can move to any spot on Earth within 24 hours." Much of Earth will have reverted to wilderness and "will be much richer in life forms (and much more dangerous) than today." He concludes: "It may be that our role on this planet is not to worship God -- but to create him." And, in keeping with the Playboy ethic of the 1960s, "then our work will be done. It will be time to play." AU - Clarke, Arthur C. DA - Dec. 1968 IS - 12 KW - computers science +future and science fiction values leisure +artificial intelligence and biotechnology future science fiction leisure, and artificial intelligence artificial intelligence, and liesure automation +computers and the Internet work ethic values, and artificial intelligence computers computers, and popular culture future, and artificial intelligence labor LB - 4270 PY - 1968 SP - 116-18, 122, 293-94 ST - The Mind of the Machine T2 - Playboy TI - The Mind of the Machine VL - 15 ID - 1815 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Clarke argued that satellites and space stations would allow world-wide radio and television communication. While “many may consider the solution proposed in this discussion too far-fetched to be taken very seriously,” he wrote, “everything envisaged here is a logical extension of developments in the last ten years -- in particular the perfection of the long-range rocket of which V2 was the prototype.” He went on to say that “A true broadcast service, giving constant field strength at all times over the whole globe would be invaluable, not to say indispensable, in a world society.” Clarke also thought that atomic power would accelerate space exploration. "The advent of atomic power has at one bound brought space travel half a century nearer. He predicted that atomic powered rockets would be developed in less than two decades, and that they would make exploration of the planets possible. This interesting piece appeared twelve years before Sputnik. AU - Clarke, Arthur C. DA - Oct. 1945 IS - 10 KW - science +future and science fiction non-USA +aeronautics and space communication +radio +television satellites future science fiction rocketry atomic power rocketry, and atomic energy future, and satellites radio, and satellites global communication +television television, and satellites broadcasting, global rocketry, and atomic energy broadcasting atomic energy LB - 4480 PY - 1945 SP - 305-08 ST - Extra-Terrestrial Relays: Can Rocket Stations Give World-wide Radio Coverage? T2 - Wireless World TI - Extra-Terrestrial Relays: Can Rocket Stations Give World-wide Radio Coverage? VL - 11 ID - 1836 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The movies were here to stay, acknowledged Philander P. Claxton, the United States Commissioner of Education in 1921, and he thought that they could be used by schools to promote the study of great literature. But the “careless contemplation of the screen” must never be allowed to “supplant the thoughtful reading of a book,” he said, not “if we are to avoid national deterioration.” (326, emphasis in original text) For Claxton, motion pictures could never be more than an aid to stimulate appreciation for great books and they could not inspire the ideals that came from “the habit of reading good literature.” Movies could not replaced reading nor should it be allowed to. “The moving-picture can present to the eye only such things as may be seen without its help. The purpose of literature … is not so much to present facts as it is to interpret life. The moving-pictures themselves need interpretation of the kind that can be given only through words. Most of the attempts to present literature through the film have not been successful,” he said. “Moving-pictures, like still pictures, are necessarily particular and concrete. The spoken word moves from the particular and concrete to the general and abstract.” (326) AU - Claxton, Philander P. DA - Jan. 1921 IS - 5 KW - nationalism history words vs. images ref, secondary motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures images vs. words ref, secular ref, literary ref, Bookman democracy democracy, and motion pictures motion pictures, and democracy nationalism and communication nationalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and reading nationalism, and education education, and nationalism nationalism LB - 42580 PY - 1921 SP - 326-29 ST - The Booklovers of Tomorrow: Teaching Literature T2 - The Bookman TI - The Booklovers of Tomorrow: Teaching Literature VL - 52 ID - 4357 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article C. R. Clifford discusses the potential for improving the use of color and lighting in decorating the home and also in the theater. He discuss the "Restfulness of Warm-Toned Light" (63) and the "Danger of Overlighting" (63-64) "The home is the theater of life," he says. (64) He comments on the importance of lighting in the theater in the section "Lessons in Lighting to be Learned from the Theatre." (64) "Go to the mimic stage and observe the great work that is done there. No longer does the orchestra give the key to the emotion. We are not aroused to an extra heart beat by the shiver-music of the strings. It is the man with the light, and why? Because the play is always seen by artificial light, and whether the light simulates nature by daylight or moonlight the colorings on the stage are so selected that they are beautiful under the lights used and are not a discordant element, a sacrifice to the demonstrations of illumination." (64) In a section entitled "Psychology of Light," (64-65) Clifford argues that color has a greater impact on some people than does music. "Chromotherapy is the science based on the effect of colored lights on the human body. For years Schopenhauer, as well as Herbert Spencer, searched for an explanation of the effects of music on the emotions, and yet the effect of color upon the nerves of nervous people is more distinctly shown than the effects of music." (64) He goes on the maintain that "Natures provides vast fields of green because favorable in its effect upon animals," (65) and that some "men of extreme sensibilities exposed to red light show excitement, giving increased muscular development." (65) Clifford read this paper before the New York Section of the Illuminating Engineering Society on March 17, 1910. AU - Clifford, C. R. DA - April, 1910 IS - 2 KW - ref, secondary motion pictures lighting motion pictures, and lighting lighting, and motion pictures color color, and lighting lighting, and color color, and chromotherapy chromotherapy, and lighting lighting, and chromotherapy color, and red color, and green lighting, and theater theater, and lighting color, and emotions lighting, and emotions theater LB - 41210 PY - 1910 SP - 62-65 ST - The Relationship of Decoration to the Illuminating Engineering Practice T2 - Illuminating Engineer TI - The Relationship of Decoration to the Illuminating Engineering Practice VL - 5 ID - 4220 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article draws a distinction between fame and notoriety and argues that Americans, much more so than people from Great Britain, are eager to giver up their privacy for publicity. The author sees a decline in the classic kind of fame whereby one is recognized for great achievements. In 1890, the poet, politician, or soldier would rarely admit that they sought fame because "to admit that we thirst for fame, and act with a view to winning it, would be to make ourselves the laughing-stock of our contemporaries." (171) Cobbe continues by saying that "Such a change in the common estimate of a once universally-applauded passion is, of itself, noteworthy. It become still more singular when we find, growing up in the vacant place, a bastard-brother sentiment, the love of notoriety, and observe that though no man yet openly avows harboring this last in his breast, multitudes are credited with it both by friends and foes, and not thought much the worse of in consequence. To confess to the ambition for fame would be to fall into mock-heroics and bathos and become the mark of satire. To betray the love of notoriety may be slight vulgar, but readily passes muster as a rather amiable weakness by no means ridiculous, but, on the contrary, possessing many advantage, political and commercial." (171) The author concludes "that men have ceased to avow their desire to be renowned for 'things known to their advantage,' but are not ashamed of being supposed to desire to be renowned for things known to their disadvantage! Notoriety, in short, is fame, minus that element of honor and approval of the public conscience which rendered the thirst for it commendable. [emphasis in original text] Men in our own day, like gluttons, care for the quantity of their celebrity, not, like gourmets, for its quality." (172) [my emphasis] Later, the author says that "When we pretend to drop the desire of fame, it is only to fall into the love of notoriety; and of the two there can be no question but that the former is the nobler." (179) For the British and many old-world Europeans, the idea of giving up privacy for notoriety was repellent. "To the man who inherits the old-world sentiments (or prejudices, whichever we may call them) in favor of privacy, it is impossible that notoriety, even of the most favorable kind, should not bring with it a sense of violence of the benséances, of being 'rubbed the wrong way,' of derogation of dignity, almost such as is felt by the poor inmate of an Eastern zenana [emphasis in original text] when brought unveiled into the street. On the other hand, a man or woman brought up with the sense of publicity, for instance, a person connected with the stage, generally accepts any amount of notoriety without roughening a hair." (174) [my emphasis] The author believes there were national differences in attitudes toward publicity. "The difference extend to nations. On no subject do English and American tastes differ more widely than on the pains and pleasures of publicity. The average Englishman, from the highest to the lowest, entertains a profound conviction that privacy is an invaluable privilege for which it is quite worth while to barter, as regards his abode and grounds, light, air, and beauty; and as regards his domestic circle, all the intellectual pleasures of varied society." (174) Cobbe says that "Until the rise of the pestilent 'society papers' in London, no public journal described the homes, furniture, the dress, or the habits of eminent men and women,...." (174) (with the possible exception of the Morning Post). By contrast, "the invasion of a man's privacy, so far from being held to constitute an affront, is rather felt in America to involve a compliment." (175) [my emphasis] In the United States, "That anybody, young or old, male or female, should entertain an objection to being 'interviewed,' and described at length as to height, weight, complexion, features, dress, voice, manners, and habits, for the benefit of the world at large, or that he or she should shrink from seeing his or her parents, husband, wife, 175/176 brother, sister, son, or daughter exposed in a similar pillory, is an idea which seems never to occur to the contemporary American mind. On the contrary, an impression obviously prevails that to draw a man's portrait in pen and ink, even if it be a caricature, is a tribute of respect which ought to be accepted with gratitude." (175-76) In America, the public loves to hear about the notorious person; "there exists in the great Republic an all-pervading hunger for elaborate descriptions of human being, great, small, and mediocre, which has no counterpart in the British soul." (176) [my emphasis] Cobbe says that "It is the interest in nobodies, in men, women, and children whose achievements, if any, are of a wholly insignificant kind, which is so remarkable among Americans." (177) [my emphasis] The author says that there is a connection between attitudes toward privacy and notoriety. "It would lead us too far to attempt to fathom the sources of these correlated sentiments, the indifference to privacy, and the excessive interest in people, which together combine to make the love of notoriety more prominent in America than it is, as yet, in England. A great deal of kindliness and genuine human sympathy must assuredly be at the bottom of both sentiments. We attach much importance to privacy only when wee have a certain shy mistrust of our fellow-creatures en masse. And, ... we can scarcely interest ourselves in ordinary people, unless we are richly endowed with sympathy and warm with the sense of human brotherhood. The manifestations of these feelings may be foolish or absurd or vulgar, but at the root they must be better and more wholesome than exclusiveness or indifference." (178) If the love notoriety is to be good, it "must be the desire of notoriety for some excellence or bravery." (179) But the pursuit of a notoriety which little more than "the thirst for the applause of fools and scoundrels ... is a weakness deserving, not of the indulgence it commonly receives, but of contempt. (179) AU - Cobbe, Frances Power DA - Oct. 1889 KW - personality family fame fame ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality newspapers, and fame fame, and newspapers magazines, and fame fame, and magazines fame vs. notoriety notoriety vs. fame privacy privacy, and notoriety notoriety, and privacy fame, and privacy privacy, and fame news and journalism news, and fame news, and notoriety quotations quotations, and fame vs. notoriety quotations, and notoriety modernity modernity, and love of notoriety actors acting actors, and fame actors, and love of notoriety privacy, and newspapers newspapers, and privacy Great Britain non-USA Great Britain, and privacy Great Britain, and notoriety non-USA, and privacy non-USA, and notoriety privacy, and Great Britain fame, and Great Britain Great Britain, and fame quotations, and loss of privacy privacy, and human nature ref, secondary ref, secular ref, social ref, literary ref, Forum celebrity magazines news photography LB - 39250 PY - 1889 SP - 170-79 ST - The Love of Notoriety T2 - Forum TI - The Love of Notoriety ID - 4024 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article attempts to explain what accounts for personal magnetism, a vague and ill-defined term. "Many and varied are the artificial means advertised whereby this enviable acquisition may be cultivated. It has been explained in many ways." (3) Cobbett offers five qualities. 1) "Great individual size or capacity ever attracts," he says. (4) So, too, does "large intellectual capacity: A large head, accompanied by a physiognomy expressing intellect, will, and balanced feelings...." (4) That "commands respect." (4) Cobbett comments on the eyes and facial features: "Intensity: High quality of organism and intellectual acuteness. Another individual, whose intelligent eye and thoughtful face many solicit a second glance, seems to possess but little power of attraction under ordinary circumstances. Yet in conversation and in certain situations his keen judgment, refined eloquence, lofty ideals, raise him in the estimation of those who thus become acquainted with him, and he soon exercises a magnetic influence over them." (5) Other qualities include: 4) "Harmony: A healthy, active organism with sentiments, feelings, and intellect, in harmonious activity." (5) And, 5) "Facility of function producing special talents...." (5) "High quality of personal magnetism ... obviously seems to depend upon the amount of energy conserved in the individual." (5) AU - Cobbett, W. J. DA - Jan. 1902 IS - 1 KW - celebrity ref, secondary personality celebrity culture personality, and magnetism personality, and face personality, and eyes ref, secondary ref, secular ref, health ref, Phrenological Journal ref, scientific LB - 39610 PY - 1902 SP - 3-6 ST - Personal Magnetism T2 - The Phrenological Journal and Science of Health TI - Personal Magnetism VL - 113 ID - 4059 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article argues that "color is the sex appeal of business" and that "there is hardly a product which sells to the general consuming public that cannot be sold more extensively with the aid of color." (150) AU - Cochrun, Crete M. DA - Sept. 15, 1927 IS - 11 KW - advertising and public relations color capitalism media effects media effects, and color color, and advertising advertising, and color sexuality advertising, and sexuality sexaulity, and advertising advertising sex LB - 30600 PY - 1927 SP - 150, 153-54 ST - Cashing In On Color T2 - Printers' Ink TI - Cashing In On Color VL - 140 ID - 2908 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Cockerill touches on a range of topics in this article. He says that "the most shocking thing about news, it seems to me, is the absolute lack of respect for privacy and decency which must attend its gathering." Despite all the marvelous technical advances in newspapers, it is "astounding" that one "should find nothing more worthy of presentation to the eye of the thoughtful man or woman than the most recent divorce, the most painful death, the most disgusting elopement that can be heard of by fair means or foul...." (697) Cockerill goes on to say that "'Give the people what they want, and that, too, the very worst of it,'" seems to be "the guiding principle -- if that be so called which is the abnegation of all principle -- of sensational journalism." (698) Cockerill worried about the growth of illustrated journalism. "Perhaps the most salient phase of contemporary journalism, to the non-expert view, is its illustration. The future of newspaper illustration is a grave problem. It is difficult to see how the better Sunday newspapers can very much more nearly approximate to weekly magazines, and yet there is every reason to believe that cheaper paper and more perfect mechanical processes will render them even more perfect in detail and appearance. I once heard a millionaire non-resident newspaper owner say: 'Any picture is better than no picture.' If one thinks of what this means, it is easy to see. Just as the sign language and picture alphabet appeal more cogently to the savage mind than any written characters can, so the picture on the front page of a newspaper, which is so folded as to best display that picture, not only catches the eye of the casual observer and buyer, but assists the reader's imagination and excites his curiosity. [my emphasis] News stand illustration is, indeed, a part of the newspaper business, just as big headlines are. The most attractive picture must be put on the upper fold of the first page, in order to serve its purpose as an advertisement to purchasers at the news stands. A casual comparison of such pictures, as the papers lies on the stands, all the pictures representing the same event or person -- say a prominent criminal who, of course, furnishes the most desirable subject matter of a newspaper illustration, provided the crime is still fresh -- is only necessary to create at once the impression that uniformity in pictures of the same person or thing -- in other words, pictorial veracity -- is absolutely unessential. Five great morning dailies may each have a picture of 'Jack the Ripper,' caught red-handed over one of his victims, and each of the five will represent the wretch in a different costume, with different weapons, of different sizes, different in personal appearance, with different features and widely divergent expressions of animal ferocity. What serious moral or public good can be accomplished by such illustration as this?" (701) AU - Cockerill, John A. DA - Oct. 1892 IS - 6 KW - sensationalism journalism ethics words vs. images magazines, and photography ref, secondary ref, secondary news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and photoengraving newspapers, and photo engraving privacy privacy, and newspapers privacy, and journalism journalism, and privacy newspapers, and privacy newspapers, and illustrations journalism, and sensationalism sensationalism, and journalism critics critics, and newspaper illustrations quotations quotations, and newspaper illustrations ethics values ethics, and newspapers illustrations values, and newspaper illustrations newspaper illustrations, and ethics images vs. words images vs. print ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, reform ref, Cosmopolitan magazines photography LB - 38380 PY - 1892 SP - 695-703 ST - Some Phases of Contemporary Journalism T2 - Cosmopolitan TI - Some Phases of Contemporary Journalism VL - 13 ID - 3937 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author was the founder and editor of the San Francisco Oracle. In addition to discussing the history and content of this paper, Cohen also recalls how the paper experimented with color. The Oracle, like other underground paper during the 1960s, made novel use of color. The Oracle avoided color in its advertising but experimented with it to highlight artwork, poems and articles. The editors hoped the paper would be “an agent of mind expansion” (for some readers, the design reminded them of taking drugs), and changed to a bigger printer to expand the application of color, using “the presses like a paint brush” to create “a rainbow newspaper.” AU - Cohen, Allen DA - Spring, 1990 IS - 1 KW - underground media offset printing underground press offset printing, and underground press underground press, and offset printing democracy censorship and ratings color underground press, and color color, and underground press San Francisco Oracle, and color color, and San Francisco Oracle San Francisco Oracle underground newspapers LB - 32580 PY - 1990 SP - 13-46 ST - The San Francisco Oracle: A Brief History T2 - Serials Review TI - The San Francisco Oracle: A Brief History VL - 16 ID - 2916 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The drive-in, a postwar novelty, combined movies with privacy, transforming the “motor car into a private theater box.” Religious leaders and the League of Women Voters condemned drive-ins as “passion pits” during the late 1940s, and studios were initially reluctant to rent first-run films to them. Drive-ins were places where many different types of people went, including those of varied economic backgrounds and people with disabilities. AU - Cohen, Mary Morley DA - 1994 IS - 4 KW - audiences exploitation circuit exploitation circuit +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures theaters theaters, and drive-ins motion pictures, and exploitation circuit exploitation circuit, and drive-ins audiences, and drive-ins audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences +transportation motion pictures, and automobiles automobiles, and motion pictures audiences automobiles LB - 18260 N1 - See filed under Film History articles (1994). PY - 1994 SP - 470-86 ST - Forgotten Audiences in the Passion Pits: Drive-in Theatres and Changing Spectator Practices in Post-War America T2 - Film History TI - Forgotten Audiences in the Passion Pits: Drive-in Theatres and Changing Spectator Practices in Post-War America VL - 6 ID - 733 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the impact of "mechanical advancements" on the modern newspaper, and provides of critique of yellow journalism. "Modern journalism, in its yellow form, represents a decline either in the moral and tone of the reading public, or a degeneration in the editorial profession; or, perhaps, both." (453) The author provides a definition of "yellow journalism": "A daily publication wherein news is featured, not 453/454 according to its objective truth or public interest but with a view of bringing out some novel, unique, or hitherto underdeveloped phase; which aims rather to present an attractive appearance than to give the happenings of the day; which appeals to the eye and prejudices of the reader than to his intellect; which introduces, colors, and suppresses facts in conformity with its own editorial policy, the orders of its business office, and the dictates of its proprietor; and which never misses an opportunity to chronicle its own achievements for the benefit of humanity, and to boast of its extensive circulation as compared with its competitors." (453-54) Another "essential for every would-be yellow journalist" was an "irrepressible desire to search for uninteresting and unimportant details...." (461) Connolly quotes a "well-known [but unnamed] journalist" who characterized these papers as "picture books for children." (quoted, 462) Connolly argued that yellow journalism had been made possible "by the progress of photography, the invention of the linotype, the introduction of stereotyping, color press-work, zinc etching, the absolute freedom from restraint conceded to press utterances here, and the well-known facility with which the American people take to anything new." (454) The origins of yellow journalism traced back to "the circus poster and patent medicine 'ad' of the last generation," he writes. (455) How can the modern newspaper which is produced so hurriedly "be a power for good?" (459) The author ends by speculating that yellow journalism will be replaced by more responsible news reporting and that the "American reporter will become a professional man, a scholar and a gentleman, and not a professional meddler, amateur detective, and inventor of plausible impossibilities all in one." (462) AU - Connolly, Charles B. DA - July 1, 1902 IS - 448 KW - news and journalism photography journalism, yellow (defined) yellow journalism photography, and yellow journalism journalism, and modernity journalism, new, and yellow journalism critics critics, and yellow journalism quotations quotations, and yellow journalism ref, Catholic World ref, religious ref, secondary ref, Catholic journalism journalism, and ethics journalism, yellow LB - 42230 PY - 1902 SP - 453-62 ST - The Ethics of Modern Journalism T2 - Catholic World, A Monthly Magazine of General Literature and Science TI - The Ethics of Modern Journalism VL - 75 ID - 4322 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article attempts to access the impact of mechanical reproduction -- printing, photography, sound recording -- on art. "What might be called the democratization of Art, or art-products, by cheap printing and various reproductive processes is quite revolutionary," Cook writes. (701) The author notes that the "rapid rise of photography has revolutionized the reproductive printing processes," and that the camera has become a "toy; everything is snap-shotted, and photographs are becoming like visible memories, recording the multitudinous impressions of the roving eye." (701) This article discusses color photography and also mechanical sound reproduction such as the hand organ and mechanical piano. The phonograph, it argues "does for the ear what photography does for the eye.... The photograph gives form truly, but translates a colored world into black and white, or a monochrome; there is no such translation in the phonograph, which records time, tune and words of a song -- its form and color." (702) Cook notes that the gramophone puts good music with reach of those who are not wealthy. When we "think of this magic little disc which, operated by Nature's own nerve fluid -- electricity -- can not only speak but sing with full 702/703 orchestral accompaniment, we see what a marvel it is." (702-03) In addition to describing electricity as "Nature's own nerve fluid," there are other descriptions: the phonograph as "mechanical witchery" (703); "the cinematograph, recording and reproducing in lightning flashes moving objects" (703); the cinematograph is a "magic mirror." (703) Understanding the true nature of these modern innovations is liberating: "A flash of insight causes us to break our earthly bonds and burst into a larger life." (703) Cook discusses the "demand for novelty" and how many of these seemingly miraculous inventions now seems commonplace. "This wearying of the faculty of appreciation and wonder is a prime factor in the decadence of Art...." (701) Cook says that many "writers who deal only with the pictorial and plastic arts have shown singularly little insight into the real nature of these new departures." (711) Cook complains about "the glut of Art, and the wearying of faculty which has caused a cry for change, and a revolt against nearly all forms of accepted excellence. A divine melody and a soul-stirring symphony may sicken us if done to death on street pianos or gramophones, but they do not cease to be beautiful tone-poems because our taste is vitiate by surfeit. Yet this elementary fact is continually overlooked in current criticism, the writers failing to realize the personal equation." (711) Cook sees several characteristic in modern life and art: 1) "an utter relaxation of the artistic conscience"; 2) lessening demands on the artist; 3) making art less attuned to "Nature's subtle methods....."; 4) a "blasé revolt against things hitherto considered good, and the invention of new forms of bad work, or the return to primitive blundering." (712) Cook believes that "this new fever is the sign of Art sickening to its death rather than of birthpangs; and that the 'advanced' artists and their friends on the Press have mistaken decadence for progress, and are judging largely by inverted criteria....." (713) This article, under the same title, appeared in Living Age, 243, No. 3148 (Nov. 5, 1904), 321-33. AU - Cook, E. Wake DA - Dec. 1904 IS - 6 KW - journalism art art photography photography and visual communication photography, and art art, and photography values photography, and values values, and photography photography, and decadence sound recording phonograph electricity metaphors color photography, and color color, and photography cameras cameras, and art art, and cameras history and new media photography, and history history, and photography gramophone quotations advertising art, and advertising advertising, and art advertising and public relations modernity history, break with critics news and journalism art, and journalism journalism, and art critics, and modernity modernity, and critics critics, and new media ref, mag duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and sound recording duplicating technologies, and phonograph duplicating technologies, and printing duplicating technologies, and photography photography, and duplicating technologies printing, and duplicating technologies phonograph, and duplicating technologies sound recording, and duplicating technologies motion pictures, and duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and motion pictures motion pictures, as lightning flash quotations quotations, and lightning flash ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary (foreign) ref, eclectic ref, Eclectic Magazine quotations, and nerve fluid electricity, and nature's nerve fluid quotations, and magic mirror motion pictures, and magic motion pictures, and magic mirror metaphors, and electricity as nerve fluid electricity, and nerve fluid history motion pictures print LB - 400 PY - 1904 SP - 701-13 ST - Progress or Decadence in Art? T2 - Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature TI - Progress or Decadence in Art? VL - 143 ID - 3336 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Forbes reported in 1978 that pornography grossed $4 billion a year, “about as much as the conventional motion picture and record industries combined.” This figure included not only movies but also magazines, adult book stores, peep shows, and commercial ventures. The industry in pornographic movies developed outside the auspices of mainstream Hollywood and the Motion Picture Association of America. By the end of the 1970s, there were about 780 adult movie theaters in the United States (out of 16,827 theaters) that took in more than $365 million annually. AU - Cook, James DA - Sept. 18, 1978 IS - 6 KW - values sexuality pornography sexuality sexuality values obscenity law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures X-rated films motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and motion pictures Playboy Penthouse obscenity, and pornography motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures law, and pornography Deep Throat (1972) movie pornography, and corporations pornography, as business LB - 20960 PY - 1978 SP - 81-88, 92 ST - The X-Rated Economy T2 - Forbes TI - The X-Rated Economy VL - 122 ID - 897 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The authors maintain that "the evidence indicates that a small association can regularly be found between violence on television and later aggression when individual differences in aggression are controlled at one time. But is the association causal? If we were forced to render a judgment, it would be: Probably yes. "What's missing in the NIMH report [1982], as in nearly all television research, are mechanisms for goind from the evidence produced by television researchers to changes in television practice." AU - Cook, T. D. AU - Kendzierski, D. A. AU - Thomas, S. V. DA - 1983 KW - media research television television, and violence violence, and television social science research social science research, and violence violence, and social science research violence, and pornography pornography, and violence media effects media effects, and TV violence media violence, meta-analyses social science research, and literature review social science research, and meta-analysis violence, and children children, and media children, and media violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures social science research, and press coverage press coverage, and social science research violence, and press coverage journalism, and media violence critics journalism media effects research, and critics motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and media effects media effects, and motion pictures violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) critics NIMH, and critics critics, and NIMH children media violence motion pictures news and journalism NIMH pornography press LB - 29170 PY - 1983 SP - 161-201 ST - The Implicit Assumptions of Television Research: An Analysis of the 1982 NIMH Report on Television and Behavior T2 - Public Opinion Quarterly TI - The Implicit Assumptions of Television Research: An Analysis of the 1982 NIMH Report on Television and Behavior VL - 47 ID - 2690 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Cooper says that new technologies create hidden effects in their environments, altering the social order that they penetrate. These changes are tied closely to ethical issues such as free speech and censorship. But other problems "have new names and dimensions, and may even be new issues. Forty of these issues pertaining to the new communication technologies of the 1990s and next millennium are catalogued here. The author argues that each new communication technology either retrieves, amplifies, transforms, obsolesces, or mixes ethical issues from the past or creates new issues for the future." It is likely, moreover, that issues as yet unknown will emerged as new technologies are combined. AU - Cooper, Thomas W. DA - 1998 IS - 2 KW - ethics computers religion public relations advertising preservation sexuality values history, and new media digitization law community democracy freedom law censorship and ratings censorship history values satellites race propaganda pornography media media mass media information technology Information Age history +computers and the Internet history, break with values, and new media ethics, and information technology censorship, and new media free speech, and new media media effects medium is the message automation copyright intellectual property information technology, and consumers democracy and media digital media, and manipulation propaganda, and new media gender, and new media race, and new media information, and the poor information flow obscenity indecency pornography, and new media satellites, and imaging digital media ethics gender values, and digital media digital media, and ethics ethics, and digital media +aeronautics and space communication labor advertising and public relations LB - 4600 PY - 1998 SP - 71-92 ST - New Technology Effects Inventory: Forty Leading Ethical Issues T2 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics TI - New Technology Effects Inventory: Forty Leading Ethical Issues VL - 13 ID - 1847 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article's subtitle is "Oliver Stone's Natural Born Killers is wild and demonic -- and the work of a virtuoso." This violent 1994 movie, according to Stone and Warner Bros. marketers, was a satire on media violence. Corliss says of the film: "The ride is fun, too, daredevil fun of the sort that only Stone seems willing to provide in this timid film era." AU - Corliss, Richard DA - Aug. 29, 1994 IS - 9 KW - motion pictures media effects media violence +motion pictures and popular culture violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence Stone, Oliver violence, and Oliver Stone critics LB - 2660 PY - 1994 SP - 66 ST - Stone Crazy T2 - Time TI - Stone Crazy VL - 144 ID - 354 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This work mentions the movie Basic Instinct (1992) and the ratings controversy it stirred. AU - Corliss, Richard DA - March 23, 1992 KW - Classification and Rating Administration censorship and ratings motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Cocks, Jay De Palma, Brian Scorsese, Martin Basic Instinct (1992) NC-17 motion pictures, and public relations CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) LB - 22120 PY - 1992 SP - 64 ST - He Lost It at the Movies T2 - Time TI - He Lost It at the Movies VL - 139 ID - 945 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Richard Corliss of Time called Basic Instinct a “cop-and-copulation thriller” with a climatic scene “drenched in violence.” It had, he said, “courted scandal” from the start. Other critics of this movie, which starred Michael Douglas and Sharon Stone, argued that the producers had exploited the movie rating system in order to gain publicty. AU - Corliss, Richard DA - Jan. 27, 1992 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality homosexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality women, and new media advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising press motion pictures media effects media violence lesbianism gays women feminism law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and lesbianism public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Basic Instinct motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures lesbianism, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising Douglas, Michael motion pictures, and bad press coverage press, and poor movie coverage Verhoeven, Paul Eszterhas, Joe Stone, Sharon feminists feminists, and motion pictures gays, and motion pictures Jay Leno Show LB - 25440 PY - 1992 SP - 64 ST - What Ever Became of NC-17? T2 - Time TI - What Ever Became of NC-17? VL - 139 ID - 1140 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Many film critics, including Richard Corliss, and movie makers were dissatisfied with the NC-17 and believed the system remained inconsistent, providing no clear distinction between the R and the new rating category. The NC-17 had merely taken movies out of the “forbidden zone” and placed them in “limbo,” said Corliss. AU - Corliss, Richard DA - Oct. 8, 1990 KW - X-rated films censorship and ratings motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Basic Instinct (1992) NC-17 motion pictures, and public relations NC-17, and critics X-rating LB - 25580 PY - 1990 SP - 70 ST - Taking the Hex out of X T2 - Time TI - Taking the Hex out of X VL - 136 ID - 1154 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article criticizes the motion picture rating system which appeared to be more willing to give a severe rating (NC-17) to films with bad language and non-violence sex, than it to movies with high levels of violence. AU - Corliss, Richard DA - Aug. 29, 1994 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture CARA NC-17 rating system (U. S.), and controversies CARA, and critics rating system (U. S.), and critics CARA LB - 27710 PY - 1994 SP - 68 ST - Murder Gets an R; Bad Language Gets NC-17 T2 - Time TI - Murder Gets an R; Bad Language Gets NC-17 ID - 1325 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Court, an Australian researcher, argues that pornography seen through mass media has damaging effects on society. His conclusions disagreed with those of the 1970 President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography that held there were few harmful effects from pornography and that legal restrictions should be eased. AU - Court, J. H. DA - May, 1977 KW - syntheses (of research) syntheses social science research sexuality motion pictures media effects crime non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +television pornography pornography, and harmful effects social science research, and pornography syntheses, and pornography research media effects media effects, and pornography aggression, and pornography pornography, and aggression crime, and pornography pornography, and crime Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) pornography, and opponents Meese Commission Australia Australia, and pornography critics LB - 22740 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1977 SP - 129-57 ST - Pornography and Sex Crimes -- Re-Evaluation in Light of Recent Trends Around the World T2 - International Journal of Criminology and Penology TI - Pornography and Sex Crimes -- Re-Evaluation in Light of Recent Trends Around the World VL - 5 ID - 999 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article, Cousins responds to Eric Johnston's article in the same issue ("Messengers from a Free Country") in which the MPAA president defends American movies abroad. Johnston was reponding to three pieces that Cousins had written attacking the impact of American film abroad. Johnston in his piece listed many movie titles that he said projected a good image of America. Cousins says that the films Johnston's cited "are in fact the 'good-will ambassadors' referred to by President Truman." But he goes on to say that "I seriously doubt, however, that the President has seen reports from Americcan public servants in the field concerning the effects of the preponderance" of American films abroad. (13) Of the movies, Cousins goes on to say that "no medium of communications or entertainment in the world exercises the power -- actual or potential -- of the motion picture. No medium can claim the attentions of as many millions of people for such interrupted periods of time each week or each month. And, as it concerns the war of ideas today, no medium is as effective in projecting America for foreign audiences. Which leads to the basic question: is its sense of public responsibility comparable with its position of public power?" (28) AU - Cousins, Norman DA - March 4, 1950 IS - 9 KW - Truman administration Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union self-regulation nationalism MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism Cold War war Johnston, Eric capitalism motion pictures, and communism Truman, Harry presidents and new media motion pictures, and Harry Truman Truman, Harry, and motion pictures motion pictures, and drinking military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and U.S. foreign policy MPAA, and foreign policy MPAA, and Truman administration MPAA, and Cold War USSR motion pictures, and USSR propaganda democracy motion pictures, and democracy media effects motion pictures, and media effects LB - 34800 PY - 1950 SP - 12-13, 28 ST - Let's Look at the Message T2 - Saturday Review of Literature TI - Let's Look at the Message VL - 33 ID - 3122 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article by one of the leading historians on film censorship discusses efforts to regulation race and sex in early motion pictures. "The purpose of this essay," Couvares writes, "is to explore efforts to control cinematic representations of sexuality and ethnicity earlier in this century and to suggest that little has changed over time in the arguments pro and con, in proposals for the control of such representations, and even in the nature of the political coalitions that have assembled on both sides of these issues. In particular, the question of harm was always at the center of critiques of movies and mass culture. Whether children, women, or racial and ethnic minorities themselves was seen to be an undeniable justification for action to prevent or punish assaultive expression. Moreover, the effect of movies on potential aggressors was just as strong asserted: some movies, it was argued, aroused while to mistreat, even physically assault blacks; other movies aroused men to assault women, or, at the very least, to view them with contempt." AU - Couvares, Francis G. DA - 1994 IS - 2 KW - billboards sexuality photography sex seeing at a distance race values postmodernism modernism modernism modernity media effects media violence violence media effects law censorship and ratings values posters new way of seeing +motion pictures new way of seeing, and motion pictures modernity +photography and visual communication +motion pictures and popular culture modernism billboards, and motion pictures motion pictures, and billboards cinema of attractions censorship race, and motion pictures motion pictures, and race race, and censorship censorship, and race violence, and media effects sex, and media effects media effects, and motion pictures media effects, and race media effects, and early cinema censorship, and media effects media effects, and censorship LB - 27880 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1994 SP - 233-51 ST - The Good Censor: Race, Sex, and Censorship in the Early Cinema T2 - Yale Journal of Criticism TI - The Good Censor: Race, Sex, and Censorship in the Early Cinema VL - 7 ID - 1340 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This study used a content analysis of popular X-rated videos to examine them for prevalence of dominance and exploitation of women. A total of 45 movies released between 1979 and 1985 were used in this analysis yielding a total of 443 sex scenes. The authors found that 54 percent of the sexually explicit scenes coded had dominance and exploitation as themes. Typically, male characters were presented as dominating or exploiting female characters. There was also some evidence for objectification of women in that the majority of scenes containing self-gratification were of women. Moreover, women were more likely to be the subjects of close-up shots. The authors conducted this research from a feminist perspective. They argue that the evidence demonstrates that there is a great deal of material presenting sexual inequality and objectification of women. Moreover, they argue, this could lead to disastrous consequences. --Michael Boyle AU - Cowan, G., C. Lee, D. Levy, and D. Snyder DA - 1988 KW - computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) magnetic recording women, and new media women social science research sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence violence Internet magnetic tape computers Boyle, Michael pornography media effects pornography, and rape myths violence, and pornography pornography, and violence women, and pornography pornography, and women +motion pictures and popular culture pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects media effects, and violence media effects, and motion pictures violence, and computers +computers and the Internet pornography, and computers computers, and pornography Internet, and pornography pornography, and Internet VCRs pornography, and VCRs VCRs, and pornography LB - 1220 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1988 SP - 299-311 ST - Dominance and Inequality in X-Rated Video Cassettes T2 - Psychology of Women Quarterly TI - Dominance and Inequality in X-Rated Video Cassettes VL - 12 ID - 210 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Critics and scholars alike have long considered the content of pornography to be sexist, demeaning to women, and to result in negative effects. There has also been speculation that the content of pornography has similar implications for race. Cowan and Campbell examine the prevalence of racist and sexist themes in 54 X-rated videos. Each instance of a sexually explicit scene involving two characters was coded yielding a total of 476 characters. Each characters gender, race, level of aggression, and other behaviors were coded. They found that male characters were more likely to engage in aggressive acts, with women often being the target of that aggression. Furthermore, black females were more likely than white women to be the targets of aggressive acts. Racism was present in that black characters were more often shown in lower status than were white characters. However, there were differences in how racism and sexism were presented. White women for instance, were more likely to have a male character ejaculate on their face. Black women, on the other hand, were more likely to perform fellatio from their knees, a subordinate position. Furthermore, black women were the targets of a “greater number of different acts of physical and nonphysical aggression than were white women, regardless of the race of the perpetrator” (335). The authors indicate that these findings have implications for how sex and race is viewed in society and that continual exposure to images that portray gender and race in a negative light are deleterious to racial and sexual attitudes. --Michael Boyle AU - Cowan, G. and R. R. Campbell DA - 1994 KW - computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) magnetic recording women, and new media women social science research race sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence violence Internet magnetic tape computers Boyle, Michael pornography media effects pornography, and rape myths violence, and pornography pornography, and violence women, and pornography pornography, and women +motion pictures and popular culture pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects media effects, and violence media effects, and motion pictures violence, and computers +computers and the Internet pornography, and computers computers, and pornography Internet, and pornography pornography, and Internet VCRs VCRs, and pornography pornography, and VCRs pornography, and race race, and pornography pornography, and race African Americans African Americans, and pornography pornography, and African Americans LB - 1210 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1994 SP - 323-38 ST - Racism and Sexism in Interracial Pornography: A Content Analysis T2 - Psychology of Women Quarterly TI - Racism and Sexism in Interracial Pornography: A Content Analysis VL - 18 ID - 209 ER - TY - JOUR AB - See filed under Film & Television articles (2001). AU - Craig, J. Robert CN - This article is part of an entire issue is devoted to "Film and/as Technology." Telotte, who is guest editor, notes that enjoying such technologies such as film we enter into an "unspoken" arrangement with that technology. Film's technological underpinning often go unexamined. This raises important issues "especially to the impact of digital technology and its capacity to reproduce convincingly practically any image." Articles in this issue include: David Lavery, "From Cinescape to Cyberspace: Zionists and Agents, Realists and Gamers in The Matrix and eXistenZ"; J. Robert Craig, "Establishing New Boundaries for Special Effects: Robert Zemeckis's Contact and Computer-Generated Imagery"; Kelly Ritter, "Spectacle at the Disco: Boogie Nights, Soundtrack, and the New American Musical"; Susan A. George, "Not Exactly 'of Woman Born': Procreation and Creation in Recent Science Fiction Films"; and J. P. Telotte, "The Sounds of Blackmail: Hitchcock and Sound Aesthetic." DA - Winter, 2001 IS - 4 KW - computers special effects new media motion pictures digital media digitization computers +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and new technology new media, and motion pictures motion pictures, and digital media digital media, and motion pictures motion pictures, and digital effects digital effects, and motion pictures virtual reality motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and motion pictures +computers and the Internet computers, and special effects special effects, and computers LB - 150 PY - 2001 SP - 159-65 ST - Establishing New Boundaries for Special Effects: Robert Zemeckis's Contact and Computer-Generated Imagery T2 - Journal of Popular Film & Television TI - Establishing New Boundaries for Special Effects: Robert Zemeckis's Contact and Computer-Generated Imagery VL - 28 ID - 104 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article, Cressey discusses portable camera technology that allows one person to film and record sound on location. This technology made it possible "to film double-system, split-screen, man-on-the-street interviews." (36) Avoiding vibration and bouncing pictures is determined by how the cameraman wears the camera. This system is still relatively heavy, although Cressey notes that he has "shot continuously for a half hour without the slightest fatigue." (68) He argues that this portable technology offers the non-theatrical cinematographer "long overdue emancipation ... from antique equipment" designed for other purposes. "It beats me," he said, "why we have had to put up with these fossilized tools and procedures for so long." (68) He notes that this camera technology often allows him to cover "news events unobtrusively (except that when I'm finally spotted the 'one-man band' effect causes something of a sensation)." (36) Cressey was Director of Photography at WNYS-TV in Syracuse, NY, and owned his own production company, "Ideas on Film." Trained as a sociologist, for the previous decade he had been making documentary films, commercials, and newsreels for TV. AU - Cressey, Richard DA - Jan., 1967 IS - 1 KW - documentaries cinematography news and journalism television cameras cameras, portable journalism, and portable cameras news, and portable cameras television, and portable cameras cameras, Eclair NPR (1967) location shooting television, and location shooting television news, and portable cameras documentary films motion pictures motion pictures, and documentaries journalism news LB - 30090 PY - 1967 SP - 36, 68 ST - The Cinematographer as On-the-Spot Journalist T2 - American Cinematographer TI - The Cinematographer as On-the-Spot Journalist VL - 48 ID - 2764 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author of this article is Rev. J. Crofts, although what denomination he is (Presbyterian?) is unclear. Crofts begins by discussing color sense in lower animals and quotes extensively from Charles Darwin's Descent of Man (e.g., Part I, chapter iii). Bird and insects often use color as a form of sexual attraction. Here, quoting Darwin: "'Why certain bright colors should excite pleasure cannot, I presume, any more than why certain flowers and scents are agreeable.'" (emphasis in original text) But man differs from lower animals. His senses are not a keen as a dog's, for example. Yet man has a more highly developed sense of beauty. Color is a source of pleasure because "it is when to the glories of light is added the boundless wealth of color" that man's "heart truly rejoices." (638) He maintains that "There is scarcely anything more widely spread, or more commonly strong, than the love of color...." (643) (my emphasis) Crofts observes that three kinds of people seem to object to color, or are at least indifferent-- those who are color blind, those for whom color doesn't make a difference, and those who are hostile to it perhaps because of religious values. He writes that "That what people are pleased to call 'quiet colors' have something about them savoring of piety, whilst brighter colors are allied to profanity and godlessness, is by no means an uncommon notion amongst people of emature habits...." (639) He offers a story of one person, a member of the Society of Friends, who waged a campaign against colored dyes in 1720. But such people constitute a small minority, Crofts argues. (640) Croft says that in Darwin's theory it is usually the female who is attracted to the bright colors of the male. Over time, this color sense "would become what we might call a peculiarly feminine faculty." (641) But, he maintains, "it is not ... only in modern times that a special love for color has been attributed to the feminine mind." (641) He gives examples from Virgil to prove this point. (641-42) Crofts says that "there is, in nature, great wealth of color-harmonies, and abundant suggestions of a pure color-art" (642) but we do not have yet an art comparable to the creations of Beethoven, Handel, or Haydn in music. There "exists, as yet, no color-art as a language of pure emotion." (H. R. Haweis quoted, 642) (my emphasis) He writes that "Color, then, has hitherto only been used as an accessory, however important, to form." (642) The author is inclined to be optimistic about the possibility of color music, and agreeing with H. R. Haweis (who wrote Music and Morals [1872]), says "we are already on the threshold of an age in which color-music will take its place as an emotional art on equal terms with its elder sister, and vie, in the magnificence of its results, with sculpture, architecture, painting, and music." (643) Quoting Haweis: "'What a majestic symphony might not be played with orchestral blazes of incomparable hues!'" (643) (my emphasis) And again quoting Haweis: "'But the color-art must first be constituted, it symbols and phraseology discovered, its instruments invented, and its composers born. Up to that time, music will have no rival as an art-medium of emotion.'" (643) This article says that "It is surprising what absurd theories have been propounded and conclusions arrived at in the matter of color," (644) and Crofts attempts to debunk them. (644-45) He notes that the colors of nature are often discordant. "As a matter of fact, neither are the sounds of nature nor the colors always harmonious. Even the colors of flowers are sometimes discordant; and the best and truest guide in nature, and the only one to be trusted, is the natural taste of man." (645) Crofts points out that while there may be analogies to be made between music and color, they also "differ in so many points...." (646) Electricity held the key to color art, Crofts believed in 1885. "We have, as it were, just opened the door of an inexhaustible treasure-house, and taken a stupefied glance at its contents." (647) (my emphasis) Electric light offers "the means of expressing variety, velocity, intensity, form, elation, and depression -- in short, all the complex properties of emotion; and it only requires a master mind to direct and adapt and reduce to system and order what is already in our hands as raw material, for the world to possess a new art-medium of emotion in all respects capable of rivaling music itself." (647) (my emphasis) This article was originally published as J. Croft, "Colour-Music," The Gentleman's Magazine, CCLIX (July 1885), 251-271. AU - Crofts, J. DA - Nov., 1885 IS - 5 KW - media effects emotion decadence ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color color, and inadequacy of language color, in history color, and theory color, and language color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and poetry values values, and color color, and values color, and decadence decadence, and color non-USA color, and non-USA non-USA, and color color, as not decadent ref, secular ref, literary ref, Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature electricity, and color color, and electricity color, and music color, and women women women, and color color, as feminine value quotations quotations, and color-music quotations, and color and emotion quotations, and electricity electricity LB - 40810 PY - 1885 SP - 635-47 ST - Color-Music T2 - Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature TI - Color-Music VL - 42 ID - 4179 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article appears in an issue of Film History devoted to audiences. Curtis examines the German "cinema reform movement as it dealt with the relation between cinema, children and the masses, taste and nation, education and the body." It looks at how reformers sought to protect children from the dangers of cinema. Curtis focuses on the work on one reformer, Hermann Hälker. AU - Curtis, Scott DA - 1994 IS - 4 KW - audiences nationalism theaters motion pictures censorship and ratings non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture Germany Germany, and motion pictures children children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children (Germany) theaters, and children children, and theaters +nationalism and communication nationalism, and motion pictures (Germany) children, and media LB - 2960 PY - 1994 SP - 445-69 ST - The Taste of a Nation: Training the Senses and Senibility of Cinema Audiences in Imperial Germany T2 - Film History TI - The Taste of a Nation: Training the Senses and Senibility of Cinema Audiences in Imperial Germany VL - 6 ID - 384 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author says that "Unconsciously our eyes drink it in [color] from our birth, but unfortunately the eyes are too often blind and the senses dulled to the natural beauties surrounding them. It is indeed a mystery why the lessons which are a part of our very life should not in time become an instinct to us all, instead of to the favored few to whom the genius of color insight and feeling is an unstudied as it is unsought...." (762) "Where instinct is absent study, observation, and experiment must take its place. The color artist needs no rule or law to tell him what is beautiful, but in time he inevitably forms certain well-defined theories as to the means of obtaining certain color effects. Color, after all, is physical, and mystical and elusive though its charms may be, natural laws undoubtedly underlie its combinations as well as its composition, and in time we will have as clearly defined scales and laws of harmony in color as in music, its sister art. Color has been aptly called 'the music of light.'" (762) [my emphasis] As for harmony in color: "The truest harmony surrounds us on all sides, for Nature is full of it and Nature never makes a mistake." (762) (my emphasis) Cutler says that "all the color have certain definite qualities." (762) She also notes that psychological studies, or experiments, have been done to see what effects color light has upon the retina. (763) AU - Cutler, Martha DA - Aug. 1905 IS - 8 KW - theater theater religion religion, and color magic emotion decadence censorship censorship ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color color, and inadequacy of language color, in history color, and theory color, and language color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and poetry color, and religion religion, and color values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations theater and stage color, and theater theater, and color censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color magic, and color color, and magic color, and music media effects color, media effects media effects, and color quotations quotations, and color as music of light ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Harper's Bazaar LB - 39160 PY - 1905 SP - 762-63 ST - The Secret of Harmony in Color T2 - Harper's Bazaar TI - The Secret of Harmony in Color VL - 39 ID - 4015 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the creation of the Motion Picture and Distributors Association (MPPDA), which hired Will H. Hays as its president, in the wake of the Fatty Arbuckle scandal. It draws parallels to the creation of the MPPDA and the establishment Major League Baseball Commissioner's office created after the Black Sox Scandal of 1919. AU - Cutlip, Scott M. DA - Winter, 1989 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) self-regulation Production Code PCA advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising public relations Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. MPAA MPPDA context, new +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures public relations, and MPPDA public relations, and motion pictures MPPDA, and creation MPPDA, and public relations Hays, Will H. context, and public relations Arbuckle, Fatty motion pictures, and scandal Production Code (motion pictures) context LB - 13300 PY - 1989 SP - 46-48 ST - A Public Relations Footnote To the Pete Rose Affair T2 - Public Relations Review TI - A Public Relations Footnote To the Pete Rose Affair VL - 15 ID - 502 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author, Elliott Daingerfield (1859-1932), was a well-known Southern landscape painter during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and was one of small number of artists commissioned Sante Fe Railroad to paint the Grand Canyon. In this article he discusses the relation between drawing, or form, and the use of color. "Drawing defines form, color reveals it," he says. (179) "We may then rach almost an axiomatic statement that color without form is chaos. No haphazard assemblages of the palette, no flowing together of chance tones may rightly be considered color when we are considering the art of Painting." (179) Daingerfield comments on color's impact on psychology. "Color is sensation, and because of this curious and powerful effect upon the nerves of man, it is possible for him to become inebriate, a color inebriate, and when that happens he loses all or nearly all sense of form. A study of the works of Monticelli will show beautiful drawing in his earlier things, progressing then through various changes, as the power of color took hold upon him, until at the last he had become so heavily 'doped' with color sensation that form is lost, and we have a jumble of colors, each lovely in itself perhaps, but contradictory when considered as painting. And so the mind asks, what is it all about?" (179) Daingerfield discusses the harmonious use of color and its relation to Nature. "We are not ready to return to the barbaric excitement of a spot of red or yellow or to enter the mad-house from a suffusion of yellow and purple. For this we cannot give up the exquisite delicacy of nature, her sumptuousness of color and the magic of her grays. "Everywhere in God's world, indeed, we find the Master Worker using from, color; color, form. Nor is it out of doors alone that this law is at work; the delicacy of a child's face reveals it quite as entirely; and always the color must express the form. There has been much of rhapsody written about colorists. We are told their going made in the glory of it, and then we see their things 179/180 and no longer wonder; indeed, the only wonder is that any who have seen the works remain sane." (179-80) This article was part of a symposium on color in this issue of Art World. AU - Daingerfield, Elliott DA - Dec. 1917 KW - emotion decadence ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color, in history color, and theory color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and passion color, and sensations media effects color, media effects media effects, and color color, and sensuality lighting lighting, and color color, and lighting color, and music censorship ref, secular ref, Art World ref, secondary color, and dope color, and inebriation metaphors color, as inebriation color, as dope color, and Nature color, and magic color, and barbarism color, and red color, and yellow color, and morality color, and immorality color, as viewed by an artist color, and form color, and drawing ref, and antimodernist art ref, Art World LB - 42520 PY - 1917 SP - 179-80 ST - Color and Form -- Their Relationship T2 - Art World TI - Color and Form -- Their Relationship VL - 3 ID - 4351 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this address to Union College student, the New York Sun’s editor, Charles A. Dana, discusses what it takes to become a good journalist and also the state of the newspaper business in 1895. He expressing skepticism about the creation of schools of journalism which was happening in some universities then. A for the new journalism departments, he said “I have never found that a student or graduate who had pursued that department, instead of pursuing other studies, was of any great value as a practical worker in the newspaper work ….” (556) He was in favor of a general education, though, that included Greek and Latin. “I had rather take a young fellow who knows the Ajax of Sophocles, and who has read Tacitus, and can scan every ode of Horace, I would rather take him to report a prize-fight or a spelling match, for instance, than to take one who has never had those advantages.” (556) The first requisite of a good journalist was “a thorough knowledge of English.” (558) The second was “a knowledge of politics” (558). Studying the U. S. Constitution was essential to understanding American government, he said. (559) In addition “the newspaper man should know the Bible, Shakespeare, and Milton.” (560) Dana thought that transmission of news by electricity had revolutionized newspapers and journalism. “What a wonder, what a marvel it is, that here, for one or two cents, you buy a history of the entire globe of the day before!” he told students at Union College in 1895. “It is something that is miraculous, really, when you consider it.” (563) It would give the newspaper profession “a higher dignity” than ever before, he said. (563) AU - Dana, Charles A. DA - May 1895 IS - 6 KW - ref, secondary ref, secular ref, reform ref, McClure's news and journalism education education, and journalism journalism, and education journalism, and journalism schools journalism, and Charles A. Dana Dana, Charles, and journalism education quotations quotations, and Charles Dana electricity telegraph electricity, and journalism journalism, and electricity Dana, Charles, and telegraph Dana, Charles, and journalism schools journalism schools, and Charles A. Dana Dana, Charles A. journalism LB - 42260 PY - 1895 SP - 555-63 ST - Journalism. A Lecture Delivered to the Students of Union College T2 - McClure's Magazine TI - Journalism. A Lecture Delivered to the Students of Union College VL - 4 ID - 4325 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the problems of shooting on location for the movie "Marriage on the Rocks," produced by Sinatra Enterprises. The cost for perhaps 100 people would have been about $175,000. AU - Daniels, William H. DA - Sept., 1965 IS - 9 KW - motion pictures location shooting motion pictures, and location shooting movie, Marriage on the Rocks Marriage on the Rocks location shooting, and problems cameras cameras, and lens Sinatra, Frank values motion pictures, and marriage cinematography LB - 29980 PY - 1965 SP - 567-69 ST - The Drawing Room Comedy Marriage on the Rocks T2 - American Cinematographer TI - The Drawing Room Comedy Marriage on the Rocks VL - 46 ID - 2753 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The authors show how the lathe's historical development can be represented and analyzed by employing the techniques developed in artificial intelligence programming, especially in the realm of expert systems. The article discusses the lathe's history over 22 centuries, and then how the expert systems approach can be used as a model to study this historical change. AU - Danko, George M. and Friedrich B. Prinz DA - 1988 IS - 1 KW - +artificial intelligence and biotechnology expert systems model lathe artificial intelligence, and lathe experts LB - 11810 PY - 1988 SP - 1-29 ST - An analysis of lathe development using artificial intelligence techniques T2 - History and Technology: An International Journal TI - An analysis of lathe development using artificial intelligence techniques VL - 5 ID - 2528 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This work discusses the possibilities presented by digital cinema and computers. As movie makers gain the ability to improvise virtual reality, entertainment will become much more interactive. AU - Davenport, Gorianna DA - Nov. 2000 IS - 5 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography projection motion pictures home entertainment Hollywood digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema computers 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movie +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality Hollywood, and digital movies digital movies, and Hollywood media convergence Hollywood, and media convergence media convergence, and digitial movies digitization LB - 26230 PY - 2000 SP - 79-82 ST - Your Own Virtual Storyworld: True interactive entertaiment will arise once engineers and artists create virtual realities that can unfold improvisationally T2 - Scientific American TI - Your Own Virtual Storyworld: True interactive entertaiment will arise once engineers and artists create virtual realities that can unfold improvisationally VL - 283 ID - 1214 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This study examined the relationship between X-rated video rentals and attitudes toward feminism and violence toward women. The author gathered data from “194 men who rented X-rated videos of their choosing from a single pornography establishment in a large metropolitan county during 1988” (131). The renters attitudes were assessed by asking whether or not they supported the Equal Rights Amendment, whether they supported a law against marital rape, and length of sentence for both marital and date rape. Davies found no relationship between any of the dependent measures and number of videos rented. This study used non-experimental methods due to some of the criticisms leveled at experimental research, particularly pornography research (see Childress, 1991). A strength of this research, then, is that it introduces a new and useful method for examining the relationship between pornography use and attitudes and behaviors. A caveat, however, is that other media are not considered in the analysis/ --Michael Boyle AU - Davies, K. A. DA - 1997 KW - computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) magnetic recording women, and new media social science research sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence violence Internet magnetic tape women feminism computers Boyle, Michael pornography media effects pornography, and rape myths violence, and pornography pornography, and violence women, and pornography pornography, and women +motion pictures and popular culture pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects media effects, and violence media effects, and motion pictures violence, and computers +computers and the Internet pornography, and computers computers, and pornography Internet, and pornography pornography, and Internet VCRs pornography, and VCRs VCRs, and pornography feminism, and pornography pornography, and feminism LB - 1230 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1997 SP - 131-37 ST - Voluntary Exposure to Pornography and Men's Attitudes Toward Feminism and Rape T2 - Journal of Sex Research TI - Voluntary Exposure to Pornography and Men's Attitudes Toward Feminism and Rape VL - 34 ID - 211 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Davis outlines a 10-point program to help organized labor modernize its public relations efforts to manage its public image. Among the recommendations: Create a national strategy board to coordinate labor public relations and create a unified voice; provide more training for union leaders in modern methods of public relations; make use of sociologists on union research staffs to develop better appeals to laborers; improve polling methods to ensure more representation of the rank and file; create labor-oriented metropolitan newspapers and modernize the weekly and monthly labor press. --Phil Glende AU - Davis, Melton S. DA - Jan. - Feb. 1947 IS - 1 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising news and journalism Glende, Phil labor public relations newspapers, and labor labor, and newspapers public relations, and labor labor, and public relations newspapers, and public relations newspapers news LB - 900 N1 - See also: office PY - 1947 SP - 24-27 ST - Public Opinion -- the Court of Last Resort T2 - Labor and Nation TI - Public Opinion -- the Court of Last Resort VL - 3 ID - 178 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Davis, Watson DA - Dec. 1923 KW - television, and history of +radio seeing at a distance +motion pictures +television television, and origins? LB - 6670 PY - 1923 SP - 436 ST - The New Radio Movies T2 - Popular Radio TI - The New Radio Movies VL - 4 ID - 2045 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Davis, Watson DA - April 1923 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins seeing at a distance +radio LB - 6680 PY - 1923 SP - 266 ST - Seeing by Radio T2 - Popular Radio TI - Seeing by Radio VL - 3 ID - 2046 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, written by a leading geologist in 1906, says that "the Invention of Bright, Steady Light has revolutionized history” and had been a great “civilizer.” (654) "For with the advent of a bright light, for the first time in history people began to read at night.... The bright light made reading a universal habit." (656) Day discusses various types of light made possible by oil and kerosene, gas, and electricity. AU - Day, David T. DA - April 1906 IS - 6 KW - reading electricity electricity, and lighting lighting, and electricity lighting, and arc lights lighting, and gas lighting, and oil lighting, and kerosene electricity, and arc lights electricity, and spectacle color color, and electricity electricity, and color non-USA Russia Great Britain electricity, and Russia Russia, and electricity Russia, and lighting Great Britain, and electricity electricity, and Great Britain Great Britain, and lighting electricity, and reading reading, and electricity reading, and lighting lighting, and reading electricity, and civilization civilization, and electricity lighting, and civilization civilization, and lighting ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, American Illustrated Magazine lighting LB - 41870 PY - 1906 SP - 654-64 ST - Light: The Civilizer T2 - American Illustrated Magazine TI - Light: The Civilizer VL - 61 ID - 4286 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Mary Anderson de Navarro here paints a bleak picture of what it takes to be successful on the stage. Of her early performances, she says that "All I had gained by a week of hard work was a sad heart and a very sore throat." (1) She ends by saying: "Indeed, I would not wish 'my dearest enemy' to pass through the uncertainties and despondencies of those early days." (2) AU - de Navarro, Mary Anderson DA - Jan. 1896 IS - 2 KW - theater stage journalism fame celebrity critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater ref, secondary celebrity culture theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures celebrity, and actors actors, and celebrity fame, and actors actors, and fame actors acting actors, and fame before movies quotations quotations, and actors fame actors, and status of news and journalism actors, and journalists journalism, and actors personality actors, and personality personality, and actors women women, and acting acting, and women ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary (women) ref, women ref, Ladies' Home Journal LB - 38730 PY - 1896 SP - 1-2 ST - My Early Days on the Stage T2 - Ladies' Home Journal TI - My Early Days on the Stage VL - 13 ID - 3972 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article surveys improvements in printing methods. It discusses the work of Earl Stanope, the Konig press, the Bullock press, and the rapid printing machinery made possible by the "cylindrical inking rollers made of glue and molasses." The improvements in printing technology would have been relatively insignificant, though, had not cheap paper become available. The author notes that by 1880, photoengraving was replacing woodcuts for illustrations in books and magazines. AU - De Vinne, Theodore L. DA - May 1901 IS - 5 KW - wood engraving journalism magazines, and photography ref, secondary news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving journalism, and presses newspapers, and presses stereotyping presses presses, and Konig presses, and Bullock books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and woodcuts materials materials, and paper newspapers, and paper ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Literature magazines photography LB - 37990 PY - 1901 SP - 533-35 ST - Perfecting the Press T2 - Current Literature TI - Perfecting the Press VL - 30 ID - 3898 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This excellent article explains how the printing process worked at The Century in 1890. The magazine became one of the leading illustrated periodicals during the 1890s. When the magazine's large presses were at work, the author says, "the air trembles with their busy hum." (96) De Vinne discusses the improvements in the printing of the magazine that occurred between 1870 and 1890. He notes that before 1890, cylinder presses were considered to be "type smashers" and likely to damage fine engraving. (87) The "stop-cylinder printing machine" (87) was a major improvement. It "did better presswork, but at slower speed and at greater cost, yet its capacities were often seriously overtaxed by the close and shallow engraving furnished by engravers who were striving to reproduce with picks or lines the effective tints of designs made entirely with the brush." (88) The stop cylinder machine used to print find woodcut illustrations was smaller and slower that the magazine's web presses. It printed "sixteen pages only on one side of a sheet at a rate of about 750 impressions an hour. One machine can produce in one month but a small portion of the illustrations required for the magazine. It follows that there are many of these stop-cylinders, and that the printing plates [electrotype plates] are made in duplicate and sometimes in triplicate, and, to get out the edition on time, that these duplicates go to press on different machines." (94) Among the challenges to producing higher quality illustration were the need for better ink and inking systems (87) and the uneven surface of the paper on which the illustrations were printed. De Vinne describes a process for smoothing paper, which was probably not noticed by most people, but which was critical to reproducing quality illustrations. (88) De Vinne describes the type-setting process. "Printing begins with type-setting, which is done now as it was four hundred years ago. Every letter must be picked up by hand and adjusted by human fingers to its fellows." (88) Even though type-setting machines were being used more and more, "they have not curtailed the employment of the four thousand compositors who set type by hand in this city [New York]. Type-setting by hand is slow work. A quick workman can set five columns of The Century in a day of ten hours; but the performance of the average compositor does not exceed, hardly reaches, two pages a day." (88) The composition work is usually done by young women who "are paid the same rates as men." (88) De Vinne says that the woodcut illustrations are considered to be "the jewels of the magazine." (89) The magazine used electrotype plates and the process of creating these plates is explained (90-91). The electroplate used for both the printed page and illustrations is much cheaper than earlier methods of printing. "Unlike the type, or the frail woodcut which may be in the page, this electrotype plate can receive a hundred thousand impressions, or more, without loss of beauty or sharpness. It can be handled, packed, and transported with more ease and greater safety than the type or the wood. The page of type costs, composition included, about seven dollars; a full page of woodcut costs from one hundred to two hundred dollars. The electrotype of either costs less than one dollar. These are the reasons why electrotypes are made." (91) This article points out that by 1890 the magazine could shape illustrations to fit onto a cylindrical press, thanks, no doubt, to the electrotype plates, but that illustrations from woodcuts still were not usually printed on both sides of the same page. De Vinne describes the "shaping machine, with its gas heater and air blast, which curves a flat plate to fit the periphery of the printing cylinder of the web press...." (92) This was "another novelty" in 1890, he says. (92) Special plates with special coating with a film of nickel or a film of steel were often used. (92) "Encouraged by the success of the web press in magazine presswork, the printers of The Century have applied the rotary principle to a new machine for fine illustrations, expressly made for them by Messrs. R. Hoe & Co. and but recently put to work. Sixty-four plates of The Century, truly bent to the proper curve, are firmly fastened on one cylinder sixty inches long and about thirty inches in diameter; sixteen inking rollers, supplied with ink from two ink fountains, successively ink these sixty-four plates with a delicacy and yet with a fullness of color never before attained.... The performance of the machine could have been more than doubled by adding to it other cylinders which would print on both sides of the paper; but careful experiment has proved that the finest woodcuts cannot be properly printed with this rapidity. To get the best results the ink on side of the paper must be dry before it is printed on the other side." (94) De Vinne notes the difficulties that remained in trying to print images with different shades. (95) For advertising and good book work, De Vinne writes, a special hoe press was used. He then describes the process as the paper unrolls during printing through the loading of the magazine onto trucks for delivery. The "web press" used by the magazine was "not so fast as the web press of daily newspapers, but it performs more operations and does more accurate work," the article says. (93) The web press had limitations: it was "not at all an economical machine for small editions" nor could "it be successfully used for the fine woodcuts" of the magazine's illustrated articles. (93) For the pages using the woodcuts, the magazine turned to a slower and smaller stop cylinder machine, described above. De Vinne discusses the national and worldwide distribution ot the magazine. (98-99) By 1890, moderately priced, smooth-surfaced paper was readily available. "Easy working and durable black inks are as common now as they were scarce twenty years ago. Electrotype plates are made of smooth surface, and are curved with unharmed lines, to fit the cylinders of rotary printing machines on which they produce presswork that fully meets the most exacting requirements," De Vinne write. (99) The author concludes by speculating on how these technological changes might have altered John Milton's dream in Areopagitica: "In the literary workshop of which John Milton dreamed, 'the pens and heads, sitting by studious lamps, musing, searching, revolving new notions and ideas,' were those only who thought and wrote. Now, the thinkers have mechanical helpers. In machine shops and paper mills, in printing houses and electrotype foundries, are other studious men equally busy in mechanical devices that aid writers in realizing this dream of the 'Areopagitica.'" (99) AU - De Vinne, Theodore L. DA - Nov. 1890 IS - 1 KW - woodcuts wood engraving magazines ref, secondary news and journalism illustrations, and journalism journalism, and illustrations illustrations, and newspapers newspapers, and illustrations magazines, and illustrations illustrations, and magazines illustrations, and wood engraving wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving journalism, and presses newspapers, and presses stereotyping presses presses, and Hoe presses, and rotary books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and woodcuts materials materials, and paper newspapers, and paper ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Century illustrations, and rotary presses illustrations, and cylinder presses woodcuts, and cyclinder presses cylinder presses, and woodcuts presses, and stop cylinder illustrations, and stop cylinder press magazines, and ink illustrations, and ink printing printing, and hand setting type illustrations, and electrotype plates printing, and electrotype plates woodcuts, and electrotype plates magazines, and type-setting printing, and type setting presses, and web press printing, and web press quotations quotations, and Milton on printing Milton, John, and printing freedom freedom, and printing processes illustrations journalism print LB - 41790 PY - 1890 SP - 87-99 ST - The Printing of 'The Century' T2 - Century Illustrated Magazine TI - The Printing of 'The Century' VL - 41 ID - 4277 ER - TY - JOUR AB - IPeter Decherney writes about efforts of such studios as those controlled by Thomas Edison to copyright films as photographs. The central question he asks is "Was film really a new medium or was it just the latest extension of photography?" (109) Decherney covers the before 1912, the year that motion pictures were incorporated into copyright law in the Townsend Amendment. The Edison Manufacturing Co. began copyrighting films as photographs in 1894 with a moving picture of Fred Ott, a laboratory assistant, sneezing. Decherney points put that piracy was a major problem from the invention of photography. The duping of films, he says, "was only one part of a much larger culture of copying." (113) The motion picture industry was "built on duping." (121) Siegmund Lubin among the most "prodigious" (121) dupers and was sued on several occasions by Edison. In 1903 in Edison v. Lubin, Judge George Mifflin Dallas sided with Lubin and agreed that films and photographs were "different, and it is just too complicated for the law to consider them to be equal." (118) Film, he concluded, was a new technology. Although Dallas did not endorse piracy, the result of his decision was to make film duping legal for a brief time. (118) The appellate decision in this case, handed down by Judge Joseph Buffington in 1903, overturned Dallas' judgment and essentially took Edison's side. "Buffington argued that motion pictures advanced the art of photography rather than creating a new medium." (120) For copyright purposes, films were photographs. This view seemed reasonable for "single shot, panoramic films" such as Christening and Launching Kaiser Wilhelm's Yacht 'Meteor' (1902). But between 1902and 1904, more complicated story films were developed. Even so, "the legal doctrine that defined films as photographs became broader and more entrenched." (122) Decherney concludes that although Edison v. Lubin clearly set a legal precedent, ... the quick fix declaring film to be a new form of photography rather than a new medium didn't solve any of the existing problems. On the contrary, the decision exacerbated the problems. Duping continued and the confusion over how to implement the new standard contributed to the monopolization of the film industry." (122) The case was "a fascinating example of what happened when courts try to explain a new medium using the terms of an old one: their decisions are ineffectual and generally delay true grappling with the newness of the new medium. Piracy is an integral element of the development of new media; it reveals the new functions and dimension of the new medium. Courts are left with the difficult job of separating the innovations revealed by piracy from the theft facilitated by piracy. But forcing new media to labor exclusively under the rules of old media inevitably fails." (123) Decherney also discusses an interesting case involving circus posters and other commercial advertisement, Bleistein v. Donaldson Lithographic Company (1903) in which U. S. Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes concluded "neither mass reproduction, nor commercial use, nor lowbrow or risqué subject matter, could disqualify a work from copyright protection." (119) This case, Decherney argues, influenced Judge Buffington's appellate decision in Edison v. Lubin. AU - Decherney, Peter DA - 2007 IS - 2 KW - motion pictures motion pictures, and copyright copyright, and motion pictures court cases court cases, and Edison v. Lubin (1903) Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Thomas Edison Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures photography motion pictures, and photography photography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and duping motion pictures, and piracy court cases, and new technology motion pictures, as new technology advertising, and copyright copyright, and posters posters, and copyright copyright, and advertising duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and copyright copyright, and duplicating technologies advertising Edison, Thomas, and piracy Edison, Thomas, and copyright advertising and public relations copyright posters LB - 41750 PY - 2007 SP - 109-24 ST - Copyright Dupes: Piracy and New Media in Edison v. Lubin (1903) T2 - Film History TI - Copyright Dupes: Piracy and New Media in Edison v. Lubin (1903) VL - 19 ID - 4273 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author argues that video games are where motion pictures were during the 1930s -- "on the verge of become the popular entertainment." (p. 36) This piece notes that in 2002, video games were a $28 billion-dollar industry and that the American market for these games was growing about 20 percent annually. People spent more time playing video games in 2002 than that did watching rented videos or DVDs. The article also notes the concerns that parents and researchers have expressed about the possible effects of violence video games. The author notes that "unlike movies or music or almost any other form or popular entertainment -- or drugs, for that matter -- games are virtually impossible to consume anywhere outside someone's home." (p. 52) AU - Dee, Jonathan DA - Dec. 21, 2003 KW - violence video games media effects media effects, and video games video games, and media effects children children, and new media children, and video games video games, and children violence, and children video games, and violence home home, and new media home, and video games video games, and home children, and media LB - 29610 PY - 2003 SP - 36-41, 52-53, 66-68 ST - Playing Mogul T2 - New York Times Magazine TI - Playing Mogul ID - 2694 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This short piece provides an interesting account of the process used in coloring post cards in 1907-08. AU - Delery, Henry C. DA - 1907 KW - post office photography +postal service +photography and visual communication postcards color color, and postcards LB - 12370 PY - 1907 SP - 65-68 ST - Coloring Post Cards T2 - American Annual of Photography: 1908 TI - Coloring Post Cards ID - 2584 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Deloria comments on a “collapse of history” that risked “losing all sense of orientation toward our ... traditions,” and that placed us at the mercy of “the ephemeral fads of modern society.” AU - Deloria, Vine, Jr. DA - Sept., 1977 KW - advertising, and public relations time and timekeeping time propaganda public relations preservation present mindedness history, and new media history history +television television, and history history, break with advertising, and history history, and advertising time presentism history, and presentism history, as linear advertising LB - 19500 PY - 1977 SP - 349 ST - The Confusion of History: A Review Essay T2 - Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church TI - The Confusion of History: A Review Essay VL - 46 ID - 785 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The authors found that "picture motion significantly increased arousal, particularly when the image was already arousing. Both skin conductance and self-report data supported this finding. Picture motion also tended to prompt more heart-rate deceleration, most likely reflecting a greater allocation of attention to the more arousing images." The author report that for this study, "the influence of picture motion on affective valence was evident only in the self-report measures; positive images were experienced as more positive and negative images as more negative when the image contained motion." AU - Detenber, Benjamin H., Robert F. Simons, and Gary G. Bennett, Jr. DA - 1988 KW - motion pictures media effects media violence violence media effects +motion pictures and popular culture +television media effects, and motion pictures media effects, and television media effects, and picture motion pornography, and picture motion violence, and picture motion pornography LB - 3240 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1988 SP - 113-27 ST - Roll 'em!: The Effects of Picture Motion on Emotional Responses T2 - Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media TI - Roll 'em!: The Effects of Picture Motion on Emotional Responses VL - 48 ID - 412 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The effects of color images on viewers merits additional research. This article is one of the relatively few studies that considers what impact color moving images in films and on television have on attention. The authors write: "Results indicate that the influence of color appears in the self-reports of emotional experience, but in none of the physiological measures. These results suggest that people feel, or consciously believe they feel, that color pictures are more pleasing and exciting than monochrome versions of the same images, yet there is no difference in their physiological responses. The implications of this dissociation of emotional responses are discussed." AU - Detenber, Benjamin H. AU - Simons, Robert F. AU - Reiss, Jason E. DA - 2000 KW - photography newspapers motion pictures media effects media violence journalism news and journalism +motion pictures and popular culture +photography and visual communication photography photography, and color photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography newspapers, and color photography color color, and photography media effects media effects, and color photography media effects, and color violence violence, and color photography photography, and violence +television television, and color media effects, and color television color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color news LB - 22100 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 2000 SP - 331-55 ST - The Emotional Significance of Color in Television Presentations T2 - Media Psychology TI - The Emotional Significance of Color in Television Presentations VL - 2 ID - 943 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This research maintains that color depictions of blood and violence in news photographs are more disturbing to viewers than the same pictures in black-and-white. The authors explain that this study "was designed to explore the emotional impact of black and white versus color in news photographs. Given that there seems to be some kind of color-content interaction, we chose to assess the emotional impact of color using three particular categories of images: those that depict bloody violence, those that show fire and destruction, and images of tragedy and grief." Among the conclusions they draw: "In general, the influence of color on all dimensions of emotions was greatest for the images depicting bloody violence." AU - Detenber, B. H. AU - Winch, S. P. DA - 2001 IS - 3 KW - photography motion pictures media effects media violence journalism news and journalism +motion pictures and popular culture +photography and visual communication photography photography, and color photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography newspapers, and color photography color color, and photography media effects media effects, and color photography media effects, and color violence violence, and color photography photography, and violence newspapers news LB - 22090 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 2001 SP - 4-14 ST - The Impact of Color on Emotional Responses to Newspaper Photography T2 - Visual Communication Quarterly TI - The Impact of Color on Emotional Responses to Newspaper Photography VL - 8 ID - 942 ER - TY - JOUR AB - "The human brain is not specialized to deal with 20th-century media," Detenber and Reeves write. "It is possible to do things with pictures that have no counterpart in natural experience, and these special properties could potentially change emotional response. This experiment has examined two such qualities of media form as predictors of emotional response to pictures: (a) the ability to significantly change the physical size of stimuli (by changing the size of media displays), and (b) the ability to represent an image as either a stationary or moving picture. Each of these formal features is important in media, especially for newer forms of display and representation." The authors note that "the best summary of prior research is that larger image sizes indeed can intensify viewers' evaluatioins of content." One conclusion from this study suggests "that emotional responses are affected by the form a message takes, as well as by its content. This means that mediated presesntations, such as film and television, should not be regarded as solely symbolic communication. In temrs of the bio-informational theory of emotion, the significance of media messages to an individual resides not only in their content, but also in the nature of their presentation." The authors call for "further inquiry into the psychological effects of home theaters. The trend for larger and larger television screens in the home may be altering the viewing the viewing experience." AU - Detenber, Benjamin H. and Byron Reeves DA - Summer, 1996 IS - 3 KW - fear entertainment computers entertainment, home advertising, and public relations television, and home syntheses (of research) syntheses propaganda public relations motion pictures media effects media violence violence media effects journalism home entertainment computers news and journalism home, and new media home +television +motion pictures and popular culture +computers and the Internet television, and screen size motion pictures, and screen size computers, and screen size media effects, and screen size syntheses, and screen size bibliographies, and effects of screen size news, and screen size advertising, and screen size violence, and screen size media effects, and picture motion media effects, and arousal media effects, and motion pictures media effects, and television media effects, and fear media effects, and home home, and media effects home entertainment, and media effects home, and television home, and big screens advertising +bibliographies news fear, and media effects LB - 3260 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1996 SP - 66-84 ST - A Bio-Informational Theory of Emotion: Motion and Image Size Effects on Viewers T2 - Journal of Communication TI - A Bio-Informational Theory of Emotion: Motion and Image Size Effects on Viewers VL - 46 ID - 414 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by saying: "To be able to see by electricity! This sounds quite an impossible idea. But however extraordinary the things appears to be, the realization of it is not so very far off. Telephotography, or the transmission of pictures by means of electricity, which has already been accomplished, seems to have paved the way towards the solution of a far vaster problem, that of seeing distant objects by means of the telegraph." The article mentions a "fresh solution," although one "not yet perfect" by a French engineer named L'Armengaud. The article goes on to say that "Theoretically, to be able to see objects at a distance it is necessary to manufacture by means of selenium, a kind of artificial eye, sensitive to the different degrees of light and shade, the same as our own eyes which perceive an object by means of the contrast between its dark and light parts.... Without going into too many details, we may state that the phenomenon of the persistency of sight forms in vision by telegraph, as in a cinematograph, a useful ally." "In vision by telegraph the picture is taken, not in its entirety, but in minute parts, and put together again on the screen like a mosaic. This is done so rapidly that the result is practically instantaneous, the time taken to produce the whole picture being less tan one-tenth of a second. The tremendous velocity and the minute precision required have hitherto been the chief obstacles to success in the realization of vision by electricity. These have now been successfully overcome, so that before very long we may be able to see the most distant objects by means of electricity. With all these astonishing new discoveries one wonders 'What next?'" (my emphasis) AU - di Brazza, F. Savorgnan DA - Sept. 26, 1908 IS - 3351 KW - wireless communication journalism future magazines, and photography facsimile magazines photography ref, secondary electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and photography photography, and electricity photography and visual communication motion pictures electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines television telegraph wireless photography and visual communication wireless, and photography photography, and wireless future and science fiction telephotography seeing at a distance modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity non-USA France France, and photography by wire France, and telegraph telegraph, and France facsimile, and telegraph telegraph, and facsimile duplicating technologies postal service postal service, and facsimile facsimile, and postal service postal service, and telegraph telegraph, and postal service materials materials, and selenium Great Britain Great Britain, and photography by wire Switzerland, and telegraph Switzerland, and facsimile telegraph, and wireless wireless, and telegraph telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph television (origins) quotations quotations, seeing at a distance ref, secondary ref, secular ref, eclectic ref, literary (British) ref, Living Age post office Switzerland LB - 37460 PY - 1908 SP - 818-19 ST - Seeing by Telegraph T2 - Living Age TI - Seeing by Telegraph VL - 258 ID - 3845 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, written by W. K. L. Dickson's sister, Antonia, explains the purpose of the kinetosope. “Its functions are to give us the representation of life, not as the painting, the photograph or the statue represents it, frozen into a single attitude, but exhibiting all that wealth of movement and expression which makes up the sum of our restless existence.” (245) "The kinetophonograph," she says, "goes a step further. It is the union of the kinetoscope with the phonograph, the blending of visual impressions with their kindred sounds. The combined effect is life, with all its eloquent and insistent appeals to the sense of man." (245) The author is interesting in describing the "motley possession" that can "be seen winding its way toward the Kinetographic Theatre." (250) It included "Boxing cats, performing monkey, terriers, and rats...." The human subjects are equally diverse." (250) AU - Dickson, Antonia DA - Feb. 1895 IS - 2 KW - history motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and movement history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures democracy democracy, and entertainment sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures kinetoscope Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and kinetoscope Dickson, W. K. L., and kinetoscope kinetoscope-phonograph motion pictures, and sound motion pictures, and phonograph phonograph Dickson, W. K. L. ref, secondary ref, secular ref, Frank Leslie's ref, Leslie's ref, illustrated LB - 42350 PY - 1895 SP - 245-51 ST - Wonders of the Kinetoscope T2 - Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly TI - Wonders of the Kinetoscope VL - 39 ID - 4334 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Thomas A. Edison in his Introduction (p. 206) to this article on the Kineto-Phone wrote: “I believe that in coming years by my own work and that of Dickson, Muybridge [,] Marié and others who will doubtless enter this field, that grand opera can be given at the Metropolitan Opera House at New York without any material change from the original and with artists and musicians long since dead.” (206) In this article, W. K. L. Dickson commented on this invention's importance to history: “The advantages to students and historians will be immeasurable. Instead of dry and misleading accounts, tinged with the exaggerations of the chroniclers’ minds, our archives will be enriched by the vitalized pictures of great national scenes, instinct with all the glowing personalities which characterized them.” (214) AU - Dickson, W. K. L. and Antonia DA - May-Oct. 1894 KW - history ref, secondary motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures democracy democracy, and entertainment sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures kinetophone Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and kinetophone Dickson, W. K. L., and kinetophone nationalism and communication nationalism, and kinetophone nationalism, and Thomas Edison Dickson, W. K. L. ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Century nationalism LB - 13490 PY - 1894 SP - 206-14 ST - Edison’s Invention of the Kineto-Phone T2 - The Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine TI - Edison’s Invention of the Kineto-Phone VL - 48 (New Series Vol. 26) ID - 3508 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Park Elliott Dietz, an M.D. and Ph.D., was a member of the Meese Commission in 1985-86. He taught courses at the University of Virginia on Law and Psychiatry, and Crimes of Violence, and had published research in the Journal of Forensic Sciences about sexual sadism in detective magazines, a theme he traced back to the 17th century. Dietz thought most forms of pornography were “immoral” and corrupted the family and society’s moral fabric.A copy of this article appears in Final Report of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography (1986), pp. 492-504. AU - Dietz, P. E. AU - Harry, B. AU - Hazelwood, R. R. DA - 1986 KW - sexuality news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers news and journalism pornography magazines pornography, and detective fiction media effects media effects, and pornography Meese Commission critics LB - 22230 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1986 SP - 197-211 ST - Detective Magazines: Pornography for the Sexual Sadists? T2 - Journal of Forensic Science TI - Detective Magazines: Pornography for the Sexual Sadists? VL - 31 ID - 952 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Pornography and aggression have oft been linked by scholars and critics alike. As a result, they are often examined in tandem. This study looks at the effects exposure to erotic films has on subjects likelihood to aggress against a confederate (a pseudo-participant planted by the experimenters). A total of 72 male subjects were used in this procedure. The subjects were part of a 2 x 2 x 2 design manipulating anger (anger or no anger), film-type (erotic or neutral), and target of aggression (male or female). To facilitate anger subjects were graded either favorably or poorly on a mock writing assignment. Donnerstein and Barrett found that subjects who were angered prior to exposure to the erotic stimuli indicated the likelihood to aggress toward the confederate. Non-angered subjects did not demonstrate this effect. The major implication of this study is that an individual’s cognitive or behavioral state before exposure to pornography is an indicator of how they will act after exposure. These findings corroborate the findings of Malamuth and Check (1983 & 1985) in that there are conditions that exist prior to exposure that may indicate post-exposure behavior. Furthermore, this study demonstrates the impact of exposure to filmed sexual acts whereas the Malamuth and Check studies utilized audiotapes. --Michael Boyle AU - Donnerstein, Edward and G. Barrett DA - 1978 IS - 2 KW - women, and new media women social science research sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence violence Boyle, Michael pornography media effects pornography, and rape myths violence, and pornography pornography, and violence women, and pornography pornography, and women +motion pictures and popular culture pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects media effects, and violence media effects, and motion pictures LB - 1240 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1978 SP - 180-88 ST - Effects of Erotic Stimuli on Male Aggression Toward Females T2 - Journal of Personality and Social Psychology TI - Effects of Erotic Stimuli on Male Aggression Toward Females VL - 36 ID - 212 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Dow, J. S. DA - Aug., 1909 IS - 6 KW - Marked ref, secondary motion pictures lighting motion pictures, and lighting lighting, and motion pictures color color, and lighting lighting, and color LB - 41220 PY - 1909 SP - 315-19 ST - The Effect of Light of Different Colors on Visual Acuity T2 - Illuminating Engineer TI - The Effect of Light of Different Colors on Visual Acuity VL - 4 ID - 4221 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Downey writes that “paradoxically, the more the Internet grows in scale and scope, the more its virtual attractions obscure its physical foundation. Those crucial internetworkers become visible in the historical record only when three separate processes – technological innovation, the production of space, and the daily performance of labor – are considered simultaneously. Thus, revealing such work offers a unique opportunity (and challenge) for interdisciplinary cooperation between historians of technology, human geographers, and sociologists and anthropologists of work. In this article I hope to illustrate the possibilities offered by such collaboration by again juxtaposing two apparently different but fundamentally related images: the analog internetwork of a century ago and the digital internetwork under construction today. The crucial question, though, is not whether the telegraph, telephone, and Post Office were equivalent to today’s Internet, but rather whether analyzing those three networks as an internetwork – in which the whole is more than the sum of its parts – can lead to a better understanding of today’s Internet.” (211) AU - Downey, Greg DA - April 2001 IS - 2 KW - computers post office +computers and the Internet +telegraph office, and new media office labor labor and new media +telephones telegraph, and messenger boys networks, and telegraph +postal service postal service, and telegrams labor, and messenger boys geography space (spatial) networks, analogy networks, digital analog v. digital Internet, and labor labor, and Internet Internet capitalism analog media networks LB - 28680 N1 - See also: office PY - 2001 SP - 209-35 ST - Virtual Webs, Physical Technologies, and Hidden Workers: The Spaces of Labor in Information Internetworks T2 - Technology and Culture TI - Virtual Webs, Physical Technologies, and Hidden Workers: The Spaces of Labor in Information Internetworks VL - 42 ID - 2480 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Downey writes that "historians of telegraphy have traditionally focused on the system-builders who invented wire communications technologies and incorporated them into profit-making enterprises. Geographers of communication have traditionally traced the changes that the telegraph network wrought on the rank-size of cities and the speed of business. Both have ignored the history of the telegraph messenger boys and the 'lived geography' of the telegraph network. This article summarizes a study of telegraph messengers as both active components of technological systems and laboring agents within produced urban spaces, bringing together the fields of both history of technology and human geography." AU - Downey, Greg DA - 2003 IS - 2 KW - technology post office +telegraph office, and new media office labor labor and new media +telephones telegraph, and messenger boys networks, and telegraph +postal service postal service, and telegrams labor, and messenger boys geography space (spatial) labor, and geography geography, and labor urban studies technology and society geography, historical capitalism networks LB - 28690 N1 - See also: office PY - 2003 SP - 134-45 ST - Telegraph Messenger Boys: Crossing the Border Between History of Technology and Human Geography T2 - The Professional Geographer TI - Telegraph Messenger Boys: Crossing the Border Between History of Technology and Human Geography VL - 55 ID - 2499 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The authors note that "AI has undergone a sea-change in the general character of its research methodology since about 1980, partly through progress on its problems of formulation, and partly through increasing integration with related areas of computing research and other fields." (655) The conclude: "As a field, AI embarks on the next fifty years excited about the prospects for progress, eager to work with other disciplines, and confident of its contributions, relevance, and centrality to computing research." (669) AU - Doyle, Jon AU - Thomas Dean, et al. DA - Dec. 1996 IS - 4 KW - R & D computers Reagan administration artificial intelligence and biotechnology computers and the Internet strategic computing initiative Reagan administration, and artificial intelligence presidents and new media education computers, and education education, and computers military communication military communication, and strategic computing initiative supercomputers artificial intelligence robotics research and development computers LB - 33940 PY - 1996 SP - 653-70 ST - Strategic Directions in Artificial Intelligence T2 - ACM Computing Surveys TI - Strategic Directions in Artificial Intelligence VL - 28 ID - 3032 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author says that although Joseph Pulitzer's New York World was the "first newspaper to print picture regularly," there were about fifty newspapers that "were printing semi-news picture 'syndicated' from New York" (230) before Pulitzer ever acquired the World. James Gordon Bennett illustrated the Herald and Albert Pulitzer illustrated the New York Morning Journal "profusely" when he purchased it. (230) Certainly by the 1890s, newspaper publisher realized that picture could create circulation booms. The World, which the author argues "founded its success on the introduction of pictures," increased its circulation from 114,705 in 1885, to 713,318 in 1897. (231) "It was not until the newspapers began to maintain their own photo-engraving plants, as they did in a very few years, that we began to have many important news-pictures," Drake says. These private plants made possible many more illustrations and the greater use of pictures by Sunday newspapers. (231) The author discusses the growth of Sunday papers and their use of illustrations. (231-32) Drake provides an interesting account of how artists are sent to cover a fire and how the newspaper holds back production until it can get their pictures. The artists return to the paper and deliver their drawings to the photo-engraving plant. For the artist, it usually took about "two hours to make a four-column drawing," but in this case, it had to be done in an hour and a half. At the plant, the drawing "is photographed and 'printed' by electric light on a sensitized zinc plate. By chemical action the lines of the drawing, as they appear on the zinc plate, are impervious to the action of nitric acid. Into this acid, then, the plate is immersed until the zinc around the lines is eaten away, leaving the lines in relief. More of the zinc is then removed from around and between the lines by the 'routing machine,' a few touches are given to it by a hand-engraver, it is nailed to a metal block to make it 'type high,' and sent to the composing room. "Since the illustrations of any periodical naturally divide themselves into three main classes of pictures, viz.: buildings and landscape, 'figure' subjects, and portraits, the art department of a newspaper is formed of due proportions of men clever in each of these lines. If the art department is a small one, men are selected who, in an emergency, can do all three branches of work in a fairly creditable manner." (234) AU - Drake, Frank C. DA - Sept. 1897 IS - 3 KW - wood engraving journalism illustrations fame entertainment, and journalism entertainment celebrity ref, secondary magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality quotations newspapers, and photographs photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving New York World, and illustrations Pulitzer, Joseph Pulitzer, Albert Bennett, James Gordon journalism, and entertainment entertainment, and journalism newspapers, and Sunday newspapers Sunday newspapers illustrations, and artists newspapers, and artists illustrations, and zinc process newspapers, and zinc process zinc process, and newspapers photo engraving ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Literature illustrations journalism LB - 38560 PY - 1897 SP - 230-34 ST - The Illustration of Newspapers T2 - Current Literature TI - The Illustration of Newspapers VL - 22 ID - 3955 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Draper, Harry Napier DA - March 6, 1873 KW - materials television, and history of +television television, and origins selenium seeing at a distance LB - 6710 PY - 1873 SP - 340 ST - Effect of Light on the Electrical Conductivity of Selenium T2 - Nature TI - Effect of Light on the Electrical Conductivity of Selenium VL - 7 ID - 2049 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author argues that corporate relations experts are buying favorable public opinion. The profound influence of public relations has the effect of neutralizing any liberal bias that might slip into national news media accounts of the world. Much of what is by definition news is determined by politicians, government officials and well-financed interest groups. --Phil Glende AU - Dreier, Peter DA - Nov. 1983 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising journalism community democracy news and journalism public relations news Glende, Phil public relations, and liberal media public relations, and news news, and public relations news, and corporate bias +books, periodicals, newspapers public relations democracy and media democracy, and public relations LB - 9210 PY - 1983 SP - 64-80 ST - The Corporate Complaint Against the Media T2 - The Quill TI - The Corporate Complaint Against the Media ID - 2288 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Du Maurier, George DA - Dec. 9, 1878 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins Edison, Thomas +telephones telephonoscope, and Edison seeing at a distance telephonoscope LB - 6730 PY - 1878 ST - Edison’s Telephonoscope (transmits light as well as sound) T2 - Almanack for 1879, Punch TI - Edison’s Telephonoscope (transmits light as well as sound) VL - 75 ID - 2051 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article was among the many attacks that feminists made on child pornography, and more generally on all pornography, during the late 1970s. AU - Dudar, Helen DA - Aug. 1977 IS - 2 KW - women, and new media sexuality women feminism censorship and ratings pornography children children, and pornography pornography, and children child pornography feminism, and pornography women women, and pornography children, and media LB - 28300 PY - 1977 SP - 45-47, 80 ST - America Discovers Child Pornography T2 - Ms. TI - America Discovers Child Pornography VL - 6 ID - 932 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, written by the United States Commissioner of Patents in 1901, talks about developments in several areas of research. With regard to photography and color photography, he writes that "the development of dry plate and other details in the art of photography have been recently such that the amateur of to-day is a better photographer than the expert of yesterday. Interesting possibilities in color photography are at the open door, and the young woman of auburn hair may not much longer complain that her peculiar beauty is not shown in her photograph. The tricolor printing processes of to-day will soon become multicolor printing processes. Typesetting-machines and roller printing processes will be further developed." (3) AU - Duell, Charles H. DA - Jan. 3, 1901 IS - 1 KW - journalism magazines, and photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography, and dry plate photography, and amateurs photography, and color color color, and photography photography, and printing news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines typesetting typesetting, and photography photography, and typesetting photography, and women women, and photography women photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography sexuality quotations, and color photography quotations ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated (youth) ref, Youth's Companion magazines photography LB - 38390 PY - 1901 SP - 3-4 ST - Glimpses into the Future: I. The Future as Seen from the Patent Office T2 - Youth's Companion TI - Glimpses into the Future: I. The Future as Seen from the Patent Office VL - 75 ID - 3938 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Dunn, then President of Film Effects of Hollywood, Inc., discusses the special effects used in "It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad, World," a comedy starring several big name stars and which was shown in Cinerama in 1964. AU - Dunn, Linwood G. DA - March, 1965 IS - 3 KW - cinematography motion pictures special effects motion pictures, and special effects location shooting motion pictures, and location shooting movie, It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World 65mm cameras cameras, 65mm Cinerama cameras 65mm LB - 30030 PY - 1965 SP - 160-63 ST - The 'Mad, Mad' World of Special Effects T2 - American Cinematographer TI - The 'Mad, Mad' World of Special Effects VL - 46 ID - 2758 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, published in early 1906, starts by pointing out that pictures (photographs) of actors "adorn every fence and bill-board, they fill the Sunday newspapers" and they "occasionally break into better company in the magazines!" (386) Moreover, the popular actors has by this time become more important in drawing people into theaters than the play or drama being performed. "In spite of shrill critical reiterance of Hamlet's remark, 'The play's the thing' (which he did not intend as a critical dictum), our public goes on paying its money to see this or that player, sometimes it must be confessed without much regard to the play, continues to lavish on the actor or actress the largess of its applause." (386) The author comments on the difference in the way an actor can deliver lines and the way the reader might experience them in the privacy of his or her study. "A drama read in the closet may be discussed purely on its literary merits; a drama performed on the stage become hopelessly entangled with the personalities of the players, and may often meet success or failure, according to their skill and charm. On an intonation of the actor's voice, a gesture of his hand, a gleam of pas- 386/387 sion on his face, the final lift of the spectator into sympathetic emotion frequently depends. In the closet the reader exercises his own imagination; in the theater he surrenders it to the players. The play's the thing! It is true of man that the skeleton's the thing, but what make it exquisite is the curve of fair flesh on a shoulder, the touch of color in cheek and eye." (386-87) Eaton discusses the magnetism of certain personalities. Referring to a performance by the actor George Arliss, he writes: "That intangible but very real quality, personal magnetism, which seems naturally to radiate from some people, had much to do with it, no doubt. The pictorial skill displayed, the black figure against the lemon yellow walls, was a telling element. And the facial malignity, cunning and cold secrecy, of which Mr. Arliss' features are the master, worked their share. The shock of an evil or a beautiful face seen suddenly is no less potent over the imagination on the stage than in life, no less suggestive of hidden character and emotional possibilities. But one thing is certain -- it was an effect due quite as much to Mr. Arliss as to the playwright or Mr. Thackeray." (389) The subtitle of the article reads: "Illustrated with Photographs of Actors Distinguished in Character Parts Taken Especially for this Article by Alice Houghton." Actors whose photographs are included are: George Arliss, Forbes Robertson, Edith Wynne Matthison, David Warfield, and Mary Shaw. AU - Eaton, Walter Pritchard DA - Feb. 1906 IS - 4 KW - stars (actors) theater fame fame celebrity ref, secondary theater theater, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and theater personality personality, and theater motion pictures, and theater fame, and theater theater, and fame theater, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality actors acting actors, and fame fame, and actors advertising and public relations advertising, and actors actors, and advertising Sunday newspapers photography, and Sunday newspapers Sunday newspapers, and photography actors, and Sunday papers Sunday newspapers, and actors magzines, and photography photography, and magazines actors, and magazines magazines, and actors photography, and actors actors, and photography words vs. images images vs. words quotations quotations, and actors' magnetism quotations, and words v. images acting, and personality personality, and acting quotations, and personality actors, and George Arliss acting, and facial expression actors, and the face ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, American Illustrated Magazine advertising magazines motion pictures photography LB - 39570 PY - 1906 SP - 386-92 ST - The Actor's Portion T2 - American Illustrated Magazine TI - The Actor's Portion VL - 51 ID - 4055 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this interview, given when he was in his mid-60s, Thomas A. Edison discusses his inventions. He expresses his optimism about the power of moving pictures in education. "I could tell any one a great deal about a dynamo and it would be hard for him to understand; but I could show everything in a few pictures so that a child would understand -- and would never forget." (27) AU - Edison, Thomas A. DA - Jan. 5, 1914 IS - 3396 KW - history words vs. images ref, mag motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures images vs. words ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent democracy democracy, and motion pictures motion pictures, and democracy LB - 200 PY - 1914 SP - 24-27 (APS Online) ST - Today and Tomorrow T2 - The Independent TI - Today and Tomorrow VL - 77 ID - 2346 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Ten years earlier, in May-June, 1878 issue of the North American Review, Edison had written an article in which he listed several uses for the phonograph-- 1) letter writing; 2) books on records; 3) teaching elocution; 4) reproducing music; 5) creating a family records of reminiscences; 6) music boxes and toys with sound; 7) clocks that would announce time; 8) preserving languages; 9) aids to teachers and education. "Every one of these uses the perfected phonograph is now ready to carry out," Edison writes in this article. (646) To these uses, he adds an instrument that can provide amusement (e.g., music, short stories, poems). Edison comments on the inexpensive duplication of wax cylinders and also on their use for preserving history. "A single wax cylinder, or blank, may be used for fifteen or twenty successive records before it is worn out. But if the record is to be kept, the wax blank must not be talked upon again, and is simply slipped off from the metal cylinder and filed away for future reference. It may be fitted on to the cylinder again at any time, and will at once utter whatever has been registered on it. One of these wax blanks will repeat its contents thousands of times with undiminished clearness. Further, we are able to multiply to any extent, at slight cost, phonographic copies of the blank, after the talking, or music, or other sounds have been put upon it once." (645) As for preserving history, Edison says: "It is curious to reflect that the Assyrians and Babylonians, 2,500 years ago, chose baked clay cylinders inscribed with cuneiform characters, as their medium for perpetuating records; while this recent result of modern science, the phonograph, uses cylinders of wax for a similar purpose, but with the great and progressive difference that our wax cylinders speak for themselves, and will not have to wait dumbly for centuries to be deciphered, like the famous Kilch-Shergat cylinder, by a Rawlinson or a Layard. Without our facilities, a sovereign, a statesman, or a historian, can inscribe his words on a phonograph blank, which will then be multiplied a thousand-fold; each multiple copy will repeat the sounds of his voice thousands of times; and so, by reserving the copies and using them in relays, his utterances can be transmitted to posterity, centuries afterwards, as freshly and forcibly as if those later generations heard his living accents. Instrumental and vocal music -- solos, duets, quartets, quintets, etc. -- can be recorded on the perfected phonograph with startling completeness and precision. How interesting it will be to future generations to learn from the phonograph exactly how Rubinstein played a composition on the piano;...." (645) The phonograph "will retain a perfect mechanical memory of many things which we may forget," Edison maintains. (649) Edison saw a role for the phonograph in home entertainment and in journalism. "The speeches of orators, the discourses of clergymen, can be had 'on tap,' in every houses that owns a phonograph. It would not be very surprising if, a few years hence, phonographic newspaper bulletins should be issued on wax cylinders. Even now, so soon as the phonograph comes into general use, newspaper reporters and correspondents can talk their matter into the phonograph, either in the editorial office or at some distant point, by a telephone wire connected with a phonograph in the composing-room, so that the communication may be set up in type without any preliminary of writing it out in long hand." (647) Edison says that the "accuracy of interviews with newspaper reporters will be determined, no doubt, by phonographic record." (649) Edison thought the wax cylinders would be sent through the mail and that "pay stations" would be set up where people could take a "phonogram" and play it. (647) Writers would be able to "register their fleeting ideas and brief notes on the phonograph at any hour of day or night, without waiting to find pen, ink or paper, and in much less time it would take to write out even the shortest memoranda. They can also publish their novels or essays exclusively in phonogram form, so as to talk to their readers personally; and in this way they can protect their works from being stolen by means of defective copyright laws. Musical composers, in improvising compositions, will be able to have them recorded instantaneously on the phonograph." (647) Dictating letters will become common. (648, 649) For those concerned with privacy, Edison says that "two business men, conferring together, can talk into the recorder by means of a double transmitting tube, with perfect privacy, and yet obtain upon the cylinder an unimpeachable transcript of their conversation in their own voices, with every break and pause, every hesitation or confident affirmation, every partial suggestion or particular explanation, infallibly set down in the wax." (648) Edison compares the phonograph to instantaneous photography. "In fact, the phonograph will do, and does at this moment accomplish, the same thing in respect of conversation which instantaneous photography does for moving objects; that is, it will present whatever it records with a minute accuracy unattained by any other means." (648) Edison says that using the phonograph requires a little training although considerably less than using a typewriters and little more than is needed to operate a sewing-machine. (649) He ends optimistically: "It will become an important factor in education; and it will teach us to be careful what we say -- for it imparts to us the gift of hearing ourselves as others hear us -- exerting thus a decidedly moral influence by making men brief, businesslike and straightforward, cultivating improved manners, and uniting distant friends and associates by direct vocal communication." (650) AU - Edison, Thomas A. DA - June, 1888 IS - 374 KW - history ref, secondary history and new media materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures sound recording, and historical preservation historical preservation, and sound recording phonograph phonograph, and history history, and phonograph phonograph, and historical preservation historical preservation, and phonograph Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and phonograph phonograph, and Thomas Edison duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and phonograph phonograph, and duplicating technologies quotations quotations, and Edison and phonograph home and new media home, and entertainment phonograph, and home home, and phonograph news and journalism news, and phonograph phonograph, and news telephones telephones, and phonograph phonograph, and telephones law law, and copyright copyright, and phonograph phonograph, and copyright privacy privacy, and phonograph phonograph, and privacy quotations, and phonograph education education, and phonograph phonograph, and education sound recording, and phonograph sound recording, and Thomas Edison ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, North American Review copyright home news LB - 39770 PY - 1888 SP - 641-50 ST - The Perfected Phonograph T2 - North American Review TI - The Perfected Phonograph VL - 46 ID - 4075 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Edison wrote this fascinating piece shortly after his invention. Here he discusses what can already be done with the phonograph: 1) it can capture and permanently retain “fugitive” (530) sound waves; 2) it can capture and reproduce the original sources with or without the consent of the original source; 3) it can transmit “such captive sounds through the ordinary channels of commercial intercourse...”; 4) it can infinitely replicate and preserve the sounds. Edison speculates that in the future this invention will be used in writing and dictation, and that a person can send a sound letter to a correspondent without the intervention of the stenographer. It will be used to record books (p. 534) (“A book of 40,000 words upon a single metal plate ten inches square ... becomes a strong probability” [p. 534]), and that it will be “liberally devoted to music.” It will also be used to capture the last utterances of family members or great people and in this respect “will unquestionably outrank 533/534 the photograph.” (533-34) It will also be used for toys (e.g., talking dolls), clocks that will announce time, music boxes, and for many educational purposes. “Lastly, and in quite another direction, the phonograph will perfect the telephone, and revolutionize present systems of telegraphy.” A person will be able to speak on the phone and record the message at the same time. AU - Edison, Thomas A. DA - May-June, 1878 IS - 262 KW - entertainment entertainment, home preservation labor archives home entertainment history, and new media future and science fiction history home, and new media home office office, and new media telephones sound recording phonograph office, and information technology home, and information technology libraries information technology libraries, and information storage history Edison, Thomas phonograph books, periodicals, newspapers books, recorded information technology, and office information storage telephones, and phonograph phonograph, and telegraph history, break with history, and phonograph future information technology, and home books sound recording office home home, and sound recording LB - 4490 PY - 1878 SP - 527-36 ST - The Phonograph and Its Future T2 - North American Review TI - The Phonograph and Its Future VL - 126 ID - 4308 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that "photography as eclipsed many of her sister arts" (p. [2]) and has had an enormous impact on the study of astronmy and medicine.It notes that George G. Rockwood was the "first one to introduce instantaneous photography" in New York City. (p. [5]) AU - Editor DA - July 1899 IS - 7 KW - photography photography and visual communication cameras photography, instantaneous photography, and medicine photography, and George Rockwood Rockwood, George, and photography ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Phrenological Journal ref, health LB - 130 PY - 1899 SP - 1-5 ST - Mr. George G. Rockwood T2 - Phrenological Journal and Science of Health TI - Mr. George G. Rockwood VL - 108 ID - 1878 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Edkins writes that "by 1925 black-and-white photography played a prominent part in many magazines, but color was rare-- except in technically advanced magazines such as the National Geographic..... The advent of more commercially viable full-color photographic reproduction in the 30s started a new era of general magazine publishing. Also, it gave large-circulation magazines a great advantage over small publishers, since the unit cost of the color pages was so much less for them than for their smaller competitors." This article discusses five pioneers of commercial color photography: Anton Bruehl, Victor Keppler, Paul Outerbridge, Nickolas Muray, and Edward Steichen. AU - Edkins, Diana DA - Sept., 1978 IS - 9 KW - photography news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines context color +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and history of context, and movie technology color +photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography motion pictures, and color photography, and pioneers of color magazines, and color photography +books, periodicals, newspapers color, and magazines color photography, and Anton Bruehl color photography, and Victor Keppler color photography, and Paul Outerbridge color photography, and Nickolas Muray color photography, and Edward Steichen LB - 17920 PY - 1978 SP - 104, 142, 148, 150 ST - Pioneers of Commercial Color: Bruehl, Keppler, Muray, Outerbridge, Steichen T2 - Modern Photography TI - Pioneers of Commercial Color: Bruehl, Keppler, Muray, Outerbridge, Steichen VL - 42 ID - 701 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Edwards writes: "Computers have become the control, information storage, and information processing technology of choice in many other, pre-existing infrastructures. This essay argues that historians of computers and information technology should expand their agenda to include the origins and impacts of this phenomenon. Studying computer-based infrastructures could lead to a new historiographical approach focussing on 'internetworks'. These are very large, integrated, extremely heterogeneous metasystems, made possible in part by 'digital convergence' or the ability to record, store, process, and distribute information in all media using computers and computer networks. Key actors include the developers of protocols for information exchange among heterogeneous networks." AU - Edwards, Paul N. DA - 1998 IS - 1-2 KW - computers primary sources preservation labor networks archives history, and new media computers office office, and new media office +computers and the Internet infrastructure, and computers archives, and new technology computers, and history history, and computers archives, and computers archives, and new media archives, and infrastructure infrastructure, and archives information storage, and computers networks, large-scale +information storage computers, and historical interpretation infrastructure history archives LB - 2740 PY - 1998 SP - 7-29 ST - Y2K: Millennial Reflections on Computers as Infrastructure T2 - History and Technology TI - Y2K: Millennial Reflections on Computers as Infrastructure VL - 15 ID - 362 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This issue was devoted to "Popular Entertainments." In this article, Eisenstein explains what he means by "montage of attractions." “An attraction (in relation to the theatre) is any aggressive aspect of the theatre; that is, any element of the theatre that subjects the spectator to a sensual or psychological impact, experimentally regulated and mathematically calculated to produce in him certain emotional shocks which, when placed in their proper sequence within the totality of the production, become the only means that enable the spectator to perceive the ideological side of what is being demonstrated the ultimate ideological conclusion. (This means of cognition ‘through the living play of passions’ apply specifically to the theatre.) (bold and italics in original text) “Sensual and psychological, of course, are to be understood in the sense of immediate reality, in the way that these are handled, for example, by the Grand Guignol theatre: gouging out eyes or cutting off arms and legs on the stage or a character on stage participating by telephone in a ghastly event ten miles away; or the plight of a drunkard who senses his approaching death, and whose cries for help are taken as delirium tremens not in terms of the development of psychological problems where the attraction is already the theme of the play itself a theme that exists and functions even outside of the play’s action provided that it is sufficiently topical. (This is an error into which agit-theatres fall, satisfied with only this kind of attraction in their productions.) “… An attraction has nothing in common with a trick….” (78) Eisenstein goes on to say that “the film and above all the music hall and the circus constitute the school for the montage-maker….” (79) AU - Eisenstein, Sergei DA - March 1974 IS - 1 (Popular Entertainments) KW - motion pictures motion pictures, and avant-garde avant-garde, and motion pictures cinema of attractions new way of seeing motion pictures, and new way of seeing Eisenstein, Sergei theater motion pictures, and reform motion pictures, and Marxism theater, and agit-prop propaganda motion pictures, and propaganda propaganda, and theater propaganda, and motion pictures ref, secondary Gunning, Tom motion pictures, and modernity ref, secondary ref, secular avant garde LB - 80 PY - 1974 SP - 77-85 ST - Montage of Attractions: For ‘Enough Stupidity in Every Wiseman’ T2 - Drama Review: TDR TI - Montage of Attractions: For ‘Enough Stupidity in Every Wiseman’ VL - 18 ID - 1577 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article attempts to use newspapers and books to measure public reaction to Darwinism during the late nineteenth century. The author discusses methodology and the difficulties involved in trying to gauge opinion in a time before opinion polling. AU - Ellegard, Alvar DA - June 1958 KW - Darwinism news and journalism books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and public opinion books, and public opinion newspapers, and Darwinism Darwinism, and newspapers newspapers books news Darwin, Charles LB - 12690 PY - 1958 SP - 379-87 ST - Public Opinion and the Press: Reactions to Darwinism T2 - Journal of the History of Ideas TI - Public Opinion and the Press: Reactions to Darwinism VL - 19 ID - 2615 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by saying that "There are three things ... which color in literature describes or symbolizes: nature, man, imagination." (212) Certain colors, Havelock contends, are associated with certain emotions. Red, for example "and its synonyms ... assume an absorbing interest in man and woman, for these are the colors of blood and of love, the two main pivots of human affairs, at all events in poetry." And "a love for red is evidently associated with the passionate and sensuous enjoyment of natural and human things" in many of the great writers including "Chaucer, Shakespeare, Keats, Tennyson, and D'Annunzio." (212) In the seventeenth century, the Puritans found pleasure in green, as did Tennyson, and associated this color with nature and country living. (212) Havelock says, however, that language is often inadequate to describe color. "The savage rarely possesses words for either color [e.g., blue and green, and even the Greeks in the fourth century of our era had no specialized word for green." (212) Havelock gives other and later examples for the lack of language for colors. AU - Ellis, Havelock DA - Sept. 1896 IS - 3 KW - religion religion, and color emotion decadence censorship censorship censorship ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color color, and inadequacy of language color, in history color, and theory color, and language color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and poetry color, and religion religion, and color values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color media effects color, media effects media effects, and color color, and primitives ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Literature LB - 39190 PY - 1896 SP - 212-13 ST - Color in Literature T2 - Current Literature TI - Color in Literature VL - 20 ID - 4018 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Ellis begins by arguing that even though scientific investigations of color sense are in their infancy, it is clear that humans have had this facility from the beginning. "The colour-vision of savages, whenever carefully tested, is found to be admirable, as is also that of the lower animals, and there is no reason to suppose that so useful an aptitude ever fell into abeyance." (714) Yet, he says, language has been inadequate to describe and explain color. "It remains true... that while man's colour-vision has in all probability always been excellent, his colour-vocabulary has sometimes been extremely defective, even among ourselves to-day remaining very vague...." (714) He notes that the "savage rarely possesses words for either colour [blue and green], and even the Greeks in the fourth century of our era had no specialised word for green. "(727) In a footnote, he refers to an issue of Nature in 1895 that attempted to improve the quality of language relating to color. (714) Ellis explains his research as follows: "I have selected a series of imaginative writers, usually poets, dating from the dawn of literature to our own day; and in considerable fragments of their works, sometimes their complete works, I have noted the main colour-words that occur, and have also noted how these words are used." (715) He is careful to explain his methodology, too. "I was careful to avoid the danger of taking too small a basis for calculation; I was also careful to to eliminate any bias of my own, and, as will be seen, I have not been able to show that any one colour dominates imaginative literature from first to last." (715) The author contends that his study of color-vision has at least two uses. First, it is "an instrument for investigating a writer's person psychology, by defining the nature of his aesthetic colour-vision." (729) In other words, the colors a writers uses can tell us "at a glance, simply and reliably, something about his view of this world which pages of description could onlly tell us with uncertainty." (729) Second, this research "unables us to take a definite step in the attainment of a scientific aesthetic, by furnishing a means of comparative study." (729) Among the writers Ellis examines are Isaiah, Job, Song of Songs, Homer, Catullus, Chaucer, Marlowe, Shakespeare, Thomson, Blake, Coleridge, Shelley, Keats, Wordsworth, Poe, Baudelaire, Tennyson, Rossetti, Swinburne, Whitman, Pater, Verlaine, Olive Schreiber, and D'Annunzio. He concludes that "in general, it may be said that recent writers use more colour than earlier writers, and that a poet's early work shows more colour than his later work, but there are numerous exceptions." (717) Ellis that color in literature symbolizes or represents three things: "nature, man, imagination. These three over the whole ground. The predominance of green or blue -- the colours of vegetation, the sky, and the sea -- means that the poet is predominantly a poet of nature. If red and its synonyms are supreme, we may assume an absorbing interest in man and woman, for there are the colours of blood and of love, the two main pivots of human affairs, at all events in poetry. And where there is a predominance of black, white, and, I think I would add, yellow -- the colours that are rare in the world, and the colour of golden impossibilities -- there we shall find that the poet is singing with, as it were, closed eyes, intent on his own inner vision. Wordsworth and Shelley belong largely to the first class; Chaucer and Whitman largely to the second; and Homer, Marlowe, Blake, Poe, and Rossetti largely to the third. We cannot, of course, expect any great degree of precision in the matter. Green among the earlier writers is commonly used of garments; blue often referes to eyes and veins; it is chiefly by their tone that black, white, and yellow reveal the imaginative instincts; and red refers to human beings things in only about fifty per cent. cases in which it occurs. But the general tendency remains distinct." (726) Green, the author says, became common in the 17th century. "It is in the seventeenth century that we first find trace of a conscious and deliberate joy in green with special reference to its symbolism of nature. This tendency was a by-product of the Puritan movement. The men who turned from courts and towns began to find pleasure in the country, and the predominant colour of the country became for them the symbol of that pleasure." (728) Green was also associated with decadence. "Wordsworth represents the climax of the green movement in English literature; in his hands the epithet become merely a label which the poet affixes almost mechanically to his literary baggage. If a love of green, as a writer with some claim to be an authority has somewhat absurdly declared, 'heralds a laxity, if not a decadence of morals,' the end of the last century [18th century] was certainly such an age, and Wordsworth was the chief prophet. It was clearly impossible to go farther in that direction." (728) Tennyson introduced "a new movement," and while not adverse to green, realized that its use had become a "bald convention.... The type of colour-formula which Tennyson introduced, or re-introduced, is substantially that which still rules to-day." (729) Ellis suggests that in the future, blue may be more widely used. Finally, Ellis rejects the idea that the use of color in late 19th century art represented decadence or degeneration. "At least one broad and unexpected conclusion may be gathered from the tables here presented. Many foolish things have been written about the 'degeneration' of latter-day art. It is easy to dogmatise when you thik that you are safe from the evidence of precise tests. But here is a reasonably precise test. And the evidence of this test, at all events, by no means furnishes support for the theory of decadence. On the contrary, it shows that the decadence, if anywhere, was at the end of the last century, and that our vision of the world is fairly one with that of classic times, with Chaucer's and with Shakespeare's. At the end of the nineteenty century we can say this for the first time since Shakespeare died." (729) AU - Ellis, Havelock DA - Jan.-June, 1896 KW - media effects emotion decadence ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color color, and inadequacy of language color, in history color, and theory color, and language color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and poetry values values, and color color, and values color, and decadence decadence, and color non-USA color, and non-USA non-USA, and color color, as not decadent color, and red color, and blue color, and yellow color, and green ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Contemporary Review LB - 39810 PY - 1896 SP - 714-29 ST - The Colour-Sense in Literature T2 - Contemporary Review TI - The Colour-Sense in Literature VL - 69 ID - 4079 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Ellis begins this article by saying that "Among all colors, the most poignantly emotional tone undoubtedly belongs to red." (365) Red "possesses" a "special virtue in relations to other colors" which "all are of infinite variety." (365) According to Ellis, red is one of the very few colors that are almost always recognized by savages (368, 372, 373) and one of the first color to be seen by children (374). While it may be a sacred color to some, it must also be said that "red is the most primitive of colors." (370) Ellis says that the color to distinguish color, even among the uncivilized, is greater than the ability to express color in language. "In all parts of the world it has been found that color discrimination, even amongst the lowest savages, is far more accurate than color nomenclature." (368) Ellis also implies here that civilized people tended to prefer more subtle color rather than strong primary colors such as red. "It is difficult not to believe that there really is, both among many uncivilized peoples and also many children at an early age, even to a slight extent among civilized adults, a relative inability, by no means usually absolute, to recognize and distinguish the tones of color at the more refrangible end of the spectrum." (373) Ellis mentions Hugo Munsterberg's studies that showed such colors as red and yellow tended to stimulate the eye more strongly that other hues. He cites a 1897 study by J. Jastrow ("The Popular Aesthetic of Color," Popular Science Monthly) that show that most adults preferred blue as their favor color and about half as many liked red. (373) Once teens reach puberty, most also seemed to prefer blue. (375) Most men prefer blue and that most women like red, Ellis says and concludes by saying that "it might have been anticipated that, even though the typically 'cold' color should appeal most strongly to men, the most emotional of colors should appeal most strongly to women." (375) AU - Ellis, Havelock DA - Aug., 1900 KW - religion religion, and color Münsterberg, Hugo media effects emotion decadence ref, secondary color color, and values values, and color values actors actors, and color color, and actors quotations quotations, and color meanings color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and poetry color, and religion religion, and color values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations color, and red color, and savages color, and the uncivilized color, and children children and media children, and color red quotations, and color red quotations, and education thur senses violence violence, and color color, and violence ref, secular ref, literary ref, Popular Science Monthly color, and inadequacy of language women women, and color red color, and Hugo Munsterberg Munsterberg, Hugo, and color Munsterberg, Hugo acting children LB - 41200 PY - 1900 SP - 365-75 ST - The Psychology of Red T2 - Popular Science Monthly TI - The Psychology of Red VL - 57 ID - 4219 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The article begins by comaring the telephoto lens to field glasses or the telescope in its ability to bring remote objects closer. The author notes that he began experimenting in 1890 with the lenses from old field glasses and found that it brought St. Patrick's Cathedral which was 18 blocks away into much closer viewing range. Elmendorf describes a telephoto attachment and it increases the exposure time needed to take a picture. "This is a serious drawback, for it not only debars one from using it upon moving subjects, but also increases the liability of the image to be blurred by vibrations of the camera. In order to obtain the best results the camera must be very rigid. Most of the cameras and tripods of to-day are too light and unstable for telephotography." AU - Elmendorf, Dwight L. DA - Jan. 1900 IS - 1 KW - telephotography journalism fame celebrity celebrity culture magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality cameras cameras, and zoom lens zoom lens, and cameras cameras, and telephoto lens telephotography, and limitations modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing photography, and space and time space and time photography, and time photography, and space photography, and travel photography, and exposure time news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines newspapers, and telephotography telephotography, and newspapers telephotography, and exposure time photography, and exposure time personality ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Literature LB - 37380 PY - 1900 SP - 82 (APS Online) ST - Telephotography T2 - Current Literature TI - Telephotography VL - 27 ID - 3837 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Fairbanks writes that with "the wonderful advances made in the study and practice of photography in recent years, the work of the engraver has been revolutionized. Mechanical processes have now been devised by means of which pen and ink and pencil drawings may be reproduced in exact facsimile, and drawings done in water color, and even in oil, may be rendered in relief plates, from which impressions with amazing fidelity to the original, may be taken by the ordinary process of printing." (597) Still, the work of the artist-engraver is superior in some areas. The author says that "despite the beauty of the soft half-tone engravings, the superiority of artistic wood cutting remains unimpaired, and a great part of the best work in our magazines is still produced by the 'painter-engraver,' who is able to preserve the color values and tones of the original as no photographic process is quite able to do as yet. Bright red and yellows in nature will insist on coming out black in photographing, and the darkest blues appear as white, and these errors of the camera the wood engraver can correct." (599) Fairbanks then discusses some of the most prominent illustrators. AU - Fairbanks, C. M. DA - Aug. 1891 IS - 5 KW - wood engraving journalism journalism illustrations magazines, and photography magazines photography news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving electricity electricity, and journalism journalism, and electricity electricity, and newspapers newspapers, and electricity illustrations, and newspapers newspapers, and illustrations color color, and photography photography, and color color, and illustrations illustrations, and color duplicating technologies photography, and duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and engravers duplicating technologies, and illustrations duplicating technologies, and newspapers newspapers, and duplicating technologies illutrations, and duplicating technologies ref, secondary ref, secular ref, educational ref, reform ref, Chautauquan magazines, and duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and magazines half tones, and duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and half tones photography, and half tones newspapers, and half tones illustrations LB - 41710 PY - 1891 SP - 597-601 ST - Illustration and Our Illustrators T2 - The Chautauquan TI - Illustration and Our Illustrators VL - 13 ID - 4269 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article laments that fact that increasingly during the preceding decade illustrated material is replacing written text in weekly and even daily publications. Fairfield considers the "written word" to be "the first and the highest expression of thought, and it ever will be." (864) Yet, "the reading public has suddenly become picture-mad." (863-64) He notes that reading material is more in demand if pictures come with it and so urges writers to either learn how to be illustrators or to hire a good illustration. Care needs to be exercised by the writer, however, because the illustrator "often ... takes outrageous license with the truth as written. He is essentially an exaggerator, a perverter of the facts." (864) The most commonly used picture or illustration has become the woman. Pictures of beautiful women are replacing written text. There was a "glorification of feminine beauty." (863) Where possible, color is used. "The color is laid on thick in those spots and combinations which yield the most striking effect when displayed on the news-stand." (862) As "long as certain publishers insist on putting forth the painted and decorated woman in all manner of impossible costumes with impossible backgrounds, the artists who want to make money can do so by catering to this manufactured taste." (862) Advertising, of course, is a leader in the use of such pictures. Even when publications do not use color, women remain "the one great subject for illustration." (863) These are pictures of the "'up-to-date' girl" and the emancipated woman of the women's movement. "We are daft -- or at least many of us are daft -- over rounded arms, snowy shoulders, lips like wine, radiant cheeks, and all other sensuous allurements of a perfect woman; and as long as we are thus entranced and will buy these things in picture-papers, so long will capital and brains go into partnership to supply the demand." (864) AU - Fairfield, Sidney DA - June 1895 KW - words vs. images magazines, and photography magazines photography photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography magazines women women, and photography photography, and women women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women images vs. words women, and beauty photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines women, and sexuality sexuality, and women advertising advertising, and photography photography, and advertising advertising, and women women, and advertising ref-mag ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Lippincott's advertising and public relations news and journalism sexuality LB - 110 PY - 1895 SP - 861-64 ST - The Tyranny of the Pictorial T2 - Lippincott's Monthly Magazine TI - The Tyranny of the Pictorial ID - 1840 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author points out that fibre-optic communication may alter the foundation of the entire information industry. He surveys the history of this technology beginning with the Claude Chappe's optical telegraph in France during the 1790s. A section is devoted to the first optical waveguides , and then a section on masers and lasers (covering the 1950s up to 1970 and the development of a continuous-wave semiconductor laser at Bell Labs. The author then discusses research on glass as a medium of transmission. The article concludes that "besides being different, fibre-optic communications is a rival to older techniques and a threat to the interests vested in them. It is eroding the dominant technological paradigm of telecommunications on two basic counts. First, the physical principles on which the transfer of information takes place. Electronic telephone transmission signals and laser light are both electromagnetic waves, but they have different characteristics. Second, the materials used to enable the transfer of information to take place. So far, electromagnetic communications and information-handling have been chiefly founded on metal conductors. The first major challenge to this material base was the introduction of silicon and other non-metallic substances in semi-conductors, but the technological and economic impact of fibre-optics communications systems, in which metals play only an auxiliary role, is much more significant, especially because of the expected pervasiveness of integrated optics." The author notes that fiber optics is a relatively new technology -- the basic inventions underlying it had been around about three decades or less at the time of this article; fiber optic transmission lines had been on the market for only about one decade. Using scientific papers and "a few well-researched historical papers," this article examines how fiber optics was invented and the forces that influence scientists in their research -- why the research went in certain directions and not others. AU - Faltas, Sami DA - 1988 IS - 1 KW - computers materials, and silicon corporations corporations fiber optics communication revolution materials fiber optics communication revolution, and second industrial revolution non-USA optical fibers France +telegraph telegraph, optical Chappe, Claude lasers masers glass silicon materials revolution second industrial revolution electromagnetic waves metals semiconductors +telephones Bell Laboratories optical fibers, and cable telephones, electronic +computers and the Internet fiber optics, origins optical fibers, origins lasers, and fiber optics materials revolution communication revolution materials electricity LB - 11800 PY - 1988 SP - 31-49 ST - The invention of fibre-optic communications T2 - History and Technology: An International Journal TI - The invention of fibre-optic communications VL - 5 ID - 2527 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Fanning, R. S. DA - Sept. 6, 1916 IS - 2124 KW - art Marked advertising and public relations color color, and advertising advertising, and color art, and advertising advertising, and art modernity modernity, and advertising advertising, and modernity new way of seeing new way of seeing, and advertising advertising, and new way of seeing billboards posters advertising, and posters posters, and advertising advertising, and billboards billboards, and advertising color, and billboards ref, secondary ref, secular ref, American Architect quotations, and billboards electricity electricity, and electric signs advertising, and architecture color, and electricity electricity, and color advertising quotations LB - 41330 PY - 1916 SP - 147-48 ST - Advertising Architecture T2 - American Architect TI - Advertising Architecture VL - 110 ID - 4232 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This review essay of Howard P. Segal's book Technological Utopianism in American Culture (1985), discusses not only Segal's book but other writing on this topic. Segal examined the writings of more than two dozen authors, most between 1883 and 1933. AU - Fano, Ester DA - 1987 IS - 3 KW - technology utopianism technology and society values utopianism, and technology technology, and utopianism values, and technology critics Segal, Howard technological determinism technological utopianism, and literature survey values LB - 3140 PY - 1987 SP - 329-38 ST - Early American Technological Edens [review essay] T2 - History and Technology TI - Early American Technological Edens [review essay] VL - 3 ID - 402 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author, who was president of Brown University, says that the "chief need of American education is background. We are swept away by a desperate desire for modernity.... The worship of the contemporaneous, which is really the extemporaneous, means loss of all perspective, disregard of history, callow judgments, superficial reforms, and ready acceptance of panaceas." He argues for the effective teaching of Greek and Latin. He says that "those studies -- or others devoted to the interpretation of great thinking into modern speech and action -- at least will save us from education given solely by short stories and moving pictures, and from the naive conviction that our age is the only one worth knowing." AU - Faunce, W. H. P. DA - Aug. 22, 1914 KW - history modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures ref, religious ref, literary ref, congregationalist ref, Outlook LB - 160 PY - 1914 SP - 962 ST - Transient Knowledge and Permanent Education T2 - Outlook TI - Transient Knowledge and Permanent Education ID - 2032 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Fearing begins by saying that "with a few special exceptions, everybody -- social scientists, movie makers, and laymen -- seems to agree that there are profoundly important relationships between motion pictures and human behavior. The initially important question is concerned with the way in which these relationships are to be conceived." Fearing studied the effects of educational films during World War II. Of educational films, he argues that "their use and the studies which have been made regarding their effects present unequivocal evidence that motion pictures do affect human attitudes." AU - Fearing, Franklin DA - Nov., 1947 KW - nationalism nationalism public relations advertising propaganda values motion pictures education law censorship and ratings censorship war audiences +motion pictures and popular culture regulation, and motion pictures audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship critics values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values media effects media effects, and motion pictures propaganda, and motion pictures education, and motion pictures World War II World War II, and propaganda films +nationalism and communication nationalism, and motion pictures military communication regulation advertising and public relations LB - 2990 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality See filed under Annals.... (1947). PY - 1947 SP - 70-79 ST - Influence of the Movies on Attidues and Behavior TI - Influence of the Movies on Attidues and Behavior ID - 387 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article examines moral and medical discourse about women in exploitation movies, films that often played outside mainstream theaters and without the approval of the mainstream motion picture industry. "Medical discourse in the exploitation cinema is at the core of the genre's imagery, narrative and conventions," Feaster writes. AU - Feaster, Felicia DA - 1994 IS - 3 KW - audiences self-regulation Production Code motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality exploitation circuit women, and new media women values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) sexuality pornography sexuality exploitation circuit values religion law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and history of sex nudity motion pictures, and nudity censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and exploitation circuit pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and history of theaters motion pictures, and porn theaters Production Code, and exploitation circuit motion pictures, and childbirth motion pictures, and venereal disease women, and exploitation circuit exploitation circuit, and women motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and drug use LB - 16450 N1 - See filed under Film History articles (1994). PY - 1994 SP - 340-54 ST - The woman on the table: Moral and medical discourse in the exploitation cinema T2 - Film History TI - The woman on the table: Moral and medical discourse in the exploitation cinema VL - 6 ID - 597 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This essay by a sociologist reviews several studies on the relationship between violence and mass media: field experiments, natural experiments involving the introduction of television into society, natural experiments involving publicized violence, longitudinal surveys, theoretical explanations of situational effects (cognitive priming, arousal from pornography, sponsor effects, television viewing as a routine activity), and theoretical explanations involving socialization (learning novel forms of behavior, vicarious reinforcement and legitimations, desensitization, messages from pornography). The essay also provide discussion of other meta analyses of media and violence. Felson’s conclusions are qualified. He agrees with “those scholars who think that exposure to television violence probably does have a small effect on violent behavior.” He also agrees with research indicating that some people are “more susceptible to media influence than others,” and that it is reasonable to assume that “the media directs viewers’ attention to novel forms of violent behavior they might not otherwise consider.” This essay is also reprinted in Stephen Prince, ed., Screening Violence (New Brunswick, N. J.: Rutgers University Press, 2000), 237-66. AU - Felson, Richard B. DA - 1996 KW - syntheses sexuality meta-analyses media effects media violence violence journalism news and journalism +motion pictures and popular culture +television motion pictures violence, and television television, and violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence news, and violence meta-analyses, media and violence bibliographies bibliographies, and media violence pornography values, and media violence, and pornography pornography, and violence media effects media effects, and television violence media effects, and violence values news bibliographies, and violence LB - 12610 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1996 SP - 103-28 ST - Mass Media Effects on Violent Behavior T2 - Annual Review of Sociology TI - Mass Media Effects on Violent Behavior VL - 22 ID - 2607 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article, the director of photography for "A Swingin' Summer" (1965), Ray Fernstrom, discusses the use of color photography in the making of this low-budget movie that starred sex symbol Raquel Welch. He also covers the use of cameras, zoom lenses, and lighting (both interior and exterior). He talks about shooting a "day for night love scene," that is, a scene supposedly that took place at night but which was filmed during the day. In addition, he covers the "Rembrandt technique" which involved highlighting the area of the movie on which the movie's makers wanted to focus attention. AU - Fernstrom, Ray DA - May, 1965 IS - 5 KW - lenses, zoom sex corporations motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality corporations cinematography motion pictures lighting cameras color Technicolor Techniscope Eastman Kodak color, and low budet sex scences motion pictures, and sex sexuality cameras, and zoom lenses zoom lenses movie, A Swingin' Summer A Swingin' Summer Welch, Raquel Welch lighting, and sex scenes color, and sex scenes sex scenes, low budget motion pictures, day for night photography motion pictures, and location shooting location shooting lenses LB - 30070 PY - 1965 SP - 292-95 ST - Low Budget Color Photography of A Swingin' Summer T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Low Budget Color Photography of A Swingin' Summer VL - 46 ID - 2762 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author argues that "the regulation of technology is the most important intellectual and political task on the America agenda. "I do not say that technology will be regulated, only that it should be. "My thesis is unpopular. It rests on the growing evidence that technology is subtracting as much or more from the sum of human welfare as its is adding. We are substituting a technological environment for a natural environment." Ferry sees technology killing privacy. For example, the then proposed supersonic transport plane would damage privacy: "the sonic boom of the SST will daily and nightly waken sleepers; worsen the condition of the sick; frighten tens of millions; induce neuroses; and cause property damage beyond estimate." He also discusses the creation of smog and damager to the environment, and the impace of technology on education. Ferry sees the uncritical linkage on technology and progress as an underlying problem. Ferry at the time was vice president of the Fund for the Republic, Inc. and a staff associate of its Center for the Study of Democracy Institutions in Santa Barbara, CA. AU - Ferry, Wilbur H. DA - March 2, 1968 IS - 9 KW - technology surveillance progress law, and privacy privacy education community democracy law values technology and society law, and technology privacy, and technology environment, and technology critics democracy and media technology, and progress progress, and technology education, and technology environment LB - 2700 PY - 1968 SP - 50-54 ST - Must We Rewrite the Constitution to Control Technology? T2 - Saturday Review TI - Must We Rewrite the Constitution to Control Technology? VL - 51 ID - 358 ER - TY - JOUR AB - H. D. Estabrook said in 1913 that the railroad and the telegraph were the “Siamese Twins” of commerce. Field says that “Whereas the economic impact of the railroad has received extensive attention, that of the telegraph has not.” Field notes that economic history texts written between 1960 and 1990 have made few references to the telegraph. Earlier economic historians such as George Rogers Taylor did mention the telegraph but did not fully development its significance. Taylor said in The Transportation Revolution, written in 1951, that “In an age of revolutionary developments in transportation and communication, perhaps the most drastic change resulted from the magnetic telegraph.” In this article, Field deals primarily with “optical telegraphy” in France. Such a network existed on the east coast of the U.S. and in Britain. In France between 1794 and 1855, this network grew to 530 relay stations cover about 5,000 kilometers. The relay stations were usually 8-10 kilometers apart, situated on high points-- mountains, specially constructed towers, church belfries. They were manned by two operators with telescopes. Each station had three movable arms connected to each other. More detail is given in the article. AU - Field, Alexander J. DA - April 1994 IS - 2 KW - telescopes non-USA +telegraph telegraph, optical +transportation railroads Taylor, George Rogers telegraph, magnetic France France, optical telegraph telescopes, and optical telegraph LB - 5200 PY - 1994 SP - 315-47 ST - French Optical Telegraphy, 1793-1855: Hardware, Software, Administration T2 - Technology and Culture TI - French Optical Telegraphy, 1793-1855: Hardware, Software, Administration VL - 35 ID - 1907 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article poses a imaginary conversation between an "Art Critic" and a "Young Artist." The art critics wants more attention paid to "the management of color." The young artist is more inclined to give reign to his emotions in expressing color. The critic says that "If you look round the work that is being done at the present time you will find that a vast amount of it is either willfully aggressive and unpleasant or is merely an evasion of color -- it is either offensively vulgar and inharmonious and unpleasantly dull and depressing. There is little discretion in the use of colour, little understanding of the science of arrangement, and little study of subtleties of combination. ... Moreover, I see no hope of improvement until our decorative artists learn that undisciplined emotion is a curse rather than a blessing." (160) AU - Figure, The Lay DA - Jan. 1917 KW - media effects emotion ref, secondary ref, International Studio color, in decoration color, and design color color color, and undisciplined emotion color, in history color, and theory color, and language color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology cvalues values, and color color, and values color, and decadence critics critics, and modern uses of color values LB - 42440 PY - 1917 SP - 160 ST - The Lay Figure: On Discretion in Colour T2 - International Studio TI - The Lay Figure: On Discretion in Colour VL - 60 ID - 4343 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article, Findlay, who was a professor of chemistry at University College of Wales, talks about "The Way in Which Paper is Made," "Imitation Leather and Mercerized Cotton," " Artificial Silk, Sugar and Alcohol," and "Guncotton, Smokeless Powder and Celluloid." Of celluloid, he writes that "although the investigations that led to the discovery of celluloid were first undertaken with the object of finding a substitute for ivory for the manufacture of billiard balls, celluloid is now used not only for that purpose but also for imitating amber, for making photograph and motion -picture films, combs, knife handles, soap boxes, and innumerable other articles in common use. It is, indeed, the most widely used of all the plastic materials at the present day." However, he notes that celluloid presents a serious fire hazard and can be ignited by the sun's rays or by contact with a hold electric light bulb. AU - Findlay, Alexander DA - Jan. 16, 1919 IS - 3 KW - ref, secondary materials materials, and celluloid celluloid, and materials celluloid materials, and cellulose motion pictures, and celluloid celluloid, and motion pictures ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated (youth) ref, Youth's Companion motion pictures LB - 37960 PY - 1919 SP - 27-28 ST - The Wonders of Cellulose T2 - Youth's Companion TI - The Wonders of Cellulose VL - 93 ID - 3895 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The authors surveyed national unions on how information technology was being used. They found, for example, that 89 percent used personal computers, and more than 70 percent of unions reported using a local area network for communications. Word processing software and spreadsheets were used by nearly everyone, but relatively few were using satellite, cable television or video conferencing, according to the survey. The survey involved 75 unions representing 12 million members. Some key findings: “IT use seems to be related to union size, rationalization of union bureaucratic structure, and environmental scanning.” The authors suggested that larger unions have greater the resources and cost-spreading ability to invest in information technology. The complexity of the union structure “probably increases the value of IT to improve communications and coordination.” Further, “unions more attuned to the developments in the external environment are likely to be more aware of the potential for IT applications to their tasks.” --Phil Glende AU - Fiorito, Jack, Paul Joray, John Thomas Delaney, and Robert W. Kolodinsky DA - Winter 2000 IS - 4 KW - computers satellites computers Glende, Phil labor labor, and new media +computers and the Internet labor, and computers computers, and labor +aeronautics and space communication labor, and satellites satellites,and labor labor, and cable television +television television, and labor labor, and video conferencing video conferencing, and labor video conferencing LB - 970 N1 - See also: office PY - 2000 SP - 3-34 ST - Unions and Information Technology: From Luddites to Cyberunions? T2 - Labor Studies Journal TI - Unions and Information Technology: From Luddites to Cyberunions? VL - 24 ID - 185 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses how moving production from videotape to film increased the market for the television series "Science in Action." It notes that many science programs depend heavily on being able to film in color. For example, program dealing with blood, or hematology. The author points out that the full syndication of "Science In Action" was not realized until it went to film becaus "there are simply not enough stations equipped to handle programs syndicated on tape." (45) Another advantage in using film was that it made it easier to record a program on location. The cost for doing a program in color film was about the same as that of doing a program using color videotape. At this time, it was still easier and cheaper to update and edit a program in film. (46) The 30-minute show was film with a Kodak Reflex Special 16mm camera. Sound recording of the program used boom and lavalier microphones and spocketed 16mm magnetic film. AU - Fischel, Robert DA - Jan., 1965 IS - 1 KW - cinematography television color videotape 16mm 16mm film, and television television, and 16mm film television, and videotape magnetic sound recording microphones television, and microphones color, and TV film color, and videotape color, and television television, and color cameras television, and 16mm cameras 16mm cameras, and television magnetic recording, and 16mm film 16mm cameras, and magnetic sound recording motion pictures magnetic recording magnetic tape 16mm film LB - 30400 PY - 1965 SP - 45-46 ST - Color Film Preferred T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Color Film Preferred VL - 46 ID - 2795 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Digital communication meant that in the not-too-distant future, as the entertainment and information worlds moved from analog to digital means of communication, the movies would continue to converge with other media – television, video games, music, radio, books, newspapers, magazines, telephones, and the World Wide Web – and could be accessed from any place, at any time, on TV sets, personal computers, automobile dashboards, with eye glasses and wristwatches – even, some predicted, with retinal implants. It seemed certain that these media would become more sophisticated in their ability to mimic real life experiences. AU - Fischetti, Mark DA - Nov., 2000 IS - 5 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography television, and digital projection motion pictures home entertainment Hollywood digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema computers 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movie +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality Hollywood, and digital movies digital movies, and Hollywood media convergence Hollywood, and media convergence media convergence, and digitial movies +television television, and digital entertainment television, and media convergence media convergence convergence, media digitization LB - 27160 PY - 2000 SP - 47-49 ST - The Future of Digital Entertainment T2 - Scientific American TI - The Future of Digital Entertainment VL - 283 ID - 1273 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article argues that moving pictures are a new art form for literature, the first since the appearance of the novel. “This moving picture story is a new literary form. It is not drama, it is not novel, it is not poem. It contains the elements of all previous forms, but it is itself a new creation, the only new form which literature has evolved since the publication of the first novel in 1741. It is so modern that we cannot see it in perspective; we can as yet realize only in the smallest way its possibilities. We may see a little: we may imagine more; but we should ever bear in mind the vast difference between crude beginnings and full achievement; between ‘Pamela’ and ‘Les Miserables’; between the ‘Beggar’s Opera’ and ‘Parsifal.’ The motion picture story is to-day a lusty infant. When it gets its growth it will shed its swaddling clothes and all men will see and recognize its virile power.” The article also notes that brewers have lost money to the movies and hence are the source of much hostiled press toward cinema. “A very large percentage of the income of these nickel theaters is taken directly from the profits of the brewers. This fact probably accounts largely for the hostility of the daily press to the motion picture; the liquor interests largely sway the press through their advertisements.” The article indicates that improvements in lighting, especially the Cooper Hewitt mercury vapor lamp, made it possible for film makers to created more elaborate story thus changing the nature of acting. Cooper Hewitt lighting made possible the filming of more complex stories about the time of transition and the emergence of the “star.” “The art of printing made possible the novel. The invention of Edison made possible the newest literary form, though the inventor had no suspicions of this literary fact at the time. The first motion pictures were all scenic: later simple pantomimic actions were planned and photographed. Then came the invention of the mercury vapor electric light (the Cooper Hewitt light), peculiarly adapted to photography. This made possible the use of special studios and scenic settings. Producers began to plan and to stage regular pantomime plays; now the larger producing companies all have these studios; some have private parks many acres in extent, and all send companies into the great natural studio of out-of-doors, there to enact their mimic dramas in the environment of natural scenery.” AU - Fitch, Walter M. DA - Feb.19, 1910 IS - 6 KW - theater stage fame fame celebrity celebrity culture censorship words vs. images metaphors actors acting motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and printing press motion pictures, as new literary form theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures images vs. words motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and novels censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings censorship, and brewers motion pictures, and censorship (brewers) electricity lighting mercury vapor electric light lighting, and Cooper Hewitt lighting, and mercury vapor motion pictures, and lighting motion pictures, and Cooper Hewitt lighting acting, and lighting lighting, and acting motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and celebrity motion pictures, and fame fame, and motion pictures celebrity, and motion pictures celebrity culture actors, and status of ref, secondary ref, secular ref, movie magazine ref, Moving Picture World LB - 1100 PY - 1910 SP - 248 ST - The Motion Picture Story Considered as a New Literary Form T2 - Moving Picture World TI - The Motion Picture Story Considered as a New Literary Form VL - 7 ID - 3405 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the portable equipment used by an independent film maker who works with 16mm film. AU - Fleming, Rex DA - Oct., 1965 IS - 10 KW - motion pictures location shooting motion pictures, and location shooting location shooting, and problems cameras cameras, and lens lighting 16mm film cameras, 16mm cameras cameras, portable independent movie making motion pictures, independent motion pictures, 16mm 16mm LB - 29990 PY - 1965 SP - 642-44 ST - Suitcase Studio T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Suitcase Studio VL - 46 ID - 2754 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Beaumont Fletcher begins by saying that "Nobody will deny that the Stage can be grossly immoral." (280) But the stage can be a positive force but if it is to fulfill its educational potential, it must "endure comparison with that activity which is entirely devote [sic] to the furtherance of morals, the Church." (280) The stage is primarily to amuse and provide entertainment and whatever moral instruction it has to offer must be provided in that context. Fletcher writes that "the Stage should pose as a teacher primarily; its first object is to entertain. Like fiction, and other branches of art, its didacticism must be artfully concealed, effective only subtly." (282) The author talks about the status of actors and says that "the potency of tradition, centuries old, is against the actor." "Over-zealous" critics have preached that the "play-house is 'the vestibule of hell,' a pitfall for young men's feet." (283) The actor's life off-stage may often be immoral even if his stage performance may be deemed moral. But "a virtuous actor cannot redeem the insidious immorality of a drama, any more than the uprightness of a theologian can ensure the accuracy of his dogmas. The word and the speaker are not the same." (280) Why do actors have a low status? "Now the somewhat general laxness of actors lies almost altogether in a disregard of one section of the Decalogue. They are conspicuously absent from the jails and penitentiaries, and they possess the virtue of charity to a remarkable degree. The reasons for their personal intemperance are numerous and quickly found. They are, of necessity, a roving class, with almost no opportunity for the solid blessings of home-life. They have a comparatively large income for what is usually a small number of working hours. And their excessive and monotonous leisure must be spent in dissipation or in the horrible barrenness of a hotel room. The very piety of the monks ran into riotous mischief when their only surroundings were dingy, narrow cells." (280) The centuries of prejudice against actors have had an effect on the contemporary actor. "Ages of abuse heaped on the heads of players have had their undeniable effect of the actor of to-day. The recently knighted Sir Henry Irving is still, in the eyes of unrepealed statutes, a rogue and a vagabond. The revered Shakespeare was a common vagrant....Then, too, the unwarrantedly large space theatrical people are given in the newspapers which print most of their vices and few of their good deeds, magnifies their frailty unfairly." (280) "Culture," Fletcher said, was "a prime bulwark of morality. But actors, as a rule, come upon the stage with unfinished educations, and, achieving sudden celebrity in some role, are strongly tempted to wear the mark into a rut, and make to excursions into wider fields of their art. They are 280/281 not a studious class, though, learning is of immense advantage in a genuinely successful stage career." (280-81) The author notes that the moral influence of drama on audiences has been "discussed by numberless writers from Aristotle to Schlegel to Schiller." (281) He argues that "a radical change is demanded in the attitude of the Church toward the Playhouse." (283) Ministers condemnations of the theater do not keep people from attending plays. The average ministers knows little of the plays he attacks "beyond bald newspaper accounts of their plots and garbled, sensational reports of the personal failings of certain actors." (283) Few ministers are bold enough to defend the theater and stage from their pulpits. (284) The author opposes prior censorship. "Art-censorship has never succeeded in justifying its existence," he says. "It installs bigotry, bias, and partisanship into despotry. It brings into play all underhanded machinations, wire-pulling, evasion, bribery. It narrows art to the channel of the faction in power. It throttles inspiration, reform, novelty, experiment. It endeavors to school and jail the high-spirited democracy of artists, and it must yield sooner or later to growing revolution, only to be supplanted by an equally stiff-necked tyrant of another party. After all, a free press and an unfettered art, with punishment for evil works rather than vain attempt at their prevention, bring in their train fewer ills than any other policy." (284) This article ends by observing that modern society seems to have a growing hunger for attending plays. "The passion for play-writing and the hunger for play-going are grown into the very marrow of the bones of civilized man. The stage is a primeval, unceasing activity that cannot be howled down or boycotted. It needs, then the restraining, guiding inspiration of a lofty sentiment in its audiences. The Better Stage has a right to the approval and aid of all that profess a concern in the morals and the culture of mankind." (284) AU - Fletcher, Beaumont DA - Sept. 1895 IS - 783 KW - theaters stars (actors) theater journalism fame entertainment, and journalism entertainment celebrity anti-theatrical bias censorship critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater actors acting actors acting morality magazines ref, secondary theater theater, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and theater personality fame, and theater theater, and fame theater, and stars values values, and theater theater, and values actors, and status of anti-theatrical prejudice theater, and bias against audiences, and theaters theaters, and audiences acting, and bias against censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship morality, and theater theater, and morality women women, and theater theater, and women critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and professional acting motion pictures, and stars (origins) quotations news and journalism actors, and journalism journalism, and actors actors, and newspapers newspapers, and actors magazines, and actors actors, and magazines theater, and religion religion, and theater audiences theater, and audiences audiences, and theater news and journalism entertainment, and journalism journalism, and entertainment newspapers, and actors actors, and newspapers journalism, and theater quotations, and bias against actors newspapers, and magnifying actors personality, and newspapers audiences, and theater theater, and audiences quotations, and vestibule of hell critics, and prior censorship censorship, and critics audiences, and desire for theater modernity, and play-going quotations, and primeval theater quotations, and hunger of theater quotations, and prior censorship censorship ref, secondary ref, secular ref, women ref, Godey's Magazine ref, illustrated modernity motion pictures religion LB - 38860 PY - 1895 SP - 280-84 ST - The Stage and the Church T2 - Godey's Magazine TI - The Stage and the Church VL - 131 ID - 3985 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Flint writes that there are three major categories when considering the use of a moral vocabulary in art criticism between 1870 and 1910. The first, "prevalent since the Renaissance, that art must deliberately serve a didactic end as well as pleasing the eye, persisted, above all through the writings of Ruskin and his followers...." (59) A second category is one "in which morality and art criticism can be considered ... in many ways the obverse of the first. It rests on the belief that art has the power to influence for the bad as well as for the good, both through its content, and, though to a lesser extent, through the style in which it is executed." (59) These two categories, Flint says, are "broadly speaking prescriptive. But the third type of criticism, on which I wish to concentrate for the remainder of this article, is descriptive in its essence: it is that criticism which uses states of being and aspects of conduct as convenient value-bearing metaphors. Whereas the two types of overtly moralising criticism already mentioned centre around the responsibility of the artist, in this cas the finished work itself is constructed as the subject. It is conceived of as a body, possessor of mental and physical attributes and defects. This normative approach habitually employs pairs of opposites used elsewhere to define the human Victorian subject, and plays on associations of approval and disapprobation: health/disease; mental equilibrium/insanity; decorum/unruliness or vulgarity. Short nineteenth-century lists if desirable artistic qualities read like a paraphrase of Victorian moral values: 'strong individuality, earnestness of feeling, and healthiness of conception...." (60) Among the critics who associated some types of art with revolution and anarchy were Max Nordau, E. Wake Cook, and Robert Ross. Kate Flint argues that “Wake Cook was the most fervent and probably the most consistently extreme of those who equated the danger of change in art with political revolution. The very title of his work, Anarchism in Art and Chaos in Criticism draws this analogy, which he elaborates in a vituperative attack against ‘decadence’, against the ‘anti-patriotism’ which an interest in French art reveals. In a neat bit of bellicose word play, he condemns those artists who, in the late nineteenth century, tried to upset British painting as ‘A few daring anarchists [who] crept in and tried to spike the canons of Art and to dynamite established reputation.’ One of his favourite targets is Whistler with his International Society of Sculptors, Painters and Gravers…. (61) “Cook was not just an isolated eccentric among early twentieth-century critics. Robert Ross, reviewing the first Post-Impressionist exhibition, noted the significance in the choice of opening day the Fifth of November, appropriate for ‘revealing the existence of a widespread plot to destroy the whole fabric of European painting’…” (61) With regard to the use of color, Flint says: "The condemnation of excess, and the favouring of moderation, so often brought in when criticism undesirable continental characteristics, was employed with particular force when discussing the application of colour. Bright meant vulgar...." (62) AU - Flint, Kate DA - 1983 IS - 2 (Criticism) KW - ref, secondary ref, Oxford Art Journal color critics critics, and color color, and critics color, and decadence color, and chromophobia Cook, E. Wake, and color values censorship and ratings censorship, and art values, and art criticism values, and art color, and E. Wake Cook color, and Max Nordau color, and Robert Ross censorship LB - 42790 PY - 1983 SP - 59-66 ST - Moral Judgment and the Language of English Art Criticism, 1870-1910 T2 - Oxford Art Journal TI - Moral Judgment and the Language of English Art Criticism, 1870-1910 VL - 6 ID - 1932 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Flood writes that "Occupying the windows of our shops, the walls of our streets and roads, and appealing everywhere to the eye, the poster has doubtless seemed commonplace and ordinary, for it has the advantage of position which compels observation whether we will or not. That it receives but passing notice, is commonly examined with reluctance if only for the moment, or failss to excite moe than temporary curiosity is due in large measure to its seeming effrontery, oftentimes it vulgarity, not infrequently its lack of charm, and more generally its omnipresence, which bequeaths to it a commonplace character." (561) Flood goes on to say that the "poster of today has a history which much of achievement has dignified, and quite as well the prospect of a future which is likely to be as useful as it is certain to be chromatic." (561) Those posters that are "grossly immoral," the author claims, "are only a small part of the whole." (562) "The modern poster is not representative of art but of a phase of artistic development. In a social way it provokes some persons who lack self-restraint; is impatiently tolerated by the very few whose artistic sense is so highly endowed that they fail to appreciate anything beyond the canvase of a Raphael or Angelo; and by the many it is simply accepted for what it is worth." (562) The author writes about Jules Cheret's posters in France. "His poster pictures have caused much of a transformation in Paris. The tall, sentinel-like kiosks of the main thoroughfares have become veritable monuments of color; the dead gray walls of the long boulevards and streets have been warmed into life, decorated wit the most startling, astounding figures, and set off by the most extraordinary combinations of color, mainly the creations of Cheret." (563) As these posters are damaged by weather, etc., they are rapidly replaced by others. "Cheret is the pioneer in posterdom, the genius in art, above all the colorist, a complete and absolute chromatic master." (563) In the United States, "Literature has given to poster designers their greatest inspiration, and the large number of periodicals in this country has 567/568 notably influenced the development of art. By far the greatest number of artistic posters made with us are those announcing the publication of books, magazines, and newspapers." (567-68) According to Flood, "the modern poster is a combination of ideas." (570) AU - Flood, Ned Arden DA - Sept. 1899 IS - 6 KW - Chicago, IL billboards art advertising and public relations color color, and advertising advertising, and color art, and advertising advertising, and art modernity modernity, and advertising advertising, and modernity new way of seeing new way of seeing, and advertising advertising, and new way of seeing posters advertising, and posters posters, and advertising advertising, and billboards billboards, and advertising color, and billboards ref, secondary ref, secular ref, Chautauquan quotations quotations, and posters Chéret Jules, and posters posters, and Jules Chéret color, and French posters color, and Jules Chéret quotations quotations, and colored posters quotations, and Jules Chéret color, and magazines color, and books color, and newspapers books, periodicals, newspapers advertising Chéret, Jules LB - 41320 PY - 1899 SP - 561-70 ST - The Modern Poster T2 - The Chautauquan TI - The Modern Poster VL - 29 ID - 4231 ER - TY - JOUR AB - "The past seventy years have been marked by a steady, rapid, and at times an almost magical improvement in the art of photography," Flower begins. He links these improvements to progress brought by modern science - - "the age of science the miracle-worker, who in nature's laboratory has so utilized sunshine, electricity, steam and other subtle natural agencies and forces as to transform the world, changing the face of civilization, almost annihilating time and space, while greatly broadening the mental horizon of the race and marvelously enriching the life of man." (128) After listing the values of "legitimate" photography, he continues by saying that "while these noble triumphs have been legitimately achieved and the young art has in a way become a companion to the splendid art of the painter, a servant of science and a handmaid of industry, there are those in our modern feverish and somewhat superficial age who would force photography out of its legitimate sphere, throwing to the wind the well-defined rules of the art.... This temper o the charlatan, this striving to wrest photography from its legitimate function and produce occasionally some wonderful examples of freak photography, [my emphasis] that may or may not be strong in points of real value and which are the result of chance rather than of the conscientious and faithful following of the great basic laws of the photographers." (128) The author (here quoting from a prominent sculptor) disapproves of work whose only purpose was to "make the superficial start and exclaim, 'Ah! how strange, how striking, unique and original!'" (130) He quotes Hugo Munsterberg on the difference between the photographer and the artist: "'A good photographer ... is certainly a more useful being than a bad artist, but no photographer understands the meaning of art who thinks that he and Sargent are in principle doing the same thing.'" (131) Flower then turns to Bernard Shaw for further commentary on this issue. (131) Flower maintains that the "artist of the camera ... is a literalist. He is nothing if not true to the external delineations." (133) Later he quotes the well-know Boston photographic artist, J. E. Purdy, who said that "'the aim of photography is to bring out or develop the truth, character and feature of the subject in its highest, loftiest sense.'" (137) Flower thought it unlikely that the photographer would supplant the artist whose portraits remain more compelling and better able to capture the essential of their subjects than a photograph. AU - Flower, B. O. DA - Feb. 1907 IS - 207 KW - Münsterberg, Hugo Munsterberg, Hugo ethics art ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography photography, and new art form photography, and psychology Münsterberg, Hugo photography, and Hugo Münsterberg Munsterberg, Hugo, and photography photography, and art art, and photography Shaw, George Bernard Shaw, George Bernard, and photography photography, and George Bernard Shaw values ethics photography, and values photography, and ethics ethics, and photography values, and photography photography, as magic modernity photography, and modernity modernity, and photography new way of seeing new way of seeing, and photography photography, and time and space quotations quotations, and modernity critics critics, and modernity critics, and photography ref, secondary ref, secular ref, reform ref, Arena Munsterberg, Hugo LB - 38080 PY - 1907 ST - Photography: Its True Function and Its Limitations T2 - The Arena TI - Photography: Its True Function and Its Limitations VL - 37 ID - 3907 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by saying that "The theatre of recent years has been a mask rather than a mirror; that is to say, it has been afflicted with the gangrene of artificiality." (304) The author also sees religion, literature and art heavily influenced by artificiality. Flower believes that theater is too conventional. "That which is artificial, or if true is still encased in the mummy clothes of traditionalism, will fail to tough the well-springs of life." (306) He argues that it is "well-nigh impossible to present a dramatic work which is strongly unconventional." (307) AU - Flower, B. O. DA - Aug. 1893 KW - actors acting ref, secondary critics modernity modernity, and theater theater, and modernity quotations critics metaphors, and theater metaphors, and gangrene metaphors, and mirror vs. mask ref, secondary ref, secular ref, reform ref, Arena metaphors theater LB - 39270 PY - 1893 SP - 304-14 ST - Mask or Mirror: The Vital Difference between Artificiality and Veritism on the Stage T2 - The Arena TI - Mask or Mirror: The Vital Difference between Artificiality and Veritism on the Stage VL - 45 ID - 4026 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The article begins by saying that the "nineteenth century may be termed the golden age of scientific discovery and the summer-time of inventive genius, in comparison with which all other centuries dwarf into insignificance." (28) This article discusses the history of photography and talks about two innovations -- color photography and x-rays. It quotes Gabriel Lippmann on his color photography process saying in a lecture before the Royal Society in April, 1896, that "The effects are said to be most beautiful, the only falt being that the colors are more brilliant than in Nature, just as they are when viewed in the camera itself." (Lippmann quoted, 32) Flower says that before photography "only the very rich could afford portraits of the cherished members of the home circle, 33/34 for even indifferent work was far out of the reach of most persons, and few artists possessed at once the genius and the training necessary to catch and represent the lifelike features and expressions that we find in the work of the camera. Photography has changed all this, so that to-day in the homes of rich and poor alike, which jewel the civilized world, are found the lifelike shadows, or images of those who hold a sacred place in the affections or images of the home makers." (33-34) The author goes on to say that "Before the magic of this picture the past rises as a dream, in which the boy, with joyous laughing face, gives place to the thoughtful youth, standing on the threshold of manhood, with brow mantled with the same look of confidence, mingled with serious concern, which the camera has so marvelously reproduced." (34) Flower notes that photography has given the reading public a visible image of historical figures over the past three-quarters of a century where before, one might have to settle for looking a a sculpture or painting. (35) This article compares achievements of photography's inventors to the work of Johann Gutenberg: "Like Gutenberg, Daguerre and the other fathers of photography have greatly enriched life and increased the enlightenment of the world." (37) The author concludes by saying that today (1902), "it would be difficult to overestimate the blessings it [photography] has rendered to civilized man." (38) AU - Flower, B. O. DA - Jan. 1902 IS - 1 KW - magic fame ethics ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography photography, and new art form values ethics photography, and values photography, and ethics ethics, and photography values, and photography photography, as magic modernity photography, and modernity modernity, and photography new way of seeing new way of seeing, and photography photography, and time and space quotations quotations, and modernity critics critics, and modernity critics, and photography ref, secondary ref, secular ref, reform ref, Arena photography, and fame fame, and photography inventions inventors, and photography photography, and history of color color, and photography photography, and color x-rays Daguerre, Louis photography, and Louis Daguerre Roentgen, Wilhelm x-rays, and Wilhelm Roentgen Lippmann, Gabriel, and color photography color, and Gabriel Lippmann quotations quotations, and photography photography, and quotations magic, and photography photography, and history history, and photography history and new media metaphors metaphors, and photography as dream photography, as dream printing press, and photography photography, similar to printing press ref, secondary ref, secular ref, reform ref, Arena history print LB - 41660 PY - 1902 SP - 28-38 ST - The Rise of Photography and Its Service to Mankind T2 - The Arena TI - The Rise of Photography and Its Service to Mankind VL - 27 ID - 4264 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that prior to World War II, most amateur movie cameras that would bought in the United States were American products. In 1969, Europe led "in the production of quality super 8 cameras. West Germany, France, and Switzerland led in imports to the U. S. Also, even more inexpensive camera (under $50) came from Japan. Bauer cameras, Agfa-Gevaert (made near Munich), and the Beaulieu movie camera (from south of Paris) were among the best know brands. AU - Fondiller, Harvey V. DA - Nov., 1970 IS - 5 KW - motion pictures cameras motion pictures, and internationalization motion pictures, and new technology Europe Germany France Japan Switzerland 8mm cameras, 8mm movie cameras, portable Japan, and 8mm movie cameras Germany, and 8mm movie cameras France, and 8mm movie cameras Switzerland, and 8mm movie cameras Japan, and cameras cameras, and Switzerland cameras, and Japan cameras, and France cameras, and Germany non-USA LB - 32350 PY - 1970 SP - 124-26 ST - Movie Camera Factories of Europe T2 - Popular Photography TI - Movie Camera Factories of Europe VL - 67 ID - 2888 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Fones-Wolf traces the use of radio by organized labor, especially the CIO unions, from the mid 1930s to the mid 1950s. Fones-Wolf notes that in the years immediately following World War II, unions were regularly heard on commercial stations and also operated a number of FM radio stations. “By the early 1950s, labor’s voice was more widely heard on the airwaves than ever before. Organized labor offered at least a modest check on corporate America’s command of the mass media.” The National Association of Broadcasters adopted a code in 1939 that prohibited stations from selling time for controversial issues, which by definition included programming produced by labor unions. Organized labor fought the code until it was eliminated under FCC pressure. Fones-Wolf briefly describes how the CIO Political Action Committee used radio in 1944 for its campaigns for Roosevelt and supportive congressional candidates. CIO PAC also published a handbook on how to gain access and use radio, and it produced a series of pro-labor musical and dramatic radio programs to be sponsored by local unions. In November 1944, the four networks agreed to give the AFL and the CIO free time for weekly programs, including “The American Federationist of the Air,” a weekly newsmagazine, and “Cross Section CIO,” a radio forum with discussion by labor, farm, business and government leaders. Organized labor, Fones-Wolf noted, attempted to challenge business domination of discourse by trying to expose employer propaganda, by aggressively contesting the portrayal of labor in the mass media, and by using radio to compete directly with business for “worker loyalty and public sympathy.” In 1949, the UAW and ILGWU established FM radio stations in Detroit, Cleveland, Chattanooga, Los Angeles, and New York City. These stations all closed by 1952, in part because FM sets were not being developed for consumer sales, FM was not being promoted, and television was emerging. Still, labor continued to be present on commercial AM stations. Fones-Wolf argues that the experience from 1935 to 1956 “suggests that it is possible to challenge the capitalist broadcasting system and to use the media to help achieve organized labor’s goals.” --Phil Glende AU - Fones-Wolf, Elizabeth DA - May 2000 IS - 3 KW - corporations corporations Glende, Phil labor +radio radio, and labor labor, and radio radio, FM labor, and FM radio radio, and CIO NBC LB - 740 N1 - See also: office PY - 2000 SP - 285-307 ST - Promoting a Labor Perspective in American Mass Media: Unions and Radio in the CIO Era, 1935-1956 T2 - Media, Culture & Society TI - Promoting a Labor Perspective in American Mass Media: Unions and Radio in the CIO Era, 1935-1956 VL - 22 ID - 162 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Ken and Elizabeth Fones-Wolf recount the short life of daily newspaper launched by the International Typographical Union in the mid-1950s. By publishing daily, instead of weekly, biweekly, or monthly, like the rest of the labor press, Labor’s Daily was supposed to “more effectively communicate with union members and the public.” The authors briefly trace the history of the labor press, labor’s complaints about the mainstream media, and the cultural and political context of post-war America. They detail the beginnings of Labor’s Daily from a daily ITU strike paper in Charleston, West Virginia, to a national publication distributed during strikes throughout the nation. “The ITU published a national edition of the paper in West Virginia and shipped mats of its pages to strike-bound cities where printers added additional pages of local news, picture and features, thus supplying communities with local news from a union source.” In 1955, the ITU moved publication to a more central location Bettendorf, Iowa. The authors also provide a brief description of content. They noted that the paper carried cartoons, a crossword puzzle, sports, and other non-labor features to compete with the mainstream press for readers. The paper never was self-sustaining, and by late 1956, the ITU’s commitment was waning, and the union insisted that the whole labor movement had to bear financial responsibility. The paper did not win support. It was opposed by the staff of the AFL-CIO, the authors noted, because of its poor circulation and its independent politics. The paper was discontinued in March 1958. --Phil Glende AU - Fones-Wolf, Ken and Elizabeth Fones-Wolf DA - Fall 1995 IS - 3 KW - journalism reform news and journalism Glende, Phil labor newspapers, and labor labor, and newspapers reform, and newspapers newspapers, and reform newspapers, and International Typographical Union labor, and Labor's Daily newspapers news LB - 980 N1 - See also: office PY - 1995 SP - 42-64 ST - A Mighty Voice for Labor: The Struggle to Create a National Daily Labor Newspaper, 1952-1958 T2 - Labor Studies Journal TI - A Mighty Voice for Labor: The Struggle to Create a National Daily Labor Newspaper, 1952-1958 VL - 20 ID - 186 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Digital communication also meant that in the not-too-distant future, as the entertainment and information worlds moved from analog to digital means of communication, the movies would continue to converge with other media – television, video games, music, radio, books, newspapers, magazines, telephones, and the World Wide Web – and could be accessed from any place, at any time, on TV sets, personal computers, automobile dashboards, with eye glasses and wristwatches – even, some predicted, with retinal implants. It seemed certain that these media would become more sophisticated in their ability to mimic real life experiences. This issue of Scientific American has much on digital cinema. AU - Forman, Peter AU - John, Robert W. Saint DA - Nov. 2000 IS - 5 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography television, and digital projection motion pictures home entertainment Hollywood digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema digitization computers 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movie +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality Hollywood, and digital movies digital movies, and Hollywood media convergence Hollywood, and media convergence media convergence, and digitial movies +television television, and digital entertainment television, and media convergence media convergence convergence, media LB - 26190 PY - 2000 SP - 50-56 ST - Creating Convergence T2 - Scientific American TI - Creating Convergence VL - 283 ID - 1210 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article provides a good account of Sunday newspapers in 1907 and an explanation for their rapid growth over the previous two decades. The Sunday paper in its modern form was "of comparatively recent origin," Foxcroft says. In 1907, the article notes, New York had fifteen Sunday papers, Chicago and Philadelphia each had eleven, and Boston had four. Among the reasons for the growth of these papers were 1) the lower cost of paper; 2) greater use of the linotype and other more efficient printing technology; 3) cheaper illustrations made possible by photography; 4) less expensive telegraph tolls; 5) the "development of the newspaper 'syndicate'"(259) which supplies articles, interviews, illustrations, and other material; and 6) the growing influence of advertisers who helped to fund these publications. Foxcroft says that the typical Sunday paper might run 100 pages in 1907, and perhaps 46 of those pages would be devoted to advertising. Department stores ads were especially prominent and more than 9,000 other advertisers appear. Also, the "paper virtually make itself an employment bureau" (260) in that it prints announcements of job openings. The article argues that the Sunday paper appeals to a low level of intelligence and that its influence tends to secularize Sundays. Foxcroft discusses the uses of color in comic sections. "What can be the mental condition of the adult person who thinks them even faintly funny? These gaudy atrocities have now had a run of several years," he complains. "Ten years ago the present monstrosities would have seemed incredible." (260) He goes on to say that "the average Sunday newspaper is ill-suited for Sunday, and, in spite of its vast bulk, it is a poor apology for a newspaper. It is ill-suited to Sunday because ordinarily it makes no recognition whatever of the sacred character of the day, but is wholly given up to secular interests and amusements." (261) Reading the Sunday paper was a family endeavor and led families to by-pass church attendance. "A family which has saturated itself with the Sunday newspaper is in no mood for church-going, nor for any serious occupation. It is fit for nothing but amusement or sheer idleness," the author writes. (263) Religious leaders were often forced to sensationalize their sermons in order to compete with the Sunday paper. "American preachers who are charged with sensationalism are not so blameworthy as they seem. They are engaged in a desperate competition," Foxcroft contends. (263) The newspaper syndicate gives unlimited copy, often paid for by advertisers, free to papers. Illustrations that appear in New York papers also appear in the Chicago papers. The article discusses the distribution system of these papers and notes that during the summer months, special trains are dispatched on Sunday mornings to deliver papers "to the distant seaside and mountain resorts." (261) These urban papers are circulate "far into the country districts" as well. (262) One type of Sunday paper sought to appeal to the "masses" and usually featured the prominent use of color, "dramatic gossip, pictures of actresses, and 'society' news" as well as sports. (262) Pictures of "stage scenes and portraits of actresses and society leaders" made up a significant part of the Sunday papers. (262) The author concludes that the "influence of the Sunday newspaper is dissipating intellectual energy and lowering standards of taste in art and literature is not easily measured. In these respects it works along the same lines as the indefinitely-multiplied ten-cent magazines which strew the counters of the news stands. But reaches a lower level and achieves a wider circulation. The typical American is a more omnivorous reader than any other national type. He leaves behind him in the street-cars and railroad trains a trail of discarded papers and magazines with which he has beguiled his journey. It is a pity that, for his one leisure day of the week, he should find nothing better than what is provided for him by the average Sunday newspaper." (264) Despite all its shortcomings, the author concludes that "the Sunday newspaper is very rarely immoral. It may be inane, trivial, flippant, but it is usually morally innocuous. Its aim is to please, divert and entertain the widest possible constituency, and it does not care to provoke criticism by offenses against decency." (264) AU - Foxcroft, Frank DA - Nov. 2, 1907 IS - 3304 KW - sensationalism journalism journalism illustrations fame celebrity cartoons celebrity culture actors acting actors acting magazines photography ref, secondary books, periodicals, newspapers advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers newspapers, and Sunday papers newspapers, and linotype color color, and Sunday papers newspapers, and color newspapers, and illustrations illustrations, and Sunday papers newspapers, and religion religion, and newspapers religion newspapers, and novels newspapers, and fiction actors, and Sunday papers newspapers, and sports newspapers, and cartoons cartoons, and Sunday papers values values, and Sunday papers newspapers, and values modernity modernity, and newspapers newspapers, and modernity new way of seeing news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Sunday papers newspapers, and motion pictures photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and advertising women women, and Sunday papers newspapers, and women photography and visual communication women, and photography photography, and women celebrity, and Sunday papers photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality newspapers, and celebrity culture critics critics, and Sunday papers newspaper syndicates newspapers, and syndicates Sunday newspapers personality ref, secondary ref, secular ref, eclectic ref, literary (British) ref, Living Age advertising motion pictures LB - 37040 PY - 1907 SP - 259-64 ST - The American Sunday Newspaper T2 - Living Age TI - The American Sunday Newspaper VL - 255 ID - 3805 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article talks about the various processes Century Magazine used to illustrate its pages. By 1895, Century, together with McClure's and Munsey's, were the leading magazines in the United States using illustration. The article says that first the was a traditional for of wood engraving. Then came a new school of wood engraving that was improved. There followed the half-tone process "which claimed to be able to reproduce the work of the artist by mechanical means, and without the intervention of the engraver." (479) But the half-tone process has problems "as the deepest darks cannot be rendered by it, nor the highest lights, only the middle of the scale of the drawing can be reproduced." (479) Wood-engraving, once thought to be made obsolete by the half-tone process, is still being used by Century's. And where the half-tone process is incomplete, the engraver now sometimes adds what is missing from the pictures. The article ends by noting the relative cost of these processes. "First-class wood-engraving is ten times dearer than good half-tone; engraved half-tone costs three or four times as much as unengraved or ordinary half-tone." (479) AU - Fraser, W. Lewis DA - Jan. 1895 IS - 3 KW - wood engraving journalism journalism fame celebrity ref, secondary magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality quotations newspapers, and photographs photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving photography, and Century ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Century LB - 38550 PY - 1895 SP - 478-79 ST - A Word about The Century's Pictures T2 - Century's Illustrated Magazine TI - A Word about The Century's Pictures VL - 49 ID - 3954 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article deals with Park's research regarding newspapers and their role in society. Park saw motion pictures as less divisive than newspapers, the authors maintain. “Media such as newspapers are potentially divisive forces because new gives rise to different point of view. Media such as motion picture are potentially integrative,” the authors write. “Movies (and later television) portray themes closer to ordinary people, are able to evoke the most elemental and primitive feelings and function as a means of displaying emotion and attitudes, more nearly universal than news.” In urban areas, Park believed that newspapers provided “a function formerly supplied by the village gossip. In smaller communities, the newspaper cannot compete with village gossip as a means of social control....” People living in cities “are influenced and modified by the intricate system of communication which takes on a special form, relying upon secondary, rather than primary, contacts. The newspaper, the telephone and the mails take the place of village gossip and the town meetings as initiators of opinion and morale.” The authors note that Park saw newspapers helping to bring immigrants into the national culture. “Park’s interpretation was that the American native-language immigrant press served to strengthen the national identity of the immigrant population, but, by printing articles abut the United Sates as well, it also served to socialize the newcomers as Americans and assimilate them into American culture.” AU - Frazier, P. Jean and Cecilie Gaziano DA - Nov. 1979 KW - Chicago, IL journalism news and journalism values newspapers news +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and Robert Park Park, Robert values, and newspapers Chicago School newspapers, and sociology LB - 9740 PY - 1979 ST - Robert Ezra Park’s Theory of News, Public Opinion and Social Control T2 - Journalism Monographs TI - Robert Ezra Park’s Theory of News, Public Opinion and Social Control VL - 64 ID - 2341 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Freedman, a psychology professor at the University of Toronto, says that he read and reviewed all of the media effect literature dealing with the television violence He concludes that exposure to media violence does not cause children or other to become aggressive or take part in real-world violence. Nor does this media effects research support the view that TV violence causes people to be less sensitive to violence in the real world. As for the many organizations -- the American Medical Association, the American Psychiatric Association, the National Institute for Mental Health, and others -- that have concluded that media violence has harmful effects, especially for children, Freedman argues they have been misled by committees dominated by so-called "experts" who have a vested interest in finding harmful effects. AU - Freedman, Jonathan L. DA - Summer, 1994 KW - media research syntheses, and social scienc research syntheses journalism, and social science research social science research, and journalism sexuality pornography news and journalism children +television television, and violence violence, and television social science research social science research, and violence violence, and social science research violence, and pornography pornography, and violence media effects media effects, and TV violence media violence, meta-analyses social science research, and literature review social science research, and meta-analysis violence, and children children, and media children, and media violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures social science research, and press coverage press coverage, and social science research violence, and press coverage journalism, and media violence critics journalism media effects research, and critics +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and media effects media effects, and motion pictures violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence media violence motion pictures press LB - 20 PY - 1994 SP - 833-55 ST - Viewing Television Violence Does Not Make People More Aggressive T2 - Hofstra Law Review TI - Viewing Television Violence Does Not Make People More Aggressive VL - 22 ID - 2644 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article gives examples in such places as Java, Australia, and Argentina, of how American movies have stimulated demand for American goods. In Java, it was an electric sewing machine shown in movie. In Australia and Argentina, it was demand for a certain type of addle seen in films set in the American west. The movies signboard, according to Freeman, "belongs almost exclusively to America" (13) and he suggests that its full potential will developed in the future. What does the author mean by "movie signboards." He is referring "only to the type of film made and sent out for amusement purposes -- most of which would doubtless classify as photo plays -- and in which the display of some article (of?) possible foreign export is quite incidental to the development of the plot. These are, of course, quite distinct from outright advertising and demonstration films, which both American European manufacturers have sent abroad for a number of years (to?) popularize and induce certain of their articles...." (13) This article brings to made an argument made later by movie industry presidents Will H. Hays and Eric A. Johnston, that movies were "salesmen" for American goods. AU - Freeman, Lewis R. DA - Jan. 17, 1920 KW - electric lighting motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects motion pictures, and media effects media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electric signs electric signs, and motion pictures capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures capitalism, and movie signboards advertising, and movie signboards motion pictures, and movie signboards ref, secondary ref, Saturday Evening Post motion pictures, and influence abroad motion pictures, and cultural imperialism motion pictures, and advertising abroad motion pictures, and entertainment films as advertising Hays, Will H. Johnston, Eric advertising children LB - 42490 PY - 1920 SP - 12-13, 61 ST - Movie Signboards: How the Cinema Has Advertised American Goods in Foreign Lands T2 - Saturday Evening Post TI - Movie Signboards: How the Cinema Has Advertised American Goods in Foreign Lands VL - 192 ID - 4348 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Daniel Frohman, who was a leading theatrical producer and manager during the late 19th century, says that flashlight photography often yielded pictures not faithful the an actor's or actress's face but they were good for "depicting the physical character of the dramatic situation." (413) He says that "theatrical photographing" has become "a very important factor in play advertising." (413) He notes that many newspaper have set up "pictorial departments" and publish scenes from plays. "Other publications which have a theatrical department, including the weekly papers, have found theatrical pictorial literature both profitable and desirable." (414) Frohman notes that "sometimes ... a handsome woman, or an actor with an interesting face, is not successful as a subject for the camera," and that such cases "need the most careful study" because "the camera is capricious and sometimes whimsical." (416) The "sale of actors' photographs," though, remains "a large, if not the largest, factor in the photographer's profits...." (416) Photographs of scenes from plays has become common, Frohman explains, and "in the course of a season, an actor or actress spends many hours in posing at a studio." (418) The article concludes with Frohman discussing the arrival of moving pictures ("in which forty views are taken in a single second!") and how they may be combined with the gramophone. (420) The current "aim of the entire photographic scheme is to secure a life-like, faithful and artistic reproduction of the play or actor." These pictures are reproduced in "lithographic form for show printing.... The fancy and purely imaginative pictures of actors and of situations in plays, for advertising purposes, are largely a thing of the past," he says. (420) AU - Frohman, Daniel DA - Feb. 1897 IS - 4 KW - theater journalism fame celebrity photography, and celebrity culture magazines, and photography actors acting magazines photography ref, secondary celebrity culture fame personality photography, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology theater and stage photography, and stage stage, and photography photography, and celebrity celebrity, and photography fame, and photography photography, and fame motion pictures, and stars audiences media effects photography, and audiences audiences, and photography sexuality photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing photography, and acting acting, and facial expression acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting women women, and beauty women, and cameras women, and acting acting, and women advertising and public relations photography, and public relations photography, and advertising photography, and advertising photography and visual communication advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines fan magazines magazines, fan newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones photography, and newspapers ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, reform ref, Cosmopolitan advertising motion pictures stage LB - 37590 PY - 1897 SP - 413-20 ST - Actress Aided by Camera T2 - Cosmopolitan TI - Actress Aided by Camera VL - 22 ID - 3858 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author comments on the popularity of the theater and the apparent changing attitudes that the public takes toward it. "The prejudices which once retarded the development of the drama with us have apparently ceased to operate. They are cherished by some highly respectable persons still, but the people in general no longer regard them. The very men and women who once would have explained away an occasional visit to a theatrical production by saying that they valued the educational influence of Shakespeare or Sheridan are now able to sit through a performance of the latest burlesque without a blush. It is a marvelous change, and it some respects an inexplicable one." (423) Fuller says that "there are good plays and good actors still; but what proportion do they bear to the sickly, silly, nauseous, and vulgar stuff and the coarse, crass, crude performers whose names are on all the playbills in letters a foot long?" (424) He goes on to say that "the tendencies of the time are downward and not upward. It is not such a very long step to complete degradation." (424) There are several reasons why modern drama has become decadent, in Fuller's estimation. 1) "The desire for mere display, which is characteristic of the age, has exercised, on the whole, a baneful influence upon dramatic taste.... When the production is everything the play has little chance. Audiences learn to regard the drama simply as a 'show' and to estimate it accordingly. This is our potent reason for its decadence...." (424) 2) "Another reason for the decay of the drama is its triviality." (424) Financial interests play a role here. "Commercialism is ever the bane of art, and commercialism necessarily dominates the theatre." (425) 3) "Still another reason for the decay of the drama is its immorality. Too many of the pieces brought upon the stage in these days are thoroughly vulgar and debasing. And the worst of it is that so many professional moralists suffer acutely from ethical strabismus. It is seldom the genuinely immoral play that gives rise to the loudest out-cry. We reserve our denunciations, not for the dirty burlesque or the adulterous farce, but for the drama which deals frankly and fearlessly with the existing social conditions...." (425) Fuller was pessimistic about audiences and their tastes. "Naturally our farces and burlesques are becoming very vulgar indeed. Even when they do not deal hilariously with breaches of the moral law, they turn serious subjects into ridicule, destroying the reverence of youth and the ideals of manhood. Audiences , as a rule, are not quick to perceive a tendency in all its implications.... We cannot depend upon the great mass of theatre-goers for any regeneration of the theatre. These are not very largely recruited from the cultivated classes. They are in the main middle-class Philistines, with thoroughly Philistinish ideas. It is idle to talk to them about are: they do not know what art is. And yet the theatre cannot be regenerated without their aid." (426) It is, the author, says a problem that is perhaps "unsolvable." (426) AU - Fuller, Edward DA - Sept. 1895 KW - theaters stars (actors) theater journalism fame celebrity anti-theatrical bias critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater actors acting actors acting morality magazines ref, secondary theater theater, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and theater personality fame, and theater theater, and fame theater, and stars values values, and theater theater, and values actors, and status of anti-theatrical prejudice theater, and bias against audiences, and theaters theaters, and audiences acting, and bias against censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship morality, and theater theater, and morality women women, and theater theater, and women critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and professional acting motion pictures, and stars (origins) quotations news and journalism actors, and journalism journalism, and actors actors, and newspapers newspapers, and actors magazines, and actors actors, and magazines theater, and religion religion, and theater audiences theater, and audiences audiences, and theater censorship ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Lippincott's religion LB - 38770 PY - 1895 SP - 423-26 ST - The Decadent Drama T2 - Lippincott's Monthly Magazine TI - The Decadent Drama ID - 3976 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author argues that the U.S. could have launched a satellite as early as 1955 but did not because the defense establishment adopted a “tragically naive and shortsighted” view “that research not directly related to the development of military hardware is entitled to only secondary consideration.” A number of prominent senators (Henry “Scoop” Jackson from Washington, and Stuart Symington from Missouri) and others are quoted. AU - Furnas, Dr. C. C. DA - Oct. 21, 1957 IS - 17 KW - USSR Soviet Union, and space war non-USA space communication +aeronautics and space communication satellites Cold War Sputnik Symington, Stuart Jackson, Henry Soviet Union space race Soviet Union, and satellites rocketry military communication LB - 7600 PY - 1957 SP - 22-23 ST - Why Did U.S. Lose The Race? Critics Speak Up T2 - Life TI - Why Did U.S. Lose The Race? Critics Speak Up VL - 43 ID - 2129 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This study examined the relationship between self-reported exposure to various types of pornographic content, themes, and media had with an attitudes toward rape (ATR) and an attitudes toward women scale (AWS). Garcia administered his survey to 115 male students and found that a majority of the respondents had to sexual imagery and most had scene or read a Playboy or Penthouse. Contrary to expectations, Garcia failed to find any significant relationships between the pornography use measures and a set of subscales developed from the AWS. For the ATR, consistent with the hypotheses, Garcia found that exposure to violent sexual material resulted in greater feelings of women being responsible for preventing their own rape, rapists not being severely punished, and that women should not resist a rape attack. The correlations were fairly small, however. An important note to this study is that Garcia found little in the way of non-violent/non-coercive pornography being related to poorer attitudes toward women or rape. Furthermore, the relationship between violent/coercive and poorer attitudes to both women and rape was relatively weak. --Michael Boyle AU - Garcia, L. T. DA - 1986 KW - women, and new media women social science research sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence violence Boyle, Michael pornography media effects pornography, and rape myths violence, and pornography pornography, and violence women, and pornography pornography, and women +motion pictures and popular culture pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects media effects, and violence media effects, and motion pictures pornography, and defenders violence, and pornography pornography, and violence pornography, and no violence LB - 1260 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1986 SP - 378-85 ST - Exposure to Pornography and Attitudes about Women and Rape: A Correlational Study T2 - Journal of Sex Research TI - Exposure to Pornography and Attitudes about Women and Rape: A Correlational Study VL - 22 ID - 214 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The article draws on Martin Heidegger’s account of modernity to illuminate the interactions between tourism and photography. It is concerned with the question of the role photography plays within touristic experience and the knowledge the photographic practices of tourists produces. Relating the role of photographic images to the constitution of memory and self identity, the author suggests that photography not only plays its part in the production of tourist subjectivities. More importantly, an interesting dimension of the ‘unphotographable’ -- the limitation of enframing tourist experience -- is stressed to enable an artistic way of seeing and understanding tourist photography. --Huai-Hsuan Chen AU - Garlick, Steve DA - 2002 IS - 2 KW - tourism art Chen, Huai-Hsuan Heidegger, Martin, and photography photography, and Martin Heidegger photography and visual communication photography, and modernism photography, and tourism tourism, and photography photography, and travel values values, and photography photography, and values non-USA photography, and photography non-USA, and photography photography, and art art, and photography photography LB - 33160 PY - 2002 SP - 289 - 305 ST - Revealing The Unseen: Tourism, Art and Photography T2 - Cultural Studies TI - Revealing The Unseen: Tourism, Art and Photography VL - 16 ID - 71 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author explains the scope of his article: "This paper was written for the Brighton project. For it I screened all of the Edison films and part of the Biographs (which were much larger in quantity) available. Thus, in what follows there is perhaps more attention to the development at Edison, and future work should fill in the developments at Biograph in more detail." (1) The article revises a "common misconception that the only great development during 1900-1906 period was editing, and that the few camera pans that occurred were novelties and random gestures without significance with the structure of the film." Gartenberg argues that "panning was a convention in this 1900-1906 period as an historical development in its own right, and that it frequently served as an alternative to editing." (15) Between 1900 and 1906, moviemakers at Biograph and Edison used camera movement -- panning, use of the dolly (e.g., for close-ups of faces, and to give depth), panoramas (6-8), in addition to editing techniques. Cameras were sometimes mounted on tops of trains (8). Gartenberg writes that "Camera movement wass evident in films as early as 1900, was employed with increasing frequency and innovation during the ensuing years, and by 1906 had established itself as a basic filmmaking device of the Ameri- 1/2 can cinema (often integrated with editing, as in the chase film). This paper will provide a beginning step in our understanding of the use of this technique in the early history of the American cinema." (1-2) As moving pictures were filmed increasingly out-of-doors, camera movement was used more frequently. (2) Gartenberg notes that the close up was used in moving pictures as early as 1900. "While the Edison Company was using editing to arrive at a closer view, Biograph's means of achieving the same results was a fascinating alternative manner. At Biograph, many productions in 1903 were still being shot indoors with the same subjects and themes as in the 1900 and 1902 films. A film that begins like the earlier ones is Hooligan in Jail (Biograph, September 25, 1903). A prisoner is seated at a table in a long view of the interior of a prison cell. The guard enters the room, and leaves his food. Then a fascinating changes takes place. As the prisoner sits eating and grimacing the camera dollies in order to get a closer view of his facial expressions. What a novelty this must have been for the viewing public, and how dynamic the camera movement appears today when seen in the chronological context of the other static films! The dolly ends precisely at the point where the camera can capture in close-up the facial gestures of the performer, tightly framing his face. Great attention was apparently given to the point where the dolly ends. This close-up view has precedents in films such as A Dull Razor (Edison, February 28, 1900) and Facial Expressions (Edison, January 27, 1902), in which the camera is placed at a relatively close view to record the detailed facial gestures of the characters. The dolly that is used is Holligan in Jail recurs in only two other films of the period. A Subject of the Rogue's Gallery (Biograph, January 13, 1904) and Photographing a Femal Crook 3/4 (Biograph, January 13, 1904). Surprisingly, this device was not further developed during this 1900-1906 period at Biograph, nor at Edison; it remained a dynamic, innovative technique, rather than developing as an alternative to editing." (3-4) Such techniques created "a sense of depth in the image." (4) The author discusses several films that recreated the Boer War (4-5). He also covers the increasing use of panning and panorama films. Panning was used more frequently by 1906. (12) Gartenberg concludes that "it is difficult to rigidly categorize camera movement in this 1900-1906 period because, for a given year, exceptions can always be found to general developments." (13) But by 1906, camera movement "fully integrated into the narrative" of moving pictures. (13) He also notes that significant changes in editing occurred during this period (14-15) He notes that "the most significant advance in camera movement beginning in 1907 is the appearance of panning in interiors." (15) AU - Gartenberg, Jon DA - Spring 1980 IS - 2 KW - fame fame celebrity actors acting motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space ref, secondary cameras cameras, and movement cameras, and portability motion pictures, and movement Edison, Thomas, Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Thomas Edison motion pictures, silent Biograph, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Biograph motion pictures, and close ups cameras cameras, and close ups acting, and close ups motion pictures, and close ups (origins) close ups, and motion pictures acting, and facial expression motion pictures, and facial expressions actors, and facial expression motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars war war, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Boer War Griffith, D. W. Griffith, D. W., and panorama films motion pictures, and panning cameras, and panning cameras, and dollies motion pictures, and panorama cameras, and panorama ref, secondary ref, secular LB - 620 PY - 1980 SP - 1-16 ST - Camera Movement in Edison and Biograph Films, 1900-1906 T2 - Cinema Journal TI - Camera Movement in Edison and Biograph Films, 1900-1906 VL - 19 ID - 3357 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses Vincente Minnelli's work on the film Meet Me in St. Louis (1944) and covers scene sequence (248ff), camera movement (251), decor and frame compositions (251-52), lighting (252-53), and use of color (253). The author notes that "Minnelli's color effects were not achieved without a struggle. With the backing of [Arthur] Freed, the director 'revolutionized' -- to use his expression -- the art department at MGM, demanding from his set and costume designers an unprecedented range and variety of colors. In an audaciou move, especially so for a new director on his first color film, Minnelli also dispensed with the services of Natalie Kalmus, the wife of the co-inventor of Technicolor, who, in accordance with the Technicolor licensing agreement, had to be the color advisor on every MGM film that used the process. Minnelli thought that Kalmus had only a limited idea of the potential range of the process, so, although her name is listed on the credits, her advice was not taken into account in determining the color scheme of the film." (253) AU - Genné, Beth DA - Autumn, 1983 IS - 3 KW - Kalmus, Herbert censorship censorship motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Technicolor, and Natalie Kalmus Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color censorship, and Natalie Kalmus ref, secondary color, and primitives color, and cinematographers color, and novelty motion pictures, and Vincente Minnelli cameras, and motion pictures motion pictures, and cameras lighting motion pictures, and lighting lighting, and motion pictures color, and Vincente Minnelli LB - 40930 PY - 1983 SP - 247-54 ST - Vincente Minnelli's Style in Microcosm: The Establishing Sequnce of 'Meet Me in St. Louis' T2 - Art Journal TI - Vincente Minnelli's Style in Microcosm: The Establishing Sequnce of 'Meet Me in St. Louis' VL - 43 ID - 4192 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is part of an entire issue is devoted to "Film and/as Technology." Telotte, who is guest editor, notes that enjoying such technologies such as film we enter into an "unspoken" arrangement with that technology. Film's technological underpinning often go unexamined. This raises important issues "especially to the impact of digital technology and its capacity to reproduce convincingly practically any image." Articles in this issue include: David Lavery, "From Cinescape to Cyberspace: Zionists and Agents, Realists and Gamers in The Matrix and eXistenZ"; J. Robert Craig, "Establishing New Boundaries for Special Effects: Robert Zemeckis's Contact and Computer-Generated Imagery"; Kelly Ritter, "Spectacle at the Disco: Boogie Nights, Soundtrack, and the New American Musical"; Susan A. George, "Not Exactly 'of Woman Born': Procreation and Creation in Recent Science Fiction Films"; and J. P. Telotte, "The Sounds of Blackmail: Hitchcock and Sound Aesthetic." AU - George, Susan A. DA - Winter, 2001 IS - 4 KW - computers science special effects new media motion pictures +future and science fiction digital media digitization computers +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and new technology new media, and motion pictures motion pictures, and digital media digital media, and motion pictures motion pictures, and digital effects digital effects, and motion pictures virtual reality motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and motion pictures +computers and the Internet computers, and special effects special effects, and computers science fiction future, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science fiction future LB - 170 N1 - See filed under Film & Television articles (2001). PY - 2001 SP - 177-83 ST - Not Exactly 'of Woman Born': Procreation and Creation in Recent Science Fiction Films T2 - Journal of Popular Film & Television TI - Not Exactly 'of Woman Born': Procreation and Creation in Recent Science Fiction Films VL - 28 ID - 106 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author writes: "It is only during a public event that is in progress, in which participants are so absorbed in their activities that the presence of a camera crew is just that of another spectator -- that the changes are good that a 'true' occurrence can be filmed -- as on any news story assignment." (474) AU - Gerard, Edmund Bert DA - May, 1969 IS - 5 KW - cinematography cinéma vérité motion pictures cameras documentary films motion pictures, and documentaries lighting lighting, and 16mm cameras lighting, and portable cameras sound recording news and journalism television television, and cinéma vérité television news, and cinéma vérité newsreels documentaries news LB - 30360 PY - 1969 SP - 474, 502 ST - The Truth About Cinema Verite T2 - American Cinematographer TI - The Truth About Cinema Verite VL - 50 ID - 2791 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Gerbner studied public service announcements produced by HBO/Time Warner. These eight public service announcements dealt with urban violence and reflected high production standards. Nevertheless, when one considers the situation that were depicted, and the age, race, and gender of the characters involved, the announcements had hidden messages of stereotyped violence. AU - Gerbner, George DA - Summer, 1995 IS - 2 KW - classification self-regulation Federal Trade Commission (FTC) CARA advertising, and public relations censorship and ratings propaganda public relations motion pictures media effects media violence violence FTC cyberspace culture censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and children children, and media children, and violence motion pictures, and violence advertising advertising, and motion pictures advertising, and children advertising, and movie violence media effects FTC, and motion pictures motion pictures, and FTC video games video games, and children children, and video games rating system (U. S.), and controversies video games rating system (U. S.), and children children, and music rating system (U. S.) violence, and motion pictures violence, and video games violence, and children violence, and music +television +television, and violence culture imperialism, and violence violence, and cultural imperialism LB - 27100 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1995 SP - 292-98 ST - The Hidden Message in Anti-Violence Public Service Announcements T2 - Harvard Educational Review TI - The Hidden Message in Anti-Violence Public Service Announcements VL - 65 ID - 1267 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Gernsback, Hugo DA - July 1920 KW - television, and history of +radio +television television, and origins? seeing at a distance LB - 6820 PY - 1920 SP - 5 ST - Radio in 1945 T2 - Radio News TI - Radio in 1945 VL - 2 ID - 2060 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Gernsback, Hugo DA - July 1922 KW - television, and history of +radio +television television, and origins seeing at a distance LB - 6830 PY - 1922 SP - 234-35 ST - The Radiophot. Television by Radio T2 - Science and Invention TI - The Radiophot. Television by Radio VL - 10 ID - 2061 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Gernsback, Hugo DA - Dec. 1923 KW - television, and history of +radio +television television, and origins seeing at a distance LB - 6840 PY - 1923 SP - 681 ST - Radio Vision T2 - Radio News TI - Radio Vision VL - 5 ID - 2062 ER - TY - JOUR AB - See also author's article in Electrical Experimenter, 6 (June, 1918), 95-96. AU - Gernsback, Hugo DA - May 1918 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins seeing at a distance LB - 6850 PY - 1918 SP - 12-13 ST - Television and the Telephot T2 - Electrical Experimenter TI - Television and the Telephot VL - 6 ID - 2063 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by quoting an unindentified amateur photographer saying: "'A photographic apparatus, with its delightful allurements, is a more valuable possession than Aladdin's lamp.'" (4) It notes that the "total membership of the Society of Amateur Photographers is 255," (5) and that Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper announced a contest for amateur photographers. (11) AU - Gibson, S. M. DA - Jan. 1891 KW - journalism ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography, and art photography, and amateurs quotations quotations, and amateur photography Aladdin, and amateur photography metaphors metaphors, and Aladdin newspapers, and photographs photographs, and Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper news and journalism journalism, and photography ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Frank Leslie's ref, Leslie's photography photography, and Aladdin's lamp LB - 38780 PY - 1891 SP - 4-13 ST - The Amateur and His Camera T2 - Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly TI - The Amateur and His Camera VL - 31 ID - 3977 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The authors report that "experimental findings suggest that exposure to images with color or complex elements results in different viewer responses in than black and white or simple images. Study images were taken from popular magazines. Experimental subjects did find it easier to remember images with color and -- opposite to general lore -- more complex elements. Contrary to one study hypothesis, complexity did not result in more (reported) mental effort." AU - Gilbert, Kathy and Joan Schleuder DA - Winter 1990 IS - 4 KW - photography motion pictures media effects media violence news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines journalism news and journalism +motion pictures and popular culture +photography and visual communication photography photography, and color photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography newspapers, and color photography color color, and photography media effects media effects, and color photography media effects, and color violence violence, and color photography photography, and violence magazines, and color color, and magazines newspapers news newspapers LB - 3250 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1990 SP - 749-56 ST - Effects of Color and Complexity in Still Photographs on Mental Effort and Memory T2 - Journalism Quarterly TI - Effects of Color and Complexity in Still Photographs on Mental Effort and Memory VL - 67 ID - 413 ER - TY - JOUR AB - S. C. Gilfillan discusses, the editor explains, "primitive home theater, which combines the kinetoscope, phonograph and telephone, and promises to be of very great value in large halls." The author, Gilfillan, begins by saying that "There are two mechanical contrivances, one now taking its first unsteady steps in the commercial world, the other still in inventors' laboratories, each of which bears in itself the power to revolutionize entertainment, doing for it what the printing press did for books. They are the talking motion picture and the electric vision apparatus with telephone. Either one will enable millions of people to see and hear the same performance simultaneously, by the 'seeing telephone' and the telephone, or successively from kinetoscope and phonographic records of it, with the result that a matchless production may be attended for almost nothing. Furthermore (if we may use a dogmatic style, but offering proof), these inventions will become cheap enough to be, like the country telephone, in every home, so that one can go to the theater without leaving the sitting room. From this fact we may call both devices the home theater. "One of them bears entertainment into the home by the telephone wires. To witness a play, speech, lecture, music or dance one will simply throw a switch or two and the voices will be heard, while a picture in motion, naturally colored and apparently three dimensional, will be projected on a wall of the room.. A view of moving objects has already been telegraphed by Professor Rösing, of St. Petersburg, and by a number of other inventors, but their apparatus is not yet perfected. The other home theater, the combined phonograph and kinetoscope, is now in commercial use. To come into our homes it needs only to have its reproducing apparatus cheapened; the records can be borrowed from a library. Or, still more conveniently, it can be combined with the electric home theater, so that a person wishing to see a certain production may simply telephone the library to play their records of it into his wires." (886) The article notes that home theater had long been a dream of such writers as Edward Bellamy, H. G. Wells, and others. The article predicts that the "screen of the future home theater will not have the flat, flickering, black and white pictures of today, but scenes like those in the ground-glass plate of a camera, fresh and bright with blue sky and green foliage, or the tints of a close-by face. And by stereoscopy the scenes will be more yet -- three dimensional, not flat pictures, but vistas of reality. To this add music or the natural voices, and you have the home theater of 1930, oh ye of little faith! It is just as certain that the home theater will be improved as it is that color printing has been improved." (886) The article mentions that microphones will amplify sound. It discusses actress Florence Turner acting before cameras and very few people but at the same realizing that "she was playing to million all over the world." (887) It notes that two French companies are "producing these 'film parlants'" and Thomas Edison "has brought ot his school kineoscopes." Gilfillan says that the drama of 1930 will have more scenes. "The old motion picture shows," he notes" had an average length of scene of about fifty seconds." (889) Such changes will make "drama more perfectly bendable to teaching and entertainment." (889) The article comments on this form of entertainment and its presentation of time and history. "The peculiar ability of the disk and film theater is to preserve, to halt time. We shall see the actors of the past play again, dead orators will speak, the Panama Canal can be reopened. Independence of time again enables it to represent the supernatural, by merely concealing an interval, as when in moving pictures we see a man vanish into the air. And by doctoring films centaurs, elves, earthquakes, murder, everything to be seen on canvas or in joke books will become the material of the playwright." (887) The article predicts improved lighting to "see" in twilight and in moonlight. "But instantaneity is a recommendation, also. By the electric theater a whole nation will be able actually to see an inauguration, a launching, a ball game, or a first performance. It will not seem a mechanical device, but a window or a pair of magic opera glasses thru which one will watch the actors or doers." (my emphasis) Much of this article assumes that future home entertainment will be devoted to opera, classical music, and great literature, lectures, and plays. "Home theater art will be better than any to-day. For not only will the bad and mediocre artists be massacred in their thousands and the great heaped with honor and riches, but the great will be introduced to a new competition, that with the great dead." (890) This article discusses the power of home theater to preserve democracy and the home. It asks "What will happen to our political forms when a candidate must appeal directly to all the electorate, revealing his personality 890/891 by his close range appearance and normal voice? Will representative government survive this nation-wide extension of the neighborhood in which a man can be known?" (890-91) The article goes on to argue that "The home theater, in contrast to most modern developments, will tend powerfully to preserve the home, as the newspaper has by superseding the Athenian barber shop, the Roman forum and the Queen Anne coffee house. And to those who live in small towns and the country the home theater will be a minister of life." (891) Gilfillan says that a form of the electric theater, called Telephone Herald, has been in operation in Budapest for about 12 years. He was overly optimistic, however, when he predicted in 1912 that the electric theater would "be in the majority of homes" in the United States two decades. (891) AU - Gilfillan, S. C. DA - Oct. 17, 1912 IS - 3333 KW - nationalism home history fame celebrity actors acting photography ref, secondary home and new media future and science fiction motion pictures motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures electricity electricity, and home entertainment home entertainment telephones electricity, and telephones telephones, and electricity color color, and home entertainment home entertainment, and color motion pictures, and 3-D 3-D, and home entertainment motion pictures, and printing press sound recording sound recording, and home entertainment home entertainment, and sound recording sound recording, and phonograph phonograph, and home entertainment future, and home entertainment France France, and home entertainment motion pictures, and French influence motion pictures, and French films in U.S. motion pictures, and lighting lighting, and motion pictures lighting, and home entertainment home entertainment, and lighting modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures electricity, and theaters theaters, and electricity quotations kinetoscope motion pictures, and kinetoscope kinetoscope, and home entertainment home entertainment, and kinetoscope seeing at a distance microphones home entertainment, and microphones microphones, and home entertainment metaphors metaphors, and windows metaphors, and magic opera glasses motion pictures, and stars (origins) Turner, Florence, and movies stars motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and home entertainment quotations nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures telephones, and home theater democracy democracy, and new media telephones, and seeing telephone education education, and motion pictures education, and home theater motion pictures, and education home entertainment, and education phonograph lighting ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent 3-D future theaters LB - 37020 PY - 1912 SP - 886-91 ST - The Future Home Theater T2 - The Independent TI - The Future Home Theater VL - 73 ID - 3803 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Glass examines the use of media technology by seven major labor unions in the early 1980s. The unions -- the ILGWU, IAM, UAW, AFSCME, CWA, AFT and USWA -- used media to communicate to union members and to deliver a general public relations message. Glass notes, for example, that the garment workers union used satellite teleconferencing to communicate with union members and reporters to deliver the union position on import quotas in 1983. As early as 1979, the machinists association used a satellite cablecast to distribute a program that included a film on plant closings and a live discussion by union leaders followed by phone-in questions by audience members. In addition, Glass also details the work of the then-new Labor Institute of Public Affairs, which was founded by the AFL-CIO to develop a coordinated national plan for the use of new communications technologies. Glass concludes that video, cable, and satellite technologies offered organized labor new opportunities to compete for public opinion. In addition, labor could integrate new media into its infrastructure to communicate for organizing, training, and general communications with members and the public. “From the 1920s to the mid 1970s the broadcast media era -- the means of communication were held hostage by the corporations,” Glass writes. “Today we have entered a new age.” AU - Glass, Fred DA - Spring 1984 IS - 1 KW - satellites Glende, Phil labor labor, and new media +aeronautics and space communication labor, and satellites satellites, and labor labor, and satellite teleconferencing +television labor, and cable television television, and labor cable television, and labor labor, and video labor, and new media (1980s) cable LB - 810 N1 - See also: office PY - 1984 SP - 131-50 ST - Labor and New Media Technology: A Union of Necessity T2 - Labor Studies Journal TI - Labor and New Media Technology: A Union of Necessity VL - 9 ID - 169 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Glass argues for the creation of regional media resource centers to provide local unions with sophisticated electronic communications capabilities. Glass briefly summarized the state of national use of media technology, including the work of the Labor Institute of Public Affairs, which used broadcast, cable and closed circuit video for communications during the 1980s. He noted that “there are a growing number of local unions utilizing the simpler, consumer level of video hardware for publicity and other communications. For locals with greater resources, cable television and small format professional video, properly utilized, also afford labor important media outlets.” But Glass argued that local or regional media resource centers could help all union bodies overcome the three main problems for development of a media strategy: coordination, cost and conceptualization. He suggested, for example, that a media resource center could help a union body create a 15-minute VHS cassette that would be distributed as part of an information packet to welcome every new union member. Organizers could also work in the field with VHS cassettes and portable VCRs for playback wherever organizing meetings occur. The article includes a budget for a regional video production studio and a brief labor videography. -- Phil Glende AU - Glass, Fred DA - Winter 1989 IS - 4 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) magnetic recording VCRs magnetic tape Glende, Phil labor labor, and new media labor, and VCRs VCRs, and labor +television labor, and cable television cable television, and labor television, and labor cable LB - 910 N1 - See also: office PY - 1989 SP - 3-17 ST - A Locally Based Labor Media Strategy T2 - Labor Studies Journal TI - A Locally Based Labor Media Strategy VL - 14 ID - 179 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Godfried examines the relationship between organized labor and WEVD, a New York radio station started by the Socialist Party with the help of the ILGWU. He notes that WEVD provided a forum for intellectuals and labor groups but that labor organizations generally failed to see the value and provide the funds for sustained programming. Godfried begins with a brief biography of Morris Novik, who became program director in 1932, after the station was turned over to the Jewish Daily Forward. “Novik realized that the advent of broadcasting might undermine live debates ... and he became fascinated with the idea of combining new and old forms of education and entertainment to advance cultural and political struggles.” The station often “gave free air time to labor unions and working-class organizations to make important announcements during strikes, boycotts, lockouts, and organizing drives. At the same time, WEVD actively encouraged local unions to pay for their own programs; and it assisted them in producing these sponsored shows for the purpose of educating, informing and entertaining an extended working class audience.” In 1933, WEVD began The University of the Air , modeled after CBS’s American School of the Air, only with a leftist orientation. The next year, the ILGWU started The Voice of Local 89, an Italian language program aimed at immigrants in the garment industry. Other cultural programming, including dramas, were produced throughout the decade to educate workers about labor issues. Godfried noted that WEVD often made its facilities available during times of labor trouble, but that it also was forced to push labor programming aside during prime listening hours in order to sell airtime for commercial use. Despite positive experiences with radio, leaders of the ILGWU and the ACWA did not commit to sustained programming on WEVD. “ILGWU leaders supported short-term labor radio programming for immediate economic and political gains in the midst of strikes, organizing campaigns, or political elections. But ... only a handful of ... union innovators recognized the importance of maintaining continual access to the airwaves for ongoing political, economic and cultural battles.” --Phil Glende AU - Godfried, Nathan DA - Nov. 2001 IS - 4 KW - ethnicity Glende, Phil labor +radio labor, and radio radio, and labor labor, and ethnicity radio, and ethnicity ethnicity, and radio radio, and WEVD (New York) LB - 1140 N1 - See also: office PY - 2001 SP - 347-69 ST - Struggling Over Politics and Culture: Organized Labor and Radio Station WEVD During the 1930s T2 - Labor History TI - Struggling Over Politics and Culture: Organized Labor and Radio Station WEVD During the 1930s VL - 42 ID - 202 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between pornography exposure, particularly in youth, and ‘the development of normal or abnormal behavior’ (197). To do this, Goldstein examines four distinct groups(1) institutionalized sex offenders, (2) non-heterosexuals, (3) pornography users, and (4) a control group. Members of each group were assessed for how often they were exposed to a variety of pornographic themes in photos, movies, and books. Exposure to pornography in adolescence and the year prior to the study was lower for each of the three test groups than for the control group. This study is of use to current scholars because it is an initial attempt to distinguish between differences in use across media, and also examines groups that are presumably influenced by pornography (i.e. sex offenders). This study concludes that some pornography use for arousal and release (masturbation) is good for developing normal heterosexual behaviors, but continuation of this pattern into adulthood is not desirable and was demonstrated only by users and sex offenders. --Michael Boyle AU - Goldstein, M. J. DA - 1973 IS - 3 KW - photography women, and new media women social science research sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence violence censorship and ratings Boyle, Michael pornography media effects pornography, and rape myths violence, and pornography pornography, and violence women, and pornography pornography, and women motion pictures and popular culture pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects media effects, and violence media effects, and motion pictures +photography and visual communication photography, and pornography pornography, and photography children children, and pornography pornography, and children pornography, and defenders pornography, and postive effects children, and media LB - 1270 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1973 SP - 197-219 ST - Exposure to Erotic Stimuli and Sexual Deviance T2 - Journal of Social Science TI - Exposure to Erotic Stimuli and Sexual Deviance VL - 29 ID - 215 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Contrary to film history texts, movie executives did not ignore television as a competitor and from the 1930s on put considerable thought and discussion into how best to deal with this growing competitor. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences urged major studios to install television in their movie theaters. AU - Gomery, Douglas DA - Summer 1985 IS - 21 KW - audiences widescreen theaters motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and widescreen widescreen, and motion pictures +television television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television theaters, and television television, and motion picture theaters LB - 2570 N1 - Filed under Velvet Light Trap PY - 1985 SP - 54-61 ST - Theatre Television: The Missing Link of Technological Change in the U.S. Motion Picture Industry T2 - Velvet Light Trap TI - Theatre Television: The Missing Link of Technological Change in the U.S. Motion Picture Industry ID - 345 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Gordon, J. E. H. DA - July 8, 1875 KW - materials television, and history of +television television, and origins seeing at a distance selenium LB - 6880 PY - 1875 SP - 187 ST - Anomalous Behavior of Selenium T2 - Nature TI - Anomalous Behavior of Selenium VL - 12 ID - 1969 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this Methodist publication, Mary Gordon writes about the impact of modern communication (the printing press and "the electric wire"): “Before our own breakfast we read how many will be breakfastless in India. The sufferings of American and Filipino, of Boer and Briton on the uncleared battlefield are not fact of past history; they are present agonies.” The “’other half,’ with its squalor, misery, and oppression, stares out at us with hollow eyes from between the comforts of our own daily lives. Our minds are like the operator’s table in one of the great telegraph centers, on which messages from all points of the compass are ticked off at the same instant. We are perplexed and confused." Later she says that "Our faith must embrace a larger world" that that of earlier generations. "It must be a sublimed thing. To lose it in these days is to lose our balance. Steam and electricity have, indeed, raised the curtain, and all the world is on the stage in one tremendous act." (610) AU - Gordon, Mary DA - April 18, 1901 IS - 16 KW - progress ref, religious ref, Methodist ref, Christian Advocate ref, secondary electricity nationalism and communication electricity, and nationalism nationalism, and electricity religion religion, and telegraph religion, and electricity electricity, and religion electricity, and imperialism nationalism, and evangelization electricity, and progress progress, and electricity progress, and steam power news and journalism electricity, and news news, and electricity steam power news, and steam power quotations quotations, and modern news (1901) nationalism news LB - 42340 PY - 1901 SP - 610 ST - World-Consciousness T2 - Christian Advocate TI - World-Consciousness VL - 76 ID - 4333 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In 1906 (?), Maxim Gorky visited the metropolitan playground of Coney Island, and found its outward appearance of gayety deceiving. “With the advent of night a fantastic city all of fire suddenly rises from the ocean into the sky,” he began. “Thousands of ruddy sparks glimmer in the darkness, limning in fine, sensitive outline on the black background of the sky, shapely towers of miraculous castles, palaces and temples. Golden gossamer threads tremble in the air. They intertwine in transparent, flaming patterns, which flutter and melt away in love with their own beauty mirrored in the waters. Fabulous and beyond conceiving, ineffably beautiful, is this fiery scintillation. It burns but does not consume. Its palpitations are scarce visible. In the wilderness of sky and ocean rises the magic picture of a flaming city.” (309) But the beauty of this man-made setting was superficial and its impact on the people who became immersed in its amusements was deadening, Gorky thought. “The visitor is stunned; his consciousness is withered by the intense gleam; his thoughts are routed from his mind; he becomes a particle in the crowd. People wander about in the flashing, blinding fire intoxicated and devoid of will. A dull-white mist penetrates their brains, greedy expectation envelopes their souls. Dazed by the brilliancy the throngs wind about like dark bands in the surging sea of light, pressed upon all sides by the black bournes of night. (310) “Everywhere electric bulbs shed their cold, garish gleam. They shine on posts and walls, on window casings and cornices; they stretch in an even line along the high tubes of the power-house; they burn on all the roofs, and prick the eye with the sharp needles of their dead, indifferent sparkle. The people screw up their eyes, and smiling disconcertedly crawl along the ground like the heavy line of a tangled chain. (310) “A man must make a great effort not to lose himself in the crowd, not to be overwhelmed by his amazement an amazement in which there is neither transport nor joy….” (310) What from a distance appeared beautiful upon close inspection was hideous. Everywhere the visitor discovered “a dull, gloomy ugliness. The city, magic and fantastic from afar, now appears an absurd jumble of straight lines of wood, a cheap, hastily constructed toy-house for the amusement of children. Dozens of white buildings, monstrously diverse, not one with even the suggestion of beauty. They are build of wood, and smeared over with peeling white paint, which gives them the appearance of suffering with the same skin disease…. Everything is stripped naked by the dispassionate glare. The glare is everywhere, and nowhere a shadow. Each building stands there like a dumbfounded fool with wide-open mouth, and sends forth the glare of brass trumpets and the whining rumble of orchestrions. Inside is a cloud of smoke and the dark figures of the people…. (311) “The soul is seized with a desire for a living, beautiful fire, a sublime fire, which should free the people from the slavery of a varied boredom. For this boredom deafens their ears and blinds their eyes….” (311) Gorky comments on the inanity of the amusements and the cruelty shown to the animals that make up some of the entertainment. The spectators “with weary faces and colorless eyes … drink in the vile poison” of these pleasures “with silent rapture. Boredom whirls about in an idle dance, expiring in the agony of its inanition.” (317) All this “aimless straying stupefies the people,” Gorky said. “But for that very reason it is profitable both to the traders in morality and the venders of depravity.” (314) AU - Gorky, Maxim DA - Aug. 8, 1907 IS - 3062 KW - ref, secondary modernity modernity, and Coney Island amusements, and modernity new way of seeing electricity electricity, and color color color, and electricity color, and amusement parks electricity, and amusement parks electricity, and Coney Island critics, and modernity critics, and amusement parks critics critics, and electricity critics, and Coney Island Gorky, Maksim, and silent film ref, book Gorky, Maksim quotations quotations, and Maksim Gorky sound recording sound recording, and amusement parks amusement parks, and sound recording color, and Maksim Gorky Gorky, Maksim, and color ref, Independent ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, reform amusement parks LB - 42560 PY - 1907 SP - 309-17 ST - Boredom T2 - The Independent TI - Boredom VL - 63 ID - 4355 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The authors survey research on the effects of screen size in viewers' experiences with media content. They notes that in "media production circles there is currently a trend toward the increased use of images and editing techniques designed to elicit visceral responses in viewers." Evidence comes from TV news program, MTV shows, and television advertising. The authors suggest that as sales of large-screen televisions and other media increase, the question raised in this study will increase in importance. AU - Grabe, Maria Elizabeth, Matthew Lombard, Robert D. Reich, Cheryl Campanella, and Theresa Bolmarcich Ditton DA - Spring 1999 IS - 2 KW - computers advertising, and public relations syntheses (of research) syntheses propaganda public relations motion pictures media effects media violence violence media effects journalism computers news and journalism +television +motion pictures and popular culture +computers and the Internet television, and screen size motion pictures, and screen size computers, and screen size media effects, and screen size syntheses, and screen size bibliographies, and effects of screen size news, and screen size advertising, and screen size violence, and screen size advertising +bibliographies news LB - 3230 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1999 SP - 4-9 ST - The Role of Screen Size in Viewer Experiences of Media Content T2 - VCQ: Visual Communication Quarterly TI - The Role of Screen Size in Viewer Experiences of Media Content VL - 6 ID - 411 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses "a system of telephotography invented by Prof. Korn, or Munich." It explains Korn's system of sending pictures and other information by telegraph wire and its value to "up-to-date illustrated newspapers and journals." (288) It says that this process "is of special importance for long-distance transmission of half-tone pictures intended for reproduction on a large scale in newspapers, illustrated journals, etc." (289) The "Cabonelle process," can transmit 300,000 to 500,000 letters per hour as well as pictures. AU - Gradenwitz, Alfred DA - Oct. 26, 1907 IS - 17 KW - photography telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph photography and visual communication magazines news and journalism newspapers, and photography photography, and newspapers ref-mag magazines, and photography photography, and magazines ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific American LB - 120 PY - 1907 SP - 288-89 ST - Recent Developments in Picture Telegraphy T2 - Scientific American TI - Recent Developments in Picture Telegraphy VL - 97 ID - 1876 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article reports on a research paper presented by a Swiss naturalist, A. Vautler-Dufour, who was constructing an improved device for telephotography. Vautler-Dufour and a Geneva astronomer named Scheer, had come up with an invention that was more portable than an earlier device using a telescope. The men built "an apparatus with an objective 16 cm. in diameter and 2.40 m. in focal lenth, the latter being reduced to the third part of its value, by inserting two plane mirros between the objective and the plate. The losses by reflection of these mirrors did not exceed 5 per cent. Exposures of 10 seconds were required when yellow screens and orthochromatical plates were used, while without a screen excellent snap shots could be taken with exposures of about 1/75 sec. The total lenth of the apparatus was only 3 1/2 inches." The article then reports that "Vautler-Dufour is now constructing an apparatus 40 cm. in length, the diameter of the objective being 0.10 cm. and the focal length 1.20 m. It is hoped to obtain good instantaneous photographs with exposures ranging between 1/200 and 1/500 sec. The same apparatus may be used to take ordinary photographs with an objective 0.25 m. in focal distance. "The following advantages are claimed for this ingenious device, as compared with tele-objectives -- greater intensity, better definition, higher magnification, and an easier adjustment. As regards the neatness of images, the views presented before the members of congress were perfectly sharp as far as the edges of the field of view. Twelve-fold magnifications were obtained, without the apparatus ceasing to be portable." The article devotes a paragraph to the industrial, scientific, and militay applications of this device as well as for ordinary photography. A summary account of this article appeared under the title "The 'Telephot'," Current Literature, XXXV, No. 2 (Aug. 1903), 149. AU - Gradenwitz, A. DA - June 27, 1903 IS - 26 KW - telephotography journalism fame celebrity celebrity culture magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality cameras cameras, and zoom lens zoom lens, and cameras cameras, and telephoto lens telephotographyy, and limitations modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing photography, and space and time space and time photography, and time photography, and space photography, and travel photography, and exposure time news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines newspapers, and telephotographyy telephotographyy, and newspapers telephotographyy, and exposure time photography, and exposure time military communication telephotographyy, and military military communication, and telephotographyy instantaneous photography telephotographyy, and instantaneous instantaneous photography, and telephotographyy photography, and telephot cameras, and portable color color, and telephotographyy telephotographyy, and color personality ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific American LB - 37390 PY - 1903 SP - 486 (APS Online) ST - The 'Telephot,' a Novel Apparatus for Photographing at Great Distances T2 - Scientific American TI - The 'Telephot,' a Novel Apparatus for Photographing at Great Distances VL - 88 ID - 3838 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article about the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, NY, in 1901, the author comments on both electricity and the use of color. Describing the illumination of the Electric Tower, Grant writes: "There is a deep silence, and all eyes are riveted on the Electric Tower. Suddenly, in the splendid vertical panel with four brooches which decorates its center, there is a faint glow of light like the first flush of sunrise from behind a moutain-peak. It mounts and spreads, at first gradually, with dignified celerity, then with a swifter effulgent pervasiveness until the entire territory of the Fair has been metamorphosed into a gorgeous vision of dazzling towers, minarets and scintillating gardens. The Spanish Renaissance scheme of color is gone, and in its stead we have a veritable fairy-land; the triumph not of Aladdin's lamp, but of the masters of modern science over the nature-god, Electricity." (454) AU - Grant, Robert DA - Sept. 1901 IS - 5 KW - progress ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, reform ref, Cosmopolitan electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time color electricity, and color color, and electricity color, and world fairs electricity, and world fairs color, and progress electricity, and progress progress, and electricity progress, and color color, and Pan-American Exposition electricity, and Pan-American Exposition metaphors metaphors, and Aladdin electricity, and Aladdin electricity, as nature god metaphors, and nature god LB - 40110 PY - 1901 SP - 451-62 ST - Notes on the Pan-American Exposition T2 - Cosmopolitan TI - Notes on the Pan-American Exposition VL - 31 ID - 4109 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that people can now hear and see dead actors perform. "What had been accomplished three years ago indicated that Mr. Edison's prophecy would be fulfilled; entertainment that has heretofore been possible only at a prohibitive cost will be provided for the masses, and the amazing spectacle of seeing deceased players act and hearing them speak their lines will be revealed to the forthcoming generations." (142) Grau notes that opera stars can now earn as much from their phonograph records as from performing live on stage. (143) The article says that a major change has taken place during the past three years in the way actors regard moving pictures. "As recently as three years ago, not a single prominent player from the speaking stage was willing to make the excursions into the film studio, yet a few weeks ago the writer recognized on the screen in one photoplay four ladies and gentlemen who were last season prominent in Charles Frohman's Broadway productions, and it is an actual fact that on the Vitagraph Company's roster are today one hundred and twenty reputable players. By no means are these composed of the rank and file of the profession. Six at least have been stars, and it is extremely doubtful if one of the number would care to make a change. Yet this same Vitagraph Company, six years ago, had a stock company numbering but six persons -- and this included the three proprietors, who appeared on the screen regularly. The company now is capitalized at a million, and distributed $25,000 to its employees last Christmas." (143) Grau says theater managers and producers are turning to film. "Like the players, the men who were wont to decry the vogue of the camera man have at last recognized the modern trend and are now affiliating themselves with the film industry at every turn." (143) Grau says that in New York City alone, ther are 100 theaters tha seat from 500 to 3,000 people that did not exist only four years earlier. About one-fifty are owned or controlled by Marcus Loew. Much of the public is attracted by the cheap prices of the movies. Yet, the article concludes, "there are those who believe that the salvation of the speaking stage will be achieved when a large portion of these millions become tired of scientific simulation of real plays and players and are enticed into the high-priced playhouse, where it is hoped the superiority of the performance on the real stage will tend to hold them fast thenceforth!" (144) AU - Grau, Robert DA - July 17, 1913 IS - 3372 KW - history fame fame celebrity ref, secondary sound recording phonograph sound recording, and phonograph motion pictures Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures Edison, Thomas, and sound recording Edison, Thomas, and phonograph motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars phonograph, and celebrity culture celebrity, and phonograph phonograph, and fame fame, and phonograph personality, and phonograph phonograph, and personality history and new media history, and phonograph phonograph, and history motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures kinetophone Edison, Thomas, and kinetophone motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and stars (origins) Vitagraph Frohman, Charles ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent LB - 38970 PY - 1913 SP - 142-44 ST - Actors by Proxy T2 - The Independent TI - Actors by Proxy VL - 75 ID - 3996 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This illustrated article discusses the Pan American Exhibition in Buffalo in 1901 and contrasts its architecture with the earlier Chicago Exposition with its lack of symmetry and scale. (676) According to the author, four things made the Buffalo exposition significant: 1) the lighting effects; 2) the "composition" (673) of the architecture; 3) the use of color; and the sculpture scheme. (673, 675) The article begins by describing the magical transformation that takes place when the electric lights at the Exposition are turned on. "As the moment for the illumination approaches, the bands hush and a stillness falls upon the multitude. Suddenly dull reddish threads appear in the globes on the near-by lamp-pillars. A murmur of expectation runs through the crowd. For an instant the great Tower seems to pulse with a thrill of life before the eye become sensible to what has taken place. Then its surfaces gleam with a faint flush, like the flush which church spires catch from the dawn. This deepens slowly to pink, then to red. Presently the eye notes that the transformation which has been worked in the Tower has taken place everywhere. In a moment the architectural skeletons of the great buildings have been picked out in lines of red light. Then the magic current grows stronger, and the whole effect mellows into luminous yellow. The material Exposition has been transfigured, and its glorified ghost is in its place. A storm of applause arises from the crowds, the bands strike up, and one realizes that the darkness has settled down upon the City of Light." (673) Gray says that "color in the modern world has never 673/675 before been applied to an architectural creation of this magnitude and character." (673, 675) Further commenting on the use of color on the buildings of the Exposition, Gray said that next to the display of electricity, the color scheme generated the most discussion. "The modern world is not used to the application of paint to public buildings. There has prevailed, among laymen at least, the feeling that it was undignified and possibly immoral." (684) The color scheme adopted reflected assumption about color and levels of civilization. Quoting from the official "Art Hand-Book," by Charles Y. Turner: As one entered the Exposition "'we would come upon the elementary conditions, that is, the earliest state of man, suggested on one side, and primitive nature on the other. I concluded that the strongest primary colors should be applied here, and that as we advance up the grounds the colors should be more refined and less contrasting, and that the Tower, which is to suggest the triumph of man's achievement, should be the lightest and most delicate in color.'" (685) This, Gray explains, was "the philosophy of the color scheme. It is not for a layman to discuss it, but it is his province to say that the visiting public seems to feel the inspiriting cheerfulness of the color, and to derive a pleasure from it...." (685) The Exposition celebrated electric lighting. "Since the world began," the author writes, "this is the first time that human eyes have beheld such floods of artificial light as the untiring cataract of Niagara generates for this Exposition." (675) Discussing the architectural lay-out of the Exposition, Gray says that the "deliberations of the board resulted in a plan shaped like a cross." (678) The Exposition Electric Tower was something of "'an architectural skirt-dance'," and "a monument to man's dominion over the cataract of Niagara...." (682) The author concludes by saying that words and even pictures cannot capture the Exposition. The "City of Light must be seen to be comprehended." (685) AU - Gray, David DA - Sept. 1901 IS - 5 KW - progress magic emotion censorship censorship censorship ref, secondary color, and electricity color color, and architecture color, in history color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and values values, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and sensations censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color media effects color, media effects media effects, and color electricity electricity, and color color, and electricity color, and Pan American Exposition (1901) electricity, and Pan American Exposition (1901) color, and progress progress, and color electricity, and progress progress, and electricity World's Fairs color, and magic magic, and color quotations, and electricity quotations, and color lights color, and civilization color, and primitives color, and inadequacy of language ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Century quotations values LB - 39200 PY - 1901 SP - 673-85 ST - The City of Light T2 - Century Illustrated Magazine TI - The City of Light VL - 62 ID - 4019 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article argues that "when one considers the prominence of outline illustration in the make-up of a modern newspaper, and the short space of time that has been required to popularize it, it is not going too far to characterize this innovation as a veritable journalistic revolution." (471) A decade earlier, the author says, only the New York Daily Graphic and the New York Truth were the only newspapers to indulge in "any form of illustration." Now, in 1891, Gribayedoff estimates that there are 5,000 illustrated periodicals in the United States. More than 1,000 artists were then supplying the press with 10,000 drawings each week. (472) It is difficult to pinpoint exactly when newspaper started using illustrations. The New York Herald used woodcuts of the old Merchants' exchange. Other papers also used them including the New York Sun, New York Telegram, and the Pittsburgh Telegraph. Theater owners used stock illustrations and political caricatures were also commonly used. Gribayedoff, an illustrator who worked for Colonel John L. Cockerill on the New York World, believed that "the great boom in daily newspaper illustration" started when he helped produced caricatures of the "Wall Street Nobility" on the from page of the New York World on February 3, 1884. (474) Other paper began using similar images of "local celebrities." (475) The American Press Association, which supplied rural and small-town papers with stereotyped plates, also played a roll in the newspaper illustration boom. (475) S. H. Horgan estimated that it supplied perhaps 7,000 papers with all manner of material except local news. (476) The author notes that in an earlier period there was a significant time lag in getting images published. "Engravers still needed at least forty-eight hours to manipulate their 'soft metal process,' involving the photographing of the drawing, the printing from the negative, the soaking of the gelatin, the casting of a plaster mould, the stereotyping, the routing, the blocking and the trimming or finishing of the cuts, so that by the time murderer and victim appeared in bold outline in the news columns the crime itself had became a feeble memory." (474) Gribayedoff also discusses Horgan's use of the photolithographic process on the New York Graphic. (475-76) The process used zinc etching and was much faster enabling papers to receive images within four hours. The greater speed gave further impetus to the use of newspaper illustrations. Horgan and other noted that papers that used illustrations were more popular with readers than those that did not. As Horgan put it, it was discovered "'that matter without the accompaniment of cuts does not take half as well as when illustrated.'" (476) As the popularity of newspaper illustrations increased, publications moved away from using caricatures of men and started using images of women more frequently. There were protests to this development and the Assistant District Attorney general in New York even threaten to indict Joseph Pulitzer for criminal libel. "The protest was grounded less on the basis of the distortion of fair features than on the argument that the privacy and sanctity of American homes had been ruthlessly invaded and forced into the garish glare of vulgar publicity." (477) This view, the author says "seems most amusing" in views of subsequent developments where women sought to have their images on the society page of newspapers. (477) Gribayedoff says that "the feature of daily newspaper illustration that has impressed me most is its development of a form of vanity in this country which, it is true, had existed in a less rampant degree for many years previous. I allude to the desire of the average American for seeing his portrait in print." (478) He observes that such public publicity is no longer reserved merely for the wealthy but is increasing available to the average person. The use of "mugs" by newspapers -- a "vulgar but descriptive" in his opinion, was not confined to large urban papers but more and more common in rural publications and indeed, in all parts of the country. (479) The press in western towns now widely use illustration. "The St. Louis papers, following the example of the Post-Dispatch, have, almost without a single exception, come to illustration." (481) Newspaper advertising was also a place were images of people were often used. (479) Gribayedoff says that the use of quality artists (e.g., Baron C. de Grimm) by newspapers "marks a distinct epoch in American pictorial journalism." (480) AU - Gribayédoff, Valerian DA - Aug. 1891 IS - 4 KW - wood engraving journalism journalism celebrity celebrity culture magazines, and photography ref, secondary news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving critics critics, and pictorial journalism newspapers, and outline illustrations illustrations, and newspapers newspapers, and artists art, and newspapers American Press Assocation photography, and art photography, and American Press Association celebrity culture celebrity culture, and origins celebrity culture, and newspapers newspapers, and celebrity culture women photography, and women newspapers, and women sexuality sexuality, and newspaper illustrations home and new media home, and newspaper illustrations advertising and public relations advertising, and newspaper illustrations journalism, and artists critics critics, and newspaper pictures ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, reform ref, Cosmopolitan advertising art home illustrations magazines photography LB - 37890 PY - 1891 SP - 471-81 ST - Pictorial Journalism T2 - Cosmopolitan TI - Pictorial Journalism VL - 11 ID - 3888 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article examines the practical impact of electricity on American life, especially during the previous quarter century. The author contends that electricity is well beyond its infancy and "that this electrical revolution has come about so swiftly and quietly that few of us realize how much it had done to make our lives easier, more convenient, and more comfortable. Still less do we realize the significance of these changes and what they promise for us and future generations." (401) Griffin gives figures on the size of the electrical industry in 1913. "All modern life and industry is, in fact, becoming either directly or indirectly dependent upon electrical power," he writes. (401) Already it "operates the machinery of our factories and mills; drives trains, trolley cars, and automobiles; prints our books magazines, newspapers, stamps, and money; lights our streets and building; carries our voices by telephone, telegraph, and wireless to the uttermost ends of the earth." (401) Griffin begins by recalled the genie discovered by the fisherman in the "Arabian Nights." "If you want to experience a little of the awe that must have possessed this fisherman of old, go stand in one of the great Niagara power-houses, where the elemental forces of nature are wrestled from chaotic torrents of water, reduced into submission by Brobdingnagian machinery, and dispatched, like tamed thunderbolts, over hundreds of miles of copper wire to serve the myriad needs of populous cities and wide countryside. "No romance in modern life and industry? We need but eyes to see, but ears to hear. In very truth the fabled genie of the copper jar is not one-half so wonderful as the uncannily invisible magician, electricity, that we have subdued and made captive in filaments of copper to do our bidding, instant and obedient, where and when we will." (401) Griffith notes that this "mighty genie" (402) remains mysterious to most people and that electricity has become the domain of experts. "It is unfortunate but true that the general public has never gained much accurate knowledge of electrical inventions, history, or development. Electrical literature has been very largely confined to technical journals and text-books, and what little has been written in a so-called popular style has usually been fantastically inaccurate." (403) As an engineering professor at Columbia University is quoted as saying, the "electrical apparatus usually appears either very striking or else mysteriously incomprehensible to the average man." (403) This professor, Francis B. Crocker, talks about the role of electricity in the news about the sinking of the Titanic. The public "read with avidity the story of the Titanic in their newspapers," he said, "but forget that these very newspapers were made from wood pulp and printed by electric power in quite as marvelous a way as that by which the wireless message is received out of the mists of the sea." (404) The article discusses early misconceptions about electricity. Griffin says that "almost nothing is done in modern life and industry as it was done twenty-five years ago," and he wonders if President Woodrow Wilson was fully aware of that fact. (404) Griffin also notes how this "invisible genie" affects the working place and home life. (405) He predicts that people will soon be able to buy "an electric motor just as you would a camera or a carpet-sweeper." (406) He concludes that electricity has already brought "far-reaching" changes and suggests that even more fundamental changes may be produced in the future. (411) AU - Griffin, Henry Farrand DA - Oct. 25, 1913 KW - magazines ref, secondary metaphors electricity home and new media news and journalism electricity, and newspapers electricity, and books newspapers, and electricity magazines, and electricity book, and electricity electricity, as Aladdin's genie news, and electricity electricity, and news electricity, and metaphors metaphors, and electricity metaphors, and Aladdin metaphors, and white magic ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, literary ref, Outlook home news LB - 370 PY - 1913 SP - 401-11 ST - White Magic T2 - Outlook TI - White Magic ID - 3333 ER - TY - JOUR AB - D. W. Griffith discusses the differences between the live theaters and moving pictures. It notes that many people living in small communities were "starved spiritually" (447) and that they traveling acting groups often had to work under very meager circumstances. But, he says, Science (which included moving pictures) came "to the rescue of these typical Americans in the small places. (447) He says that "Already the motion picture is the world's chief form of entertainment, the greatest spiritual force the world has ever known." (447) By then, Griffith says, movies were the fifth larges industry in America. (448) Where actors on the live stage even under good circumstances might reach a thousand people with each performance, Griffith notes that Birth of a Nation played to full houses all over the United States on the same evening. (448) More people watch a single film in the state of Illinois and in the South in one month than see all of the traveling acting companies from New York City in fourteen months. (448) Griffith discusses differences in acting on the stage and in film, and notes that only two year earlier "hardly any real actor" depended on motion pictures. (448) That had changed by 1916. Griffith comments on progress in making color films. Thanks to the work of "six or seven scientists," the movie camera has been "perfected so that, without tinting, without limitation or liability to error such as prevailed in the only color pictures ever employed, pictures may be taken without considerable additional cost and with all the colors of the universe." (448) AU - Griffith, David Wark DA - Dec. 11, 1916 IS - 3549 KW - stage history censorship words vs. images metaphors Griffith, D. W. history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures images vs. words war motion pictures, and war war, and motion pictures quotations motion pictures, and printing press motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings Griffith, D. W., and censorship censorship, and D. W. Griffith images vs. words motion pictures, and new art form quotations motion pictures, and teaching history by lightning Griffith, D. W., and Birth of a Nation ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent Griffith, D. W., and Intolerance audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences quotations, and movies as spiritual force motion pictures, as spiritual force education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and education stage and theater motion pictures, and stage motion pictures, as fifth larges industry color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color LB - 41970 PY - 1916 SP - 447-48 ST - Pictures vs. One-Night Stands T2 - The Independent TI - Pictures vs. One-Night Stands VL - 88 ID - 992 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Griffith outlines how American business interests became involved in an unprecedented advertising and public relations campaign to bolster its image during and after World War II. With a lack of consumer products due to war conditions, advertising executives who formed the Advertising Council sought to convince business leaders to purchase advertising to improve the public perception of business following the Great Depression. Early during the war years, the advertising industry was helped by a federal ruling that allowed corporations to deduct the expense of institutional and public service advertising. After the war, Griffith argued, industry executives, worried about the growing role of the federal government and the gains made by labor unions, set out in a campaign to bolster the image of business and win public opinion for a corporate state. “Following World War II, they set out to achieve these goals in a fairly purposeful and self-conscious manner, spending enormous sums of money not only on lobbying and campaign financing, but also on a wide variety of public relations activities institutional advertising, philanthropy, the sponsorship of research, and industrial and community relations.” Griffith outlines the origins of these campaigns during the war and describes several of the post-war campaigns, such as Our American Heritage, in detail. He concludes that there is no measure of whether such an unprecedented campaign to influence public opinion was successful. However, it would be a “serious mistake to underestimate the impact of the Council, if for no other reason than the frequency and ubiquity with which its advertisements appeared and the zeal with which its leaders sought to publicize their highly selective views of American society.” --Phil Glende AU - Griffith, Robert DA - Autumn 1983 IS - 3 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations public relations advertising war military communication Glende, Phil labor advertising propaganda advertising, and labor labor, and advertising propaganda, and labor labor, and propaganda (WWII) World War II World War II, and advertising advertising, and World War II labor, and World War II World War II, and labor LB - 990 N1 - See also: office PY - 1983 SP - 388-412 ST - The Selling of America: The Advertising Council and American Politics T2 - Harvard Business Review TI - The Selling of America: The Advertising Council and American Politics VL - 57 ID - 187 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author begins by saying that there appears "to be no limit" (17) to the way electricity is benefiting mankind and that sound recording is not exception. The "Acousticon" is a device in which "there is no need to speak directly into the transmitter, as it gathers the sound from the air for itself." (17) A Acousticon Transmitter was recently installed in Washington, D. C. in Speaker Cannon's office. (The Saturday Evening Post, Oct. 12, 1907, describes the installation.) This "highly sensitized microphone... magnifies sound so greatly that the feeblest of sound waves are transmitted through wires to a considerable distance, yet are distinctly audible at the other end throughout the room." (17) One advantage of this invention will be for the hard of hearing, or as the author says, "it makes the deaf to hear. It not only amplifies, or magnifies [emphasis in original text] the sound 400 per cent., but it clarifies and accentuates the articulation." (18) The article says that "hundreds of churches and public halls are now equipped with the Acousticon...." and that "it is bringing happiness to multitudes of deaf people throughout the world-- some of them in the houses of royalty." (18) AU - Griffith, Walter W. DA - Oct. 1909 IS - 6 KW - ref, secondary electricity electricity, and sound recording sound recording, and electricity microphones microphones, and sound recording sound recording, and microphones microphones, and sound magnification electricity, and microphones microphones, and Acousticon Transmitter Acousticon Transmitter sound recording, and Acousticon Transmitter telephones telephones, and Acousticon Transmitter sound recording, and hearing impaired microphones, and hearing impaired ref, secondary ref, secular ref, reform ref, illustrated ref, McClure's sound recording LB - 38090 PY - 1909 SP - 17-18 ST - The Wonders of Magnified Sound T2 - McClure's Magazine TI - The Wonders of Magnified Sound VL - 33 ID - 3908 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Grimshaw, Robert DA - April 1, 1911 KW - television, and history of +telegraph telegraph, and visual +television television, and origins LB - 6890 PY - 1911 SP - 335-36 ST - The Telegraphic Eye T2 - Scientific American TI - The Telegraphic Eye VL - 104 ID - 1970 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is based on an interview with Arthur Korn of Munich, identified as "the inventor of one of the latest systems of electro-telephotography, or of reproducing electrically, at a distance, photographic images." It notes that as early as 1901, Korn had succeeded with experiments that transmitted "electrically to a distance, simple figures and signs, by means of especially-constructed sending and receiving apparatus." The transmission time for sending these images had been shortened from about 15 minutes in the earlier experiments to about 6 to 12 minutes. The article notes that the press in Paris and London have been interested in this invention and have already made arrangements to use it. In spring, 1907, the apparatus will also be installed in Berlin and in another city as some distance from Berlin. "The professor exhibited two pictures, one of the German Kaiser and one of himself, that at a distance of a yard were hardly to be distinguished from ordinary photographs, and which, the professor stated, had been transmitted through a resistance corresponding to 1,800 kilometers, about 1,080 miles. "As regards the practical utilization of the invention, the professor stated that its application for purposes of crime detection would prove of the greatest value. The illustrated press has also naturally shown a great interest in the invention, and some of the European publishers have already made arrangements to use it. L'Illustration of Paris has purchased the sole rights for France up to July 1, 1909, after which these rights will revert to the inventor. That journal has the right to install sending apparatus in every country, and a receiver in Paris. The apparatus may be made by French manufacturers. For Germany the inventor has reserved all rights, and the apparatus will be made by a German firm. English journals show special interest in the matter, and both the Daily Mail and the Illustrated London News have taken steps toward the purchase of the English rights, but up to date the inventor has closed no contracts with them, in the expectation that an international company will shortly be formed.... "In the spring there will be installed in Berlin and in some other important city, at a considerable distance therefrom, the apparatus for demonstrating on an actual working scale not merely the possibilities but the absolute practicability of the invention." AU - Grimshaw, Robert DA - Feb. 16, 1907 IS - 7 KW - journalism future magazines, and photography facsimile magazines photography ref, secondary electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and photography photography, and electricity photography and visual communication motion pictures electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines television telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph future and science fiction telephotography Korn, Arthur, and telephotography seeing at a distance modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity non-USA Germany Germany, and photography by wire Germany, and telegraph telegraph, and Germany facsimile, and telegraph telegraph, and facsimile duplicating technologies postal service postal service, and facsimile facsimile, and postal service postal service, and telegraph telegraph, and postal service materials materials, and selenium Great Britain Great Britain, and photography by wire Great Britain, and telegraph Germany, and facsimile Great Britain, and facsimile France France, and photography by wire France, and telegraph France, and facsimile France, and facsimile ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific American post office LB - 37430 PY - 1907 SP - 148 ST - Korn's Photographic Fac-Simile Telegraph T2 - Scientific American TI - Korn's Photographic Fac-Simile Telegraph VL - 96 ID - 3842 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Gronow presented this paper at a meeting in Brussels, July 8, 1982. He notes that record company catalogs are one of the best sources, and that the Library of Congress has a compilation of Victor catalogs. AU - Gronow, Pekka DA - Nov. 1982 IS - 34 KW - +sound recording bibliographies, and sound recording +bibliographies sound recording, and bibliography LB - 11220 PY - 1982 SP - 50-54 ST - Sources for the History of the Record Industry T2 - Phonographic Bulletin TI - Sources for the History of the Record Industry ID - 2483 ER - TY - JOUR AB - "This article examines the ethical implications of the desire for disembodiment situated in the texts and technologies of cyberspace. The article is divided into 2 parts. The first traces the conceptual history of dualism, demonstrating its exclusionary cultural politics and investigating the socio-political consequences of encoding this metaphysical information in contemporary media technology. The second part examines the material conditions of new communication technology, arguing that the issue of access reduplicates in practice the exclusivity of dualism. The article concludes by investigating the ethical implications of employing dualistic metaphysics as a legitimizing narrative of media technology and cyberculture." AU - Gunkel, David J. DA - 1998 IS - 2 KW - ethics computers values religion) ethics +computers and the Internet cyberculture values, and computers values, and the Internet values, and cyberculture ethics, and cyberculture dualism, and cyberculture cyberspace virtual reality LB - 4630 PY - 1998 SP - 111-23 ST - Virtually Transcendent: Cyberculture and the Body T2 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics TI - Virtually Transcendent: Cyberculture and the Body VL - 13 ID - 1850 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Gunning writes that the St. Louis "World's Fair provides one of the richest instances of the visual and technological culture that emerged in industrialized countries from the middle of the nineteenth century into the twentieth. Cinema moves within this culture less as its culmination than as a parasite, drawing upon both its forms and its themes but initially remaining relatively neglected, seeming like a pale shadow of richer, more vivid, forms. But as such it has a great deal to tell us about the visual practices which cinema sought to emulate and from which it emerged." This article was part of an edition of Film History devoted to audiences. See the introductory piece before Gunning's article, "Audiences," in ibid., 419-21. AU - Gunning, Tom DA - 1994 IS - 4 KW - visual communication World Fairs seeing at a distance modernism motion pictures modernism modernity modernity modernism audiences +motion pictures and popular culture World Fairs (1904) World Fairs, and motion pictures motion pictures, and worlds fairs new way of seeing motion pictures, and modernity modernity, and motion pictures visual culture, and motion pictures audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences visual culture LB - 2950 PY - 1994 SP - 422-44 ST - The World as Object Lesson: Cinema Audiences, Visual Culture and the St. Louis World's Fair, 1904 T2 - Film History TI - The World as Object Lesson: Cinema Audiences, Visual Culture and the St. Louis World's Fair, 1904 VL - 6 ID - 383 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This interesting article discusses the impact that early motion pictures had on their audiences and how the visual experiences reflected a new way of seeing. This "cinema of attractions" also included billboards, posters, and other forms of advertising and visual communication. "Certain genres, such as pornography, musical comedies, or newsreels, remain closely tied to the methods of the cinema of attractions throughout cinema history," Gunning writes. Drawing on Baudelaire's essay, "The Painter of Modern Life," Gunning says that the "motifs of modernity that Baudelaire sets out -- 'the ephemeral, the fugitive, the contingent' -- evoke the discontinuous and punctual temporality of the attraction: something that appears, attracts attention, and then disappears without either developing a narrative trajectory or a coherent diegetic world. Attractions work by interruption and constant change rather than steady development." Gunning notes that early motion pictures played an important part in the development of billboards, world's fairs, department stores, and amusement parks. AU - Gunning, Tom DA - 1994 IS - 2 KW - billboards photography advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures World Fairs seeing at a distance propaganda public relations values modernism modernism modernity freedom values posters new way of seeing +motion pictures new way of seeing, and motion pictures modernity photography and visual communication motion pictures modernism posters, and motion pictures new way of seeing motion pictures, and new way of seeing advertising, and movie posters urban studies values, and posters (19th century) values, and motion picture advertising color, and posters posters, as degenerate art freedom of expression, and posters color advertising modernity posters context context, late 19th billboards, and motion pictures motion pictures, and billboards cinema of attractions modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography Baudelaire, Charles World Fairs, and motion pictures motion pictures, and worlds fairs department stores, and motion pictures motion pictures, and department stores billboards, and motion pictures motion pictures, and billboards amusement parks, and motion pictures motion pictures, and amusement parks department stores amusement parks pornography LB - 27860 PY - 1994 SP - 189-201 ST - The Whole Town's Gawking: Early Cinema and the Visual Experience of Modernity T2 - Yale Journal of Criticism TI - The Whole Town's Gawking: Early Cinema and the Visual Experience of Modernity VL - 7 ID - 1338 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Gunning argues that early film viewing experiences before 1906 “relate more to the attractions of the fairground than to the traditions of legitimate theater. The relation between films and the emergence of the great amusement parks, such as Coney Island, at the turn of the century provides rich ground for rethinking the roots of early cinema.” (65) What is “the cinema of attraction”? “First, it is a cinema that bases itself on the quality that Léger celebrated: its ability to show something.” (64) There “is the extremely important role that actuality film plays in early film production.” (65) It is “a conception that sees cinema less as a way of telling stories than as a way of presenting a series of views to an audience, fascinating because of their illusory power (whether the realistic illusion of motion offered to the first audiences by Lumiere, or the magical illusion concocted by Méliès), and exoticism.” (64) Film has a different relationship with spectators than it would have with “narrative film after 1906.” (64) Gunning writes that “Exhibitionism becomes literal in the series of erotic films which play an important role in early film production….” (64; see also 65) He notes that the close-up shot where “the camera is brought close to the main character,” served a different purpose prior to 1906. “The enlargement is not a device expressive of narrative tension; it is in itself an attraction and the point of the film.” (66) Gunning’s article owes something to Sergei Eisenstein who wrote an article entitled “Montage of Attractions: For ‘Enough Stupidity in Every Wiseman’,” in 1974. Gunning quotes Eisenstein saying: “An attraction aggressively subjected the spectator to ‘sensual or psychological impact.’ [Eisenstein’s quoted] According to Eisenstein, theater should consist of a montage of such attractions creating a relation to the spectator entirely different from the absorption in ‘illusory imitativeness.’” (Gunning, 66) Gunning notes that Eisenstein used “attraction” in a different way that he does but, he says, “it is important to realize the context from which Eisenstein selected the term. Then as now, the ‘attraction’ was a term of the fairground, and for Eisenstein and his friend Yuketvich it primarily represented their favorite fairground attraction, the roller coaster, or as it was known then in Russia, the American Mountains.” (66) Gunning goes on to write that “I believe that it was precisely the exhibitionist quality of turn-of-the-century popular art that made it attractive to the avant-garde its freedom from the creation of a digenesis, its accent on direct stimulation.” (66) Even after the arrival and dominance of narrative film, Gunning sees the “cinema of attraction” continuing to be important. “Just as the variety format in some sense survived in the Movie Palaces of the Twenties (with newsreel, cartoon, sing-along, orchestra performance and sometimes vaudeville acts subordinated to, but still co-existing with, the narrative feature of the evening), the system of attraction remains an essential part of popular filmmaking.” (68) “Clearly in some sense recent spectacle cinema has re-affirmed its roots in stimulus and carnival rides, in what might be called the Spielberg-Lucas-Coppola cinema of effects.” (70) AU - Gunning, Tom DA - 1986 IS - 3/4 KW - actors acting actors acting photography ref, secondary values new way of seeing motion pictures new way of seeing, and motion pictures modernity photography and visual communication photocopied modernism new way of seeing motion pictures, and new way of seeing advertising, and movie posters urban studies values, and motion picture advertising freedom of expression, and posters cinema of attractions cameras motion pictures, and cameras acting, and facial expressions facial expressions motion pictures, and facial expressions sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and avant-garde avant-garde, and motion pictures spectacles motion pictures, and spectacle Eisenstein, Sergei motion pictures, and modernity ref, secondary ref, secular advertising avant garde freedom LB - 470 PY - 1986 SP - 63-70 ST - The Cinema of Attraction: Early Film, Its Spectator and the Avant-Garde T2 - Wide Angle TI - The Cinema of Attraction: Early Film, Its Spectator and the Avant-Garde VL - 8 ID - 3343 ER - TY - JOUR AB - George H. Guy surveys "some of the newer developments in the electrical field, outside of warfare, and limited solely to the arts of peace." (331) It covers wireless, telephones, the writing telegraph (telautograph), the electric railway, the gasoline electric stage coach, "radical change" in the way electrical current is generated, turbo generators, electrical heating, kitchen utensils, and scientific experiments with radium. The author also discusses developments in lighting with mercury vapor electric lamp (334-35) and the tantalum lamp (335-36). He notes that the mercury vapor electric lamps are easy on the eyes, are being used in offices, including newspaper offices, "and in the production of scenic effects on the stage. It is claimed that the light is twice as efficient as the ordinary arc lamp, and has seven times the efficiency of the incandescent electric lamp." (335) (emphasis added) "Another interesting development in methods of electric illumination is the 'artificial daylight' of a new vacuum-tube lamp. In this lamp the electric current is conducted by a very small quantity of non-metallic gas, which is placed inside the air-exhausted tube. One appreciable advantage possessed by the lamp is that great length can be given to the tubes, and, consequently, an enlarged surface can be used for the emission of light. This gives a uniformity of illumination that it would be difficult otherwise to obtain. Another point in its favor is its long life. Its efficiency is high, as the energy is converted almost entirely into light-energy, practically little or no heat energy being produced. This creation of light without heat has therefore been called 'cold light.' .... This lam is coming into demand for both exterior and interior illumination, and especially for the lighting of photographers' windows and studios, advertising signs and spectacular displays. It has already been made in one hundred and twenty-five feet single lengths of tubing." (335) AU - Guy, George H. DA - Jan. 1906 IS - 3 KW - wireless communication stage motors photography ref, news electricity telephones telegraph electricity, and telegraph electricity, and telephones telegraph, and electricity telephones, and electricity electricity, and motors motors, and electricity electricity, and lighting lighting, and electricity vacuum tubes railroads electricity, and railroads railroads, and electricity electricity, and modernity modernity modernity, and electricity mercury vapor electric light lighting, and Cooper Hewitt lighting, and mercury vapor motion pictures, and lighting motion pictures, and Cooper Hewitt lighting lighting, and vacuum tube lamps advertising and public relations advertising, and electricity electricity, and advertising De Forest, Lee wireless radio radio, and wireless Marconi, Guglielmo, and wireless wireless, and Marconi wireless, and Lee De Forest telegraph, and telautograph office and new media office, and lighting photography and visual communication photography, and mercury vapor lamp photography, and Cooper Hewitt lighting newspapers, and Cooper Hewitt lighting cold light lighting, and cold light stage and theater, and lighting electricity, and theater theater, and electricity motion pictures motion pictures, and lighting motion pictures, and vacuum-tube lighting lighting, and motion pictures lighting ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, reform ref, Cosmopolitan advertising news and journalism office theater LB - 37070 PY - 1906 SP - 331-38 ST - Electricity's Farthest North T2 - Cosmopolitan TI - Electricity's Farthest North VL - 40 ID - 3807 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This annotated index is helpful in finding scholarship related to specific topics published in Technology and Culture between 1959 and 1984. AU - Hacker, Barton C. DA - April 1991 IS - No. 2, Part 2 KW - computers Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories time and timekeeping inventions innovation materials timekeeping, and clocks +bibliographies bibliographies, and technology bibliographies, and printing bibliographies, and electricity bibliographies, and primary collections bibliographies, and timekeeping bibliographies, transportation inventors bibliographies, and computers +transportation +electricity +computers and the Internet +books, periodicals, newspapers electronic media timekeeping +aeronautics and space communication materials lighting motors +biography satellites LB - 11280 PY - 1991 ST - An Annotated Index to Volumes 1 through 25 of Technology and Culture 1959-1984 T2 - Technology and Culture TI - An Annotated Index to Volumes 1 through 25 of Technology and Culture 1959-1984 VL - 32 ID - 2489 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins with the quotation "Color is an agent able to produce effects which to the thoughtful mind must always remain wonderful." (no source given) The author then discusses the importance that color has played throughout history. "Color was first used symbolically in the hieroglyphics of Egypt. In them, the color of an object meant as much to the reader as the object itself. For instance, a certain king, who had always been well and strong, lost his mind in the latter part of his life. In the hieroglyphics, his portrait was colored entirely red in the story of his early life, but later his head was changed to yellow. The red symbolized strength and vitality, while yellow signified disease and pestilence. "Color played an important part in the religious rites of early peoples. All the colors woven into an Oriental rug were symbolic. The Turk regarded green as a holy color, not to be profaned by believers' or unbelievers' feet -- which accounts for the absence of all green from Turkish rugs. Different countries did not always give the same meaning to colors, but to all white was Purity; black was Evil; blue was Virtue and Truth; and yellow, in China, was Royalty." (419) The author says that the "spontaneous choice of color" in the home is not always wise. The decorator must take into consideration "the mental influences of color." (420) Rarely is it advisable to use red rooms in public buildings and "almost never in private homes." (421) This article makes comparisons between color and music. "Just as musical sounds differ in loudness, quality and pitch, so may colors differ in intensity, value and hue...." (422) The author recommends that "Intense color should be used with restraint, for brilliant coloring is pleasing only in small areas...." (423) AU - Hall, Marie DA - Jan. 1915 KW - home emotion decadence ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color, in history color, and theory color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and passion color, and sensations media effects color, media effects media effects, and color color, and sensuality lighting lighting, and color color, and lighting color, and music lighting, and theater censorship color, and nationalism advertising and public relations color, and advertising advertising, and color home and new media home, and color color, and home color, and red color, and yellow color, and blue ref, secondary ref, secular ref, Craftsman color, and magic color, and reading color, and religion religion religion, and color color, and white color, and black color, and music advertising LB - 42510 PY - 1915 SP - 419-23 ST - Color: The Magic Spirit in the Home T2 - Craftsman TI - Color: The Magic Spirit in the Home VL - 27 ID - 4350 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece begins by Hall saying: "I am here to affirm that the theatre of the present day as a whole is calculated to do moral injury both to performers and spectators, and therefore should not receive the sanction of the Christian Church." (819) The byline reads: "By Newman Hall (of London) as reported in Christian Literature and Review of the Churches." (819) AU - Hall, Newman DA - Nov. 28, 1896 IS - 48 KW - theaters morality children anti-theatrical bias Marked critics critics, religious critics, and theater critics, and actors religion religion, and theater religion, and actors actors, and religion values values, and the stage values, and the theater Great Britain non-USA Great Britian, and antitheatrical bias anti-theatrical prejudice theater, and bias against audiences, and theaters theaters, and audiences acting, and bias against censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship morality, and theater theater, and morality false leaders false leaders, and actors actors, as false leaders children and media theater, and children children, and theater ref, secondary ref, religious ref, Quakers ref, Friends' Intelligencer acting actors audiences censorship theater LB - 41460 PY - 1896 SP - 819-21 ST - The Church and the Theatre T2 - Friends' Intelligencer TI - The Church and the Theatre VL - 53 ID - 4245 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Clayton Hamilton was a well-known drama critics and editor of such publications as The Bookman, Everybody's Magazine, and Vogue. Here Hamilton chided his fellow critics for not recognizing that motion pictures were a new kind of narrative presented in pantomime that deserved serious attention. It is true that the silent film “bereaves the drama of the spoken word,” he said, but “it must be surprising to the literary theorists to learn how much is left how vividly the essential elements of action, character, and setting may convey themselves by visual means alone.” (512) It was “only in handling the element of character that the new art is at a disadvantage in competing with the novel and the drama,” he said. (514) Compared to the stage, the movies had “immeasurably greater freedom in handling the categories of place and time,” (513) said Hamilton. The possessed the “ability to alter, in the fraction of a second, the point of view from which the story shall be looked upon.” (514) Hamilton believe that “In this freedom in handling place and time and in shifting the point of view, the moving-picture play resembles the novel much more nearly than it resembles the regular drama.” (514) He went to say that “in handling the element of action, the moving-picture play is more successful than the novel, since its appeal is made directly to the eye instead of the imagination, and it is scarcely less successful than the drama. In handling the element of setting, it is overwhelmingly superior, not only to the novel but to the drama as well….” (514) In dealing with character, both the novel and the drama are better than the motion picture. (515) When the setting and action are paramount, the movie is more similar to the novel than the drama, and superior to both. He compares watching a film to reading in childhood when “we read story-books … not for eloquence or character or thought, but for some quality of the brute incident.” (515) Cinema “carries us back to the boyish age of the great art of telling tales, when stories were narrated nakedly as stories instead of being sicklied o’er with the pale cast of thought.” (516) For Hamilton, who believed that modern fiction dwelled to much on character and “exalted the subjective over the objective,” (516) the moving-picture play was refreshing. This new narrative art form “disembarrasses its stories of psychologising, and tells them in the free and boyish spirit that vivified the epic, the drama, and the novel throughout the centuries before the world grew old.” (516) AU - Hamilton, Clayton DA - Jan. 1911 IS - 5 KW - theater stage motion pictures, and modernity critics censorship words vs. images metaphors actors acting motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and printing press motion pictures, as new literary form theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures images vs. words motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and novels censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and new way of seeing motion pictures, and drama motion pictures, and nature motion pictures, and character motion pictures, and words quotations quotations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and quotations motion pictures, and psychologising ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Bookman LB - 41850 PY - 1911 SP - 512-16 ST - The Art of the Moving-Picture Play T2 - The Bookman TI - The Art of the Moving-Picture Play VL - 32 ID - 4284 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the way the movie industry's Production Code is being enforced under Production Code Administration director Geoffrey Shurlock. It notes that in the age of television, there is no longer one "family" audience for the movies but multiple audiences. Hollywood is attempting to keep pace with changing American taste and Shurlock was attempting to interpret the Code in a way that would allow more mature themes to be treated than had been the case in the past. As Stanley Kubrick, then a 31-year-old independent movie producer put it, "The Code has become the loose suspenders that hold up the baggy pants of the circus clown." (80) AU - Hamilton, Jack DA - Sept. 29, 1959 IS - 20 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Kubrick, Stanley LB - 36260 PY - 1959 SP - 80, 83-4 ST - California Movie Morals: Hollywood Bypasses te Production Code T2 - Look TI - California Movie Morals: Hollywood Bypasses te Production Code VL - 23 ID - 3259 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Hansen, Miriam DA - Winter, 1987 KW - ref, secondary motion pictures Benjamin, Walter motion pictures, and modernity modernity modernity, and motion pictures ref, secondary ref, secular LB - 60 PY - 1987 SP - 179-224 ST - Benjamin, Cinema and Experience: 'The Blue Flower in the Land of Technology' T2 - New German Critique TI - Benjamin, Cinema and Experience: 'The Blue Flower in the Land of Technology' VL - 40 (Special Issue on Weimar Film Theory) ID - 1553 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Hardy, Forsyth DA - Summer, 1935 IS - 4 KW - Marked ref, secondary color color, and emotion LB - 41110 PY - 1935 SP - 231-37 ST - The Color Question T2 - Cinema Quarterly TI - The Color Question VL - 3 ID - 4210 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Abstract from Technology and Culture: "The hobby of amateur radio-communicating by wireless with individuals around the world-focused on technology. At the same time, however, it served important social functions in the lives of participants. This article analyzes hobbyists' rhetoric about family life and household space to document how men operating "ham" radios in mid-twentieth century America altered the social geography of middle-class homes. During a postwar period of sexual identity anxiety and when women controlled domestic environments, ham radio strengthened men's claims on masculinity and privacy. Amateur radio operators developed a distinct technical identity, based in personal identity and material culture, that allowed them to simultaneously achieve social and spatial distance." AU - Haring, Kristen DA - Oct. 2003 IS - 4 KW - democracy women radio radio, amateur radio, wireless communication wireless communication women, and amateur radio radio, and women home and new media radio, and home home, and amateur radio sexuality, and amateur radio home sexuality LB - 33620 PY - 2003 SP - 734-61 ST - The 'Freer Men' of Ham Radio: How a Technical Hobby Provided Social and Spatial Distance T2 - Technology and Culture TI - The 'Freer Men' of Ham Radio: How a Technical Hobby Provided Social and Spatial Distance VL - 44 ID - 3001 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author, who at the time was the editor of the London Daily Mail, begins by saying that in 1884 there were 29 daily newspaper in New York City and 28 in London. (72) He notes that a number of technological improvements have changes the press -- the telegraph, telephones, electrotyping, "process engraving," and improved transportation, and that the number of illustrations in papers is increasing and likely to increase during the next twenty years. (73) He comments on the problems with using half tones -- "the present imperfections of the printing press often reduce them to mere smudges." (74) Harmsworth asserts that the best intellects are not drawn to journalism. (76) He notes that the "whole tendency of the times, both in America and Great Britain, is toward the concentration of great affairs in the hands of a few." (81) His vision of the twentieth century paper is one that would be published simultaneously in several cities at once. Distribution still posed problems for this kind of paper. "Distribution over a wide area by means of special newspaper trains has its obvious limitations," he writes. (83) Still, such a widely distributed paper published in morning and evening editions would have advantages. "Such a national newspaper would have unrivalled powers of organization in all directions." (85) Such a paper could resist the temptation to publish "non-news," or what the author calls "trivial and unimportant items." (86) AU - Harmsworth, Alfred DA - Jan. 1901 IS - 530 KW - journalism entertainment, and journalism entertainment ref, secondary democracy newspapers, and democracy democracy, and newspapers news and journalism critics critics, and newspapers newspapers, and critics critics, and journalism journalism, and critics modernity modernity, and newspapers newspapers, and modernity new way of seeing nationalism and communication newspapers, and nationalism nationalism, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones photography, and half tones newspapers, and illustrations photography and visual communication photography, and printing presses newspapers, and photography photography, and newspapers non-USA non-USA, and journalism Great Britain Great Britain, and journalism journalism, and Great Britain newspapers, and Great Britain Great Britain, and newspapers journalism, and entertainment entertainment, and journalism critics critics, and newspapers ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, North American Review nationalism photography LB - 38500 PY - 1901 SP - 72-90 ST - The Simultaneous Newspaper of the Twentieth Century T2 - North American Review TI - The Simultaneous Newspaper of the Twentieth Century VL - 172 ID - 3949 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The appeal of women and personality (sex appeal): “What is it that goes over into the hearts of thousands who attend picture plays? “What is it that reaches out and get a grip on human hearts at business, political or social gatherings? “What else is it but the genial glow , the thrilling magnetism, of an exuberant and interesting personality? (my emphasis) “No one ever looks twice at a man’s picture. As a mere thing of beauty, he is usually unmanly; as a creature of forceful character, he usually unlovely. We look to woman for what beautifies existence, and, as interest in picture plays is stimulated by what is seen, it become centered on the heroine of the story. To suit the role, she must be lovable. Thoughtful appreciation of what is required by the role and good taste in things feminine count, but, when she delights the eye and stirs the irresponsible pulses of responsible men with a dazzling array of potent womanly attributes, she wins because she represents the ideal creatures of our heartaches and dreams. She goes over. Any man who does not think so should send for Doctor Osler.” AU - Harrison, Louis Reeves DA - June 4, 1910 IS - 22 KW - fame fame celebrity actors acting photography ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, silent motion pictures, and oratory fame celebrity culture motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and celebrity motion pictures, and stage actors celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures status of actors actors, and status of personality motion pictures, and personality personality, and motion pictures women women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women acting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and acting photography and visual communication women women, and photography photography, and women women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women sexuality photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography sexuality, and personality personality, and sexuality motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and stars (origins) Harrison, Louis Reeves ref, secondary ref, secular ref, movie magazine ref, Moving Picture World LB - 15500 PY - 1910 SP - 933 ST - A Great Motion Picture and Its Lesson T2 - Moving Picture World TI - A Great Motion Picture and Its Lesson VL - 6 ID - 3709 ER - TY - JOUR AB - “The actor must be considered, and an entirely new art is coming into existence through facial expression in the photoplay….” (p. p. 348) (my emphasis) “In primitive exhibitions, the movement of human beings in a picture was enough to enlist interest for a while, then it became necessary to provide a framework of incident for a dramatic situation…. In an effort to equal or excel the older art, it has been found that character portrayal is necessary to enforce an idea, and the idea is the starting point of every serious effort to enlist the attention of the audience…. (p.348) “In carrying the thought from the screen to the audience, the actor is the essential medium of transmission. He must be fitted to the situation by costume, show his attitude towards other characters which suggests love, jealousy, hatred or other emotional tendency, but the obvious emotional attitude is easy to portray compared to the masked one. We all wear masks in our daily intercourse, but while this can be imparted by other means, the eyes and the lips are most effective in facial expression of any kind, whether the emotion be open or subdued. Nearly all the varieties of emotion find outlet through the eyes and lips, they center all attention when a woman of in- 348/349 teresting personality is on the stage, possibly for reasons explained by the poet:” (poem follows on man’s reaction of woman’s eyes and lips) (my emphasis) “We are not permitted to see the sealing of love in the final scenes because the actors and actresses have the microbe scare and only pretend, but they can really talk to us if they will. Language forms the readiest instrument of thought and words may be suggested by labial expression when freed of sentiment as well as when encumbered by emotion, whether in cynical comment or outburst of heartburning, they carry the effect to the close observer. Why take such pains? The balance between failure and success in a picture play is very delicate, the audience is sensitive to details infinitely small.” (my emphasis) In the movie theater, “every detail of a picture is closely scrutinized by those who sit in the dark with attention concentrated on the one light spot in the auditorium, so the highest development of the photo-play may come when the performers speak all the way through on the actual stage. This is being done in a way, but the lines to be spoken may, eventually, become a part of the written scenario. (p. 349) “As for the eyes, I have seen an accomplished young actress portray the vanishing of human reason so vividly that its light seemed to die out as we watched her… Every actor and actress should study the use of these potent influences. There characterizations seem real or unreal, rich or impoverished, according to our susceptibility and their powers of suggestion.” (249) AU - Harrison, Louis Reeves DA - Feb. 18, 1911 IS - 7 KW - theater stage fame fame celebrity actors acting ref, news celebrity culture fame personality motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars audiences media effects motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures media effects, and audiences media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and acting acting, and facial expression motion pictures, and not facing camera acting, and not facing camera acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and stars (origins) Harrison, Louis Reeves ref, secondary ref, secular ref, movie magazine ref, Moving Picture World motion pictures LB - 15520 PY - 1911 SP - 348-49 ST - Eyes and Lips T2 - Moving Picture World TI - Eyes and Lips VL - 8 ID - 3711 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses an "insurgent movement" in theater and links bolshevism with "stage revolutionaries." "The insurgent movement in the theatre has its chief centre in Italy, where it may be said to have been taken by Gordon Craig some two score years ago. It is developing into something so anarchic and grotesque withal that it would be hardly necessary to deal with it here were not its theories and practice extending to the American stage. We are getting what is called the expressionist play, the synthetic drama of Marinetti, Ricciardi's theatre of color, the grotesque theatre, and Scardonai's dramatic polyphonism, or new dramatic unity, in which last we are told dialogue is to be deprived of its supremacy and made to fuse with other elements of the play -- the pauses of silence, the words, the gestures, lights, colors, all of which will combine to establish 'a cosmic zone.'" (48) Hart comments on the use of color -- in this case red -- as a "psychological agent." "A striking example of the insurgent movement in play producing was afforded by the Arthur Hopkins production of Shakespeare's 'Macbeth,' which caused many animadversions as well as reopened the old controversy on the right and proper method of staging a Shakespeare play. It was obvious in the production referred to that those responsible took several hints from Ricciardi, using color not solely as a decorative element but as a psychological agent. The strongly prevailing color was red; the witches wore red cloaks, Macbeth's dull red cloak in the first act became a vivid scarlet robe when he was king, while Lady Macbeth's gown was the brightest crimson. This would have been well enough if there had not been other and more obscure elements in the staging which diverted attention from the play and puzzled and offended." (49) The author condemns the revolution in theater whereby the play producer has overtaken the actor- manager. "A few years ago we used to hear a great deal of grumbling about the tyranny of the actor-manager, his unwarranted assumption of principal parts and monopoly of the limelight, and so on. Today we are witnessing a complete revolution. The actor-manager is overthrown and in his place reigns the play-producer. It is something much worse than the old autocracy. In may, in fact, be compared with the substitution of Bolshevism for Czarism. Stage revolutionaries are endeavoring to overthrow all our accepted ideas and to shatter our most cherished imaginings. They are deliberately attempting to crush our affection for fine verse eloquently delivered, for strong drama effectively played, and fierce passions movingly portrayed, and are substituting for them bright lights, profound shadows, weird shapes and freak costumes." (50) The article concludes by saying that "it is time ... to put the producer where he belongs, in the background, and to restore the actor to his rightful 53/54 place. In doing this with respect to Shakespeare's plays we shall be effecting a stage reform of the first importance." (53-54) AU - Hart, E. Jerome DA - July 1921 IS - 48-54 KW - theater religion religion, and color magic emotion decadence censorship censorship censorship ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color color, and inadequacy of language color, in history color, and theory color, and language color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and poetry color, and religion religion, and color values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations theater and stage color, and theater theater, and color Ricciardi, Achille, and color color, and Achille Ricciardi Italy non-USA Italy, and color in theater non-USA, and color in theater lighting lighting, and theater theater, and lighting censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color magic, and color color, and magic color, and music media effects color, media effects media effects, and color color, as psychological agent color, and bolshevism theater, and bolshevism bolshevism, and theater quotations quotations, and color as psychological agent ref, secondary ref, secular ref, social ref, literary ref, Forum theater LB - 39140 PY - 1921 ST - Bolshevism in the Theatre T2 - Forum TI - Bolshevism in the Theatre VL - 66 ID - 4013 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This bibliography provides brief annotations of research done about widescreen motion pictures. This entire issues is devoted to American widescreen cinema. AU - Hartsough, Denise, ed. DA - Summer 1985 IS - 21 KW - widescreen motion pictures +bibliographies bibliographies, annotated bibliographies, and widescreen motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and widescreen widescreen, and motion pictures LB - 2530 N1 - See filed under Velvet Light Trap. PY - 1985 SP - 75-79 ST - An Annotated Widescreen Bibliography T2 - Velvet Light Trap TI - An Annotated Widescreen Bibliography ID - 341 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Harvey examines “early contributions to the art of recording sound by photographic methods made by several Bell-related organizations, using mementoes of those contributions as examples. Photographic plates with spiral soundtracks (1884-1885) from the Volta Laboratory of Alexander Graham Bell and his associates are examined. Copies of both variable-density and variable-area examples are shown. Later work done at Western Electric and Bell Laboratories at the advent of talking pictures is discussed, with film clip samples salvaged from early experiments (1923 and 1929) with the light valve system developed by E. C Wente for providing sound on film. Concurrent developments in associated fields are also described.” AU - Harvey, F. K. DA - March 1982 IS - 3 KW - sound corporations corporations corporations photography Western Electric Company preservation history and new media preservation motion pictures cinema motion pictures celluloid film +sound recording history, and sound recording sound recording, and history history, and new media preservation, and sound recording Bell Laboratories +photography and visual communication photography, and sound recording sound recording, and photography sound film, and E. C. Wente Western Electric, and sound film film, and sound recording sound recording, and film +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sound recording history materials LB - 2390 N1 - See filed under SMPTE Journal (1982) (1985). PY - 1982 SP - 237-44 ST - Mementos of Early Photographic Sound Recording T2 - SMPTE Journal TI - Mementos of Early Photographic Sound Recording VL - 91 ID - 327 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article, Headrick examines the influence of shortwave radio on Great Britain and contrasts this impact with what happened in the United States between World War I and World War II. He discusses the origins of shortwave radio, which had an advantage of being "vastly cheaper than any previous long-distance communication system." The author notes that shortwave radio "transformed Britian from the center of global communications into one of many nodes in a decentralized network. Yet Britian's faith in cables was soon justified in World War II when its overseas communications remained largely intact and secure thanks to cables." For the United States, "overseas radio communications expanded slowly in the thirties and rapidly after 1940, often by undercutting the British. Thus shortwave radio hastened the shift of the center of global information from London to New York. As for its strategic security, the United States could still rely on the British cable network. Both the new technology and Britian's reaction to it contributed to America's rise to global power." This article appears in a special issue of History and Technology devoted to "Informati on Technologies and Socio-Technical Systems." Other authors include Hans Dieter Hellige, Alan Q. Morton, William Aspray, and James S. Small. AU - Headrick, Daniel R. DA - 1994 IS - 1 KW - R & D nationalism imperialism research and development war cultural imperialism war non-USA +nationalism and communication +military communication +radio shortwave radio radio, shortwave nationalism, and shortwave radio military, and shortwave radio cultural imperialism, and shortwave radio capitalism, and shortwave radio Great Britain Great Britain, and shortwave radio cable, submarine World War II World War II, and shortwave radio Great Britain, and cables cable capitalism LB - 3100 PY - 1994 SP - 21-32 ST - Shortwave Radio and Its Impact on International Telecommunications Between the Wars T2 - History and Technology TI - Shortwave Radio and Its Impact on International Telecommunications Between the Wars VL - 11 ID - 398 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author says that the World Wide Web is growing so rapidly that current attempts to organize and search it have been overwhelmed. New user interfaces may prove to be more successful. AU - Hearst, Marti A. DA - March 1997 IS - 3 KW - computers archives libraries libraries, and information storage Information Age +computers and the Internet +information storage information processing world wide web Internet LB - 4540 PY - 1997 SP - 68-72 ST - Interfaces for Searching the Web T2 - Scientific American TI - Interfaces for Searching the Web VL - 276 ID - 1841 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Hedges language and silent film. "For, to verbal language belongs the poetry of life. The language of picture-drama, the language of signs, must move in narrow grooves." (21) Movies were at the disadvantage in depicting emotion. The "picture-drama, for depicting profound emotions has only the crude tools of smiles and tears, and as soon as it fall back upon them, it become grotesque; and grotesqueness forever forbids the competition of picture-drama with drama proper." (21) While the motion picture was superior to the stage in depicting settings (21), it was inferior to the stage in the ability to depict the inner life of human beings, the psychological underpinnings of drama. Silent films, usually produced in black and white, relied heavily on pantomime which offered a poor substitute for the words spoken and emotions registered by live actors [on stage]. These films seemed incapable of entering “the subjective world of the soul.” Pictures were “the province of melodrama; the legitimate stage is the province of motivated drama, high comedy and tragedy,” said H. M. Hedges. “For drama, great drama, the only thing of importance is human personality in conflict…. How can the struggle of a soul be adequately portrayed by pantomime?” (22) AU - Hedges, H. M. DA - Jan. 1915 IS - 8 KW - theater stage motion pictures, and modernity critics censorship words vs. images metaphors actors acting motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and printing press motion pictures, as new literary form theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures images vs. words motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and novels censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and new way of seeing motion pictures, and drama motion pictures, and nature motion pictures, and character motion pictures, and words quotations quotations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and quotations motion pictures, and subjective world of soul motion pictures, and psychology ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Play-Book LB - 41940 PY - 1915 SP - 20-23 ST - A Laocoon for the Movies T2 - The Play-book TI - A Laocoon for the Movies VL - 2 ID - 4293 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Richard D. Heffner began his television program "The Open Mind" in 1956 and at that time had high hopes for television as an instrument of education and democracy. But he recognized the medium’s limitations and apprehensive about the direction of commercial television. During the late 1950s when many urged greater use of TV in the classroom, Heffner doubted that a “soul-satisfying atmosphere” could be created and warned that television’s widespread use could change American educational values for the worse. AU - Heffner, Richard D. DA - Feb. 14, 1959 KW - values religion motion pictures education community democracy +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures +television Heffner, Richard television, and education Heffner, Richard, and television Heffner, Richard, and TV and education television, and values values, and television Heffner, Richard, and values democracy, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and democracy education, and television values critics democracy, and television LB - 19880 PY - 1959 SP - 17-19, 47-53 ST - Design for Learning T2 - Saturday Review TI - Design for Learning VL - 42 ID - 819 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Heffner, who chaired the movie industry's Classification and Rating Administration, here explains what the rating symbols mean. AU - Heffner, Richard D. DA - Oct. 4-10, 1980 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and CARA motion pictures, and Richard Heffner CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard Heffner, Richard, and rating system classification, and Richard Heffner +television television, and rating system (U. S.) Heffner, Richard, and classification Heffner, Richard, and television Heffner, Richard, and CARA CARA LB - 19980 PY - 1980 SP - 38-40, 42, 44, 46 ST - What G, PG, R and X Really Mean T2 - TV Guide TI - What G, PG, R and X Really Mean ID - 823 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Richard Heffner, who chaired the movie industry's Classification and Rating Administration from 1974 until 1994, also had an even longer career in television dating back to 1956 when he started his program "The Open Mind." At the outset he was optimistic about television as an instrument aided education and democracy, but as TV became commercialized he became pessimistic. AU - Heffner, Richard D. DA - Aug. 17, 1958 KW - values education community democracy +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and background Heffner, Richard Open Mind, and Richard Heffner +television television, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and television Heffner, Richard, and Open Mind Heffner, Richard, and educational TV education, and television television, and education democracy, and television values critics LB - 20180 PY - 1958 SP - 19, 74 ST - TV as Teacher: Of Adults, Too T2 - New York Times Magazine TI - TV as Teacher: Of Adults, Too ID - 840 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Richard D. Heffner participated in an American Library Association Round Table on Intellectual Freedom in 1985, and there talked about how the “rights of the creative individual” needed to be respected but also balanced against the “rights of the majority ... of parents whose primary concern is for the well-being of their own children.” He still believed that if limits needed to be placed on communication, the responsibility for imposing restraints should rest with the receiver who could choose not to listen, read, or view. Restrictions should not be imposed “upon the freedom of the sender.” AU - Heffner, Richard D. DA - Sept. 1985 KW - Classification and Rating Administration CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Heffner, Richard Heffner, Richard, and censorship censorship and ratings CARA values Heffner, Richard, and CARA American Library Association censorship LB - 29290 PY - 1985 SP - 176-78 ST - ALA Conference: Caution: This Program Is Rated X T2 - Newsletter on Intellectual Freedom TI - ALA Conference: Caution: This Program Is Rated X VL - 34 ID - 2698 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Abstract from Technology and Culture: "Monitoring people by use of punched cards was a tool for governments to exploit the potentials of modern mass society, which they started to develop in the 1930s. In France, René Carmille promoted this possibility. He worked to mechanise the army's conscript and mobilisation administration, which was only implemented by the autocratic French regime after the country had been conquered by Germany in 1940. For this end a national register of people was established by use of punched cards. However, this register also improved the possibilities to control and locate individuals, for example Jews, which Carmille only gradually realised. This predicament added to Carmille's dilemma between his loyalty to the French government and his detestation of the German Nazis. After the German occupation of the last part of France in late 1942, he rebelled against the French collaborative regime, was arrested by the Germans and died in a concentration camp." AU - Heide, Lars DA - Jan. 2004 IS - 1 KW - computers nationalism computers and the Internet France Germany information storage computers, and surveillance military communication nationalism and communication war World War II World War II, and France computers, and databases computers, and punch cards punch cards non-USA computers LB - 33610 PY - 2004 SP - 80-101 ST - Monitoring People: Dynamics and Hazards of Record Management in France, 1935-1944 T2 - Technology and Culture TI - Monitoring People: Dynamics and Hazards of Record Management in France, 1935-1944 VL - 45 ID - 3000 ER - TY - JOUR AB - “An agreement has been reached between the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers and the European Broadcasting Union concerning the most important parameters for digital television signal operation,” the author writes. “It is now possible to proceed with standardization of the videotape recorder. The parameters that must be considered toward this goal are discussed,” he explains. “Conclusions are reached about the basic standardization principles that must be taken into account.” The author sets out “what parameters must be standardized and which one will not preclude compatibility if not standardized.” AU - Heitmann, Jürgen K. R. DA - March 1982 IS - 3 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) magnetic recording magnetic tape digital media non-USA VCRs VCRs, and standardization Europe Europe, and VCR standardization digitization digital media, and VCRs VCRs, and digitization LB - 2380 N1 - See filed under SMPTE Journal (1982) (1985). PY - 1982 SP - 229-32 ST - An Analytical Approach to the Standardization of Digital Videotape Recorders T2 - SMPTE Journal TI - An Analytical Approach to the Standardization of Digital Videotape Recorders VL - 91 ID - 326 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author believes that the history of technology has dealt only in a minor way "with the linking of computers, terminals and other teleconnections, or with the genesis of special data communications networks and information systems, despite the fact that these have been under development for over 40 years.... The history of of computing is still the history of hardware and not data processing as such." The primary focus of this article is "on questions relating to the explanatory capacity, and the limits and shortcomings of more recent technohistorical approaches, such as the 'genesis of technology,' and the analysis of technological visions... and especially 'large system history.'" This article appears in a special issue of History and Technology devoted to "Informati on Technologies and Socio-Technical Systems." Other authors include Daniel R. Headrick, Alan Q. Morton, William Aspray, and James S. Small. AU - Hellige, Hans Dieter DA - 1994 IS - 1 KW - technology computers ARPA technology and society labor computers office office, and new media office +computers and the Internet computers, and large-scale systems technological determinism Hughes, Thomas infrastructure, and computers computers, and infrastructure computers, and data processing Arpanet SAGE Ethernet infrastructure LB - 3070 N1 - See filed under History and Technology (1994). PY - 1994 SP - 49-75 ST - From SAGE Via Arpanet to Ethernet: Stages in Computer Communications Concepts between 1950 and 1980 T2 - History and Technology TI - From SAGE Via Arpanet to Ethernet: Stages in Computer Communications Concepts between 1950 and 1980 VL - 11 ID - 395 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Hendrick, Burton J. DA - May 1905 IS - 1 KW - electric lighting billboards art Marked advertising and public relations color color, and advertising advertising, and color art, and advertising advertising, and art modernity modernity, and advertising advertising, and modernity new way of seeing new way of seeing, and advertising advertising, and new way of seeing posters advertising, and posters posters, and advertising advertising, and billboards billboards, and advertising color, and billboards ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Leslie's Monthly Magazine ref, Leslie's critics critics, and billboards electric signs electricity electricity, and electric signs quotations quotations, and billboards advertising LB - 41370 PY - 1905 SP - 85-91 ST - The Bill-Board Abomination T2 - Leslie's Monthly Magazine TI - The Bill-Board Abomination VL - 60 ID - 4236 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Herbert’s introductory essay runs from pp. 3-29. This work is one of two bibliographies on color cited in Neil Harris’ Cultural Excursions (1990). Herbert's essay is part of an issue devoted to “The Faber Birren Collection on Color in the Art Library.” Birren was a well-known color consultant, and wrote and edited books about color theory and color psychology. He donated his personal library to the Art Library at Yale University. An annotated bibliography of Birren's books (pp. 29-49) follows Herbert's essay. Of Birren's work, Herbert wrote: "Histories of color and color theory are remarkably rare, and are usually devoted to one aspect, not to the whole issue. The writings of scientists in the twentieth century are markedly ahistorical, and can even be considered antihistorical. They tend to be limited to contemporary statements, and when they do look to the past, it is to deal with those aspects which retain validity, omitting outmoded concepts despite their significance to the historian. "Only Faber Birren has attempted to summarize the several aspects of color history, in the sciences, the arts, religion, and popular knowledge. His Story of Color (1941) remains the unrivaled general history, its lay summaries not improved upon in his more copiously illustrated Color, a Survey in Words and Pictures (1963)." See also Robert C. Kaufmann's brief discussion of the Birren Collection in Yale University Library Gazette, 48, No. 1 (July 1973), 211-12. AU - Herbert, Robert L. DA - July, 1974 IS - 1 KW - photography +photography and visual communication +bibliographies color, and bibliographies bibliographies, and color color Birren, Faber LB - 1600 PY - 1974 SP - 3-49 ST - A Color Bibliography T2 - Yale University Library Gazette TI - A Color Bibliography VL - 49 ID - 1556 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Hertenstein argues that new technology allows labor educators to use distance education to reach more students at a lower cost than in traditional classroom settings. He reports on his study of student responses to distance education at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign from 1993 to 1997. Using two-way television links for distance education offers students access to instructors while reducing barriers involving “distance from campus, time constraints, work responsibilities, and family responsibilities.” Hertenstein surveyed 59 students in labor education courses, including 41 at distant classrooms who participated by two-way video and video link over a high-speed telephone line. Contrary to his expected outcome, Hertenstein found more positive evaluations from those involved in distance education than from traditional students. Hertenstein suggested students at distant sites might have been predisposed to be satisfied with their experience because they choose a non-traditional setting for instruction. --Phil Glende AU - Hertenstein, Edward DA - Winter 1999 IS - 4 KW - Glende, Phil labor labor, and new media labor, and distance education LB - 960 N1 - See also: office PY - 1999 SP - 3-16 ST - Distance Learning in Labor Education T2 - Labor Studies Journal TI - Distance Learning in Labor Education VL - 23 ID - 184 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that at the time, there were about 4,000 film societies on college and university campuses that show films to about 2,500,000 people each year. These societies were especially interested in "art" films and in foreign movies. Most of the pictures were shown in 16mm. AU - Hetzel, Ralph DA - Jan. 5, 1968 KW - self-regulation Hollywood motion pictures censorship and ratings foreign films sexuality motion pictures, and foreign films foreign films, and sexuality Hollywood, and subsidiaries Production Code, and foreign films censorship, breakdown of 16mm foreign films, and 16mm 16mm, and foreign films Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) censorship LB - 31550 PY - 1968 SP - 5, 47 ST - Campus Interest in Pix T2 - Variety TI - Campus Interest in Pix ID - 2846 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Heyer examines an exchange between Harold Innis, the Canadian historian and political economist, and Gordon Childe (1896-1957), an archaeologist who was perhaps "Australia's most widely published and influential scholar." AU - Heyer, Paul DA - 1993 IS - 1 KW - nationalism non-USA Innis, Harold Innis, Harold, and Gordon Childe +nationalism and communication Innis, Harold, and new media Innis, Harold, and literacy Innis, Harold, and Australia Australia Australia, and Gordon Childe LB - 3310 PY - 1993 SP - 91-104 ST - Empire, History, and Communications Viewed from the Margins: The Legacies of Gordon Childe and Harold Innis T2 - Continuum: The Australian Journal of Media & Culture TI - Empire, History, and Communications Viewed from the Margins: The Legacies of Gordon Childe and Harold Innis VL - 7 ID - 419 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by arguing that "unquestionably, the moving picture is the most direct appeal to the understanding. The printed page and the spoken words are tortuous paths to learning as compared to the royal road provided by the cinematograph." (598) The author says that many films are not censored effectively and that many independent films are not censored at all. He calls for the "careful regulation of the places of exhibition" (599) and urges that exhibitors be given the power to refuse films. "A movement for the nation-wide supervision of public exhibitions should be under the Department of Education or Child Welfare at Washington," he concludes. (599) The author was Boys' Work Director of the Young Men's Christian Association. AU - Hibbard, Darrell O. DA - July 13, 1912 IS - 11 KW - children censorship words vs. images ref, mag motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings religion religion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion images vs. words education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, literary ref, Outlook LB - 230 PY - 1912 SP - 598-99 ST - The Moving Picture -- the Good and the Bad of It T2 - Outlook TI - The Moving Picture -- the Good and the Bad of It VL - 101 ID - 2513 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Higgins, Scott DA - 1999 IS - 1 KW - Kalmus, Herbert Jones, Robert Edmond censorship censorship Marked motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Technicolor, and Natalie Kalmus Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color censorship, and Natalie Kalmus ref, secondary color, and primitives color, and cinematographers color, and Lansing Holden color, and A Star Is Born color, and novelty color, and Robert Edmond Jones Jones. Robert Edmond, and color LB - 40910 PY - 1999 SP - 55-76 ST - Technology and Aesthetics: Technicolor Cinematography and Design in the late 1930s T2 - Film History TI - Technology and Aesthetics: Technicolor Cinematography and Design in the late 1930s VL - 11 ID - 4190 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Higgins, Scott DA - 2000 IS - 4 KW - Kalmus, Herbert censorship censorship Marked motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Technicolor, and Natalie Kalmus Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color censorship, and Natalie Kalmus ref, secondary color, and primitives color, and cinematographers color, and Lansing Holden color, and A Star Is Born color, and novelty color, and Robert Edmond Jones Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process color, and La Cucaracha color, and Becky Sharp color, and Walt Disney color, and music lighting lighting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and lighting color, and lighting lighting, and color LB - 40920 PY - 2000 SP - 358-83 ST - Demonstrating Three-Colour Technicolor: Early Three-Colour Aesthetics and Design T2 - Film History TI - Demonstrating Three-Colour Technicolor: Early Three-Colour Aesthetics and Design VL - 12 ID - 4191 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This 1969 article discusses a cassette-loading 16mm camera. This piece, and indeed the American Cinematographer in general, offer good material on changing camera technology. AU - Hill, Bruce DA - Dec., 1969 IS - 12 KW - materials cinema motion pictures celluloid film context color +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and history of context, and movie technology 16mm cameras, and 16mm film, and 16mm cameras, and portable 16mm cameras cameras materials LB - 17910 N1 - See filed under American Cinematographer (1969). PY - 1969 SP - 1204-06 ST - Mitchellmatic 16: Cordless Cassette-Loading Action Camera T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Mitchellmatic 16: Cordless Cassette-Loading Action Camera VL - 50 ID - 700 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Hincha, Richard DA - Summer 1985 IS - 21 KW - advertising, and public relations widescreen propaganda public relations motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and widescreen widescreen, and motion pictures advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising CinemaScope advertising LB - 2580 N1 - See filed under Velvet Light Trap. PY - 1985 SP - 44-53 ST - Selling CinemaScope: 1953-1956 T2 - Velvet Light Trap TI - Selling CinemaScope: 1953-1956 ID - 346 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that while most TV sets are still in black-and-white, that color television is the wave of the future. "Though often difficult and demanding, color TV commercials offer the cinematographer many opportunities for creative expression." (792) AU - Hirschfeld, Gerald DA - Nov., 1967 IS - 11 KW - television advertising and public relations color 16mm color, and television television, and color advertising, and color color, and advertising 16mm, and color color, and 16mm television, and 16mm 16mm, and television cinematography advertising motion pictures LB - 30540 PY - 1967 SP - 792-93, 826-28 ST - The Challenges of Filming Commercials for Color TV T2 - American Cinematographer TI - The Challenges of Filming Commercials for Color TV VL - 48 ID - 2810 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Hoch was a graduate physicist from the California Institute of Technology and a former three-time Academy Award winner for his photography in such movies as "The Quiet Man," "Joan of Arc," and "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon." In this article he discusses filming the John Wayne movie, "The Green Berets" (1968), about the Vietnam War. He discusses filming battle action scences using a Panavision camera mounted on a Chapman boom, and filming battles under "artificial moonlight" (656) Hand-held cameras were also used such as the Arriflex. With a 200-foot magazine, it was light enough to give cameramen great mobility, but with the 400-magazine, the added weight posed "a serious handicap." (657) He also notes that "there is no substitute for a zoom lens when you need to move in fast for a really sharp impact. You simply can't do the same thing by dollying. The zoom will sell the point where nothing else will," he said. (684) AU - Hoch, Winton DA - Sept., 1968 IS - 9 KW - lenses, zoom media effects motion pictures cameras cameras, portable cameras, portable motion pictures, and portable cameras war war, and portable cameras news and journalism news, and portable cameras cameras, and zoom lenses zoom lenses cinematography war, and zoom lenses zoom lenses, and war lighting lighting, and battle scenes war, and movie lighting cameras, Panavision cameras, hand-held hand-held cameras, and motion pictures movie, Green Berets Green Berets Wayne, John military communication news lenses Vietnam War war LB - 30250 PY - 1968 SP - 654-57, 684-85 ST - The Vietnam War as Filmed for 'The Green Berets' T2 - American Cinematographer TI - The Vietnam War as Filmed for 'The Green Berets' VL - 49 ID - 2780 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article deals with efforts to increase digital memory. The author notes that "present memories based on transistors typically store some 16,000 bits (binary digits) on a chip. Magnetic-bubble and charge-coupled devices are providing an even higher density of information storage." Despite intensive research, several promising memory technologies had not yet achieved commercial success in 1977. The author predicts a brighter future, though. "The next decade is likely to bring substantial improvements in the performance of both moving-surface and electronic memories, together with reductions in cost. There are no fundamental barriers to increasing the bit-storage density on moving magnetic surfaces a hundredfold, with little accompanying increase in the price of the system. The anticipated introduction of electron-beam and X-ray techniques in the fabrication of microelectronic circuits should also make it possible to increase the bit density of these devices by a factor of 100, again with only minor increases in price per component. Thus the expectation is that over the next 10 years there will be a reduction of more than an order of magnitude in the price per bit of all forms of digital memory." AU - Hodges, David A. DA - Sept. 1977 IS - 3 KW - computers tape recording, magnetic magnetic recording recording tape recording preservation communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution archives history, and new media future and science fiction communication revolution, and second industrial revolution tape recorders recording sound recording tape recording computers microelectronics libraries libraries, and information storage Information Age history computers and the Internet history, and digital memory history, and microelectronics revolution information processing information storage sound, and audio cassettes sound digital media microelectronics revolution communication revolution RAM digitization information storage, and digital media future, and information storage future random access memory (RAM) LB - 3750 PY - 1977 SP - 130-45 ST - Microelectronic Memories T2 - Scientific American TI - Microelectronic Memories VL - 237 ID - 1763 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses legal cases relating to programs with "adult" on cable television. By the early 1980s, cable television, together with satellite TV and video cassettes, had help to change home entertainment. AU - Hofbauer, Diane L. DA - Summer, 1983 IS - 2 KW - entertainment Federal Communications Commission (FCC) entertainment, home values sexuality values obscenity religion values morality home entertainment First Amendment regulation values community freedom law censorship and ratings censorship home court cases law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures +television FCC, and television television, and FCC cable TV, and FCC FCC, and cable TV censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship? motion pictures, and freedom motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures censorship, and community standards community standards, and censorship pornography pornography, and television pornography, and theaters pornography, and community standards, theaters motion pictures, and cable television television, and motion pictures FCC indecency law, and indecency cable television, and indecency indecency, and cable television morality, and cable television pornography, and television television, and pornography home entertainment revolution pornography, and home X-rated films cable television, and First Amendment First Amendment, and cable porn cable television, and pornography pornography, and cable television home, and new media cable LB - 20520 PY - 1983 SP - 139-208 ST - 'Cableporn' and the First Amendment: Perspectives on Content Regulation of Cable Television T2 - Federal Communications Law Journal TI - 'Cableporn' and the First Amendment: Perspectives on Content Regulation of Cable Television VL - 35 ID - 864 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, written by the then editor of the Moving Picture World, begins by saying that "an 'optical illusion' plus an almost insatiable appetite for amusement on the part of the public is responsible for one of the most remarkable commercial developments of this age -- motion pictures." (1) The author says, though, that cinema is more than a "cheap catch-penny amusement device," (1) and that it offers a powerful tool for educators. The article concludes with a section on "The Educational Picture" (9-10). The article discusses the origins of moving pictures -- whether it was an Englishman named Freese-Green or Thomas Edison -- who deserves the most credit. It explains how the movie camera works ("on the same principle as a kodak" - p. 2) and that it produces an "optical illusion." It also covers the origin of the film projector (4-5). Sections are devoted to "Growth of the Exhibition Business" (6-7) and "The Growth of Picture Making." (7-8) "The amount of marketable film issued by the licensed manufacturers each week approximates 3,000,000 feet" (7) and the anywhere from $5 million to $30 million is invested in the manufacturing of moving pictures. (7) AU - Hoff, James L. DA - June 7, 1913 IS - 1 KW - ref, secondary motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and projectors projectors, and motion pictures capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business special effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and special effects ref, secondary ref, secular ref, educational ref, reform ref, Chautauquan projection special effects LB - 37910 PY - 1913 SP - 1-10 ST - The Era of the Motion Picture T2 - The Chautauquan TI - The Era of the Motion Picture VL - 71 ID - 3890 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Holden writes that "'Color is assuredly, if considered by itself, a very subtle language, yet is is none the less definite.... "'Eyes are not enough to interpret the Language of Color. True, impressions of color come to the brain through the sense of sight, but he who runs may not always read, for the language of color, though definite, has a subtlety of meaning to the colorist which is rich-in suggestiveness. As far as the understanding of this language goes, thousands of people might as well be born color-blind, for all the profit they derive from the use of their eyes." For contemporary artists, "'their theme is that "The sun paints true."'" The author notes that "the church has formulated color, though by an unwritten law, into a language full of symbolic meaning...." Holden discusses the three primary color and what they represent -- red equals emotion and passion; blue "is the color of the sky, impenetrable" and often reflects the intellectual and cold; yellow equals fire. This article apparently offers excerpts from Holden's book Audiences: A Few Suggestions to Those Who Look and Listen (Chicago: A.C. McClurg and Company, 1896). AU - Holden, Florence P. DA - Jan. 1897 IS - 1 KW - religion religion, and color media effects emotion ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color color, and inadequacy of language color, in history color, and theory color, and language color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and poetry color, and religion religion, and color values color, and values values, and color ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Literature LB - 39110 PY - 1897 SP - 58 ST - The Language of Color T2 - Current Literature TI - The Language of Color VL - 21 ID - 4010 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses how theatrical press agents supply stories, some of which are exaggerated or faked, to newspapers to gain publicity. "It is the duty of the press agent to know the man or men on each of these half hundred publications who can 'put a piece' in his paper, and then it is his duty to see that 'the piece' is printed. As each of the fifty theaters has a press agent the struggle is spirited and the man who can furnish the best 'stories' or who makes himself most popular with the dramatic editors is the one who obtains the most publicity for his theater or star." (615) Newspapermen are usually in on this deception or practice. An example is given on how a minstrel dressed as a black and another actor impersonating President Theodore Roosevelt made a fictional film of the president help the negro into a carriage. When TR protested and the film was destroyed, those involved in the deception nevertheless gain great notoriety. (616) AU - Holland, W. Bob DA - Oct. 1904 IS - 6 KW - public relations press agents celebrity celebrity culture actors acting actors acting ref, secondary advertising and public relations advertising, and stage stage, and advertising stage, and public relations public relations, and stage actors, and public relations public relations, and actors press agents, and actors actors, and press agents press agents, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and press agents news and journalism press agents, and journalism journalism, and press agents press agents, and newspapers newspapers, and press agents magazines, and press agents press agents, and magazines press agents, and journalism journalism, and press agents press agents, and newspapers newspapers, and press agents magazines, and press agents press agents, and magazines ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Leslie's Monthly Magazine ref, Leslie's advertising journalism magazines press stage LB - 37940 PY - 1904 SP - 614-20 ST - The Passion for Publicity: Being an Account of the Ingenious Arts of the Press Agent T2 - Leslie's Monthly Magazine TI - The Passion for Publicity: Being an Account of the Ingenious Arts of the Press Agent VL - 58 ID - 3893 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article paraphrases a pastor, Asbury E. Krom, who led "one of the most conservative churches in America" and who brought a moving picture projector into Sunday School as saying that motion pictures are "one of the greatest agencies for good the world had ever seen." (354) Holliday says that "it is the very ability of cinematography to expose injustice, cruelty, and suffering in all their naked ugliness that has impressed the clergymen and church workers with the 353/354 importance of this marvelous invention of the last decade. In the teaching of the young and of the morally deficient, therefore, it is destined to hold a larger placed than many people realize. Thus, when we find two such widely different institutions as the State Penitentiary at Olympia, Washington, and the Episcopal Sunday School at Bristol, Tennessee, using the pictures for the same purposes -- the impressing of the lessons of decency, health, industry, honesty, and love -- we may wisely conclude that here is a weapon against evil more versatile than any other yet discovered by man. The love of the drama is instinctive in the human race; the savages of Africa and Australia perform crude plays and imitations of hunting and war; civilized America spends more than three hundred million dollars annually for its more finished tragedies and comedies...." (353-54) (my emphasis) The author argues that movies have a more powerful effect on the young than does the printed word. Whereas a book may treat such subjects they might "simply disgust or irritate the average boy; but when he sees the actual deed and rewarding going on before his very eyes, the effect is different; he cannot escape the impression that here is actual life and that right-doing is an admirable thing." (353) One positive impact of the movies, Holliday says, is that it is causing a decline the saloon business. Movie theaters are ruining the liquor business and there is a "bitter battle now waging between the motion picture and the grog-shop, a battle in which the liquor dealers are undoubtedly losing." (355) The author says that movies should not be done away with any more than public libraries which may carry some books that might move "nervous youngsters to unfortunate imitation." (355) The motion picture "is simply a powerful auxiliary for the machinery already existing and a new attractive force in the hands of a moral worker," Holliday contends. (356) He then gives examples of churches in different cities that are putting movies to good moral purpose. "Even the Pope has consented to appear in the moving pictures, and his image may now be seen by thousands of devout Catholics who never dared to hope for such a privilege.... Here, then, is a movement that cannot be ignored by the progressive church." (356) Holliday concludes by sayings that "This new form is entering silently but effectively into the character of public education and modern life, and no student of the American social conditions as they really are can afford to be ignorant of its power or ignore its potentialities in economic, social, intellectual and moral uplife." (356) The subtitle of this article reads: "What the Churches Are Doing and Hope to Do with This New Educational Agency." Holliday is identified as the author of several books on southern literature in the United States and a recent head of the English Department at Vanderbilt University. AU - Holliday, Carl DA - Feb. 13, 1913 IS - 3350 KW - children censorship words vs. images images vs. words ref, secondary motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and liquor business critics critics, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and morality religion religion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and new art form images vs. print quotations quotations, and movies aiding morality motion pictures, and libraries ref, religious ref, reform ref, congregationalist ref, Independent LB - 37870 PY - 1913 SP - 353-56 ST - The Motion Picture and the Church T2 - The Independent TI - The Motion Picture and the Church VL - 74 ID - 3886 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author was Executive Director of the Motion Picture and Television Research Center. He speculates that the currently technological revolution will continue but warns about how tenuous predicting the future can be -- he quotes from a 1955 book that says that motion picture film will be replaced by videotape and film cameras will be superseded by electronic TV cameras. The old technologies continue to thrive, he notes in 1969. Of interest is the section in which he notes new technologies that did not exist in 1937: 1) TV -- in 1969 55 million homes had TV. 2) Electronic computers. 3) Jet travel. 4) Synthetic fibers were largely in an experimental stage. 5) Dial telephones. 6) Transistors -- the vacuum tube "was the marvel of the electrical age." (492) 7) Space travel -- it was a radical idea often associated with Jules Verne. 8) Nuclear energy. AU - Holm, Wilton R. DA - May, 1969 IS - 5 KW - computers cinematography motion pictures future and science fiction motion pictures, and future vacuum tubes videotape television telephones computers and the Internet computers, electronic aeronautics and space communication future magnetic tape magnetic recording computers LB - 30290 PY - 1969 SP - 467-68, 492 ST - Communications Technology of the Future T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Communications Technology of the Future VL - 50 ID - 2784 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This articles examines "the priority dispute between Guglielmo Marconi and [Oliver] Lodge over the invention of wireless telegraphy." Hong argues "that any claim for Lodge’s priority is incorrect.” He is refuting the assertion made about Lodge in Hugh G. J. Aitken’s Syntony and Spark (1976). AU - Hong, Sungook DA - Oct. 1994 KW - non-USA wireless communication wireless telegraphy +radio Marconi, Guglielmo Lodge, Oliver wireless telegraphy, and origins Aitken, Hugh G. J. LB - 5920 PY - 1994 SP - 717-49 ST - Marconi and the Maxwellians: The Origins of Wireless Telegraphy Revisited T2 - Technology and Culture TI - Marconi and the Maxwellians: The Origins of Wireless Telegraphy Revisited VL - 35 ID - 1977 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the upcoming theater season and is accompanied by several pictures of well-known stage actresses. Among the actresses discussed is Maud Adams, who at 24 was John Drew's leading lady. "She is the youngest leading woman on the stage, and one of the most popular and successful. She has a singularly sweet face and the parts she usually plays on stage represent faithfully what she is in real life -- a modest, refined, and sympathetic little gentlewoman. It is not generally known that Maud Adams's father was a Mormon, the family originally having come from Salt Lake City. Her mother, Annie Adams, also an actress in Mr. Drew's company, is likewise a woman of culture and rare amiability. Maud Adams went 959/960 on the stage as a child. She was first seen in New York in a piece called 'The Paymaster,' and later in Hoyt's play 'A Midnight Bell.'..." (959-60) AU - Hornblow, Arthur DA - Sept. 1895 IS - 9 KW - fame celebrity anti-theatrical bias censorship actors acting photography motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality ref, news sexuality sexuality, and photography women women, and photography photography, and sexuality audiences audiences, and women women, and audiences ref, news censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings actors, and status of anti-theatrical prejudice actors, and bias against women, and actresses actors, and women celebrity, and Maude Adams Adams, Maude, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines ref, secondary ref, secular ref, women ref, Peterson Magazine magazines LB - 38910 PY - 1895 SP - 951-60 ST - Among the Players T2 - Peterson Magazine TI - Among the Players VL - 5 ID - 3990 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author notes that at least one illustrator who is color blind is still "alive to line and form." (365) Horton is interested, though, in "the importance and possibilities of color and its subtle influence upon the senses." (366) He then talks about how various colors -- red, blue, green, yellow -- are often associated with warmth or the shedding of blood (red), coldness or depression (blue), quiet and tranquility (green), a spring morning (yellow). He notes that color plays an important role in the world's religions. He turns then to Japan and says that "of all the Oriental nations the Japanese possess the most intense and almost insatiable love of color, which enters into every detail of their civil and religious life, and in their naive and childlike enjoyment of nature lies the secret charm of Japanese art." (366) In North American, the "Indian loves color, and takes supreme delight in decking himself." War paint has a special appeal, the author says. AU - Horton, William S. DA - Oct. 1897 IS - 4 KW - religion religion, and color media effects emotion ref, secondary color, in literature color color, and inadequacy of language color, in history color, and theory color, and language color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and religion religion, and color values color, and values values, and color non-USA non-USA, and color Japan Japan, and color color, and native Americans ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Literature LB - 39730 PY - 1897 SP - 365-66 ST - The Art of Seeing Color T2 - Current Literature TI - The Art of Seeing Color VL - 22 ID - 4071 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article examines the influential ideas of Thomas P. Hughes (history of technology) and Alfred D. Chandler (business history), discusses the interaction between Hughes and Chandler, and identifies areas on which they disagree and agree. "The problem of technological determinism has attended both scholars' work and has become one of the principal avenues by which their work has been criticized. This essay argues that the rise of social construction of technology and its cousins stemmed in large measure from political concerns about human agency in historical change in general and the problem of technological determinism in particular. "Both social constructivism and historians' embrace of the critique of American manufacturing methods launched by Piore and Sabel in their 1984 book, The Second Industrial Divide, have become principal means by which some historians have sought to lessen the dominance of Chandlerian approaches in business history and to move beyond Hughesian systems analysis in the history of technology." AU - Hounshell, David A. DA - 1995 IS - 3 KW - technology technology and society Hughes, Thomas Chandler, Alfred technological determinism technology, and systems LB - 3040 PY - 1995 SP - 205-24 ST - Hughesian History of Technology and Chandlerian Business History: Parallels, Departures, and Critics T2 - History and Technology TI - Hughesian History of Technology and Chandlerian Business History: Parallels, Departures, and Critics VL - 12 ID - 392 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This brief article was part of a longer article entitled "The Edge of the Future" where well-known people were asked to speculate on what the future would bring. Here, Houston predicts "a practical apparatus for seing through a wire; i.e., a device for looking into a receiver at one end of a metallic wire and seeing therein a faithful reproduction of whatever optical images are impressed on a transmitter at the other end, even though thousands of miles intervene." (199) AU - Houston, Edwin J. DA - 1894 IS - 2 KW - future ref, mag television seeing at a distance future and science fiction electricity ref, secondary ref, secular ref, reform ref, illustrated ref, McClure's LB - 290 PY - 1894 SP - 199 ST - The Edge of the Future in Science T2 - McClure's Magazine TI - The Edge of the Future in Science VL - 2 ID - 3325 ER - TY - JOUR AB - One of several articles in mainstream U. S. magazines publicizing Brigitte Bardot after her movie And God Created Woman. AU - Howard, T. DA - June 14, 1958 KW - magazines Bardot, Brigitte magazines, and sexuality sexuality women women, and magazines magazines, and sexuality motion pictures motion pictures, and Brigitte Bardot LB - 31770 PY - 1958 SP - 32-33+ ST - Bad Little Bad Girl T2 - Saturday Evening Post TI - Bad Little Bad Girl VL - 230 ID - 2862 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Howe, who was chairman of the National Board of Censorship (NBOC) (established in 1909), begins by setting out a list of controversial issues covered by the motion picture that have led to calls for censorship: "sex questions, the white slave traffic, or the social evil.... labor struggles, conditions in mine and factory; when it becomes the daily press of industrial groups or classes, of Socialism, syndicalism, and radical opinion." He then notes that there is one extreme group that wishes to have harsh censorship of all films while another group wants movies to be as free as possible. To the latter group, "the motion picture is no different from the daily press, theater, or any other form of communication." (412) Howe then discusses the scope of the film industry in 1914 -- "from 16,000 to 20,000 motion-picture theaters in the United States" which "entertain from 7,000,000 to 12,000,000 persons daily, or from 2,000,000,000 to 3,000,000,000 persons a year." (412) Howe comments on the scope of what movie cameras cover and their potential influence on audiences, and especially on children. "The most inaccessible corners of the earth are being explored by the camera man, while the life of the insect and the plant, of the arctics and the tropics, of the Wild West and the city, are being portrayed to somewhere in the neighborhood of one-tenth of our population every day. Next to the daily press and the school the movie is probably the most influential educational and recreational agency in our daily life. That is one reason why the question of its freedom is of such far-reaching significance. "No one can trace the influence of the motion-picture show in opening the minds of people to new experiences, new realms of knowledge, new ambitions. It is impossible to measure the contribution which it makes to the mind of the child accustomed to learn only through parents and teachers. Nor can we trace its social or moral influence...." (413) The movies differ from the saloon, Howe says, and may even be taking business away from the liquor business. "Men now take their wives and families for an evening at the movies, where formerly they went alone to the near-by saloon," he writes. (413) Some people believed then that movies were hurting attendance at live theater, also. "These are but a few of the unknown, unseen influences which this colossal commercial agency of publicity has set in motion," Howe writes. "To those who would act heedlessly or under the spur of some local repressive agitation on the subject I would suggest that they think through the question, into all of the good and the bad, the immediate and the ultimate, for they are dealing with a force almost as potential as the daily press. Moreover, no one can be sure of the moral effects of any book, drama, or portrayal of fact or fiction that is not obviously vulgar, suggestive, or alluring." (413) Howe explains the work of the NBOC and that 532 films were submitted to it in January, 1914. The NBOC "has no legal position," he says, and "does not consider the destruction of films as its most important work. The most valuable results are to be found in the graduate improvement of the quality of motion pictures and in the elimination from all the films of certain undesirable motives, which, in the opinion of the Board, should not be portrayed to audiences containing a considerable percentage of children." (414) Howe says that all the work is done by "voluntary committees" (414) and names many of them and how the censorship process works. He then lists the standards the NBOC tries to follow (415). Howe warns about the danger of government censorship. "If such censorship is provided for, will not this great field of dramatic expression be subjected to the fear of suppression, so that only the safe and sane, the purely conventional, the uncontroversial film will be produced? he asks. He notes that government censorship of the movies would be comparable to censoring the Associated Press "and almost as dangerous to the freedom of the country. (416) He concludes by saying that "the motion-picture show is not only democracy's theater, it is a great educational agency, and it is likely to become a propagandist agency of unmeasured possibilities." (416) AU - Howe, Frederic C. DA - June 20, 1914 KW - censorship ref, secondary motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings censorship, and Frederic Howe motion pictures, and Frederic Howe motion pictures, and printing press censorship, and National Board of Censorship National Board of Censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and National Board of Censorship sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and white slavery white slavery, and motion pictures audiences motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and 2-3 billion per year media effects motion pictures, and media effects media effects, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel advertising and public relations motion pictures, and public relations public relations, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and education values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values quotations quotations, and movies' influence quotations, and movie publicity democracy propaganda democracy, and motion pictures motion pictures, and democracy propaganda, and motion pictures motion pictures, and propaganda ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, literary ref, Outlook advertising children National Board of Censorship public relations LB - 39550 PY - 1914 SP - 412-16 ST - What To Do with the Motion-Picture Show: Shall It Be Censored? T2 - Outlook TI - What To Do with the Motion-Picture Show: Shall It Be Censored? ID - 4053 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Huang, Yu DA - Jan. 1996 IS - 3 KW - nationalism Asia ideology communism non-USA +television China China, and television television, and China +nationalism and communication nationalism, and television (China) communism, and television (China) television, and ideology ideology, and television television, and communism television, and Mao Zedong LB - 660 PY - 1996 SP - 143-70 ST - Chinese Televison in Mao's Era (1958-1976): A Historical Survey T2 - Journal of Radio & Television Studies (Gaunbo yu tianshi) TI - Chinese Televison in Mao's Era (1958-1976): A Historical Survey VL - 2 ID - 154 ER - TY - JOUR AB - China's television industry has turned from a propaganda machine to a party-run enterprise during the forty year of its existence. The authors examine the evolution of television, which was first launched in 1958, and consider problems and dilemmas brought by commercialization. --Amy Chu AU - Huang, Yu and Jen Wei DA - July 1998 IS - 3 KW - nationalism Asia television, and digital communism non-USA Chu, Amy +television China television, and China China, and television television, and commercialization (China) +nationalism and communication nationalism, and television (China) television, and communism (China) communism, and television (China) television, and communism LB - 650 PY - 1998 SP - 76-92 ST - From 'Mouthpieces' to Party-Run Enterprises: Exploration of China's Television, 1958-1998 T2 - East Asia Quarterly (Dongyah jikan) TI - From 'Mouthpieces' to Party-Run Enterprises: Exploration of China's Television, 1958-1998 VL - 29 ID - 153 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author says that only forty years ago "the whole trend of the pulpit was against the stage, and it is only by very slow although very perceptible changes that the theatre has gradually been tolerated by religious teachers." (695) Bishop Fraser of Manchester, England, had hoped to reform the theater but near his death, Hughes says, he wrote to an American clergyman his efforts had been disappointing. "He [Fraser] found that neither the managers of theatres nor the actors themselves desired any great reform in the direction of morality, while the public seemed to care very little about the subject." (696) Although frustrated by efforts to reform the stage and actors, ministers had to come to terms with the theater if for no other reason that it was too important to be left alone. “The theatre is an enormous influence,” he said, and where ministers preached once or twice a week, the theatre was “an influence and an instruction, either for good or evil, every day of the week.” (696) It was impossible to eliminate. Hughes argues that ministers needed to give playgoing serious attention. "I have been told that if any leading preacher of New York city were to denounce any particular play it would be the means of making such a play exceedingly popular. I do not think so. I believe that if a pastor of a fashionable church were to denounce any particular play as positively immoral, it would very soon disappear from the stage. A very large percentage of the ordinary playgoers are communicants of the churches, and a well-considered condemnation of a play would certainly injure its popularity. 'Christian people' would not think it 'respectable' to sit through a play which had been condemned by their spiritual pastors. All that is needed is a little more ministerial courage with regard to the stage, and it will very soon be seen that the pulpit really possesses more power in this direction than it ever had in the history of the modern drama. One thing is certain," Hughes concludes. "If the stage is left to his own devices it will become a fruitful source of injury to the moral well-being of the nation." (704) (emphasis added) AU - Hughes, Thomas P. DA - Feb. 1896 IS - 6 KW - theaters morality children anti-theatrical bias Marked ref, secondary ref, secular ref, social ref, literary ref, Forum critics critics, religious critics, and theater critics, and actors religion religion, and theater religion, and actors actors, and religion values values, and the stage values, and the theater Great Britain non-USA Great Britian, and antitheatrical bias anti-theatrical prejudice theater, and bias against audiences, and theaters theaters, and audiences acting, and bias against censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship morality, and theater theater, and morality false leaders false leaders, and actors actors, as false leaders children and media theater, and children children, and theater acting actors audiences censorship theater LB - 41440 PY - 1896 SP - 695-704 ST - The Stage from a Clergyman's Standpoint T2 - Forum TI - The Stage from a Clergyman's Standpoint VL - 20 ID - 4243 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This essay discusses the social impact of photography in the construction of tourist destination. The author points out that tourist photography, because of the consuming nature of tourism, is endowed with a power of selection which can lead to the distortion of spatial and ethnic identity into a series of icons. The consequences of the commodification of places are concerned with the issue of marketing and the media when tourist photographic images are produced. As a result, the author proposes that more ethnographic and empirical researches on this issue are necessary and helpful to the study the destination management. --Huai-Hsuan Chen AU - Human, Brian DA - Jan. 1, 1999 IS - 2 and 3 KW - tourism Chen, Huai-Hsuan color photography, and color color, and photography color, and Kodachrome photography, and Kodachrome Kodachrome photography, and ethnography ethnography, and photography photography and visual communication photography, and tourism tourism, and photography photography, and travel photography, and space Kodak photography LB - 33170 PY - 1999 ST - Kodachrome Icons: Photography, Place and the Theft of Identity T2 - International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management TI - Kodachrome Icons: Photography, Place and the Theft of Identity VL - 11 ID - 72 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece appeared in an issue of Daedalus devoted to speculation about what would life be like in the year 2000. Huntington says that "future historians will... view the Soviet Union, China, and the United States as expansionist powers during this period, but they will view the U.S. as a highly successful expansionist power and the other two as frustrated expansionist powers. "This is preliminary hypothesizing that in the year 2000 the American world system that has been developed during the last twenty years will be in a state of disintegration and decay. Just as American influence has replaced European influence during the current period, so also during the last quarter of this century American power will begin to wane, and other countries will move in to fill the gap." AU - Huntington, Samuel P. DA - Summer, 1967 IS - 3 KW - nationalism imperialism +future and science fiction +nationalism and communication future cultural imperialism future, and American power LB - 4240 PY - 1967 SP - 927-29 ST - Political Development and the Decline of the American System of World Order T2 - Daedalus TI - Political Development and the Decline of the American System of World Order VL - 96 ID - 1812 ER - TY - JOUR AB - These are edited excerpts from Harold A. Innis's unpublished "History of Communication." AU - Innis, Harold A. DA - 1993 IS - 1 KW - Asia non-USA Innis, Harold Innis, Harold, and History of Communication China China, and printing China, and Harold Innis Innis, Harold, and China LB - 3330 N1 - See filed under "Shoesmith, Brian" and "Introduction to Innis' 'History of Communication'." PY - 1993 SP - 132-39 ST - Printing in China in the 19th and 20th Century T2 - Continuum: The Australian Journal of Media & Culture TI - Printing in China in the 19th and 20th Century VL - 7 ID - 421 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Wallace Irwin laments the negative impact that movies have had on great literature in these sonnets. "How was thine English wasted, O my Bard! What thou expressed in pentametric airs, Chanting in verse life's comedies and cares, Lo! Mary Pickford, in the world's regard, By looking like a picture postal-card, Can quite accomplish. Here how laughter blar When Charley Chaplin, falling down the stairs, Kills Falstaff's jokes -- and kills them very hard! (my emphasis) .... II .... "Thou needst not know the art that summons ghosts, Shaken from Hell by mastery of sound, The gift of words that conjures all the hosts Of restless Acheron from out of the ground -- Nay, hire some actors, choose a spot out West And let the camera do all the rest. III "Thy plays, O Will, were acted on the boards Of that old Globe whose stage was bleak and bare: Belasco's self could not improve thee there -- Thy words made pictures. And those noble Lords Who heard brave Marc address the Roman hordes Saw Ceasar's City, pile on pile, upbear Arrogant domes and pinnacles in air Which thou madest living by the gift of words! "To-day there's too much noise, too little said. Accents grow thinner, dialogues more terse. 'Step lively, please!' oft fuddles Thespis' head If she but dote a moment on her verse. Come, Poet, to the movies! Here's a seat Now lets see life expressed -- by hands and feet!" (my emphasis) --Wallace Irwin AU - Irwin, Wallace DA - April 20, 1916 IS - 1747 KW - theater stage fame celebrity actors acting ref, secondary motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality Irwin, Wallace Pickford, Mary motion pictures, and Mary Pickford motion pictures, and Wallace Irwin theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures quotations quotations, and motion pictures quotations, and Mary Pickford critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and critics ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Life photography LB - 37780 PY - 1916 SP - 753 ST - Motion Picture Sonnets T2 - Life TI - Motion Picture Sonnets VL - 67 ID - 3877 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author argues that Vierge towers over modern illustrators. (188) During the previous 30 years, Jaccaci says, "the art of illustration ... has undergone a complete revolution, and, being transformed to fit new necessities, it has branched out into many new channels more or less directly connected with journalism." (188) Illustrations set "forth in a clear manner those aspects of scenes and incidents that no word-description, however elaborate, can give...." (188) There is great demand for illustration, although the demand reflects certain lamentable trends. "But the demand is that of an age hurried and utilitarian, and the supply, taking on a corresponding form, impresses the observer by it superficiality and cheapness, in place of substance and carefully wrought results involving more time and a finer quality of labor; by its sensationalism and its tawdriness, in place of artistic refinement. These pictures therefore not only portray events of the day, but are a significant evidence of the tendencies of an age which cares less to be touched by beauty and sincerity than to be tickled by novelty, and by a sort of ready-made pettiness." (188) The author maintains that "illustration may justly be called a modern art." (188) AU - Jaccaci, August F. DA - June 1893 IS - 2 KW - sensationalism illustrations Marked ref, secondary ref, Century ref, secular ref, illustrated illustrations news and journalism pictorial journalism journalism, pictorial journalism, and illustrations critics critics, and pictorial journalism illustrations, and Daniel Vierge Urrabieta posters illustrations, and posters advertising and public relations advertising, and illustrations advertising, and posters journalism, and sensationalism illustrations, and sensationalism posters, and sensationalism sensationalism, and illustrations new way of seeing new way of seeing, and illustrations quotations, and modern illustrations advertising journalism LB - 41430 PY - 1893 SP - 186-203 ST - The Father of Modern Illustration: Daniel Vierge Urrabieta T2 - Century Illustrated Magazine TI - The Father of Modern Illustration: Daniel Vierge Urrabieta VL - 46 ID - 4242 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article attacks the modern "hero," the villain who is portrayed attractively in sensational literature. "For this evil influence of low sensational literature the newspaper must share the responsibility with the cheap novel," Jackson writes. (638) "The typical rascal is never the hero that romance, whether in the dime novel or the newspaper, pictures him. His intelligence is, as a rule, of a very low order, confined to keenness and cunning, which act in the narrow circle of first preying upon his victims and then trying to outwit justice. Compare it with the intelligence which works for good. His courage is generally greatly overestimated. He rarely fights except when he has the overwhelming advantage, or when he is driven into a corner. His magnanimity and amiability -- qualities especially credited to him by writers and readers of the low romantic school -- are myths. They are no part of his business save as they sserve to cloak his villainy. Pure selfishness, or at best physical temperament, is at the bottom of his good humor, apparent generosity, and even his family affection, for when the crucial test comes he will sacrifice anybody and everybody to self. ... (639) "Better acquaintance with them, would soon disarm the fascinating villains who play such havoc with susceptible hearts.... "Beautiful evil! heroic villain! They have no existence save in the imagination of the poet and the romancer. In real life they are impossibilities,.... Their nearest possible realizations would be simply detestable, horrible." (639) AU - Jackson, Edward C. DA - Nov. 1897 IS - 492 KW - journalism heroes entertainment, and journalism entertainment celebrity celebrity culture censorship ref, secondary books, periodicals, newspapers democracy newspapers, and democracy democracy, and newspapers news and journalism critics critics, and newspapers newspapers, and critics critics, and journalism journalism, and critics modernity modernity, and newspapers newspapers, and modernity new way of seeing journalism, and entertainment entertainment, and journalism newspapers, and entertainment entertainment, and newspapers advertising and public relations advertising, and newspapers advertising, and journalism journalism, and advertising newspapers, and advertising celebrity culture newspapers, and celebrity culture celebrity culture, and newspapers values values, and newspapers newspapers, and values censorship and ratings censorship, and newspapers newspapers, and censorship newspapers, and dime novels newspapers, and heros heroes, as false leaders false leaders, and newspapers critics, and modern heros critics, and modern literature censorship ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, North American Review advertising false leaders LB - 38570 PY - 1897 SP - 638-39 ST - Beautiful Evil T2 - North American Review TI - Beautiful Evil VL - 165 ID - 3956 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article, the Rev. William Henry Jackson extolls the wondrous nature of the moving picture. “The eyes of the world say: ‘All the world’s a picture;’ anywhere, everywhere, earth, sea or sky; in burning tropics, or frozen pole; in ocean depth, or emblazoned sky; everywhere, the eye rests upon the beautiful, the picturesque. “To-day we have the new picture, not the cold, lifeless picture, deathlike in its stillness, but the animated, living, active, inspiring reality, full of the vigor of life and beauty, a very part of the universe itself. No wonder then if the modern moving pictures strike a popular chord; they have touched the center of humanity, they have revealed life to be living; like as the universe itself is the crowning perfection of the amalgamation of its created parts; so the moving picture is the perfection of the sublimest combination of science, art and mathematics. “The sciences of chemistry and electricity, with light, heat and power, together with the reproductive beauty of the photographer’s art, have united in producing the highest laudable results hitherto held secret in the recess of science, art and law, giving to people everything the marvel of the moving picture. “Again the moving picture reaches humanity because of its universal nature, everyone sees the picture, everyone reads the picture….” (quotation, 931) AU - Jackson, William Henry DA - June 4, 1910 IS - 22 KW - ref, secondary religion motion pictures, and religion religion, and motion pictures motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space ref, secondary ref, secular ref, movie magazine ref, Moving Picture World LB - 970 PY - 1910 SP - 931-32 ST - The Moving Picture 'World’ T2 - Moving Picture World TI - The Moving Picture 'World’ VL - 6 ID - 3392 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This annotated bibliography, copyrighted by the Boeing Company in 1985, covers "Distributed Artificial Intelligence (DAI)" which "refers to the subarea of AI which is concerned with the problem of utilizing multiple processors to the solution of AI problems." (44) The annotations are "organized on the basis of the institutions to which the first author belongs. This approach was selected to allow the reader to identify those institutions which currently are emphasizing development of the subject material." (45) AU - Jagannathan, V. AU - Dodhiawala, Rajendra DA - Jan. 1986 IS - 95 KW - R & D nationalism corporations military-industrial complex corporations Boeing Corporation bibliographies bibliographies, annotated bibliographies, and artificial intelligence artificial intelligence and biotechnology Boeing and artificial intelligence artificial intelligence, and Boeing research and development research and development, and artificial intelligence military-industrial-university complex military communication military communication, and AI nationalism and communication LB - 33950 PY - 1986 SP - 44-56 ST - Distributed Artificial Intelligence T2 - SIGART Newsletter TI - Distributed Artificial Intelligence ID - 3033 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Jenkins, Charles Francis DA - Dec. 1923 KW - photography television, and history of +radio +photography and visual communication seeing at a distance +motion pictures +television television, and origins radio, and photography +electricity LB - 6970 PY - 1923 SP - 78-79 ST - Radio Photographs, Radio Movies, Radio Vision T2 - Transactions of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers TI - Radio Photographs, Radio Movies, Radio Vision VL - 16 ID - 2068 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Jenkins, Charles Francis DA - July 25, 1894 KW - photography television, and history of +photography and visual communication +television television, and origins +photography and visual communication +electricity photography, and electricity +electricity LB - 6980 PY - 1894 SP - 62-63 ST - Transmitting Pictures by Electricity T2 - Electrical Engineer TI - Transmitting Pictures by Electricity VL - 18 ID - 2069 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The article is concerned with the power of the visual image in relation to tourist behavior. The author discusses the relevant literature for understanding tourist images from such disciplines as geography, sociology, cultural studies or anthropology. With the conceptualization of “’Circles’ of representation” for tourist destination images in terms of marketing, the article then focuses on backpacker tourists visiting Australia as an example to illustrate the connection between tourist brochures and the photographic preferences and behavior of backpackers traveling to and in Australia. The research and interviews of this project show “a circular process by which particular tourist images are produced, projected, perceived, propagated and perpetuated” (p. 323). Thus, this study underlines the links between the representation of tourism marketers and the photographic pattern of backpackers to develop an understanding of the meaning of the tourist experience. --Huai-Hsuan Chen AU - Jenkins, Olivia DA - 2003 IS - 3 KW - tourism Chen, Huai-Hsuan color photography, and anthropology sociology, and photography photography, and sociology sociology photography, and ethnography ethnography, and photography photography and visual communication photography, and tourism tourism, and photography photography, and travel photography, and space anthropology, and photography photography, and geography geography geography, and photography non-USA Australia Australia, and photography photography, and Australia non-USA, and photography photography LB - 33180 PY - 2003 ST - Photography and Travel Brochures: The Circle of Representation T2 - Tourism Geographies TI - Photography and Travel Brochures: The Circle of Representation VL - 5 ID - 73 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this review of Leonard T. Troland's book Principles of Psychophysiology (1930), Dorothea Johannsen about 44 percent of this book is concerned with visual sensation, owing in large part to Troland interest in this topic. (331) AU - Johannsen, Dorothea DA - 1933-1934 KW - ref, secondary Troland, Leonard color Troland, Leonard, and color color, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and visual sensation color, and media effects media effects media effects, and color Troland, Leonard, and book review book review, and Leonard Troland LB - 40280 PY - 1933 SP - 330-33 ST - [book review] T2 - Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology TI - [book review] VL - 28 ID - 4126 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This is a commencement address that Johnston delivered at the University of Oklahoma, June 4, 1951.He is identified as Administrator, Economic Stablization Agency, Washington, D. C. He talks about his hope for "the long-lasting spiritual rebirth of our country," and bringing "into more perfect balance the values of the spirit and soul and the advantages of our industrial empire." He concludes that "we are truly a besieged people -- not by armies but by frustration, materialism, and cynicism." (562) AU - Johnson [sic], Eric DA - July 1, 1951 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Johnston, Eric motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign market motion pictures, and Eric Johnston MPAA speeches Johnston, Eric, and speeches LB - 34870 PY - 1951 SP - 559-62 ST - The Land of Calculated Risk T2 - Vital Speeches TI - The Land of Calculated Risk VL - 17 ID - 3129 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Johnson argues that prime-time television in the late 1970s depicted an upper-middle-class view of work and workers and that real laborers were being ignored. This finding is significant, Johnson argues, because television shows Americans what life is supposed to be like. Johnson analyzed the content of 20 prime-time shows for the 1979 fall season, categorizing shows for indicators such as economic need. Johnson found, for example, occupations were substantially different than the real world, with workers in high prestige jobs enjoying personal freedom and exercising control over their work environment. Non-upper-middle-class workers appeared as service workers in minor and dispensable roles. “Whether through malice or ignorance,” Johnson writes, “television has avoided any realistic presentation of work, workers, and workers’ organizations. Television has filled our fantasies with upper-middle-class pictures and distorted our perceptions of the world by making it appear that everyone else has more of everything that we do and that to a productive worker is to be a nobody. It may be difficult to fight unflattering stereotypes; it is even more difficult to fight an image that barely exists.” --Phil Glende AU - Johnson, Ralph Arthur DA - Winter 1981 IS - 3 KW - television, and values values Glende, Phil labor +television labor labor, and television (1970s) television, and labor values, and television values LB - 870 N1 - See also: office PY - 1981 SP - 199-206 ST - World Without Workers: Prime Time's Presentation of Labor T2 - Labor Studies Journal TI - World Without Workers: Prime Time's Presentation of Labor VL - 5 ID - 175 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Johnson and Catlett argue that organized labor should make greater use of its phone bank system to survey members and determine their interests. They argue that labor effectively used the phone bank for decades to mobilize members to register, vote, and take political action. In addition, the phone bank could be used to regularly communicate with rank-and-file members about their concerns and priorities. The key, they argue, is to reverse the flow of information, so that phone bank operators are not delivering a message from union leaders but rather asking questions of members and delivering the responses to unions leaders. “Using the telephone not to talk, but to listen, will bring members’ needs and attitudes to the organization,” Johnson and Catlett argue. “The challenge of the interactive phone bank is to break the one-way communication habit. While labor explores the opportunities to alter mass opinion through the major media, it can experiment with new methods of using familiar technologies to talk directly with members.” --Phil Glende AU - Johnson, Ralph Arthur and Judith L. Catlett DA - Fall 1986 IS - 2 KW - reform Glende, Phil +telephones labor labor, and telephones telephones, and labor reform, and telephones telephones, and reform LB - 830 N1 - See also: office PY - 1986 SP - 149-55 ST - Expanding the Effectiveness of the Phone Bank T2 - Labor Studies Journal TI - Expanding the Effectiveness of the Phone Bank VL - 11 ID - 171 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Johnson writes that the "library 'as place' is being debated in the vision of tomorrow's campus. Library administrators must move the library to a central role in services, technology, and organization for it to remain an integral part of the university's intellectual life." At the time of this article, Johnson was a professor of political science and a former Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs at the University of Illinois, Chicago. AU - Johnson, Richard M. DA - Summer, 1995 IS - 90 KW - computers computers libraries information storage digital media education libraries, and new media libraries, and digital media computers and the Internet computers, and libraries libraries, and computers LB - 29790 PY - 1995 SP - 19-31 ST - New Technologies, Old Politics: Political Dimensions in the Management of Academic Support Services T2 - New Directions for Higher Education TI - New Technologies, Old Politics: Political Dimensions in the Management of Academic Support Services ID - 2735 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Eric Johnston, then president of the Motion Picture Association of America, says the influence of motion pictures is "immeasurable." He argues that movies can "break down barriers of misunderstanding among nations as readily as it has broken down lesser barriers within this country." AU - Johnston, Eric DA - Nov., 1947 KW - nationalism nationalism imperialism public relations advertising propaganda values motion pictures education cultural imperialism law law censorship and ratings censorship capitalism war audiences +motion pictures and popular culture regulation, and motion pictures audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values media effects media effects, and motion pictures propaganda, and motion pictures education, and motion pictures Cold War Cold War, and propaganda films +nationalism and communication nationalism, and motion pictures capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism cultural imperialism, and motion pictures regulation military communication public relations advertising and public relations LB - 3010 PY - 1947 SP - 98-102 ST - The Motion Picture as a Stimulus to Culture T2 - The Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science TI - The Motion Picture as a Stimulus to Culture ID - 389 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Johnston, the president of the Motion Picture Association of America, rejected the view that movie-goers were childlike or vulnerable. “The old bugaboo about the average American having the average intelligence of a twelve-year-old child, has gone by the board,” he wrote on the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Code. Guarding against violence, sex, and other such issues -- if indeed he believed audiences needed such protection -- should depend not on censors but a “heightened sense of responsibility” among the producers of all mass media and the public. Johnston presided over the decline of the Production Code which had been used since 1930 by Hollywood to censor movies. The Code was revised in 1956 and a decade later, it was all but dead. A copy of this piece is in Folder 8, Box 6, MS 118, Eric A. Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA. AU - Johnston, Eric DA - 1955 KW - addresses, Eric Johnston self-regulation Production Code values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) values religion addresses +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code Production Code, and Eric Johnston Production Code, and decline of LB - 16610 PY - 1955 ST - The Code Is 25 T2 - 49th Variety Anniversay TI - The Code Is 25 ID - 610 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Eric Johnston, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, expresses his opposition to government classification of movies. A copy of this material is in Folder 85, Box 7, MS 118, Eric A. Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA. AU - Johnston, Eric DA - Sept., 1961 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) censorship and ratings NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric, and classification classification, and Eric Johnson Johnston, Eric MPAA, and classification classification, and MPAA LB - 16770 PY - 1961 ST - Classification: A Noise or an Echo? T2 - Journal of the Screen Producers Guild TI - Classification: A Noise or an Echo? ID - 625 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Eric A. Johnston, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, discusses developments relating to movie theaters, 70mm motion pictures, and 3D movies. A copy of this piece is in Folder 8, Box 6, MS 118, Eric A. Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA. AU - Johnston, Eric DA - June 2, 1960 KW - audiences 70mm +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and theaters Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and theaters theaters motion pictures, and community Johnston, Eric, and community motion pictures, and 3D motion pictures, and 70mm film 70mm, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and new technology motion pictures, and family LB - 16830 PY - 1960 ST - 'When I Dipped into the Future Far as Human Eye Could See ...' [Alfred Lord Tennyson] T2 - Boxoffice TI - 'When I Dipped into the Future Far as Human Eye Could See ...' [Alfred Lord Tennyson] ID - 631 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Johnston, then president of the Motion Picture Association of America, discusses the porminent role in the world played by American movies. A copy of this piece is in Folder 8, Box 6, MS 118, Eric A. Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA. AU - Johnston, Eric DA - Oct. 22, 1962 IS - 1 KW - non-USA ? +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and democracy motion pictures, and democracy Johnston, Eric, and U. S. films abroad LB - 16850 PY - 1962 ST - American Films Around the World [Guest Editorial] T2 - Boxoffice TI - American Films Around the World [Guest Editorial] VL - 82 ID - 633 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article, Johnston, the president of the MPAA, responds to three earlier articles by Norman Cousins in The Saturday Review that argued that the impact of Hollywood movies abroad damaged the world's perception of America and of Americans. Here Johnston lists many movies he believes are ambassadors of good will for the U. S. He argues that "American feature films produced for entertainment" have a powerful "educational value." (10) He maintains that movies showing the abundance of American prosperity, "what Mr. Cousins sloughs off as 'dazzling gadgets' adds up to our stand of living" (11) and that the "thread of the democratic story runs through" these films "without calculated emphasis, but with the more powerful emphasis of suggestion." (12) See Cousins response that follows in this issues (pp. 12-13, 28). AU - Johnston, Eric DA - March 4, 1950 IS - 9 KW - Truman administration Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union self-regulation nationalism MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism Cold War war Johnston, Eric capitalism motion pictures, and communism Truman, Harry presidents and new media motion pictures, and Harry Truman Truman, Harry, and motion pictures motion pictures, and drinking military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and U.S. foreign policy MPAA, and foreign policy MPAA, and Truman administration MPAA, and Cold War USSR motion pictures, and USSR propaganda democracy motion pictures, and democracy media effects motion pictures, and media effects Cousins, Norman LB - 34810 PY - 1950 SP - 9-12 ST - Messengers from a Free Country T2 - Saturday Review of Literature TI - Messengers from a Free Country VL - 33 ID - 3123 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Johnston, then president of the MPAA, explains the international role of American movies. He says that "super-nationalistic films have little international appeal" and "they rob the state they are supposed to serve of an important tool for winning world understanding." Hollywood's influence in the world was "explained by its cosmopolitan nature. Hollywood has become a Mecca for the creative and the artistic from many lands," Johnston wrote, "offering a warm welcome in exchange for skills and backgrounds that are of inestimable value to its film production." (4) He went on to say that "motion pictures have made drama out of history and history out of drama. Social values and ethics have been given mass circulation they never had before." (5) AU - Johnston, Eric DA - July, 1955 IS - 7 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union self-regulation nationalism MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) Eisenhower administration motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism Cold War war Johnston, Eric capitalism motion pictures, and communism Eisenhower, Dwight D. presidents and new media motion pictures, and Dwight Eisenhower Eisenhower, Dwight D., and motion pictures motion pictures, and drinking military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and U.S. foreign policy MPAA, and foreign policy MPAA, and Truman administration MPAA, and Cold War USSR motion pictures, and USSR propaganda democracy motion pictures, and democracy media effects motion pictures, and media effects LB - 34820 PY - 1955 SP - 3-6 ST - Mirrors of Society T2 - Américas TI - Mirrors of Society VL - 7 ID - 3124 ER - TY - JOUR AB - “Film knows no international barriers,” Eric A. Johnston, president of the MPAA, told members of the U. S. House of Representatives in late 1946(?), and the American movie industry was “geared to a world market.” It was in the best interest of the United States to promote expansion of the film industry for two reasons. First, cinema was “the greatest conveyor of ideas the most revolutionary force in the world today,” he said. Second, the industry occupied an important and growing place in the nation’s commercial life, both domestically and internationally. To critics, he promised that Hollywood would “be more discriminating in the type of pictures set to other countries AU - Johnston, Eric DA - Feb., 1947 IS - 2 KW - Truman administration Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union self-regulation nationalism MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism Cold War war Johnston, Eric capitalism motion pictures, and communism Truman, Harry presidents and new media motion pictures, and Harry Truman Truman, Harry, and motion pictures military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and U.S. foreign policy MPAA, and foreign policy MPAA, and Truman administration MPAA, and Cold War USSR motion pictures, and USSR propaganda democracy motion pictures, and democracy media effects motion pictures, and media effects capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism LB - 34880 PY - 1947 ST - Film Knows No International Barriers T2 - Motion Picture Letter TI - Film Knows No International Barriers UR - Folder: "Motion Picture [Research] Clippings," Box 3, Files of Dallas C. Halverstadt, Harry S. Truman Library, Independence, MO VL - 6 ID - 3130 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by discussing a demonstration of a hologram in 1964, and then discusses how specialists labored to incorporate this invention into their understanding of such areas as optics. AU - Johnston, Sean DA - Jan. 2005 IS - 1 KW - visual communication holograms holography optics lasers visual culture LB - 33600 PY - 2005 SP - 77-103 ST - Shifting Perspectives: Holography and the Emergence of Technical Communities T2 - Technology and Culture TI - Shifting Perspectives: Holography and the Emergence of Technical Communities VL - 46 ID - 2999 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author, who worked for Kodak Research Laboratories in Rochester, NY, writes on the technical problems involved in tinting sound films and also on the potential emotion impact of color movies. He begins by says that "within the past few years eighty to ninety per cent of the total production" of the film industry "has been printed on tinted positive film." (199) But the use of tinting has impaired the quality of recording sound films (199-200). "As a result, the use of tinted film has been entirely discontinued in the production of positives carrying a photographic sound record. There is little doubt that this absence of color from the screen constitutes a serious impairment of the beauty and dramatic power of the screen production." (200) This article is divided into two parts. In the first (200-15), Jones discusses the technical problems of making sound films in color. In the second (215-25), he talks about the emotional consequences of using color. He argues that color has "great potential power to enhance, by either objective or subjective association, the emotional significance of the scene with which it is associated." (199) If color is "properly employed," he maintains, it "may exert a powerful influence on the emotional reactions." (215) But Jones acknowledges that "the language of color... is at present in a very rudimentary stage of evolution." (199) This "language or symbolism" awaits "the master motion picture dramatist" to develop it "into a powerful emotional tool." (199) Jones discusses "The Language of Color" (215-17) and draws on two works. One is George Field's Chromatography, written in 1835, and, more recently from Jones's vantage point, M. Luckiesh's The Language of Color (1920). The literature on the emotional influence of color and on color language and symbolism, he admits, is "scattered and fragmentary." (215) Jones devotes a section (221-24) to covering what he believes are the emotional qualities of seventeen tints -- argent, sunshine, candleflame, firelight, afterglow, peachblow, rose doree, verdante, aquagreen, turquoise, azure, nocturne, purplehase, fleur de lis, amaranth, caprice, and inferno. In his recommendations for the use of color in motion pictures, he makes suggestions not unlike those espoused a few years later by Natalie Kalmus of Technicolor. (There is no mention of Kalmus here or any other suggestions that the two conferred on this subject.) Jones urges "care and discretion" in using color and recommends against "the lavish and unrestrained use of color treatments." He says that "The use of too strong or saturated colors is in general not good, since such colors are usually obtrusive and distracting and may defeat rather than promote the attainment of the desired effect. A more subtle method will yield better results. This involves the employment of pastel tints which may be increased in subjective strength for a brief period of time by the action of successional contrast or juxtaposition in time." (225) Jones speaks to the issue that creating "an emotional atmosphere" is difficult because "individuals react differently to the same color." (225) He observes that people also react differently to hearing the same music, or to hearing the same words or language. He concludes, however, by asking: "If there is in the human mind, or, more specifically, in the collective mind of the motion picture public, a color consciousness, even though it be at present latent or but slightly developed, is it not worth considerable effort in thought and experimentation to develop a technique such that color can be applied to the screen in such a way as to enhance the emotional and dramatic values of the motion picture of the future?" (225) AU - Jones, Loyd A. DA - May 6-9, 1929 IS - 37 KW - censorship ref, secondary motion pictures motion pictures, and Kodak color color, and motion pictures color, and Kodak Technicolor Jones, Lloyd, and color cameras, and Kodak cameras Kodak, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Kodak color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kodak, and Lloyd Jones Kodak, and emotions color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color sound recording color, and sound films color, and tinting motion pictures, and color quotations quotations, and color quotations, and color and emotion color, and Natalie Kalmus Kalmus, Natalie, and color color, and music Kalmus, Natalie Kodak LB - 41230 PY - 1929 SP - 199-226 ST - Tinted Films for Sound Positives T2 - Transactions of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers TI - Tinted Films for Sound Positives VL - 13 ID - 4222 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Robert Edmond Jones, a well-known designer of stage scenes, designed the sets and costumes for the first feature-length Technicolor film, Becky Sharp, and also earlier, the short film La Cacuracha, also made in Technicolor. This article appeared about the time Becky Sharp opened. Jones says that "Technicolor makes it possible to see your favorite star in her true colors, far larger than life and many times as natural.... There is literally no end to the possibilities of this new medium. For color, like music, has no limitations. The color film is a creation in the true sense of the word. Something alive is in the world that was not there before." (13) Jones predicted that color was another step in making images more realistic -- an evolution from still photographs, to moving pictures, to talking black-and-white pictures, then films in color, and eventually, he said, there would be 3D films. Soon, he said, characters would "step off the screen and appear before you in the round -- all but living." (13) Color films had an emotion appeal and language different from black-and-white movies. Colored films were appealing because "Color is not only pleasing to the eye: it affects us emotionally; it means something to us; it has what we call significance." (13) Jones saw a parallel between color and music. "Beautiful color is pleasing to our eyes, just as beautiful sound is pleasing to our ears. But, more than this, beautiful color, properly arranged and composed on the screen and flowing from sequence to sequence just as music flows from movement to movement, stirs our minds and our emotions in the same way that music does. Color on the screen -- mobile color, flowing color -- is really a kind of visual music. Or, rather, it is an art for which there is as yet no name." (13) What was the "fundamental difference" between black-and-white movies and Technicolor films? "It is not only that color has been added to black-and-white. Color has been added for a reason -- to enhance the action of the drama. As a matter of fact, the difference between a black-and-white film and a Technicolor film is very like the difference between a play and an opera." (13) Jones said that "Within us all is a deep, unconscious response to the rhythms and harmonies of color, just as there is an unconscious response to rhythms and harmonies of sound.... We don't have to be musically educated to be aware of this. We just feel it. Even a child feels it." (13) Our understanding of musical and color harmonies "is a matter of instinct, planted in us all, ages ago." (58) Color cinema, according to Jones, was about to liberate actors bringing them "out of their black-and-white prison into the sunlight." (58) Jones believed that "black-and-white thinking" was of little use in making a color film. (58) The differences between the technique of black-and-white movies and the color films was as different as a painting was from a drawing. A new group of people alive to color, and who had not had there sense of color "numbed" by working among the "gray shadows" of black-and-white pictures, was needed. These as yet undiscovered artists would "profoundly influence not only the art of our time, but the life of our time. For they will partake of the magic power of the motion picture to lift us out of ourselves into another world of beauty and fantasy." (58) AU - Jones, Robert Edmond DA - June, 1935 IS - 4 KW - Kalmus, Herbert Jones, Robert Edmond censorship motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Technicolor, and Natalie Kalmus Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color color, and cinematographers color, and novelty color, and Robert Edmond Jones Jones, Robert Edmond, and color quotations quotations, and color on screen color, and music color, and Nature color, as visual opera color, and emotions ref, secondary ref, Vanity Fair color, and new way of seeing motion picture, and Becky Sharp motion pictures, and La Cacuracha color, and La Cacuracha color, and Becky Sharp motion pictures, and 3D media effects, and color films motion pictures, and magic color films, and magic media effects LB - 42760 PY - 1935 SP - 13, 58 ST - A Revolution in the Movies T2 - Vanity Fair TI - A Revolution in the Movies VL - 44 ID - 1555 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Jones argues in 1995 that what information technology has transformed higher education, "the conduct of inquiry in the humanities has not yet been influenced by the technology as it has in the sciences." At the time of this essay, Jones was an assistant university librarian at the University of Illinois, Chicago. AU - Jones, William Goodrich DA - Summer, 1995 IS - 90 KW - computers computers libraries information storage digital media education libraries, and new media libraries, and digital media computers and the Internet computers, and libraries libraries, and computers LB - 29800 PY - 1995 SP - 33-41 ST - The Disappearance of the Library: Issues in the Adoption of Information Technology by Humanists T2 - New Directions for Higher Education TI - The Disappearance of the Library: Issues in the Adoption of Information Technology by Humanists ID - 2736 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Joray and Knauss argue that the introduction of half-inch video tape recording equipment in the late 1960s expanded labor media opportunities beyond the closed circuit television and 16-mm film technology handled by audio-visual specialists. They argued that the video tape recorder could be used in labor education to simulate collective bargaining experiences for students. “Educational technology has advanced rapidly in recent years, but many labor educators have not experimented with the new technology in their teaching methods. Lack of understanding regarding the potential advantages and varied uses of this technology is one explanation for the absence of innovation in the classroom.” The video tape, they argued, provided an opportunity to record and later critique role-playing that simulates grievance and bargaining situations. In addition to providing immediate feedback for participants, the video tape allows the instructor to provide individual evaluation of participants. The video tape can also be used to record outside experts who cannot be available for in-class presentations. They described their own media studio, which included a Sony AV 3650 Videocorder, a Sony AVC 3200 camera with a 16-64 mm zoom lens, a Sony CVM-192U monitor, a Sony Cardiod F98 microphone and V-32 video tapes. --Phil Glende AU - Joray, Paul and Keith Knauss DA - May 1976 IS - 1 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) magnetic recording materials materials videotape VCRs magnetic tape Glende, Phil labor labor, and VCRs VCRs, and labor videotape, and labor labor, and videotape labor, and new media LB - 920 N1 - See also: office PY - 1976 SP - 19-26 ST - The Use of Video Tape Recording in Labor Studies: Implementation in Collective Bargaining Courses T2 - Labor Studies Journal TI - The Use of Video Tape Recording in Labor Studies: Implementation in Collective Bargaining Courses VL - 1 ID - 180 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by saying that "Ruskin, who 'could not consider architecture perfect without color,' is sounder than he is usually found to be in the expression of his artistic preference, and it is the re-discovery of color in decoration and the taste for full brilliant colors that, together with the more accurate reproduction of historic styles, has marked the twienth century as distinct from the nineteenth." (111) Jordan discusses how some colors had moral connotations. "Green is a color said by Wilde in his Intentions to have been favored by Wainewright the murderer, who 'had that curious love of a subtle artistic temperament, and in nations is said to denote a laxity, if not a decadence of morals.' Green has been so frequently used in decoration that it seems impossible to associate it with decadence; in the early and middle Georgian period nearly all the great houses, to judge by contemporary accounts, had a saloon or drawing-room painted olive green picked out with gold...." (111) Later, the author writes that "the taste for heavy -- what Mr. Ruskin would call impure -- colors lasted through the greater part of the Victorian period, when chocolate paint was in favor for the dining room, passages, and dark 111/112 rooms." (111-12) The article concludes by saying that present-day homes often have "an added note of modernity in the use of color." (112) AU - Jordan, E. DA - July 24, 1918 IS - 2222 KW - religion religion, and color media effects emotion decadence ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color color, and inadequacy of language color, in history color, and theory color, and language color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and poetry color, and religion religion, and color values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality ref, secondary ref, secular ref, American Architect LB - 39120 PY - 1918 SP - 111-12 ST - Color in Decoration T2 - American Architect TI - Color in Decoration VL - 114 ID - 4011 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author asks: "Does the use of color photographs have the power to change how readers look at the page, with an attraction strong enough to draw them away from information presented in black-and-white?" The article concludes "that color photographs may not be as powerful of a communication tool as believed by newspaper designers.... Overall, color does not seem to draw more attention to photographs unless the sole color picture on a page is in a subordinate position." AU - Josephson, Sheree DA - Winter 1996 IS - 1 KW - photography newspapers media effects journalism news and journalism color +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and color color, and newspapers media effects, and color news, and color color, and news +photography and visual communication photography, and color news, and color photography news LB - 3200 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1996 SP - 4-7, 12 ST - Questioning the Power Of Color T2 - Visual Communication Quarterly TI - Questioning the Power Of Color VL - 3 ID - 408 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the U. S. Supreme Court that held that motion pictures were not covered by the First Amendment. Jowett writes that "the motion picture represents a significant anomaly in American legal history. It has the distinction of being the only medium of communication ever subjected to systematic legal prior-restraint in the history of the United States." Not until 1952 (Joseph Burstyn v. Wilson) did the Court give movies First Amendment protection. AU - Jowett, Garth S. DA - 1989 IS - 1 KW - U. S. Supreme Court Supreme Court (U. S.) law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Supreme Court (U. S.) Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law Supreme Court (U. S.), and Mutual case (1915) Mutual case (1915) censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and censorship censorship, and Supreme Court (U. S.) motion pictures, and actors' status LB - 12750 PY - 1989 SP - 59-78 ST - 'A Capacity for Evil': The 1915 Supreme Court Mutual Decision T2 - Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television TI - 'A Capacity for Evil': The 1915 Supreme Court Mutual Decision VL - 9 ID - 453 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that in 1967 there were about 10,000 videotape recorders (VTRs) that were owned by broadcasters. Most belonged to institutions and not to individuals. For those 500 or so private individuals wealthy enough to own a VTR, "instant pornography" probably constituted most home production, this article speculates. It also says that the instant playback features of videotape should help underground filmmakers to develop "critical discipline." The article predicts that VTR should spawn "an image-making revolution equal to the one" brought by the Kodak camera. AU - Junker, Howard DA - Sept. 9, 1967 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) sound recording magnetic recording VCRs television television, and VCRs VCRs, and television motion pictures, and VCRs motion pictures home and new media home, and VCRs pornography VCRs, and pornography pornography, and VCRs home, and pornography underground films, and videotape Warhol, Andy, and videotape videotape, and Andy Warhol home underground films underground media videotape magnetic tape underground cinema LB - 31890 PY - 1967 SP - 33-34 ST - Underground Channels T2 - New Republic TI - Underground Channels VL - 157 ID - 2873 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Kahan asks "Why did American magazines delay introducing the photograph to their readers throughout the 1880s? Apparently editors thought hand-engraving was art, but the photograph was not." (53) The author notes that such magazines as Century and Harper's made liberal use of photographs in the 1890s but had few of them in the 1880s. And before "the turn of the century, magazine photography was already taking contemporary form. 'Story-telling' pictures were a feature of the Ladies' Home Journal. And Munsey's art nudes, though dished out as haute cuisine, were nevertheless cheesecake." (53) Why did not the revolution in magazine photography take place in the 1880s? "It was in 1881, after all, that Frederic E. Ives put on the market the first commercially practical halftone plate. Ives' invention, unlike its predecessors, was successful; for the first time it became feasible to print a photograph on the same page with type matter in a mass circulation magazines." (53) But "Ives' halftone were use, not to print photographs, but other forms of artwork, including oil painting and watercolors." (53) Kahan discusses early photography that used "dry" plate and then the early use of flexible film, noting that "film speeds did permit motion to be captured -- if the object was at a distance and not moving too fast." (54) The covers process of using halftone plates on pages 55-57. He notes that in the editorial offices the artist inferiority of photographs was a theme often heard and says that "the hand-engraving remained paramount. It was first-rate art. The photograph was not. It was principally for this reason and not, as has been supposed, because of the technical limitation of picture-taking and printing, that the growth of magazine photography was delayed until the nineties." (59) AU - Kahan, Robert S. DA - Winter, 1965 KW - wood engraving lighting journalism journalism Ives, Frederic fame celebrity ref, secondary magazines, and photography magazines photography news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality quotations newspapers, and photographs photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving lighting, and flashlight powder lighting, and magnesium flash newspapers, and Frederic Ives photo engraving photo engraving, and Frederic Ives Ives, Frederic, and photo engraving sexuality sexuality, and magazines magazines, and sexuality magazines, and nudes ref, secondary ref, secular LB - 38590 PY - 1965 SP - 53-59 ST - Magazine Photography Begins: An Editorial Negative T2 - Journalism Quarterly TI - Magazine Photography Begins: An Editorial Negative VL - 42 ID - 3958 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Kahle argues for the importance of preserving the contents of the Internet. He and others founded the Internet Archive in 1996. In the article, he addresses both the importance of creating an archive as well as some technical issues and privacy and copyright questions. All in all, this by Internet standards rather ancient article explains the basics of search engine cache memories (e.g. Google Cache) in combination with technical restrictions/possibilities and early privacy and copyright discussions. --Bart Nijman The author established the Internet Archive in April, 1996, and in this piece discusses efforts to preserve the Internet. He concludes that it will probably take many years "before an infrastructure that assures Internet preservation becomes well established -- and for questions involving intellectual-property issues to resolve themselves. For our part, we feel that it is important to proceed with the collection of the archival material because it can never be recovered in the future. And the opportunity to capture a record of the birth of a new medium will then be lost." --SV AU - Kahle, Brewster DA - March 1997 IS - 3 KW - computers information storage, and Internet archives archives, and Internet Nijman, Bart google archives, and google google, and archives seeing at a distance primary sources labor postmodernism modernism new way of seeing Internet archives office office, and new media office new way of seeing, and computers libraries libraries, and information storage information storage information storage computers and the Internet electronic preservation infrastructure intellectual property new way of seeing, and the Internet information storage libraries, and the Internet information storage, and the Internet electronic media archives, and Internet Internet Archive Internet, and archives archives LB - 11640 PY - 1997 SP - 82-83 ST - Preserving the Internet T2 - Scientific American TI - Preserving the Internet VL - 176 ID - 17 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Robert Kahn, then of the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency, became important in setting out a vision for the Strategic Computing Initiative during the remainder of the 1980s. In this article, he comments on "steady progress" during the previous 15-20 years in artificial intelligence. He write: "We are now at a stage where the confluence of these two disciplines -- microelectronics and artificial intelligence -- may indeed produce new generations of computers that are both fast and smart. "The nation that dominates this information - processing field will possess the keys to world leadership in the twenty-first century.... " (36) AU - Kahn, Robert E. DA - Nov. 1983 IS - 11 KW - technology R & D computers Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) chips, computer ARPA technology and society presidents, and new media research and development war microprocessors war non-USA +computers and the Internet +military communication DARPA Kahn, Robert Kahn, Robert, and strategic computing initiative Strategic Computing Initiative Reagan administration Reagan administration, and strategic computing Reagan, Ronald Reagan, Ronald, and strategic computing military communication, and strategic computing strategic computing, and military artificial intelligence Advanced Research Projects Agency research and development research and development, and strategic computing military-industrial complex chips, and strategic computing Japan Japan, and fifth generation computers fifth generation computers information processing microprocessing technology, and economic development technology, and change +artificial intelligence and biotechnology Information Age LB - 200 PY - 1983 SP - 36-41 ST - A New Generation in Computing T2 - IEEE Spectrum TI - A New Generation in Computing VL - 20 ID - 109 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This is perhaps the most frequently cited work by Natalie Kalmus on color. Kalmus headed Technicolor's Color Advisory Service and was credited for her advice on many Technocolor films during the 1930s and 1940s. "From a technical standpoint, motion pictures have been steadily tending toward more complete realism," Kalmus said. (139) "The advent of sound brought increased realism through the auditory sense. The last step -- color, with the addition of the chromatic sensations, completed the process. Now motion pictures are able to duplicate faithfully all the auditory and visual sensations." (140) But without proper understanding of color, movies "will be merely an accurate record of certain events." She urged that "we guide this realism into the realms of art.... It is not enough that we put a perfect record upon the screen. That record must be molded according to the basic princples of art." (140) Color, Kalmus believed that people did not appreciate color properly. People listen to music only for brief periods but they see color constantly. (140-41) Kalmus thought that the proper use of color was tied to the way color appears in Nature. "If the color schemes of natural objects were used as guides, less flagrant mistakes in color would occur." (141) Monochromatic films did not reflect Nature. "The use of black and white, however, to the complete exclusion of all color, is decidedly not in keeping with Nature's rules." (141) At the same time, "A super-abundance of color is unnatural, and has a most unpleasant effect not only upon the eye itself, but upon the mind as well." (142) Color could have an important impact on the emotions of audiences, Kalmus thought, and she had maintained that how people reacted to color had been well established. "The usual reaction of a color upon a normal person has been definitely determined. [my emphasis] Colors fall into two general groups. The first group is the 'warm,' and the second the 'cool' colors. Red, orange, and yellow are called the warm or advancing colors. They 142/143 call forth sensations of excitement, activity, and heat. In contrast, green, blue, and violet are the cool and retiring colors. They suggest rest, ease, coolness." (142-43) Kalmus then discusses the characteristics of several specific colors. (143-45) Kalmus explained that color was charted carefully and in great detail in the making of a Technicolor film. "In the preparation of a picture we read the script and prepare a color chart for the entire production, each scene, sequence, set, and character being considered. This chart may be compared to a musical score, and amplified the picture in a similar manner. The preparation of this chart calls for careful and judicious work. Subtle effects of beauty and feeling are not attained through haphazard methods, but through application of the rules of art and the physical laws of light and color in relation to literary laws and story values. [my emphasis] In the first place, this chart must be in absolute accord with the story action. Again, it must consider the art, principles of unity, color harmony, and contrast. Again, it must consider the practical limitations of motion picture production and photography. The art director, however, in handling a color picture, must be forever mindful that the human eye is many times more sensitive than the photographic emulsion and many times greater in scope than any process of reproduction. Therefore, he must be able to translate his colors in terms of the process. (145) "When we receiver the script for a new film, we carefully analyze each sequence and scene to ascertain what dominant mood or emotion is to be expressed. When this is decided, we plan to use the appropriate color or set of colors which will suggest that mood, thus actually fitting the color to the scene and augmenting its dramatic values." (145) [Note-- It is interesting to observe that this detailed consideration of color came at the same time the Production Code Administration was making detailed examinations of scripts to insure that they conformed to the moral values of the Production Code.] Kalmus concluded this piece by saying that "We must constantly practice color restraint. In the early two-color pictures, producers sometimes thought that because a process could reproduce color, they should flaunt vivid color continually before the eyes of the audience. This often led to unnatural and disastrous results, which experience is now largely eliminating." (147) [my emphasis] AU - Kalmus, Natalie M. DA - Aug. 1935 IS - 2 KW - Kalmus, Herbert censorship censorship ref, secondary motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Technicolor, and Natalie Kalmus Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color censorship, and Natalie Kalmus ref, secondary color, and primitives color, and cinematographers color, and novelty color, and music Kalmus, Natalie, and color music color, and sound films sound recording sound recording, and color color, and Nature LB - 40900 PY - 1935 SP - 139-47 ST - Color Consciousness T2 - Journal of SMPTE TI - Color Consciousness VL - 25 ID - 4189 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece appeared in an issue of Daedalus devoted to speculating about life in the year 2000. The author argues that "there is no reason to doubt that the technology will continue to improve -- probably at a geometric rate-- and that by the year 2000 it will be possible to place man under constant surveillance without his ever becoming aware of it. Moreover, since the culture will become cognizant of this advance, men will live with the constant possibility that they are under surveillance without ever being able to be sure whether this is so." Kalven says that three changes in American culture will have important implications for privacy. 1) The decline of the family for the family "has been the citadel of privacy"; 2) the decline of religion; and 3) a decline in the habit of reading. AU - Kalven, Harry, Jr. DA - Summer, 1967 IS - 3 KW - computers law, and privacy law +future and science fiction freedom values surveillance privacy privacy civil liberties, and surveillance surveillance bugging +computers and the Internet privacy, and computers values, and privacy control revolution future civil liberties future, and privacy LB - 4220 PY - 1967 SP - 876-82 ST - The Problems of Privacy in the Year 2000 T2 - Daedalus TI - The Problems of Privacy in the Year 2000 VL - 96 ID - 1810 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by commenting on the fragility of modern newspapers when compared to books. "When any attempt is made to weigh or measure the enormous masses of printed paper daily and hourly going into the rubbish heaps and junk shops because newspapers, and more leisurely made periodicals also, cannot even preserve themselves, it must be admitted by the most zealous champion of the press that periodicals seem merely the forests, destined to decay and obliteration; and the amber that holds fast the living thought of the day appears to be found in books alone." (411) The author notes that metaphors, then dated such as the "sword," are still commonly used in discussing war even when few soldiers are killed any longer by that weapon. He notes that literature is slow to adapt to modern condition. "It is not strange, therefore, that the place which electricity [emphasis in original text], in its varied manifestations, has won in literature is exceedingly small in comparison with the part it plays in the life of civilized nations. As yet we have little of it in books that are not too technical to be literature at all. The telegram arrives in the nick of time, it is true, in certain novels, as well as in the melodramas that are apt to be more 'mellow' than anything else. The newspapers tell how campaign orators 'electrify' their audiences and dilate upon the 'magnetic' presence of candidates; but it has been shown that the daily press is not literature, if for not other reason than its inability to make enduring records of the times...." (412) Karr predicts that literature will increasingly use themes relating to electricity. It already has had an effect in some areas, he says. "In a widely different way the effect of electricity upon letters is sure to be very great. It will render the distribution and use of book and periodicals easy and general to a degree never yet known. Modern newspapers are virtually the creation of electricity, and without it they could not exist in their present form. [my emphasis] The more highly systems of instantaneous transmission of intelligence can be developed the more newspapers will flourish. They are not literature, and they never will be more than a means of spreading the love of reading and quickening intelligence; but in that manner their effect upon the demand for books and the opportunities enjoyed by authors will be very important...." (413) The modern, electric newspaper has led to a decline in letter writing and conversation but may aid literature in the long term. The "enormous growth of newspaper patronage has taken the place of old-time tavern gossip rather than supplanted literature. It has done away, to a great extent, with the circulation of news by letter, and it has made much 'small talk' seem a waste of time to busy persons. They read instead of conversing. But it is more conducive to the use of books to read papers than to talk, matching the daily press against common gossip, and therefore the influence of electricity upon newspapers tends, in the long run and the large view, to promote the growth and prosperity of literature." (414) Karr goes on to conclude that "electricity is very likely to prove one of the best handmaidens literature has ever known." (414) The author comments that the storage battery will provide future illumination for reading and other activities. "Electricity promises to make London, Chicago, and Pittsburg smokeless and brilliant by day and night. For literature, that means more leisure, more patrons, and more inspiration to joyous and charming creation." (415) AU - Karr, Benjamin DA - Oct. 1901 IS - 4 KW - journalism history words vs. images images vs. words ref, secondary electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time electricity, and newspapers electricity, and journalism news and journalism journalism, and electricity newspapers, and electricity history and new media history, and books books, periodicals, newspapers history, and newspapers newspapers, and history historical preservation, and newspapers historical preservation images vs. print metaphors metaphors, and electricity quotations quotations, and electricity quotations, and newspapers critics critics, and newspapers newspapers, and critics newspapers, and books books, and newspapers newspapers, and literature batteries electricity, and storage batteries ref, secondary ref, secular ref, reform ref, Arena electricity, and reading books LB - 38040 PY - 1901 SP - 411-16 ST - Electricity and Literature T2 - The Arena TI - Electricity and Literature VL - 26 ID - 3903 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece gives a chronology of widescreen motion pictures from 1897 to 1984. AU - Katz, David DA - Summer 1985 IS - 21 KW - reference works widescreen References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and widescreen widescreen, and motion pictures +timelines timelines, and widescreen motion pictures LB - 2560 N1 - See filed under Velvet Light Trap. PY - 1985 SP - 62-64 ST - A Widescreen Chronology T2 - Velvet Light Trap TI - A Widescreen Chronology ID - 344 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author predicts (in 1977) that during the 1980s many people will own small computers that will have as much power as do the large computers of 1977. AU - Kay, Alan C. DA - Sept. 1977 IS - 3 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution home entertainment +future and science fiction home, and new media home computers and the Internet computers, personal computers home, and information technology microelectronics information technology +computers and the Internet personal computers computers, personal microelectronics revolution information technology, and home information technology, and consumer future future, and computers home, and computers LB - 3790 PY - 1977 SP - 230-45 ST - Microelectronics and the Personal Computer T2 - Scientific American TI - Microelectronics and the Personal Computer VL - 237 ID - 1767 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Financier Charles H. Keating, Jr., had started the Arizona-based Citizens for Decency through Law (CDL), a militant anti-pornography organization in 1957 by financier Charles H. Keating, Jr. President Richard Nixon appointed Keating to the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography, and he was an outspoken critic of its 1970 Report. In this article, Keating questions the Commission's objectivity and rejects its conclusion that no connected existed between erotica and sex crimes. AU - Keating, Charles H., Jr. DA - Jan. 1971 KW - conservatives sexuality motion pictures mass media First Amendment media effects crime freedom law censorship and ratings censorship pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970), and critics media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and crime crime, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment critics Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) LB - 22420 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1971 SP - 37-41 ST - The Report That Shocked the Nation T2 - Reader's Digest TI - The Report That Shocked the Nation ID - 970 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This speech, by the President of Calvin Productions, Inc., promotes the Super-8 format. This format, according to the editors of American Cinematographer, "having proved its worth in the professional arena, has spurred a ground swell of exciting new film production. Those who would ride the crest must catch the wave now!" The editors of this journal believed that the Super-8 format "could not fail to open up vast new horizons for the motion picture industry." Not only did the format offer amateur film makers "the facility for projecting a larger, sharper pictgure on his home movie screen," (678) but it woudl stimulate "a vast new area of professional motion picture production." (678) In his keynote address to the Annual Calvin Workshop, Keck that has president of a company manufacturing 8mm film, "we are in exactly the same position with 8mm as we were with 16mm in the 30's. Although, fortunately, we are on the other side of the fence." (678) Keck says that "all print production will be done in color," (693) and that for economic reasons, 8mm films will be released in 16mm. "How are films to be produced for ultimate release in 8mm?" he asked. "We have answered this question to our own satisfaction -- they will be produced in 16mm. Why? Because virtually all the equipment in production houses, laboratories, in-plant operations, governmental facilities, are in 16mm form. There exists no professional 8mm production equipment, and I cannot conceive of manufacturers developing this kind of equipment, for the simple reason that no market will exist. The cost of camera raw stock in film production is insignificant in our total costs." (693) AU - Keck, Leonard W. DA - Sept., 1968 IS - 9 KW - entertainment entertainment, home cinematography sound recording 8mm 8mm, and Super-8 cameras cameras, 8mm sound recording, and Super-8 sound recording, and 8mm cameras magnetic recording magnetic recording, and Super-8 8mm, and magnetic sound recording education education, and 8mm film education, and Super 8mm film 8mm, and Super-8 16mm 16mm film 8mm, compared to 16mm (1930s) color home and new media home entertainment, and 8mm film color, and 8mm 8mm film, and production equipment motion pictures home entertainment home LB - 30260 PY - 1968 SP - 678, 684, 693, 699-701, 708 ST - 'The New Dimension' T2 - American Cinematographer TI - 'The New Dimension' VL - 49 ID - 2781 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This illustrated article discusses the life and work of the well-known illustrator Joseph Pennell. At the outset, the author makes an interesting observation about fame and its relation to how widespread various artists' work can be distributed. "Next after the illustrator it is probably the really able original etcher to whom fame comes quickly; and after him, in a descending scale, come the portrait painter, then the painter of other subjects, and last of all in order of quick promotion, the sculptor. His statue or group cannot easily be multiplied, is difficult to move from place to place, and for these reasons must long remain comparatively unknown, while, on the contrary, the picture of the illustrator is examined by thousands of people in thousands of different places from the very day of its birth." (173) [my emphasis] AU - Keppel, Frederick DA - Sept. 23, 1905 IS - 4 KW - wood engraving modern art ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving books, periodicals, newspapers photography, and books books, and photography photography, and zinc plates words vs. images images vs. words quotations quotations, and increase in pictures quotations, and half tones photography, and cameras cameras cameras, and photo engraving photography, instantaneous photography, and photogravure photogravure photography, and art modern art, and photography modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing photography, and space and time space and time photography, and time photography, and space Pennell, Joseph duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and illustrations fame, and illustrations illustrations, and fame fame fame, and new technologies books illustrations news and journalism photography LB - 41550 PY - 1905 SP - 172-83 ST - Joseph Pennell: Etcher, Illustrator, Author T2 - Outlook TI - Joseph Pennell: Etcher, Illustrator, Author VL - 81 ID - 4254 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that “By 1916 the modern movie star system had emerged.” (384) The author sees the emergence of the star system going through four stages, the third of which was a “transitional stage (1909-15)….” The author discusses the significance of close-up and parallel editing, (393-4) and discusses ideas set out by Frank Woods, the influential critic for the New York Dramatic Mirror in early 1910. He argued that “Cinematic realism could no longer be seen as merely the faithful rendition of spatial and temporal reality.” (Kerr’s quotation, p. 395) “With the close-up and parallel editing anchoring ‘big ideas,’ film product could narrate a powerful reality independent of the technical and business conditions that had physically and economically produced it. He saw the new realism as 395/396 responsible for the screen’s new-found power in exerting its ‘personal magnetism on the spectator.’” (395-96) Kerr also discusses Woods’ recommendation to actors that they stop addressing the camera and to act naturally. “He urged that actors be “trained … to be gazed upon without gazing back,” she writes. “Implicit … in this discussion of the actor’s internal state was a new view of the importance of film ‘personality.’” She goes on to mention the first mass circulated fan magazine and “The Biograph Girl.” (398) In a section called “The Rise of the Star as Commodity” (401-09), Kerr writes about the emergence of Lillian Gish as a “star.” With the rise of the “star,” “the individual actor’s projection was now the conduit between product and audience.” (402) Kerr uses Louis Reeves Harrison’s Feb. 18, 1911 article, “Eyes and Lips,” in Moving Picture World to explain how with the close-up the actor’s facial expression magnified the power of personality. “The face in the close-up had become a paradox: a surface whose authenticity promised limitless depths. Under this formulation, film products were no longer seen as conduits for ‘big ideas,’ but rather as the special forum for the actor’s authentic self-expression.” (403) Harrison’s ideas were incorporated “into the distribution and promotion strategies surrounding the new commodified film star.” (403) AU - Kerr, Catherine E. DA - Autumn 1990 IS - 3 (Service Industries) KW - theater stage fame fame celebrity actors acting ref, secondary celebrity culture fame personality motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars audiences media effects motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures media effects, and audiences media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and acting acting, and facial expression motion pictures, and not facing camera acting, and not facing camera acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting personality motion pictures, and personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and stars capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business motion pictures, and stars (origins) motion pictures, and fan magazines fan magazines Gish, Lillian Harrison, Louis Reeves ref, secondary ref, secular motion pictures LB - 15470 PY - 1990 SP - 383-410 ST - Incorporating the Star: The Intersection of Business and Aesthetic Strategies in Early American Film T2 - Business History Review TI - Incorporating the Star: The Intersection of Business and Aesthetic Strategies in Early American Film VL - 64 ID - 3706 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, condensed from Harper's Bazaar, considers "the strange effects of color on the human mind." AU - Ketcham, Howard DA - March, 1937 IS - 179 KW - color LB - 2480 N1 - See filed under Reader's Digest. PY - 1937 SP - 47-50 ST - Color Schemers T2 - Reader's Digest TI - Color Schemers VL - 30 ID - 336 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article examines federal communication policy in antebellum America. During this period communications policy was concerned mostly with the mail. Throughout this era there were conflicts over postage rates on newspapers. As the telegraph came into greater sue in the 1850s, those conflicts increased. According to Kielbowicz communications played a big part in the modernization of the United States, and many of the tensions and debates over modernization were reflected in the conflicts over communications policy. Jacksonians “championed a quiet, stable, localized, face-to-face society” whereas Whigs “felt more comfortable in the increasingly commercial and cosmopolitan environment of the modernizing United States.” During the 1830s and early 1840s the major issue was postage rates for newspapers carried through the mail. Jacksonian Democrats defended a rate of one to two cents per newspaper as a way of protecting small town and rural newspapers from large city newspapers. They feared that people in outlying areas would want to read the big city newspapers if postage was free, and given the economies of scale some of the larger newspapers like the New York Herald and, after 1841, the New York Tribune, were beginning to achieve, those newspapers might even be cheaper than the local papers. Whigs and anti-Jacksonian Democrats argued that abolishing postage for newspapers would put all papers into democratic competition on an equal footing, and responded to Jacksonian concerns about displacement by contending that large city newspapers complement rather than displace local newspapers. In small towns and rural areas local newspapers continued to remain competitive with the large metropolitan papers throughout the antebellum era. The Post Office Act of 1845 legislated protection for local newspapers by dispensing with postage for newspapers only within thirty miles of their site of publication. Large or oversize newspapers, which were almost always the metropolitan “country” editions published weekly, were assessed an additional fee. But by the 1850s local newspapers were aided by the telegraph in their battle with the large city papers. As one Congressional report concluded, “When the papers from the city arrive, their chief news has been several days anticipated upon the wings of the lightning.” By the eve of the Civil War, federal communication policy had shifted toward a more uniform and lower postage rate for newspapers. The Post Office Act of 1852 allowed for any newspaper under three ounces to be mailed anywhere in the nation for one cent, encouraging more rural customers to take a big city paper. Total circulation of newspapers had increased dramatically and the number of papers sent through the mails had also increased. Although data is hard to come by, it seems that the influx of more metropolitan editions into the countryside did complement rather than displace the local newspaper. --David Henning AU - Kielbowicz, Richard B. DA - March 1986 KW - journalism news and journalism newspapers news +telegraph +postal service Post Office Act, 1852 +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and circulation (19th century) news Henning, David telegraph, electric Post Office Act, 1845 newspapers news, and postal service newspapers, and postal service post office LB - 4020 PY - 1986 SP - 21-35 ST - Modernization, Communication Policy, and the Geopolitics of News, 1820-1860 T2 - Critical Studies in Mass Communication TI - Modernization, Communication Policy, and the Geopolitics of News, 1820-1860 VL - 3 ID - 1790 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This rather long-winded article says that newspapers are replacing rhetoric and that the modern newspaper, as Max O'Rell once said, is a "huge collection of short stories." (O'Rell quoted, 120) The author also quotes James Gordon Bennett, who reportedly said that the "mission, if journalism has any, is to startle or amuse." (Bennett quoted, p. 120) The "secret of the modern newspaper's universality of appeal," Kimball writes, "lies in its miscellaneousness, which provides almost everybody with something that interests or entertains." (120) He comments on the "growing tendency toward 'jounalization,'" the press's use of slang and how there seems to be an increasing number of "journalistic books" (121). He discusses how newspapers are encroaching on the terrain of magazines and also the nature of Sunday papers which, starting about 25 years earlier, justified their "Sabbath-breaking by 'pointing with pride' to a literary excellence equal to that of the magazine." (122) The author says he compared the content of three publications -- Harper's, Scribner's Magazine, and Century -- in 1872 and 1897. Among the changes: 1) the disappearance of travel article; 2) more short stories; 3) ten percent more article on contemporary topics; and 4) the number of scientific articles was about the same. (124) Kimball concludes by saying: "To lay exclusive stress on the demoralization of what is sensational is to overlook a more serious condition, the quiet journalistic invasion of so much of the intercourse and thinking of life." (124) AU - Kimball, Amos Reed DA - July 1900 KW - illustrations entertainment, and journalism entertainment cartoons ref, secondary news and journalism books, periodicals, newspapers advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers newspapers, and Sunday papers newspapers, and linotype color color, and Sunday papers newspapers, and color newspapers, and illustrations illustrations, and Sunday papers newspapers, and religion religion, and newspapers religion newspapers, and novels newspapers, and fiction actors, and Sunday papers newspapers, and sports newspapers, and cartoons cartoons, and Sunday papers Bennett, James Gordon news, and entertainment newspapers, and entertainment journalism, and entertainment entertainment,and journalism sensationalism sensationalism, and journalism journalism, and sensationalism critics critics, and journalism ref, secondary ref, secular ref, political ref, literary ref, Atlantic Monthly actors advertising journalism news LB - 38490 PY - 1900 SP - 119-24 ST - The Invasion of Journalism T2 - Atlantic Monthly TI - The Invasion of Journalism VL - 86 ID - 3948 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece weighs in on the side of those who would argue that technological innovation is not necessarily the tail that wags the dog, but often lags behind, waiting for other factors to make technology’s debut more auspicious. In particular, color in movies, though dating back to the well before the 1930s, did not completely overtake black-and-white until the 1960s, when the economic, and particularly the social climate, made color finally in widespread demand. Americans seemed at last to have put the “realism” era of the depression and war behind them, and were ready for the “fantasy” with which colored film has always been associated. This article makes good use of magazine articles from days gone by. --Gordon Jackson AU - Kindem, Gorham A. DA - Spring, 1979 IS - 2 KW - corporations corporations journalism news and journalism color +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures Technicolor Eastman Kodak motion pictures, and Technicolor motion pictures, and Eastman Kodak +television television, and color color, and television television, and color movies color, and movie realism motion pictures, color and realism motion pictures, color and fantasy news, and color television, news and color Eastman Color Jackson, Gordon color, and movie fantasy color, and reality news LB - 17830 PY - 1979 SP - 29-39 ST - Hollywood's Conversion to Color: The Technological, Economic and Aesthetic Factors T2 - Journal of the University Film Association TI - Hollywood's Conversion to Color: The Technological, Economic and Aesthetic Factors VL - 31 ID - 693 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The authors write: "A commn belief among marketing practitioners is that increasing the vividness of a message enhances its persuasiveness. This belief has received support in experimental investigations, but vividness also has been found to undermine persuasion or to have no effect. The authors extend a current view of memory operation to predict when and how vividness will affect persuasion. According to this view, the favorableness of available information determines the persuasive effect of vividness. This assertion is tested and supported in a series of experiments. The findings are discussed in terms of strategies for controlling vividness effects." AU - Kisielius, Jolita and Brian Sternthal DA - Feb. 1984 KW - photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations public relations advertising propaganda newspapers media effects journalism news and journalism color +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and color color, and newspapers media effects, and color news, and color color, and news +photography and visual communication photography, and color news, and color photography color, and advertising advertising, and color color, and vividness media effects, and vividness propaganda, and vividness advertising news LB - 3210 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1984 SP - 54-64 ST - Detecting and Explaining Vividness Effects in Attitudinal Judgments T2 - Journal of Marketing Research TI - Detecting and Explaining Vividness Effects in Attitudinal Judgments VL - 21 ID - 409 ER - TY - JOUR AB - "The effect of vividness on attitudinal judgments is a controversial issue," the authors acknowledge. "Experimental evidence indicates that vividness often has no effect on attitudinal judgments; however, there is also evidence that vividness can enhance or undermine the favorableness of attitudinal judgments." The authors here "introduce the availability - valence hypothesis to predict and explain the effects of vividness and to account for the frequent observation of a null effect." AU - Kisielius, Jolita and Brian Sternthal DA - March 1986 KW - photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations public relations advertising propaganda newspapers media effects journalism news and journalism color +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and color color, and newspapers media effects, and color news, and color color, and news +photography and visual communication photography, and color news, and color photography color, and advertising advertising, and color color, and vividness media effects, and vividness propaganda, and vividness advertising news LB - 3220 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1986 SP - 418-31 ST - Examining the Vividness Controversy: An Availability-Valence Interpretation T2 - Journal of Consumer Research TI - Examining the Vividness Controversy: An Availability-Valence Interpretation VL - 12 ID - 410 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The series in which this article appears is one of the most comprehensive, if not the most comprehensive, histories of sex in the movies. Yet it is not documented. Readers are left to accept the authors' assertions without benefit of notes to document where the information comes. This article, and the series, have served as a basis for much subsequent writing about sex in the cinema. Many writers have apparently accepted these articles without question. In this article, the authors contend that during the 1930s, "when America's censors were most potent, the sexploitation movies could anticipate at least 2000 bookings across the country, while today's [1967] nudies rarely average over 400." AU - Knight, Arthur AU - Alpert, Hollis IS - 6 KW - audiences self-regulation Production Code motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) sexuality pornography sexuality values religion law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and history of sex nudity motion pictures, and nudity censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and exploitation circuit pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and history of theaters motion pictures, and porn theaters Production Code, and exploitation circuit Europe, and erotic films (1930s) motion pictures, and European erotic films Europe LB - 16420 SP - Playboy (June 1967): 124 -36, 177-80, 182, 185-88 ST - The History of Sex in Cinema: Part XVI: The Nudies T2 - Playboy TI - The History of Sex in Cinema: Part XVI: The Nudies VL - 14 ID - 594 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The series in which this article appears is one of the most comprehensive, if not the most comprehensive, histories of sex in the movies. Yet it is not documented. Readers are left to accept the authors' assertions without benefit of notes to document where the information comes. This article, and the series, have served as a basis for much subsequent writing about sex in the cinema. Many writers have apparently accepted these articles without question. This article examines international influences on American sex and cinema during the 1950s. AU - Knight, Arthur AU - Alpert, Hollis IS - 12 KW - audiences self-regulation Production Code motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) sexuality pornography sexuality values religion law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and history of sex nudity motion pictures, and nudity censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and exploitation circuit pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and history of theaters motion pictures, and porn theaters Production Code, and exploitation circuit foreign films motion pictures, and foreign films foreign films, and sexuality motion pictures, and U. S. films abroad LB - 16470 SP - Playboy (Dec. 1966): 232-50, 252, 254-56, 258 ST - The History of Sex in Cinema: Part XIII: The Fifties -- Sex Goes International T2 - Playboy TI - The History of Sex in Cinema: Part XIII: The Fifties -- Sex Goes International VL - 13 ID - 599 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The series in which this article appears is one of the most comprehensive, if not the most comprehensive, histories of sex in the movies. Yet it is not documented. Readers are left to accept the authors' assertions without benefit of notes to document where the information comes. This article, and the series, have served as a basis for much subsequent writing about sex in the cinema. Many writers have apparently accepted these articles without question. In this article, the authors deal with erotic films made in Europe during the 1930s. In America, these movies ran into trouble from state and local censors, as well as with the U. S. Bureau of Customs. AU - Knight, Arthur and Hollis Alpert DA - Feb. 1966 IS - 2 KW - audiences self-regulation Production Code motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) sexuality pornography sexuality values religion law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and history of sex nudity motion pictures, and nudity censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and exploitation circuit pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and history of theaters motion pictures, and porn theaters Production Code, and exploitation circuit Europe, and erotic films (1930s) motion pictures, and European erotic films Europe LB - 2860 PY - 1966 SP - 134-41, 167-68, 170-72 ST - The History of Sex in Cinema: Part Seven: The Thirties -- Europe's Decade of Unbuttoned Erotica T2 - Playboy TI - The History of Sex in Cinema: Part Seven: The Thirties -- Europe's Decade of Unbuttoned Erotica VL - 13 ID - 374 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The series in which this article appears is one of the most comprehensive, if not the most comprehensive, histories of sex in the movies. Yet it is not documented. Readers are left to accept the authors' assertions without benefit of notes to document where the information comes. This article, and the series, have served as a basis for much subsequent writing about sex in the cinema. Many writers have apparently accepted these articles without question. In this article, the authors discuss Mae West, Greta Garbo, and other movie stars from the 1930s, a period when the Production Code was in effect. AU - Knight, Arthur and Hollis Alpert DA - April, 1966 IS - 4 KW - audiences self-regulation Production Code motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) sexuality pornography sexuality values religion law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and history of sex nudity motion pictures, and nudity censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and exploitation circuit pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and history of theaters motion pictures, and porn theaters Production Code, and exploitation circuit Europe, and erotic films (1930s) motion pictures, and European erotic films Europe LB - 2870 PY - 1966 SP - 142-49, 201-14, 216-17 ST - The History of Sex in Cinema: Part Eight: Sex Stars of the Thirties T2 - Playboy TI - The History of Sex in Cinema: Part Eight: Sex Stars of the Thirties VL - 13 ID - 375 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The series in which this article appears is one of the most comprehensive, if not the most comprehensive, histories of sex in the movies. Yet it is not documented. Readers are left to accept the authors' assertions without benefit of notes to document where the information comes. This article, and the series, have served as a basis for much subsequent writing about sex in the cinema. Many writers have apparently accepted these articles without question. In this article, the authors discuss experimental films, a field dominated during the 1960s by New York movie makers. "What distinguished the 'far-out' films of the Fifties from the underground films of the Sixties, however, was neither their point of origin nor their choice of themes. It was their technical polish, their obvious concern for the physical appearance of the image, their feeling not only for the surface but for the form of the completed work." AU - Knight, Arthur and Hollis Alpert DA - April, 1967 IS - 4 KW - Mekas, Jonas underground cinema audiences self-regulation Production Code motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality underground media underground films values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) sexuality pornography sexuality values religion law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA motion pictures, and underground films motion pictures, and experiental films underground films, and sex experimental films, and sex Mekas, Jonas +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and history of sex nudity motion pictures, and nudity censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and exploitation circuit pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and history of theaters motion pictures, and porn theaters Production Code, and exploitation circuit Europe, and erotic films (1930s) motion pictures, and European erotic films Europe experimental films LB - 2880 PY - 1967 SP - 136-41, 196-98, 200-04, 206-08, 210-12 ST - The History of Sex in Cinema: Part XV: Experimental Films T2 - Playboy TI - The History of Sex in Cinema: Part XV: Experimental Films VL - 14 ID - 376 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The series in which this article appears is one of the most comprehensive, if not the most comprehensive, histories of sex in the movies. Yet it is not documented. Readers are left to accept the authors' assertions without benefit of notes to document where the information comes. This article, and the series, have served as a basis for much subsequent writing about sex in the cinema. Many writers have apparently accepted these articles without question. In this article, the authors discuss explicit stag films, or "blue" movies. They note a change in audiences from the 1950s to 1960s and a slight change in the nature of the entertainment -- "a slight increase in appeals to the quirkier sexual proclivities -- mild sadomasochism, garter-belt and high-heeled-shoe fetishism...." They note the increased private use of good-quality 8mm home-movie equipment. They note that "stag films began finding their way into private homes" which gave women access to them for perhaps the first time. AU - Knight, Arthur and Hollis Alpert DA - Nov. 1967 IS - 11 KW - entertainment audiences self-regulation Production Code motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality entertainment, home women, and new media values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) sexuality pornography sexuality home entertainment values religion law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and history of sex nudity motion pictures, and nudity censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and exploitation circuit pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and history of theaters motion pictures, and porn theaters Production Code, and exploitation circuit motion pictures, and European erotic films motion pictures, and stag films stag films motion pictures, and explicit sex films home, and stag films home, and 8mm film women women, and erotica women, and 8mm films home, and pornography LB - 2890 PY - 1967 SP - 154-58, 170, 172, 174-76, 178, 180, 182-84, 186, 188-89 ST - The History of Sex in Cinema: Part Seventeen: The Stag Film T2 - Playboy TI - The History of Sex in Cinema: Part Seventeen: The Stag Film VL - 14 ID - 377 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The series in which this article appears is one of the most comprehensive, if not the most comprehensive, histories of sex in the movies. Yet it is not documented. Readers are left to accept the authors' assertions without benefit of notes to document where the information comes. This article, and the series, have served as a basis for much subsequent writing about sex in the cinema. Many writers have apparently accepted these articles without question. In this article, the authors discuss erotica in European films, the treatment of such theme as rape, abortion, and incest, and their impact in America. AU - Knight, Arthur and Hollis Alpert DA - July 1968 IS - 7 KW - audiences self-regulation Production Code motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) sexuality pornography sexuality values religion law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and history of sex nudity motion pictures, and nudity censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and exploitation circuit pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and history of theaters motion pictures, and porn theaters Production Code, and exploitation circuit motion pictures, and European erotic films Europe Europe, and erotic films (1960s) motion pictures, and Europe (1960s) values, and motion pictures abortion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion rape, and motion pictures motion pictures, and rape incest, and motion pictures motion pictures, and incest values abortion LB - 2900 PY - 1968 SP - 130-45, 181-88, 190-98 ST - The History of Sex in Cinema: Part XIX: The Sixties Eros Unbound in Foreign Films T2 - Playboy TI - The History of Sex in Cinema: Part XIX: The Sixties Eros Unbound in Foreign Films VL - 15 ID - 378 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The series in which this article appears is one of the most comprehensive, if not the most comprehensive, histories of sex in the movies. Yet it is not documented. Readers are left to accept the authors' assertions without benefit of notes to document where the information comes. This article, and the series, have served as a basis for much subsequent writing about sex in the cinema. Many writers have apparently accepted these articles without question. In this article, the authors discuss Marilyn Monroe, Brigitte Bardot, Elizabeth Taylor, Kim Novak, Gina Lollobridida, Sophia Loren, Marlon Brando, James Dean, Rock Hudson, and other movie stars of the 1950s. AU - Knight, Arthur and Hollis Alpert DA - Jan., 1967 IS - 1 KW - motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality sexuality pornography sexuality law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and history of sex nudity motion pictures, and nudity censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and exploitation circuit pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and history of motion pictures, and sex (1950s) LB - 2910 PY - 1967 SP - 96-108, 130, 222-24, 227-32 ST - The History of Sex in Cinema: Part XIV: Sex Stars of the Fifties T2 - Playboy TI - The History of Sex in Cinema: Part XIV: Sex Stars of the Fifties VL - 14 ID - 379 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article examines the way in which television was portrayed in motion pictures prior to World War II. He notes that discussion appeared about "distant electric vision" soon after Alexander Graham Bell demonstrated the telephone in 1876. (129) The topic appeared in both science fiction and in publications that dealt with scientific fact after the turn of the century. Hugo Gernsback, for example, dealt with TV during the 1920 in Television, the first U. S. magazine on the topic, and in also the first science fiction magazine, Amazing Stories, which he started in 1926. Early versions of TV, sometimes shown as a picture phone, appeared in such films as Universal's Up the Ladder (1922), Metropolis (1927), H. G. Wells' Things to Come (1936), and Charlie Chaplin's Modern Times (1937). Modern Times offered an "unnerving vision of television as 'all seeing eye', a high-tech mixture of telescope and crystal ball combining equal elements of surveillance and voyeurism." (132) Serials, such as Flash Gordon (1936), also showed TV with a dark potential. (132) By the late 1930s, such movies as Exiled to Shanghai (1937) began to portray television's news gathering potential. (138) AU - Koszarski, Richard DA - 1998 IS - 2 KW - ref, secondary motion pictures television television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television science fiction and future television, and science fiction science fiction, and television telephones telephones, and television television, and telephones telephones, and picture phones television, and picture phones surveillance, and television television, and surveillance privacy privacy, and television television, and privacy news and journalism television, and news news, and television news science fiction surveillance LB - 40210 PY - 1998 SP - 128-40 ST - Coming Next Week: Images of Television in Pre-War Motion Pictures T2 - Film History TI - Coming Next Week: Images of Television in Pre-War Motion Pictures VL - 10 ID - 4119 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This excellent article discusses how the arrival of sound in Hollywood changed the working conditions for musicians. Prior to sound movies, musicians played in theaters accompanying silent films. After the arrival of sound, many of these workers lost their jobs, while other found lucrative work providing soundtracks for movies. The author also comments on the arrival of sound recording on long playing records and radio. By the mid- to late- 1930s, it was common for radio hookups via telephone to broadcast bands playing in hotels. “Between the two world wars, the ‘music sector’ of the economy shifted from a diffused structure to a concentrated, highly mechanized setting. This shift transformed the musicians’ working world....” This article has good leads regarding the technology of music recording. AU - Kraft, James P. DA - April 1994 IS - 2 KW - +sound recording music +motion pictures +sound recording +motion pictures motion pictures, and musicians musicians, and motion pictures sound recording, and capitalism sound recording, and labor +radio radio, and records sound recording, and LP records capitalism, and sound recording capitalism LB - 5500 PY - 1994 SP - 289-314 ST - Musicians in Hollywood: Work and Technological Change in Entertainment Industries, 1926-1940 T2 - Technology and Culture TI - Musicians in Hollywood: Work and Technological Change in Entertainment Industries, 1926-1940 VL - 35 ID - 1935 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This articles discusses the difficulties posed in location shooting in MGM "Sandpiper" (1965) which was filmed from Carmel to Paris. The story is about an "unconventional" (p. 429) love affair between a married man and woman who is not his wife. The actors, Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor, had only limited visas. Some locations were almost inaccessible. The filming involved shooting scenes at night. AU - Krasner, Milton DA - July, 1965 IS - 7 KW - sex motion pictures location shooting motion pictures, and location shooting movie, Sandpiper Sandpiper Burton, Richard Taylor, Elizabeth sexuality sex scenes, and location shooting lighting sex scenes, and lighting lighting, and sex scenes location shooting, and problems cinematography LB - 29960 PY - 1965 SP - 428-31 ST - My Color Photography of The Sandpiper T2 - American Cinematographer TI - My Color Photography of The Sandpiper VL - 46 ID - 2751 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Krattenmaker, Thomas G. AU - Esterow, Marjorie L. DA - March, 1983 IS - 4 KW - entertainment corporations corporations Federal Communications Commission (FCC) entertainment, home values sexuality values obscenity religion values morality home entertainment home Home Box Office (HBO) HBO regulation values community law censorship and ratings censorship court cases law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures television FCC, and television television, and FCC cable TV, and FCC FCC, and cable TV censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Court of Appeals, and motion pictures motion pictures and Court of Appeals motion pictures, and freedom HBO case court cases, and HBO obscenity, and Court of Appeals Court of Appeals, and HBO case motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and HBO case censorship, and community standards community standards, and censorship pornography pornography, and HBO case HBO case, and pornography pornography, and community standards, theaters motion pictures, and cable television television, and motion pictures FCC indecency law, and indecency cable television, and indecency indecency, and cable television morality, and cable television cable home, and new media LB - 20500 PY - 1983 SP - 606-36 ST - Censoring Indecent Cable Programs: The New Morality Meets the New Media T2 - Fordham Law Review TI - Censoring Indecent Cable Programs: The New Morality Meets the New Media VL - 51 ID - 862 ER - TY - JOUR AB - "Five ethical objections to the use of mass media and the Internet help explain why the Plain People of North America avoid new communication technologies. Each subgroup of plain folk -- including Amish, Mennonites, and Brethren -- adopt differing amounts of new technology, and the use varies from region to region or even from community to community. Old media such as the radio and telephone and newer media such as television and the Internet introduce different and unwelcome moral values into plain communities, although the telephone is often a borderline case. The ethical system of the Old Order groups provide a unique and pragmatic critique of the widespread acceptance of mass media and the Internet in the large social world." AU - Kraybill, Donald B. DA - 1998 IS - 2 KW - ethics computers communication revolution values radio +computers and the Internet values, and new media values, and the Internet values, and telephones +telephones telephones, and values +radio radio, and values ethics, and new media Amish, and new media Mennonites, and new media communication revolution, and values communication revolution ethics critics LB - 4620 PY - 1998 SP - 99-110 ST - Plain Reservations: Amish and Mennonite Views of Media and Computers T2 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics TI - Plain Reservations: Amish and Mennonite Views of Media and Computers VL - 13 ID - 1849 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article was among those written by social, legal, and political conservatives in the aftermath of the 1970 Report by the President Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. They warned that pornography dehumanized society, eroded self-restraint, undermined democratic government, and, when disseminated through mass media, could even destroy civilization. The 1970 Report of the President Commission on Obscenity and Pornography argued that pornography and erotica were essential harmless and that restrictions imposed on them by society should be loosened. AU - Kristol, Irving DA - March 28, 1971 KW - conservatives sexuality motion pictures mass media First Amendment media effects crime freedom law censorship and ratings censorship pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and crime crime, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment critics LB - 22390 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1971 SP - 24-25, 112-15 ST - Pornography, Obscenity and the Case for Censorship T2 - New York Times Magazine TI - Pornography, Obscenity and the Case for Censorship ID - 967 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This study, conducted by the Schwerin Research Corp., drew the following conclusions in 1956 about the effectiveness of color television commercials: 1) "Color increases effectiveness but decreases remembrance"; 2) "Distracting use of color hurts effectiveness of TV commercials"; 3) "Moderately effective black-and-white commercials grow stronger through use of color"; 4) "Color helps certain products win stronger brand identification"; 5) "Color influences women more than men"; 6) "Color is most effective for holiday and other special promotions." AU - Kudisch, Leonard DA - May 11, 1956 KW - advertising and public relations color +television women women, and color ads advertising, and color color, and advertising color, and television television, and color ads media effects media effects, and color ads media effects, and women media effects, and color TV advertising LB - 29700 PY - 1956 SP - 27-28 ST - What Schwerin finds in first comparison of color and black-and-white TV T2 - Printers' Ink TI - What Schwerin finds in first comparison of color and black-and-white TV ID - 2722 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Those people who supported the conclusion of the 1970 Report of the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pointed to Denmark where pornography had been legalized and where the more liberal laws appeared to have contributed to a decrease in child molestations. AU - Kutschinsky, Berl DA - 1973 KW - sexuality motion pictures mass media media effects crime non-USA pornography media effects motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and supporters pornography, and crime crime, and pornography Denmark Denmark, and pornography pornography, and defenders LB - 22330 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1973 SP - 163-81 ST - The Effect of Easy Availability of Pornography on the Incidence of Sex Crimes: The Danish Experience T2 - Journal of Social Issues TI - The Effect of Easy Availability of Pornography on the Incidence of Sex Crimes: The Danish Experience VL - 29 ID - 961 ER - TY - JOUR AB - An effort to explain how motion pictures work. Laird comments on the stage of color motion pictures. "Colored projection will always be hampered not only by the expense and great mechanical difficulties involved, but also by the fact that the [day?] varies with the colors and it is impossible to get the smoothness that is obtained with black and white. Negative after- images of the colors which are projected with a light stronger than is usual in daily life also contribute to the difficulty of successful colored projection." (378) AU - Laird, Donald A. DA - April 1922 IS - 4 KW - photography motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space ref, secondary motion pictures, instantaneous motion pictures, and number of pictures electricity sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity photography and visual communication color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color lighting lighting, and color movies color, and lighting color, and movie projection motion pictures, and projectors ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific Monthly LB - 900 PY - 1922 SP - 364-78 ST - Why the Movies Move T2 - Scientific Monthly TI - Why the Movies Move VL - 14 ID - 3385 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author, Frederick Stymetz Lamb (1863-1928), was an artist who known for his murals and for his stained glass designs.. Here he argues for better public use of color and says that in civic life, color has become virtually a "dead language." (111) Color, Lamb believed, was a powerful influence in people's lives. "If we analyze this fact, if we more fully study its importance, we must eventually rank the mental sensation called color as an important influence in our lives. We must grant that in light we have not only the great life-giving force, but an intellectual influence which under proper control might be of untold value." (110) In the streets and buildings, color was being poorly used. "Have we ever in the most ephemeral way realized that the discord of color presented at every turn acts just as directly on the mind; or, having realized it, have we ever made the slightest effort to change our surroundings through personal appeal or legislative action?" (110) "The only intelligent name which expresses the existing condition is 'color anarchy,'" he said. (111) Color was "more intelligently treated in its relation to the municipality" in the dark ages that today (1898). (111) "Then it was a medium of expression; then they believed that 'a good symbol is a missionary to persuade thousands.' Color became a language .... To-day what have we in its place? A dead language. Not one in a thousand can read the message of the flower; not one in a thousand differentiate the influence or significance of various colors...." (111) Lamb says that "A careful study of history shows conclusively that the craving for color is one of the natural desires of the mind." (112) In an earlier time, "In their eagerness to enlist the aid of color sensation, church and state, guild and people vied. Color rivaled speech, and was far more important than music...." (112) Lamb notes how colors were used and says that religious reformation and political protest "eliminated it from contemporaneous life." (112) "White was the emblem of religious purity, innocence, faith, joy and life. 'In the judge it indicated integrity; in the rich man, humility; in the women, chastity.' Red signified in its best sense creative power, divine love, and royalty. Red combined with white as in the red and white roses, expressed love and innocence, or live and wisdom. In a reverse sense, red signified war, hatred and punishment. Blue, the blue of the sky, typified truth, constancy and fidelity; gold symbolized the sun, fruitfulness and faith. Green expressed hope, victory and immortality; violent, passion and suffering; gray, mourning and humility. And black signified the earth, darkness, wickedness, negation and death. This was the sign language used by all. Its intimate relation with church and state made it one of the most conspicuous marks for adverse criticism when religious [sic] and governments were criticised. When the wave of religious reformation and the political protest against monarchical government swept over Europe, it struck at color and eliminated it from contemporaneous life; leaving to the western world but the very negation of its expression in the two great ceremonies -- white at the marriage, black at the funeral. Black and white became the costume of the Puritan; gray, the robe of the Quaker 112/113 and the language of color disappeared . The finer, more poetic, more spiritual, mode of expression gave way to the spoken word, or the wide influence of the printing press." (112-13) Lamb commented on the color and its relation to Nature. "In residential sections, why should not more restful colors running from brown, yellow brown, to green yellow and yellow green be used for the ground tone? Nature's colors are admittedly the most refreshing and restful...." (115) Just as nature changed colors from season to season, electric lighting should be modified to have "harmonious color." (119) In the United States, "unlike Europe, we have but little heraldry to aid us," Lamb said, and there was "absolutely no limit to the historical, poetical or personal expression. Our important civic buildings, if white in color, would form a fitting frame to mosaics not only recording historical events but depicting the more abstract qualities of justice, mercy, etc...." (116) AU - Lamb, Frederick S. DA - March 1898 KW - ref, secondary ref, Municipal Affairs ref, secular color color, and Middle Ages color, and Renaissance color, and myticism color, and Orientalism Orientalism, and color color, and sensuousness religion religion, and color color, and religion color, and form color, and emotion color, and thought values color, and values color, and reason color, and reason v. emotion color, and East v. West color, and stained glass color, eliminated by religion color, and nature color, and music color, and red color, and white color, and black color, and blue color, and violent color, and gold color, and gray color, and language color, and Puritans color, and Quakers color, and electric lighting electricity electricity, and color color, and electricity LB - 42650 PY - 1898 SP - 110-22 ST - Civic Treatment of Color T2 - Municipal Affairs TI - Civic Treatment of Color VL - 2 ID - 4364 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article by the Rev. M. B. Lambdin discusses literature, art, and amusements. Of the latter, he says: "It glitters in the fascinating trio of the theatre, the dance, the card table. "The 'draw' of the modern drama lies in its salacious flavor. Akin to modern fiction, many of it plays are built up on the infatuation of a man for a married women; or the woman for another woman's husband. "If the plays were severely sterilized of this impure spicing, there would be little left to give them zest, and the dust would gather thick upon the benches of the deserted play houses. "Strange, yet true, that multitudes of presumably respectable and virtuous people should attend these licensed schools of evil suggestion. Particularly so when the divine ideals of moral truth and beauty are summarily cast out into the mud of the street, to be trampled under the swine-like feet of actors and actresses of unclean hearts and impure lives, as they travesty the sanctities of the married relation, in just and jibe, while the professing sons and daughters f the pure and holy God look on admiringly and applaud most rapturously!" (6) This is but a form of "Beautified Sin," he says. "And Sin, when it is finished, bringeth forth DEATH." (6) AU - Lambdin, M. B. DA - Nov. 18, 1908 IS - 47 KW - anti-theatrical bias censorship actors acting ref, secondary critics critics, religious motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures actors, and bias against actors, and status of theater, and bias against anti-theatrical prejudice quotations ref, religious ref, Presbyterian ref, Christian Observer theater LB - 450 PY - 1908 SP - 6 ST - Beautified Sin T2 - Christian Observer TI - Beautified Sin VL - 96 ID - 3341 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that at the time, there were about 4,000 or more film societies in the United States and Canada, and that many of them were in college towns and campuses. These societies were especially interested in "art" films and in foreign movies. Most of the pictures were shown in 16mm. AU - Landry, Robert J. DA - Jan. 26, 1966 KW - self-regulation Hollywood motion pictures censorship and ratings foreign films sexuality motion pictures, and foreign films foreign films, and sexuality Hollywood, and subsidiaries Production Code, and foreign films censorship, breakdown of 16mm foreign films, and 16mm 16mm, and foreign films Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) censorship LB - 31530 PY - 1966 SP - 7, 21 ST - U. S. Campus Love of Europe's Pix T2 - Variety TI - U. S. Campus Love of Europe's Pix ID - 2844 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Langenberg, chancellor of the University of Maryland System at the time of this essay, says that "technology will make possible truly revolutionary change in higher education. The question before us is whether educators can apply technology to achieve its full potential." AU - Langenberg, Donald N. DA - Summer, 1995 IS - 90 KW - computers computers libraries information storage digital media education libraries, and new media libraries, and digital media computers and the Internet computers, and libraries libraries, and computers LB - 29780 PY - 1995 SP - 5-17 ST - The University and Information Technology: Interpreting the Omens T2 - New Directions for Higher Education TI - The University and Information Technology: Interpreting the Omens ID - 2734 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Although the great bulk of this article deals with the making of the film Tabu (1931), the author does provide some interesting information regarding the extent to which color motion pictures were appearing in 1929 and 1930. "Hollywood was then in the midst of a color boom. Over one hundred feature films had been announced in all or part color for the 1929-30 season. Dr. Herbert Kalmus, president of Technicolor, stated that the supply of Technicolor cameras was being increased at the rate of one a week to meet demand. The twenty-five Technicolor cameras on the West Coast were being used day and night in order to keep up with production schedules.52" (page 51) (Source for note 52 cited on p. 63: "Natural Colors soon to Prevail in Films," Hollywood Daily Screen World, 2 Oct. 1929, 1.) "Within that season about fifty color companies were in some stage of promotion. Along with Colorart, companies such as Multicolor, Harriscolor, Vita Color, Kelly-Handschlegele, and Williams were selling stock in a market where demand exceeded supply.53 [Source for note 53, cited from p. 63: "50 Color Co.'s Dwindle to 7," Variety, 14 Jan. 1931, 11.] The Colorart stock scheme, based on pos- 51/52 session of the Technicolor franchises, seemed like a safe venture before the unforeseen collapse of the stock market a few months later." (51-52) AU - Langer, Mark J. DA - Spring, 1985 IS - 3 KW - ref, secondary color motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures Technicolor, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor motion pictures, and color film companies (1929) Kalmus, Herbert Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor Technicolor, and Herbert Kalmus Technicolor LB - 40410 PY - 1985 SP - 43-64 ST - Tabu: The Making of a Film T2 - Cinema Journal TI - Tabu: The Making of a Film VL - 24 ID - 4139 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, written in 1897, notes that there has been an explosion in the number of pictures in the books, magazines, newspapers, and other printed material over the past 20 years. It discusses the reasons for this development and talks about the advantages of using zinc plates and halftones over woodcuts in making these pictures. Commenting on material coming from the printing press, Lanier writes: "After a sober enough course of four centuries it has suddenly blossomed into pictures during the last twenty years throughout its every ramification; and it is an insignificant pamphlet nowadays which does not re-enforce its printed thought with some pictorial content. The genesis of this truly remarkable development is, of course, to be found in the application of photography to methods of reproduction and the consequent increase of facility with greatly decreased cost; but a wider view reveals such similar tendencies in other than literary activities that one is fairly justified in ascribing it primarily to the demand made by a mental or esthetic appetite which the civilized public has latterly developed. The fact that the great mass of those who have something to sell find their buyers most surely through an appeal which is appreciated first of all by the eye, is surely not unrelated to the equally obvious condition which confronts us to-day at the theaters, namely, an increase of importance in the stage-setting, the scenery and the grouping, until our 'drama' has become largely a series of kaleidoscopic effects, in which the dialog or the topical song is introduced merely by way of hitching two scenes together. Interesting, however, as such an investigation would be, the actual mechanical methods which have made possible the vast flood of illustrated books, magazines and newspapers that pours each year from our whirring presses is sure no less so." (3) Before 1870, wood engravings were used for pictures. In preparing a picture, the wood engraver was a "essentially analogous to the translator." (3) Photography changed this arrangement. Lanier says that "A little over two decades ago the scientific playthings with which investigators like Niepce had amused themselves were found to have a commercial value, and almost with a bound the photographic process-plate was upon us. The simplest form of the omnivorous process is the 'line-place' or 'zinc-etching,' and since in, probably, ninety-nine out of a hundred of our illustrated books the pictures are either line-plates or 'half-tones' it may be well to give an idea as to their production." (3) The new process was much cheaper. "For, whereas an ordinary full-page woodcut by a competent engraver required several weeks in the execution, and cost anywhere from seventy-five to two hundred dollars, a zinc plate or half-tone the same size could be rushed through on a pinch in a few hours and normally required only a couple of days, while the former would cost only a couple of dollars and the half-tone from three to five times as much. That is to say, for the same expenditure, to leave out the time consideration, one could obtain about twenty times as many pictures, photographically reproduced 3/4 and in no way dependent on 'the fancy of the engraver'; is it any wonder the business of illustration developed so magically?" (3-4) "With the perfection of cameras and methods of instantaneous photography ten or fifteen years ago, these various processes received a new fillip. In simplified the question of picture-matter tremendously to send out a photographer, let him snap the necessary scenes, and, marking the sizes of the prints, sweep them into the hands of the photo-engraver." (4) Lanier says, though, that woodcuts still have superior tones over the photographic material. The trend, however, is that woodcuts are likely to continue to decline in their use. Lanier says that "for the more expensive books and for full-page pictures, it is possible to use photogravures (cooper-plate on which the picture has been etched in intaglio instead of in relief); but these have to be printed separately, and each impression costs between one and two cents, making a heavy fixed charge on a volume at all profusely illustrated. The three methods, therefore, ordinarily at the disposal of the book-maker are the half-tone, the line-plate and the wood-cut; and there are to-day thousands of publishers who would call blessed the man so lucky as to hit upon a new and satisfactory method of reproduction." (4) He notes the problems with using halftones. "The half-tone, altho reproducing form accurately, is far from correct in values; and, moreover, to obtain any reasonable clearness it must be printed on 'coated' paper. This is very much more expensive than paper quite satisfactory for type printing, it makes a large volume inordinately heavy, and, above all, the glossy sheen of the highly finished surface becomes most tiresome to the eye. Half-tones, too, require the most careful attention to obtain good printing, even with the best paper; and commercial considerations render it impossible fully half the time to give them the necessary time and trouble, so that the printed picture shows an ever greater backsliding from the plate-proof than that did from the original -- a truly disheartening retrogression." (4) Lanier concludes: "The best photographic reproduction must always fall short of any greatness, and by way of compensation we have the fact that the average kodak 'snap-shot,' half-toned into a page, is far truer to life, far better in every way, than the inartistic crudities which amuse us so much in the illustrated volumes of a half century ago." (4) AU - Lanier, Henry Wysham DA - Dec. 9, 1897 IS - 2558 KW - wood engraving ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving books, periodicals, newspapers photography, and books books, and photography photography, and zinc plates words vs. images images vs. words quotations quotations, and increase in pictures quotations, and half tones photography, and cameras cameras cameras, and photo engraving photography, instantaneous photography, and photogravure photogravure ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent books news and journalism photography LB - 39650 PY - 1897 SP - 3-4 ST - The Pictorial Side of Bookmaking T2 - The Independent TI - The Pictorial Side of Bookmaking VL - 49 ID - 4063 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this brief article, the author discusses the launch of Sputnik and the reaction to this event in the United States. He then considers the forewarnings leading up to the launch of the Soviet satellites. Then he covers the U. S. response and the American space program, deals with why the United States failed to be first in space, and then offers perspective by dealing with the period from Sputnik to Apollo moon launch only a dozen years later. The article is based on published sources. AU - Lapidus, Robert D. DA - Summer-Fall, 1970 IS - Nos. 2 & 3 KW - Soviet Union nationalism aeronautics and space communication nationalism and communication satellites Sputnik Sputnik, and U.S. reaction USSR satellites, and USSR USSR, and satellites non-USA LB - 33170 PY - 1970 SP - 88-93 ST - Sputnik and Its Repercussions: A Historical Catalyst T2 - Aerospace Historian TI - Sputnik and Its Repercussions: A Historical Catalyst VL - 17 ID - 2957 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discussing recent trends in lighting. Cinematographer Andrew Laszlo notes that more and more cinematographers are being forced "to move out of the studio into real locations." (666) Some time is spent on discussing the movies "Popi" (1969), starring Alan Arkin, filmed in Spanish Harlem in New York; "One Potato, Two Potato" filmed in a 150-year old farmhouse; and "The Night They Raided Minsky's" (1968), directed by William Fridkin and starring Jason Robards, Jr. Laszlo describes the lighting and camera work used to capture on film poverty in Spanish Harlem where the set was a that of a Puerto Rican's home: "The desired photographic effect is that of a dingy, unglamorous apartment. The crumbling walls, shabby furniture, cramped space and so forth all indicate poverty of the worst kind." (668) Laszlo makes an interesting commentary at the outset on cinematography earlier in the century. The cameraman's "lens ... had three stops on it. One was about F/5.6 for overcast, one about F/8 for sunshine and one which had no F value, was called 'Florida.'" (666) AU - Laszlo, Andrew DA - Sept., 1968 IS - 9 KW - location shooting cinematography motion pictures motion pictures, and location shooting location shooting, and motion pictures lighting motion pictures, and lighting lighting, and motion pictures cameras cameras, hand-held hand-held cameras motion pictures, and poverty LB - 30350 PY - 1968 SP - 666-68, 696-97 ST - Recent Trends in Location Lighting T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Recent Trends in Location Lighting VL - 49 ID - 2790 ER - TY - JOUR AB - James Latham examines seven advertisements for war films during World War I. "Most of these advertisements promoted films exhibited in the latter years of World War I," the author writes, "when the United States and its film industry were fully engaged in the war; other ads emphasized certain issues that were of special concerns to exhibitors, such as war taxes on theater admissions." (36) The advertisements supported the American war effort and publicized new technologies used during the war (e.g., submarines, airplanes, radios, chemical weapons, machines guns). The ads and the films also "valorized the medium of cinema, itself a modern form of communication and a powerful technological weapon that served 'our' interests. Ads touted the capacity of cinema to provide news or spectacular images from the war with greater verisimilitude than any other medium. They vaunted cinema's ability to advocate the war effort -- how cinema could portray the leaders, heroes, villains, and victims of the war in ways that served government interests. Cinema was likened to weapons such as the machine gun, with the information and persuasive content of film images being as powerful as bullets in combating the enemy. Ads also touted cinema as a respite from the war, providing escapist entertainment that rejuvenated war-weary spirits. As providers of this powerful new medium, local exhibitors were encouraged to see themselves not simply as merchants but as actively serving both their local communities and the country." (36) Some ads implied the rapidly improving technology of cinema could "capture moving images from anywhere for geographically dispersed audiences to see up close, safely, and conveniently at local movie theaters...." (37) Latham argues that there was a level of cooperation between the ads, newsreels, and print media (e.g., newspapers) in informing the public. The advertisements and films during the war enabled the movie industry, and especially theaters, "to become integrated with the fabric of American life by providing entertainment, information, and places for communities to gather, which in turn facilitated economic growth and stability for the film industry." (39) AU - Latham, James DA - 2006 IS - 1 KW - nationalism motion pictures propaganda nationalism and communication advertising and public relations motion pictures, and propaganda motion pictures, and advertising motion pictures, and movie posters war motion pictures, and World War I World War I, and motion pictures advertising, and motion pictures advertising, and movie posters advertising, and propaganda advertising, and World War I World War I, and advertising World War I, and propaganda motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures nationalism, and World War I World War I, and nationalism motion pictures, and patriotism advertising, and motion pictures posters motion pictures, and posters advertising, and movie posters news and journalism motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures newsreels, and movie posters cameras cameras, and World War I war, and cameras theaters motion pictures, and theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and nationalism nationalism, and theaters capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and World War I propaganda capitalism, and movie theaters advertising nationalism World War I war LB - 41740 PY - 2006 SP - 36-43 ST - Technology and 'Reel Patriotism' in American Film Advertising of the World War I Era T2 - Film & History TI - Technology and 'Reel Patriotism' in American Film Advertising of the World War I Era VL - 36 ID - 4272 ER - TY - JOUR AB - See filed under Film & Television articles (2001) AU - Lavery, David CN - Lavery notes that in The Matrix, Morpheus quotes from Jean Baudrillard's "The Precession of the Simulacra": "Welcom to the desert of the real." This article is part of an entire issue is devoted to "Film and/as Technology." Telotte, who is guest editor, notes that enjoying such technologies such as film we enter into an "unspoken" arrangement with that technology. Film's technological underpinning often go unexamined. This raises important issues "especially to the impact of digital technology and its capacity to reproduce convincingly practically any image." Articles in this issue include: David Lavery, "From Cinescape to Cyberspace: Zionists and Agents, Realists and Gamers in The Matrix and eXistenZ"; J. Robert Craig, "Establishing New Boundaries for Special Effects: Robert Zemeckis's Contact and Computer-Generated Imagery"; Kelly Ritter, "Spectacle at the Disco: Boogie Nights, Soundtrack, and the New American Musical"; Susan A. George, "Not Exactly 'of Woman Born': Procreation and Creation in Recent Science Fiction Films"; and J. P. Telotte, "The Sounds of Blackmail: Hitchcock and Sound Aesthetic." DA - Winter, 2001 IS - 4 KW - computers special effects new media motion pictures digital media digitization computers +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and new technology new media, and motion pictures motion pictures, and digital media digital media, and motion pictures motion pictures, and digital effects digital effects, and motion pictures virtual reality motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and motion pictures +computers and the Internet computers, and special effects special effects, and computers Baudrillard, Jean LB - 140 PY - 2001 SP - 150-57 ST - From Cinescape to Cyberspace: Zionists and Agents, Realists and Gamers in The Matrix and eXistenZ T2 - Journal of Popular Film & Television TI - From Cinescape to Cyberspace: Zionists and Agents, Realists and Gamers in The Matrix and eXistenZ VL - 28 ID - 103 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The article says that "Perhaps the greatest obstacle in the way of fully realizing the true importance of the film story as a social force and the consequent need of an adequate and uniform system of regulation is the overnight, mushroom growth of the industry. Any one old enough to vote is old enough to remember when the movie was not. As a business we may say that the film is scarcely adolescent; fourteen going on fifteen might be termed its age." (7) The movie's rapid development in recent years has been astounding. It sees 1907 as an important year in the industry's development when Thomas Edison "established his patents and licensed a number of other companies...." (7) Lawson says that "The development of the movie during the past eight years is a phenomenon which should impel ancient Aladdin -- if he knows about it -- to turn over in his grave. It is without parallel or comparison. It would challenge the elasticity of the imagination were there not the facts to chain us to actuality. In 1914, up to the beginning of December, American manufacturers have turned out no less than ten thousand separate reels of negative film from each of which reels thirty five 'positive' copies, on an average, are made. The standard reel is 1000 feet long, which makes 360,000,000 feet of film all told, including both the originals and copies! About 68,000 miles of motion pictures -- enough to go round the globe a little less than three times. In one year less a month!" (7) Lawson estimates that there are between 17,000 and 18,000 movie theaters which are attended by 10 million people each day. (8) The movie industry "ransacks the corners of the earth for sensations, it digs into the grave of the buried past, it searches every nook and cranny of life for new and interesting material. Its scope is as broad as the interests and occupations of mankind." (8) As for film's influence, Lawson says, "Is it any wonder that this ubiquitous visitor to all homes and all minds and all hearts should be credited by the discerning with a vast actual and potential power for good or evil, with a supreme influence upon public sentiment and public morality?" (8) The author then discusses the National Board of Censorship and its efforts to regulate films. Quoting an anonymous member of the Board who comments on the audience's reaction watching a film based on a Victor Hugo story: "'...Suddenly the play began. The great dream of Victor Hugo lived again before their eyes. They were caught up in the sweeping movement of the story and carried along like leaves on the wind by the emotions the living shadows before them so vividly delineated.'..." (8) Lawson comments on the educational power of movies. "Those who are educated by the movies are educated through their hearts and through their sense impressions, and that sort of education sticks. Every person in an audience has paid admission and for that reason gives his attention willingly. He knows he is not to be lectured for his soul's good, or patronized in any way. He knows that the movie seeks his suffrage and lives or dies by the motion of his imperial thumb. Therefore he gives it his confidence and opens the window of his mind. And what the movies says sinks in." (9) AU - Lawson, W. P. DA - Jan. 2, 1915 KW - history ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Harper's Weekly Aladdin, and motion pictures motion pictures, and reform motion pictures, and audiences motion pictures, and Aladdin motion pictures, as business motion pictures, and miles of film used motion pictures, and Thomas Edison Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures quotations quotations, and movies as history motion pictures, and media effects media effects media effects, and motion pictures history and new media censorship and ratings motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures values motion pictures, and values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and good and evil motion pictures, and morality motion pictures, and National Board of Censorship education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures censorship Edison, Thomas motion pictures LB - 42640 PY - 1915 SP - 7-9 ST - The Miracle of the Movie T2 - Harper's Weekly TI - The Miracle of the Movie VL - 60 ID - 4363 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, by the director of photography at WGN-TV in Chicago, discusses a WGN-TV program, "Point of Contact," that used color to interpret modern art to lay people. It notes that perhaps 10 percent of the public then "accepted modern art as having a place alongside traditional art." (373) The article covers the efforts at lighting to give the painting the truest color for TV. Lighting played a large part in how painting looked on film. The author borrows a phrase from John Alton, "painting with light" (375). "Lighting brought out color variations on film which were not visible otherwise," Lazan said. (374) The article says that "experimental lighting was necessary for each painting in the production." (375) The author says that WGN was committed to having about 60 hours a week of color programming (in 1965). AU - Lazan, Stanley DA - June, 1965 IS - 6 KW - corporations corporations Eastman Kodak cinematography television motion pictures avant garde avant garde, and television television, and avant garde values modern art television, and modern art modern art, and television color television, and color color, and television WGN-TV television, and WGN color TV, and modern art lighting lighting, and television television, and lighting 16mm 16mm cameras cameras, and 16mm cameras, 16mm Arriflex Eastman Kodak, and color film art cameras LB - 30460 PY - 1965 SP - 373-75 ST - Photographing Paintings in Color for Television T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Photographing Paintings in Color for Television VL - 46 ID - 2801 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Le Pontis, Leon DA - June 10, 1893 KW - television, and history of Telectroscope +television television, and origins LB - 7070 PY - 1893 SP - 14546-47 ST - The Telectroscope T2 - Scientific American Supplement TI - The Telectroscope VL - 35 ID - 2078 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Leach maintains that department stores had a great influence on the lives of women during the 1890s and early twentieth century. They helped to liberate women from self-denial and repression. Department stores helped to create a new culture of consumption and became "theatrical havens" where goods assumed new life and meaning. Leach writes that "The culture of consumption was an urban and secular one of color and spectacle, of sensuous pleasure and dreams. It subverted, but never overturned, the older mentality of repression, practical utilitarianism, scarcity, and self-denial. It slowly encompassed service and comfort as desirable goals, intermingling competition and cooperation, blurring the lines between work and leisure." This culture of consumption transformed women who worked, and middle-class women who shopped an spent money in the department stores. The new media of the late-nineteenth century found full expression in department stores. "'The effects of color,' wrote journalist Gail Hamilton in 1873, 'bring an exquisite enjoyment which scarcely anything else equals'" Artificial and natural lighting transformed stores into "theatrical havens" that both depended on commodities and that at the same time, transcended them . AU - Leach, William R. DA - Sept. 1984 IS - 2 KW - women, and new media advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations new media news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers values magazines general studies advertising department stores +electricity color, and department stores values, and department stores women women, and department stores consumerism new media, and department stores department stores, and new media magazines, and department stores capitalism, and American culture capitalism color LB - 9920 PY - 1984 SP - 319-42 ST - Transformations in a Culture of Consumption: Women and Department Stores, 1890-1925 T2 - Journal of American History TI - Transformations in a Culture of Consumption: Women and Department Stores, 1890-1925 VL - 71 ID - 2359 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Lears writes that Antonio Gramsci (1891-1937) "can inspire fresh thought in historians from a variety of intellectual traditions. By clarifying the political functions of cultural symbols, the concept of cultural hegemony can aid intellectual historians trying to understand how ideas reinforce or undermine existing social structures and social historians seeking to reconcile the apparent contradiction between the power wielded by dominant groups and the relative cultural autonomy of subordinate groups whom they victimize.” AU - Lears, T.J.Jackson DA - June 1985 KW - nationalism imperialism non-USA imperialism +nationalism and communication cultural hegemony imperialism, cultural Gramsci, Antonio cultural imperialism culture nationalism, and cultural imperialism LB - 9940 PY - 1985 SP - 567-93 ST - The Concept of Cultural Hegemony: Problems and Possibilities T2 - American Historical Review TI - The Concept of Cultural Hegemony: Problems and Possibilities VL - 90 ID - 2348 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article considers the tension between modern advertising and art, both of which have different social functions. Under the capitalist system, art is devoured by the advertising. Lears suggests that “Historians of art in advertising might ponder the sex life of insects. The male praying mantis approaches the female warily. A successful leap means he can pass on his genes to the next generation, then, with luck, slip away unharmed. If he misses or is detected too soon, he is likely to lose his limbs or his head. A headless mantis can perform sexual feats undreamt of by the whole insect; he becomes a technically superb mating machine--until copulation is over and the female devours him completely. The sexual cannibalism of mantises illuminates a century of uncertain courtship between artist and advertiser.” This article appeared in a special issue of the American Quarterly devoted to "Modernist Culture in America." AU - Lears, T. J. Jackson DA - Spring 1987 IS - 1 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations modernism modernity modernity modernism values advertising art art, and advertising advertising, and art values, and advertising values, and art general studies McLuhan, Marshall capitalism, and culture capitalism modernity, and advertising advertising, and modernity LB - 9950 PY - 1987 SP - 133-54 ST - Uneasy Courtship: Modern Art and Modern Advertising T2 - American Quarterly TI - Uneasy Courtship: Modern Art and Modern Advertising VL - 39 ID - 2360 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article examines how the creators of advertisements view themselves and their creations in relation to modern civilization. “Even in the early years, celebrants and critic alike sensed that national advertising was more than merely a way of selling goods; it was a cultural force. In part, it helped to homogenize the editorial and news content of journalism. From Upton Sinclair to David Potter, commentators noted the power advertisers exerted over the magazines and newspapers that were increasingly dependent on advertising revenue for their survival....For the cultural historian the significance of advertisements is more ambiguous: They were less a ‘true mirror’ than one of the fun-house variety. Yet they did constitute a pervasive new world of words and images, and there was some relationship between that imaginary realm and the American culture generally.” AU - Lears, T.J.Jackson DA - 1984 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers journalism news and journalism values newspapers news magazines advertising advertising, history of values, and advertising capitalism, and culture +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines, and advertising newspapers, and advertising capitalism advertising, and modernity news, and advertising advertising, and news LB - 9960 PY - 1984 SP - 349-405 ST - Some Version of Fantasy: Toward a Cultural History of American Advertising, 1880-1930 T2 - Prospects TI - Some Version of Fantasy: Toward a Cultural History of American Advertising, 1880-1930 VL - 9 ID - 2361 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This poem ends with the following lines: "Rekindled are the fires of Akbar's tents./ Strange moons have silvered stranger continents./Forsaken gods implore us./ Legended river, peak, and island-girth, / And all the reaches of the realms of earth / Are vital now before us./ But Mystery, dear Mystery, lies dead." AU - Lee, Agnes DA - Feb. 1916 IS - 2 KW - ref, secondary motion pictures motion pictures, and poems quotations quotations, and motion pictures metaphors metaphors, and motion pictures motion pictures, and metaphors ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion LB - 16420 PY - 1916 SP - 130 ST - Moving Pictures T2 - Current Opinion TI - Moving Pictures VL - 60 ID - 3795 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article provides a picture of Joseph Breen that is more complex than that found in many histories of film censorship. Leff notes that Breen was adept and reading his audience and that he sometimes reacted to events in Hollywood more as a public relations man than as an Irish Catholic (e.g., 435). Leff notes that Breen did much to bring films into the mainstream of American life and that many of the studios executives valued his leadership. AU - Leff, Leonard J. DA - May, 1991 IS - 3 KW - censorship and ratings motion pictures television motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and foreign films Breen, Joseph advertising and public relations Breen, Joseph, and public relations values advertising LB - 36240 PY - 1991 SP - 432-45 ST - The Breening of America T2 - PMLA: Publications of the Modern Language Association of America TI - The Breening of America VL - 106 ID - 3257 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author says that electronic libraries will make the Internet of today "pale by comparison." Librarians, he says, see three advantages in going digital. 1) Fragile and rare materials can be better preserved while at the same time giving scholars wider access to such documents. 2) Digital documents are more convenient. They can be retrieved much faster and multiple readers and use simultaneously the same work. 3) Digital material occupies far less space than paper documents -- "millimeters of space on a magnetic disk rather than meters on a shelf." Yet converting historical records to digital format will take enormous time and expense, and copyright issues will be difficult obstacles to overcome. AU - Lesk, Michael DA - March 1997 IS - 3 KW - computers print nonprint media archives law nonprint culture print culture libraries libraries, and information storage information storage information storage +computers and the Internet +information storage libraries, and digital media copyright intellectual property electronic preservation digital media print media v. electronic media digital records, advantages of digital libraries, advantages of electronic media digitization +information storage digital media, and libraries LB - 4560 PY - 1997 SP - 58-60 ST - Going Digital T2 - Scientific American TI - Going Digital VL - 276 ID - 1843 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author, a follower of Marshall McLuhan, says there are four questions we might ask of a medium to help us evaluate its significance: "(1) What does it enhance or amplify in the culture? (2) What does it make obsolete, or push out of a position of prominence? (3) What does it retrieve from the past? (4) And what does the medium 'reverse into' or 'flip into' when it reaches the limits of its potential?" AU - Levinson, Paul DA - Oct. 15, 1999 KW - computers seeing at a distance preservation postmodernism modernism communication revolution history +computers and the Internet McLuhan, Marshall medium is the message new way of seeing history, and new media general studies +television communication revolution digital media digitization LB - 4330 PY - 1999 SP - B10-B11 ST - Millennial McLuhan: Clues for Deciphering the Digital Age T2 - Chronicle of Higher Education TI - Millennial McLuhan: Clues for Deciphering the Digital Age VL - XLVI ID - 1821 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Lieberthal urges labor educators to recognize the stereotypical roles assigned to workers on television and in movies. Understanding these stereotypes is important because labor educators often come from socio-economic backgrounds that are different than the backgrounds of workers. Lieberthal argues that movie producers and networks have become more sensitive to criticism of stereotypes for women and minorities and their portrayals have become more sympathetic and more realistic. But “while TV and movies depart at times from the stereotype, manual workers in large part continue to suffer the preponderant image as incompetent and unlettered. Movies and TV might deviate from the worst images of workers, but they still employ the stereotype. While blacks art treated with some respect and dignity in the media, with the result that they are heroes or understandable human beings, white workers only occasionally receive that treatment and then in a superficial manner. Workers frequently are portrayed as ignorant, prejudiced, and incompetent, stereotypes that insult the huge number of intelligent real-life workers.” -- Phil Glende AU - Lieberthal, Mil DA - Fall 1976 IS - 2 KW - television, and values values motion pictures Glende, Phil labor +television +motion pictures and popular culture labor, and television television, and labor labor, and tv stereotypes labor, and movie stereotypes values, and motion pictures values, and television values LB - 930 N1 - See also: office PY - 1976 SP - 162-69 ST - TV and Movie Images of Workers -- Reinforcing the Stereotypes T2 - Labor Studies Journal TI - TV and Movie Images of Workers -- Reinforcing the Stereotypes VL - 1 ID - 181 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this interview, Alfred Hitchcock talks about the use of cameras, lighting, the use of color film, and film editing in such movies as Psycho and Torn Curtain. While on the whole he preferred to film movies in color, for Psycho, he said, he chose black-and-white film because he believed that the censors would cut the famous shower scene in which Janet Leigh is stabbed to death because of all the blood in the bathtub. AU - Lightman, Herb A. DA - May, 1967 IS - 5 KW - self-regulation Hitchcock, Alfred cinematography +motion pictures violence color Hitchcock, Alfred motion pictures, and color film violence, and color film motion pictures, and violence cameras motion pictures, and cameras lighting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and lighting violence, and color photography color film, and violence media effects media effects, and violence violence, and media effects censorship and ratings violence, and censorship censorship, and violence Production Code, and violence movie, Psycho lighting Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) censorship LB - 29660 PY - 1967 SP - 332-35, 350-51 ST - Hitchcock Talks about Lights, Camera, Action [Interview with Alfred Hitchcock] T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Hitchcock Talks about Lights, Camera, Action [Interview with Alfred Hitchcock] VL - 48 ID - 2716 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the filming of Bonnie and Clyde with Director of Photography Burnett Guffey. According to Guffey, director Arthur Penn and the film's star (and producer) Warren Beatty "were out to get stark realism on celluloid." (254) The cinematography attempted to reject "glamor" by using a "semi-documentary color camera treatment of true-life melodrama." (254) The article talks about the use of different cameras and camera setups to help filming on location. It also discusses lighting. Zoom lens were used sparingly for shock value as when a law enforcement officer is shot and the camera shows his face bleeding profusely. (257) AU - Lightman, Herb A. DA - April, 1967 IS - 4 KW - lenses, zoom lenses cinematography motion pictures media effects violence censorship and ratings violence, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and lens motion pictures, and violence media effects, and violence lenses, zoom and violence zoom lenses color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and movie realism violence, and color movies color, and violence movie, Bonnie and Clyde LB - 29670 PY - 1967 SP - 254-57 ST - Raw Cinematic Realism in the Photography of 'Bonnie and Clyde' T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Raw Cinematic Realism in the Photography of 'Bonnie and Clyde' VL - 48 ID - 2717 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that director of photography, Haskell Wexler, had strong experience in documentary film making and cinema verite, and that these styles were evident in filming Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?. The movie also made use of hand-held cameras to capture the fluidity of motion among the film's four main characters. A zoom lens was used for dramatic effect, for example, in the scene where Richard Burton points a rifle (which is really an umbrella) at Elizabeth Taylor. Wexler also used lighting to make Taylor unattractive -- a "sloppy, fading voluptuary" (531) with "pouchy" eyes and a faced ravaged by alcoholism. AU - Lightman, Herb A. DA - Aug., 1966 IS - 8 KW - lenses, zoom self-regulation rating system (U. S.) (U.S.) motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality cinematography +motion pictures cameras motion pictures, and cameras cameras, and motion pictures zoom lenses cameras, and zoom lenses cameras, hand-held mobile cameras movie, Who's Afraid of Va.Wolff motion pictures, and academy awards sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality Wexler, Haskell cinematography lighting motion pictures, and profanity rating system (U. S.), and profanity language, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) (U. S.), and controversies censorship and ratings violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence violence, and zoom lenses cameras, and violence violence, and cameras Burton, Richard Taylor, Elizabeth cinéma vérité language lenses rating system (U. S.) LB - 29890 PY - 1966 SP - 530-33, 558-59 ST - The Dramatic Photography of 'Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?' T2 - American Cinematographer TI - The Dramatic Photography of 'Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?' VL - 47 ID - 2744 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discussed the innovative makeup used in this science fiction film as well as location shooting and the problems encountered. AU - Lightman, Herb A. DA - April, 1968 IS - 4 KW - cinematography motion pictures special effects motion pictures, and special effects location shooting motion pictures, and location shooting movie, Planet of the Apes Planet of the Apes LB - 29950 PY - 1968 SP - 256-59, 278 ST - Filming 'Planet of the Apes' T2 - American Cinematograher TI - Filming 'Planet of the Apes' VL - 49 ID - 2750 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This articles considers the problems of shooting the movie "Ship of Fools" on location. Much of it was filmed on a studio lot, in large part because of economic reasons. AU - Lightman, Herb A. DA - Jan., 1965 IS - 1 KW - motion pictures location shooting motion pictures, and location shooting movie, Ship of Fools Ship of Fools location shooting, and problems cameras cameras, and lens cinematography LB - 29970 PY - 1965 SP - 28-29, 68 ST - Voyage on a Sound Stage T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Voyage on a Sound Stage VL - 46 ID - 2752 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article argues that Super-8 was then "approaching full professional status" (1164) but noted that there was a consensus that had emerged from a conference of the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers about Super-8's status. 1) It would not replace 16mm. 2) While Super-8's professional potential was "staggering," it would "never realized that potential until standardization is achieved in the area of projection." (1164) 3) Although "magnetic sound for Super-8 is definitely superior to optical, quality-wise," was "that extra ounce of high-fidelity worth the extra cost?" (1164) 4) A way had to be found for making "high-quality, low-cost Super-8 to Super-8 prints." (1164) Dr. Norwood L. Simmons of Eastman Kodak noted "six key attributes of Super 8 ... flexibility, accessibility, repeatability, controllability, compatibility and profitability." (1164) This article notes that Kodak had developed new film stocks that made Super-8 images the equal of 16mm at the time Super-8 was first put on the market. ("The quality of the Super-8 image today is virtually as good as 16mm was yesterday," according to a paper by John M. McDonough and Richard K. Schafer, of Eastman Kodak. -p. 1165) Simmons said that during 1968 "the U.S. processing of professional 8mm release prints rose to 21 million linear feet -- representing an annual increase of 300 percent." (1165) McDonough noted that currently there was "no good professional way of making a Super-8 to Super-8 dulplicate. Such duplication is available, but so far strictly on an amateur level." (1166) AU - Lightman, Herb A. DA - Dec., 1969 IS - 12 KW - corporations corporations Eastman Kodak cinematography sound recording 8mm 8mm, Super-8 cameras cameras, 8mm sound recording, and Super-8 sound recording, and 8mm cameras magnetic recording magnetic recording, and Super-8 8mm, and magnetic sound recording education education, and 8mm film education, and Super 8mm film Eastman Kodak, and 8mm film 8mm, and Super-8 motion pictures LB - 30180 PY - 1969 SP - 1164-67 ST - Super-8: The State of the Art T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Super-8: The State of the Art VL - 50 ID - 2773 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This articles deals with how "The St. Valentine's Day Massacre" (1967), starring Jason Robards, Jr. and George Segal, was filmed. The studio recreated 1920s Chicago, using the resources of the Chicago Historical Society and newspapers. To distinguish flashbacks to the past from the present, different color was used. "The flashbacks are handled with an interesting modification in color balance that sets them apart unmistakably from the main action. Carrying a warm tone, with the other colors somewhat desaturated, these sequences have overtone of the rotogravure effect which was popular in Sunday supplements of the time." (708) To achieve this effect, the director of photography filtered the camera and then the laboratory did even more to create the effect. The movie attempted to mix "sex and violence in Freudian proportions" (709) and hand-held cameras played an important role in these kinds of scenes. The cameraman used a hand-held Arriflex camera risking "getting his shadow in the frame, and possibly getting hit by a flying libido" (709) but the film footage afforded "a degree of audience participation seldom experienced by moviegoers." (709) Cameramen also used zoom lenses "to lend shock impact to a scene." (709) AU - Lightman, Herb A. DA - Oct., 1967 IS - 10 KW - history lenses, zoom lenses cinematography motion pictures media effects violence censorship and ratings violence, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and lens motion pictures, and violence media effects, and violence lenses, zoom and violence zoom lenses color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and movie realism violence, and color movies color, and violence movie, St. Valentine's Day Massacre (1967) sexuality cameras, hand-held hand-held cameras motion pictures, and sex scenes cameras, and sex scenes motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures cameras, Panavision cameras, mobile special effects special effects, and violence color color, and movie history LB - 30310 PY - 1967 SP - 706-09 ST - Recreating a Violent Era on Film for 'The St. Valentine's Day Massacre' T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Recreating a Violent Era on Film for 'The St. Valentine's Day Massacre' VL - 48 ID - 2786 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Lightman notes that earlier in the century that mililtary film units looked to Hollywood for know-how. Now, he notes, "there has been a kind of technical turnabout.... It would seem, then, that the military and Hollywood, placed in rapport by the common denominator of motion picture film, have much to learn from each othere -- to their mutual benefit." (330) The article goes on to point out that "one of the most progressive of the military photographic units, and one which is constantly working to develop new and ingenious cinema technology is the Photographic Department of the Naval Missile Center, located at Point Mugu, California." (330) The article discusses work on optical printing and it notes that the Naval Missile Center was working on television, especially in areas where film cameras and television cameras joined to cover special circumstances. AU - Lightman, Herb A. DA - May, 1966 IS - 5 KW - R & D lenses, zoom Steadicam television motion pictures military communication military communication, and Hollywood motion pictures, and military communcation research and development cameras military communication, and cameras optical printing cinematography zoom lenses cameras, and zoom lenses cameras, and anti-vibration Steadicam, origins Hollywood, and military motion pictures, and military cinematography, and military cameras, high-speed 16mm cameras 35mm cameras 70mm cameras cameras, 16mm cameras, 35mm cameras, 70mm cameras, and military research Naval Missile Center, and cinematography Hollywood lenses 16mm 35mm 70mm LB - 30320 PY - 1966 SP - 330-32, 350-53 ST - Space-Age Cinematography at the Naval Missile Center T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Space-Age Cinematography at the Naval Missile Center VL - 47 ID - 2787 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article explains a new Technicolor desaturation process used in the movie "Reflections in a Golden Eye" (1967), a film based on a novel by Carson McCullers about a homosexual Army officer who is stationed in the American South. It starred Marlon Brando and Elizabeth Taylor, and John Huston directed. The desaturation process was used to create an eerie mood that complemented Huston's "brooding 'Southern Gothic' style. Although supposedly set in the Deep South, part of the movie was actually filmed in Italy. Low-keyed lighting and unusual camera angles helped to set the film's mood. According to a spokesman for Technicolor Italiana, "Huston's conception was psychological fantasy and we have been able to respond to it technically thus bringing something absolutely new to the public -- a color film in which the values do not change while the color itself is muted. We feel that it is a major breakthrough. In its present form it exactly suits the mood of this strange story. In other variations it will give motion pictures a whole new range of color effects unimaginable until now." (864) AU - Lightman, Herb A. DA - Dec., 1967 IS - 12 KW - corporations corporations homosexuality Eastman Kodak motion pictures color motion pictures, and location shooting location shooting, and motion pictures color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and homosexuality sexuality homosexuality, and motion pictures Brando, Marlon Taylor, Elizabeth movie, Reflections in a Golden Eye (1967) Reflections in a Golden Eye (1967) special effects special effects, and color color, and special effects color, and mood Technicolor color, and Technicolor Eastman Kodak, and color color, and Eastman Kodak color, and desaturated film motion pictures, and lighting lighting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and camera angles cinematography motion pictures, and made in Italy location shooting, and Italy lighting location shooting LB - 30330 PY - 1967 SP - 862-65, 896-7 ST - 'Reflections in a Golden Eye' Viewed Through a Glass Darkly T2 - American Cinematographer TI - 'Reflections in a Golden Eye' Viewed Through a Glass Darkly VL - 48 ID - 2788 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the work of three-time Academy Award winning cinematographer Robert Surtees, and his work on such different movies as "Doctor Dolittle" (Apjac-20th Century-Fox, 1967), starring Rex Harrison, and "The Graduate" (1967), starring Dustin Hoffman, Anne Bancroft, Katharine Ross, and directed by Mike Nichols. Surtees called the photography for "The Graduate" (Embassy-Paramount) "'ultra-modern -- but it is something more than that. It has touches of 'Mod' and a faint aura of avant garde, overtones of the 'Underground' and flashes of Cinema Verite. It even has one or two sequences of slick 'glamor' photography, where the script calls for a sophisticated patina. It breaks almost every rule in the cinematographic text book to create visual excitement on the screen." (105) (Lightman's quotation, not Surtees) Surtees says that he drew on 30 years of experience as a cinematographer to film this movie. (107) The movie involved a large amount of hand-held camera work. The movie had to convey Hoffman's alienation from an affluent world, "to convey this unreality at times -- without going all-out psychedelic." (132) The goal was to capture "a sense of semi-reality with dramatic overtones." (132) Surtees used hidden cameras and filmed night-time exteriors using only existing light, "pre-fogged the negative, pushed development and did just about everything else that's possible in cinematography." (133) He also used lenses with longer focal lengths than normal. Some dialogue between Hoffman and Ross was captured on wireless lavalier microphones hidden in their clothes and filmed on the streets with real street people unawre that they were being filmed. (138) Director Nichols said that Surtee was always able to "find a visual equivalent for the mood of each scene." (144) "Doctor Dolittle" involved filming in England and several trips to Europe. AU - Lightman, Herb A. DA - Feb., 1968 IS - 2 KW - history lenses, zoom lenses cinematography motion pictures media effects violence censorship and ratings lighting lighting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and lighting cameras cameras, and lens motion pictures, and violence media effects, and violence lenses, zoom and violence zoom lenses color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and movie realism movie, The Graduate (1967) The Graduate (1967) cinema verite, and The Graduate (1967) sexuality cameras, hand-held hand-held cameras motion pictures, and sex scenes cameras, and sex scenes motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures cameras, Panavision cameras, mobile special effects location shooting motion pictures, and location shooting lighting movie, Doctor Dolittle (1967) Doctor Dolittle (1967) sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures cameras, hidden sound recording, and hidden microphones LB - 30380 PY - 1968 SP - 104-07, 132-33, 138-39, 142-44 ST - Cinematographer with a 'Split Personality' T2 - American Cinematograher TI - Cinematographer with a 'Split Personality' VL - 49 ID - 2793 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Excerpts from a poem by Vachel Lindsay on hearing that Mary Picford was going to leave the movies for the stage. "Mary Pickford, doll divine, Year by year, and every day At the moving-picture play, You have been my valentine. .... "Fly, O song, to her to-day Like a cowboy 'cross the land, Snatch her from Belasco's hand And that prison called Broadway All the village swains await One dear lily-girl demure, Saucy, dancing, cold and pure, Elf who must return in state." AU - Lindsay, Vachel DA - Nov. 1914 IS - 5 KW - fame celebrity actors acting ref, secondary motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality Lindsay, Vachel Pickford, Mary motion pictures, and Mary Pickford motion pictures, and Vachel Lindsay ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Opinion photography LB - 37760 PY - 1914 SP - 354 ST - To Mary Pickford, Moving-Picture Actress T2 - Current Opinion TI - To Mary Pickford, Moving-Picture Actress VL - 57 ID - 3875 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this book review of Hugo Munsterberg's The Photoplay: A Psychological Study (1916), written shortly after Munsterberg's death, Lindsay says the work offers "a noble declaration of independence for the photoplay artist." (76) Lindsay says that before Munsterberg's death, the two had a "gratifying correspondence ... about the films." (76) Lindsay comments on moving pictures ability to jump "back and forth over barriers of time" and geography. As "to jumping over geographical spaces, the photoplay dialogue that technically replaces the old stage interchange of words is a conversation between places, not individuals," writes Lindsay.(76) Commenting on D. W. Griffith's film Intolerance, Lindsay says: "The key hieroglyphic is the cradle of humanity, eternally rocking. This photoplay is given power not by straining for depth of passion, but depth of what might be called tableau-emotion, a much more elusive thing." (76) Lindsay comments that he is opposes "music while the film is running." He also condemns professional film critics in the large newspapers who have "completely ignored" Munsterberg's book. (77) AU - Lindsay, Vachel DA - Feb. 17, 1917 KW - Münsterberg, Hugo Lindsay, Vachel ref, secondary ref, New Republic ref, book review Munsterberg, Hugo Lindsay, Vachel, and Hugo Munsterberg motion pictures, and Hugo Munsterberg motion pictures, and motion motion pictures, and time history, and new media motion pictures, and history motion pictures, and geography motion pictures, and Vachel Lindsay history motion pictures LB - 42450 PY - 1917 SP - 76-77 ST - Photoplay Progress T2 - New Republic TI - Photoplay Progress VL - 10 ID - 4344 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This study looked at the impact that exposure to R-rated movies containing violence against women had on “judgments made about the victim of a violent sexual assault” (131). The authors conducted an experiment using 24 male students from the University of Wisconsin psychology, engineering, and computer science departments. Subjects were prescreened for hostility prior to the exposure treatment. As a result, three subjects were removed from the experiment. Subjects were divided into an exposure condition and a control condition, which entailed exposure to violent R-rated films each day for a five-day period. Each day subjects used the Multiple Affect Adjective Checklist (MACCL) to indicate how they felt at the conclusion of each movie. At the end of the five days, both groups watched a documentary of a rape trial and then indicated their verdict, as well as other measures of their sensitivity toward the victim. The MACCL indicated that subjects were initially upset and depressed after the first movie. However, the authors found that the subjects became less and less anxious and depressed as the week went on and subsequent films were viewed. Subjects also indicated that the films became less violent as the week went on, although the level of violence in the films was constant. Furthermore, “subjects who reported seeing fewer offensive and violent scenes on the last day also judged the victim as offering less resistance to her assailant and felt less sympathy for her” (140). Desensitization, conditioning, and activation are offered as explanations for the results. Additionally, the authors discuss the possibility that desensitization to violent or sexual content may “spill-over” into other realms. --Michael Boyle AU - Linz, D., Edward Donnerstein, and S. Penrod DA - 1984 IS - 3 KW - women, and new media women social science research sexuality motion pictures +motion pictures violence media violence media effects sexuality media effects Boyle, Michael pornography pornography, and rape myths violence, and pornography pornography, and violence women, and pornography pornography, and women +motion pictures and popular culture pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects media effects, and violence media effects, and motion pictures R-rated movies, and media effects media effects, and R-rated movies women, and R-rated movies R-rated movies, and women censorship and ratings R-rating LB - 1280 PY - 1984 SP - 130-47 ST - The Effects of Multiple Exposures to Filmed Violence Against Women T2 - Journal of Communication TI - The Effects of Multiple Exposures to Filmed Violence Against Women VL - 34 ID - 216 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The authors argue that the American system rating movies should take into account research on child development and should be based on potential harmfulness of films and videos. AU - Linz, Daniel AU - Wilson, Barbara AU - Donnerstein, Edward DA - Spring, 1992 IS - 1 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) motion pictures media effects media violence critics censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification media effects violence violence, and mass media rating system (U. S.) systems, and violence rating system (U. S.), and harmfulness Donnerstein, Edward CARA, and critics rating system (U. S.), and critics media efffects, and rating system (U. S.) children and media children, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and children social science research law, and media effects law, and media effects +motion pictures and popular culture +television motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) television, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and television critics, and rating system (U. S.) CARA LB - 27730 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1992 SP - 145-71 ST - Sexual Violence in the Mass Media: Legal Solutions, Warnings, and Mitigation through Education T2 - Journal of Social Issues TI - Sexual Violence in the Mass Media: Legal Solutions, Warnings, and Mitigation through Education VL - 48 ID - 1327 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Abstract from Technology and Culture: "One of the proudest achievements of Bell Telephone Laboratories in the post World War II era, the video telephone system Picturephone ended its brief life as the Labs' biggest flop. Accounts have attempted to explain this "failure" in a variety of ways. This article proposes a new approach that questions the usefulness of the categories success and failure, and instead considers Picturephone as part of a technological narrative that directed both innovators and users along a certain path or trajectory of information technology. In the end, Picturephone may have actually reinforced this path, even though the device disappeared from use. Understanding these resonate meanings and effects requires extending the time frame of innovation and problematizing notions of consumer autonomy." AU - Lipartito, Kenneth DA - Jan. 2003 IS - 1 KW - cellular telephones corporations corporations telephones telephones Bell Laboratories telephones, and Picturephone Picturephone cell phones telephones, and video phones video phones LB - 33650 PY - 2003 SP - 50-81 ST - Picturephone and the Information Age: The Social Meaning of Failure T2 - Technology and Culture TI - Picturephone and the Information Age: The Social Meaning of Failure VL - 44 ID - 3004 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the marketing strategies used for Oliver Stone's Natural Born Killers (1994). AU - Lippert, Barbara DA - Sept. 5, 1994 KW - Natural Born Killers (1994) Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Natural Born Killers motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures nudity, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising language motion pictures, and language nudity CARA, and nudity motion pictures, and nudity Stone, Oliver public relations, and Oliver Stone Stone, Oliver, and public relations advertising, and Natural Born Killers Natural Born Killers, and advertising LB - 25500 PY - 1994 ST - Bear Trap: Coke's Cuddly Mascots Are Fair Game for Oliver Stone's "Killers" T2 - Adweek TI - Bear Trap: Coke's Cuddly Mascots Are Fair Game for Oliver Stone's "Killers" ID - 1146 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article presents what was surely a common argument in 1890 about the use of color. "The American public are slowly awakening to the fact that color has to do with healthy, wholesome human living," Locke begins, and "that there is an eternal word in nature and in color which we must heed, for the heart of man feels the need of it.....Long ago, Mahomet said, 'The colors which the earth displays to our eyes are manifest signs for those who think.' Curious, isn't it, we should be the first civilization to neglect the teaching of color?"(796) "Among all people of high antiquity, it had a most sacred significance; in Egypt, oldest of the nations, it was closely associated with religious teachings. They understood that color and human happiness were closely associated together; that love lies back of all life, and that the colors with which Nature rules herself are simply the overflow of the oversoul -- the covenant between God and man; the same which is expressed in the many hues of the rainbow. Hence, the robe of Isis was at once a hieroglyphic of physical and spiritual truth. "There is no separating these two -- health of body and health of soul are one, and color ministers to both." (796) For the ancients, the primary colors were black and white. "Back of these education lay the phenomena of light and darkness, day and night, as symbols of good and evil." (797) Goethe's theory of color closely mirrored that of the ancients. "Shelley expresses it in the well-known words, 'Life, like a dome of many-colored glass, stains the white radiance of eternity.'" (797) According to Locke, "true color, being spiritual in essence, exists in nature only." (797) Color "is more than a fact -- it is an influence, and as such transcends all literalism." (797) At no time, says Locke, "can the teaching of conventional color ignore the laws of nature with safety." (798) Later, she says, that it is "Very interesting ... to note how pagan literature takes us only as far in the study of color as does the 'Purgatory.'" (798) Locke quote Ruskin who said: "Color that is unmysterious is wholly barbarous." (Ruskin quoted, 801) The "study of color is altogether different in its nature from the study of form." (801) Color and sensation should be subordinate to understanding, according to the author. "Color is the one thing in all the world that defies the training of the schools, and the judgment of a cold, piercing intellect. It reveals itself only where there is warmth of feeling, and the responsive simplicity of a little child. It will not be argued over, or reasoned about. It appeals directly to the affections, and its mission at this time is to teach us to know truly what other men have felt during their span of life, and to open our hearts to the messages of the skies and the earth. Shall we receive it? "It will be understood that throughout this paper I have reference to the positive right teaching of color, which, while recognizing sensation as the legitimate gate by which to approach the individual, yet knows if growth is to be attained sensation must be transcended, and subordinated to understanding." (801) AU - Locke, Josephine Carson DA - 1890 KW - emotion decadence ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color, in history color, and theory color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and passion color, and sensations media effects color, media effects media effects, and color color, and nature education color, and education education, and color ref, National Education Association Addresses and Proceeding ref, educational color, and pagan literature color, and children children, and color children and media color, and sensation color, and reason children LB - 42550 PY - 1890 SP - 796-802 ST - The Mission of Color T2 - Journal of Proceedings and Addresses, National Education Association, Session of the Year 1890, Held at Saint Paul, Minnesota TI - The Mission of Color VL - 29 ID - 4354 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Lockhart, William B. DA - 1954 KW - law obscenity law, and obscenity motion pictures motion pictures, and obscenity censorship and ratings censorship, and obscenity censorship LB - 32850 PY - 1954 SP - 295-395 ST - Literature, the Law of Obscenity and the Constitution T2 - Minnesota Law Review TI - Literature, the Law of Obscenity and the Constitution VL - 38 ID - 2922 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Daniel Lord, the primary author of the movie industry's Production Code of 1930, was at odds with the modern age and believed that film could become a weapon against the biblical account of man’s place in the world. “What the centuries were spent in constructing, the present age is bent on destroying,” he warned in this attack on the work of Benard Shaw. AU - Lord, Daniel A. DA - Feb. 1915 KW - modernity modernism modernism, and critics Shaw, George Bernard, and critics Lord, Daniel A. context, and Catholic Church context Shaw, George Bernard LB - 13000 PY - 1915 SP - 577-90 ST - Martyrs according to Bernard Shaw T2 - Catholic World TI - Martyrs according to Bernard Shaw VL - 100 ID - 475 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author discusses how ?Alfred Hitchcock's "Torn Curtain" was filmed. He notes that most films then were still not shot on location and he discusses the reasons why Hitchcock preferred not to shoot on location. Hitchcock believed he could get better performances from his actors when conditions were tightly controlled. In "Torn Curtain," many of the long shots were filmed on location but that location backgrounds were built on a sound stage in southern California. The article examines how interior scenes were lighted and how Hitchcock preferred to use "selective focus" which had an "almost sub-liminal effect of forcing the audience to concentrate on one of the two people in the scene even though both may appear to be standing almost in the same plane." It also covers special effects used. In the love scene played in bed by Paul Newman and Julie Andrews, reflected light was used which usually is flattering to female actors. The articles claims this was "probably the most torrid love scene ever recorded on celluloid -- so warm, in fact, that it was necessary to run a fan up through the bed clothes to cool off the actors." (p. 681) AU - Loring, Charles DA - Oct., 1966 IS - 10 KW - motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality Hitchcock, Alfred cinematography motion pictures cameras lighting sexuality special effects motion pictures, and lighting lighting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and special effects sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sexuality lighting, and sex scenes location shooting motion pictures, and location shooting movie, Torn Curtain Torn Curtain Hitchcock, Alfred location shooting, and Alfred Hitchcock LB - 29930 PY - 1966 SP - 680-83, 706-07 ST - Filming 'Torn Curtain' by Reflected Light T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Filming 'Torn Curtain' by Reflected Light VL - 47 ID - 2748 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the filming of "An American Dream" (1966), based on Norman Mailer novel and starring Stuart Whitman and Janet Leigh. In the movie (Warner Bros. Distribution), a rich women is murdered by her husband when he pushes from a tall building. The story, about an anti-hero who is doomed from the beginning by his psychological flaws, was deliberately filmed in a low-key manner to create a certain mood. Cinematographer Sam Leavitt made "liberal and creative use of shadow and used very little fill-light on the players. The style is not, however, documentary -- nor was it meant to be. Mixed with the realism is a smoothness of technique which makes the female players look as glamorous as the ticket-buyers expect them to look, but there is a visual authenticity of atomosphere that is invaluable to the story." (753) The article notes that the violence of a fight scene between the main players was "accentuated by mood lighting and choice of dramatic camera angles." (753) It observers that a murder scene that takes place on the terrace of a plush penthouse was "made more grisly by use of stark contrast in lighting." (754) Hand-held cameras helped cameramen to capture these scenes. The movie also employed a 360-degree pan shot. As for sex scenes involving the protagonist's estranged wife, lighting was especially important of the penthouse was especially important to give the impression of a spoiled, wealthy woman. It was also the setting for violence and murder. "When first discovered the land is lying naked in bed with her similarly unattired lover, and she is watching television -- which seems to be a rather sad commentary on the lover's talents for distraction. The main challenge was to light her in such a way, and adopt proper camera angles, so that she would move through the rather intricate action required of her without showing what some might consider to be an overabundance of her silky epidermis." (753) AU - Loring, Charles DA - Nov., 1966 IS - 11 KW - motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality motion pictures lighting motion pictures, and lighting lighting, and motion pictures movie, An American Dream Mailer, Norman, and An American Dream motion pictures, and Norman Mailer Mailer, Norman, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and hand-held hand-held cameras sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sexuality violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence values values, and anti-hero motion pictures, and anti-hero cameras, and sex scenes lighting, and sex scenes violence, and cameras cameras, and violence lighting, and violence motion pictures, and novels novels, and motion pictures cinematography novels LB - 30340 PY - 1966 SP - 752-55 ST - The Photography of 'An American Dream' T2 - American Cinematographer TI - The Photography of 'An American Dream' VL - 47 ID - 2789 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses a news camera used at WCSH-TV in 1967 that used a "magnetic double-system sound combination" that weighed about 24 pounds. "Our unit is a converted Auricon Cine-Voice II with the conversion cutting off the little 'Mickey Mouse' ears that the normal design for 100- foot loads created on the camera. This gives us a flat top accommodating Mitchell 400 or 1200 magazines. The weight of this unit with loaded 400-foot magazine and Angenieux 12mm x 120mm lens is about 24 pounds. We say about 24 pounds because we have two units, one weighing about a pound and a half less than the other. This was due to drive motor change and a slight body change in the original manufacture of the units." (718) AU - Low, John A. DA - Oct., 1967 IS - 10 KW - cinematography television news and journalism videotape television, and videotape television news, and portable cameras cameras cameras, portable cameras, and magnetic tape television news, and portable cameras motion pictures, and portable cameras videotape, and portable cameras cameras, and TV news television news, and magentic tape motion pictures magnetic tape magnetic recording LB - 30130 PY - 1967 SP - 718-19 ST - Another Approach to Television Newsfilming T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Another Approach to Television Newsfilming VL - 48 ID - 2768 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by commenting on the "mad worship of the woman's face which swept over the English world" during the late 1870s and early 1880s. "It was the day of the 'Professional Beauty,' whether she did actually make a profession of her charms or only used them as an amateur to win applause and ad-244/245 miration.... To the thousands who gazed upon their portraits in the shop windows, or caught faint glimpses of their features crudely rendered on the lids of chocolate-boxes and in other poor reproductions, they were goddesses revealing their glory from the empyrean to worshippers on this clouded earth." (244-45) The article contrasts these images with the "orgy of nudity" brought by the camera in 1909. Of the late 19th century, it was true that "the objects of all this adoration were perhaps (I do not know) only frivolous 'society' dames, or sometimes, it may be, light damsels whom our fathers would have called wantons. But in the emotions they created there was little of vulgarity or animalism. The portraits displayed of them were nearly always delicate, and so far as the coarseness of the medium allowed refined. They were fully arrayed in garments that represented to the contemporary eye the type of feminine elegance. Whether they were ladies or not, their habits and demeanor were those associated with aristocratic, luxurious womanhood. They were not to be confused with the half-naked females then just beginning to expose themselves to the camera and now sprawling tumultuously on all sides. We have come to live amid an orgy of nudity, exhibited in the ball-room, at the theatre, on the stage, in the street: every man of us has become a Peeping Tom whether he will or not. Crowds press to the music-halls to gaze on women who cannot dance, who are not even beautiful, whose sole attraction is that they are very nearly undressed; a whole brood of illustrated newspapers, at sixpence for the genteel, at a penny for the multitude, thrives on this art of the baignoire and the alcove. Compared with it, our riot of indecent inquisitiveness, the late-Victorian love of lovely faces seems reticent and chaste. To many thousands of clerks in offices, of assistants in shops, soldiers, sailors, settlers far away in the bush and the backwoods, the cheap framed photograph was like the picture of the Virgin or St. Catherine to some Catholics: a type of goodness and purity as well as beauty, a revelation of the ideal womanhood that hovers dimly before most men's minds at some period of their lives." (245) (emphasis added) The author concludes by contrasting the ideal woman seen in images with the "Real Woman" of real life. (248) AU - Low, Sidney DA - Jan. 23, 1909 IS - 3368 KW - theater stage fame fame celebrity actors acting ref, secondary celebrity culture fame personality motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars audiences media effects motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures media effects, and audiences media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and acting acting, and facial expression motion pictures, and not facing camera acting, and not facing camera acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting quotations quotations, and nudity quotations, and ideal woman quotations, and peeping toms women women, and beauty women, and cameras women, and acting acting, and women non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and beauty Great Britain, and nudity advertising and public relations advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising advertising, and women women, and advertising actors, and status of actors, and bias against ref, secondary ref, secular ref, eclectic ref, literary (British) ref, Living Age advertising motion pictures LB - 37540 PY - 1909 SP - 244-48 ST - The Goddesses of the Camera T2 - Living Age TI - The Goddesses of the Camera VL - 260 ID - 3853 ER - TY - JOUR AB - According to Sir Sidney Low, movies were Americanizing England. “The greatest American ‘spiritual’ conquest of all is that of the cinema,” wrote Sir Sidney Low. “In the world of the film America is supreme; at any rate she has far more than a two-Power superiority.” (338) “The cinema is the chief recreation of the masses of the people perhaps it may be said their chief interest outside their own work and domestic affairs. It has superseded the church, the meeting house, the lecture platform; it outshines the novel and the popular magzines; it is overtaking its most formiable rival, the cheap illustrated daily and weekly newspaper. And it is, in the main, American.” (338) In Britain, almost all class of the population, “except perhaps the ‘intellectuals,’ and even they are beginning to frequent the ‘pictures’, -- are habitually and constantly seeing life through American spectacles.” (338) Low then says that certain phases of American life are better known such as the Wild West. (338-39) “No wonder our younger generation talks American,” Low said. (339) “No missionary every had such a preaching stool in foreign lands as this pictorial pulpit, which is set up several times a day everywhere.” (339) Low says that “certain phases of American life” are “over-emphasized, and others ignored.” Their view of America is “scrappy, incomplete, and distorted.” (339) AU - Low, Sidney DA - Aug. 9, 1919 IS - 3918 KW - nationalism history motion pictures, and Americanism motion pictures nationalism motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, foreign nationalism and communication motion pictures, and Americanization motion pictures, and westerns history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad quotations non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Great Britain modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel Great Britian, and U.S. films motion pictures, and Americanizing England LB - 42060 PY - 1919 SP - 338-39 ST - The Americanization of England T2 - Living Age TI - The Americanization of England VL - 15 ID - 4304 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Several categories in this bibliography relate to communication technology: information storage (libraries and their problems), air and space transportation, energy conversion (including lighting), biotechnology, computers, electronic and electro-mechanical technology, communication and records (which includes printing and publishing, telegraphy, telephones, radios, phonographs and recording instruments, and photography). AU - Lowood, Henry, comp. DA - 1992 KW - technology R & D computers atomic power Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories photography time and timekeeping research and development war archives materials geography timekeeping, and clocks war values libraries libraries, and information storage +bibliographies +electricity +aeronautics and space communication +computers and the Internet electronic media +sound recording +telegraph +telephones +information storage libraries +transportation +artificial intelligence and biotechnology lighting +books, periodicals, newspapers +photography and visual communication +radio +military communication timekeeping +biography values, and technology technology and society railroads cartography atomic energy materials ceramics glass calculating machines paper LB - 11240 PY - 1992 ST - Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1990) T2 - Technology and Culture: 1992 Supplement TI - Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1990) VL - 33 ID - 2485 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Several categories in this bibliography relate to communication technology: information storage (libraries and their problems), air and space transportation, energy conversion (including lighting), biotechnology, computers, electronic and electro-mechanical technology, communication and records (which includes printing and publishing, telegraphy, telephones, radios, phonographs and recording instruments, and photography). AU - Lowood, Henry, comp. DA - 1993 KW - technology R & D computers atomic power Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories photography time and timekeeping research and development war archives materials geography timekeeping, and clocks war values libraries libraries, and information storage +bibliographies +electricity +aeronautics and space communication +computers and the Internet electronic media +sound recording +telegraph +telephones +information storage libraries +transportation +artificial intelligence and biotechnology lighting +books, periodicals, newspapers +photography and visual communication +radio +military communication timekeeping +biography values, and technology technology and society railroads cartography atomic energy materials ceramics glass calculating machines paper LB - 11250 PY - 1993 ST - Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1991) T2 - Technology and Culture: 1993 Supplement TI - Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1991) VL - 34 ID - 2486 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Several categories in this bibliography relate to communication technology: information storage (libraries and their problems), air and space transportation, energy conversion (including lighting), biotechnology, computers, electronic and electro-mechanical technology, communication and records (which includes printing and publishing, telegraphy, telephones, radios, phonographs and recording instruments, and photography). AU - Lowood, Henry, comp. DA - 1994 KW - technology R & D computers atomic power Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories photography time and timekeeping research and development war archives materials geography timekeeping, and clocks war values libraries libraries, and information storage +bibliographies +electricity +aeronautics and space communication +computers and the Internet electronic media +sound recording +telegraph +telephones +information storage libraries +transportation +artificial intelligence and biotechnology lighting +books, periodicals, newspapers +photography and visual communication +radio +military communication timekeeping +biography values, and technology technology and society railroads cartography atomic energy materials ceramics glass calculating machines paper LB - 11260 PY - 1994 ST - Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1992) T2 - Technology and Culture: 1994 Supplement TI - Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1992) VL - 35 ID - 2487 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This is the 33rd annual bibliography of current literature in the history of technology, a series that has appeared in Technology and Culture since 1964. Readers are also encouraged to examine Eugene S. Ferguson's Bibliography of the History of Technology (1968). Several categories in this current bibliography relate to communication technology: information storage (libraries and their problems), air and space transportation, energy conversion (including lighting), biotechnology, computers, electronic and electro-mechanical technology, communication and records (which includes printing and publishing, telegraphy, telephones, radios, phonographs and recording instruments, and photography). AU - Lowood, Henry, comp. DA - 1996 KW - technology R & D computers atomic power Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories photography time and timekeeping research and development war archives materials geography timekeeping, and clocks war values libraries libraries, and information storage +bibliographies +electricity +aeronautics and space communication +computers and the Internet electronic media +sound recording +telegraph +telephones +information storage libraries +transportation +artificial intelligence and biotechnology lighting +books, periodicals, newspapers +photography and visual communication +radio +military communication timekeeping +biography values, and technology technology and society railroads cartography atomic energy materials ceramics glass calculating machines paper LB - 11270 PY - 1996 ST - Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1994) T2 - Technology and Culture: 1996 Supplement TI - Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1994) VL - 37 ID - 2488 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This review essay notes some of the difficulties in displaying computers in museums -- they are "the ultimate black boxes," their intricate internal workings often invisible to the viewers; computers change rapidly making it hard for museums to keep pace and their progress is almost too good, overwhelming larger ideas about cultural and social change; and since their are interwoven into the fabric of modern life in so many ways, it is difficult to do justice to their significance. AU - Lubar, Steven DA - Jan. 1986 IS - 1 KW - computers primary sources history and new media preservation museums +computers and the Internet museums, and computer displays archives, and computers preservation, and computers archives history LB - 4150 PY - 1986 SP - 96-105 ST - The Computer Museum, Boston, Massachusetts [Exhibit Review] T2 - Technology and Culture TI - The Computer Museum, Boston, Massachusetts [Exhibit Review] VL - 27 ID - 1803 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article explains digital movie projection and discusses the difficulties preparing theaters for this technology. AU - Lubell, Peter D. DA - Nov. 2000 IS - 5 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography projection motion pictures home entertainment Hollywood digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema digitization computers 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movie +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality Hollywood, and digital movies digital movies, and Hollywood media convergence Hollywood, and media convergence media convergence, and digitial movies LB - 26210 PY - 2000 SP - 70-71 ST - Digital Cinema Is for Reel: Digital Projection Works, but It's Not at a Theater Near You -- Yet T2 - Scientific American TI - Digital Cinema Is for Reel: Digital Projection Works, but It's Not at a Theater Near You -- Yet VL - 283 ID - 1212 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is reprinted from the London Independent Conservative Daily (July 30, 31, and Aug. 1, 1923). The author recalls his experiences with first viewing moving pictures 33 years earlier. He first saw the zoetrope, or wheel of life, the came a "little flexible book of pictures which you turned over very rapidly, and so forth. "All magic lanterns and dissolving-view entertainments were an ecstasy ... but they were never so much so as when there were comic pictures that moved," Lucas writes. (565) He says that "what began with a curious patient investigation of nature seems to have passed, at any rate for the time being, to those pioneers of the passionate world, Pola Negri, Pauline Frederick, and Rudolph Valentino." (566) [my emphasis] Lucas contrasts motion pictures with the stage. "To me the principal value of the cinema is that it can show us things that otherwise we could never see; yet it most popular work at the moment is the presentation of well-known plays and well-known novels." (568) He wonders why anyone who has seen a drama performed live on stage or has read a good work of literature would want to see it reproduced in a movie. "I am personally bewildered by the fact that anyone who has seen a play acted on the stage, with the author's words accompanying each gesture, should wish to witness it again -- as it were in a mirror, and with one's ears stopped with wax." (568) Indeed, of silent film he says: "But, whatever may be the future of the cinema, one purpose it will always fulfill: it will always be the theatre of the deaf. Indeed, the value of its kindness to the deaf cannot be overestimated." (570) (my emphasis) Lucas discusses some of the unique advantages of motion pictures -- their ability to go back and forth in time and their power to transmit ideas throughout the entire world. "One of the cinema's most precious gifts is its ability to leap backwards and forwards into time and instantaneously construct either a significant early environment or illustrate a dark foreboding or happy hope. It can also, with equal celerity, heavily underline and isolate whatever needs such treatment. It can show with the utmost vividness what is in every character's mind; it can almost draw pictures of abstract ideas! And not the least interesting of its peculiar advantage is that it can appeal to all the world at the same moment with almost equal force -- for I take it that Tokyo is hardly less familiar with Mary Pickford than is Tooting or Turin. Judicious films might then be very federating things, 568/569 and I advise the League of Nations to think of this. But probably the cinema-managers will require a little financial persuasion to let such alloy in." (568-69) He notes that while it is possible to make films in color, this branch of movie making seems to be at "a complete standstill." (570) But the author did not feel that cinema was being used to its full potential and, in fact, compares movies to "dope" or a drug. "But when all is said, what the cinema has provided has in the main been dope. Very delightful dope, fairly harmless dope, but dope." (568) He goes on to write that "A wise autocrat would probably ration it with some strictness. The movies have a way of growing on their frequenters with a drug-like persistence, and I can't think it a good thing that the weekly attendance at cinema in the British Isles should be twenty-two million people. Even if the appeal were less lurid, I should doubt if this was the best way for twenty-two million people to be spending time every week, for, although all kinds of architectural and sanitary improvements have been made, cinema theatres are still practically in darkness, all tax the eyes, and few have proper ventilation." (568) Cinema has a powerful influence on children, Lucas maintains, and says that "it is deplorable that children should be present at cinema performance where emphasis is laid upon lawlessness and what is sordid and hectic." (569) But it is also a powerful education force, and it teaches best by "indirect instruction" rather than "direct instruction" which most people try to avoid. (569) Films can "teach history better than any book," he asserts. (569) "There is almost no phase of civilization or nature that the cinema cannot place before us, even scenes of life in the depths of the sea. In the illustration of evolution it can do more in ten minutes than a textbook in ten hours." (569) He believes that a "children's cinema" could be "a tremendous moral force." (569) AU - Lucas, E. V. DA - Sept. 22, 1923 IS - 4133 KW - theater stage nationalism Muybridge, Edward Muybridge, Eadweard history children ref, secondary ref, secular ref, eclectic ref, literary (British) ref, Living Age motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and critics zoetrope motion pictures, and zoetrope motion pictures, and Edward Muybridge motion pictures, and Thomas Edison motion pictures, and E. J. Marey motion pictures, and George Eastman Eastman, George, and motion pictures Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures Marey, E. J., and motion pictures Muybridge, Edward, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, instantaneous film, and George Eastman motion pictures, and roll film non-USA non-USA, and motion pictures motion pictures, and non-USA motion pictures, and Great Britain Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures quotations quotations, and pioneers of passionate world metaphors metaphors, and movies as dope metaphors, and movies as drugs motion pictures, as a drug motion pictures, as dope motion pictures, and D. W. Griffith Griffith, D. W., and motion pictures Griffith, D. W. Chaplin, Charlie motion pictures, and Charlie Chaplin children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel images vs. words words vs. images motion pictures, and novels quotations, moves as theater of the deaf education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and internationalism motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color Eastman, George film photography LB - 40030 PY - 1923 SP - 564-70 ST - Moving-Picture Prospects and Retrospects T2 - Living Age TI - Moving-Picture Prospects and Retrospects VL - 318 ID - 4101 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece discusses the difficulties and strategies involved in searching the Internet. It has charts showing the growth in number of websites and host computers between 1993 and 1997. It also considers finding pictures on the web. The Internet is much more than a library, and "the diversity of materials on the Net goes far beyond the scope of the traditional library. The author concludes: "Users willing to pay a fee to underwrite the work of authors, publishers, indexers and reviewers can sustain the tradition of the library. In cases where information is furnished without charge or is advertiser supported, low-cost computer-based indexing will most likely dominate -- the same unstructured environment that characterizes much of the contemporary Internet. Thus, social and economic issues, rather than technological ones, will exert the greatest influence in shaping the future of information retrieval on the Internet." AU - Lynch, Clifford DA - March 1997 IS - 3 KW - computers photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations archives libraries Internet libraries, and information storage information storage, and libraries +information storage information processing Information Age +computers and the Internet +information storage information storage world wide web +photography and visual communication Internet, and growth of (1993-97) information processing information retrieval advertising, and the Internet advertising LB - 4570 PY - 1997 SP - 52-56 ST - Searching the Internet T2 - Scientific American TI - Searching the Internet VL - 276 ID - 1844 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Lynch argues in 1995 that the over the next ten years the library "will answer the demands of its changing community rather than implement new technology to facilitate traditional operations." At the time of this essay, Lynch was Director of Library Automation in the Office of the President at the University of California. AU - Lynch, Clifford A. DA - Summer, 1995 IS - 90 KW - computers computers libraries information storage digital media education libraries, and new media libraries, and digital media computers and the Internet libraries, and computers computers, and libraries LB - 29840 PY - 1995 SP - 93-105 ST - The Technological Framework for Library Planning in the Next Decade T2 - New Directions for Higher Education TI - The Technological Framework for Library Planning in the Next Decade ID - 2740 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses Richard D. Heffner. He became the founding general manager of New York’s principal public broadcasting station, Channel 13, in 1962. Heffner hosted "The Open Mind," which interviewed leading intellectuals and political leaders. Heffner was head of the movie industry's Classification and Rating Administration from 1974 until 1994. AU - Lynes, Russell DA - Sept., 1962 IS - 1348 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner CARA CARA, and Richard Heffner Valenti, Jack Heffner, Richard, and CARA censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and background Heffner, Richard, and Jack Valenti Heffner, Richard Open Mind, and Richard Heffner +television television, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and television Heffner, Richard, and Open Mind LB - 19850 PY - 1962 SP - 26, 28-29 ST - Channel 13 in Biz T2 - Harper's Magazine TI - Channel 13 in Biz VL - 225 ID - 817 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Watching the news by film would be entertaining, wrote the theater critic and film producer Kenneth MacGowan. After seeing “Men slaying men in Europe and Mexico. Murderers murdered in France,” the “newspapers seem a little tame after this sort of thing.” (27) MacGowan wrote: “Why buy the news when you can get it thrust upon you … as a by-product of amusement?” (27) MacGowan believed that "Seeing the news by movies has made over the war correspondent as well as the news reader." (27) He thought the news camera would also have an important influence on the way future generations could learn history. "Instead of reading dry history," schools might be able to show past events on a movie screen. (27) AU - MacGowan, Kenneth DA - April 1, 1916 KW - Jones, Robert Edmond entertainment entertainment, and journalism ref, Collier's ref, secondary news and journalism motion pictures motion pictures, and news motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures news, and motion pictures news, and entertainment journalism, and entertainment newsreels Jones, Robert Edmond, and Kenneth MacGowan history and new media motion pictures, and history news, and history history journalism news LB - 42780 PY - 1916 SP - 27-28 ST - Seeing the News by Films T2 - Collier's TI - Seeing the News by Films VL - 57 ID - 1896 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses efforts to pass federal legislation during the 1920s to censor motion pictures. It provides information on measures proposed but not passed. AU - MacGregor, Ford H. DA - Nov. 1926 KW - law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA government +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and federal censorship government censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and federal regulation motion pictures, and local censorship censorship, local censorship, state motion pictures, and state censorship motion pictures, and foreign censorship LB - 13130 PY - 1926 SP - 163-74 ST - Official Censorship Legislation T2 - Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science TI - Official Censorship Legislation VL - 128 ID - 487 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article gives definitions for terms used in 1908 in advertising -- from "Adverting Agent" through "Zinc Plate." Many of the terms (e.g., halftone, linotype, press, etc.) were also common to journalism and photography. AU - MacGregor, T. D. DA - March 1908 IS - 3 KW - journalism photography ref, secondary advertising and public relations advertising, and terminology (1908) news and journalism news, and advertising journalism, and advertising advertising, and news advertising, and journalism photography, and advertising advertising, and photography photography and visual communication ref, secondary ref, secular ref, economic ref, Banker's Magazine advertising news advertising, and vocabulary (1908) LB - 37520 PY - 1908 SP - 396-99 ST - Glossary of Terms Commonly Used in Advertising T2 - Banker's Magazine TI - Glossary of Terms Commonly Used in Advertising VL - 76 ID - 3851 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Author quotes Woodrow Wilson in 1937 (without attribution): “Woodrow Wilson saw The Birth of a Nation at a private showing in the White House and paid the picture its finest tribute. The President had lived in the Carolinas as a child during Reconstruction days. When the two hours and forty minutes of camera reporting at last were over, he rose from his chair and wiped his eyes. “‘It is,’ he said, ‘like writing history with lightning. And my only regret is that it is all so terribly true.’” (p. 69) AU - MacKaye, Milton DA - Nov. 1937 IS - 5 KW - history words vs. images photography ref, secondary presidents and new media photography and visual communication motion pictures Wilson, Woodrow Wilson, Woodrow, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Woodrow Wilson Griffith, D. W. history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures images vs. words war motion pictures, and war war, and motion pictures quotations motion pictures, history written with lightning MacKaye, Milton, and Birth of a Nation metaphors motion pictures, as lightning flash ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, political ref, Scribner's Magazine LB - 6450 PY - 1937 SP - 40-46, 69 ST - The Birth of a Nation T2 - Scribner's Magazine TI - The Birth of a Nation VL - 102 ID - 3442 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Walt Makee, writing for a Chicago publication, The Show World, said that "'The children of today will see the press superseded to more or less extent by a combine moto [sic] and phonographic machine. … Today, a photograph may be transferred by telegraph; tomorrow, a motion picture may be taken at any distance without wires. Indeed the daily newspaper may be relegated to the rag-heap and reels and records take its place. Moreover, just as today, one may record and reproduce without disturbing the waxen cylinder upon a phonographic machine, so will some genius parallel this achievement in motography by the production of a projecto-camerascope, which will project its pictures immediately after exposure in the photographic process; for an indestructible film which not require the delaying development-bath of today.'" (This passage is also quoted by Ben Singer, “Early Home Cinema and the Edison Home Projecting Kinetoscope,” Film History, 2 (No. 1, 1988), 41. AU - Makee, Walt DA - June 27, 1908 IS - 1 KW - home history news and journalism sound recording newspapers, and new media newspapers, and death of ref, secondary electricity motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures home and new media motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures cameras cameras, portable cameras, home movie cameras home entertainment modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures home, and electricity electricity, and home electricity, and home entertainment newspapers, and home entertainment television newspapers, and motion pictures newspapers, and television television, early visions of home LB - 42190 PY - 1908 SP - 10 ST - Bright Future for Big Motion View Industry T2 - The Show World TI - Bright Future for Big Motion View Industry VL - 3 ID - 4318 ER - TY - JOUR AB - One of the presumed effects associated with the use of pornography is decreased sensitivity to rape. This has been demonstrated in a number of ways and by various scales. Malamuth and Check, here, examined the influence that exposure to an audio-taped pornographic scenario depicting either a rape or non-rape condition influence arousal as well as attitudes toward rape. Preceding the rape/non-rape conditions, subjects were pre-exposed to a series of audio-taped accounts of sexual acts depicting various conditions ranging from consent vs. non-consent, pain vs. no-pain (for the female), and arousal vs. disgust. During the exposure condition, a penile tumescence measure was used to indicate the subjects level of arousal. After, subjects were grouped based on their scores on the Likelihood to Rape scale (LR). Their findings indicate differences between low-LR and high-LR subjects such that “low-LR subjects were equally aroused to the consenting and the non-consenting depictions, whereas the high-LR subjects showed greater arousal to the non-consenting scenes” (64). Furthermore, there was a relationship between sexual aggression (measured by post-test items) and indicated likelihood to rape. This study is somewhat unique in that it utilized audiotape as the medium for presenting the pornographic stimulus. --Michael Boyle AU - Malamuth, N. M. and J. V. P. Check DA - 1983 IS - 1 KW - women, and new media women social science research sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence violence Boyle, Michael pornography media effects pornography, and rape myths violence, and pornography pornography, and violence women, and pornography pornography, and women +motion pictures and popular culture pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects media effects, and violence media effects, and motion pictures LB - 1290 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1983 SP - 55-67 ST - Sexual Arousal to Rape Depictions: Individual Differences T2 - Journal of Abnormal Psychology TI - Sexual Arousal to Rape Depictions: Individual Differences VL - 92 ID - 217 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This study used an experiment to assess male’s reactions to audio-taped re-enactments of sexual scenarios. Of particular concern in this study was the role that individual differences, in terms of self-reported likelihood to rape, played in mediating any effects of the audiotapes. After the exposure conditions, participants were asked to answer a battery of questions assessing their attitudes toward women and rape, as well as their use of pornographic magazines such as Penthouse and Playboy. An initial finding of this study was that representations of rape myths, such as a woman coming to enjoy a rape, resulted in respondents indicated a greater sense of belief in those myths. The authors explore a number of explanations for their findings including Bandura’s social learning theory as well as the implication that sexually aggressive pornography may act to “prime” respondents to think, act, and react in a sexually aggressive manner. --Michael Boyle AU - Malamuth, N. M. and J. V. P. DA - 1985 KW - women, and new media women social science research sexuality sexuality sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence violence news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines Boyle, Michael pornography media effects pornography, and rape myths violence, and pornography pornography, and violence women, and pornography pornography, and women +motion pictures and popular culture pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects media effects, and violence media effects, and audiotapes +sound recording sound recording, and pornography magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines media effects, and magazines Playboy Penthouse LB - 1300 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1985 SP - 299-320 ST - The Effects of Aggressive Pornography on Beliefs in Rape Myths: Individual Differences T2 - Journal of Research in Personality TI - The Effects of Aggressive Pornography on Beliefs in Rape Myths: Individual Differences VL - 19 ID - 218 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Discussion of mainly pre-1940 projectors, with several photographs and illustrations of early projection booths and technological innovations, including Loews Theater on Broadway in New York City in 1939 and Western Electric Vitaphone sound system of 1928. Malkames is described by Chair of SMPTE’s Archival Papers and Historical Committee as a pioneer in the fields of motion picture cameras, printers and projectors. -Mark Van Pelt AU - Malkames, Karl DA - Aug. 2001 IS - 8 KW - education democracy motion pictures motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and machine operators Van Pelt, Mark motion pictures, and projectors sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures LB - 34510 PY - 2001 SP - 527-531 ST - The Motion Picture Machine Operator: 1900 to 2000 T2 - SMPTE Journal TI - The Motion Picture Machine Operator: 1900 to 2000 VL - 110 ID - 3089 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article, John Malone comments on changes taking place in the acting profession. He points out that making actors then lived in poverty. During 1893-94, "more than ten thousand persons, who had for a number of years been earning a living by means of acting, were out of employment and in sore straits." (235) Also, a few years earlier "existed in different prominent cities of the United States companies of players known as 'stock' actors." (237) Malone says that changes in transportation and communication extended the reputations of actors beyond their local areas. "When the steamship, the electric wire, and the daily newspaper began to draw the ends of the earth more closely together, facility of travel had its effect upon the stock company of actors as well as upon other communities. Actors began to travel from place to place, at first in small circuits, from a natural and commendable desire to increase their usefulness as well as their financial receipts. The theatre-going public encouraged this action from a similarly natural desire to see new faces and witness different renditions of its favorite dramas; and as improvement went on in means of transportation and the dissemination of intelligence, so the fame of particular players became more widespread and afforded an opportunity for the increase of that class of players known as 'stars.' When the only means of travel from city to city was the public or private coach, actors, from purely economical reasons, hesitated to place themselves before the world in the attitude of stars, no matter how great might be their reputations. But when it became possible to extend a local reputation to half-a-dozen of the principal cities of the country, the actor was not to blame for taking advantage of his opportunity. But the result, so far as the existence of the stock company was concerned, was that no sooner had a particular actor gained a considerable reputation than he began to look for means to place himself in the rank of stars, and by these defections the managers of stock companies found themselves every year more and more impeded in their purpose of keeping up a high standard of artistic work." (238) At one time only "stars" traveled from place to place but by 1895, traveling stock players were more common. (239) Replacing the stock company was a new experiment in organizing known as the "combination system" in which "an entire company of players" traveled around the country to put on a single play. (239) "Next came the most distinctively dangerous novelty which afflicted the life of the drama. The stock plays known as the 'standard drama' did not afford sufficient material for the growing influence of the combination. It was ell enough for actors who had made a reputation in particular parts or in particular plays, but 239/240 the new aspirant found it easier to rise to fame and fortune in the wake of a new play. So for a number of years it has been the fashion for every aspiring actor to seek some novel dramatic idea upon whose reputation he might easily ascend to the stellar spaces. 'The play's the thing!' -- became the rallying cry of the dramatic enthusiasts." (239-40) Malone goes on to say that "As the number of attempts at dramatic work increased, it became more difficult to determine the good from the bad." (240) The public willingly embraced these new plays and actors. (241) The press was important in generating publicity. Newspapers willingly published the promotional material put out by managers and agents. (242) More and more actors became famous for playing a particular character. "If he be a star, and has made money, he enjoys neither his notoriety nor his fame, for he has become a 'part.' Having made a reputation and a fortune through the performance of a certain character, his future career is tied to the mask of that character. He is remembered for it, reminded of it, compared to it, no matter where he goes, what he does, or how often he tries to destroy the memory of it by trying to assume a new and different part. As a stock actor he was praised for his ability effectively to assume a number of different and dissimilar parts." (244) Malone says that not all actors can expect to be stars and that there is a need to re-establish the stock companies. (245) Among the actors' problems are excessive travel and fear of not being hired. (244) AU - Malone, John DA - Oct. 1895 KW - theater stage public relations journalism fame celebrity critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater ref, secondary celebrity culture theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures celebrity, and actors actors, and celebrity fame, and actors actors, and fame actors acting actors, and fame before movies quotations quotations, and actors fame actors, and status of news and journalism actors, and journalists journalism, and actors personality actors, and personality personality, and actors actors, and public relations public relations, and actors advertising and public relations actors, and stars (origins) actors, and stock companies actors, and combination system ref, secondary ref, secular ref, social ref, literary ref, Forum advertising LB - 38720 PY - 1895 SP - 235-46 ST - The Actor, the Manager, and the Public T2 - Forum TI - The Actor, the Manager, and the Public ID - 3971 ER - TY - JOUR AB - “Love of colour and susceptibility to colour is one of the strongest instinct in human beings,” the author says. “If you want to discover the most organic, basic elements of the sophisticated human being of to-day, go to children and go to savages. You will find that next to food, they love things of vivid colour and sparkle. That instinct is alive and strong in everyone of us,” and color “brings a new terrific power to motion pictures.” (225) Mamoulian goes on to say that "Apart from pure pictorial beauty and entertainment value of colour, there is also a definite emotional content and meaning in most colours and shades," (225) and that movie makers and other artists "should take advantage of the mental and emotional implications of colour and use them on the screen to increase the power and effectiveness of a scene, situation or character." (225) The author says that we expect more from color when dealing with pictures set in the past than we do from "some stories of ur modern age and civilization." (226) Black-and-white films will remain but they will become less frequent and color movies will be more common. The author warns that "Colour should not mean gaudiness. Restraint and selectiveness is the essence of art." (226) AU - Mamoulian, Rouben DA - Summer, 1935 IS - 4 KW - ref, secondary color color, and emotion quotations quotations, and color color, and primitives color, and motion pictures motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and history history, and media color, and restraint history LB - 41120 PY - 1935 SP - 225-26 ST - Colour and Emotion T2 - Cinema Quarterly TI - Colour and Emotion VL - 3 ID - 4211 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This study examined the effects of showing pornographic movies to couples once a week for a four-week time period. A total of 68 couples were used in this analysis. During the time period in which the movies were shown, data on the participant’s sexual behavior was tracked through self-report. Two conditions were employed(1) conventional sex movies for two weeks followed by less conventional (i.e. homosexual) sex movies, and (2) less conventional sex movies for two weeks followed by conventional sex movies for two weeks. They found that on the nights that the movies were shown, sexual activity increased. This effect was greatest for the first week of the experiment but diminished as the study progressed. For the conventional sex first condition, there was a spike during week three which was the first showing of unconventional sex movies for that group. The authors argue that the effects resulting from weekly pornography use, particularly regarding sexual activity with a partner, increase sexual activity but are transient in nature. As such, the effect dissipates after awhile. However, they indicate that coming back to sexual materials after a hiatus results in effects similar to the original exposure. --Michael Boyle AU - Mann, J., L. Berkowitz, J. Sidman, S. Starr, and S. West DA - 1974 IS - 6 KW - women, and new media women social science research sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence violence Boyle, Michael pornography media effects pornography, and rape myths violence, and pornography pornography, and violence women, and pornography pornography, and women +motion pictures and popular culture pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects media effects, and violence media effects, and motion pictures pornography, and satiation media effects, and satiation LB - 1310 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1974 SP - 729-35 ST - Satiation of the Transient Stimulating Effect of Erotic Films T2 - Journal of Personality and Social Psychology TI - Satiation of the Transient Stimulating Effect of Erotic Films VL - 30 ID - 219 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Martin, Marcus J. DA - June 1915 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins LB - 7160 PY - 1915 SP - 193 ST - Television T2 - Wireless World TI - Television VL - 3 ID - 2087 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author discusses artificial lighting created by “clock work lamps and the illuminant magnesium ribbon.” Exposure time required ten to twenty seconds. The proportion of chemicals used is also discussed. AU - Mason, George DA - 1887 KW - photography lighting +photography and visual communication lighting, and magnesium ribbons lighting, artificial (1887) photography, and lighting LB - 12400 PY - 1887 SP - 142-43 ST - Magnesium Light Experiments T2 - American Annual of Photography and Photographic Times: Almanac for 1888 TI - Magnesium Light Experiments ID - 2587 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author says that motion pictures are being used "in a hundred ways" (963) today for educational purposes -- travel, advertising, etc. The moving picture has "almost unlimited possibilities" in education. (963) The article has an extended quotation from Thomas A. Edison on the educational value of movies (768, 770). Edison is quoted as saying: "'A child is given a set of hieroglyphics to learn, and when it has done that it learns that groups of hieroglyphics have meanings of their own; they connote objects in the world about the child. That is the alphabet and printed words. But the child has no palpable facts, nothing for its imagination to work on. "'Give the child objects, something that can be visualized, let it see with its own eyes, and it is astounding how rapidly that child will learn.... (768) 768/770 "'Sooner or later it's coming -- moving pictures in every school in connection with all courses. It may take eight or ten years, just as it took use about ten years to get "straight" moving pictures over, but it's bound to come.'" (970) The article says that Wisconsin is one of the leaders in setting up educational film programs of the kind Edison advocates. (970) The author says it is surprising that motion pictures are not used more extensively today in education and notes the possibilities of "'moving-picture textbooks' for all school courses." (970) AU - Mason, Gregory DA - Aug. 22, 1914 KW - history children words vs. images ref, secondary motion pictures motion pictures, and new art form Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Thomas Edison Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures history, and Thomas Edison Edison, Thomas, and history history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children motion pictures, and travel advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space quotations quotations, and educational movies images vs. words ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, literary ref, Outlook advertising LB - 38400 PY - 1914 SP - 963-70 ST - Teaching by the Movies: The Uses of Motion Pictures in Education and an Interview with Their Perfecter, Thomas A. Edison T2 - Outlook TI - Teaching by the Movies: The Uses of Motion Pictures in Education and an Interview with Their Perfecter, Thomas A. Edison ID - 3939 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article examines the modern press in Great Britain, which, the author believes, has "moral obligations" to the public. He asks "who and what really governs a newspaper?" The modern press has become "not concerned only with the presentation of ideas and facts; it is also a medium, an almost colorless medium, of trade." (515) Insofar as a newspaper proprietor "exercises a direct censorship on the character of things he advertises, he may be said to be acting morally." (515) The increasing use of photography and romantic fiction may have made newspapers more popular but they have led to a decline in the press's moral influence. In general, "the most modern kind of newspaper is more thoroughly commercial in tone" than papers from an earlier time. (516) The earlier, more conventional type of journalism "was served by a type of journalist who generally wrote as he thought. The newer is at one freer and more skeptical in tone, more independent, but much less serious." (516) The "chief agent of the new form of journalism is almost necessarily the proprietor" and the type of proprietor that will be the model for the future is most likely to be men such as Lord Northcliffe of England Daily Mail and Joseph Pulitzer of the New York World. The author comments on the growing influence of modern newspapers on public opinion and how that influence differs from the more deliberative press of the mid-nineteenth century. "The nations are temporarily passing Carlyle's book-selling stage, and becoming, so far as the mass are concerned, newspaper-reading nations." (517) He cites John Stuart Mill and suggests that newspapers are important in the creation of a "Collective Will" necessary to democracy in an increasingly urban society. (517) "A huge, flat surface of humanity has suddenly been made sensitive and opened 517/518 to a multitude of new impressions" by the modern press. (517-18) "Mr. Wells (H.G.?), in his imaginative pictures of future society, can hardly conceive this mass as deliberately self-governing. So weak is its economic position, so keen its appetite for pleasure, so helpless and so impressionable its temper, so volatile its thinking about public questions, that it seems clearly destined to fall under the control of stronger wills and centralized powers. Its favorite press necessarily reflects what are discovered to be its immediate spiritual needs. Strongest of all is its curiosity, not the curiosity of the trained mind, but the simple kindly inquisitiveness which contents itself with romantic illusions, fed either with fiction or with social gossip. Crime interests it, because its normal life, though restless, is humdrum; and sport and gambling, and the brilliant, vulgar pageant of civilization, while the Imperialist movement has quickened its sense of color and the pride of a governing race. But it is not enthusiastic; for it was not born of a period of new ideas in politics or religion." (518) (emphasis added) Massingham goes on to say that this is not a revolutionary period such as 1817 or 1840, because only a tiny minority takes any "sustained or active part in political work or organization." (518) "The founders of the new journalism have interpreted this new strain of character, born of modern city life and a universal skimming habit, and helped to form it. Like Faust, they resembled the spirit they understood. The older journalism was and is more or less deliberately instructive and educational. The new is almost purely pictorial and impressionist. Its literary form has changed. 'Let us take literature,' said Verlaine -- himself a literary poet -- 'and wring its neck.' If the new journalism has not wrung the neck of the old, its sensationalism, it liveliness of tone, the far greater variety of its subjects, its untiring organization of pleasurable and amusing facts, in which it compasses the whole world in order to gain one reader, its adaptation of the arts of photography and romantic fiction to the daily newspaper, have drawn a large public away from its rival. It is impossible not to conclude that this implies a certain lowering of the currency, so much more grist put into the great amusement mill, so much more withdrawn from criticism of life and continuous thought about it. The daily newspaper may thus be recovering its true function in the modern State. But it so, it is reaching it through a perceptible lose of moral influence, and of its earlier ambitions as an organ of literature." (518) (emphasis added) The author maintains that the influence of political experts has declined since the 1870s and 1880s and that only a few newspaper carry any weight with the British government. Massingham quotes Graham Wallas who talked about the journalist's opportunities in the "production of emotion and opinion," (519) and the creation of "sub-conscious inferences" in politics. Massingham comments on the ability of the press to use images in ways that can shape opinion. (519) "It is clear that an appeal of this kind to the emotional prejudices of great masses of people, who think, as it were, through their eyes, requires an entirely different set of agents and methods from those employed by the older type of newspaper. The reflective political essay in the shape of the leader must, as I have said, either disappear or be much shortened. The sharp separation between the literary and the news-gathering staff must also be modified. The function of the head of the organization will be to present every day some new pictorial arrangement of the surface life of man. Its salient feature will not often be political, and when the turn of politics comes round, the effect 519/520 to be aimed at must be sharp, shallow impression made on the fancy of the newspaper's huge clientele, to be removed at the first hint of satiety or the first call to a profitable change of subject. Such machinery is repugnant to the notion of special intellectual training." (519-20) (emphasis added) "We have, therefore, to deal chiefly with a journalism whose main end is to amuse, based on the broad purpose of 'giving the people what they want,' giving, that is to say, to a race of hard but not highly educated workers larger imaginative horizons than Peckham or Camberwell afford, appealing to their physical weariness and preoccupation, their mental and moral confusion about life and its puzzling or darkly colored issues." (520) (my emphasis) Massingham says the modern newspaper is deliberately calculated "to create a continuous interest in a paper, to make it a habit, like tobacco or snuff-taking." (520) He goes on to says that "Originality, or, indeed, any form of artistic effort, is rididly excluded from these calculations," and that "much of the actual product of such newspapers, or of their allied publications, is machine-made." (520) (emphasis added) The author raises other concerns such as "trial by newspaper" (520) which interferes with the system of justice; the danger of consolidated newspaper ownership; interference with "the more leisurely workings of diplomacy" (521); the decline in the appraisal of serious art; and the overemphasis of sports. The "passionate Roman cult of professional athletics" which publicizes "an army of cricketers, footballers, boxers, runners, oarsmen, jockeys and horse-boys, billiard players, wrestlers and swimmers, as well as the minor gods and goddesses of the theatre, .... cheapens the popular view of the significance of individual character and of public events," he argues. (521) (emphasis added) The organization of the modern newspaper overwhelms the judgment of good journalists. The influence of the journalist "dies" quickly. (522) Massingham says "that some such common carrier of the age was bound to appear. If it really does establish a general standard of thought and opinion, it must in the end insensibly aid the tendency of our times to achieve a measure of unity for mankind. Irritable, ignorant, and impulsive as it is, it cannot help promoting understanding between nations." (522) (emphasis added) The author calls upon "the satirist and moral reformer" to condemn this "soulless type of journalism" because "public morals and good government demand ... intelligent and well-informed reporting." (523) If the modern retains one of the "prime moral purpose of journalism, which is the hearing of 'complaints'," it also "puts the standard of culture too low," the author says, "a little lower, I think, than any other journalism in the world." (524) (emphasis added) AU - Massingham, H. W. DA - Nov. 26, 1910 IS - 3464 KW - journalism journalism entertainment, and journalism entertainment celebrity celebrity culture magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary books, periodicals, newspapers democracy newspapers, and democracy democracy, and newspapers news and journalism critics critics, and newspapers newspapers, and critics critics, and journalism journalism, and critics modernity modernity, and newspapers newspapers, and modernity new way of seeing journalism, and entertainment entertainment, and journalism newspapers, and entertainment entertainment, and newspapers advertising and public relations advertising, and newspapers advertising, and journalism journalism, and advertising newspapers, and advertising celebrity culture newspapers, and celebrity culture celebrity culture, and newspapers non-USA Great Britain non-USA, and newspapers Great Britain, and newspapers Northcliffe, Lord Northcliffe, Lord, and modern newspapers Pulitzer, Joseph quotations quotations, and newspapers nationalism and communication newspapers, and nationalism nationalism, and newspapers newspapers, and community community, and newspapers Mill, John Stuart advertising, and Great Britain Great Britain, and advertising anti-urban prejudice photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism photography and visual communication class newspapers, and class class, and newspapers metaphors metaphors, and newspapers metaphors, and tobacco use celebrity vs. character ref, secondary ref, secular ref, eclectic ref, literary (British) ref, Living Age advertising community motion pictures nationalism LB - 37110 PY - 1910 SP - 515-24 ST - The Modern Press and Its Public T2 - Living Age TI - The Modern Press and Its Public VL - 267 ID - 3811 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article provides an interesting commentary on the use of color in modern art. The author spends a good deal of space discussing and criticizing Post-Impressionism, and less in critiquing cubism and futurism (which he admits he does not understand, p. 511). Whereas in more conventional art color was linked to nature, in modern art color is often used to reflect the inner emotional life and is often detached from nature. The use of color is often associated with the unique and with freedom and liberty. "Something of this freedom there has always been in the art of painting; the mere fact that the color scheme of every painter is individual implies such liberty," Mather writes. (507) Mather considers the use of color by the impressionist Monet who specialized in "sunlit air." (507) He says that the "Luminists invented a new method to suggest the vibrancy of light. Black is discarded because it is inert, and the painting is made by laying strokes of bright color together, leaving their mixture to the spectator's eye. This art, being concentrated on the problem of light and air, is careless about subjects and composition. Any object serves the Luminist's end so long as it absorbs or reflects light interestingly." (507) The Neo-Impressionist marked a new departure. "Where the Luminists had laid the strokes with some regard to the form of the object, getting the desired optical mixture by instinct or experiment, the Neo-Impressionists, as the new men were soon to be called, practiced a perfectly uniform dot, or blob, and studied scientifically the results of color juxtaposition. Thus technique became a shade more unnatural, and Luminism endeavored to assume the pretensions of a science." (507) The author says that over the past half century art has moved away from showing a world as perceived by ordinary people and further away from nature. "In short, for fifty years painting became constantly more highly specialized, further away from average human concerns, more unlike both nature itself, as perceived by the ordinary man, and even more unlike the world of classical painters which the average man had been trained into accepting as natural. Evidently the way was being prepared for that complete breach with nature which is the avowed program of the latest painting." (509) Post-impressionism tends to see nature as a disturber of authentic inward emotion and moves from accepting the authority of nature. Mather argues that "at least all individualistic doctrines till very lately admitted a kind of authority in nature. Suppose my isolated mood to be the only artistic motive or value, at least it is nature or some aspect of nature by which my mood is evoked. It is the distinction of Post-Impressionism to have retained the theory of the isolated ecstatic state, but it is now supposed to be complete within the personality itself. Nature does not come in at all, being merely a disturber of the authentic inward emotion. ...Such is the doctrine of Matisse and his followers. 'We express ourselves immediately in paint,' is their cry; 'and our forms and colors are not those of nature, but those of our own inner emotions.' [my emphasis] In such a view lies either lamentable self-deception or utter charlatanry. All experiences in a life are knit together. Memory cannot whole be inhibited. Psychologically there is no such thing as this isolated emotion in the void. So the Post-Impressionist is forced to simulate it. What he actually does is merely to search the remoter, odder, more unlikely parts of his experience of nature, and render them with a coarseness and vehemence which is to be read as spontaneity. You may see just what emotional immediacy comes to in the Matisse portrait here reproduced. We have willful if powerful distortions, a childish symbolism, fairly appalling ugliness. I sometimes wish the over-subtle and world-wearied esthetes who welcome the shock such a work undoubtedly produces could bring to their appreciation of art the common sense they use in their ordinary living. So far as Post-Impressionism rests on a desperate struggle for originality and a false theory of the emotions it is a negligible eccentricity which will soon run it course. Yet no such revolution is ut- 509/510 terly vain. This one represents an honest and justifiable disgust with the tameness and nullity of much academic painting...." (509-10) The Post-Impressionist influenced the use of color by artists. "A franker use of color, certain simple formulas for mass, a bolder decorative sense -- these are hints that many of our well trained painters are quietly taking from the Post-Impressionists. Yet I feel that all such gains in detail come to very little indeed so long as art is unguided by any sound social tradition and left the prey of boisterous and undisciplined personalities," the author writes. He believes that rather than an "impending revolution," Post-Impressionism is most likely "a particular and transient form of eccentricity which began twenty five years ago in literature with the Symbolists." (510) While Post-Impressionism "has roots," (510) Mather says, cubism and futurism do not and "are more or less hoaxes." (510) All three movements are flawed. "And here, perhaps, lies the fallacy of the whole recent movement -- so far as it is at all sincere," he writes. "In the desperate research of novelty, themes that might serve a minor purpse in literature are promoted to major use in the art of painting. An exact description of a distorted and toadlike nude by Matisse would perhaps not offend the mind; the picture does offend the eye.... In short, so far as Post-Impressionism and Cubism are not mere sham they seem to me an insidious rebirth of the old fallacy of the literary picture. The Mid-Victorian literary picture was nourished on harmless anecdote, and Post-Impressionist or Cubist picture is spawned from the morbid intimations of symbolistic poetry and distorted Bergsonian philosophy. In fact, the unwholesomeness of the new pictures is their most striking and immediate condemnation. Where the critics notes a forced and hectic mixing of pictorial and literary values, the layman may well dismiss on moral grounds an art that lives in the miasma of morbid hallucination or sterile experimentation and denies in the name of individualism values which are those of society and of life itself." (512) AU - Mather, Frank Jewett Jr. DA - March 6, 1913 IS - 3353 KW - theater theater emotion decadence ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color color, in history color, and theory color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations theater and stage color, and theater theater, and color censorship and ratings media effects color, media effects media effects, and color color, and sensuality sexuality color, and sexuality sexuality, and color lighting lighting, and color color, and lighting color, and post-impressionism color, and modern art Matisse, Henri, and color color, and Henri Matisse color, and Vincent Van Gogh color, and nature nature, and color quotations quotations, and color in modern art quotations, and color equals inner emotion critics critics, and modern art critics, and modern color critics, and Matisse color, and cubism color, and futurism values, and modern art immorality, and modern art censorship ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent critics, and color immorality LB - 39300 PY - 1913 SP - 504-12 ST - Newest Tendencies in Art T2 - The Independent TI - Newest Tendencies in Art VL - 74 ID - 4029 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Brander Matthews, who taught dramatic literature at Columbia University, believed that silent cinema could never rival live drama because it lacked “the potent appeal of the spoken word.” It was “only by the aid of dialogue and soliloquy that we can peer into the recesses of the human soul,” he said. (453) Matthews quotes extensive from the novelist William Dean Howells (Howells wrote The Story of a Play). Howells wrote that "'The drama is literature that makes a double appeal; it appeals to the senses as well as to the intellect, -- and the stage half the time is only a picture-frame.'" (Howells, quoted, p. 447) Howells had a dim view of motion pictures up to this point in time. "'From men and women it turns them to automations ... [It] buys their beauty and their power for a moment of the film, extinguishing the soul in them.'" (Howells, quotes, 448) Howells asked: "'Will the capitalized black art corrupt the dramatist as it has corrupted the actor? As yet it does not seem so... As yet the movie demands nothing of the dramatist.'" (Howells quotes, 448) Howells said that "'the worst of it is that no one can deny the wonder of this new form of the world-old mime. It is of a truly miraculous power and scope; there seems nothing that it cannot do, -- except convince the taste and console the spirit.'" (Howells quoted, 448) Matthews acknowledged that movies are much better than the stage in handling scenery and settings. (449) The film is much superior in "pictorial story-telling." (450) Matthews believed that movies appealed to the audiences basest emotions. "The relish for beholding violent adventure, for watching villainies plotted, and accomplished or thwarted, for impending terror and horror, is deep rooted in the baser instincts of man; and it sated itself in Rome in the gladiatorial combat and in Spain in the bull-fight. Thus it is that the makers of movies, having killed off the crudely sensational melodrama, find their profit in supplying picture-stories of exactly the same kind." (450) Matthews said that the melodrama which the movies can present effectively is different from the higher forms of drama. "But while melodrama has had a long and interesting history, it is not one of the higher and more important forms of the drama. Indeed, it is frankly an inferior form because it contents itself with story-telling for its own sake, never hesitating to sacrifice character to situation. Its appeal is to the emotions but mainly to the senses, and more especially to the nerves, whereas true drama, the drama comic or serious, which is really worth while, appeals both to the emotions and to the intellect; its uses situation mainly to reveal character. (450) "In a melodrama or in a farce we are interested very much in what happens and very little in the persons to whom these misadventures happen. In a comedy or in a tragedy we are 450/451 interested mainly in the persons themselves, in what they are rather than in what they do. However powerful the situation may be in which they are enmeshed, we are always watching them to see how their characters are going to react and to reveal themselves under the stress of unforeseen circumstance...." (450-51) Matthews argued that movies could do some kinds of melodramas and farces better than the stage. "But comedy and tragedy are wholly beyond its reach; and equally unattainable by it are the social drama and the problem-play." (451) All the motion picture could do to as Shakespearian plays was "to rob it of its vitality and its significance and to reduce it to the purely spectacular level of The Birth of a Nation and of the 'gross and palpable' triumphs of the 'black art,' as Mr. Howells has termed it." (451) According the Matthews, "the movies cannot compete with the drama in dealing with the soul of man in its manifold struggles with itself." (452) Quoting Howells again: "'The reel ... asks no co-operation of the intellect for the enjoyment of the events thrown upon the screen.'" (Howells quoted, 452) Matthews also cited Samuel Henry Butcher, a scholar of Greek drama, who wrote an essay entitled "The Written and the Spoken Word." Butcher had observed that before writing, drama had depended on the spoken word delivered to live audiences. (453) Matthews said that "As the moving-picture is deprived of the aid of words, it 453/454 cannot be literature. As it is deprived of the aid of the human voice, it takes from the actor his most powerful resource." (453-54) AU - Matthews, Brander DA - March 1917 IS - 736 KW - stage fame actors acting acting, and fame actors, and fame fame, and actors stage and theater fame, and live stage acting ref, secondary ref, book critics critics, and theater quotations quotations, and violent movies violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and stage acting Howells, William Dean, and motion pictures motion pictures, and William Dean Howells motion pictures, and stage motion pictures, as black art quotations, and movies as black art motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures media effects, and movie violence words vs. images images vs. words Birth of a Nation audiences media effects motion pictures violence LB - 42050 PY - 1917 SP - 447-54 ST - Are the Movies a Menace to the Drama? T2 - North American Review TI - Are the Movies a Menace to the Drama? VL - 205 ID - 4303 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Mayo observes that "the essence of systems such as the telephone, radio and television is signal processing. The large capacity, high reliability and low cost of microelectronic devices make them ideal for such purposes." The author notes that "silicon is to the electronics revolution what steel was to the Industrial Revolution. Seldom, however, can a communication system be built entirely of silicon circuits. Several other microelectronic technologies are important. "For example, a number of semiconductor materials (gallium arsenide and gallium phosphide among them) emit light when they conduct current. Light-emitting diodes serve widely as indicators and illuminators. They also display in numerals and letters the readout of digital signals. Such devices are extremely important in communication because they provide the translations required to couple electrical signals to the human brain without the necessity of printing the results on paper. "Of even greater potential importance to communication is the solid-state laser.... "Magnetic-bubble circuits are another promising product in communication research.... "A functionally similar semiconductor arrangement is the charge-coupled device...." AU - Mayo, John S. DA - Sept. 1977 IS - 3 KW - computers materials, and silicon communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution materials digitization communication revolution, and second industrial revolution microelectronics Information Age +computers and the Internet microelectronics revolution silicon Industrial Revolution second industrial revolution gallium arsenide gallium phosphide lasers, solid-state +television television, and solid-state +telephones +radio diodes, light-emitting digital media information processing circuits, magnetic-bubble semiconductors circuits lasers communication revolution materials LB - 3770 PY - 1977 SP - 192-209 ST - The Role of Microelectronics in Communication T2 - Scientific American TI - The Role of Microelectronics in Communication VL - 237 ID - 1765 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece, appearing in an issue published in 1967 devoted to speculation about the year 2000, discusses "the genetic contribution to human traits. If the time should ever come when we are emotionally ready to allow a reproductive premium for above-average genotypes, we would have to be able to determine what makes a genotype 'valuable.' At present we are unable to do this. We all remember the great controversy of the past generation over nature versus nurture. Fortunately this argument is now dead except in the minds of a few who have not kept track of the developments in genetics in the past thirty years. We now know that the phenotypes of almost all traits are the result of both a genetic predisposition and its response to the environment." AU - Mayr, Ernst DA - Summer, 1967 IS - 3 KW - +future and science fiction values +artificial intelligence and biotechnology values, and genetic engineering future nature v. nurture LB - 4200 PY - 1967 SP - 832-36 ST - Biological Man and the Year 2000 T2 - Daedalus TI - Biological Man and the Year 2000 VL - 96 ID - 1808 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article profiles Joseph Breen who headed the motion picture industry Production Code Administration. Breen warned the studios that he intended to throw “a hell of a lot of your celluloid in the ash-can.” He was blunt enough, one writer said, to “outshout the pick of Hollywood hog-callers.” If Hays was Hollywood’s czar, Breen became its “decency dictator,” this article says. AU - McCarthy, John J. DA - Sept., 1936 KW - self-regulation Production Code values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) values religion Breen, Joseph +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Production Code (motion pictures) Breen, Joseph, and Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code, and Joseph Breen Breen, Joseph, and biography LB - 15270 PY - 1936 SP - 64, 128 (?) ST - Man of Decency T2 - Esquire TI - Man of Decency VL - 4 ID - 549 ER - TY - JOUR AB - McChesney recounts the earliest years of WCFL, a radio station operated by the Chicago Federation of Labor. He argues that WCFL, which began broadcasting in 1926, was involved in some of the most important battles over the future of broadcasting before enactment of the Communications Act in 1934. Despite the lack of the support from the AFL, the Chicago federation fought to operate a station that would be the “Voice of Labor” in the Chicago area. This struggle occurred, McChesney argues, as commercial interests were working with the federal government to establish a regulatory structure that fostered commercial exploitation of the airwaves and effectively limited significant non-commercial use. McChesney details how WCFL was affected by federal decisions about frequency and license allocations in the late 1920s, and how indifference and hostility to a labor radio station limited WCFL’s success. WCFL officials continued to lobby into the 1930s for federal regulations that would support non-commercial uses of radio. “(Station managing director Edward) Nockels put labor at the forefront of the broadcast reform movement and he spent a good portion of this time attempting to rally the labor movement to see the necessity for structural broadcast reform.” But Nockels’ passion was not shared by AFL President William Green, who believed that big labor’s interests would be adequately represented under a commercial structure. Eventually, Nockels reached a deal with NBC in 1932 to expand WCFL’s broadcast hours in exchange for withdrawing from a fight over a fundamental reform in airwave allocation. --Phil Glende AU - McChesney, Robert DA - Aug. 1992 KW - corporations corporations NBC law Glende, Phil labor +radio labor, and radio radio, and labor regulation, and radio radio, and regulation labor, and WCFL (Chicago) radio, and Chicago Federation of Labor labor, and NBC NBC, and labor regulation censorship and ratings LB - 1150 N1 - See also: office PY - 1992 ST - Labor and the Marketplace of Ideas: WCFL and the Battle for Labor Radio Broadcasting, 1927-1934 T2 - Journalism Monographs TI - Labor and the Marketplace of Ideas: WCFL and the Battle for Labor Radio Broadcasting, 1927-1934 VL - 134 ID - 203 ER - TY - JOUR AB - McCord, the directory of photography for "The Sound of Music" (1965), discusses the lighting techniques used in making the film. "In ever striving to fit mood to action, he used a soft brilliance on most exteriors, day for night, night for night, and a strikingly eloquent total silhouette." (222) A combination of shots from a camera crane and a helicopter were used to film star Julie Andrews as she whirled on the hilltops. AU - McCord, Ted DA - April, 1965 IS - 4 KW - cinematography motion pictures location shooting lighting motion pictures, and location shooting motion pictures, and lighting motion pictures, day for night photography movie, Sound of Music (1965) Sound of Music (1965) LB - 30080 PY - 1965 SP - 222-25 ST - How I Photographed The Sound of Music T2 - American Cinematographer TI - How I Photographed The Sound of Music VL - 46 ID - 2763 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Word circulated that the Meese Commission’s report would list some 10,000 stores in the United States that had been identified as selling pornographic magazines. By July, 1986, more than 16,000 outlets had decided to take Playboy, Penthouse, and other materials off their shelves. The Curtis Circulation Company, then the largest distributor of magazines in the United States, announced that Wal-Mart would even pull rock-and-roll magazines from its 800 stores. This article notes that reactions to the Commission's report were split. Anti-pornography activists, including some feminists, liked the report. Liberals, such as Barry Lynn of the American Civil Liberties Union, were critical even before the report was released. AU - McDaniel, Ann DA - July 21, 1986 KW - morality sexuality sexuality sexuality First Amendment freedom boycotts pornography Penthouse First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment Penthouse, and First Amendment First Amendment, and Penthouse Moral Majority pornography, and opponents boycotts, and pornography boycotts, and Penthouse Playboy Playboy, and First Amendment boycotts, and Playboy Meese Commission Meese Commission, and critics ACLU law LB - 23820 PY - 1986 SP - 18 ST - A Salvo in the Porn War T2 - Newsweek TI - A Salvo in the Porn War ID - 1044 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article says that Guglielmo Marconi predicts in the near feature that wireless will be sending 200 words a minute at one cent per word across the Atlantic. It then explains the impact that the transatlantic cable has had on life during the preceding 38 years, and especially on commerce, diplomacy, and newspapers. "Among the fairy-tales of science there is none more wonderful than that of the electric telegraph, and its most fascinating chapter relates to the submarine cable. Rapid has been the development of electricity as a handmaiden of civilization. Only thirty-eight years ago was regular cabling established between Europe and America, and the silent messengers of civilized intercourse sent racing along the ocean-bed. Prior to 1866, the two hemispheres were a fortnight apart, but since then an amazing scientific advancement has been accomplished. To grasp the significance, one must imagine the cable broken to-day. What would be the result? Commercial enterprise would be paralyzed. The mighty movement of trade would halt and the operations of financiers come to nothing. The bourses would be silent and the bulletins blank. The newspapers would lack their most interesting contents, diplomacy would be stultified, existence would be shorn of one of its most convenient 724/725 accessories. Before the Atlantic cable was laid, it took several days to exchange news across the ocean.... Yet to day, with the continents interconnected as they are, we can learn of a victory in the Far East ere the battle-smoke as lifted....."(724-25) The article points out that the "chief factors in Atlantic cable traffic are 'stock' and 'press' messages." (731) McGrath then draws parallels between the transatlantic cable and wireless. It notes that the "cost of cables increases as their size and efficiency grows," (727) and it gives examples of costs per mile. It notes that it "the greatest marvel about the submarine wire is that messages can be sent and received over the one cable at the same time." (730) It discusses the "modified Wheatstone automatic transmitter." (730) The article covers British ownership of cable lines worldwide and also the spread of the Pacific cable. It concludes by saying that "That wireless telegraphy is not yet regarded as a serious competitor by the cable companies, the carrying out of recent mighty cable projects clearly indicates." (732) AU - McGrath, P. T. DA - Oct. 1904 IS - 6 KW - wireless communication ref, secondary electricity electricity, and transatlantic cable transatlantic cable, and electricity Marconi, Guglielmo radio radio, and wireless wireless, and Marconi microphones microphones, Huges telegraph telegraph, and wireless telegraph, and Morse code telegraph, and trans-Atlantic cable transatlantic cable, telegraph news and journalism transatlantic cable, and newspapers newspapers, and transatlantic cable modernity modernity, and transatlantic cable transatlantic cable, and modernity transatlantic cable, and news news, and transatlantic cable wireless, and transatlantic cable transatlantic cable, and wireless metaphors quotations metaphors, and electricity quotations, and electricity telegraph, and electricity electricity, and telegraph community community, and new media transatlantic cable, and community transatlantic cable, and internationalism ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, reform ref, Cosmopolitan news transatlantic cable wireless LB - 37880 PY - 1904 SP - 723-32 ST - Will Marconi Supplant the Cables? T2 - Cosmopolitan TI - Will Marconi Supplant the Cables? VL - 37 ID - 3887 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Will H. Hays readily admitted that he knew little about film making when he came to Hollywood in 1922. At first glance he seemed the antithesis of a movie star. He was small, slender, had a down-home manner, and prudish demeanor. He was an elder in the Presbyterian Church and came from a small Indiana community named Sullivan. But Hays' appearances was deceptive. AU - McIntyre, O. O. DA - March, 1930 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) self-regulation Production Code PCA Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories MPPDA Production Code Administration (PCA)) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. MPAA motion pictures biography +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures MPPDA, and Will Hays Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 13360 PY - 1930 SP - 44 ST - The Truth about the Czar of the Movies T2 - New Movie Magazine TI - The Truth about the Czar of the Movies VL - 2 ID - 508 ER - TY - JOUR AB - McMahan notes that the status of the theater has changed significantly for the better and that theater has entered a new era -- "old books dealing with the theatre -- even the books of ten years ago" have become "obsolete." (420) Of attitudes toward actors and theater, the author writes: "In its attitude toward the theatre, the present generation has been living in a transition period. Forty years ago, the theatre was regarded simply as an amusement; actors (except a few of the greatest) were social outcasts; the writing of plays was counted unworthy of the best pens; the drama, in John Hare's happy phrase, was the Cinderalla of the arts. We have lived to see the theatre regarded as one of the most powerful agents for the education of the people, the actor the most feasted, photographed, and flattered of men during his life, and promptly made the subject of elaborate biography at his death; the writing of plays the greatest ambition of every young writer; courses in the technique of the drama offered at most of our great universities; a play ('Salvation Nell') accepted in place of a thesis from a candidate for Master's degree at Harvard; and Cinderella the most pampered, caressed, and courted of the art sisters." (420) The author notes that the "problem of the dramatist is less a task of writing than a task of constructing. His primary concern is so to build a story that it will tell itself to the eye of the audience in a series of shifting pictures." (420) Continuing, McMahan says that "an important difference between drama and most of the other arts is that it is designed to appeal to a crowd instead of to an individual." (420) Therefore "the playwright must take into account the psychology of a crowd. A crowd is less intellectual and more emotional than the individuals that compose it. The dramatist ... because he write for a crowd writes for a comparatively uncivilized and uncultivated mind, a mind richly human, vehement in approbation, emphatic in disapproval, easily credulous, eagerly enthusiastic, boyishly heroic, and somewhat carelessly unthinking.... A theatre audience wants to have its emotions played upon; it seeks amusement -- in the widest sense of the work -- amusement through laughter, sympathy, terror, tears...." (421) McMahan comments that electric lighting has made the backgrounds and sets much more realistic in theater. She also discusses the "modern social drama, popularly known as the problem-play," which critics have condemned for being in conflict with morality. As a "distinguishing character of this new type -- our modern social drama -- is that the individual is displayed in conflict with his environment." (421) She writes that "there is no such thing per se as an immoral subject, and only in the treatment of the subject, and only in the treatment, lies the basis for ethical judgment of the piece." (421) "A dramatist is immoral 421/422 only when he is untrue." (421-22) It is because plays are "rarely printed now-a-days," a critic can only ascertain what an actor and playwright are getting at by actually attending the play. (422) AU - McMahan, Anna Benneson DA - June 16, 1910 IS - 5 KW - theater theater stage morality fame celebrity anti-theatrical prejudice censorship actors acting ref, secondary motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures actors, and status of actors, and bias against theater, and bias against anti-theatrical bias photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality education education, and theater audiences audiences, as a crowd audiences, as uncivlized electricity electricity, and theater electricity, and drama electricity, and special effects theater, and electricity lighting lighting, and electricity electricity, and theater lighting critics critics, and drama critics, and theater values values, and theater theater, and values morality, and theater theater, and morality censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship censorship, and morality censorship ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary (conservative) ref, Dial photography LB - 38360 PY - 1910 SP - 420-22 ST - The Theatre of To-Day T2 - The Dial TI - The Theatre of To-Day VL - 48 ID - 3935 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author notes that the ancients said little about the "nature of color," although "many of their poets poured forth brilliant effusions when spellbound by nature's enchantment. It is not easy to understand their ideas. They seem to have held color as a property of a body, just as its density or hardness or smell is a property. And they were of opinion that a body could communicate its color to light. Then, is not the occult cause of color in the external object?" (742) The writers goes on to say that "the secret of the production of color is not yet revealed." (745) With regard to photography: "One of the greatest difficulties facing scientific men is the photographing of colors. If the fine complexion of a beautiful woman should be transcribed to paper by the limner power of light, what a marvellous step would be gained in the magic art! If the varied colors of a brilliant sunset could be thus fixed, what a help it would be to the painter, and what a pleasure to the connoisseur of coloring! ...." (747) McPherson concludes: "Not flash, but harmony of color, manifests the educated taste and refined mind. 'Be true to nature and nature will be true to you,' is an order which must be obeyed without dispute, in color as in all else; who breaks that order will suffer sometime." (748) AU - McPherson, J. G. DA - March 24, 1894 IS - 2594 KW - photography ref, mag motion pictures color color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures photography and visual communication ref, secondary ref, secular ref, eclectic ref, literary (British) ref, Littell's Living Age LB - 260 PY - 1894 SP - 742-48 ST - Color T2 - Littell's Living Age TI - Color VL - 200 ID - 2710 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The authors argues that developments in microelectronics makes it possible to rethink the design of computers. AU - Mead, Carver A. DA - Sept. 1977 IS - 3 KW - computers microprocessing communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution computers microelectronics +computers and the Internet microelectronics revolution microprocessors computer science electronic media computer design computers, and microelectronics LB - 3780 PY - 1977 SP - 210-29 ST - Microelectronics and Computer Science T2 - Scientific American TI - Microelectronics and Computer Science VL - 237 ID - 1766 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Anthropologist Margaret Mead said that “‘Essentially, the incest taboo does only one thing: It protects the integrity of the family.’” Mead's article was used by Richard Heffner, head of the film industry Classification and Rating Administration in a controversy over the rating given to George C. Scott's movies The Savage Is Loose (1974). AU - Mead, Margaret DA - March, 1972 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification non-USA motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and anthropology Mead, Margaret CARA CARA, and Margaret Mead Heffner, Richard Heffner, Richard, and Margaret Mead Mead, Margaret, and Savage Is Loose rating system (U. S.), controversies rating system (U. S.), appeals LB - 21260 PY - 1972 SP - 74-80 ST - Can We Protect Children from Pornography T2 - Redbook TI - Can We Protect Children from Pornography VL - 138 ID - 925 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article gives a good account of the state of color photography and color cinematography in 1921. Among the processes discussed involving motion pictures are Kinemacolor and Gaumont. The article has several black-and-white illustration and a picture of a Kinemacolor projecting machine. AU - Mees, C. E. Kenneth DA - July 1921 IS - 183 KW - illustrations ref, secondary color photography color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and color color, and cameras motion pictures, and color projectors color, and kinemacolor color, and Gaumont illustrations, and color photography color, and Autochrome ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Photo-Miniature illustrations LB - 39400 PY - 1921 SP - 97-131 ST - Color Photography T2 - The Photo-Miniature: A Magazine of Photographic Information TI - Color Photography VL - 16 ID - 4038 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article explains how electronic circuits operate. "The basic functional element of a modern electronic circuit is the transistor. Microelectronic technology has made it possible to employ large numbers of them in a single circuit," the author says. AU - Meindl, James D. DA - Sept. 1977 IS - 3 KW - computers materials, and silicon microprocessing photography transistors, and integrated circuits silicon communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution materials computers communication revolution, and second industrial revolution +photography and visual communication photo engraving microelectronics +computers and the Internet microelectronics revolution transistors integrated circuits microprocessors second industrial revolution photomicrograph photo engraving, and computer chips computer chips semiconductors computer chips, silicon computer chips computer chips, and photo engraving silicon, and computer chips communication revolution materials LB - 3740 PY - 1977 SP - 70-81 ST - Microelectronic Circuit Elements T2 - Scientific American TI - Microelectronic Circuit Elements VL - 237 ID - 1762 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This author begins by noting that photography now helps the beautiful actress to gain notoriety. "This is not to deny the large part that personal comeliness plays in the success of the actress. The face and figure that lend themselves readily to the art of the photographer and to the mechanical processes which mulitply his results are an excellent foundation for the notoriety which nowadays is essential to managerial recognition. Then, if there is back of the good looks even slight ability, time and training may help on to the moderate or even great position which the individual could never hoped for without the original inheritance from Mother Nature." (13) Metcalfe says that Americans have not yet reached the same level of "beauty-worship which, in Europe, makes famous even the obscure figurant, if she possesses enough physical attractions to catch the attention of an audience." (13) The article comments further on actresses and photography. "Certain of our own beauties have been so often pictured, that we have almost tired of them, as the Spartans tired of Aristides the Just. The camera has reproduced them until we know every possibility they may have of feature and of pose. This does not mean that personally they cease to interest, for in many instances their beauty is largely subsidiary to their other attractions, and the flesh and blood woman in action is always more interesting than her photographic or painted counterfeit. Not every day gives birth to a new stage beauty, and not every season largely augments their ranks." (16) The author notes that worship of beauty on stage is a root cause for some religions' opposition to the theater. "This worship of the stage beauty is not altogether reprehensible, although some of the churches include it among the things anathema of the theater and the satirists and paragraphists hurl their shafts of wit and sarcasm against that type of humanity know as the theatrical 'Johnnie.' The 'Johnnie' is a natural fungus on the stage, and grows and multiplies under the radiance of the beautiful 18/19 lady of spangles, tights and abbreviated skirts. He worships not always with discrimination and the types he selects are not always of the purest Grecian...." (18-19) Later, the author concludes that "Morals have nothing to do with the stage beauty.... Even in this respect beauty is not a drawback, but, as has been said before, is a strong ally for ability and hard work. It is the best advertisement in the world for real artistic merit; but alas! it so often makes rosy the beginning of the path to glory that the final goal is never sought, and its fortunate possessor is willing to be content with the title and emoluments of the stage beauty rather than strive for the laurel crown of the great artist." (20) AU - Metcalfe, James S. DA - Nov. 1896 IS - 1 KW - theater photography morality fame entertainment celebrity anti-theatrical prejudice celebrity culture ref, secondary women women, and theater theater, and women values values, and acting values, and women women, and values censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship actors acting actors, and status of theater, and bias against actors, and bias against acting, and women women, and acting entertainment, and immorality morality, and theater anti-theatrical bias sexuality women, and photography photography, and women women, and beauty photography, and beauty religion, and antitheatrical bias celebrity photography, and celebrity celebrity, and photography photography, and beauty beauty, and photography sexuality, and photography photography, and sexuality sexuality, and actresses acting, and sexuality fame, and photography photography, and fame non-USA non-USA, and beauty Europe Europe, and beauty worship duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and photographs censorship ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, reform ref, Cosmopolitan religion LB - 38800 PY - 1896 SP - 13-20 ST - The Stage and the Beauty Problem T2 - Cosmopolitan TI - The Stage and the Beauty Problem VL - 22 ID - 3979 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The writer begins by saying: "Don't Go-- because the atmosphere is essentially materialistic and sensuous, and indisposes for prayer and faith; ... Because you have not right to support a system which is inimical to the virtue of actors. Not that every actor is necessarily immoral, but that the almost universal confession of those actors and actresses who have become Christians is that life on the stage is not friendly to virtue, but strongly the reverse. You have no right to help to put stumbling blocks on other people's paths by contributing your money to support such a system; ..." Also, other might follow you example by going to the theater. AU - Meyer, F. B. DA - March 31, 1900 IS - 37 KW - theaters theater morality children anti-theatrical bias critics critics, religious critics, and theater critics, and actors religion religion, and theater religion, and actors actors, and religion values values, and the stage values, and the theater Great Britain non-USA Great Britian, and antitheatrical bias anti-theatrical prejudice theater, and bias against audiences, and theaters theaters, and audiences acting, and bias against censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship morality, and theater theater, and morality false leaders false leaders, and actors actors, as false leaders children and media theater, and children children, and theater ref, secondary ref, religious ref, Quakers ref, Friend acting actors audiences censorship LB - 41470 PY - 1900 SP - 290 ST - Theatre-Going T2 - The Friend: A Religious and Literary Journal TI - Theatre-Going VL - 73 ID - 4246 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article examines the origins of "cheesecake" and the rise of so-called "girlie" magazines which featured nude and semi-nude pictures of women. These images helped to define women in society and were of great historical significance, the author contends. The author covers the 1946 U. S. Supreme Court case that narrowed the federal government’s power to regulate sexual images in magazines. The Court unanimously overturned the postmaster general’s decision in 1943 to deny mailing privileges to Esquire on the grounds that it included cartoons, pictures, and other sexual material that reflected a “smoking-room type of humor.” Written by Justice William O. Douglas, the decision contributed to proliferation of girlie publications. The author describes the scope of this piece: the "article begins with a short chronology of the rise of popular sexual representations in the United States and of women's early public responses, both pro and con. It then focuses in depth on mid-twentieth century episodes in which women articulated both their pleasure and their disgust with the commercialized sexual representations found in mass-circulation magazines. In the Post Office hearings on Esquire magazine, the battles over 'girlie pictures' in Ebony and Negro Digest, the debates in Playboy, and the national campaign against 'girlie magazines,' women arrayed themselves on opposing sides of an ideological fault line still visible in our current cultural terrain." AU - Meyerowitz, Joanne DA - Fall, 1996 IS - 3 KW - Esquire magazine photography women, and new media women sexuality pornography sexuality sexuality news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers context law censorship and ratings censorship, new +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures magazines +books, periodicals, newspapers pornography, and magazines magazines, and pornography +photography and visual communication photography, and girlie magazines women, and magazines magazines, and women nudity nudity, and magazines censorship, and magazines magazines, and censorship context, and nudity context, and girlie magazines photography, and nudity nudity, and photography Esquire case Playboy, Ebony, and nudity Negro Digest, and nudity Playboy censorship LB - 16650 PY - 1996 SP - 9-35 ST - Women, Cheesecake, and Borderline Material: Responses to Girlie Pictures in the Mid-Twentieth-Century U. S. T2 - Journal of Women's History TI - Women, Cheesecake, and Borderline Material: Responses to Girlie Pictures in the Mid-Twentieth-Century U. S. VL - 8 ID - 614 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the lighting of a carberet for the 1916 movie "New York." The owner of the cabaret let the movie makers film in his establishment and the customers became unpaid extras. Miller, who photographed the movie, says that the studio had to contact New York Edison Company to make sure that there would be enough current for the lights. "For lighting equipment we used Wall twin-arc broadsides and a number of 60-amp. Kliegl spotlights, and what seemed like tons of cable, all of which was brought across the Hudson River from our studio." (640) There follows in this same issue an article about filming interiors in 1967. Freddie Young, the Director of Photography, discusses interior location filming for a new James Bond film (in Technicolor), "You Only Live Twice." AU - Miller, Arthur C. DA - Sept., 1967 IS - 9 KW - cinematography motion pictures motion pictures, and location shooting lighting motion pictures, and lighting motion pictures, and interior lighting (1916) movie, New York LB - 30220 PY - 1967 SP - 640, 665-67 ST - Filming Actual Location Interiors ... Then T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Filming Actual Location Interiors ... Then VL - 48 ID - 2777 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article by motion picture director Charles Miller recalls his work after being hired by Thomas H. Ince. Miller comments on the importance of actors' facial expressions and being able to convey emotion. "I caught on to the fact that actors and actresses were more often than not, permitted to play a scene without feeling it. Indeed I've seen actors go on, and go through their scene like automations, moving about and expressing only as the director bellowed orders at them. And I made up my mind then, that, were I to ever direct, I would see that I got my money's worth for the man who was paying the actor's salaries. By that I mean, an artist is not paid big money for looks but for brains, for individuality, magnetism. I decided that, were I to direct, no actor would go in front of the camera until he knew all about the scene, the story, and the character he was portraying. Knowing that, his face would then by its look convey the thought of that scene. Not the sort of thing that I was hearing then...." (617) (emphasis in original text) Miller explained why many actors failed when they went before the camera. "An actor who assumes that motion-pictures are a form of pantomime, believes, when he acts in front of the camera, that he must make exaggerated gestures to 'get over' his scene. He believes that he is handicapped by the absence of voice; that without voice he cannot convey the meaning of the situation to the audience unless he pantomimes. That conception is absolutely wrong. It is why many great actors fail." (619) (my emphasis) Miller claimed that he was "not interested in the 'star system'; it is an obtrusion into the painting that one des on celluloid instead of on canvas. It is as if an artist were to choose the pigment red and favor it for not reason save that it is red to the exclusion of other pigments. I am interested in producing pictures which credit the audience with intelligence. Conveyance of the thought of the situation of the story to the mind of the audience by a look instead of the spoken word is thee secret for making motion-pictures that will be remembered...." (620) AU - Miller, Charles DA - May 1919 IS - 5 KW - theater stage fame fame celebrity actors acting celebrity culture fame personality motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars audiences media effects motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and acting acting, and facial expression motion pictures, and not facing camera acting, and not facing camera acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting quotations ref, secondary ref, secular ref, social ref, literary ref, Forum motion pictures LB - 37580 PY - 1919 SP - 611-20 ST - Mastering Motion-Pictures: From $3 a Day to Motion-Picture Magnate T2 - Forum TI - Mastering Motion-Pictures: From $3 a Day to Motion-Picture Magnate VL - 61 ID - 3857 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article carries the subheading: "An Exclusive Story, Illustrated with a Series of Remarkable Photographs Taken with the Fastest Camera in the World." The pictures were taken by an officer in the Coast Artillery and record the firing of artillery shells. Some of the photographs were "taken one hundred thousandth of a second apart." (39) The camera could record projectiles penetrating a steel target inch by inch. The article mentions scientific experiments which are measured in "a millionth part of a second!" (45) (emphasis in original text) The pictures in this article were taken at about one five thousandth of a second. (46) "So great was the precision of the electrical device as to render possible the photographic recording of these mortar projectiles, moving at great velocities, in almost any desired position after the discharge, say two feet 45/46 away from the muzzle, or six feet away, or twenty feet away, or right at the muzzle, as shown in the first mortar picture, where the great projectile has been caught in its flight half way out of the mortar." (45-46) The article notes that the projectiles traveled faster than sound and that "foreign governments would pay millions" for the secret of the smokeless powder used in the artillery. (48) AU - Moffett, Cleveland DA - April 1914 IS - 6 KW - ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing photography, and space and time space and time photography, and time photography, and space photography, and travel history and new media history, and photography photography, and history news and journalism newspapers, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and history history, and newspapers war war, and photography photography, and war military communication military communication, and photography photography, and military communication Boer War, and photography nationalism and communication photography, and nationalism nationalism, and photography cameras, and speed of electricity electricity, and military photography photography, and electricity photography, and speed of photography, and magnesium photography, and lighting lighting, and photography photography, and high speed ref, secondary ref, secular ref, reform ref, illustrated ref, McClure's cameras history lighting nationalism LB - 39520 PY - 1914 SP - 38-49 ST - Twenty-Five Miles a Minute T2 - McClure's Magazine TI - Twenty-Five Miles a Minute VL - 42 ID - 4050 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This review of more than three dozen studies concluded that pornography could be beneficial to the development of normal sexuality. AU - Money, J. AU - Athanasiou, R. DA - 1973 KW - syntheses (of research) syntheses archives sexuality motion pictures mass media pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and supporters syntheses, and pornography research pornography, and research synthesis +bibliographies bibliographies, and pornography bibliographies, annotated LB - 22310 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1973 SP - 130-46 ST - Pornography -- Review and Bibliographic Annotations T2 - American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology TI - Pornography -- Review and Bibliographic Annotations VL - 115 ID - 959 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author notes that for the ancient Romans "the theatre was a mere secular amusement, a toy for the moment, despise even while enjoyed...." (123) "But, as has been said, actors generally had a hard and often thankless task. They were nearly always freedmen, foreigners, or slaves; possessed no rights of citizenship; could not enter the army; and, at one time, were liable to be scourged by the praetor. They were usually banded into a company in charge of a manager, who was frequently a freedman. Through the latter, the magistrate who desired to present a play to the people engaged the company. The word 'histrio' was derived from the Etruscan term meaning 'a dancer'; this shows that originally dancing was the most important part of a theatrical exhibition. (125) "The pay which actors received was small and precarious. If the play was successful, the state made a pitiful allowance; if it failed, the rewards of the players were the hisses and taunts of the rabble. (125) "There was a regularly organized and paid band of applauders, who attended all performances and earned their hire by repeated and vociferous applause. The contentions between the supporters of different actors became so violent and were marked by so many bloody encounters, and the actors were so immoral, that Emperor Tiberious expelled all members of the profession from Italy. They were recalled by his successor. "A singular feature of Roman, as well as Greek, plays was the custom of actors' wearing masks -- 'personae.'" (125) AU - Montague, A. W. DA - Feb. 1892 IS - 2 KW - theaters theater morality anti-theatrical bias Marked false leaders false leaders, and actors actors, as false leaders acting, and bias against censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship morality, and theater theater, and morality anti-theatrical prejudice theater, and bias against audiences, and theaters theaters, and audiences actors, and Roman Empire acting, and Roman Empire anti-theatrical bias, and Roman Empire Roman Empire, and actors ref, secondary ref, secular ref, women ref, Peterson Magazine acting actors anti-theatrical bias audiences censorship LB - 41450 PY - 1892 SP - 123-25 ST - The Drama and the Actors of Ancient Rome T2 - Peterson's Magazine TI - The Drama and the Actors of Ancient Rome VL - 101 ID - 4244 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the ways in which motion pictures can be used to improve the teaching of medicine. AU - Montague, Joseph Franklin DA - Nov. 1926 KW - science medicine ref, secondary motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures science, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science motion pictures, and medicine medicine, and motion pictures ref, secondary ref, secular LB - 16230 PY - 1926 SP - 139-42 ST - What Motion Pictures Can Do for Medical Education T2 - Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science TI - What Motion Pictures Can Do for Medical Education VL - 128 (“The Motion Picture in Its Economic and Social Aspects”) ID - 3776 ER - TY - JOUR AB - William Pepperell Montague, a philosopher who taught at Columbia University, considered considered the idea of "the specious present" to be important to our sense of time but said it was “an illusion” that extended “appreciably into the past.” The question he attempts in this article is: "How is it that at any one moment there can appear to be present several moments?" (1) AU - Montague, W. P. DA - Jan. 1904 IS - 1 KW - space and time time and timekeeping quotations quotations, and specious present time, and psychology specious present ref, secondary LB - 42820 PY - 1904 SP - 1-13 ST - A Theory of Time-Perception T2 - American Journal of Psychology TI - A Theory of Time-Perception VL - 15 ID - 2464 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the process of taking photographic portraits in 1891. Among the advice given: "Just before the exposure, let the sitter moisten the lips; it does away with that rough appearance so common in portraits." (425) It concludes: "It is to be hoped, in view of all these various stages through which the photograph passes, that the reader will not be in too great haste for his pictures after sitting, and particularly when he calls to mind that through competition there is at present very little profit in them for the profession." (431) AU - Moore, Clarence Bloomfield DA - Feb. 1891 IS - 4 KW - photography ref, mag photography and visual communication women women, and photography photography, and women women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, reform ref, Cosmopolitan LB - 430 PY - 1891 SP - 422-31 ST - Amateur Portraiture in Photography T2 - Cosmopolitan TI - Amateur Portraiture in Photography VL - 10 ID - 3339 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is an insightful analysis of media in 1914. "Newspapers," Moore says, "are becoming a mass of photographs from life with merely a trickle of commenting text." (127) He says that of all the recent major innovations -- the telegraph, telephone, wireless, automobile, bicycle -- none "is more miraculous in essence or has spread over the world so instantaneously as the Moving Pictures. Events have been taught to record themselves, so that Time seems to merge into Eternity. Yesterday is abolished!" (127) He compares the motion picture business to "a myriad-armed octopus." (127) This new medium threatens the traditional theater as "the drama 'flicker down to brainless pantomime.'" (127) The public is given cheaper entertainment than it has ever known and legitimate actors are leaving the stage for work in the moving pictures. Moore says that one now hears "people in remote villages discussing the merits" of film actors. This "new art is not on probation; it is overwhelmingly triumphant." (127) He notes film's value as a substitute for travel. But, he says, it pleasures are not likely to "ever rival those of the great arts." It appeals because it does not require its audience to think; "photography has been found a brainless and soulless substitute for the thinking mind, the creative hand." (127) In contrast, "Art betters nature by importing into it the joys and fears and passions of mankind; by joing together remote things in unforeseen similitude; by giving us at once the object itself and its profound meaning. And art works this magic more potently by the use of words than by any other method at its disposal." (128) Moore was alarmed because movies, especially silent films, seemed to be doing away with words. "The partial eclipse of words," he wrote, "is a serious threat to intelligence." (127) In "the history of the world words are the most lasting, if not the only lasting things," he maintains. (128) Moore noted the use of violence in movies -- "violence seems almost a necessity as it is in pantomime. The exhibition of finer shades of feeling and thought, of matters interior and spiritual, must be abandoned." (128) "One case of the immense success of the Moving Pictures is their realism," Moore said. (128) "The Moving Pictures, having got rid of this great intermediary of language, give us real- 128/129 ism raw from the shambles of life." (128-29) He ends on a pessimistic note: "The egotism of human beings always tends to push idealistc and significant art aside for what is seemingly literal representation, and the Moving Pictures cater to this egotism. We are afraid the business will have to run its course and will result in an indefinite postponement of a really great literary, dramatic, and pictorial rebirth of our modern world." (129) Moore mentions Plato and his contempt for poets. This article as well as other essays Moore published in The Dial, were published in a book entitled Incense & Iconoclasm: Studies in Literature (1915). AU - Moore, Charles Leonard DA - Sept. 1, 1914 IS - 677 KW - theater stage Plato journalism history words vs. images ref, mag history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures images vs. words critics metaphors motion pictures, and metaphors theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity quotations history, break with Plato, and poets ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary (conservative) ref, Dial LB - 330 PY - 1914 SP - 127-29 ST - Pictures and Words T2 - The Dial TI - Pictures and Words VL - 57 ID - 3329 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author argues that a business that has failed to electrify is hardly modern and most likely backward. Moore begins by describing a business that had 110 separate steam plants to generate power and how it modernized by using current distributed "from a centrally located electric plant." "To be sure, there are not many works extensive enough to contain anywhere near one hundred and ten power plants, but so effectually has electricity demonstrated its advantages that any industrial establishment devoid of electrical equipment would to-day seem as archaic as a dwelling house devoid of plumbing equipment, and the more modern the establishment the more complete and efficient are its electrical applications." (224) Moore goes on to say that "no matter whence comes the supply of current there is no operation requiring energy to which it cannot advantageously be applied...." (225) He discusses the use of modern lighting -- "enclosed arcs, flaming arcs, plastic glowers, vacuum tubes, mercury vapor tubes, metalized filaments, tantalum filaments and tungsten filaments, to say nothing of the great variety of candle-powers and shapes of the filament lamps, there is no excuse for unsuitable illumination, and the scientifically lighted establishment often contains several types and a wide range of sizes of lamps." (226) He devotes a couple of paragraphs to the advantages of the Cooper Hewitt lamps. (226) Any "industrial establishment, large or small, without electrical equipment is anything but modern," he concludes. (227) AU - Moore, James Robert DA - June 14, 1911 IS - 1851 KW - ref, secondary electricity lighting mercury vapor electric light lighting, and Cooper Hewitt lighting, and mercury vapor electricity, and lighting electricity, and Cooper Hewitt lighting electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time advertising and public relations electricity, and advertising advertising, and electricity electricity, and business capitalism electricity, and capitalism capitalism, and electricity quotations quotations, and electricity quotations, and lighting ref, secondary ref, secular ref, American Architect advertising LB - 37820 PY - 1911 SP - 224-27 ST - Electricity in Modern Industrial Establishments T2 - American Architect TI - Electricity in Modern Industrial Establishments VL - 99 ID - 3881 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This study found little or no connection between erotic material and antisocial behavior. AU - Moos, Rudolf H. DA - 1972 KW - syntheses (of research) syntheses archives sexuality motion pictures mass media pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and supporters syntheses, and pornography research pornography, and research synthesis LB - 22300 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1972 SP - 123-31 ST - The Effects of Pornography: A Review of the Findings of the Obscenity and Pornography Commission T2 - Comments on Contemporary Psychiatry TI - The Effects of Pornography: A Review of the Findings of the Obscenity and Pornography Commission VL - 1 ID - 958 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, written by a former president of the American Society of Civil Engineers, says that the "manufacture of power has barely begun. The steam engine is almost the sole representative; the great advances in electricity have been in conveying power already manufactured, though transmutation and conveyance of power are closely allied to its manufacture....The manufacture of power has made the physical development of the nineteenth century exceed that of the whole previous life of the world. When future generations record the history of our times they may select the date when man began to manufacture power as the division between the ancient and the modern, between the ages of ignorance and of intelligence, between the early barbarous periods and the new civilization which has not yet received a name." (140) Morison says that "the manufacture of power has entirely changed all methods of communication; the railroad has replaced the stage coach; the steamship has supplanted the graceful sailing vessel, and the telegraph has supplemented the laggardly mail; all this has been the work of the engineer." (141) He says that the "entire circuit of the globe 141/142 can be accomplished in less time than was commonly necessary for a hurried trip to a near European port and return in the early years of the century." (141-42) "The result of this quick communication has been an absolute change in all methods of doing business." (142) Morison says the world has entered a new age and that history offers few precedents for it. "The lessons of history must be studied as showing the mistakes of the past, not as giving precedents to be followed now. We have already entered on an entirely new epoch in civilization, the epoch created by the manufacture of power; the works and doings of the past are not those of the present. History gives us a record of what has been done, but no more. It would be as 147/148 wise to cite the habits of savage life as the ways which civilized nations should follow, as to make the practice of the beginning of this century, before the effect of the manufacture of power had been felt, the standard of the present day." (147-48) He calls for expanding education to meet the needs of this new age. "The cry of 'America for Americans' may be all right, but if the Americans are to make the best use of their America, they must call to their aid the work which the brains of Europe, and before long those of Asia, will contribute to the general benefit of mankind." (148) Morison says that "International trade calls for international money, but there is no such thing as an international coin." (149) AU - Morison, George S. DA - Feb. 1897 IS - 483 KW - electricity history and new media history, and break with electricity, and modernity modernity, and manufacture of power quotations quotations, and electricity quotations, and new epoch history, and steam power history, and electricity transportation transportation, and railroads railroads capitalism capitalism, and international currency quotations quotations, and break with history quotations, and new epoch ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, North American Review history modernity LB - 42380 PY - 1897 SP - 139-50 ST - The New Epoch and the Currency T2 - North American Review TI - The New Epoch and the Currency VL - 164 ID - 4337 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The authors argue that satellite television is breaking down national identities. “It is now extremely difficult for nation states to police the circulation of electronic products, precisely because they assume no material form (unlike films or books) with which a customs post can deal. Satellite broadcasting threatens to undermine the very basis of present policies for the policing of national space.” Morley and Robins argue that “New forms of bonding, belonging and involvement are being forged out of the global-local nexus. The most apparent tendency is, perhaps, towards a new or renewed localism....” “...We can say that the very idea of boundary -- the frontier boundary of the nation state, for example, or the physical boundaries of urban structures -- has been rendered problematical. Paul Virilio suggests that technological and physical topologies become, in some way, continuous. The boundary has become permeable, an ‘osmotic membrane, through which information and communication flows pass’. These global systems -- information networks, satellite ‘footprints’ -- also lay an abstract space over and across concrete territorial configurations. Consequently, older communities and older, localised, senses of community are undone. The question then is how network and community can be reconciled....” The “transnationalisation of culture” is “a fundamental process in which the ‘vertical’ organization of people within national communities is (to varying extents, and in varying contexts) being supplanted by their organization into ‘horizontal’ communities -- people are connected electronically rather than by geographical proximity....” “... It is the Anglophone (and principally American) audiovisual media that are cutting horizontally across the world audience, engaging the attention and mobilising the enthusiasm of popular audiences....” The authors’ notes have useful references to related theoretical literature. Pages 32-33 discuss the role of newspapers in creating a sense of community. AU - Morley, David, and Kevin Robins DA - Autumn, 1989 IS - 4 KW - nationalism imperialism communication revolution journalism news and journalism non-USA satellites newspapers news Great Britain +nationalism and communication +television +aeronautics and space communication television, and satellites satellites, and television community, and newspapers newspapers, and sense of community cultural imperialism localism television, and satellites and localism Virilio, Paul Great Britain, and satellite television global communication communication revolution newspapers bibliographies, and theory community culture television, and satellites Europe +bibliographies nationalism, and satellites community, and new media television, and community nationalism, and electronic media geography, and new media geography LB - 2330 PY - 1989 SP - 10-34 ST - Spaces of Identity: Communications Technologies and the Reconfiguration of Europe T2 - Screen: Incorporating Screen Education TI - Spaces of Identity: Communications Technologies and the Reconfiguration of Europe VL - 30 ID - 1626 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Clara Morris, and actress who achieved fame playing "Jezebel," writes to young women. "The question is: 'What chance has a girl in private life of getting on the stage?' and to reply at once with brutal truthfulness and straight to the point, I must say, 'Almost none.'" (41) She says there are three things that will open the way for the young actress. "I know ... of but three powers that can open the stage door to a girl who comes straight from private life -- a fortune, great influence, or superlative beauty.... As for beauty, it must be something very, very remarkable that will on its strength along secure a girl an engagement. Mere prettiness will not do; nearly all American girls are pretty. It must be a radiant and compelling beauty, and every one knows that there are not many such beauties, stage-struck or otherwise." (41) Morris says that the acting profession is "filled with strange and terrible pitfalls for women." (42) She discusses women who will throw themselves at stage managers in hopes of getting jobs. She deals with the power of newspaper critics. (43) She concludes her piece by saying that in the theater "acting is either a veritable high art or a drudgery. There is not middle course between these extremes. Better , then, to be patient at home. Find occupation there...." (46) AU - Morris, Clara DA - May 1900 IS - 1 KW - theater photography morality fame entertainment celebrity anti-theatrical prejudice celebrity culture critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater ref, secondary women women, and theater theater, and women values values, and acting values, and women women, and values censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship actors acting actors, and status of theater, and bias against actors, and bias against acting, and women women, and acting entertainment, and immorality morality, and theater anti-theatrical bias sexuality women, and photography photography, and women women, and beauty photography, and beauty religion, and antitheatrical bias celebrity photography, and celebrity celebrity, and photography photography, and beauty beauty, and photography sexuality, and photography photography, and sexuality sexuality, and actresses acting, and sexuality fame, and photography photography, and fame censorship ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Century religion LB - 38840 PY - 1900 SP - 40-46 ST - A Word of Warning to Young Actresses T2 - Century Illustrated Magazine TI - A Word of Warning to Young Actresses VL - 60 ID - 3983 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author talks about photographing a cottage at 11 p.m. by direct moonlight. The author used a “whole-plate camera” fitted to “an old-type Ross single landscape lens of long focus.” The exposure required “standing stock still for minutes” in 10 below zero weather. The photograph is displayed in this article. Two other examples of night photography are also shown. AU - Mortimer-Lamb, Harold DA - 1907 KW - photography lighting +photography and visual communication cameras lighting, and cameras (1907) photography, at night (1907) LB - 12390 PY - 1907 SP - 285-89 ST - Photography at Night T2 - American Annual of Photography: 1908 TI - Photography at Night ID - 2586 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The adoption of the Uniform Produce Codes (UPC) by the Wrigley's Chewing Gum store in Troy, Ohio, on June 26, 1974, makrerd a "historic moment," according to the author. The use of UPCs, or barcodes, "signalled a new stage in the development of the grocery industry in the United States." The author considers the process of innovation that led to the adoption of barcodes. "The barcode system is an early, perhaps the first, example of a new way of handling technological changes on such a large scale that it affected very rapidly, not just one firm or sector but the whole of a major international industry." This article discusses the supermaket as a network and how the grocery industry was restructured by UPCs. This article appears in a special issue of History and Technology devoted to "Informati on Technologies and Socio-Technical Systems." Other authors include Daniel R. Headrick, Hans Dieter Hellige, William Aspray, and James S. Small. AU - Morton, Alan Q. DA - 1994 IS - 1 KW - computers computers +computers and the Internet barcodes computers, and barcodes computers, and capitalism capitalism, and computers computers, and Uniform Product Code Uniform Produce Code computers, and supermarkets capitalism, and barcodes capitalism LB - 3080 N1 - See filed under History and Technology, (1994) PY - 1994 SP - 101-11 ST - Packaging History: The Emergence of the Uniform Product Code (UPC) in the United States, 1970-75 T2 - History and Technology TI - Packaging History: The Emergence of the Uniform Product Code (UPC) in the United States, 1970-75 VL - 11 ID - 396 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Moss, Richard J. DA - Aug. 12, 1875 KW - materials television, and history of +television television, and origins selenium seeing at a distance LB - 7200 PY - 1875 SP - 291 ST - Properties of Selenium T2 - Nature TI - Properties of Selenium VL - 12 ID - 2091 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Mott examines changes in magazines publishing that ocurred during the 1890s. AU - Mott, Frank Luther DA - April 1954 KW - democracy and media democracy news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers news and journalism press magazines +books, periodicals, newspapers press (1890s) magazines, and revolution in (1890s) magazines, and new technology presses LB - 8960 PY - 1954 SP - 195-214 ST - The Magazine Revolution and Popular Ideas in the Nineties T2 - Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society TI - The Magazine Revolution and Popular Ideas in the Nineties VL - LXIV ID - 2263 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Münsterberg discusses how psychology is being applied medicine and law and why it should be applied much more effectively in the whole area of economic activity. In advertising, he says, there has been only "a slight tendency to consult the modern psychologist." (88) He asserts that "every row of posters on the billboards affords plenty of material for studying sins against the spirit of psychology." (88) Münsterberg urged experimentation to see which advertising worked best. The packaging of goods is important and the color combination used can make a different. "There is no special color combination that is suitable for chocolates and soap and chewing-gum alike, and the same color combination is not even equally fitting for both summer and winter. And still less can the same head of a girl be successfully used to advertise side-combs and patent medicines and ketchup. But his associative factor is equally open to scientific experiment." (89) The packaging, though, is "less important than the quality and contruction of the goods themselves." (89) As an example of how psychology might be applied to the work of business and technology, Münsterberg discusses research that had been done on using the typewriter and it difference from handwriting. "The visible writing of the typewriter is a case in point. He who is not accustomed to typewriting and wants to begin it will naturally prefer the writing with visible letters. He thinks of his ordinary handwriting; he knows how essential it is for him to follow the point of his pen with his eyes. He forgets that in the visible writing the very letter that he is writing is, of course, invisible at that moment, and the touch of the key perfectly produces the complete letter. The real effect is, therefore, that he sees the letters that he is no longer writing. The case is thus fundamentally different from that of handwriting. On the other hand, the amount of attention that is given to looking at the visible words is withdrawn from the only field that is essential -- the keyboard or the copy. The visible machine may appear more attractive to one who does not know, but may be less effective through starting bad and distracting habits. Yet, again, that may have psychological exceptions. In the case of those individuals who are absolutely visualizers, the visible writing may be a help when they are writing, not from a copy, but on dictation or from their own thoughts. In that case the seeing of the preceding letters would help in the organization of the motor impulses needed for pressing the keys for the next syllable. It would, therefore, demand a careful experimental analysis to determine those persons who would profit and those who would suffer by the visibility of the writing. The instinctive feeling can never decide it. (90) "But this difference of individual disposition plays no less a part with reference to the other qualities of the various types of machines. The double keyboard demands a distribution of attention over a very large field. The psychological laboratory can easily demonstrate that there exist individuals whose attention is concentrated and cannot stretch out much beyond the focus, and others whose attention is wide and moves easily. On the other hand, the shift-key is not only one of the many keys, but demands an entirely different kind of effort, which interrupts the smooth running flow of finger movement. The psychophysical experiment demonstrates how much more slowly and with how much more effort the shift-key movement must be performed. Again, the analysis of the laboratory shows that there are individuals who can easily interrupt their regular movement habits by will impulses of an entirely different kind, but others who losemuch of their psychological energy by so sudden a change. For these the breaking in of the shift-key process means an upsetting of the mental adjustment and therefore a great loss in their effectiveness. Accordingly, the machine that is excellent for the one is undesirable for the other, and the market would fare better if all this were not left to chance. (90) "Even as to the keyboard, it seems that psy- 90/91 chological principles are involved which demand reference to individual tendencies. For some it is best if the letters that frequently occur together in the language are in near neighborhood on the keyboard; for other minds such an arrangement is the least desirable. These writers mix up the motor impulses that belong to similar and correlated ideas, and they fare better if the intimately associated letters demand a movement in an entirely different direction, with the greatest possible psychological contrast. "There is hardly any instrument on the market for which a similar analysis of the interplay of mental energies could not be carried out...." (90-91) AU - Münsterberg, Hugo DA - Nov. 1909 IS - 1 KW - Münsterberg, Hugo Munsterberg, Hugo magazines illustrations billboards art ref, secondary advertising and public relations advertising, and new art form advertising, and psychology Münsterberg, Hugo advertising, and Hugo Münsterberg color color, and advertising advertising, and color art, and advertising advertising, and art illustrations newspapers, and illustrations magazines, and illustrations advertising, and illustrations modernity modernity, and advertising advertising, and modernity new way of seeing new way of seeing, and advertising advertising, and new way of seeing posters advertising, and posters posters, and advertising advertising, and billboards billboards, and advertising handwriting vs. typewriting typewriting vs. handwriting typewriters writing Münsterberg, Hugo, and typewriters typewriters, and Hugo Münsterberg ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, reform ref, McClure's advertising news and journalism LB - 38950 PY - 1909 SP - 87-93 ST - Psychology and the Market T2 - McClure's Magazine TI - Psychology and the Market VL - 34 ID - 3994 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that at the time there were more than 100 motion picture concerns and more than 5,000 people regularly employed as movie actors. The article discusses the Cooper Hewitt mercury arc lights. An illustration shown the lighting bank that is on wheels and is portable. Actors, though, had to use heavy makeup color to offset the impression created by the greenish hue cast off by the lights. "Half the studios are today equipped with mercury arc lighting apparatus that casts a greenish, sickly hue upon the countenances of the actors. Whereas the motion theater-goer sees a fair damsel of creamy skin and light fluffy hair, happily folded in the arms of a noble, bronzed hero., the camera man, the director and all, in fact, who are taking part in the production see only the pallor of green anemia upon the cheeks of the cooing pair. In fact, no movie heroine is beautiful to her leading man. "Overhead are great batteries of Cooper Hewitt lights -- strong but cool lights -- scores upon scores of them, and from every wall the overhead batteries are reinforced by other equally formidable. The ideal light is actinic, that is, rich in the green, blue and violet rays. It has not the glare of the ordinary electric light because the light is diffused everywhere, not concentrated, not coming from a point; it comes from an area. "An elaborate mechanism is required in conjunction with the lights of a motion picture studio. The batteries are suspended from a trolley system so that they may be run back and forth across the huge stage to any position that may be required...." (768) AU - Murphy, F. A. DA - 1917 KW - electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing images vs. words lighting mercury vapor electric light lighting, and Cooper Hewitt lighting, and mercury vapor Cooper Hewitt lighting color, and lighting lighting, and color Cooper Hewitt lighting, and color color, and Cooper Hewitt lighting electricity, and cool light lighting, and cool light quotations quotations, and electricity Cooper Hewitt, Peter metaphors metaphors, and new door opened ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated motion pictures, and Cooper Hewitt lighting acting, and Cooper Hewitt lighting actors, and Cooper Hewitt lighting Cooper Hewitt lighting, and motion pictures Cooper Hewitt lighting, and acting Cooper Hewitt lighting, and actors actors, and makeup acting actors color motion pictures words vs. images LB - 42500 PY - 1917 SP - 768 ST - Lighting the Movie Studio T2 - Illustrated World TI - Lighting the Movie Studio VL - 27 ID - 4349 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Musselman offers a case study of a local union that used public opinion polling to find out what union members thought about contract negotiations, the company and the union itself. Musselman documented the survey of more than 750 workers and how union leaders used the information to shape negotiating strategy. The survey helped the leadership prepare for negotiations and prompted some internal changes. Musselman noted that interest in the survey helped produce better attendance at union meetings, lead to the creation of a union newspaper to improve communication among members and enabled leaders to better understand rank-and-file members. “The efforts of this union to bridge the communication gap by eliciting the opinions of members is a sound idea.” --Phil Glende AU - Musselman, Barbara DA - Fall 1977 IS - 2 KW - news and journalism Glende, Phil labor newspapers, and labor labor, and newspapers newspapers news LB - 940 N1 - See also: office PY - 1977 SP - 132-38 ST - Reaching the Rank-and-File: An Analysis of the Use of a Local Union Survey T2 - Labor Studies Journal TI - Reaching the Rank-and-File: An Analysis of the Use of a Local Union Survey VL - 2 ID - 182 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This interesting article discusses the ways in which people early in the twentieth century experience motion pictures. Musser takes exception to Tom Gunning's article in this same issue, "The Whole Town's Gawking: Early Cinema and the Visual Experience of Modernity." Musser writes that "it is when he claims both that cinema of attractions characterizes all of pre-1903 cinema and continues to be a dominant feature of the post-1903, that I find myself in sharp disagreement." This technology brought a new way of seeing. Musser is the author of The Emergence of Cinema (1990), the first volume in Scribner's History of the American Cinema series. AU - Musser, Charles DA - 1994 IS - 2 KW - billboards photography advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures seeing at a distance propaganda public relations values modernism modernism modernity freedom values posters new way of seeing +motion pictures new way of seeing, and motion pictures modernity +photography and visual communication +motion pictures modernism posters, and motion pictures new way of seeing motion pictures, and new way of seeing advertising, and movie posters urban studies values, and posters (19th century) values, and motion picture advertising color, and posters posters, as degenerate art freedom of expression, and posters color advertising modernity posters context context, late 19th billboards, and motion pictures motion pictures, and billboards cinema of attractions LB - 27870 PY - 1994 SP - 203-32 ST - Rethinking Early Cinema: Cinema of Attractions and Narrativity T2 - Yale Journal of Criticism TI - Rethinking Early Cinema: Cinema of Attractions and Narrativity VL - 7 ID - 1339 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by discussing the prevalence of moving pictures in 1912: at least 20,000 places show movies, a half million dollars a day are spent on them; almost 300,000 people a day seen motion pictures in New York City alone. It then attempts to assess the historical importance of the motion picture: "As a force for the entertainment and enlightment of the masses, the moving-picture machine probably finds its closest parallel in the printing-press." (65) The article then gives a brief history of the motion pictures up to 1912. In the beginning, moving pictures attracted crowds "not because it was artistic or entertaining in itself, but imply because it moved." (67) It discusses early censorship of films beginning in Chicago (70), and the "revival of the art of pantomime" (73-74) and not that "the actors moved rapidly, and conveyed their ideas by wild gesticulaltions; instead of facial expression, they indulged in facial contortion." (73) In recent year a "new kind of stock company" (74 ) emerged and "real actors when into moving pictures." (74) In less than a decade, "the cinematograph had thus ascended from the noisome little 'store show' to the big Broadway houses." (75) The article concludes that moving pictures offer entertainment as "inspiring and beautiful" as ever created and that "as a moral influence," the movies "are immeasurably superior to the so-called 'muscial comedy,'" (76) even if films are often too sensational, violent, and focused on "the inevitable domestic triangle." (76) AU - Musson, Bennet and Robert Grau DA - Nov. 1912 IS - 1 KW - theater stage censorship metaphors ref, mag motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and printing press analogies, historical ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, reform ref, McClure's LB - 190 PY - 1912 SP - 65-76 ST - Fortunes in Films: The Romance of Moving Pictures T2 - McClure's Magazine TI - Fortunes in Films: The Romance of Moving Pictures VL - XL ID - 2297 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In 1987 and 1988, Valenti negotiated an agreement with USSR film minister Alexander Kamshalov that gave American movies greater access to the Soviet market. AU - Myers, Harold DA - July 22, 1987 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Soviet Union nationalism motion pictures nationalism and communication capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and USSR non-USA motion pictures, and nationalism motion pictures, and USSR USSR Valenti, Jack MPAA MPAA, and USSR Valenti, Jack, and USSR LB - 33100 PY - 1987 SP - 3, 23 ST - Valenti Urges Soviets to Buy More U. S. Pix, Widen Audience T2 - Variety TI - Valenti Urges Soviets to Buy More U. S. Pix, Widen Audience VL - 327 ID - 2947 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This account explains the development of the 8mm cartridge which helped to make cameras more portable. "Within two years," this article predicts, "the number of educational sound film titles available in compatible Super * mm cartridges will equal or exceed the number of educational titles now available in 16mm sound film format." AU - Myers, Nat C. DA - Dec., 1969 IS - 12 KW - cinema motion pictures celluloid film education context 8mm color +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and history of context, and movie technology cameras, and 8mm film, and 8mm cameras, and portable 8mm cameras education, and Super 8mm film education, and 16mm film cameras materials LB - 17930 N1 - See filed under American Cinematographer (1969). PY - 1969 SP - 1178-79, 1225-27 ST - The Story of 8mm Cartridges T2 - American Cinematographer TI - The Story of 8mm Cartridges VL - 50 ID - 702 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The National Association of Theater Owners (NATO) played an important role in the creation of the motion picture rating system. Members of the National Association of Theater Owners (NATO), the country’s largest exhibitor organization, saw a voluntary rating system as a way to prevent government regulation movie entertainment. After consulting with the Motion Picture Association of America’s production companies and with NATO president Julian Rifkin, Jack Valenti proposed a rating system in May, 1968, and on November 1 the industry adopted it. The article reports on NATO leaders approval of the plan. AU - National Association of Theatre Owners, Inc. DA - June, 1968 IS - 6 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA audiences self-regulation CARA theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) theaters theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U. S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and rating system (U.S.) origins NATO rating system (U. S.), and NATO classification, and Jack Valenti classification, and origins classification, and NATO rating system (U.S.), and Jack Valenti NATO LB - 20390 PY - 1968 SP - 1-2 ST - Directors Approve Voluntary Classification at Scottsdale Meeting T2 - Newsletter TI - Directors Approve Voluntary Classification at Scottsdale Meeting VL - 3 ID - 855 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece is an intelligent reflection on the problems of preserving electronic information. "The computer makes possible a fundamental change in the way recorded information is disseminated," Neavill says. "For the first time in human history, it is possible to disseminate written messages to a catered audience without reproducing the messages in multiple copies and distributing the copies across geographical space. Electronic data stored in computers have important advantages. "One advantage is intellectual. Whereas print-based systems freeze data in a particular configuration, computer-based systems enhance the malleability of recorded information. Data stored in a computer memory can be updated, corrected, rearranged, or otherwise altered practically at will, and new data are easily interpolated into existing data. Users of such systems can manipulate and interact with recorded data, arranging the data to suit their individual needs. These features give computer-based, electronic information systems powerful capabilities that print-based systems can never hope to match." Yet, the author explains, "nothing inherent in the technology of computer-based electronic systems ensures that information in the system will survive." Much more work is needed to design systems that will ensure the long-term survivability of electronic records. "In an electronic environment, paying conscious attention to the survival of recorded information will be an urgent necessity. With this goes a renewed emphasis on the library's role as a social institution." If we regard libraries as merely "social agencies" that supply the immediate needs of their users, if other agencies come into existence that supply information better, then libraries could very well wither away. Commercial vendors that distribute information in the marketplace are unlikely "to share the library's institutional commitment to the survival of information." Neavill see three kinds of information in peril. 1) Scientific and scholarly research that has no or only slight market value might be eliminated from the system. 2) "Nonscholarly writings that have served the primary purpose for which they were created and are no longer in demand would in all probability be purged, precluding their later use by scholars for secondary purposes." 3) The continuous "updating of electronic reference works could mean the loss of noncurrent information." The author warns that unless such problems are addressed, "the tradition of cumulative scholarship could be undermined, and the continual updating of information could mean an ongoing obliteration of the past." AU - Neavill, Gordon B. DA - January/March, 1984 IS - 1 KW - computers seeing at a distance print primary sources preservation nonprint media postmodernism modernism communication revolution archives history, and new media +future and science fiction community democracy communication revolution, and second industrial revolution history nonprint culture print culture new way of seeing libraries libraries, and information storage history +computers and the Internet +information storage +duplicating technologies libraries electronic preservation history, break with communication revolution second industrial revolution print media v. electronic media new way of seeing, and electronic media democracy and media electronic media archives, and electronic media history, and electronic media libraries, and electronic media print v. digital future, and libraries libraries, and future information storage, and libaries future archives LB - 4510 PY - 1984 SP - 76-89 ST - Electronic Publishing, Libraries, and the Survival of Information T2 - Library Resources and Technical Services TI - Electronic Publishing, Libraries, and the Survival of Information VL - 28 ID - 1838 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article, Richard Neupert draws heavily on Natalie Kalmus's article, "Color Consciousness," that appeared in the Journal of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers (Aug. 1935). Natalie Kalmus headed Technicolor's Color Advisory Service which strongly influenced studios used color during the 1930s and 1940s. Kalmus believed that color should reflect the patterns used in nature and that strong, vivid colors detracted from movie's story and could have "unnatural and disastrous results." (Kalmus quoted, 22) Kalmus insisted that Technicolor movies be put through a five-stage process. 1) The script was read and an appropriate color scheme for the story was chosen. 2) A budget and schedule was agreed upon with the producers. 3) Meetings were held with the people responsible for costumes and interiors to design the color to be worn by the actors. 4 and 5) Kalmus and her associates met with the studio's Art and Props department to insure that the color schemes would be coordinated for every shot and scened filmed. (23) A color chart for every aspect of the film was made. (25) Kalmus believed, perhaps simplistically, that there were natural laws that should be followed in using colors and that various colors had definite emotional connotations (e.g., "blue is suggestive of coolness 24/25 and truth ...," purple symbolized royalty and vanity, while gold and some yellows "symbolize wisdom, light, fruition, harvest .... but yellow also symbolizes deceit, jealousy, insonstancy in its darker shades." (Kalmus quoted, 25) Red suggested blood, danger, and passion. Kalmus believed that black and white pictures were boring. "The complete absence of color is unnatural. The mind strives to supply the missing chromatic sensations," she said. "The monotony of black, gray, and white ... is an acknowledged fact." (Kalmus quoted, 24) But "superabundant" color shocked viewers. "A super-abundance of colour is unnatural, and has a most unpleasant effect not only upon the eye itself, but upon the mind as well," she claimed. (Kalmus quoted, 24) "In the end," the author says, "Kalmus proposed a system for color that tried to parallel the system for music in the classical fiction film: there were basic rules of harmony and motivation behind the 'score' of each scene, yet the actual selection and combination always allowed for an infinite number of 'variations on a theme.'" (28) If Kalmus's ideas about using color were based on "a naive theory of psychology and cognition," (26 Neupert writes, they also helped Technicolor to "maintain a profitable foothold within the industry...." (28) See also Natalie Kalmus's article "Color Consciousness." AU - Neupert, Richard DA - 1989 IS - 1 KW - Kalmus, Herbert censorship censorship motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Technicolor, and Natalie Kalmus Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color censorship, and Natalie Kalmus ref, secondary color, and primitives color, and cinematographers color, and novelty color, and music Kalmus, Natalie, and color music color, and sound films sound recording sound recording, and color color, and Nature LB - 40940 PY - 1989 SP - 21-29 ST - Technicolor and Hollywood: Exercising Color Restraint T2 - Post Script TI - Technicolor and Hollywood: Exercising Color Restraint VL - 10 ID - 4193 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Nichols offers a satirical review of several foreign films opening in the United States. These films included Dominic Fabiani's The Occurrence, Penuche Marchesi's Carlo and His Brothers, and Carissimo De Vita's Mother and Daughter. AU - Nichols, Mike DA - Nov. 18, 1961 KW - motion pictures foreign films motion pictures, and foreign films Nichols, Mike LB - 31440 PY - 1961 SP - 57 ST - Save My Seat T2 - New Yorker TI - Save My Seat VL - 37 ID - 2878 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article provides a good account of issues involving privacy up to 1941, the year the United States enter World War II. Nizer says that concerns about "right of privacy did not grow insistent until the age of great industrial expansion, when miraculous advances in transportation and communication threatened to annihilate time and space, when the press was going through the growing pains of 'yellow journalism,' when Business first became Big." (526) Nizer says that "although the right of privacy is of recent origin, its roots go back into the ancient principles of the common law." (527) He devotes several pages to explaining how the courts have ruled on this issue (529-39). During the late 19th and first half of the 20th centuries, the news was often seen as invading people's privacy. (541-42). Magazine photographs and pictures in newspaper raised concerns (542-43) as did books (543-44). By 1941, the "growing popularity of motion pictures" had "created new and difficult problems." (544) The newsreel, in which people were filmed inadvertently and then shown in theaters, because a point of contention. Here Nizer maintains that the newsreel was more than entertainment and that it had much in common with the newspaper in informing audiences. (545) Nizer discusses early court cases involving movies and privacy: Binns v. Vitagraphy Corporation of America (1913) (p. 545), and Humiston v. Universal Film Mfg. Co. (1919) (pp. 545-46). He also considers medical photographs and privacy (546-47). This article also covers legal issues that involve the use of people's names and pictures in advertising without their permission. Nizer concludes that "the privacy doctrine has been handicapped in its development by the fact that it came into being after the common law had been fairly well crystallized. Many judges who were trained merely to apply the law as they found it ignored the tradition underlying our Anglo-Saxon system of jurisprudence and failed to apply the principles behind existing rules to new situations as they arose. Consequently the doctrine was hampered by the inability of some courts to accept the idea that it is not an interloper but a full-fledged, socially acceptable member of the legal family." (559) AU - Nizer, Louis DA - Feb. 1941 IS - 4 KW - ref, secondary motion pictures law privacy motion pictures, and privacy privacy, and motion pictures law, and privacy law, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and privacy privacy, and photography privacy, and microphones privacy, and dictograph privacy, and newsreels privacy, and Olmstead case Olmstead v. U.S. quotations quotations, and privacy quotations, and Louis Brandeis home and new media home, and privacy privacy, and home privacy, and Louis Nizer Nizer, Louis, and privacy privacy, and books motion pictures motion pictures, and privacy privacy, and motion pictures advertising and public relations advertising, and privacy privacy, and advertising ref, secondary ref, secular ref, law ref, Michigan Law Review advertising home Nizer, Louis photography LB - 38520 PY - 1941 SP - 526-60 ST - The Right of Privacy: A Half Century's Developments T2 - Michigan Law Review TI - The Right of Privacy: A Half Century's Developments VL - 39 ID - 3951 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This essay, Noble writes, attempted "to get beyond the ideology of technological determinism by demystifying the development of a particular technology." He goes on to say that "It is time, it is imperative, that the labor movement as a whole begin to assume the responsibility for the design and deployment of technology -- the organization of our shops, the structure of our jobs, the shape of our lives." AU - Noble, David F. DA - 1978 IS - 3-4 KW - technology technology and society labor labor, and automation technological determinism labor, and technological determinism technological determinism, and labor LB - 2430 N1 - See also: office PY - 1978 SP - 313-47 ST - Social Choice in Machine Design: The Case of Automatically Controlled Machine Tools, and a Challenge for Labor T2 - Politics & Society TI - Social Choice in Machine Design: The Case of Automatically Controlled Machine Tools, and a Challenge for Labor VL - 8 ID - 331 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article gives a description of what kinds of cameras were available to take into the field in 1922. “The guiding consideration is to combine portability with such a design of apparatus as will permit of all the usual branches of photography being undertaken. These are landscape and architectural photography; telephotography; natural colour photography; instantaneous photography; panoramic photography; kinematography. “It is possible to obtain a single camera which will combine all the first five functions, but it will be necessarily a complicated bit of apparatus to operate in the field; and most travelers will find it more convenient to provide themselves with three separate types of camera: a landscape 169/170 stand camera adapted for wide-angle work and also telephotography; a small-size camera (preferably of fixed focus) for instantaneous photography where portability is the first consideration; and a panoramic camera.” (169-70) AU - Noel, J. B. L. DA - March 1922 IS - 3 KW - history photography motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity ref, news new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel ref, secondary education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures cameras cameras, portable cameras, and mobility photography, instantaneous photography, and color color, and photography photography and visual communication ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Geographical Journal LB - 560 PY - 1922 SP - 169-78 ST - Some Notes on Photographic Equipment and Methods for Travellers T2 - Geographical Journal TI - Some Notes on Photographic Equipment and Methods for Travellers VL - 59 ID - 3351 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Nord argues that newspapers served as a nation building force despite the fact that they were often in early American history fragmented and one-sided in their political opinions. “In the first fifty years of independence, in every effort to undermine the government or disrupt the state, the newspaper was implicated. Newspapers were the organizers of faction and sedition. Yet, in their efforts to subvert the state, they helped to build the nation. American nation hood coalesced in the constitutional crises of the state. Though organizers of faction, newspapers helped to standardize a political language of state, which came, in turn, to serve as the mythic language of the nation.” (395) --Michael Shefky AU - Nord, David Paul DA - 1991 IS - 2 KW - nationalism journalism community democracy news and journalism Shefky, Michael Shefky, Michael +nationalism and communication newspapers, and democracy newspapers, and nationalism nationalism, and newspapers democracy, and nationalism news newspapers LB - 2090 PY - 1991 SP - 391-405 ST - Newspapers and the Foundations of Nationhood T2 - Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society TI - Newspapers and the Foundations of Nationhood VL - 100 ID - 297 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the social and political impact of the newspaper in nineteenth-century Chicago. Nord writes: “The broad thesis of this article has been that newspapers were part of the transformation of community life in nineteenth century American cities. More specifically, I have argued that the major difference between the popular press of the mid-century and the urban press of the late nineteenth century-- Chicago Daily News style--was that the latter believed, whether correctly or not, that modern urbanization had eroded the distinction between public and private.” AU - Nord, David Paul DA - Aug. 1985 IS - 4 KW - journalism community democracy community news and journalism newspapers news +books, periodicals, newspapers democracy and media urban studies public sphere newspapers, and democracy newspapers, and community community, and newspapers democracy, and newspapers newspapers, and democracy LB - 10120 PY - 1985 SP - 411-41 ST - The Public Community: The Urbanization of Journalism in Chicago T2 - Journal of Urban History TI - The Public Community: The Urbanization of Journalism in Chicago VL - 11 ID - 2377 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Nord argues that it was not merely the secular press that used and encouraged modern technological changes in printing, but that evangelical religion also exploited such media. Nord writes that “One step was to seek and to promote new printing technology that would be more efficient for mass publication. In the 1810s and 1820s, this meant stereotyping, steam-powered printing, and machine papermaking. The Bible and tract societies were pioneer developers of all three.” --SV During this early period in American history, several tract and bible societies sprang up. Their importance lay in more than simply spreading the word of God. They helped spread the technologies of mass media. “These groups gradually coalesced into two large national organizations: the American Bible Society (1816) and the American Tract Society (1825). The work of the Bible and tract societies of the early republic did not bring about the millennium of Christ as their founders had hoped. The importance of these societies in American history may lie elsewhere, for they helped to lay the foundation for mass media in America through their pioneering work in mass printing and mass distribution of the written word,” Nord says. -- Michael Shefky AU - Nord, David Paul DA - May 1984 IS - 88 KW - steam power print values religion religion printing printing press paper +books, periodicals, newspapers printing, and stereotyping printing, and steam presses papermaking, and machines printing steam, and printing presses religion, and printing presses religion, and mass media presses, and new technology religion, and new media Shefky, Michael presses materials LB - 10130 PY - 1984 ST - The Evangelical Origins of Mass Media in America, 1815-1835 T2 - Journalism Monographs TI - The Evangelical Origins of Mass Media in America, 1815-1835 ID - 2378 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This short article attempts to quantify Internet usage and summarize some research on user patterns. The purpose of the article is to examine the claims that people are using the Internet for political purposes and that the medium is enhancing democracy. The authors correctly state that the Internet is far from a unified thing and that people have many different motivations for using it. This article groups users into four categories and shows that only one small group of Internet users are actually engaged in political communications. Most people are using it of research, personal communication, or to learn about cultural events. The article also counters the claim that the Internet is providing something new. The authors show that most of the information available is not unique to the Internet, and that the personal communications are just as likely to occur by telephone or in person. But there is a significant minority using Internet resources for political activism, and these tend to be the people who are most involved in the process. The article concludes that the Internet will likely end up a fragmented medium and that, because of the vast number of things you can do online, it is unlikely to provided many shared experiences. --Rob Rabe AU - Norris, Pippa, and David Jones DA - Spring 1998 IS - 2 KW - computers community democracy Internet +computers and the Internet Rabe, Rob democracy and media Internet, and nature of democracy, and computers democracy, and Internet Internet, and democracy LB - 9480 PY - 1998 ST - Virtual Democracy T2 - Harvard International Journal of Press/Politics TI - Virtual Democracy VL - 3 ID - 2315 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Lord Northcliffe comments on the status of color photography in magazines (and moving pictures) and says the process has not yet been perfected. "What we publishers are all striving for now is the adequate development of adequate and truthful reproduction of nature photographs in colors. We can get the colored photographs -- the flowers, the landscapes, the trees, the water, even the changing sunset. We can even catch the sunset in the moving picture machine. But when we go to reproduce what we have caught in printed form -- ah! there's the difficulty that balks us all. The man who could do that would at once go to the front among us. Perhaps it will be done. But not yet." (1165) AU - Northcliffe, Lord DA - Nov. 19, 1908 IS - 3129 KW - magazines photography color color, and photography photography, and color magazines, and color color, and magazines photography and visual communication ref, mag motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent motion pictures LB - 410 PY - 1908 SP - 1165-66 (APS Online) ST - The Future of Magazines T2 - The Independent TI - The Future of Magazines VL - 65 ID - 3337 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author begins by making assumptions about the difference between watching a movie in a theater with other people and viewing a television program alone in one's home. In the movie theater, he writes, "the activities portrayed by ... beauties and heroes were frequently far beyond the range of everyday living. However, thesse were worshipfully accepted by the audiences, largely due to the effect of mass psychology, which is operative on an audience group sitting relaxed in a darkened theatre." (390) When people watch TV, "absent is te factor of mass psychology, which in former eras acted to get an entire audience 'carried away.'" (390) Norwood goes on to talk about the need for TV pictures that "show freer movement by natural looking actors" and pictures that have "high technical excellence," including "a greater variety of natural looking scenes. More spontaneity is wanted." (390) Norwood says that the camera technology too often used is "the ungainly, dinosaur type of camera (and associated unduly complex appartus)" that "is usually stationery, or requires the efforts of a number of men to provide limited mo-390/391 tion. Such cameras by their very nature impose many undesirable restrictions on the cinematographer. They cramp his style. They slow him down. They also impose restrictions on the movements of actors. They impose restrictions on the types of scenes which can be readily photographed. The screen results tend to be stilted, stagy and stuffy. Such results are less and less acceptable to the down-to-earth home TV viewer." (390-91) What was needed was a camera that would help the cameraman rather than hinder him. It would "optionally mounted on a light-weight professional tripod, a light-weight dolly, a light-weight camera crane, or, very significantly, it can be conviently hand-held, resting on a cameraman's shoulder. In the latter case it can be used almost anywhere to get very realistic scenes. In can conveniently followed action almost anywhere. It can be used as a concealed camera to get natural street scenes, mob scenes, riot scenes, actual battle scenes, etc. It can be readily used in an airplane or on a boat, in an office building or in a private home." (391) This camera would be quiet, driven by an electric motor. It would be able to record sound. Norwood was an authority on photographic exposure control and invented the 3-D light meter. AU - Norwood, Don DA - June, 1966 IS - 6 KW - entertainment entertainment, home television media effects motion pictures cameras cameras, portable cameras, portable motion pictures, and portable cameras television, and portable cameras home entertainment home and new media cameras, hidden cameras, concealed sound recording sound recording, and portable cameras war war, and portable cameras news and journalism news, and portable cameras cinematography home news LB - 30240 PY - 1966 SP - 390-92 ST - The Camera of the Future T2 - American Cinematographer TI - The Camera of the Future VL - 47 ID - 2779 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, part of a series (forthcoming pieces will deal with businessmen, businesswomen, workingmen, lumbermen), considers the status of actors. It begins by noting that over the past two decades "there has been a palpable improvement in the general character of players" and that the "progress toward decency, sobriety and integrity has been much faster and sounder than the general public has vividly felt." Still, progress has been slow. "At the very start the actor finds himself suspected," Noxon says. "He cannot help seeing that even if his conduct is exemplary he may be subjected to slights merely because he is an actor. This part of the struggle must seem to all fair-minded persons who give it careful thought a needless and cruel hardship, and the players are to be congratulated that such discrimination meets frequent rebuke nowadyas from men and women in high places, and that it is disappearing, even though slowly." The author says that actors comes from the ranks of people who generally do not belong to the church, and hence, religion is not sufficiently represented on the stage. Also, the inflated publicity given to actors hurts their reputation. "Both the ostracism and the staying out of the profession spring from the popular notion about stage folk. Actors, or their agents, have largely brought this upon themselves through inviting publicity. Whatever personal affair may come out, the actor usually suffers, or enjoys, a dozen time the notoriety that would fall to a plumber or a music teacher under like circumstances. The manager strains every muscle to fill more newspaper space with gossip about his employees than his rival fills. It is just because of this lime-light thrown on actors and throwing other persons into gloom that the stage seems to be a wickeder places than some others...." Noxon discusses the long-standing prejudices against actors and sees three causes. "The ancient charges against stage folk may be lumped together as licentiousness, excessive drinking [and also "opium eating"] and loose business methods." Despite these shortcoming, the author believes that in 1898 the opportunities "for useful and honored careers in the drama" are "brighter and safer than ... ever before." AU - Noxon, Frank W. DA - Jan. 27, 1898 IS - 4 KW - theater celebrity anti-theatrical bias celebrity culture censorship actors acting ref, secondary critics critics, religious motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures actors, and bias against actors, and status of theater, and bias against anti-theatrical prejudice quotations quotations, and status of actors fame, and notoriety celebrity culture actors, and publicity newspapers, and actors actors, and newspapers news and journalism ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, Congregationalist-title fame LB - 39670 PY - 1898 SP - 122 ST - The Struggle for Character: X. The Actor T2 - Congregationalist TI - The Struggle for Character: X. The Actor VL - 83 ID - 4065 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, written in 1977, assesses the significance of microelectronics. Noyce argues that microelectronics has brought "a true revolution a qualitative change in technology, the integrated microelectronic circuit, has given rise to a qualitative change in human capabilities." Noyce discusses the potential implication for personal computers. He discusses the transistor, integrated circuit, and the semiconductor integrated circuit. He explains Moore's law and prospects for further miniaturization. He also treats photoengraving processes that are used as computer chips shrink in size. He concludes that "it is in the exponential proliferation of products and services dependent on microelectronics that the real microelectronic revolution will be manifested." AU - Noyce, Robert N. DA - Sept. 1977 IS - 3 KW - computers Moore, Gordon microprocessing photography transistors, and integrated circuits +photography and visual communication communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution archives materials computers communication revolution, and second industrial revolution photo engraving microelectronics libraries libraries, and information storage Information Age +computers and the Internet microelectronics revolution second industrial revolution Eniac Moore's law miniaturization microprocessors integrated circuits transistors photo engraving, and computer chips information storage Texas Instruments Company computer chips, and photo engraving computer chips information age information processing communication revolution computer chips computers, personal materials LB - 3730 PY - 1977 SP - 62-69 ST - Microelectronics T2 - Scientific American TI - Microelectronics VL - 237 ID - 1761 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses using instantaneous photography by amateurs to capture nature. "We deal here with photography as it may be applied by the amateur to animal life, in its natural setting, and to the sea." (301) By this time. 1898, it was possible to capture objects in motion. The article begins by saying: "Photographic possibilities reach to an image of a cannon-ball when near its initial velocity." (301) Several photographs accompany the text. AU - Nutting, Wallace DA - June 4, 1898 IS - 5 KW - photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing modernity education photography, and education education, and photography photography, and science science, and photography photography, and exposure time quotations, and exposure time quotations, and camera speed quotations ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, literary ref, Outlook motion pictures science LB - 38670 PY - 1898 SP - 301-09 ST - Photographic Beauties of Objects in Motion T2 - Outlook TI - Photographic Beauties of Objects in Motion VL - 59 ID - 3966 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Offenheim raises the question: "Is it or is it not a vicious doctrine to deny all right of privacy even to concededly public persons?" It then discusses three court cases. 1) Marion Manola v. Stephens in which the New York Supreme Court granted an injunction against using a photograph of an actress taken while she was performing on stage in tights. This case "would seem to argue that even a living public character has a right to enjoin the publication of a distasteful picture." 2) Schuyler v. Curtis was a case brought by relatives of a deceased person, Mrs. Schuyler, to prevent the World's Fair in Chicago from erecting a statute of her likeness to represent "The Typical Philanthropist." (The case was then on appeal to the New York Court of Appeals.) These two cases seemed at variance with a decision rendered earlier in the Corliss case in which the Federal Circuit Court which ruled that there was a distinction to be drawn between public and private figures. Private figures have the right to have their privacy protected but public figures -- "a statesman, author or artist, or inventor, who asks for and desires public recognition, may be said to have surrendered this right to the public." AU - Offenheim, Wm. Geo. DA - April 27, 1895 IS - 17 KW - ref, secondary law privacy law, and privacy law, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and privacy privacy, and photography court cases court cases, and privacy privacy, and court cases court cases, Schuyler v. Curtis court cases, Marion Manola v. Stephen court cases, Corliss case ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific American photography LB - 39710 PY - 1895 SP - 262 ST - Photography and Law T2 - Scientific American TI - Photography and Law VL - 72 ID - 4069 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by saying that our facial features usually reveal "little plasticity, ... little elasticity," and "seem incapable of intelligibly showing forth our moods." But "when we do see a face over which shift lights and shadows, a face expressive of inner feelings, responsive to outer stimuli, it possesses a fascination greater than that of modeled beauty." (502) There is one place, however, where people look to see facial expressions and that is on the stage. "The art of acting we are almost ready to define, offhand, as the art of emotional expression by means of face and body. Now and then -- at drearily long intervals -- comes a pan- 502-503 tomimist who convinces us that this is a true definition, so vividly does he, without a spoken word, enact a drama. But for the most part the art of facial expression is as little practised on the stage as in the drawing-room...." (502-03) (my emphasis) The author advises that one of the best ways to develop the art of facial expression is to forget the audience and listen to fellow actors on stage. "There is but one way, the older students of the stage arts declare, in which a young actor or actress can master the art of facial expression. That is by mastering the art of stage listening. Let them forget the audience and listen to their fellow players, not for their cue, but to hear what is being said as though they were indeed the people they represent, hearing for the first time the remarks of their confreres. Listening merely for one's cue on the stage produces about the same facial result as listening merely for a chance to break into the conversation in casual social intercourse." (503) American students of the stage are not this skill, the author says. "In this power of listening, with its corollary of facial expression, the American dramatic students are particularly ill-taught. For it is substituted, apparently, a course in mechanical facial gymnastic, painful to witness when they are remembered and practised, and soon forgotten. The victims of this form of instruction flutter their eyelids, twist their mouths, struggle valiantly but vainly to declare coyness, sorrow, remorse, surprise, according to rule, and they only succeed in -- 'mugging,' the irreverent call it." (504) The author continues: "It is this lack of really expressive faces on the stage which makes the fame and the fortune of the few which are expressive. It is this power of making a lifted eyebrow, a pursed-up mouth, a worried wrinkle, tell a story, reveal a character and a situation, which, for the past seven years, has reduced the audiences of Beatrice Herford to happy agonies of mirth." This article has ten photographs of Beatrice Herford demonstrating facial expressions for various moods, and eleven photographs of another actress, Elsie Janis, doing the same. Janis professed to be "entirely unambitious for the glories of a star...." (510) AU - O'Hagan, Anne DA - June 1906 IS - 6 KW - theater stage illustrations fame fame celebrity actors acting ref, secondary celebrity culture fame personality motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars audiences media effects motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures media effects, and audiences media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and acting acting, and facial expression motion pictures, and not facing camera acting, and not facing camera acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting quotations quotations, and facial expression women women, and beauty women, and cameras women, and acting acting, and women illustrations ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Harper's Bazaar motion pictures LB - 37560 PY - 1906 SP - 502-10 ST - The Art of Facial Expression T2 - Harper's Bazaar TI - The Art of Facial Expression VL - 40 ID - 3855 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is by two historians who are among the leaders in attempting to connect sound historical research to the computers and the Internet. They offer instruction doing historical research on the World Wide Web, and they describe their goals in this articles as follows: "This article offers a preliminary assessment of the possibilities and limitations, the allures and dangers, of the World Wide Web for those interested in presenting, teaching, and learning about American history. The authors are dubious about claims that the Web is a totally new departure. But we also reject the view of skeptics who say that it offers nothing at all; we are impressed--even astonished--by what already exists there for historians. It seems less likely that the Web presents a radically new paradigm or way of thinking; in many ways the Web simply gives us speedy access to existing resources." AU - O'Malley, Michael and Roy Rosenzweig DA - June 1997 IS - 1 KW - computers World Wide Web preservation Internet history, and new media +computers and the Internet history, and Internet history, and World Wide Web World Wide Web, and history Internet, and history history LB - 1770 PY - 1997 SP - 132-55 ST - Brave New World or Blind Alley? American History on the World Wide Web T2 - Journal of American History TI - Brave New World or Blind Alley? American History on the World Wide Web VL - 84 ID - 265 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author says that "In a fundamental sense, Innis introduced McLuhan to the study of communication, and in another sense, McLuhan introduced Innis to the world." The article considers parallels in the work of these two Canadians. AU - Onufrijchuk, Roman DA - 1993 IS - 1 KW - non-USA Innis, Harold, and Marshall McLuhan McLuhan, Marshall, and Harold Innis Canada Innis, Harold McLuhan, Marshall LB - 3340 PY - 1993 SP - 43-74 ST - Introducing Innis/McLuhan Concluding: The Innis in McLuhan's 'System' T2 - Continuum: The Australian Journal of Media & Culture TI - Introducing Innis/McLuhan Concluding: The Innis in McLuhan's 'System' VL - 7 ID - 422 ER - TY - JOUR AB - O'Reilly examines efforts to improve the image of the Federal Bureau of Investigation during the Franklin D. Roosevelt administration. Images of law enforcement officials in motion pictures, for example, improved after 1935. Law officers and government agents generally were portrayed as effective and heroic. AU - O'Reilly, Kenneth DA - Dec., 1982 IS - 3 KW - nationalism nationalism context context, and 1930s context, and crime +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures FBI context, and FBI motion pictures, and crime motion pictures, and FBI +nationalism and communication nationalism, and motion pictures LB - 15530 PY - 1982 SP - 638-58 ST - A New Deal for the FBI: The Roosevelt Adminstration, Crime Control, and National Security T2 - Journal of American History TI - A New Deal for the FBI: The Roosevelt Adminstration, Crime Control, and National Security VL - 69 ID - 566 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author writes that "Moving Pictures rank as high as any disseminator of knowledge, that human has conceived, and stands side by side with the printing art. If we have books that treat of light and frivolous things, so also have we books, on the deepest thoughts of mankind. Moving Pictures are but another form of printing presses. There is no subject that they can not present to us in a tenth of the time required by any other agent." (120) Noting that the "great spread of knowledge began, with the improvement in rapid modes of travel...." (120) Moving "have become the last link in a chain that is to bring the world closer together. A universal tongue so that the savage, may know a ball game and the city bred will know that figs do not grow flat with sugar on them." (120) The author says that films can be "salesmen" to show the world what America has to offer. "The United States is the greatest producer of Motion Pictures in the world. Let us tell our story in the universal tongue, let us send them broadcast." (120) Ormston concludes by asking: "Shall we take advantage of our opportunity? Or shall we let the other fellow beat us to it?" (120) AU - Ormston, Frank D. DA - Feb. 1919 IS - 2 KW - theater stage nationalism history ref, secondary ref, secular ref, Overland Monthly motion pictures, and modernity critics censorship words vs. images metaphors actors acting motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and printing press motion pictures, as new literary form theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures images vs. words motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and Americanism motion pictures motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, foreign nationalism and communication motion pictures, and Americanization history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures ref, news motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad motion pictures, as new language motion pictures, as universal language education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and education LB - 41980 PY - 1919 SP - 119-20 ST - The Value of the Film T2 - Overland Monthly and Out West Magazine TI - The Value of the Film VL - 73 ID - 4296 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article profiles movie producer Jerry Weintraub and also a good deal on singer John Denver, one of Weintraub's clients. Weintraub developed contacts with several political leaders which some believed gave him influence with Motion Picture Association of America president Jack Valenti. AU - Orth, Maureen DA - Dec. 20, 1976 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation CARA Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings politics Hollywood law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Cruising Weintraub, Jerry rating system (U. S.), and Cruising rating system (U. S.), and homosexuality motion pictures, and politics Valenti, Jack, and Jerry Weintraub motion pictures, and politics Hollywood, and politics politics, and Hollywood LB - 21070 PY - 1976 SP - 65-66, 68 ST - The Wiz of Showbiz T2 - Newsweek TI - The Wiz of Showbiz ID - 908 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This is a technical article explaining the history and process of photogravure. The Abstract reads: "The first practicable photomechanical system -- conact-screen photogravure -- was invented in 1852 by W. H. F. Talbot of England. Many of the approaches introduced by Talbot are still used in current practice; contact cross-line 'master' and 'working' screens: metal plate etching through a bichromated gelatin emulsion; etching with ferric chloride solutions of different concentrations; and selective local etching for 'retouching' purposes. "To provide the tiny image ink-holding components in the printing plate, Talbot used fine gauze fabric for the contact cross-line screens and fine resin particles (aquatint) applied as a powder or liquid. He also experimented with contact screens of ruled lines on paper; scored cartilage; waxed paper with scribed lines; aquatint pattern on paper and a blackened film with uniform grid of clear circular openings." (101) The article ends by discussing high speed production techniques in photogravure and comments on speeds obtained, presumably in 1969. "Photogravure practice has expanded to include the use of cylindrical shaped printing plates which are ideally suited for high speed runs. Sheet fed gravure presses (rotary), which in the U. S. can accommodate sheets up to 29 in x 43 in., operate at about 3,000-6,000 images (on one side of the paper) per hour depending on the work being done. High speed rotogravure presses have been built which can print 15 million catalogue pages an hour." (115) AU - Ostroff, Eugene DA - July/August, 1969 IS - 4 KW - Talbot, William Fox rotogravure journalism illustrations magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media photography, and rotogravure process rotogravure process rotogravure process, and photography rotogravure process, and newspapers newspapers, and rotogravure process journalism, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and journalism photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers photography, and advertising advertising, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and high speed newspapers, and presses duplicating technologies photogravure process photogravure process, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and photogravure process illustrations, and magazines books, periodicals, newspapers rotogravure process, and history history, and rotogravure process illustrations, and newspapers advertising, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and advertising photogravure process, and advertising advertising, and photogravure process non-USA Great Britain Talbot, W. H. F., and photogravure photogravure, and Great Britain Great Britain, and photogravure non-USA, and photogravure ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Journal of Photographic Science advertising history LB - 39010 PY - 1969 SP - 101-15 ST - Photography and Photogravure: History of Photomechanical Reproduction T2 - Journal of Photographic Science TI - Photography and Photogravure: History of Photomechanical Reproduction VL - 17 ID - 4000 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Owens writes: “One day in 1942, the Rockefeller Differential Analyzer was dedicated to winning the war. For the next several years this large mathematical machine, the centerpiece of MIT’s Center of Analysis, labored over the calculation of firing tables and the profiles of radar antennas. Weighing almost a hundred tons and comprising some two thousand vacuum tubes, several thousand relays, a hundred and fifty motors, and automated input units, the analyzer was the most important computer in existence in the United States at the end of the war. Wartime security prohibited its public announcement until 1945, when it was hailed by the press as a great electromechanical brain ready to tackle the problems of peace and to advance science by freeing it from the pick-and-shovel work of mathematics. “Within five years of its announcement, however, the early enthusiasm which had marked the development of the analyzer had died, and the Center of Analysis had collapsed as a vital site for the study of computation.” AU - Owens, Larry DA - Jan. 1986 IS - 1 KW - computers materials materials computers war World War II +computers and the Internet Bush, Vannevar computers, history of Differential Analyzer World War II, and computers MIT +artificial intelligence and biotechnology vacuum tubes radar Bush, Vannevar, and Difference Analyzer LB - 7950 PY - 1986 SP - 63-95 ST - Vannevar Bush and the Differential Analyzer: The Text and Context of an Early Computer T2 - Technology and Culture TI - Vannevar Bush and the Differential Analyzer: The Text and Context of an Early Computer VL - 27 ID - 2164 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This work attempts to synthesize the best research on the effects of television violence. It indicates that there is a consensus among researchers that there is sometimes a correlation between televised violence and anti-social behavior. The authors described their research as follows: "A meta-analysis is performed on studies pertaining to the effect of television violence on aggressive behavior. Partitioning by research design, viewer attributes, treatment and exposure variables, and type of antisocial behavior, allows one to interpret computed effect sizes for each of the variables in the partitions. We find a positive and significant correlation between television violence and aggressive behavior, albeit to varying degrees depending on the particular research question." AU - Paik, Haejung AU - Comstock, George DA - Aug. 1994 IS - 4 KW - media research syntheses sexuality sex motion pictures meta-analyses media effects violence (see also: media violence) violence media effects violence media violence censorship and ratings children +television television, and violence violence, and television social science research social science research, and violence violence, and social science research violence, and pornography pornography, and violence media effects media effects, and TV violence media violence, meta-analyses social science research, and literature review social science research, and meta-analysis violence, and children children, and media children, and media violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and media effects violence, and media effects pornography LB - 28120 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1994 SP - 516-46 ST - The Effects of Television Violence on Antisocial Behavior: A Meta-Analysis T2 - Communication Research TI - The Effects of Television Violence on Antisocial Behavior: A Meta-Analysis VL - 21 ID - 1361 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Frederick Palmer was President of Palmer Photoplay Corporation, and here talks about how motion pictures require a different type of writing. The subtitle of the article is "The Demands of the Screen Not Met by Fictionists." (182) Palmer notes that the Great Train Robbery (1897) was the first photoplay and that this art form is now only a little more than two decades old. Early photoplay scenarios were improvised and crude. Even at that, motion pictures are at the time of this piece (1919) the fifth largest industry in the United States. Palmer considered the photoplay to be "a new language." (185) He quotes extensively from the novelist, poet, and Shakespearean scholar Arthur Stringer, who also wrote for films. Here Palmer quotes Stringer on the photoplay: "'It is a language, indeed, which even duplicates in its methods the processes of the human mind, since thought itself is a stream of "pictures" with concentrated attention typified by the "close-up" and memory represented by the "cut-back." And it is this new language, scarcely out of its baby lisp, that the fiction-writers to today are berating.'" (186) Stringer said the movies made older methods of fiction seem "obsolete." (186) "The same upheaval came to the parchment embroiderer and the quill-driver with the invention of printing, just as it must have come still earlier with the evolution of written speech, and still earlier again with the first crude sign-language scratched with a walrus-tooth on a shell-face, and even before that with the organization of throat-grunts and brutish calls into some accepted form of speech.'" (186) (Palmer quoting Stringer) "'For ... the motion-picture is more than a new art; it is a new language, a new method of expressing thought and communicating emotion. It is an amplified sign-language, the picture-talk of primitive man vitalized by movement and magnified to splendor. It is life itself, singled out and set in a frame.'" (186) (Palmer quoting Stringer) Palmer linked motion pictures to other modern invention such as the railroad and automobile. (187) As a one who wrote 50 photoplays in nine months, Palmer said the movies required a new specialized type of writer. Action was "the great fundamental necessity" of movies (188). Most novels had too little action and too much description. (189) Palmer noted an important difference between the stage play, novel, and the movie. Plays for the live theater had runs of a year and more, especially when they were taken on the road to smaller venues. The circulation of novels, particular those serialized in magazines, had runs of months or even years. Movies were duplicated and shown simultaneously in many theaters "and then shelved and forgotten." (188) There was a much higher demand for new stories. AU - Palmer, Frederick DA - Aug. 1919 KW - theater stage motion pictures, and modernity critics censorship words vs. images metaphors actors acting motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and printing press motion pictures, as new literary form theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures images vs. words motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and novels censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and new way of seeing motion pictures, and drama motion pictures, and nature motion pictures, and character motion pictures, and words quotations quotations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and quotations motion pictures, and printing press motion pictures, as new language motion pictures, and Arthur Stringer ref, secondary ref, secular ref, social ref, literary ref, Forum LB - 41950 PY - 1919 SP - 182-89 ST - Whence Future Photoplays? T2 - Forum TI - Whence Future Photoplays? ID - 4294 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The sociologist Robert Park in assessing the newspaper as a form of knowledge, observed that it was concerned primarily with the present, or what psychologists called “the specious present.” It was this “transient and ephemeral quality” that was “the very essence of news,” he said, and its main concern was neither the past nor future. (676) Newspapers reflected modern life’s rapid and drastically changing circumstances and helped to create the impression that readers and viewers were “living from day to day” and had “lost … historical perspective.” (686) AU - Park, Robert E. DA - March 1940 IS - 5 KW - ref, secondary Park, Robert newspapers, and Robert Park news and journalism news, as form of knowledge history and new media history, and newspapers newspapers, and history newspapers, and specious present quotations quotations, and specious present modernity newspapers, and modernity modernity, and newspapers history news LB - 42810 PY - 1940 SP - 669-86 ST - News as a Form of Knowledge: A Chapter in the Sociology of Knowledge T2 - American Journal of Sociology TI - News as a Form of Knowledge: A Chapter in the Sociology of Knowledge VL - 45 ID - 2368 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by discussing a movement that had "formed an analogy between colors and sounds," and led to "color harmonies based upon those of music." (238) In then considers the limitation of this movement saying that "the great fallacy in this theory lies not in the nature of color design, but in the nature of a chord of music." (238) Parker discusses the relationship between certain colors and distance and maintains that color harmony depends on the "placement of colors." (239) "There is a peculiar fact about colors that seems to have been discovered by the exponent of the more modern movements, namely: that certain colors take a certain apparent distance from the eye, regardless of their actual placements, so that to get a perfect appearance of spatial integrity the colors must be very carefully related, often in contradiction to the actual colors in nature, for space is a greater factor than color and we cannot always get both. This phenomenon seems due partly to the association of certain colors with certain distances, and partly to subtle relations between the colors themselves. But most of all it is dependent upon the pigments used in painting, for these assume distances of their own, entirely regardless of what their color may be. Lead white will stand off the canvas, while zinc white will recede, but both are white. And it is in this way that the Post-Impressionists have achieved their wonder feeling for spatial values." (239) With regard to color and emotion: "The actual emotional effect of a color or sound, quite contrary to the general conceptions, is of no consequence to art. If the purpose of art is to arouse emotions it must take forever an inferior place, for an emotion is always a reaction, a mechanical product. And though it may be the accompaniment of an action it is in itself inferior to the thing which brought it forth. It is the action, the conscious doing, that counts in life, not the emotional reactions that follow and are beyond our control. And if art is to arouse feelings merely, it can be no more than a toy, a thing to pass an idle hour." (240) AU - Parker, Edwin S. DA - Sept. 26, 1917 IS - 2179 KW - theater theater religion religion, and color magic emotion decadence censorship censorship censorship ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color color, and inadequacy of language color, in history color, and theory color, and language color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and poetry color, and religion religion, and color values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations theater and stage color, and theater theater, and color lighting lighting, and theater theater, and lighting censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color magic, and color color, and magic color, and music media effects color, media effects media effects, and color color, as psychological factor quotations quotations, and color color, and Cubism color, and space color, and post-Impressionism ref, secondary ref, secular ref, American Architect LB - 39180 PY - 1917 SP - 238-40 ST - Color Harmony T2 - American Architect TI - Color Harmony VL - 112 ID - 4017 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Catholic theology played an important part in defining the movie industry's Production Code of 1930. Father Daniel A. Lord, a critic of “modern” thought, was the primary architect of the Code. According to Wilfrid Parson, editor of the Catholic publication America, Lord “put solid theological and moral bones” on the Code. AU - Parson, Wilfird DA - May 26, 1956 KW - self-regulation Production Code values Christianity values religion censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) motion pictures morality religion Catholic Church +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code, and origins Lord, Daniel A. motion pictures, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and motion pictures morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity LB - 13480 PY - 1956 SP - 213 ST - Letter to Editor T2 - America TI - Letter to Editor ID - 518 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Abstract from Technology and Culture: "In the 1920s, American newspapers and magazines enthusiastically promoted the new technology of radio broadcasting in part by focusing on how the technology was adopted by farmers. The popular press depicted farmers, isolated from the urban centers and cut off from urban-based entertainment, as the ideal benefactors of what radio did best: bridge large distances and provide an abundance of information and amusement. In focusing on the farmer's potential for redemption through the adoption of radio, however, the press accounts amplified the shortcomings of farm life, casting the farmer as an anti-modern "other." These conclusions emerge from the news coverage and advertising discourse appearing in both urban and rural publications of the period." AU - Patnode, Randall DA - April 2003 IS - 2 KW - news and journalism radio journalism, and radio radio, and journalism newspapers newspapers, and radio radio, and newspapers radio, and agriculture agriculture, and radio journalism, and agriculture agriculture, and journalism journalism news agriculture LB - 33640 PY - 2003 SP - 285-305 ST - 'What These People Need Is Radio': New Technology, the Press, and Otherness in 1920s America T2 - Technology and Culture TI - 'What These People Need Is Radio': New Technology, the Press, and Otherness in 1920s America VL - 44 ID - 3003 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article links steam and electrical power to progress, evangelization, and the expansion of American power and civilization. The author writes that “By steam and electricity the world is to-day closely compacted into general and intimate association, thus facilitating mutual uplifting, improvement, and evangelization.” (609) The article goes on to say that “Possessing the facilities of steam and electricity, the solidarity and direction of our vast empire and the working of our free institutions can be as readily and effectively extended over a hemisphere as they now are over our present domain, and are as practicable for half a billion of people as they now are for sixty-five millions. This is not merely, an ideal picture….” AU - Pearne, Thomas H. DA - July 1895 IS - 4 KW - progress ref, religious ref, Methodist ref, Methodist Review ref, secondary electricity nationalism and communication electricity, and nationalism nationalism, and electricity religion religion, and telegraph religion, and electricity electricity, and religion electricity, and imperialism nationalism, and evangelization electricity, and progress progress, and electricity progress, and steam power nationalism LB - 42280 PY - 1895 SP - 608-17 ST - Art. VIII. -- The Twentieth Century T2 - Methodist Review TI - Art. VIII. -- The Twentieth Century VL - 11 ID - 4327 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author uses the metaphor of dope to discuss silent movies as a threat not so much to morals as to our intellectual life. The author sees the root cause of movies' popularity as boredom. "For if the movies are the thing of the moment, the reason of their popularity has its roots deep down in human nature, dating back to the very beginning -- to primeval days when man no sooner lived as man than life bored him so unutterably that, at once, he set about inventing a way to forget it.... Whatever philosophers and ethnologists may say, it was man's colossal capacity for boredom that prompted him to fill his universe with imaginary terrors, to surround himself with disturbing spiritual beings, to allows the affairs of an unseen world to distract him from more immediate duties in his own, and, finally, as a means of communication with the unknown, the unseen, to evolve a ceremonial which was really the first dramatic form he gave to his make-believe." (621) Pennell says that "it has been not art, but the love of make-believe that has driven people to the play, the desire to throw off the boredom of the real for the enchantment of the unreal." (622) Although "the drama opens the door to another life, another world," Pennell says, photography that attempts to capture drama is "the degradation of dramatic art." Indeed, "photography is not, never can be, art," the author contends. (622) Cinematography is no better: "the attempt to photograph art in motion -- dramatic art -- is as foolish as the attempt to make Rembrandts and Whistlers out of photographs of people and places. For the dramatic artist fills the stage not with life, but with the semblance of life." (622) The motion picture is machine-made and artificial. "The life breathed into a drama by dramatist and actor eludes the camera, and the photographic version on the screen is no more than a skeleton, and a distorted skeleton at that, its offensiveness increasing in the proportion to its endeavor to pass itself off as real flesh-and-blood -- as the 'high art product' predicted for the future.... The evil is in the prostitution of art to the machine-made, and the cinematograph might develop into the supreme mechanical marvel, the eighth wonder of the world, and in its super-perfection it would still be a machine, and a machine can only create the machine-made. It may reproduce the scene on the stage, but this is a detail, and important detail it is true, but in itself meaningless, lifeless, needing the dramatist's words in the actor's mouth to give it life....." (623) Movies cannot convey the true meaning of great literature, Pennell says, and she doubts that even talking films, when they do arrive, will be any better. (624) The machine-made photo-play vulgarizes art and cheapens people's appreciation for art. "I know that a film of explanation is offered as a substitute for the written or spoken word, but it seldom explains anything save the illiteracy of its author and the shame of all concerned," the author laments. (624) Pennell summarizes her thesis: "The movies are worse than a sedative -- they are dope, pure dope, the most deadly every invented. Only shadows appear on the screen, moving with an abruptness, a haste, that leaves no time to wonder why they move at all. The films give something to look at, nothing to think about, and something to look at without thought stupefies, hypnotizes." (625) "The morals of humanity have not survived every trap laid by the ages to be lost in the Picture Palace," she says, but "As a snare to intellect, however, the danger of the movies cannot be overdrawn. The evil they work is not in any challenge to active iniquity, but in the state of Nirvana into which the seduce their audience -- in the deadening of all feeling for at, the stifling of all tendency to thought." (625) Pennell was appalled be the attention lavished on cinema. "The dramatic critic notices it with portentous solemnity, the most important papers in the country spare it as much space as a new book or as new opera. The latest screen novelty rivals the latest novel or picture show as a subject for polite conversation." (626) Pennell comments on the rise of movie stars. "The actors of most repute all over the world reappear as screen stars, or 'silent sirens' as one lyrical admirer, who ought to know better, has lately labeled them." (626) Motion pictures are damaging to education, the author contends. "Teachers advocate the adoption of the movie in secular schools that lessons may amuse the pupil's eye instead of exercising the pupil's mind. The old-fashioned teacher believed that the end of education was to teach the pupil how to think. But modern progress has carried us far beyond that ancient superstition, and children, whose intelligence has been already undermined by the movies 626/627 out of school, are to be further debauched by them in what should be hours of study. No wonder that the man with eyes to see is now watching with dismay the human race as it advances briskly along the highway back to illiteracy, fast drawing near to the day when the movies will deliver it even from the alphabet, and when the ultimate glory of twentieth century culture will be the return to the picture-writing in vogue before letters were invented." (626-27) The author sees a future where readers will be only a shrinking minority. "The small minority, however desperately it may cling to art and thought, will have but a meager chance against the large majority hurrying along the shortest cut to that Earthly Paradise where no alphabet need be mastered for no one will read, where art and thought will be remembered only as the sad follies of the sad generations who lived before the blessing of the movies had fallen upon mankind." (627) AU - Pennell, Elizabeth Robins DA - Nov. 1921 IS - 792 KW - celebrity art celebrity culture ref, secondary motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and art art, and photography values photography, and values values, and photography photography, and decadence metaphors metaphors, and movies as dope critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and critics photography, and critics critics, and photography words vs. images images vs. words quotations, movies as shadows quotations quotations, and movies as dope motion pictures, and values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and art art, and motion pictures motion pictures, as shadows audiences motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures media effects motion pictures, and media effects media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and stars actors actors, as silent sirens quotations, and actors as silent sirens celebrity culture motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time critics, and modernity modernity, and critics metaphors, and drugs ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, North American Review acting art photography LB - 39680 PY - 1921 SP - 619-27 ST - The Movies As Dope T2 - North American Review TI - The Movies As Dope VL - 214 ID - 4066 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article offers an excellent account for why newspapers were still having problems publishing illustrations in 1897. The author, who was involved in some of the experiments to improve newspaper illustrations, notes that only during the past 25 years have some of the practical difficulties in publishing newspaper illustrations been overcome. The Daily Graphic in New York and the Daily Graphic in London were the first illustrated dailies. Pennell says that the Sunday newspapers, which often have many illustrations, are usually printed on different presses than daily papers. (654) Pennell says that only a little over two years earlier did the Daily Chronicle published "effective drawings of the size of those published in the weekly illustrated papers." (654) Experimenting with illustrations is very expensive. Monthly magazines such as "the Century, a weekly paper like the Graphic, or a book, is printed either from what is known as as stop cyinder, or a flat press, usually the finest illustrations on one side of the paper only at a time, at the rate of from a few hundred to, at the most, a very few thousand copies an hour. In order to get out an edition of a weekly paper or a magazine at a given date, a large number of presses must therefore be employed. To increase the speed of production, the number of presses must be increased. Time and expense are not spared. The illustrated portions of the Century to to press three months before they are issued, its illustrated contents are made up a year in advance. A daily paper is printed on a cylinder press, a rotary, a web machine, usually at the rate of about 20,000 copies an hour, entirely by one operation. The paper is 'made up' between ten o'clock in te evening and, at the very latest, two o'clock in the morning. The printing is done in an hour or two, and often up to the very last moment the editor does not know that some change will not have to be made, oweing to important news coming in. Yet the paper must be ready for delivery between four and five in the morning, in order to be distributed. When the Chronicle began to printed illustrations there were but three avilable presses, made by Robert Hoe & Co., the great manufacturers, in the office. In an office that of De Vinne, the printer of the Century , where there are many stop cylinder machines (in some offices they are counted by hundreds), one press and the two or three men who run it can easily be secured at any time for the making of experiments, and the printing is done mainly in the daytime. In the Chronicle office, to make a single experiment the entire machinery had to be set going, the printers, who only came at twelve o'clock at night, had to be kept on in the daytime, after their night's work was done, as they alone understood the presses. The proprietors, in trying these experiments, risked breaking the press and losing probably their edition the next day -- for them the gravest sort of risk, as must be seen." (655) Continuing on with his account of the problems involved in newspaper illustrations on a daily basis, Pennell writes: Blocks of illustrations the size that the artist few them "were then stereotyped -- that is, from the page of type containing the blocks a cast was made in ordinary stereotype metal. A stereotype is made for three reasons: first, to preserve the type; second, to get duplicates or casts of it in metal at once, so that it can be printed on several presses at the same time; and third, because the stereotype is shaped to fit the curved cylinder of the press, to which it is impossible to fasten the type itself. But when it came to printing the drawing from the stereotype, the result ws disappointing. The grey lines, the fine lines, became hugh black masses, and all the blacks in the original printed as greys. Experiment after experiment followed, but it was not until the stereotyper was in a rage, the printer in despair, not until the whole page had been reproduced by electrotyping in the fashion adopted for the finest magazines, that a satisfactory methods was devised. The method finally adopted is this. The engraved block, or rather a blank plate of the same size, is placed in a page of type. A stereotype of this pae is then made, and the original engraving, after the stereotype is bent to fit on the cylinder of the printing press, is fastened to the blank space. This bending constitutes the radical difference between rapid newspaper printing and the printing of fine books. [my emphasis] A book is printed in sheets. The type and blocks from which it is printed, or the electrotypes,lie upon a flat bed, and the paper comes down flatly upon them, or is rolled over them, usually on one side only at a time, thus allowing greater care, and also permitting the ink to dry before the other side is printed. A newspaper is printed from one or more rolls of paper, each of enormous length. The paper is unwound by the machine from the roll, and passes at incredible speed over a series of cylinders the faces of which just touch each other. One cyclinder carries the stereotype plate, and on the other the paper runs. Each cylinder contains two or more pages of each copy of the paper. When the sheet of paper has passed arund all the cylinders, it is completely printed on both sides, and this is done in the fraction of a second. [sic] has only this: the paper is pasted together, and cut and folded and counted, and come out perfect at the end; while a book or magazine has to be gathered, and then stitched up and bound -- separate operations. Of course, by the Chronicle method, as many original engraved blocks have to be made as are wanted for the various presses. The difficulty was to bend them, and to attach them so that they would not come off when being printed at the rate of 20,000 an hour, for if they did, the press would be broken all to pieces. It is sufficient to say that the problem has been solved." (656) Pennell goes on to say: "There remains the problem of publishing drawings on the very day following the events they should illustrate -- a problem that has scarcely been solved...." (657) The article continues discussing the problems of producing the daily illustrations. Pennell says that seeing the drawings "coming off the press at the rate of over 20,000 copies an hour, I knew that I was assisting at a revolution in art which would be as wide reaching as that started by Dürer or by Bewick." (658) Still, most newspapers in 1897 were not equipped for this kind of work. (659) "What is really wanted, therefore, is a training school for illustrated journalism," he says. (660) AU - Pennell, Joseph DA - Oct. 1897 IS - 248 KW - wood engraving presses journalism journalism fame celebrity ref, secondary magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality quotations newspapers, and photographs photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving photography, and presses presses, and newspaper photography newspapers, and photography (origins) photography, and Century photography, and Daily Graphic (NY) photography, and Daily Graphic (London) newspapers, and electrotyping newspapers, and stereotyping ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Nineteenth Century LB - 38460 PY - 1897 SP - 653-62 ST - Art and the Daily Paper T2 - Nineteenth Century TI - Art and the Daily Paper VL - 42 ID - 3945 ER - TY - JOUR AB - "It is certainly surprising to note to what extent electricity is now used in the leading printing establishments of this country, as well as in Europe," this article begins. "It is with a deep feeling of pleasure when one steps from the old-fashioned belt-driven pressroom into the modern, clean, bright, well-lighted, motor-driven pressroom of an up-to-date printing plant." Perkins goes on to explain that "in the typesetting room the electric motor is geared to the linotype machine, and the composition is accomplished with great accuracy and dispatch; the type-casting machines are operated by dust-proof electric motors, and direct-connected routers and metal saws are at work, saving power and economising space and increasing the product in a given time...." There are advantages "including noiseless running, simplicity of construction, reduction of losses from friction, and slippage of belts, while the space in the pressroom required is less and the life of the motor is generally increased, largely due to its slow speed. The automatic folders are frequently driven by the electric current, and the modern paper cutter is also operated in this way with great reliability and safety, it being possible to stop the cutting machine instantly if desired. "In the binding department there is probably as great a field for the electricity driven machine as any in the entire printing establishment...." AU - Perkins, Frank C. DA - June 14, 1902 IS - 24 KW - journalism ref, secondary electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time electricity, and newspapers electricity, and journalism news and journalism journalism, and electricity newspapers, and electricity non-USA non-USA, and electricity ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific American LB - 38050 PY - 1902 SP - 415 ST - The Modern Use of Electricity in Printing T2 - Scientific American TI - The Modern Use of Electricity in Printing VL - 86 ID - 3904 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The authors wrote in 1880 that “We hear that a sealed account of an invention for seeing by telegraphy has been deposited by the inventor of the telephone. Whilst we are still quite in ignorance of the nature of this invention, it may be well to intimate that complete means for seeing by telegraphy have been known for some time by scientific men. The following plan has often been discussed by us with our friends, and, no doubt, has suggested itself to others acquainted with the physical discoveries of the last four years.” --Dave Henning AU - Perry, John J., and W.E. Ayrton DA - April 22, 1880 KW - seeing at a distance modernism television, and history of new way of seeing +television television, and origins +electricity electricity, and seeing by +telegraph Henning, David telegraph, and seeing by new way of seeing, and electricity LB - 10880 PY - 1880 ST - Seeing by Electricity T2 - Nature TI - Seeing by Electricity ID - 2450 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Using survey data collected from a student sample, Perse looks at the relationship between self-reported exposure to pornographic books, magazines, and movies and acceptance of rape myths. This study is conducted from the uses and gratifications perspective through which Perse identifies four main uses of pornographic materials(1) sexual enhancement, (2) diversion, (3) sexual release, and (4) substitution. The author found that pornography use, specifically use for the purpose of substitution was directly and positively related to rape myth acceptance. Use of pornography for both diversion and sexual enhancement were indirectly related to rape myth acceptance. Perse indicates that the most common use of pornography was diversion such that students often turned to pornography when in need of entertainment. Furthermore, she demonstrated support for the feminist social responsibility model of pornography use. For future research, Perse indicates the need to include other types of content, such as horror/slasher movies, as part of the analysis since this study did not distinguish between exposure to violent and nonviolent pornography. --Michael Boyle AU - Perse, E. M. DA - 1994 IS - 4 KW - women, and new media social science research sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence violence news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines women feminism Boyle, Michael pornography media effects pornography, and rape myths violence, and pornography pornography, and violence women, and pornography pornography, and women +motion pictures and popular culture pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects media effects, and violence media effects, and motion pictures magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines books, and pornography pornography, and books media effects, and books media effects, and magazines feminism, and pornography pornography, and feminism books LB - 1320 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1994 SP - 488-515 ST - Uses of Erotica and Acceptance of Rape Myths T2 - Communication Research TI - Uses of Erotica and Acceptance of Rape Myths VL - 21 ID - 220 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Peters, John Durham DA - 1989 KW - values progress community democracy reform media +books, periodicals, newspapers media, and reform reform, and media progressives, and media democracy and media LB - 8980 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media PY - 1989 SP - 247-63 ST - Satan and Savior: Mass Communication in Progressive Thought T2 - Critical Studies in Mass Communication TI - Satan and Savior: Mass Communication in Progressive Thought VL - 6 ID - 2265 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece, an outgrowth of Petersen's book on sex and Playboy, begins by quoting from the New York Evening World: "For the first time in the history of the world it is possible to see what a kiss looks like. Scientists say kisses are dangerous, but here everything is shown in startling directness. What the camera did not see did not exist. The real kiss is a revelation. The idea has unlimited possibilities." AU - Petersen, James R. DA - Dec., 1996 IS - 12 KW - motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality sexuality sex seeing at a distance modernism motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex new way of seeing sex, and new way of seeing motion pictures, and silent films (sex) LB - 2920 PY - 1996 SP - 66-72, 108, 166, 168, 170, 172, 174, 176 ST - Playboy's History of the Sexual Revolution: Part I: 1900-1910 T2 - Playboy TI - Playboy's History of the Sexual Revolution: Part I: 1900-1910 VL - 43 ID - 380 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece, as part of the author's 1999 book, The Century of Sex: Playboy's History of the Sexual Revolution: 1900-1999, examines the second decade of the twentieth century when Victorian values and Anthony Comstock's followers still had clout but were being challenged by new media such as the movies. AU - Petersen, James R. DA - Feb., 1997 IS - 2 KW - computers motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality sexuality Victorianism sex seeing at a distance values modernism motion pictures +computers and the Internet law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex new way of seeing sex, and new way of seeing motion pictures, and silent films (sex) Comstock, Anthony values, and motion pictures Victorianism, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship values LB - 2930 PY - 1997 SP - 68-74, 104, 106, 132-34, 136, 138-44 ST - Playboy's History of the Sexual Revolution: The End of Innocence: Part II: 1910-1920 T2 - Playboy TI - Playboy's History of the Sexual Revolution: The End of Innocence: Part II: 1910-1920 VL - 44 ID - 381 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece came from research that the author did for his 1999 book, The Century of Sex: Playboy's History of the Sexual Revolution: 1900-1999. Here he examines sexuality in an age that saw the spread of automobiles, and arrival of radio and talking movies. Movies were associated with speed and some believed they were a cause of juvenile delinquency. AU - Petersen, James R. DA - April, 1997 IS - 4 KW - computers motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality sexuality Victorianism sex seeing at a distance values modernism motion pictures +computers and the Internet law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex new way of seeing sex, and new way of seeing motion pictures, and silent films (sex) Comstock, Anthony values, and motion pictures Victorianism, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and sound film +sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures values LB - 2940 PY - 1997 SP - 80-86, 112, 114, 144, 146-52, 154-56, 158, 160-63 ST - Playboy's History of the Sexual Revolution: The Jazz Age: Part III (1920-1930) T2 - Playboy TI - Playboy's History of the Sexual Revolution: The Jazz Age: Part III (1920-1930) VL - 44 ID - 382 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This intelligently written article comments on the differences in the use of color during the Middle Ages and the Rennaissance as well as between the Orient and Western Europe. Lisle March Phillipps argues that during the Middle Ages glass was often used to exhibit color -- often associated with such gems as rubies, emeralds, etc. -- for its own sake. Artists emphasized color over form. Phillipps writes: "Uncertain and vague in form and outline, conveying no very distinct meaning, telling no story, yet of the utmost intensity and richness of color, these early window are in their nature sensuous rather than intellectual. They address themselves to the feelings. And this they do purposely and deliberately. Many people seem to imagine that the aim of the twelfth and thirteenth century craftsmen was to embody in his window the meaning of a picture, to depict a scene, and that this was done rudely and imperfectly owing to his imperfect technical skill. But the purpose of the early craftsman was not this at all. In the methods he adopted he was not influenced by any consideration of facility of form delineation, but simply by the results he was able to obtain in color. Rich, deep, and pure color was the end he sought. If the methods he employed refused to adapt themselves to the representation of form, that did not trouble him provided they yielded the right results in color. Color, not form, was his object, as the means he adopted as well as the effects he achieved prove. Early glass, or pot metal, as it is called, was obtained by fusing the molten glass in the pot with metallic oxide, by which means the glass was colored all through and the depth and lustre of tint obtained which are its peculiar characteristics. But such glass lent itself necessarily very clumsily to the purposes of draughtsmanship. Each particle of color was represented by a separate fragment of glass, ruby, or sapphire blue, or emerald green, as the case might be, and each fragment had to be separately leaded into its place in the general design. It follows that the subject matter of the early windows is of the rudest possible description, yet so little does this signify that, as everyone knows, early glass can be used to this day in collected fragments and particles, without any regard to the original design, to form a mere blazonry of splendid color. [my emphasis] Beautiful effects have been obtained in this was by collecting broken bits of early glass and patching them together. So far as subject matter is concerned they are, of course, a mere jumble but they attract none the less powerfully by their beauty of color, and the fact that they thus attract by color when all significance of form has departed -- nay, the fact that the obliteration of form has not apparently diminished in any way the charm of such windows -- is a remarkable testimony to the truth of Mr. Day's assertion that 'the beauty of early glass is in its color, not in its form.'" (144) [my emphasis] During the Renaissance, when rational thought assumed greater importance, color was used to complement form, Phillipps maintains. "...Later, as the Renaissance approached and men inclined more and more to trust reason and intellect, when the tendency was for ideas to grow more definite and less emotional, a process was developed in accordance with these new requirements. This process consisted in coloring the glass by painting over its surface by hand and then burning the hand-painting into the glass. By these means a facility and freedom in drawing figures and depicting scenes were attained which had been quite absent from the earlier method. It was no longer necessary to use separate glass fragments framed in leaden strips for each tint. Gradation of color and the modeling of forms could now be freely rendered by hand. The glass was no longer color, but a surface to be colored. [my emphasis] The change made itself felt in two directions. Form, subject-painting, the desire to depict a scene, to describe an event, became more and more 144/145 the object of window-painting. But at the same time, unnoticed, as we may suppose, and unregretted, for men's desires were turned elsewhere, the glory of color of the old windows faded away. Surface painting could render form freely, but it could not render color as the old style rendered it. Each age achieved that which it sought. The earlier age sought and achieved incomparable richness of color, but left unresolved the problem of form. The later age took up that problem and solved it; but even while t was in the act of solving it, which its hand grew more facile and subtle, and its rendering of its subject-matter more delicate, exact and skilful, there was ebbing out of it all the time, surely and steadily, that deep and jewel-like flow which the earlier craftsmen had set their hearts upon attaining." (144-45) Phillipps discusses what he saw as important differences in the way the Orient used color and the way the West used it. In the East, "mysticism" was "undiluted." (140) There was a breakdown in the barriers separating East and West with a "consequent flowing westward of Oriental emotionalism," Phillipps writes. (142). Eastern influences on European art enter the West through Venice. (145) What was the nature of this influence? "What that motive was may be explained in a sentence. It was the recognition of color as, in itself, a sufficing artistic ideal. " (145)[my emphasis] What distinguished Oriental color was "its own glow and 145/146 richness, apart from definite meanings or explanatory purposes attaching to it. The East feeds on color and its content. The West regards color as a property of things, and thinks of it in connection with the objects to which it belongs. The difference is the difference between intellectual and sensuous or emotional apprehension. [my emphasis] An intellectual people, a people whose instinct it is to examine and define, to analyze the contents, construction, uses and significance of all its sees, will utter itself in the artistic sphere in the arts of form. Form is the intellectual act of definition, and whoever observes any great and decisive movement of intellectual development against a background of comparative barbarism -- such, for example, as the Greek intellectual movement or the Renaissance intellectual movement -- will remark that the awakened intellectual sense expresses itself at once in art in a new and almost startling realization of the significance of form. And yet the very strength of this perception of the value of form carries with it a danger to another artistic vehicle. A people whose intelligence is always active, always scrutinizing, separating, defining, a people in love the quality of form in things, will inevitably subordinate emotional considerations to its own intellectual mode of apprehension. But what does that mean? It means that such a people, the more it exalts form, the more it will tend to treat color as a mere attribute of form and one of the means of distinguishing and appraising it. Such a use of color cannot and does not disengage its full power and influence, for it does not accord with the nature of color. The nature of color, considered in itself, is not intellectual, but emotional. Color does not address itself to the understanding, but directly to the feelings. [my emphasis] When, however, it is subjected to form it is subjected to an intellectual valuation. Its meaning, or interpretation , must be correct. It must, like a good adjective, rightly describe the form it belongs to. Its primary value, therefore, ceases to be its own intrinsic, emotional value, and becomes the intellectual value which it derives from form. (p. 146) [my emphasis] In the West, "if color is used at all, it is used decoratively, or as it may be called descriptively -- that is, in subordination to form and as a means for its more attractive definition." (146) [my emphasis] If one looks to the East, one finds "the very opposite of this. [my emphasis] It might seem that forms here have all been made of wax, so melted down are they as if by the hot sun's action. Not a line is true, not a surface smooth, not a shape exact. And as the forms have melted so have the colors un. Forms which are not strong and accurate cannot retain control over color. It slips from their grasp. It ceases to be decorative and descriptive. The intellectual value it drew from the form it loses, but it regains in the act its own intrinsic emotional value. Has the reader ever wandered in those most characteristic of all Eastern scenes, the bazaars of some old Arab or Persian city? In the soft twilight what a glow reigns?...." (146) Phillipps gives four examples of Oriental color: "an ordinary Eastern bazaar, a church of the style adapted from the color-instinct of the Persians, ... the school of painting of a city knit to the East by the dearest ties of dependence and self-interest" (147) and the Chartres Cathedral. (147-48) In Oriental art "Alike in the original motive and in this its final achievement, the value of color, the power of color to suffice and satisfy, is the guiding thought....In the East color is stronger than form. In the West form is stronger than color. But when we say this let us not forget what we imply by it. We imply that in the West the intellectual mood of defining and formulating predominates, whereas in the East the emotional and contemplative mood predominates. The visitor to Chartres will feel this. He will feel that not only have we here a very striking and wonderful exhibition of color, but that the color is of a kind which affects him in a peculiar way, which appeals with force to one particular side of his nature. He will, in short, acknowledge the emotional influence of a style of coloring which seems by its own intensity to have burnt up the forms and shapes of things, and therefore addresses itself wholly to the feelings and not at all to the understanding." (148) [my emphasis] Phillipps says that "Whenever in art the signs of it are seen, whenever the beauty of art resides 'In its color, not in its form,' traces of a direct inspiration from the East will be discernible." (148) As for the changes in art during the Rennaissance, Phillipps says that "I have heard many explanations of this artistic change. To me the satisfying explanation is that color in art died out and gave place to form because in life mysticism was dying out and giving place to intelectuallism." (149) He links mysticism in contemporary Western literature to the Orient. (150) Phillipps books included: Form and Colour (New York: C. Scribner’s Sons, 1915); and Art and Environment (New York, H. Holt and Co., 1914). AU - Phillipps, L. March DA - April 16, 1910 IS - 3432 KW - ref, secondary ref, secular ref, eclectic ref, literary (British) ref, Living Age color color, and Middle Ages color, and Renaissance color, and myticism color, and Orientalism Orientalism, and color color, and sensuousness religion religion, and color color, and religion color, and form color, and emotion color, and thought values color, and values color, and stained glass color, and Christianity Christianity, and color Christianity LB - 40850 PY - 1910 SP - 138-50 ST - Stained Glass Windows T2 - Living Age TI - Stained Glass Windows VL - 265 ID - 4184 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, which has the same title as Phillipps' 1915 book, argues that "in form we get the intellectual aspect of art, and that this aspect of it is indigenous to the West, and forms part and parcel of the practical business-life, scientific, self-governing and essentially intellectual Western temperament; while in colour we get the emotional aspect of art, an aspect which I think belongs naturally to the passive, contemplative and profoundly emotional Eastern temperament and was, perhaps, never fully realised in Europe until the Byzantine influence introduced it into Italy, and more especially into Venice." (267) Phillipps goes on to say that there is an “incompatibility between form, with its tendency to exact definition, and colour, with its tendency to rich but vague suggestion….” (267) “I sometimes venture to think that in these two great factors, so strangely interdependent yet so strangely inconsistent, on which they whole of art is based and reared, we have the artistic aspect of a dualism that runs through the universe and through human nature, and that intellect and emotion, West and East, man and woman are the ethical and physical statements of a difference which in art is summed up by the difference between form and colour.” (267) The article starts by describing an European traveler's encounters at an "Eastern port" where each boat in the harbor is "a focus of vivid colour and blindly impulsive human emotion." For the European, this encounter with the East starts "a totally new experience in life and character." (258) "All this colour, all this emotion, are new," Phillipps says. (258) The pervasiveness of colour and emotion is also present on the streets and poorly-lit bazaars. Here, "whether gathered into patches or broken up into moving particles among hurrying figures, colour constitutes to the eye the dominating quality of the scene." (258) Phillipps associates this use of colour with intense emotions. "But not less present to the mental perception is the human quality of an intense emotional sensibility, an emotional sensibility which manifests itself in countless different, often contradictory, ways and moods and actions, yet invariably, as you watch each individual with intentness, declares itself as the governing impulse in his character. The Oriental rage, a rage of hissing accents and blazing eyes and wildly tossing limbs and convulsed features and fangs showing through the drawn-up lips, is not more entirely an affair of emotional sensibility than that passive state of contemplation, which an Englishman might perhaps mistake for dullness or lethargy until he observed the quick, stealthy passing of beads through nervous fingers and noticed how clearly the light burns in the dark, speculative eyes...." (258) The author associates the Oriental's attitude with childishness. "They drift up and down aimlessly crooning a monotonous chant, or break into sudden fits of gossip and laughter, or stare intently at nothing, or stop, sit down and wander on, all with the impulsiveness of children and acting evidently on the mere unreasoning caprice of the moment. Indeed, so soaked are they in feeling and emotion that it is impossible for them to help for an instant giving off that quality, and their gait and attitudes and gestures and voices and glances all bear witness, sometimes strongly and passionately, sometimes lightly and fitfully, to the emotional sensibility which reigns within." (259) Phillipps comments on the Oriental temperament, the "essence" of which is characterized by a "profound emotional quality." (259) "Colour and emotion," he argues, "...make up the East." (259) "It is not only that our traveller finds himself in the presence of a new interpretation of life, but that he has left behind the interpretation with which he was familiar. The Eastern crowd is odd and strange to him partly because it possesses its own peculiar character of a dreamy or impulsive 259/260 emotionalism, but partly also because it is wanting in the qualities that make up the character of the Western crowd...." (259-60) The movement of Westerners, by contrast, Phillipps said, was purposeful. "Every unit in the crowd almost has a definite business in hand and is intent on it. Even pleasure seekers go about their pleasure in this business-like way...." (260) In the West, "we have evidently at work as the motive power of conduct not the emotional, but the intellectual faculty. The whole life of the average European is formed as it were on an intellectual rather than on an emotional basis .... All Western nations live from the mind, and are perpetually busy with plans of action laid down in the mind. Reason is the only guide the West acknowledges...." (260) Phillipps contrasts the Western man from the Oriental. The Western man has "the clear eye and square jaw, the robust frame and firm step, which seem but the outward expression of a similar toughness of the mind and which are the physical essentials for carrying into effect the decisions of the mind -- this faculty is that, I think, which the West possesses which the dreamy-eyed, supple-limbed East lacks. The East has its seers and prophets. The West has it politicians and men of science. The East feels. The West reasons. This is the human difference...." (261) And as for form and color? "We have form. Form is to Western life what colour is to Eastern," Phillipps contended. (261) "It is the expression which Western life is constantly and involuntarily seeking...." (261) The emphasis on form gives the Western "strength of character and purpose" which the Oriental is "totally unfamiliar." (262) Further defining the differences between form and color, and West and East, Phillipps wrote: "To the East then we give emotion and colour, to the West intellect and form.... Emotion and colour belong to and complete each other, and so also do intellect and form. Colour is itself emotional, form itself intellectual. Colour means nothing, you can attach no definite idea to it, nor does it make any direct appeal to the mind. It is, however, charged with feeling, and this is particularly true on the colours especially affected by Orientals; those, namely which gather on both sides of crimson, extending through orange and yellow to creamy white on the one hand, and through warm browns and chocolates to gold shadowed black on the other. These are the colours that keep the sunny side and preserve, from light to dark, a prevailing glow. They are essentially the colours of passion and emotion, and they are those to which every Oriental turns with an unconscious but never failing instinct. We know how faithfully gypsies in their Westward wanderings carry with them the relics and vestiges of this Eastern glow...." (263) "On the other hand, of all this emotionalism form knows nothing. Its own appeal is direct to the intellect...." (263) Phillipps considered these differences incompatible because "if we look a little closer we shall see that there is not only a difference but an actual incompatibility between these modes of expression. We shall find that they are irreconcilable, that colour can only be used emotionally when it is allowed to supersede the intellectual sense of form, and that form can only be used intellectually when it is allowed to supersede the emotional sense of colour...." (263) Commenting on allowing color to dominate over form, Phillipps said that "the objects and figures portrayed instead of separating themselves sharply from their surroundings, are mingled and involved in the pervading richness of hue, losing separate shape as it become penetrated with the fire's glow. This is the emotion use of colour at its greatest, developed to that pitch when it holds in entire subjection the intellectual appeal of form." (264) Phillipps continues by saying that "Exactly in so far as it is allowed to assume control of and assimilate form, colour dilates and glows and puts on power and majesty and becomes endowed with a tremendous sensuous and emotional influence, such as it had never before displayed." (265) Venice, Phillipps thought, had "become the mouthpiece of the East in Europe." (266) AU - Phillipps, L. March (L. March-Phillipps) DA - Aug. 1906 KW - ref, secondary ref, Contemporary Review ref, secular ref, literary color color, and Middle Ages color, and Renaissance color, and myticism color, and Orientalism Orientalism, and color color, and sensuousness religion religion, and color color, and religion color, and form color, and emotion color, and thought values color, and values color, and reason color, and reason v. emotion color, and East v. West LB - 42630 PY - 1906 SP - 258-67 ST - Form and Colour T2 - Contemporary Review TI - Form and Colour VL - 90 ID - 4362 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that by Christmas, 1965, one could purchase a home-sized television tape recorder for about $3,000. The Signature VI, a deluxe model from Ampex ran about $9,000. The author predicts that some day the video recorder will allow "far more meaningful and moving" documents to be created than with 8mm film. (91) AU - Pierce, Bill DA - Aug., 1965 IS - 2 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) sound recording magnetic recording VCRs television television, and VCRs VCRs, and television motion pictures, and VCRs motion pictures home and new media home, and VCRs VCRs, and Sony VCRs, and Ampex VCRs, and Panasonic 8mm film, and videotape 35mm film, and videotape videotape, and 8mm film videotape, and 35mm film home videotape 35mm 8mm LB - 31960 PY - 1965 SP - 40-43, 90-91 ST - Video Tape: Tommorrow's 35-mm? A Still Photographer Makes the Transition from 35-mm to Electronic Filming in a Week End" T2 - Popular Photography TI - Video Tape: Tommorrow's 35-mm? A Still Photographer Makes the Transition from 35-mm to Electronic Filming in a Week End" VL - 57 ID - 2881 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece appeared in an issue of Daedalus devoted to speculation about life in the year 2000. Piece discusses microfilmed newspapers, integrated circuits, satellite communication, microelectronics and mobile telephone, and other aspects of communication. AU - Pierce, John R. DA - Summer, 1967 IS - 3 KW - communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution +future and science fiction telephones, and video satellites microfiche, microfilm, microform microelectronics +aeronautics and space communication future microelectronics revolution +telephones telephones, mobile telephones, and picture phones microfilm +books, periodicals, newspapers cable, coaxial cable, television +television television, and cable television, and satellites satellites, and communication +electricity cable LB - 4230 PY - 1967 SP - 909-21 ST - Communication T2 - Daedalus TI - Communication VL - 96 ID - 1811 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article reports on allegations of sexual misconduct made by young men against Father Bruce Ritter of Covenant House. During 1985 and 1986, Ritter had been a member of the Meese Commission which investigated pornography in America. AU - Plummer, William DA - Feb. 26, 1990 KW - sexuality pornography Meese Commission Ritter, Bruce Covenant House, and Bruce Ritter Ritter, Bruce, and pornography pornography, and Bruce Ritter Meese Commission, and Bruce Ritter LB - 26990 PY - 1990 SP - 38-40 ST - Sex Charges Pit Four Young Men Against the Revered Founder of Covenant House T2 - People Weekly TI - Sex Charges Pit Four Young Men Against the Revered Founder of Covenant House VL - 33 ID - 1257 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Polito, the director of photography, discusses the problems in creating special effects for this movie about two giant computers, one in the USA, the other in the USSR, that link up and dominate the world. He notes that he simultaneously used a 35mm Mitchell BNC camera with Panavision lenses, two Norelco video cameras, two Ampex tape machines, nine 21-inch television monitors, a rear project process set-up and more. Interestingly, in 1969, powerful computers were assumed to be big. COLOSSUS was "as big as a large town, buried somewhere in thte Rocky Mountains." (382) AU - Polito, Gene DA - April, 1969 IS - 4 KW - cinematography motion pictures special effects motion pictures, and special effects location shooting motion pictures, and location shooting movie, Colossus: The Forbin Project (1969) Colossus: The Forbin Project (1969) videotape cameras cameras, 35mm cameras, video Ampex tape machine videotape, and Ampex cameras, Mitchell magnetic tape magnetic recording LB - 30050 PY - 1969 SP - 382-87, 427 ST - Challenges of Photographing Colossus 1980 T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Challenges of Photographing Colossus 1980 VL - 50 ID - 2760 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Pomper describes organized labor’s use of commercial radio for public relations in the late 1940s and the 1950s. He noted that most of labor’s public relations directed at the nonunion public was conducted on radio. In 1949, the AFL and CIO were involved in four radio series, using free air time provided by broadcasters. Labor’s League for Political Education, an AFL political group, produced “Special Report from Washington,” a weekly series heard on 180 stations. The CIO offered a quiz show, “It’s in the Family,” on ABC. “This program proved to be labor’s most successful venture, gaining a listening rating between 5 and 6.” In addition, AFL and CIO each had a weekly network series, “America United,” on NBC, and “Cross-section U.S.A.,” on CBS, featuring debates between representatives of labor, business, and farmers. In 1950, the AFL purchased air time on the Mutual network for a news and commentary program featuring Frank Edwards. It was heard on 176 stations and reportedly reached 7 million listeners in 44 states. The CIO also sponsored a similar program with John W. Vandercook. The program was heard on ABC for 15 minutes five nights a week, and reported a monthly audience of 25 million. Pomper also outlines the radio programs produced by the AFL-CIO after the merger in 1955. In addition, he notes that shortly after the merger labor began producing one-minute public service spots for television. Pomper noted that a 1956 survey of radio listeners found the audience for labor’s programs to include more older people, more men and more union members than the general population, and a below average number of professional and technical workers, managers and proprietors and clerical workers. He warned that “a public relations effort is redundant if it reaches only already convinced union members. To create a more friendly atmosphere, labor must reach the educated opinion leaders among the professional and managerial groups.” --Phil Glende AU - Pomper, Gerald DA - Winter, 1959-1960 IS - 4 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising Glende, Phil labor +radio public relations radio, and public relations public relations, and radio labor, and radio radio, and labor LB - 760 N1 - See also: office PY - 1959 SP - 483-94 ST - The Public Relations of Organized Labor T2 - Public Opinion Quarterly TI - The Public Relations of Organized Labor VL - 23 ID - 164 ER - TY - JOUR AB - During the 1950s, American Catholics with the support of the National Catholic Welfare Conference debated the need for creating a code of morality for television, and for something resembling the Legion of Decency to enforce it. But Catholics were divided over this issue and leaders within such groups as the National Council of Catholic Men opposed it. The bishops eventually back away from taking such steps after Pope Pius XII’s 1957 encyclical. AU - Pondillo, Robert DA - Summer/Fall, 2001 KW - self-regulation Legion of Decency television censorship and ratings law values religion television, and self regulation Legion of Decency, and television television, and Legion of Decency television, and Production Code Production Code, and television Pius XII, and television television, and Catholics Catholic Church, and television Catholic Church Production Code Production Code (TV) LB - 32060 PY - 2001 SP - 16-21 ST - A 'Legion of Decency' for Television? T2 - Television Quarterly TI - A 'Legion of Decency' for Television? VL - 32 ID - 2887 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article appeared in an issue of Daedalus devoted to speculation about life in the year 2000. Pool makes some uncanny predictions here. "Around 1980," he writes, "there will be a major political crisis in the Soviet Union, marked by large-scale strikes, the publication of dissident periodicals, and temporary disruption of central control over some regions, and an open clash between the major sectors of the bureaucracy over questions of military policy and consumer goods. This will stop just short of revolution, though it will result in the effectual abolition of the Communist Party or its splitting up into more than one organization.... During these events, the Soviet hold over Eastern Europe will be completely broken." Pool also predicted that "large-scale increase in reconnaissance, intelligence, and infiltration" during the first decade of the twenty-first century will "have further major effects in modifying the nation-state system." AU - Pool, Ithiel de Sola DA - Summer, 1967 IS - 3 KW - USSR surveillance nationalism communication revolution +future and science fiction non-USA surveillance +nationalism and communication future Soviet Union, and collapse of reconnaissance surveillance communication revolution Third World Soviet Union future, and Soviet Union nationalism, and new media privacy LB - 4250 PY - 1967 SP - 930-35 ST - The International System in the Next Half Century T2 - Daedalus TI - The International System in the Next Half Century VL - 96 ID - 1813 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article preceded Powdermaker's 1950 book Hollwood: The Dream Factory. Her she examines movies in relationship to other institutions, traditions, and values. She notes that the medium is not yet a half century old and that "the most important technological change, 'the talkies,' happened twenty years ago. AU - Powdermaker, Hortense DA - Nov., 1947 KW - values motion pictures law law censorship and ratings censorship audiences +motion pictures and popular culture regulation, and motion pictures audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship critics values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values regulation LB - 3000 N1 - See filed under Annals.... (1947). PY - 1947 SP - 80-87 ST - An Anthropologist Looks at the Movies T2 - The Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science TI - An Anthropologist Looks at the Movies ID - 388 ER - TY - JOUR AB - During the time of the U-2 spy planes and the Soviet Union's Sputnik, ethical issues involving satellite reconnaissance revolved around military secrets and national borders. "Now, with high-powered lenses, infrared sensory devices, ubiquitous satellites, and instant high-resolution image transmission, the communication ethics issues -- like the powers of global observation -- have greatly magnified. Possibly, conventional warfare has become obsolete because television networks have access to 9 worldwide satellite images that show troops, fleets, and fighter squadrons forming prior to attack. Civilian privacy has changed drastically as well because backyard sunbathers, naturalists, couples, speeding vehicles, and naked paramours seen through bedroom windows can all be identified, photographed, and publicized without their awareness or permission. Because the power, range, frequency, and commercialism of such space photography will increase, ethicists must survey the surveillance. This means there are at least two types of communication ethics to consider: (a) In journalism ethics, editors and producers must decide whether they will publish many types of invasive photographs, some of which may also deal with military secrecy; and (b) in new media ethics, decisions about who employs, duplicates, regulates, as well as who sells and buys satellite imagery, must be monitored and debated." AU - Powell, Adam Clayton III DA - 1998 IS - 2 KW - R & D ethics surveillance, and satellites surveillance nationalism photography law, and privacy law research and development war news and journalism war non-USA values television journalism aeronautics and space communication military communication nationalism and communication satellites satellites, and imaging satellites, and surveillance satellites, and reconnaissance values, and satellite imaging privacy ethics, and new media ethics, and satellites journalism ethics, and satellites photography and visual communication global communication television, and satellites ethics privacy, and satellites journalism, and ethics LB - 4610 PY - 1998 SP - 93-98 ST - Satellite Imagery: The Ethics of a New Technology T2 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics TI - Satellite Imagery: The Ethics of a New Technology VL - 13 ID - 1848 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article lists the top 60 box office widescreen movies up to 1959. AU - Pratt, David DA - Summer 1985 IS - 21 KW - widescreen motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and widescreen widescreen, and motion pictures audiences, and widescreen motion pictures widescreen, and audiences audiences LB - 2550 N1 - See filed under Velvet Light Trap. PY - 1985 SP - 65-66 ST - Widescreen Box Office Performance to 1959 T2 - Velvet Light Trap TI - Widescreen Box Office Performance to 1959 ID - 343 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Prince, Stephen DA - Spring, 1996 IS - 3 KW - special effects, digital special effects, and digitization +motion pictures and popular culture digitization motion pictures, and digital media digital media, and motion pictures special effects, and digital media digital media, and special effect theory, and motion pictures motion pictures, and theory digital media, and theory +photography and visual communication photography, and digital media values, and digital media values digital media motion pictures photography special effects theory theory, and motion pictures LB - 28690 PY - 1996 SP - 27-38 ST - True Lies: perceptual realism, digital images, and film theory T2 - Film Quarterly TI - True Lies: perceptual realism, digital images, and film theory VL - 49 ID - 2645 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece appeared in an issue of Daedalus devoted to speculating about life in the year 2000. The author talks about modifying the genetic code, use of drugs, neurosurgical interventions, monitoring behavior, human rights and human engineering. He concludes by saying that his "own biased opinion is that the society of the future will need all the diversity in its population that it can maintain since there will be many factors tending the enforce conformity. An understanding of behavior-control technology is to be encouraged because even though extensive knowledge may bring some undesired applications, it is also necessary to develop an alert, well-informed public that will watch for abuses." AU - Quarton, Gardner C. DA - Summer, 1967 IS - 3 KW - +future and science fiction civil liberties freedom values +artificial intelligence and biotechnology future control revolution nature v. nurture values, and technology civil rights, and technology freedom, and technology LB - 4210 PY - 1967 SP - 837-53 ST - Deliberate Efforts to Control Human Behavior and Modify Personality T2 - Daedalus TI - Deliberate Efforts to Control Human Behavior and Modify Personality VL - 96 ID - 1809 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Quigley says that the "most important and the most extensive use" of movies "is realized in the entertainment film." He goes on to say that "Alone among the arts, the motion picture was handed upward from the masses and not downward from the intelligentsia. In a very real sense it is the people's art. In a very real sense it involves the people's destiny. On this account the moral and social problems which it presents command the most thoughtful consideration and study." AU - Quigley, Martin DA - Nov., 1947 KW - values motion pictures law law censorship and ratings censorship audiences +motion pictures and popular culture regulation, and motion pictures audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship critics values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values regulation LB - 2980 N1 - See filed under Annals.... (1947). PY - 1947 SP - 65-69 ST - Importance of the Entertainment Film T2 - The Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science TI - Importance of the Entertainment Film ID - 386 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that Hollywood's foreign revenue has declined from 45 cents on the dollar to 30 cents. Part of the problem, the author says, is the mediocre quality of American movies. The article lists seven shortcomings of U. S. films. Number 2 on the list is "an impression fostered by millions of feet of American celluloid that the United States is a nation of overfed and underbred people, stuffing themselves with rich food while most of the world is cold and hungry." (42) AU - R., S. V. DA - March 31, 1947 IS - 13 KW - Truman administration Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union self-regulation nationalism MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism Cold War war Johnston, Eric capitalism motion pictures, and communism Truman, Harry presidents and new media motion pictures, and Harry Truman Truman, Harry, and motion pictures motion pictures, and drinking military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and U.S. foreign policy MPAA, and foreign policy MPAA, and Truman administration MPAA, and Cold War USSR motion pictures, and USSR propaganda democracy motion pictures, and democracy media effects motion pictures, and media effects LB - 34780 PY - 1947 SP - 42-43 ST - Hollywood's One World T2 - New Republic TI - Hollywood's One World VL - 116 ID - 3120 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Ramsaye writes in 1947 that "Inevitably, many minorities cannot be served as they are by the less expensive stage or the relatively inexpensive printed word. Some of these minorities include the most erudite, critica, and articulate persons. From that condition of limitation arises much of the impatient, often militant, criticism of the screen. Some censorship requirements and many projected movements actually represent only areas of unsatisfied demand. Few indeed of the militants who would influence the course of screen development are aware of anything beyond superficial aspects and casual observation. The screen has done little to tell its own story. Few are interested. The people who pay for the pictures want to see them as emotional experience, not as subjects of study." This issues of the Annals is devoted to "The Motion Picture Industy." AU - Ramsaye, Terry DA - Nov., 1947 KW - motion pictures law law censorship and ratings censorship audiences +motion pictures and popular culture regulation, and motion pictures audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship critics regulation LB - 2970 N1 - See filed under Annals.... (1947). PY - 1947 SP - 1-11 ST - The Rise and Place of the Motion Picture T2 - The Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science TI - The Rise and Place of the Motion Picture ID - 385 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Ramsaye comments on the fact that many Americans felt that the movies were of a foreign nature. Movies appealed to “polyglottic aliens,” especially immigrant industrial workers “from the Mediterranean countries and the Slavic regions.” Themes designed to amuse these “industrial alien islands of population” had spread rapidly into the “wide commonality” of American culture. Movies with their “continental standards” had “infected all America.” AU - Ramsaye, Terry DA - Nov. 1926 KW - ethnicity values audiences +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and history motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and immigrants immigrants, and motion pictures ethnicity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and ethnicity values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values values LB - 13070 N1 - See filed under "MacGregor, Ford H." PY - 1926 SP - 1-19 ST - The Motion Picture T2 - The Annals [of the American Academy of Political and Social Science] TI - The Motion Picture VL - 128 ID - 481 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article presents a brief overview of developments in instructional design since World War II by a Professor of Instructional Systems. It outlines education theory meant to justify development of instructional technology technique, including behavioral objectives, criterion-referenced testing, programmed instruction, and learning hierarchies. A lengthy and useful bibliography includes texts on teaching and the media. The article relies heavily on L. Paul Saettler’s work, The Evolution of American Educational Technology (aka A History of Instructional Technology) ( Englewood, Colo. : Libraries Unlimited, 1968, 1990), for pre-1950 developments. This aritcle has a useful bibliography. -Mark Van Pelt AU - Reiser, Robert A. DA - 2001 IS - 2 KW - computers education democracy education, and new media radio education, and radio radio, and education television television, and education education, and television democracy, and radio radio, and democracy democracy, and television television, and democracy media research social science research education, and computers computers, and education computers and the Internet bibliographies education, and bibliographies bibliographies, and education Van Pelt, Mark computers LB - 34500 PY - 2001 SP - 57-67 ST - A History of Instructional Design and Technology: Part II A History of Instructional Design T2 - Educational Technology Research and Development TI - A History of Instructional Design and Technology: Part II A History of Instructional Design VL - 49 ID - 3088 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins with the author saying that "Motion pictures in color have always seemed to me in the category with painted statuary and silvered lotus pods and those tinseled pasteboard actors out of Pollard's juvenile drama, the bedizenment of which occupied so many innocent hours of Queen Victoria's working classes." But, Reniers writes, "motion pictures in color are here to stay." Color films attempt to portray reality but the author notes the challenges in making them. "For many years now there has been intensive experimentation to make colored motion pictures practical. Until today the net result for the audience has been sore eyes. For the producer, the upkeep is discouragingly high. The life of a colored film is extremely fleeting; a few scratches, and it becomes a kaleidoscopic nightmare. Except in the case of highly romantic pieces like 'The Black Pirate,' I, for one, had as lief the whole color business remained in statu quo. Our inventors and producers are inclined to believe that when a color device and a mechanical voice reproducer shall be perfected, pictures will have reached their ultimate estate. When they look like the real thing and talk like the real thing, then, ah, then, the millennium!" Reniers says that silent black-and-white films have been powerful. "Without the human voice, without the third dimension, without literal color, and without words the screen has moved the average audience as much as any other art, perhaps more," he says. AU - Reniers, Perceval DA - April 24, 1926 IS - 3960 KW - ref, secondary ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent motion pictures color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures LB - 40040 PY - 1926 SP - 495 ST - The Shadow Stage: Colored Will-o'-the-Wisp T2 - The Independent TI - The Shadow Stage: Colored Will-o'-the-Wisp VL - 116 ID - 4102 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses methods of allowing users of the World Wide Web to determine for themselves what they will see on the Internet. The author says that the metaphor of the Internet as global village is misleading. "Many cultures coexist on the Internet and at times clash. In its public spaces, people interact commercially and socially with strangers as well as with acquaintances and friends. The city is a more apt metaphor, with its suggestion of unlimited opportunities and myriad dangers." The author discusses how Internet users can use filtering devices to steer clear of offensive or dangerous websites. AU - Resnick, Paul DA - March 1997 IS - 3 KW - computers community law censorship and ratings law censorship and ratings metaphors Internet +computers and the Internet metaphors Internet, and metaphors for metaphors, and Internet censorship censorship, and Internet Internet, as global village critics Internet, as city censorship children, and media children public sphere, and Internet community, and Internet censorship, and Internet filters Internet, and filters regulation, and Internet filters regulation public sphere democracy LB - 4550 PY - 1997 SP - 62-64 ST - Filtering Information on the Internet T2 - Scientific American TI - Filtering Information on the Internet VL - 276 ID - 1842 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Rhodes writes about the evolution of movie posters which grew out of "the pre-existing tradition of 'show printing'" (228) at the turn-of-the-century. He notes that early discussions of the poster in the 1910s often assumed that the movie most had grown out of the circus poster which were, as the Moving Picture News said in 1918, "'striking and lurid, and had a color scheme consisting of about twenty-eight different shades of red.'" (MPN, quoted, 229) As early as 1900, the Sears and Roebuck catalog discussed movie posters. (229) By 1903, film makers began to believe that posters should be designed for individual movies and that they would be more effective that simple, generic posters. (230) Film companies often contracted with lithographic companies to make posters and "By 1910, ads suggest that these posters were overwhelmingly created to promote single films, not generic film screenings." (231) Between 1910 and 1915, though, film industry trade publications suggests that the manufacturers of films increasingly began to produce their own posters rather than contracting this business to firms outside the industry. (232) By 1912, Rhodes says, movies posters began to used photographs more and more and relying less and less on artwork. (232) Also, over these years, trade publications contained considerable commentary on how best to display movie posters in theaters and elsewhere. Rhodes says that between 1910 and 1915, talk about movie posters "was fraught with debates and difficulties over their allegedly offensive and even immoral imagery." (229) One line of argument complained that the posters did not reflect the true content of the film. (238-39). The Chicago Daily Tribune was among the newspapers making this argument. Another criticism condemned violent images in posters. Around 1912, if not before, "Both industry trades and city newspapers began to address the believe that too many moving picture posters drew only on the violent aspects of the films they advertised," Rhodes writes. (239) A related line of criticism came from local authorities and moralists who said that the posters had a damaging effect on children.(239-41) The movie poster was unavoidable, critics complained. Rhodes quotes from a an article in the Motion Picture World ("Stamp Out the 'Crime Posters'," MPW, April 27, 1912), 322): "'[i]t sickens us every time to look at the huge banners displayed on the streets of New York, wherever traffic is the heaviest, announcing motion pictures of "famous bandits" and "terrible crimes." Millions of people pass these places, see these awful banners (and posters), and not unreasonably conclude that the motion picture is little better than a pictorial Police Gazette in motion. Thus for the sake of a few wretched nickels, incalculable harm is done to this great industry.'" (quoted by Rhodes, 240) The Chicago Daily Tribune and Washington Post similarly condemned such advertising. (240) By February, 1914, movies posters were being censored by the Chicago Chief of Police, and by May, 1914, Springfield, Missouri, had "banned all moving picture posters." (241) Many religious leaders had concluded certainly by 1915, and no doubt well before, that movies were "'one of the most potent opponents of the church that exist'" and that movie posters were "'poisoning the minds of the public.'" (Rev. E. A. Sexsmith, quoted in Washington Post, Nov. 7, 1915 in Rhodes, 242). By 1915, Rhodes says, the motion picture "poster was moving towards standardization." (243) This article draws heavily from such publications as Motion Picture World and to a lesser extent on such publications as the Chicago Daily Tribune, Boston Globe, Washington Post, and Motography. AU - Rhodes, Gary D. DA - 2007 IS - 3 KW - children Chicago, IL ref, secondary censorship actors acting actors acting ref, secondary motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures actors, and status of censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings color color, and movies posters advertising, and color color, and advertising motion pictures, and posters advertising, and movie posters violence violence, and movie posters posters, and movie violence censorship, and movie posters posters, and censorship photography photography, and movie posters photography, and movie advertising advertising, and movie photographs children and media children, and violent movie posters posters, and children media effects media effects, and children children, and media effects media effects, and violent movie posters quotations quotations, and violent movie posters color, and circus posters color, and red color, and posters color, and movie posters quotations, and red advertising children posters LB - 40140 PY - 2007 SP - 228-46 ST - The Origin and Development of the American Moving Picture Poster T2 - Film History TI - The Origin and Development of the American Moving Picture Poster VL - 19 ID - 4112 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author, a columnist for the New York Times and former entertainment critic, notes that pornography has become a $10 to $14 billion-a-year business in the United States. This includes X-rated videos (which in 1998 brought in $4.2 billion), pornographic cable networks, pay-per-view movies carried by satellite and cable, in-hotel motion pictures, magazines, books, telephone services, sex novelties, Internet Web sites, and more. The author discusses how videocasettes and then the Internet led to the growth of the pornography industry, and its acceptance by mainstream corporate America. He notes that several Fortune 500 corporations provide pornographic entertainment -- Marriott and General Motors, to name but two. In 2000, about 11,000 adults videos were released compared to about 400 films from Hollywood. This article individuals who make some of this entertainment. AU - Rich, Frank DA - May 20, 2001 KW - computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) corporations corporations magnetic recording photography sexuality motion pictures news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines Internet satellites magnetic tape General Motors Corp. law censorship and ratings censorship cable +motion pictures and popular culture pornography VCRs +computers and the Internet Internet, and pornography videotape videotape, and pornography pornography, and videotape pornography, and the Internet AT & T, and pornography General Motors, and pornography Mariott, and pornography pornography, and AT &T pornography, and General Motors pornography, and Mariott +television cable television, and pornography pornography, and cable television +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines +aeronautics and space communication pornography, and satellites satellites, and pornography +photography and visual communication photography, and pornography pornography, and photography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship AT&T LB - 21130 PY - 2001 SP - 51-56, 80, 82, 92 ST - Naked Capitlists T2 - New York Times Magazine TI - Naked Capitlists ID - 914 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article notes that many young men and women have "the most modern of diseases" called "filmitis," (12) in that they hope to go into the movies, even though the odds of them being successful are very long indeed. Where earlier young girls were lured by the live stage, now "the movie-struck girl" suffers from "filmitis" they way one might have the measles or the croup. (13) The article does have interviews from two actors (Wallace Eddinger and Edmund Breese) and an actress (Irene Fenwick) in which they comment on their experiences acting in front of the camera. Eddinger says that "everything was action, movement, facial expression" and comments on the problem of overacting. "Mechanics, gesture, facial expression, all count for less ... than mental concentration." He misses the live audience which provided actors with feedback on their acting as it was in progress. (14) Breese notes that once the actors has been filmed, his performance cannot be changed. (14) Breese also commented on the important of "magnetism" in acting and how its projected through the eyes. "'Magnetism counts in the studio and on the screen just as it does in spoken drama, and the would-be film actor must use it in the same way. The moment magnetism relaxes, in that moment you lose your hold on your audience where you stand before the footlights or the camera. And the most powerful avenue for establishing magnetism or control of your audience is through the eye. The eye is as potent in pictures as on the stage.'" (14) AU - Richardson, Anna Steese DA - Jan. 1916 IS - 3 KW - theater stage fame fame celebrity actors acting ref, secondary celebrity culture fame personality motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars audiences media effects motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures media effects, and audiences media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and acting acting, and facial expression motion pictures, and not facing camera acting, and not facing camera acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting acting, and close-ups actors, and close-ups personality, and eyes actors, and magnetism acting, and magnetism ref, secondary ref, secular ref, reform ref, illustrated ref, McClure's motion pictures magnetism LB - 38440 PY - 1916 SP - 12-14, 70 ST - 'Filmitis,' the Modern Malady -- Its Symptoms and Its Cure T2 - McClure's Magazine TI - 'Filmitis,' the Modern Malady -- Its Symptoms and Its Cure VL - 46 ID - 3943 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article says that more people will enter theaters if they are “decorated in a quietly rich way” than if the theater “be plastered with cheap looking posters in all the colors of the rainbow.” AU - Richardson, F. H. DA - June 11, 1910 IS - 23 KW - Chicago, IL censorship actors acting actors acting ref, secondary motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures actors, and status of censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings color color, and movies posters advertising, and color color, and advertising motion pictures, and posters advertising, and movie posters ref, secondary ref, secular ref, movie magazine ref, Moving Picture World advertising LB - 14390 PY - 1910 SP - 987 ST - Posteritis T2 - Moving Picture World TI - Posteritis VL - 6 ID - 3596 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is part of an entire issue is devoted to "Film and/as Technology." Telotte, who is guest editor, notes that enjoying such technologies such as film we enter into an "unspoken" arrangement with that technology. Film's technological underpinning often go unexamined. This raises important issues "especially to the impact of digital technology and its capacity to reproduce convincingly practically any image." Articles in this issue include: David Lavery, "From Cinescape to Cyberspace: Zionists and Agents, Realists and Gamers in The Matrix and eXistenZ"; J. Robert Craig, "Establishing New Boundaries for Special Effects: Robert Zemeckis's Contact and Computer-Generated Imagery"; Kelly Ritter, "Spectacle at the Disco: Boogie Nights, Soundtrack, and the New American Musical"; Susan A. George, "Not Exactly 'of Woman Born': Procreation and Creation in Recent Science Fiction Films"; and J. P. Telotte, "The Sounds of Blackmail: Hitchcock and Sound Aesthetic." AU - Ritter, Kelly DA - Winter, 2001 IS - 4 KW - computers special effects new media motion pictures digital media digitization computers +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and new technology new media, and motion pictures motion pictures, and digital media digital media, and motion pictures motion pictures, and digital effects digital effects, and motion pictures virtual reality motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and motion pictures +computers and the Internet computers, and special effects special effects, and computers +sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures LB - 160 N1 - See filed under Film & Television articles (2001). PY - 2001 SP - 167-75 ST - Spectacle at the Disco: Boogie Nights, Soundtrack, and the New American Musical T2 - Journal of Popular Film & Television TI - Spectacle at the Disco: Boogie Nights, Soundtrack, and the New American Musical VL - 28 ID - 105 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this obituary, A. A. Roback gives a picture of the wide range of Leonard Troland's interests and accomplishments: that he was directing the research at the Technicolor Corp.; that during World War I he worked on developing acoustical devices that could detect submarines; that he was highly regarded for his work in psychology and as a Harvard faculty members; that he was known for his theoretical knowledge in physics and other sciences; that he belonged to several learned societies and was president of the Optical Society of America in 1922-23. "The only gap in his intellectual inventory was the humanistic sphere, including the esthetic and historical foundations," Roback says. (27) "Among the qualities which stand our in Troland's personality are his grim determination and industry, his unpretentiousness, even temper and friendship." (27) His good humor is also acknowledged. Roback notes that in 1916, after finishing his Ph.D., Troland came back to Harvard "for a year as fellow in psychical research, working on the problem of telepathy, the results of which turned out to be negative." (27) Of Troland's beliefs, Roback writes that "His doctrine of motivation was based on the pleasure-pain principle, which according to him was further ground in change of conductance in the synergic field. In ethics he was a hedonist of the utilitarian type. On the metaphysical issue, he sponsored the philosophy of psychical monism, or, as he sometimes called it, paraphysical monism. His idealism, however, did not carry with it any theistic implications." (27) AU - Roback, A. A. DA - July 8, 1932 IS - 1958 KW - Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Technicolor Münsterberg, Hugo Munsterberg, Hugo ref, secondary Troland, Leonard color Troland, Leonard, and color color, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and visual sensation color, and media effects media effects media effects, and color Troland, Leonard, and hedonism Troland, Leonard, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and book review book review, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and Hugo Munsterberg Munsterberg, Hugo, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and psychology Troland, Leonard, and physics Troland, Leonard, and obituary obituaries, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and motion pictures Troland, Leonard, and metaphysics Troland, Leonard, and ethics Troland, Leonard, and sound recording Troland, Leonard, and World War I World War I, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and psychic research Troland, Leonard, and telepathy World War I war LB - 40300 PY - 1932 SP - 26-27 ST - Obiturary: Leonard Thompson Troland T2 - Science TI - Obiturary: Leonard Thompson Troland VL - 76 (New Series) ID - 4128 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author writes: "The poetry of nature, by which I mean this 'poetry of earth' expressed in words, may be roughly divided into two main classes: that which deals with pure description, and that which treats of nature in some one of its many relations with humanity. The latter class is that which alone was contemplated in Keat's line." (442) ("'The poetry of earth is never dead.'" Keats quoted.) (442) Roberts says that "the most inaccessible truths are apt to be reached by indirection......And whosoever follows the inexplicable lure of beauty, in color, form, sound, perfume, or any other manifestation, -- reaching out to it as perhaps a message from some unfathomable past, or a premonition of the future, -- knows that the mystic signal beckons nowhere more imperiously than from the heights of nature-poetry." (445) AU - Roberts, Charles G. D. DA - Dec. 1897 KW - ref, secondary quotations quotations, and poetry of nature metaphors metaphors, and poetry of nature color color, and poetry ref, secondary ref, secular ref, social ref, literary ref, Forum LB - 39900 PY - 1897 SP - 442-45 ST - The Poetry of Nature T2 - Forum TI - The Poetry of Nature ID - 4088 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Robertson opens this articles by writing: "Popular opinion in Britain regarding paper currency underwent a dramatic transformation in the first half of the nineteenth century. In 1800, paper money was commonly disliked and mistrusted; by the Great Exhibition of 1851, it had become generally accepted. Now, of course, paper currency is so well-established a notion that readers of this article must struggle somewhat to grasp its strangeness, even perversity. But in the early nineteenth century, paper stood more plainly in contrast to gold and silver. These "noble metals" were inert, heavy, and imperishable, and made the vaguely pejorative slang for banknote paper, "flimsy," seem entirely apt. Fear of forgery, unfavorable political events, and the development of print technology during this period all threatened to undermine belief in the authenticity and value of printed paper currency. Nevertheless, by midcentury a level of trust "without doubt and without reasoning" had been established. I will argue in this article that the flimsy banknote itself, by virtue of its appearance as a product of mechanical reproduction, helped to build that trust." (31) AU - Robertson, Frances DA - Jan. 2005 IS - 1 KW - non-USA Great Britain printing printing, and authenticity capitalism capitalism, and Great Britain capitalism, and paper money printing, and capitalism print LB - 33590 PY - 2005 SP - 31-50 ST - The Aesthetics of Authenticity: Printed Banknotes as Industrial Currency T2 - Technology and Culture TI - The Aesthetics of Authenticity: Printed Banknotes as Industrial Currency VL - 46 ID - 2998 ER - TY - JOUR AB - George Rockwood discusses recent developments in photography and notes that the camera can capture what can be seen through the microscope. He also discusses how photography can produced a lasting record for history. "The carbon photograph is not only a thing of beauty, but truthfully may be declared a joy forever," he wrote. "It is the most permanent of th direct photographic processes, and will, I believe, be as lasting as the printed page." (363) AU - Rockwood, G. G. DA - Nov. 1905 IS - 11 KW - photography photography and visual communication cameras photography, instantaneous photography, and medicine photography, and George Rockwood photography, and microscope history and new media photography, and history history, and photography Rockwood, George, and photography ref, secondary ref, secular ref, health ref, Phrenological Journal ref, scientific history LB - 140 PY - 1905 ST - Progress in Photography T2 - Phrenological Journal and Science of Health TI - Progress in Photography VL - 118 ID - 1884 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article observes that photo-engraving has taken the place of wood engraving for pictures in newspapers, magazines, and other types of publishing. "The perfected processes of photo-engraving have so taken the place of engravings on wood that I question whether there is today a single engraver on the regular payroll of Harpers, the "Century," or any of the big publishing concerns who formerly had such a large force." (267) Rockwood notes that this process is much faster than the older method. "An interesting fact concerning these photo-engraving processes is the wonderful speed with which the work is accomplished. For quite a season the translation of a photograph to a printing block was the work of hours; now it is a matter of minutes. A New York newspaper, in order to test a device which I had recently invented in this line, sent me a subject to be photographed. In sixteen minutes from the time he entered my studio the positive picture was ready for the half-tone process, which, in a rush, can easily be made in from twenty to forty mintues." (267) Rockwood gives a brief history of the use of the half -tone process and the use of illustration by newspapers and magazines. He explains that the use of the art of photography "in graphic illustration seemed to be a natural step forward. Experiments were made both in Europe and America toward some methods of producing printing blocks from the photographic image. For quite a period the art only reproduced pictures which were already in line or stripple. The most successful results were on stone by photolithography. The "Daily Graphic," the first to use photography exclusively, was printed from stone. "The next step was to produce zinc or copper plates which coould be used with type on an ordinary printing press. Progress was very rapid. It was found that any pictorial subject that had been engraved or any picture which was in lines could be reproduced in a few hours in a relief plate and printed from as easily as the original plate. Whole books, letter presses and illustrations were entirely reproduced by photography and at a price and with a rapidity truly astonishing." (264) AU - Rockwood, G. G. DA - Aug. 1905 IS - 8 KW - wood engraving journalism magazines, and photography magazines photography news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and Daily Graphic photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving ref, secondary ref, secondary ref, secular ref, health ref, Phrenological Journal ref, scientific LB - 360 PY - 1905 SP - 264, 266-67 ST - Progress in Photography. The Pioneers. No. 3 T2 - Phrenological Journal and Science of Health TI - Progress in Photography. The Pioneers. No. 3 VL - 118 ID - 3332 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article G. G. Rockwood discusses progress in color photography, using photography to preserve history, and instantaneous photography. He was not optimistic about the possibility solving the problem of reproducing "natural colors" in photographs. "We are not within gunshot of it; no nearer than in the early days of the daguerreotype," Rockwood says. (329) He says that "All picture in colors thus far produced through photographic agencies are in a measure optical delusions or color effects." (329) He discuess as process used by Ives in Philadelphia called the "kromskop" which has produced good results but "For portraiture it is yet unavailable, as the time required for sittings is thus far even longer than the old-fashioned daguerreotype." (329) He notes that color photographs supposed taken in London recently were in fact, hand painted. While not impossible, the author says, capturing "colors of nature" with a camera is unlikely any time soon. (329) With regard to preserving history, he notes that this use of photography is "no longer new." (329) He laments that more photographs of New York City's skyline were not taken each year to document its changes. It is "impossible to foresee" to what uses the camera will be put in the future, he says. (330) With regard to instantaneous photography, he notes that 1/250th of a second is now regarded as very slow. Rockwood was consulted on a patent case involving instantaneous photography. "Wheatstone measured the duration of the electric spark as one twenty-four thousandth of a second. It would follow that any vibration not quicker than this might be arrested on the photographic plate at any point in its travel." Rockwood then discusses his efforts to verify this possibility. His photographic plates "showed under the powerful magnifying glass, in some, contact of the points, and in others a variety of infinitesimally differenced intervals between them. Not one of the impressions had more than the one-twenty-four thousandth of a second in which to be begun and ended." (330) (my emphasis) Rockwood then summarizes the progress made in decreasing the exposure time needed to take a photograph. "It would be of but little interest to the lay reader to give dates and formulas of the various steps in the development of the art from the daguerreotype to the present almost perfect methods. It is not amiss, however, to give an idea of the relatives rapidities of the various processes: Daguerreotypes (originally), half hour's exposure; calotype, two or three minutes' exposure; collodion, ten seconds' exposure; rapid gelatin emulsion, for one-fifteenth second exposure to the smallest fraction of a second conceivable, as in the patent case mentioned." (330) (my emphasis) AU - Rockwood, G. G. DA - Oct. 1905 IS - 10 KW - history historical preservation historical preservation, and photography photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing photography, and space and time space and time photography, and time photography, and space photography, and travel color color, and photography photography, and color history and new media history, and photography photography, and history cameras cameras, and exposure time photography, and speed of photography, and exposure time photography, and 1-24,000 second historical preservation, and photography photography, and historical preservation photography, instantaneous ref, secondary ref, secular ref, health ref, Phrenological Journal ref, scientific LB - 37120 PY - 1905 SP - 329-30 ST - Progress in Photography T2 - Phrenological Journal and Science of Health TI - Progress in Photography VL - 118 ID - 3812 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article, one of a series, Rockwood discusses dry plate, the supply of paper used in photography, the flashlight and the use of magnesium for night and indoor pictures ("Magnesium is now in constant use in photographing at night banquets, wedding parties, plays, etc.," p. 298), and the ability to reproduce painting in color. "Until a comparatively recent period, photography has failed almost entirely to interpret the colors of nature or art, or to give the proper monochromatic value to them. For instance, yellow and red and all of their combinations would photograph dark, while blue, violet and their shades would develop white. Of late, however, we have what is known as ortho-chromatic or color-sensitive plates, which translate the colors in their proper values as between white and black; or, technically, we have mono-chromatic scale of colors. "This is of the greatest value, not only for the portrayal of nature, but also for the reproduction of paintings." (298) AU - Rockwood, G. G. DA - Sept. 1905 IS - 9 KW - photography photography and visual communication cameras photography, and paper photography, and flashlight photography, and George Rockwood photography, and color photography, and dry plate Rockwood, George, and photography color color, and photography photography, and orthochromatic plates color, and orthochromatic plates ref, secondary ref, secular ref, health ref, Phrenological Journal ref, scientific LB - 37470 PY - 1905 SP - 297-98 ST - Progress in Photography. No. 4 T2 - Phrenological Journal and Science of Health TI - Progress in Photography. No. 4 VL - 118 ID - 3846 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, the first of two by the author, gives a good survey of court cases dealing with obscenity during the 1950s and 1960s. The definition of obscenty, especially after the Roth case in 1957, was in flux and hotly debated. In general, obscenity convictions became much harder to obtain during this period and the power of censors weakened. AU - Rogge, O. John DA - Feb., 1969 KW - U. S. Supreme Court Supreme Court (U. S.) values values obscenity law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures obscenity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and obscenity Supreme Court (U. S.), and obscenity obscenity, and censorship, and obscenity censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship law, and obscenity LB - 18330 PY - 1969 SP - 1-59 ST - 'The High Court of Obscenity': I T2 - University of Colorado Law Review TI - 'The High Court of Obscenity': I VL - 41 ID - 736 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, the second of two by the author, gives a good survey of court cases dealing with obscenity during the 1950s and 1960s. The definition of obscenty, especially after the Roth case in 1957, was in flux and hotly debated. In general, obscenity convictions became much harder to obtain during this period and the power of censors weakened. AU - Rogge, O. John DA - 1968-1969 KW - U. S. Supreme Court Supreme Court (U. S.) values values obscenity law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures obscenity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and obscenity Supreme Court (U. S.), and obscenity obscenity, and censorship, and obscenity censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship law, and obscenity LB - 20450 PY - 1968 SP - 201-59 ST - 'The High Court of Obscenity': II T2 - University of Colorado Law Review TI - 'The High Court of Obscenity': II VL - 41 ID - 859 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Rogin argues that organized labor is ignored in Hollywood films of the New Deal 1930s and 1940s. While labor enjoyed its greatest organizing successes with the rise of the Congress of Industrial Organizations, the labor movement was “virtually invisible on the Hollywood screen during the decade that saw the first permanent organization of the industrial working class in the history of the United States.” Movie producers, Rogin notes, resisted union-organizing efforts, censored left-wing film content and steered clear of divisive controversies in favor of mass appeal. The absence of labor issues on the screen, Rogin argues, “testified to its centrality” off the screen. Rogin identified only 11 Hollywood films during the New Deal in which mass labor action plays more than a minor role. In almost all, Rogin believes, unions are portrayed in the classic roles of anti-union Hollywood. “These movies stigmatize foreigners and outside agitators; support narrow, conservative American Federation of Labor (AFL) elites; treat strikers as mobs and unions as gangs; and associate class struggle with intrafamilial sexual conflict.” The most extraordinary exception, Rogin notes, is The Devil and Miss Jones, the 1941 film about the richest man in the world. He becomes a labor spy in his own department store and learns to side with union organizers after being befriended by workers and exposed to the tyranny of the bosses. The movie, Rogin argues, signals the transformation of the labor movement from class conflict to a part of mass culture. “The only Hollywood movie to celebrate a successful CIO foreshadows the passing of the labor question into consumer culture, a culture whose pleasures fostered, set the limits for, and ultimately undercut working-class power.” -- Phil Glende AU - Rogin, Michael DA - June 2002 IS - 1 KW - motion pictures Hollywood law censorship and ratings censorship Glende, Phil +motion pictures and popular culture labor motion pictures, and labor labor, and motion pictures Hollywood, and labor labor, and Hollywood censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and CIO motion pictures, and AFL LB - 800 N1 - See also: office PY - 2002 SP - 87-114 ST - How the Working Class Save Capitalism: The New Labor History and The Devil and Miss Jones T2 - Journal of American History TI - How the Working Class Save Capitalism: The New Labor History and The Devil and Miss Jones VL - 89 ID - 168 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses Thomas Edison efforts between 1907 to 1914 to make sound moving pictures with his kinetophone which combined the phonograph and motion picture machine. More than 250 kinetophones were made. The author uses primary sources at the Archives at the Edison National Historical Site, in Orange, NJ. The first known talking pictures were shown publicly in 1892 by a Frenchman using a system called the Chronophotophone. Rogoff demonstrates that Edison's system was successful, even though there were often glitches in coordinating the sound and the moving picture. One draw back was the necessity for actors to speak into a sound horn which would show up in the picture. In 1911, Edison made improvement in the phonograph so that it could record sound from a distance of over twenty feet. This development meant that the actors could be filmed without having the sound horn in the picture. A fire in 1914 crippled the kinetophone's progress as did the coming of World War I which disrupted Edison's distribution networks in Europe. AU - Rogoff, Rosalind DA - Spring 1976 IS - 2 KW - ref, secondary motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and sound film kinetophone Edison, Thomas, and kinetophone chronophotophone, and sound film sound recording, and Chronophotophone Chronophotophone, and sound films ref, secondary ref, secular LB - 20 PY - 1976 SP - 58-68 ST - Edison's Dream: A Brief History of the Kinetophone T2 - American Film History TI - Edison's Dream: A Brief History of the Kinetophone VL - 15 ID - 935 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article uses the work of such scholars as Mark Katz (Capturing Sound), Colin Symes (Setting the Record Straight), and Robert Philip (Performing Music in the Age of Recording) to comment on how recording technology has changed how we experience music since the late nineteenth century. Following the lead of these people, Ross discusses how the phonograph, magnetic tape, and compact disc altered the way people played and sang. It is an well-written piece with several interesting examples including Enrico Caruso, John Philip Sousa, the Beach Boys, the Beatles, and others. AU - Ross, Alex DA - June 6, 2005 KW - technology computers music discs, compact magnetic recording sound recording digital media duplicating technologies radio radio, and sound recording phonograph advertising advertising, and phonograph phonograph, and advertising compact discs (CDs) digital media, and compact discs (CDs) sound recording, and music music, and technology music, and phonograph music, and compact discs (CDs) music, and digital media motion pictures motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures audiences sound recording, and audiences audiences, and sound recording technological determinism music, and Internet computers and the Internet values values, and digital sampling history and new media microphones sound recording, and microphones microphones, and sound recording music, and microphones microphones, and music home and new media sound recording, and jazz sound recording, and race race race, and sound recording Edison, Thomas loudspeakers magnetic tape sound recording, and magnetic tape home, and phonograph CDs history home advertising and public relations technology and society LB - 32920 PY - 2005 SP - 94-96, 98-100 ST - The Record Effect: How Technology Has Transformed the Sound of Music T2 - New Yorker TI - The Record Effect: How Technology Has Transformed the Sound of Music ID - 2930 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Ross argues that historians have failed to recognize the efforts of labor unions and labor sympathizers to use silent films to communicate a radical anti-capital message to the working masses. Ross cites film titles, producers, supporters and story content to argue that there was a “grass-roots campaign ... to make films that would educate and politicize millions of Americans,” and he argues that historians have overlooked workers as “actual producers of mass culture.” Ross noted that before the rise of multi-reel features, reformers, religious groups, manufacturers and other interests made movies for general audiences. “Workers and radicals went further than any of these groups in exploiting the overtly political potential of film.” Ross noted that the first labor-oriented theater opened in Cleveland and 1907, and labor-oriented production companies were formed in Seattle and New York. The first major labor feature, A Martyr to His Cause, was produced by the AFL in Dayton in 1911, in response to the Open Shop movement. Among the films Ross describes: A Martyr to His Cause, the story of a hard-working man who embraces trade unionism for the sake of family, country and craft; From Dusk to Dawn (1913), made with professional actors and production personnel and featuring a cast of 10,000 and documentary as well as studio footage; What Is to Be Done? (1914), the story of a factory strike that also incorporates a lesson on the history of the Ludlow, Colorado, massacre. Ross also describes the many factors that worked to defeat the making of labor films, including the rise of the studio system of production, the centralization of distribution houses, government censorship, anti-union attitudes held by Hollywood executives and their financiers, the reluctance of the AFL to support radical film-making, the rising cost of making movies with mass entertainment production values, and finally, the high cost of introducing sound in smaller theaters. --Phil Glende AU - Ross, Steven J. DA - April 1991 IS - 2 KW - audiences theaters motion pictures reform law censorship and ratings censorship Glende, Phil labor +motion pictures and popular culture labor, and silent films labor, and motion pictures motion pictures, and labor motion pictures, and reform reform, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship theaters, and silent films LB - 1000 N1 - See also: office PY - 1991 SP - 333-67 ST - Struggles for the Screen: Workers, Radicals, and the Political Uses of Silent Film T2 - American Historical Review TI - Struggles for the Screen: Workers, Radicals, and the Political Uses of Silent Film VL - 96 ID - 188 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Rosten wrote this article as the House Committee on Un-American Activities was preparing to hold hearings on Communist infiltration into Hollywood. Rosten discusses the meaning of propaganda, its international dimensions, and contrasts motion picture propaganda with that in other media (e.g., radio). AU - Rosten, Leo DA - Nov., 1947 KW - nationalism nationalism imperialism public relations advertising propaganda values motion pictures education cultural imperialism law law censorship and ratings censorship capitalism war audiences motion pictures and popular culture regulation, and motion pictures audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values media effects media effects, and motion pictures propaganda, and motion pictures education, and motion pictures Cold War Cold War, and propaganda films nationalism and communication nationalism, and motion pictures capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism cultural imperialism, and motion pictures World War II World War II, and propaganda regulation public relations advertising and public relations LB - 3020 PY - 1947 SP - 116-24 ST - Movies and Propaganda T2 - The Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science TI - Movies and Propaganda ID - 390 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Roston, Tom DA - Nov. 2001 IS - 3 KW - special effects, digital motion pictures and popular culture digitization digital cinema Lucas, George special effects, and digitization cameras, and digital cinema motion pictures, and digitization digitization, and motion pictures cameras digital media motion pictures special effects LB - 29510 PY - 2001 SP - 48-51 ST - Filmmaking Without Film T2 - Premiere (American Edition) TI - Filmmaking Without Film VL - 15 ID - 2729 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In earlier issues of American Aphrodite, which Samuel Roth edited with the help of co-editor Hal Zucker, nudes were usually depicted in black-and-white drawing. In this issue, however, a photograph of a bare-breasted woman appears on the dust jacket and several pages in this essay are devoted to black-and-white photographs of totally nude women. This issue, however, was probably not the one that brought Roth's conviction for obscenity that was appealed to the U. S. Supreme Court. According to the transcript of record, it was Issue No. 3 of American Aphrodite, together with other materials Roth mailed, that were at issue. AU - Roth, Samuel, ed. DA - 1955 IS - 20 KW - U. S. Supreme Court Roth v. U. S. (1957) law censorship and ratings freedom court cases law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and legal motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases , court cases Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and freedom court cases, and harmful Roth case (1957) court cases, and Roth obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.) Supreme Court (U. S.), and Roth v. U.S. (1957 motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and Roth case (1957) Alberts case law freedom censorship and ratings sexuality magazines, and nudity photography, and nudity nudity, and magazines photography photography, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and photography magazines nudity obscenity Supreme Court (U. S.) censorship LB - 36600 PY - 1955 SP - 239-44 ST - Strange Nudes: A Photographic Essay T2 - American Aphrodite: A Quarterly for the Fancy Free TI - Strange Nudes: A Photographic Essay VL - 5 ID - 3293 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In earlier issues of American Aphrodite, which Samuel Roth edited with the help of co-editor Hal Zucker, nudes were usually depicted in black-and-white drawings. By 1955, a photograph of a bare-breasted woman appears on the dust jacket and several pages in this essay are devoted to black-and-white photographs of totally nude women (see Issue No. 20). This issue, however, was not the one that brought Roth's conviction for obscenity that was appealed to the U. S. Supreme Court. According to the transcript of record, it was Issue No. 3 of American Aphrodite, together with other materials Roth mailed, that were at issue. Issue No. 3 (Vol. 1) contained "Lexicon of Love: A Guide to the Affections and Disaffections of Mankind." AU - Roth, Samuel, ed. DA - 1951-55 KW - U. S. Supreme Court Roth v. U. S. (1957) law censorship and ratings freedom court cases law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and legal motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases , court cases Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and freedom court cases, and harmful Roth case (1957) court cases, and Roth obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.) Supreme Court (U. S.), and Roth v. U.S. (1957 motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and Roth case (1957) Alberts case law freedom censorship and ratings sexuality magazines, and nudity photography, and nudity nudity, and magazines photography photography, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and photography magazines nudity obscenity Supreme Court (U. S.) censorship LB - 36610 PY - 1951 T2 - American Aphrodite: A Quarterly for the Fancy Free VL - 1-5 ID - 3294 ER - TY - JOUR AB - These were the issues of Good Times, which Samuel Roth edited, that were involved in his indictment that eventually led to the 1957 U. S. Supreme Court case Roth v. U. S. that changed the way the Court interpreted obscenity. This magazine, pamphlet-sized, contains numerous black-and-white pictures of nude women and other erotica. AU - Roth, Samuel, ed. DA - 1954-55 IS - 5, 7, 8, 9. 10, 11, 12 (Vol. 1); 13, 14, 15 (Vol. 2) KW - U. S. Supreme Court Roth v. U. S. (1957) law censorship and ratings freedom court cases law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and legal motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases , court cases Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and freedom court cases, and harmful Roth case (1957) court cases, and Roth obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.) Supreme Court (U. S.), and Roth v. U.S. (1957 motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and Roth case (1957) Alberts case law freedom censorship and ratings sexuality magazines, and nudity photography, and nudity nudity, and magazines photography photography, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and photography magazines nudity obscenity Supreme Court (U. S.) censorship LB - 36620 PY - 1954 T2 - Good Times: A Review of the World of Pleasure VL - 1, 2 ID - 3295 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, by a man who had long experience working in radio, TV, and film, discusses the latest advances in motion picture editing, including the 8-plate KEM Universal editing maching. AU - Rowen, Robert DA - Nov., 1969 IS - 11 KW - cinematography motion pictures motion pictures, and editing 8mm 16mm 35mm 8mm film, and editing 16mm film, and editing 35mm film, and editing sound recording 8mm film, and sound recording 16mm film, and sound recording 35mm film, and sound recording sound recording, and 8mm sound recording, and 16mm sound recording, and 35mm sound recording 16mm film LB - 30370 PY - 1969 SP - 1090-92, 1097, 1100 ST - Revolution in the Cutting Room T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Revolution in the Cutting Room VL - 50 ID - 2792 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author says that "of the six elements of art power, color is the fifth in importance...." (326) Color, he says, "enters into all the arts -- into poetry as well as painting, into sculpture as well as the drama. The poet means word-coloration when he speaks of color in poetry and the sculptor means by color --light and shade." (326) Ruckstuhl focuses on color in painting and says that "if a choice must be made I join with the picture-painters who assert that color is secondary to drawing." (326) The author quotes John van Dyke in "Arts for Art's Sake": "In music Harmony is, for the present at least, the final word. There is nothing beyond it, and so Color-Harmony is now the loftiest pitch to which the painter may attain, the consummation of his art.'" (van Dyke quoted, 326) AU - Ruckstuhl, F. Wellington DA - July 1917 KW - color, and sensuousness color, and form color, and emotion color, and thought values color, and values ref, secondary ref, Art World color, and form color, and harmony color, and nature color, and music color LB - 42430 PY - 1917 SP - 326-30 ST - A Standard of Art Measurement: Part V: Color T2 - The Art World TI - A Standard of Art Measurement: Part V: Color VL - 2 ID - 4342 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article mentions early efforts at magnetic recording and sound combined with film. "The Scientific American has from time to time presented to its readers different methods of recording and reproducing both musical sounds and human speech. Of these methods, perhaps the most generally known is that employed by Mr. Edison, in which a stylus attached to a diaphragm engraves upon a rapidly revolving wax cylinder the sound impulses thrown against the diaphragm. Still another system has been devised by the Danish engineer Valdemar Poulsen, who records sounds magnetically by passing a steel ribbon between electromagnets energized with an intensity depending upon the strength of the current which has been telephonically set up in the circuit. [my emphasis] In a third, and perhaps a more sensitive method than either of the two mentioned, photography is employed as the recording means. "Under favorable conditions the variations in the intensity of oscillation of a 'speaking' arc light* are so appreciable that it is possible to record them upon a moving sensitive film. Upon this possibility the construction of my 'photographophone' depends." Ruhman then explains the system and says that "By this method sounds are reproduced with astonishing distinctions." * See Scientific American, June 8, 1901, p. 858. AU - Ruhman, Ehnst DA - July 20, 1901 IS - 3 KW - ref, secondary motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures Denmark non-USA Denmark, and sound recording non-USA, and sound recroding motion pictures, and talking films (origins) magnetic recording magnetic recording (origins) sound recording, and magnetic sound recording, and magnetic (origins) quotations quotations, and magnetic recording quotations, and sound film Poulsen, Valdemar, and sound recording sound recording, and Valdemar Poulsen ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Scientific American Poulsen, Valdemar LB - 37860 PY - 1901 SP - 36 ST - The 'Photographophone' T2 - Scientific American TI - The 'Photographophone' VL - 85 ID - 3885 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses Eric Johnston, president of the MPAA, and maintains that he made the rounds of the various studios to discuss a "new doctrine of film content." According to this article, after meeting with the State Department, Johnston told the studio chiefs "that the United States is now in the first days of a new era in its history, and he assured them that the White House and State Department were aware of the importance of the movies in carrying to the world the American message of political democracy and economic free enterprise." The question this article poses if "shall we continue to make movies for entertainment and escapism, or for indoctrination on a global scale?" (37 ) Johnston believed that the entertanment films were the best ideological weapons in the international struggle against communism. The article also claims that Johnston encouraged screen writers to "write films showing communism not only as treasonable and subversive, but as ridiculous. He followed this by saying he was in favor of a free screen, subject neither to government pressure nor to foreign propaganda." The article concludes that Johnston's words "add up to an interesting paradox." (38) AU - S.V.R. IS - 3 KW - Truman administration Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union self-regulation nationalism MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism Cold War war Johnston, Eric capitalism motion pictures, and communism Truman, Harry presidents and new media motion pictures, and Harry Truman Truman, Harry, and motion pictures motion pictures, and drinking military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and U.S. foreign policy MPAA, and foreign policy MPAA, and Truman administration MPAA, and Cold War USSR motion pictures, and USSR propaganda democracy motion pictures, and democracy media effects motion pictures, and media effects media effects motion pictures, and media effects LB - 34740 SP - 37-38 ST - Movie Man's Burden T2 - New Republic TI - Movie Man's Burden VL - 117 ID - 3116 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article says that at least sixty major movies during the past five years have portrayed "the use of illegal drugs in a positive, upbeat way." It discusses specific films, has comments from Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, and from movie makers. About this time the U.S. Senate helding hearings on substance abuse in the movies and some supported a new rating category ("SA") to indicate the portrayal of drug use. The White House also was exerting pressure on Hollywood to enlist in its war on drugs. AU - Satchell, Michael DA - July 21, 1985 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +television motion pictures, and drug use motion pictures, and substance abuse television, and drug use television, and substance abuse Valenti, Jack, and substance abuse Valenti, Jack, and drug use MPAA, and drug use rating system (U.S.), and drug abuse rating system (U. S.), and substance abuse CARA, and drug use CARA, and substance abuse rating system (U. S.), and controversies CARA, and rating controversies LB - 23050 PY - 1985 SP - 5-7 (?) ST - Does Hollywood Sell Drugs to Kids? T2 - Parade TI - Does Hollywood Sell Drugs to Kids? ID - 1029 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This brief descriptive piece talks about Woodrow Wilson’s address at Balboa Stadium on September 19, 1919, to 50,000 with the aid of a loudspeaker. It also mentions that Vice President Thomas R. Marshall had earlier spoken to large crowd in church in Washington, D.C. with the aid of a loudspeaker. See also Gerald A. Shephard’s article on Wilson's address. AU - Scarr, Lew DA - June 1957 IS - 401 KW - +radio wireless communication Wilson, Woodrow, administration presidents, and new media Wilson, Woodrow oratory public address systems +sound recording microphones public address systems Wilson, Woodrow, and public address systems Wilson, Woodrow, and microphones (1919) oratory, and public address systems loudspeakers LB - 5580 PY - 1957 SP - 135-36 ST - Now Hear This -- Now Hear This: the birth of the public address system T2 - American Mercury TI - Now Hear This -- Now Hear This: the birth of the public address system VL - LXXXIV ID - 1943 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article deals with films that played on the exploitation circuit, movies that did not have the Production Code Administration's seal of approval. There were hundreds, if not thousands, of theaters in the United States, that exhibited these films. "Largely because the mainstream industry could not dominate the discursive formations that attended renegade exploitation movies, these films proved beyond the reach of the Hays Office. This eventually helped to undermine the very concept of self-censorship." Schaefer treats this subject in more detail in his book "Bold! Daring! Shocking! True!": A History of Exploitation Films, 1919-1959 (1999). AU - Schaefer, Eric DA - 1994 IS - 3 KW - audiences self-regulation Production Code motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality values Christianity advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) sexuality pornography sexuality Legion of Decency values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church Catholic Church +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and history of sex nudity motion pictures, and nudity censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and exploitation circuit pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and history of theaters motion pictures, and porn theaters Production Code, and exploitation circuit advertising, and exploitation circuit motion pictures, and advertising advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and drug use motion pictures, and lesbianism Catholic Church, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and foreign film Legion of Decency, and foreign films motion pictures, and childbirth censorship, and exploitation circuit Production Code, and exploitation circuit Production Code, and decline of advertising LB - 16440 N1 - See filed under Schaefer's book, "Bold! Daring! Shocking! True!" PY - 1994 SP - 294-313 ST - Resisting refinement: the exploitation film and self-censorship T2 - Film History TI - Resisting refinement: the exploitation film and self-censorship VL - 6 ID - 596 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Written in the aftermath of the first Sputnik, this piece is interesting and on target about many future uses of satellites. Among those uses would be, the author speculates: 1) reconnaissance satellites (“Big Brother” in the sky); 2) a platform to assemble rockets that could be fired back at the enemy -- admittedly, the author (and the military) acknowledges, impractical; 3) learning the true shape of the earth and measuring distances more exactly; 4) weather reporting; 5) space medicine; 6) picking up and relaying radio and television signals; and others. Although mentioned, the use for communication -- e.g., telephones and television -- is not emphasized (indeed, telephones are not mentioned). AU - Schanche, Don DA - Oct. 21, 1957 IS - 17 KW - R & D nationalism research and development war war space communication satellites reconnaissance radio +aeronautics and space communication +military communication +nationalism and communication reconnaissance, satellite satellites, and reconnaissance rocketry weather, and satellites space medicine +radio radio, and satellites +television television, and satellites medicine satellites, and weather LB - 7680 PY - 1957 SP - 26-29 ST - Space Beyond Sputnik Lies Within Our Grasp T2 - Life TI - Space Beyond Sputnik Lies Within Our Grasp VL - 43 ID - 2137 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Abstract from Technology and Culture: "Beginning in 1859, the lighthouse was the site of the first commercial application of generator-powered electric-arc lighting. At the end of the century, however, only about thirty had been installed among thousands of lighthouses worldwide. In seeking to explain the differential adoption of the technology, this paper compares the performance characteristics of electric lights and its competitor, oil lamps. Although the electric arc was at a disadvantage in utilitarian performance characteristics, such as costs of installation and maintenance, it was an adequate light under most conditions and excelled in haze and light fog; it could also uniquely symbolize a nation's command of cutting-edge electrical science and technology. Most nations, favoring utilitarian performance characteristics in their decisions, adopted no electric lights. In adopting nations, especially France and England, symbolic performance was heavily weighted, for the electric light was both an aid to navigation and a political technology." AU - Schiffer, Michael B. DA - April 2005 IS - 2 KW - nationalism electricity nationalism and communication Great Britain France electricity, and arc lighting lighting, arc electricity, and lighthouses non-USA lighting LB - 33580 PY - 2005 SP - 275-305 ST - The Electric Lighthouse in the Nineteenth Century: Aid to Navigation and Political Technology T2 - Technology and Culture TI - The Electric Lighthouse in the Nineteenth Century: Aid to Navigation and Political Technology VL - 46 ID - 2997 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins with the story from Arabian Nights about Aladdin who finds a magic lamp with the genie who grants wishes. The current generation, the author says, confronts a powerful force of no less proportion in electricity. Then, shifting metaphors, the author writes: "Within one generation, this subtle force has conquered the world; the whole surface of the globe has been covered with the wire netting of electric plants of all descriptions, so that this earth, if viewed from one of her sister planets, must look as though some gigantic spider had spun his web around her." (84) (my emphasis) Schindler goes on to write that "by means of electricity, the news of the world is brought to us at a moment's notice; by means of electricity, the voices of friends, with all their characteristic inflections, are carried to us over the space of thousands of miles; electricity floods the largest cities with a sea of light at any given moment; electricity, transformed into force, drives and propels heavy cars loaded with freight or passengers. "Still this giant has not grown to full proportions; he is yet a mere child and may after reaching maturity surpass the most extravagant expectations. Metaphorically speaking, the social body has suddenly evolved a system of nerves, by which its most distant parts, its minutest cells, are placed in intercommunication and sympathy with one another. We may stand in awe before the ruins of the buildings which the civilized nations of antiquity have left to tell us of their enterprise; we may wonder how Egypt could have built her pyramids, Greece her temples, Rome her highways; but whatever are the bequests of ancient culture and ingenuity, never before has the world been blessed with benefactions such as are represented to-day by electricity." (85) (my emphasis) The author argues that this great power should be publicly owned, not controlled by a few people. "Shall this nervous system of the social body be controlled by a few of the cells of the organism to their own advantage, for their own profit, or shall it became an integral part of the body itself?" (85) Electricity "should be owned by the people themselves." (86) AU - Schindler, Solomon DA - June 1894 IS - 1 KW - home ref, secondary metaphors electricity home and new media electricity, and nationalism electricity, and home home, and electricity electricity, as Aladdin's genie news, and electricity electricity, and news electricity, and metaphors metaphors, and electricity metaphors, and Aladdin metaphors, and spider web electricity, and system of nerves metaphors, and system of nerves nationalism and communication nationalism, and electricity news and journalism electricity, and news news, and electricity ref, secondary ref, secular ref, reform ref, Arena nationalism news LB - 37630 PY - 1894 SP - 84-90 ST - The Nationalization of Electricity T2 - The Arena TI - The Nationalization of Electricity VL - 10 ID - 3862 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Schlesinger argues that "the rate of social change has been faster than ever before," and that television has affected young people "fundamentally by reating new modes of perception." He goes on to say that the "velocity of history, the electronic revolution, the affluent society -- these have given today's college students a distinctive outlook on the world." AU - Schlesinger, Arthur Jr. DA - Sept. 21, 1968 KW - television history, break with television, and history history, and television history, and electronic media children and media values television, and values values, and television violence violence, and television television, and violence violence, and children children, and violence children history LB - 35730 PY - 1968 SP - 25 ST - Joe College Is Dead T2 - Saturday Evening Post TI - Joe College Is Dead ID - 3212 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Historian Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. wrote in this article about “the ever accelerating velocity of history,” and cited the historian Henry Adams, who in 1909 had claimed that society’s rate of progression during the nineteenth century had been a thousandfold. Since Adams’s time, Schlesinger said, science and technology had conspired to bring a rate of change that was now “incalculably greater.” AU - Schlesinger, Arthur M., Jr. DA - July 6, 1970 KW - technology technology and society preservation history, and new media history history history, break with history, and acceleration of technology, and rate of change technology, and history Adams, Henry, and break with history LB - 19460 PY - 1970 SP - 32-34 ST - The Velocity of History T2 - Newsweek TI - The Velocity of History VL - 76 ID - 782 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Schmidt writes that although the "technological developments in the production and distribution of magazines included such things as advances in ink chemistry, improved presses, better transportation, assembly line methods and streamlined type faces, the most important events within out time frame were the development of pulp paper processes, photographic dry-plates and half-tones, and offset printing -- each of which resulted in demonstrable changes in circulation, appearance and editorial content in 20th century magazines." The author notes that by mid-twentieth century, off-set printing had so reduced printing and production costs that "almost anyone could become his own publisher." AU - Schmidt, Dorothy (Dorey) DA - Spring, 1980 IS - 1 KW - underground newspapers post office advertising, and public relations underground media underground press propaganda public relations print printing news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers materials color news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines magazines, and new technology printing, and offset magazines, and offset printing paper paper, and magazines magazines, and paper underground press, and offset printing offset printing magazines, and pulp paper paper, and pulp pulp paper, and magazines papermaking magazines, and half-tones magazines, and transportation magazines, and postal service +postal service postal service, and magazines advertising, and magazines color, and magazines magazines, and color advertising, and color color, and magazine advertising advertising materials LB - 17630 PY - 1980 SP - 3-16 ST - Magazines, Technology, and American Culture T2 - Journal of American Culture TI - Magazines, Technology, and American Culture VL - 3 ID - 682 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Scholling, William DA - Aug. 10, 1895 IS - 2666 KW - media effects emotion decadence ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color color, and inadequacy of language color, in history color, and theory color, and language color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and poetry values values, and color color, and values color, and decadence decadence, and color non-USA color, and non-USA non-USA, and color color, as not decadent ref, secular ref, literary ref, Littell's Living Age electricity, and color color, and electricity color, and music electricity LB - 40820 PY - 1895 SP - 349-56 ST - Color-Music: A Suggestion of a New Art T2 - Littell's Living Age TI - Color-Music: A Suggestion of a New Art VL - 206 ID - 4180 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This 12-page article was one of a series on the Paris Exposition. Here the author looks at amusements, "of the tastes that are planted deepest in the hearts of the masses...." (643) The author comments on the current interest in travel and seeing far-off places. "Next to a taste for the theater, which dates from all time, come the stronger and more modern taste for traveling. Formerly people spent their lives forever under the same sky, in a narrow setting, and each day their eyes were satisfied to contemplate familiar objects. Now we have a fever for seeing the world, for getting near all sorts of civilizations differing from our own. Let us consider what the Exposition offers to satisfy this curiosity." (645) The author then discusses several panoramas at the Exposition -- "the Tur du Monde, the Transatlantic, the Sahara, and Alpine Club, and many others which present glimpses of foreign lands to the masses." (643) Also discussed is the "linorama" (647, 649) There is also a cinematograph. "There is a wide choice of scientific amusements at the Exposition. In the Phono-cinema Theater a cinematograph unrolls pictures with the familiar flicker and flash; the pictures represent scenes taken at a theater, and while they pass, a huge phonograph sends forth the songs of the actors, in the sharp voice of all phonographs, while the characters, with convulsive gestures, speak with a 'Punch and Judy' intonation." (651) This article is well-illustrated. AU - Schopfer, Jean DA - Sept. 1900 IS - 5 KW - spectacles progress electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time color electricity, and color color, and electricity non-USA France France, and color France, and electricity non-USA, and color non-USA, and electricity color, and world fairs electricity, and world fairs color, and progress electricity, and progress progress, and electricity progress, and color color, and Paris Exposition electricity, and Paris Exposition World's Fairs Paris Exposition (1900) panoramas panoramas, and Paris Exposition motion pictures, and Paris Exposition Paris Exposition, and motion pictures Paris Exposition, and panoramas spectacles, and Paris Exposition theater theater, and Paris Exposition travel motion pictures, and travel travel, and panoramas travel, and World's Fairs travel, and Paris Exposition quotations quotation, and fever for seeing world quotation, and tastes planted in hearts of masses sound recording phonograph phonograph, and Paris Exposition Paris Exposition, and phonograph ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, Century motion pictures transportation LB - 42150 PY - 1900 SP - 643-54 ST - Amusements of the Paris Exposition. II: Theaters, Panoramas, and Other Spectacles T2 - Century Illustrated Magazine TI - Amusements of the Paris Exposition. II: Theaters, Panoramas, and Other Spectacles VL - 60 ID - 4314 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Schuchardt argues that Nike’s symbol, the Swoosh, “transcends language, making it the perfect corporate icon for the postliterate global village.” Elsewhere, he says: “Never underestimate the power of symbols. Textless corporate symbols operate at a level beneath the radar of rational language, and the power they wield can be corrupting. Advertising that relies on propaganda methods can grab you and take you somewhere whether you want to go or not; and as history tells us, it matters where you’re going. “Language is the mediator between our minds and the world, and the thing that defines us as rational creatures. By going textless, Nike and other corporations have succeeded in performing partial lobotomies on our brains, conveying their messages without engaging our rational minds....” Schuchardt begins this piece by talking about the “Christian fish,” a symbol created by early followers of Christ who used it “to represent their beliefs and communicate with one another in times of persecution.” This work was excerpted from re:generation quarterly (Summer, 1997). AU - Schuchardt, Read Merce DA - Sept. - Oct., 1998 KW - values Christianity Christianity photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations public relations advertising values values religion values propaganda literacy iconography icons +photography and visual communication icons iconography advertising, and Nike Nike advertising, and icons symbols values, and icons propaganda, and icons Christianity, and icons literacy, and post-literate society advertising corporations LB - 1900 PY - 1998 SP - 76-77 ST - Swoosh! The perfect icon for an imperfect postliterate world [sic] T2 - Utne Reader TI - Swoosh! The perfect icon for an imperfect postliterate world [sic] ID - 1586 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article attacked the conclusions of the 1970 Report issued by the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. The author questioned the Commission’s objectivity and its assertion that no connection existed between erotica and sex crimes. AU - Schultz, Gladys Denny DA - July, 1971 KW - conservatives archives sexuality motion pictures mass media First Amendment media effects crime freedom law censorship and ratings censorship pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and crime crime, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment LB - 22430 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1971 SP - 53-57 ST - What Sex Offenders Say About Pornography T2 - Reader's Digest TI - What Sex Offenders Say About Pornography ID - 971 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Schultz examines the muckrakers' thinking about democracy during the Progressive era. He writes: "As popular journalists in the early twentieth century, the muckrakers mounted a concentrated attack against the citadels of evil which they believed dominated the republican landscape. Lincoln Steffens, Ida M. Tarbell, Charles Edward Russell, and others posed as democrats trying to turn into success the failures of a democratic society. Many hoped, as Ray Stannard Baker later recalled, 'that they could shake he walls of corrupt Jericho by the blasts of their trumpets.'" AU - Schultz, Stanley K. DA - Dec. 1965 IS - 3 KW - news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers journalism community democracy news and journalism reform +books, periodicals, newspapers democracy and media reform muckraking reform, and newspapers reform, and magazines magazines, and reform magazines news, and reform news, and democracy democracy, and news news LB - 10520 PY - 1965 SP - 527-47 ST - The Morality of Politics: The Muckrakers' Vision of Democracy T2 - Journal of American History TI - The Morality of Politics: The Muckrakers' Vision of Democracy VL - 52 ID - 2416 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The article argues that by 1890, photographers and photo engravers "were ready to put news photos into daily newspapers" but they did not do so until 1897. The article focuses on why city newspapers, especially those in New York, delayed in using news photos. The author first discusses the use of pictures and editorial methods used by several publications before 1890, including: Illustrated London News, New York Herald, Leslies's, Gleason's and the New York Daily Graphic (44-47). The article then deals with the technology used for newspapers and for photography (including the technology used for halftone photo engraving) up to the 1890s. (47-50) The telephone, typwriter, electric light, and improved transportation all changed newspapers. Photography advanced from the use of glass plates to roll film and the Kodak camera. The work of George Eastman and Jacob Riis is recounted. (48-49) Schuneman then turns to Frederic Ives contributions to contemporary photo engraving. (49-50) "If Ives' process and the Levy screens were indeed available commercially by 1891, then one must again ask why it was not until 1897 that the New York Tribune became the first mass circulation newspaper to publish a halftone photograph." (50) Schuneman goes on to say that "illustrations drawn by artists found their way into the newspapers and were quite firmly established by 1890. Evidence of the wide acceptance of this illustration was contained in the Cosmopolitan piece author by Valerian Gribayédoff, himself a command of illustration for Joseph Pulitzer's New 50/51 York World. Gribayédoff indicated that there were 5,000 illustrated periodicals by 1891. More than 1,000 artists were producing 10,000 drawings a week." (50-51) The author maintains that artist considerations explain why news photographs were not used until 1897. "As a few bold editors and publishers considered adopting the use of photography in their newpapers, they confronted organized arguments from their art and engraving staffs, which feared unemployment. The general argument was based on the suppositions that 1) only their handwork could be classified as art, 2) photography was not art because of its mechanical dependencies and 3) readers certainly would want art as compared to a mechanical substitute." (51) The technological "foundation had been laid by 1890 or 1891 for an almost unlimited use of photographs by the newspaper," the author says. "General failure of newspaper editors and publishers of the 1890s to explore, consider and contemplate for themselves whether photography was art and whether it had a legitimate place in their newspapers was to result in most unfortunate consequences for the photographic medium." (52) One should read this article in the context of other work which maintains that there were substantial technical difficulties in using photographs for daily newspapers (unlike magazines and books) until 1897. For examples, see the article by Joseph Pennel (Oct., 1897), and the doctoral thesis by Robert Sidney Kahan. AU - Schuneman, R. Smith DA - Winter 1965 KW - wood engraving lighting journalism journalism fame celebrity ref, secondary magazines, and photography magazines photography news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality quotations newspapers, and photographs photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving lighting, and flashlight powder lighting, and magnesium flash Riis, Jacob Ives, Frederic newspapers, and Jacob Riis newspapers, and Frederic Ives photo engraving photo engraving, and Frederic Ives Ives, Frederic, and photo engraving Eastman, George cameras cameras, and Kodak Gribayédoff, Valerian ref, secondary ref, secular LB - 38580 PY - 1965 SP - 43-52 ST - Art or Photography: A Question for Newspaper Editors of the 1890s T2 - Journalism Quarterly TI - Art or Photography: A Question for Newspaper Editors of the 1890s VL - 42 ID - 3957 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article considers the creative opportunities available to film makers. It discusses the TV program "Cineposium" that dealt with "avant gard feelings" (382) and with such topics as abortion. The program used multiple formats -- 8mm, 16mm, 35mm, slides, color, black and white, silent film and sound recording. The program was generally videotaped for 45 minutes and then cut by 15 minutes before it aired. AU - Schwab, Laurence DA - June, 1965 IS - 6 KW - cinematography television motion pictures television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television 8mm 16mm 8mm film, and television 16mm film, and television television, and 8mm film television, and 16mm film 35mm 35mm slides, and television television, and 35mm slides avant garde avant garde, and television television, and avant garde values abortion television, and abortion abortion, and television color television, and color color, and television art 16mm film LB - 30450 PY - 1965 SP - 381-83 ST - Cineposium -- TV Outlet for Creative Film Makers T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Cineposium -- TV Outlet for Creative Film Makers VL - 46 ID - 2800 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Schwartz, Vanessas R. DA - Dec. 2001 IS - 5 KW - motion pictures Benjamin, Walter motion pictures, and modernity modernity modernity, and motion pictures ref, secondary ref, secular LB - 50 PY - 2001 SP - 1721-1743 ST - Walter Benjamin for Historians T2 - American Historical Review TI - Walter Benjamin for Historians VL - 106 ID - 1517 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses MGM's work in special effects. It discusses the recreation of an atomic bomb explosion, and the recreation of radar screen. AU - Scot, Darrin DA - April, 1963 IS - 4 KW - corporations corporations cinematography motion pictures special effects motion pictures, and special effects MGM special effects, and MGM LB - 30000 PY - 1963 SP - 218-19, 243-45 ST - Wizardry in Special Effects: M-G-M's Special Effects Department Has Impressive Record of Accomplishment T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Wizardry in Special Effects: M-G-M's Special Effects Department Has Impressive Record of Accomplishment VL - 44 ID - 2755 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece deals with efforts by Don Wildmon and the National Federation of Decency to persuade stores to stop carrying adult magazines. In February, 1986, well before the Meese Commission released its findings, the Commission's Executive Director Alan Sears wrote a letter – without informing Commission members – to twenty-six companies that sold such magazines as Playboy and Penthouse stating that the Commission had heard testimony that their enterprise was “involved in the sale or distribution of pornography.” The twenty-six firms included 7-Eleven, Rite-Aid, Thrifty, and Dart. The charges had been made by Wildmon, who had been pressuring advertisers to withdraw support from movies, TV programs, and publishers who traded in what he considered pornography. Sears’s letter came at a time when sales and advertising for Playboy and Penthouse were already declining, in part because of pressure from such groups as the Moral Majority and NFD, and in part because of changing entertainment patterns brought about by such developments as video cassettes. AU - Scot, Jeffry DA - June 30, 1986 KW - morality sexuality sexuality sexuality First Amendment freedom boycotts pornography Penthouse First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment Penthouse, and First Amendment First Amendment, and Penthouse Moral Majority pornography, and opponents boycotts, and pornography boycotts, and Penthouse Playboy Playboy, and First Amendment boycotts, and Playboy NFD Wildmon, Don National Federation of Decency (NFD) American Family Association (NFD) law NFD LB - 23790 PY - 1986 ST - Wildmon, NFD Finally Get Some Respect T2 - Adweek (Southeast Edition) TI - Wildmon, NFD Finally Get Some Respect ID - 1041 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses transmitting photographs by wire and the work of an inventor in Cleveland, Ohio, N. S. Amstutz. The author says that the lay press has been misleading that pictures can be transmitted over long distances as "quick as thought." (133) The reality is somewhat less spectacular. "The Electro-Artograph, according to the inventor, Pictorial Telegraph, according to The Photographic Times, but better, in my opinion, as more correctly descriptive, the Telartograph, is a union of the telegraph and phonograph by which photographs in relief may be transmitted from one place to another for any reasonable distance along a single wire." (133) "The work, once started, goes on automatically and when complete, it is only necessary to make an electrotype from the cylinder and mount it ready for the press. There is still room for improvement, but enough has been done to warrant the belief that it will soon be possible for a photography of any particular happening on the afternoon in one day in London, to be transmitted to San Francisco in time to appear in the newspapers the following morning." (133) The article comments on the quality of photographing printing. "I have an idea that a man's work may be pretty accurately judged by the printing methods he employs. A high gloss, however vulgar, may compensate to a certain extent for a poor and fugitive print, but he who knows his work to be worth preserving will not risk his reputation on silver in any of its forms." (134) AU - See, Jay DA - Sept. 1895 IS - 6 KW - journalism future magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, secondary electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and photography photography, and electricity photography and visual communication motion pictures electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines television telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph future and science fiction telephotography Amstutz, N. S., and telartograph seeing at a distance modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity quotations quotations, and quick as thought materials materials, and silver photography, and materials ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, outdoor ref, Outing LB - 37030 PY - 1895 SP - 133-34 ST - Photography: Telartograph T2 - Outing, an Illustrated Monthly Magazine of Recreation TI - Photography: Telartograph VL - 26 ID - 3804 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Seidel writes that "historical analysis of the evolution of science policy for high-energy physics from 1947-1967 shows how national security concerns played a role in this branch of fundamental science." This article examines developments during the early years of the Cold War, the importance of accelerator development during the Korean War, and how accelerators contributed to America's international prestige in the technological race with the Soviet Union. Attention is also given to post-Sputnik (1957) developments. AU - Seidel, Robert W. DA - 1994 IS - 4 KW - R & D atomic power nationalism World War II research and development research and development war Korea Cold War war non-USA +nationalism and communication +military communication nationalism, and physics military, and physics research and development, and government support Atomic Energy Commission Korean War World War II, and physics Cold War, and physics acclerators research and development, and high-energy physics atomic energy LB - 3060 PY - 1994 SP - 361-91 ST - Accelerators and National Security: The Evolution of Science Policy for High-Energy Physics, 1947-1967 T2 - History and Technology TI - Accelerators and National Security: The Evolution of Science Policy for High-Energy Physics, 1947-1967 VL - 11 ID - 394 ER - TY - JOUR AB - From the abstract for this address at the 1984 Winter Simulation Conference in Dallas, TX: "Artificial Intelligence is the latest buzzword and one of the hottest topics in the scientific community today. Some experts are proclaiming that Artificial Intelligence (AI) has already emerged as one of the most significant technologies of this century. Proponents are declaring that it will completely revolutionize management and the way we use computers. If these claims are even half true, then AI is bound to have a profound effect upon the art and science of simulation. The purpose of this paper is to provide a current overview of this rapidly evolving field, examine the potential of AI in simulation and the inevitability of it. We propose to explore the probable impact as well as forecast the directions it is likely to take." AU - Shannon, Robert E. DA - Dec. 1984 KW - computers Reagan administration artificial intelligence and biotechnology computers and the Internet strategic computing initiative Reagan administration, and artificial intelligence presidents and new media education computers, and education education, and computers military communication military communication, and strategic computing initiative supercomputers artificial intelligence Japan Japan, and supercomputers non-USA computers LB - 33930 PY - 1984 SP - 3-9 ST - Artificial Intelligence and Simulation: Keynote Address T2 - Proceedings of the 16th conference on Winter simulation TI - Artificial Intelligence and Simulation: Keynote Address ID - 3031 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this study, Shaw argues that "presidential campaign news bias ... declined in the Wisconsin English-language daily press during the 1852-1916 years. The decline was sharpest between the election years 1880 and 1884." This decrease in news bias between 1880 and 1884 was "directly related to an enormous increase in politically impartial use of relatively unbiased wire news which was noticeable in the Wisconsin press beginning in the ealry 1880s." Shaw writes that five factors help to explain increased usage of the telegraph: “the expansion of telegraph facilities; the decreasing relative cost of telegraph news to newspapers; declining costs of newsprint; and expansion of press association services. Finally, if Wisconsin is any example, readers learned to demand more timely news as the years covered by this study progressed.” Shaw notes that "nonwire news became less and less biased as more and more wire news was used. One might conjecture that reporters learned to imitate the wire’s relatively unbiased news style as time went on, although this of course would take a separate study to explore.” AU - Shaw, Donald L. DA - Spring 1967 KW - corporations democracy and media democracy objectivity journalism news and journalism press newspapers news news +telegraph Western Union news, and telegraph news, bias newsprint, and declining cost press associations news, and timeliness +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and telegraph newsprint news, and objectivity objectivity, and telegraph telegraphy, and objectivity LB - 10530 PY - 1967 SP - 3-31 ST - News Bias and the Telegraph T2 - Journalism Quarterly TI - News Bias and the Telegraph VL - 44 ID - 2417 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article by members of the American Academy of Pediatrics argues that media violence does have harmful effects on children. AU - Shelov, Steve, et al. (American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Communications) DA - June 1995 IS - 6 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack social science research censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) archives primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA media effects media violence government censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and television television, and rating system (U. S.) classification, and television television, and classification motion pictures, and rating system (U.S.) television, and censorship censorship, and television Valenti, Jack, and Congress Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) children, and media children television, and Congress violence violence, and mass media violence, and television violence, and motion picture violence, and Jack Valenti hearings primary sources, TV rating system (U. S.) system primary sources, Jack Valenti MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and television, new media effects social science research, and violence social science research, and TV violence American Academy of Pediatrics LB - 25890 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1995 SP - 949-51 ST - Media Violence T2 - Pediatrics TI - Media Violence VL - 95 ID - 1180 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article by members of the American Academy of Pediatrics argues that media violence does have harmful effects on children. It was reprinted in "Television Ratings System," Hearing before the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate, One Hundred Fifth Congress, First Session, Feb. 27, 1997 (Washington, D. C.: Government Printing Office, 1997), 349-50. AU - Shelov, Steven P., et al. (American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Communications) DA - Oct. 1995 IS - 4 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack social science research censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) archives primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA media effects media violence government censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and television television, and rating system (U. S.) classification, and television television, and classification motion pictures, and rating system (U.S.) television, and censorship censorship, and television Valenti, Jack, and Congress Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) children, and media children television, and Congress violence violence, and mass media violence, and television violence, and motion picture violence, and Jack Valenti hearings primary sources, TV rating system (U. S.) system primary sources, Jack Valenti MPAA, and public relations MPAA, and television, new media effects social science research, and violence social science research, and TV violence American Academy of Pediatrics LB - 25900 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1995 SP - 786-87 ST - Children, Adolescents, and Television T2 - Pediatrics TI - Children, Adolescents, and Television VL - 96 ID - 1181 ER - TY - JOUR AB - On September 19, 1919, President Woodrow Wilson became the first U.S. President to use a public address system when he spoke to 50,000 people at Balboa Stadium in San Diego. This speech was part of Wilson speaking campaign to gain support for the United States joining the League of Nations. This piece discusses the inventors of the loudspeaker, Edwin S. Pridham and Peter L. Jensen. “The voice amplification system that Wilson used was called the ‘Magnavox’ (‘Great Voice’) moving coil device, and one of the inventors was in the glass enclosure with the President to make sure that it functioned properly.” This device had been used prior to Wilson’s speech. As early as 1915, the inventors had used it in Napa, California, and at San Francisco City Hall on Christmas Eve. “The Navy became interested in the invention for message transmission from aircraft when Lt. Herbert Metcalf picked up signals from a ground wireless and amplified them from a speaker in his plane while flying over Washington, D.C. Vice President Marshall could be heard in Alexandria, Virginia, some eight miles away, and former President Taft and other notable had tested it at Grant Park in Chicago. The Magnavox now became front page news all over the country.” This piece notes that Wilson’s voice could be heard a mile from the stadium, although some people in the audience had a hard time understanding what he said. AU - Shepherd, Gerald A. DA - Spring 1986 IS - 2 KW - nationalism +radio wireless communication Wilson, Woodrow, administration presidents, and new media Wilson, Woodrow oratory public address systems +sound recording microphones public address systems Wilson, Woodrow, and microphones (1919) Wilson, Woodrow, and public address systems public address systems (1915, 1919) oratory, and public address systems public address systems loudspeakers +nationalism and communication nationalism, and public address systems LB - 5600 PY - 1986 SP - 92-101 ST - When the President Spoke at Balboa Stadium T2 - Journal of San Diego History TI - When the President Spoke at Balboa Stadium VL - 32 ID - 1945 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author obviously has a condescending view of uneducated people but thinks that the movies can lift them up to better things. Sherwood says that "Picturisation was the primitive man's method of passing on what he had to say. A motion picture comes nearer to being the universal language than any other medium of communication. It is the lineal descendant of the cave man's method of communicating with his fellow." (235) Sherwood then quotes St. Augustine who said that "Pictures are the books of the ignorant." (235) But he, argues, the "motion picture serves to break down horizontally and vertically barriers between people and classes. It links all together. Is it not of the utmost usefulness as a means of communication?" (235) The author draws parallels between the movies and the "yellow" journalism of the era. Sherwood commented on so-called "yellow" newspapers. "If the message itself were not frequently 'yellow,' that is to say, untrue to facts, one could find little objection to the publication of this kind of paper, for it has 235/236 helped those at the bottom to climb toward the world above by providing them with a medium of expression. One may add that the coming of the 'yellow' press has modified the makeup and the style of the contents of nearly every newspaper in the United States. It has not existed in vain." (235-36) The motion picture, Sherwood contended, "followed the track of the melodramatic paper. It has added the elements of beauty and realistic action to the message." (236) He goes on to say that the "motion picture has established itself as no other means of communication has done. Publicists, artists, story-tellers, now can cross the boundaries of their special clientele. The vividness with which the facts of life are shown and contrasted has captured the attention of the most primitive minded. The unlettered can read the message on the screen. The motion picture provides those seeking to stimulate cultural development with a channel of communication leading directly to those who most need it. If they have a national message to deliver, they can pass it on to those who heretofore lacked a common language. This fact has been recognised by actors, dramatists and authors. The motion picture, by democratic means, can lift the illiterate into the world of the literate. Indeed, a movement has just been set on foot to bring the library closer to the 'movie fan,' for a majority of the patrons of motion -picture theatres are little acquainted with books." (236) Even though motion pictures are often "untrue to life," they are "a tremendous lifting force whose power is not yet measured." (238) Sherwood notes the power of movies to reach a lower strata of society and the power of screen personalities. "In its capacity to pierce the great stratum of society which underlies all the other social strata, the political potentialities of the screen recently have been recognised. Political leaders appreciate its value. Presidential candidates, a year ago, did not hesitate to make use of the motion picture to bear a message to the people. Since he war began, the Government has found it a useful channel for promoting bond sales and enlistment campaigns, and for delivering the message of food conservation and the propaganda of democratic principles. The Government recognised that its traditional language was too technical to reach a large part of the voting population. The motion picture could illustrate it. It could present the activities of the Government in a manner which would make them better understood than by any other means of communication." (237) Sherwood argued that film was "joining the newspaper as a part of the machinery of democratic control. In a democracy made up of many races, such as the United States, the motion picture carries its message to more people than can any other single medium." (238) For all "their crudity," the movies "from the beginning have gone straight to the hearts of the humble classes, who have wept and smiled over the lurid plots and characters and been generous with their tears and laughter." (238) He concluded: "Influencing and binding all men, who shall say what levels of common thought and achievement shall be attained through the motion picture?" (239) AU - Sherwood, Herbert Francis DA - May 1918 IS - 3 KW - nationalism journalism fame fame class celebrity motion pictures, and Americanization actors acting ref, secondary motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel quotations quotations, and motion pictures democracy democracy, and motion pictures motion pictures, and democracy class, and motion pictures motion pictures, and class motion pictures, as cave paintings motion pictures, as book of ignorant critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and critics news and journalism motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures journalism, yellow newspapers, and yellow journalism audiences media effects audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects motion pictures, and primitive minded motion pictures, as common language motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars propaganda propaganda, and motion pictures motion pictures, and propaganda nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures Americanism motion pictures, and Americanism Americanism, and motion pictures patriotism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and patriotism patriotism metaphors ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Bookman motion pictures, and universal language LB - 38290 PY - 1918 SP - 235-39 ST - Democracy and the Movies T2 - The Bookman TI - Democracy and the Movies VL - 47 ID - 3928 ER - TY - JOUR AB - R. E. Sherwood says in this review that several instances of "bad taste" marred Cecil B. De Mille's movie The King of Kings (1927) and that the film did not impress him "so much as it should have. Sherwood criticized DeMille’s use of color for the Resurrection scene at the end, saying: “The Resurrection scene, at the finish, is represented in colors, with doves, artificial lilies, etc., so that it resembles nothing more impressive than a badly printed Easter card.” (26) Sherwood found other things to criticize: “As to the instances of bad taste: “At the start, there is the indication of a red-hot romance between Mary Magdalene and Judas Iscariot. This, luckily, is dropped the character of Judas is entirely misrepresented until the end. “In connection with the Crucifixion, there is the usual and apparently inevitable attempt to spare the sensibilities of the Jewish race by concentrating the guilt on a scheming group of pharisean villains. (In ‘Ben-Hur,’ it appeared that Christ was crucified by the Romans.)” (26). AU - Sherwood, R. E. DA - May 12, 1927 IS - 2323 KW - ref, secondary ref, Life ref, secular ref, illustrated motion pictures color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color DeMille, Cecil motion pictures, and King of Kings (1927) color, and King of Kings (1927) color, and technicolor motion pictures, and technicolor technicolor LB - 42660 PY - 1927 SP - 26 ST - The Silent Drama: 'The King of Kings' T2 - Life TI - The Silent Drama: 'The King of Kings' VL - 89 ID - 4365 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Shiers, George DA - May 1970 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins LB - 7300 PY - 1970 SP - 24-34 ST - Early Schemes for Television T2 - IEEE Spectrum TI - Early Schemes for Television VL - 6 ID - 2100 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Shiers, George DA - March 1977 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins LB - 7320 PY - 1977 SP - 129-37 ST - Historical Notes on Television Before 1900 T2 - Journal of the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers TI - Historical Notes on Television Before 1900 VL - 86 ID - 2102 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This somewhat technical article seeks to survey the history of the video recorder from its inception to the mid-1980s. “Video technology is increasingly viewed as a necessity both for recording and also as an information-transfer medium through prerecorded cassettes,” the author writes. “Starting with the appearance in 1956 of the quadruplex VTR, areas discussed include the two-head helican scanning system, the performance of today’s [1985] oxide tapes and heads, chrominance signal recording, operability, the cassette format, and the key requirement of long playing time. The continuing development of the video systems and the new techniques engendered are investigated.” This article appears in a journal published by the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers. AU - Shiraishi, Yuma DA - Dec. 1985 IS - 12 KW - entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) entertainment, home magnetic recording materials materials magnetic tape home, and new media home +duplicating technologies home entertainment VCRs VCRs, and history of home, and VCRs videotape VCRs, and quadruplex VTR (1956) sound recording magnetic recording, and VCRs VCRs, and magnetic recording sound recording, and VCRs LB - 2330 PY - 1985 SP - 1257-63 ST - History of Home Videotape Recorder Development T2 - SMPTE Journal TI - History of Home Videotape Recorder Development VL - 94 ID - 321 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Shlain is a vascular surgeon. He argues that males process print differently from females and that the arrival of the printing press led to male dominance. “According to my thesis, certain masculine characteristics began to characterize a society after a critical mass of its people had learned to read and write. What triggered this profound shift was literacy’s reliance on the analytic thought processes linked to the brain’s left hemisphere. Meanwhile, the feminine traits associated with the right hemisphere were systematically devalued. This imbalance revealed itself in many ways, including a cultural decline in goddess worship and the status of women. Another outcome was a new disregard for the visual image, whose appreciation is closely tied to the right hemisphere as well.” Elsewhere Shlain writes: “Literacy, especially alphabet literacy, caused a biological effect that led to a fundamental change in the way cultures understood their reality. Some neuropathways in the brain were reinforced while other withered. Goddess worship, feminine values, and women’s power had depended on the ubiquity of the image. God worship, masculine values, and the paradigm of patriarchy rose with the written word. This was -- and is -- literacy’s hidden cost.” Shlain’s work draws on Marshall McLuhan. “The content of what was read by growing numbers had less impact than the process of reading itself,” Shlain says. Shlain sees the movements to empower women closely tied to changes in communication that began in the nineteenth century. “While alphabet madness still exits, the world has been changing. A series of media revolutions began in the 19th century with the rise of photography and electric power, followed by motion pictures and television. Meanwhile, a number of dramatic intellectual developments in physics, psychology, linguistics, and other disciplines began to weaken left-brain assumptions that formed the substrate of Western thought. “All these developments served to elevate the importance of the image at the expense of written words. The return of the image also coincided with the birth of the women’s rights movement.” These changes in communication also have troubling implications. “Though print technology unbalanced one society after another, the irrational right hemisphere has its dark side too: Using radio, Adolf Hitler burrowed into the dark depths of the right hemisphere, resurrecting tribal myths and rituals. World War II was a firestorm for modern civilization, but the conflict also marked the beginning of yet another massive shift in global consciousness tied to television. “ Television was so startlingly original that many other adjustments in perception were necessary for the brain to make sense of it.... “Meanwhile, the personal computer has greatly increased the impact of the iconic revolution and continues to do so, shifting the collective cultural consciousness even more into the right hemisphere.” The line of reasoning in this article is developed further in Shlain’s book: The Alphabet Versus the Goddess: The Conflict Between Word and Image (New York: Viking, 1998). An earlier book Shlain is Art and Physics: Parallel Visions in Space, Time and Light (1991). AU - Shlain, Leonard DA - Sept.-Oct., 1998 IS - 89 KW - computers photography women, and new media print community democracy war women print culture v. nonprint culture nonprint culture print culture print media nonprint media iconography general studies alphabet cognition, male v. female print culture v. nonprint culture democracy and media literacy nonprint media communication, perspective of vascular surgeon McLuhan, Marshall reading nonprint media, and women women, and nonprint media +photography and visual communication +radio World War II +television icons computers computers, and icons critics computers print v. electronic +computers and the Internet radio, and Hitler LB - 1220 PY - 1998 SP - 70-75 ST - The Curse of Literacy T2 - Utne Reader TI - The Curse of Literacy ID - 1518 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses three aborted attempts to edit and publish Harold Innis' "History of Communication," an unpublished manuscript left when Innis died in 1952. Part of this "History" was published in Innis' Empire and Communication (1950), yet much was unpublished and in rough form. This article is followed by excerpts from Innis's "History" on "Printing in China in the 19th and 20th Century" (ibid., 132-39). AU - Shoesmith, Brian DA - 1993 IS - 1 KW - Asia non-USA Innis, Harold Innis, Harold, and History of Communication China China, and printing China, and Harold Innis Innis, Harold, and China LB - 3320 PY - 1993 SP - 121-31 ST - An Introduction to Innis' 'History of Communication' T2 - Continuum: The Australian Journal of Media & Culture TI - An Introduction to Innis' 'History of Communication' VL - 7 ID - 420 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, which uses British examples, discusses the great increase during the 1890s in the number of pictures used to illustrate the news. "The abundance of pictures illustrative of news that marks the termination of the century, as compared with their paucity at its commencement, will assuredly not be lost sight of," the author writes. "Pictorial journalism, indeed, has this in common with many inventions, that in its history ten years is a lifetime, and to write in detail the story of the last decade would be to make a book." (544) The author uses "illustrated journalism in its literal sense," he says, "as it applies to the actual presentation of current news." (550) Shorter says that when he entered the editorial department of the London News around 1890 there were only five weekly journals (excluding fashion papers) that were "devoted to the illustration of news." In 1899, there were 13 such illustrated weekly journals. (544) Shorter provides a list of those that existed in 1890 and those existing in 1899. (544) Shorter acknowledged that of these 13 journals in Great Britian in 1899, "only two, or at most three, are seriously devoted to illustrating news. The others ... are restricted in their presentation of news by the limitations of the camera." (548) He also argues here for "the potency of the artists as against the photographer." (550) There are several reasons to explain this increase in pictures: "Many factors have contributed to this result. Not only has there been a remarkable cheapening of all the materials of production, but there has been an increased appetite for the purchase of newspapers, and an increased faith on the part of the commercial classes in the newspaper as a medium for advertisements." (545) Shorter maintains that the use of photographs has brought about the demise of wood-engraving in journalism. "A circumstance that must rapidly break down the old barrier between the art and literary department of an illustrated newspaper is the death of wood-engraving in journalism. The great changes that have come over illustrated journalism are the arrival of the photograph, and the substitution of mechanical processes for wood-engraving. The place now taken by the photograph, some half-dozen journals being entirely run by it, I have already hinted at. An analysis of the contents of a few of the journals of more ambitions character gives interesting results." (551) Here he cites several publications in March 1899 in London, Rome, Stuttgart, Paris, Leipzig, and New York. In New York, Harper's Weekly and Leslie's Weekly used 35 photos and 8 drawings, and 44 photos and 3 drawing respectively. "The same week's issue of the Sketch contained eighty-five photographs and four drawings, three of these last being fashion-plates. The corresponding papers of twelve years ago had only two or three photographs apiece." The author goes on to say that "Even more remarkable has been the revolution as to wood-engraving. It seems only the other day that engraving reigned without a rival in the offices of the illustrated papers. To-day it is all but extinguished in the journalism of this country [England], although there is plenty of it in the illustrated papers of the Continent. The process engraving is ... of two kinds. Line-drawings are produced by line-process engraving, and wash drawings and photographs by what is called half-tone process.... "(551) "The first half-tone blocks, apart from books and magazines, appeared in the Lady's Pictorial. They were made by Meissenbach, who brought his process from Munich. Half-tone blocks were often called Meissenback blocks, even up to a quite 551/552 recent dates...." "How momentous these changes from wood to zinc and copper were, was not, perhaps, entirely recognized at the time, nor the extraoridinary shifting of a very skilled labor that they implied...." (552) Shorter then describes the process of wood-engraving and how machines changed and speeded up the process. "Now, instead of the twenty-four men taking twelve hours apiece, the whole block is forthcoming by mechanical process is eight hours or so, and at one-sixth the cost of the engraving. Small wonder that as far as illustrated journalism is concerned wood-engraving is all but dead -- never to revive...." (552) This article speculates that the public is unlikely to tire of news photographs because "they are able to convey with such intense reality many of the incidents of the hour." (553) The artist is still likely to be important in the future. However, the "photograph ... must have an even larger place in the journalism of the future than of the past, and the editor will prove himself most skilful who most perfectly realizes the limits of the artist and the limits of the photographer." (553) Shortly says that as far as the "journalism of the future" is concerned, the most important development are likely to involve daily newspapers. (553) The author is warns that the increasing use of topical photographs is likely to push the public to "a lower stage." (555) He quotes William Wordsworth who writing around 1846 commented on seeing the Illustrated London News: (quoting Wordsworth) "Discourse was deemed Man's noblest attribute, And written words the glory of his hand; Then followed Printing with enlarged command For thought -- dominion vast and absolute For spreading truth, and making love expand. Now prose and verse, sunk into disrepute, Must lacquey a dumb Art that best can suit The taste of this once-intellectual land. A backward movement surely have we here, From manhood, -- back to childhood; for the age -- Back towards caverned life's first rude career. Avaunt this vile abuse of pictured page! Must eyes be all-in-all, the tongue and ear Nothing? Heaven keep us from a lower stage!" AU - Shorter, Clement K. DA - May 27, 1899 IS - 2864 KW - wood engraving journalism illustrations words vs. images magazines, and photography images vs. words magazines photography ref, secondary news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines illustrations, and newspapers illustrations, and magazines magazines, and illustrations newspapers, and illustration non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and illustrated journalism non-USA, and illustrated journalism images vs. print advertising and public relations advertising, and newspapers newspapers, and advertising magazines, and advertising advertising, and magazines Great Britain, and advertising advertising, and Great Britain photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving quotations quotations, and William Wordsworth ref, secondary ref, secular ref, eclectic ref, literary (British) ref, Living Age advertising LB - 37090 PY - 1899 SP - 544-55 ST - Illustrated Journalism: Its Past and Its Future T2 - Living Age TI - Illustrated Journalism: Its Past and Its Future VL - 221 ID - 3809 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Abstract from Technology and Culture: "To date, scholars have treated the history of Soviet rocketry as a linear technological evolution interrupted only by the Great Purges of 1937-38 when the Soviet secret police arrested and shot several engineers at this institute. Lacking a substantial archival record, historians viewed the Purges as the singular break in rocketry work. Evidence available in the post-Soviet era suggests that bitter conflicts over the adoption of specific technologies plagued the institute before the Purges. These technical disagreements contributed to the terror at the institute. Although conflicts over technology are common in most research and development (R&D) milieux, Soviet R&D institutions in the 1930s were unable to resolve technical dissension in a way that facilitated radical innovation. These debates over technological choice affected the trajectory of Soviet rocketry more profoundly than the Purges. The new evidence provides for a broader understanding of how radical innovation evolves under great social, political, and economic strain." AU - Siddiqi, Asif A. DA - July 2003 IS - 3 KW - R & D Soviet Union non-USA aeronautics and space communication USSR USSR, and rocketry rocketry research and development LB - 33630 PY - 2003 SP - 470-501 ST - The Rockets' Red Glare: Technology, Conflict, and Terror in the Soviet Union T2 - Technology and Culture TI - The Rockets' Red Glare: Technology, Conflict, and Terror in the Soviet Union VL - 44 ID - 3002 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Sigel, Lisa Z. DA - Summer, 2000 IS - 4 KW - post office postal service eroticism Marked censorship ref, news postcards censorship censorship, and British postcards British postcards, and censorship censorship and ratings sexuality postcards, and sexuality sexuality, and British postcards nationalism and communication postcards, and nationalism nationalism, and postcards non-USA Great Britain non-USA, and Europe Great Britain, and postcards in U.S. religion religion, and postcards postcards, and religion non-USA non-USA, and British postcards values immorality values, and British postcards immorality, and British postcards British postcards, in U.S.. eroticism, and British postcards motion pictures values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and French postcards nudity nudity, and British postcards nudity, and postcard pornography postcards, and pornography pornography, and British postcards social control, and postcards photography photography, and British postcards ref, secondary nationalism social control LB - 40970 PY - 2000 SP - 859-85 ST - Filth in the Wrong People's Hands: Postcards and the Expansion of Pornography in Britain and the Atlantic World, 1880-1914 T2 - Journal of Social History TI - Filth in the Wrong People's Hands: Postcards and the Expansion of Pornography in Britain and the Atlantic World, 1880-1914 VL - 33 ID - 4196 ER - TY - JOUR AB - From the article's Abstract: "The writer discusses the erosion of Hollywood's Production Code, which contained a set of rigid guidelines and specific taboos designed to eliminate controversial content from motion pictures. Under the dynamic and often autocratic contol of Joseph I. Breen, the Production Code Administration (PCA) was successful in quieting public criticism, and this convinced the corporate leaders on the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America's [after 1945, Motion Picture Association of America] board that the code was vital to the industry's health. By early 1954, however, it seemed hopelessly dated. Many in Hollywood and beyond called for its liberalization and modernization, not challenging its general principles but its extensive list of taboos. The profitability of adult cinema was an important factor that made it difficult for the PCA to hold the line. The writer focuses on disputes over profanity in various films up to and including Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf in 1966, which brought about the abandonment of the Production Code and ushered in the era of ratings." AU - Simmons, Jerold DA - Summer, 1997 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? motion pictures, and profanity Breen, Joseph censorship and ratings values Breen, Joseph, and profanity Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and profanity PCA PCA, and Joseph Breen PCA, and Geoffrey Shurlock Production Code Administration (PCA) LB - 32240 PY - 1997 SP - 76-82 ST - The Damned Nuisance: The Production Code and the Profanity Amendment of 1954 T2 - Journal of Popular Film and Television TI - The Damned Nuisance: The Production Code and the Profanity Amendment of 1954 VL - 25 ID - 2894 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article provides a thorough discussion of Geoffrey Shurlock, who took over as head of the movie industry's Production Code Administration in 1954, and his role in the censoring of two movies, The Bad Seed, about a young girl who commits murder, and Tea and Sympathy, a film based on a Broadway play about latent homosexuality. The Production Code at this time forbade treatments of homosexuality in films and so a number of changes were made before the film was produced. This article notes that Shurlock was well read and interested in literature, in addition to having been with the PCA since its inception in 1934. He was, however, more passive in dealing with the studios than his predecessor, Joseph Breen. AU - Simmons, Jerold DA - Spring, 1994 KW - self-regulation censorship and ratings motion pictures television motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and foreign films motion pictures, and homosexuality Production Code, and homosexuality Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and homosexuality Breen, Joseph Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 36230 PY - 1994 SP - 2-10 ST - The Production Code Under New Management: Geoffrey Shurlock, The Bad Seed, and Tea and Sympathy T2 - Journal of Popular Film & Television TI - The Production Code Under New Management: Geoffrey Shurlock, The Bad Seed, and Tea and Sympathy VL - 22 ID - 3256 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses factors that go into the making of a modern newspapers. These include: 1) Bigger and faster presses -- for example, the quadruple press, the sextuple press, the octuple press. It notes that the New York World is now having built an octuple press, "equal in working capacity to eight ordinary single presses." The octuple press will "print simultaneously from four rolls of paper six feet wide" and the rolls will unwind "at a running speed of eight miles an hours. This means that from all four rolls the machine will consume thirty-two miles of paper six feet wide every hour." (937) This means "96,000 eight-page papers every hour" or about twenty-seven complete eight-page papers every second." A 24-page Sunday paper can be run at a "rate of 24,000 an hour." (938) 2) Typesetting machines were making the working of newspaper publishing easier and the author says that the first of these machines was used by the New York Tribune in 1886. (938) 3) Cheaper paper was important because the "most expensive thing about a newspaper is the white paper on which it is printed." (939) Making paper from wood was much less expensive than paper made from rags. "When papers retained for four to six cents apiece, the raw paper was manufactured from rags and cost from twelve to twenty cents a pound according too quality. Now paper is made out of wood and can be had as low as two cents a pound. Spruce is the favorite wood for newspapers. It is ground into a powder as fine as flour and then made into pulp, in which form the paper manufacturer usually buys it. A pound of paper that costs two cents will make from three to five complete newspapers of ten or twelve pages each, retailing for two or three cents apiece." (940) 4) The author says that "the art department of a newspaper is of recent origin" and that when it was first introduced, "every picture had to be carved on a wooden block by the hand of a wood engraver." Now, the "modern way is to let the photographic camera and a species of etching on zinc do the work of the wood engraver. A picture that it would take an engraver two hours to carve has been done by the photo-engraving process in three-quarters of an hour, and the cost is only about one-tenth as great." (940) The new process is much better for pictures with delicate, fine lines. 5) The modern newspaper is connected by the telegraph as well as "long and short distance telephones and pneumatic tubes." (940) 6) Electricity is important and "almost every newspaper manufactures its own electricity for lighting its offices, the power being generated by the same engines that run the presses." (940) 7) The author asserts that have a large and impressive office building "is the most permanent and solid of advertisements" for the modern paper. (941) A discussion follows of the building housing the New York Tribune, New York Times, and New York Herald. (941-42) 8) Another characteristic is the "modern tendency to have very large newspapers." (944) Many newspapers also have joined together to have one person write "department news for all." (945) 9) The head of the newspaper is important and the author discusses such leading publishers as Charles Dana, Horace Greeley, Oswald Ottendorfer, Edwin Godlin, Whitelaw Reid, Colonel W. L. Brown, Joseph Pulitzer, Charlees R. Miller, John R. McLean, R. C. Alexander, Foster Coates, and Lemeul Elly Quigg. (945-50) AU - Simonson, George M. DA - Sept. 1895 IS - 9 KW - journalism journalism magazines, and photography ref, secondary news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and photoengraving newspapers, and photo engraving presses newspapers, and presses presses, and newspapers journalism, and presses electricity electricity, and newspapers electricity, and journalism journalism, and electricity newspapers, and electricity materials paper materials, and paper journalism, and paper newspapers, and paper paper, and newspapers telegraph telegraph, and journalism telegraph, and newspapers newspapers, and telegraph journalism, and telegraph newspapers, and typesetting materials, and wood pulp (spruce) newspapers, and wood pulp (spruce) telephones telephones, and newspapers telephones, and journalism journalism, and telephones newspapers, and telephones lighting electricity, and lighting lighting, and newspapers newspapers, and lighting ref, secondary ref, secular ref, women ref, Peterson Magazine magazines photography LB - 38370 PY - 1895 SP - 937-50 ST - The Making of a Modern Newspaper T2 - Peterson Magazine TI - The Making of a Modern Newspaper VL - 5 ID - 3936 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This is an article on the tradition in mass communication research that considers the relation between communication technology and forms of society. That tradition is marked by a recurring dream that mass communication might overcome the finitude of local civil society and bring about nationwide community. The author calls that “dream communication hope.” --Doobo Shim Media effects research from the progressive era to the present (1996), has focused on the relationship between democracy, community, and communications. Researchers have been concerned about the connection between civil society at the local level and more large-scale forms of solidarity, and how communication relates to this AU - Simonson, Peter DA - 1996 IS - 4 KW - nationalism community democracy values geography +nationalism and communication Shim, Doobo communication, and community Dewey, John space (spatial) public sphere Cooley, Charles democracy and media values, and media LB - 10540 PY - 1996 SP - 324-42 ST - Dreams of Democratic Togetherness: Communication Hope from Cooley to Katz T2 - Critical Studies in Mass Communication TI - Dreams of Democratic Togetherness: Communication Hope from Cooley to Katz VL - 13 ID - 2418 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This informative article, grounded in the Edison Archives, examines efforts to create a market for "home cinema" from 1896 to around 1941. The first half of the article discusses early examples of home movie equipment during three periods: 1) 1896 to 1912; 2) 1912-1923; and 3) 1923-1941 and after. The article is illustrated with pictures of early home movie cameras and projectors as well as other related material. The latter half of the essay focuses on the Edison Home Projecting Kinetoscope which was put on the market in 1912 but which was eventually abandoned in 1915. Although many of the early attempts to create home cinema were failures, Singer provides several interesting excerpts from people who predicted that home cinema would become an integral part of daily entertainment. For example, in 1906, Siegmund Lubin speculated that "the time will come when the life moving picture machine will be a part and parcel of every up-to-date home." (Lubin quoted by Singer, p. 41) In 1908, another writer, Walt Makee, said that "'Today, a photograph may be transferred by telegraph; tomorrow, a motion picture may be taken at any distance without wires. Indeed the daily newspaper may be relegated to the rag-heap and reels and records take its place.'" (Makee quoted by Singer, p. 41) (my emphasis) Prior to 1912, though, buying a 35mm film was very expensive, costing several times more than the home movie projector. (42) Singer says that "Around 1912, a significant change occurred in the market: an array of companies, convinced of the promising future of home cinema, entered the field en masses." (42) In Europe, Pathe brought out the Patahescope, while in the U. S., Edison introduced thee Home Projecting Kinetoscope (or "Home P.K."). Both systems used non-flammable film and also a distribution system that allowed consumers to rent movies. Pathescope used 28mm film which had a unique perforation configuration. (44) The Edison Home P.K. used 22mm film. The Edison Home P. K. catalog eventually had about 160 film titles. (46) Singer lists these titles at the end of his article. (67-69) "The year 1923 ushered in radical changes in the home projection field," according to Singer. "It was in that year that Eastman Kodak finally entered the arena by simulta- 46/48 neously introducing a new film stock -- 16mm reversal safety film -- and a camera and projector using this film." (46, 48) Singer's discussion of the Edison Home P. K. (49-63) considers several aspects of Edison's plan to market this system -- to the home (49-51), the schools and other educational institutions (51-54), to churches and religious organizations (54-56), and to business (56). He then considers why this system was a commercial failure (56-63). Edison was adept as marketing the Home P. K. as an education device and this approached fit nicely with the enthusiasms of the Progressive era. Progressive reformers hoped that moving picture could become a powerful force for social improvement. The emphasis on progressive, or "new education," during this time sought to make the classroom experience more interesting. Edison claimed that movies would be far more effective in teaching geography, history, civics, and many other subjects than were the textbooks then commonly used. (53) Similarly, Edison stressed the potential for his home movies to promote religion and business. Edison's Home P. K. "was an unqualified commercial disaster," says Singer. (56) Among the reasons were the high cost of the projector and films which were "not supported with aggressive marketing." (57) But even if the Home P. K. had been priced along the lines of a mid-range phonograph, the "Home P. K.'s cost-per-viewing would still be several dozen times more expensive than the dime movie show." (58) Also, it is likely this venture failed in part because of the fact that cinema's "aura of impropriety." (58) Edison used phonograph jobbers and dealers to sell the Home P. K. but they were not trained properly to demonstrate it to potential costumers. Their ineptitude aside, the plain fact was "that the machine itself was plagued by technological imperfections." (59) AU - Singer, Ben DA - 1988 IS - 1 KW - illustrations home home history ref, secondary electricity motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures home and new media motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures cameras cameras, portable cameras, home movie cameras Edison, Thomas, and home movie cameras home entertainment modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Thomas Edison education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures home, and electricity electricity, and home electricity, and home entertainment non-USA, and home movies Great Britain non-USA Great Britain, and home movies motion pictures, and acetate film film, and acetate celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid home entertainment, and celluloid home entertainment, and acetate film home entertainment, and fire hazards home entertainment, the Bettini machine home entertainment, and pathescope Bettini machine, and home movies pathescope, and home movies materials materials, and acetate film materials, and celluloid film, and gauge Edison, Thomas, and home theater future and science fiction future, and home entertainment home entertainment, and future France France, and home theater France, and home entertainment home entertainment, and France home entertainment, and Ikonograph home entertainment, and Pathescope home entertainment, and Edison Home Projecting Kinetoscope illustrations illustrations, and early home entertainment home entertainment, and illustrations film, and 28mm 28mm film film, and 22mm 22mm film education, and home movies religion religion, and home movies quotations quotations, and home cinema quotations, and future of newspapers 16mm film film, and 16mm home entertainment, and 16mm film motion pictures, and travel sound recording sound recording, and phonograph phonograph, and home entertainment home entertainment, and phonograph reform, and motion pictures motion pictures, and reform 16mm film future phonograph reform LB - 40150 PY - 1988 SP - 37-69 ST - Early Home Cinema and the Edison Home Projecting Kinetoscope T2 - Film History TI - Early Home Cinema and the Edison Home Projecting Kinetoscope VL - 2 ID - 4113 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Skinner makes interesting comparisons between the live stage and the moving picture. He notes that "the invasion of the regular theaters by the films" has brought "unparalleled prosperity" to theater owners. (388) There were important differences between stage and film. "The spoken drama is not a picture play; nor the picture play a spoken drama. The film can never oust the dramatist's art; nor can the legitimate drama ever annihilate the movie. And, above all, the film play can never take the place of the acted play. Be it made ever so perfect, it is, in its very last word, the operation of a remarkable machine. Its story is told by pictures and titles; its characters are shadows. It might be called a kind of vivid and sublimated illustrated story book, wherein the obligation of a reader is imposed upon the spectator. [my emphasis] To follow and understand it, he must read the titles and explanations. Often he must also read the contents of documents such as wills, deeds, contracts, telegrams, letters, newspaper articles, etc., projected on the screen for a clear understanding of the continuity of the tale. It is well nigh impossible to present upon the screen a scene of argument and mental conflict between two characters. The only thing a director may do is to place them face to face and then 'cut' to the titles which the audience must read; and these characters should not talk much, either, for lip movement is bad for the effect. It is in the art of suggestion that the director finds his best medium -- an attitude, a look, a motion, a bit of pantomime. Sometimes a glove, a gun, an empty chair will tell a story better than action." (389) Skinner talks about creating special effects in the movies -- the care that goes into creating sets. A street in Florence has an illusion so complete that it is difficult to realize that those rutted cobblestones were placed there only yesterday by studio laborers; and when one walks through 'Kismet's' Bazaar in Baghdad, it is as if a magic carpet had suddenly swept one from California to Arabia." (390) [my bold] Yet the movie is essentially a photograph and the human voice and presence are absent. "And yet -- when author, playwright, artist, actor and camera man have done their all, they have not produced a play, but a photograph. It may be presented in a thousand places simultaneously, and the star it has featured will be there no more than Caruso will be present in a phonograph. The human presence, the human voice, the human touch, the human sympathy, are lacking. I mention this as a fact, not failing, at the same time, to rejoice that thousands of people who are denied the privilege of both seeing and hearing Ethel Barrymore in the spoken drama, and both seeing and hearing Caruso in opera, have pleasurable solace in the counterfeits of cinema and phonograph.... So long as the human relation is preserved between actor and audience, so long will the acted drama retain its supremacy in any community." (391) One may enjoy both silent and spoken drama but in the end, "'Words are the only things that live.'" (392) AD - 387-92 AU - Skinner, Otis DA - Sept. 1920 IS - 778 KW - theater stage ref, secondary motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures actors acting motion pictures, and special effects quotations quotations, movie actors as shadows quotations, and sublimated illustrated storybook quotations, and magic carpet motion pictures, as magic carpet metaphors, and magic carpet motion pictures, and counterfeit sound recording phonograph, and counterfeit sound recording, and phonograph motion pictures, and Baghdad ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, North American Review metaphors phonograph LB - 38870 PY - 1920 SP - 387- ST - An Actor's View of the Movie 'Menace' T2 - North American Review TI - An Actor's View of the Movie 'Menace' VL - 212 ID - 3986 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Slade, Joseph W. DA - March 2006 IS - 1 KW - Marked ref, secondary pornography LB - 41090 PY - 2006 SP - 27-52 ST - Eroticism and Technological Regression: The Stag Film T2 - History and Technology TI - Eroticism and Technological Regression: The Stag Film VL - 22 ID - 4208 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article on cellulose has a section (p. 479) discussing how collodion has "made modern photography possible" as well as moving pictures. The subtitle of this article reads: "A Popular Explanation of Recent Progress in Chemical Industries: Cellulose and What Is Made of It." AU - Slosson, Edwin E. DA - Dec. 8, 1917 IS - 3601 KW - photography ref, mag materials celluloid cellulose paper motion pictures motion pictures, and collodion photography and visual communication collodion photography, and collodion cameras ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent LB - 310 PY - 1917 SP - 476-82 ST - Creative Chemistry T2 - The Independent TI - Creative Chemistry VL - 92 ID - 3327 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is the substance of an address that The Independent's literary editor, Edwin E. Slosson, delivered to the School of Journalism at Columbia University on April 14, 1913. It is an appeal for journalism students to pay more attention to popular science and science writing. Toward the end of the address, Slosson also comments on the role that the motion picture is playing in journalism (citing Italy as an example). The camera contributed to the development of “an entirely new form of journalism,” Slosson said, one “which discards the printing press and employs the motion picture.”(917) For about the same price as a daily newspaper, one could enter a theater and “really see the thing instead of merely reading what has been written about it by some unknown person who may perhaps have 917/918 seen it. One may be a witness of the events that occurred in his own city during the day and in neighboring countries a few days before…. It is a visual instead of verbal journalism,” Slosson said. (917-18) AU - Slosson, Edwin E. DA - April 24, 1913 IS - 3360 KW - history duplicating technologies motion pictures, and motion metaphors actors acting actors acting motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and motion motion pictures, and actors actors, and motion pictures critics motion pictures, and critics motion pictures, and printing press quotations quotations, and motion pictures duplicating technologies, and motion pictures motion pictures, and duplicating technologies motion pictures, and pulpit ref, secondary ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent Bergson, Henri motion pictures, and movement Slosson, Edwin, and journalism news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, as new journalism non-USA Italy Italy, and motion pictures Italy, and journalism motion pictures, and Italy journalism, and Italy journalism, and science journalism LB - 42130 PY - 1913 SP - 913-18 ST - Science and Journalism: The Opportunity and the Need for Writers of Popular Science T2 - The Independent TI - Science and Journalism: The Opportunity and the Need for Writers of Popular Science VL - 74 ID - 4312 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This thoroughly researched articled, grounded in primary sources, examines the role that satellite communication played during the Cold War from the late 1950s into the 1960s. This detailed work is not only high informative, but offers leads for further research. Satellites aided photo reconnaissance and improved global communication. By 1962, the Telstar satellite, for example, had made transatlantic television broadcasts. AU - Slotten, Hugh R. DA - 2002 IS - 2 KW - nationalism Kennedy, John F. Johnson, Lyndon imperialism Eisenhower, Dwight D. presidents, and new media Kennedy administration Johnson administration Eisenhower administration satellites +aeronautics and space communication +television television, and satellites satellites, and television satellites, and Cold War Eisenhower, Dwight, and satellites Kennedy, John F., and satellites Johnson, Lyndon, and satellites cultural imperialism +nationalism and communication nationalism, and satellites satellites, and foreign policy non-USA LB - 26540 PY - 2002 SP - 315-350 ST - Satellite Communications, Globalization, and the Cold War T2 - Technology and Culture TI - Satellite Communications, Globalization, and the Cold War VL - 43 ID - 539 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author writes that this article is divided into two parts: "the first is a brief history of electronic analogue computer development in ... Britain and the USA. Here we can see that military priorities, projects and funding are of central importance and that as a result, post-Second World War analogue computers were in many respects as much military technology as the guided weapons and ICMB's that they helped to develop. Analogue computers were used throughout the hierarchy of engineering design. By following the controversy which arose between advocates of analogue and digital computing it is possible to identify characteristics of engineering practices which differentiate engineering and scientific culture in the post-war period. Part two is a discussion of the analogue versus digital computer controversy and is concerned with the relations between computation, deign methods and engineering culture. This article appears in a special issue of History and Technology devoted to "Informati on Technologies and Socio-Technical Systems." Other authors include Daniel R. Headrick, Alan Q. Morton, William Aspray, and Hans Dieter Hellige. AU - Small, James S. DA - 1994 IS - 1 KW - R & D computers nationalism research and development research and development war materials materials computers Cold War war non-USA analog media +computers and the Internet computers, analog analog computers Great Britain Great Britain, and computers Great Britain, and analog computers +military communication +nationalism and communication nationalism, and analog computers military, and analog computers analog v. digital computers, digital military, and digital computers Cold War, and computers research and development, and government support research and development, and computers computers, and engineering engineering, and computers engineering LB - 3110 N1 - See filed under History and Technology (1994). PY - 1994 SP - 33-48 ST - Engineering, Technology and Design: The Post-Second World War Development of Electronic Analogue Computers T2 - History and Technology TI - Engineering, Technology and Design: The Post-Second World War Development of Electronic Analogue Computers VL - 11 ID - 399 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article observes that violence in motion pictures less likely to get severe ratings (e.g., NC-17) than profane language. AU - Smilgis, Martha AU - Thigpen, David E. DA - Aug. 29, 1994 KW - Natural Born Killers (1994) Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Natural Born Killers motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures nudity, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising language motion pictures, and language nudity CARA, and nudity motion pictures, and nudity Stone, Oliver public relations, and Oliver Stone Stone, Oliver, and public relations advertising, and Natural Born Killers Natural Born Killers, and advertising LB - 25510 PY - 1994 SP - 68 ST - Murder Gets an R; Bad Language Gets NC-17 T2 - Time TI - Murder Gets an R; Bad Language Gets NC-17 VL - 144 ID - 1147 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece is part of an issue that examined the nature of digital cinema. Here the author discusses digital created characters. Will these characters one day replace humans in motion pictures? AU - Smith, Alvy Ray DA - Nov. 2000 IS - 5 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography projection motion pictures home entertainment Hollywood materials materials digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema digitization computers 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movie +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality Hollywood, and digital movies digital movies, and Hollywood media convergence Hollywood, and media convergence media convergence, and digitial movies LB - 26220 PY - 2000 SP - 72-78 ST - Digital Humans Wait in the Wings: Characters, Scenes and Entire Movies Have Been Crafted Digitally.... T2 - Scientific American TI - Digital Humans Wait in the Wings: Characters, Scenes and Entire Movies Have Been Crafted Digitally.... VL - 283 ID - 1213 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Smith, Geddes DA - June 28, 1915 IS - 3473 KW - art Marked advertising and public relations color color, and advertising advertising, and color art, and advertising advertising, and art modernity modernity, and advertising advertising, and modernity new way of seeing new way of seeing, and advertising advertising, and new way of seeing billboards posters advertising, and posters posters, and advertising advertising, and electric signs billboards, and advertising color, and billboards ref, secondary ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent quotations, and color color, and music electricity electricity, and electric signs advertising, and architecture color, and electricity electricity, and color lighting electricity, and lighting motion pictures motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and movies expositions, Panama-Pacific (1915) advertising expositions quotations theaters LB - 41360 PY - 1915 SP - 534-38 ST - A Show Window of Civilization T2 - The Independent TI - A Show Window of Civilization VL - 82 ID - 4235 ER - TY - JOUR AB - John Talbot Smith attempts to distinguish between the "stage" and "drama," and he presents a summary of values that, according to Catholics, go into the making of good drama. He notes that "prejudice against the stage is as active as it is inconsistent and ill-informed. Whether one treats the subject as a popular amusement, somewhat regulated by law, and very much regulated by public opinion; or discusses it as a branch of the literary art; or approaches it from the purely commercial and utilitarian side: there is sure to be misunderstanding unless the writer's tone be one of disparagement." (339) Smith goes on to say that "on the whole it may safely be said that distrust of the stage is a commoner sentiment with our natural and official heads than any other. They respect the ban which many traditions in as many countries long ago put upon the stage and the player." (339) Interestingly, although Church officials denounce the theater, "no fact stands out more clearly in our day than the popularity of the stage and the player from every point of view. With the multitude the player is now a person of distinction, and 339/340 even the children gather about the stage-door after a matinee to see their hero in the familiar light of day." (339-40) Running "side by side with this popular patronage of the stage runs the official distrust and denunciation." (340) Indeed, "audiences are usually indifferent to the moral worth of their actors." (340) Smith says that "wholesale and sweeping denunciation does not exactly fit the circumstances." (341) A distinction between the "stage" and "drama" is needed. "The two have been confused, and included in the same denunciation. The stage entertainment outside the drama is a commercial affair like the circus, not a matter of literature and art; a mixture of the good and the bad like the saloon, the popular picnic-ground, or the seaside resort." (341) In serious drama, however, "the percentage of cleanness is large enough to demand a finer discrimination in the common denunciation of the stage." (342) Like it or not, "both stage and novel are social and literary facts that have been from the beginning and will be to the end." (339) Smith discusses (343-49) five values essential to good drama and Christian doctrine. They are: "the existence and providence of God, the truth and beauty of religion in general, the immortality of the soul, the existence and malice of sin and the final triumph of justice; together with their corollaries, the eternal life, judgment, heaven, hell, the need of pardon for sin, and of repentance. No play can secure presentation under ordinary circumstances, on the English-speaking stage, which does not tacitly recognize these doctrines. No playwright can afford to do worse than ignore them." (347) Moreover, there are also two additional conventions that are important to good drama. First, "the popular play demands that the hero and the heroine be exact observers of the Ten Commandments. This rule is absolute for the heroine, admitting only of exceptions that prove its universality; it is not so absolute for the hero, whose past many not have been spotless." (347) Second, there must be a "lofty recognition for the ideal in life." (347) Smith takes a swipe at the press: "When we reflect how completely modern error has taken possession of the press, it is impossible to withhold credit from the drama for its fidelity to its own conventions." (349) The author concludes by saying that "one fact with regard to the drama and the stage must be recognized and cheerfully accepted: they are institutions which have come to stay, and which will always be a great factor in public amusement. The over-delicate custom of past times, to run away from such a difficulty as an unclean drama, or to shut it out of society altogether, excommunicate actors and playwrights, and put the play and the players on a level with the bagnio and its promoters, is not suited to our methods and conditions. The play is universal.... A force so powerful with the people, a popular amusement so charming in itself, and so capable of great things, a fact so deeply rooted in the nature and the history of man, is not to be left entirely to the devil...." (353) AU - Smith, John Talbot DA - April, 1903 IS - 110 KW - theater stage entertainment entertainment, and journalism children anti-theatrical prejudice censorship critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater ref, secondary theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures actors, and status of actors, and bias against theater, and bias against anti-theatrical bias values morality values, and theater religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church censorship, and theater theater, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and theater theater, and censorship Catholics, and censorship censorship, and Catholics quotations quotations, and bias against theater children and media children, and theater theater, and children audiences audiences, and theater theater, and audiences quotations, and status of actors censorship, and commercial entertainment quotations, and values behind censorships critics critics, and theater theater, and critics modernity news and journalism news, and entertainment news, and theater journalism, and entertainment journalism, and theater critics, and news critics, and journalism modernity, and the press censorship, and modernity modernity, and censorship ref, religious ref, Catholic ref, American Catholic Quarterly Review actors acting journalism motion pictures news theater LB - 38650 PY - 1903 SP - 339-54 ST - The Popular Play T2 - American Catholic Quarterly Review TI - The Popular Play VL - 28 ID - 3964 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In June, 1968, Maine Senator Margaret Chase Smith spearheaded a brief Senate hearing on motion picture classification. Smith believed that movies, television program, and their advertising had become too violent and sexual for children. She did not favor censorship but did want some kind of rating system to give parents warning. In this article, she accused movies of selling “sick cruelty” to children, and providing them with a diet of “sex, violence and sadism.” AU - Smith, Margaret Chase DA - Dec., 1967 KW - classification children, and media self-regulation CARA Smith, Margaret Chase censorship and ratings motion pictures children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and classification Smith, Margaret Chase, and motion pictures classification, and Margaret Chase Smith children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children Smith, Margaret Chase, and children children, and motion pictures critics LB - 17010 PY - 1967 SP - 139-42 ST - 'Sick Movies' -- A Menace to Children T2 - Reader's Digest TI - 'Sick Movies' -- A Menace to Children ID - 643 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This brief piece gives some insight into the application of electric lighting to photography in 1894. The author recommends that photographers “first get four cells of storage battery (the larger the better), then get eight, or better twelve, cells of primary battery -- Daniels of Gravity, for instance.” Instructions follows on how to set up this apparatus. AU - Smyth, C. A. DA - 1893 KW - photography materials +photography and visual communication +electricity photography, and electricity batteries materials LB - 12250 PY - 1893 SP - 127-28 ST - Electric Light for the Dark-Room T2 - American Annual of Photography and Photographic Times Almanac for 1894 TI - Electric Light for the Dark-Room ID - 2572 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article deals with the growth in art houses, or theaters devoted to foreign films and other out-of-the mainstream movie entertainment. During the late 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s, there was a large increase in the number of foreign films that played in the United States. The authors attempt to characterize the people who make of the audiences for these movies. AU - Smythe, Dallas W. AU - Lusk, Parker B. AU - Lewis, Charles A. DA - 1953-1954 KW - audiences self-regulation motion pictures censorship and ratings foreign films sexuality motion pictures, and foreign films foreign films, and sexuality Hollywood, and art theaters Production Code, and art theaters censorship, breakdown of theaters theaters, and foreign films art houses foreign films, and art houses audiences audiences, and foreign films Hollywood Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) censorship LB - 31540 PY - 1953 SP - 28-50 ST - Portrait of an Art-Theater Audience T2 - Quarterly of Film, Radio and Television TI - Portrait of an Art-Theater Audience VL - 8 ID - 2845 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author reveals the interrelation among tourism development, Kodak’s promotion of snapshot photography and the construction of American identity. Through the analysis of Kodak’s advertisement aiming at middle-class tourists, Snow presents not merely how a Kodak camera becomes a part of tourists’ identity. In the development of American businesses and consumer society, travel photography which reflects the growth of social and economic power of the U.S. also plays a significant role in the construction of class identity and national identity. --Huai-Hsuan Chen AU - Snow, Rachel DA - 2008 IS - 1 KW - geography Chen, Huai-Hsuan Kodak Kodak, and tourism tourism, and Kodak photography, and Kodak photography, and geography geography, and photography photography, and tourism tourism, and photography photography, and travel travel, and photography photography, and ethnography nationalism and communication photography, and nationalism nationalism, and photography photography and visual communication nationalism photography tourism transportation LB - 33150 PY - 2008 SP - 7-19 ST - Tourism and American Identity: Kodak's Conspicuous Consumers Abroad T2 - Journal of American Culture TI - Tourism and American Identity: Kodak's Conspicuous Consumers Abroad VL - 31 ID - 70 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Spellerberg sketches "the major sources of an influential theory of the ideology of film technology" set out by the French Marxist philosopher Louis Althusser. He discusses the problems with this theory and suggest an alternant "model to determine the ideological function of CinemaScope." AU - Spellerberg, James DA - Summer 1985 IS - 21 KW - widescreen motion pictures ideology +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and widescreen widescreen, and motion pictures CinemaScope ideology, and motion pictures motion pictures, and ideology LB - 2600 N1 - See filed under Velvet Light Trap. PY - 1985 SP - 26-34 ST - CinemaScope and Ideology T2 - Velvet Light Trap TI - CinemaScope and Ideology ID - 348 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article deals with efforts to produce motion pictures that reflect Christian themes. AU - Spencer, Scott DA - Sept. 10, 2001 KW - values Christianity Christianity values motion pictures religion values Hollywood values religion +motion pictures and popular culture values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values morality morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality Christianity, and Hollywood Hollywood, and Christians Christians, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christians LB - 25670 PY - 2001 SP - 105-09 ST - Lights! Camera! Rapture!: The Christian Thriller Heads for the Cineplex T2 - New Yorker TI - Lights! Camera! Rapture!: The Christian Thriller Heads for the Cineplex ID - 1161 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Spognardi and Bro warn against the use of e-mail for employee communications and argue that e-mail provides an easy method of union organizing unless controlled by employers. “Companies have recognized that e-mail and the Internet are remarkably efficient and effective means of disseminating information. Perhaps no one realizes this better than employees, who are using the Internet and e-mail as finely-honed union organizing tools, as a way to effectively express grievances, and as a means of putting key information at the fingertips of ordinary workers.” The authors note that e-mail has accelerated the pace of organizing, making it possible that “union organizing that once took years of tedious and painstaking cultivation can now be successfully accomplished in substantially less time.” They cite as example the unionization of Borders bookstore employees in New York City using e-mail to organize. In addition, a “casual surf of the World Wide Web offers a staggering array of union and labor-related Web sites, where employees can gather invaluable information and establish key contacts with professional organizers.” Spognardi and Bro briefly describe a 1997 National Labor Relations Board decision involving protected employee communications. They argue that employers should prohibit all e-mail communications that are not related to work. “Absent adequate controls, one disgruntled employee who either is already a union members or who seeks to organize a union or at least encourage collective action can quickly gain hundreds of supporters by sending a single message over the company e-mail system.” --Phil Glende AU - Spognardi, Mark A. and Ruth Hill Bro DA - Spring 1998 IS - 4 KW - surveillance email law, and privacy law privacy labor Glende, Phil labor labor, and new media cyberspace labor, and cyberspace electronic mail labor, and electronic mail privacy, and electronic mail labor, and privacy office, and privacy office, and electronic mail office electronic media LB - 730 N1 - See also: office PY - 1998 SP - 141-51 ST - Organizaing Through Cyberspace: Electronic Communication and the National Labor Relations Act T2 - Employee Relations Law Journal TI - Organizaing Through Cyberspace: Electronic Communication and the National Labor Relations Act VL - 23 ID - 161 ER - TY - JOUR AB - After examining the magic bullet theory of propaganda, Sproule writes: "With American scholars now taking a fresh look at issues raised by the propaganda critics, it may be time to revive the term 'propaganda' as a paradigmatic center for American media criticism. Renewed attention to progressive assumptions about democracy will aid in the shift from narrow questions of whether media have negative 'effects' and help raise the wider issue of whether, in principle, mass media make acceptable contributions to democratic life." AU - Sproule, J. Michael DA - Sept. 1989 IS - 3 KW - magic journalism community democracy news and journalism propaganda media propaganda democracy and media democracy, and propaganda magic bullet theory Dewey, John Lasswell, Harold critics media effects audiences propaganda, and study of propaganda, and news news, and propaganda news LB - 10590 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1989 SP - 225-42 ST - Progressive Propaganda Critics and the Magic Bullet Myth T2 - Critical Studies in Mass Communication TI - Progressive Propaganda Critics and the Magic Bullet Myth VL - 6 ID - 2422 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Starr summarizes a survey of labor union educational practices in 1951. Forty-four labor unions or bodies, seven independent labor education organizations and 20 universities responded to the survey, which was conducted by the American Labor Education Service. In general, the survey found a wide range of educational activities, from weekend institutes and conferences to the production of films and filmstrips for general audience distribution. Starr found “rather extensive use of the film and filmstrip and, to a lesser extent, the radio” for worker education. Starr notes that the Workers Education Bureau of the AFL, the CIO’s Research and Education Department, the UAW, TWUA, ACWA, and ILGWU all maintained film libraries available to local unions and others. He notes that the U.S. State Department obtained 80 copies of With These Hands, a full-length film produced by the garment workers’ union, and translated it into at least four languages to be shown in more than a dozen countries. In addition, “our survey noted songbooks and record albums used by labor unions and some scattered use of labor plays, musical revues, and skits. The article includes a detailed summary of the response of each survey participant, including specific information on publications, film and filmstrip production and showings, and broadcast activities. -- Phil Glende AU - Starr, Mark DA - Fall 1951 IS - 4 KW - motion pictures labor office Glende, Phil +motion pictures and popular culture labor, and motion pictures labor, and film +radio labor and radio radio, and labor LB - 850 N1 - See also: office PY - 1951 SP - 55-80 ST - Trade Union Education Survey T2 - Labor and Nation TI - Trade Union Education Survey VL - 7 ID - 173 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by claiming that "photography still holds a middle ground between art and applied chemistry," and that "it still is second to the individual work of the artist with brush and pencil." Stearns says that "probably nothing worse can be said of a painting or drawing than that 'it look just like a photography.'" (257) The author notes that photography will not be used for official pictures of the coronation of King Edward VII in England. "Nowhere has photography made a more rapid advance" that in the United States, the author observes. This "is largely due to the enthusiasm of the amateur...." (258) Stearns does acknowledge that "it often has been pointed out that, next to printing, photography has done more for the intellectual advancement of mankind than any other invention." (261) He draws a contrast between the artist who renders a picture of beautiful woman and who interprets his subject and the photographer who merely takes a picture of her exact likeness. Often family and friends prefer the latter. "They do not want a fact artistically interpreted; they want it in facsimile." (266) This article is illustrated with many pictures of paintings of women. AU - Stearns, Richard DA - Jan. 1902 IS - 3 KW - wood engraving art ref, secondary photography and visual communication women women, and photography photography, and women photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and magazines magazines, and half tones wood engraving, and magazines magazines, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and magazines magazines, and photo engraving photography, and art art, and photography history and new media history, and photography photography, and history quotations quotations, and photography photography, and amateurs amateurs, and photography women women, and photography photography, and women sexuality sexuality, and photography photography, and sexuality photography, and printing press ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, reform ref, Cosmopolitan history magazines photography LB - 37930 PY - 1902 SP - 257-66 ST - Picture Photography T2 - Cosmopolitan TI - Picture Photography VL - 32 ID - 3892 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author here speculates on the causes of the decline of drama and the theater, and he blames theater managers and young theater "stars." Theater managers sell the American public short by giving them performances that they believe will make the most money. The young stars are to blame because while they have name recognition and people come to see them, they have little experience or understanding of great drama and are thus incapable of giving insightful performances. Of theater managers and acting "stars," and of the role of advertising and the press, Stearns writes: "It has been very well said that if you got together seven theatrical 'stars' of the present day, the only constellation they would resemble would be the Little Dipper. In my opinion, this overdoing of the star is largely responsible for the present decadence of the American drama. Here again the manager is showing himself limited in his views of dramatic requirements by the box-office. He has found that the public likes a name. Like the newsboys who cannot read the headlines, but can make out the word 'extra,' so he thinks the public may not be able to make out a play but can recognize a name. Therefore the newspapers are constantly issuing extras and the theatrical managers constantly getting out stars. In former years the appearance of a star was an event of great importance. Now we have half a dozen every year. The result of this constant making of new stars is that an actor becomes a star long before he has had the requisite experience, has gained the necessary elasticity, or has risen to those heights in his art which in former days actors were obliged to attain before the could become stars. He is immature and utterly unable too tackle the finer and larger products of dramatic art. Consequently these stars have a lot of plays written for them, much as a tailor would make a suit of clothes. The playwright sizes up his man or woman, constructs a play to suit the little idiosyncrasies of the person in question. There is a lot of advertising and puffing, a great flourish of trumpets, and what the newspapers in their clumsy way are so fond of calling the 'stellar debut' is accomplished. But take the star and put him in a really fine play and he would be hopelessly lost." (68) The modern actors is too inclined to emphasize the sensational. "It seemed as if the actors themselves were doubtful of their ability to carry through the enterprise as a purely dramatic one, and therefore appealed to the pubic on the spectacular side." (69) Theater managers "appear to proceed upon the theory that clothes make the man and scenery the play. Perhaps they do with our present-day 'stars.'" (70) Stearns traces some of the moral decadence of the theater to French plays. "One manager has for several years past been bringing out a string of salacious French farces, always turning somehow or other upon the supposed Gallic disregard of the Seventh Commandment. Marital infidelity, treated in a wholly flippant and supposedly humorous way, has been the constant, ever-recurring theme of these farces. The manager in question engaged a special theater for their production and a special company of clever comedians. Of all the long list of plays of this kind which he has produced, only one has made a hit...." (66) According to the author, Americans deserve better entertainment. "The American theatrical public is neither vicious nor depraved. This country is altogether too optimistic, too well aware of its own greatness and consequently altogether too overflowing with vitality, for any exhibition of decadent taste." (67) AU - Stearns, Richard DA - Nov. 1901 IS - 1 KW - theater status of actors stars (actors) entertainment decadence celebrity anti-theatrical prejudice critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater ref, secondary religion religion, and theater theater, and religion values values, and acting censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship actors acting actors, and status of theater, and bias against actors, and bias against entertainment, and immorality morality, and theater anti-theatrical bias quotations quotations, and unintellectual theater quotations, and theater stars newspapers Sunday newspapers, and theater advertising and public relations advertising, and values advertising, and theater advertising, and morality theater, and advertising modernity, and theater modernity theater, and modernity theaters, and stars stars, and theater celebrity culture celebrity culture, and theater theaters, and celebrity culture audiences audiences, and theater theater, and audiences personality personality, and theater stars words vs. images images vs. words modernity, and French plays values, and French plays morality, and French plays French plays, and modernity French plays, and American theater stars, and theater decadence decadence, and American theater decadence, and theater stars news and journalism stars, and newspapers advertising, and theaters stars newspapers, and theater stars censorship ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, reform ref, Cosmopolitan theater, and French plays advertising morality news theaters LB - 38790 PY - 1901 SP - 65-74 ST - The Drama's Tendency toward the Unintellectual T2 - Cosmopolitan TI - The Drama's Tendency toward the Unintellectual VL - 32 ID - 3978 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author argues that “It was not Pulitzer versus Hearst that ushered in a new era in American journalism, but rather Joseph Pulitzer versus Charles A. Dana, the editor of the New York Sun. At stake in this circulation war was the very definition of the reading public. Pulitzer’s victory over Dana marked the creation of a consumer society; it signified the erosion of traditional American values such as hard work, thrift and self sacrifice, an the emergence of a value system that increasingly celebrated consumption, leisure, and self-indulgence.” AU - Steele, Janet E. DA - Autumn 1991 KW - photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations journalism community democracy news and journalism values newspapers news news +books, periodicals, newspapers +photography and visual communication Pulitzer, Joseph Dana, Charles A. Hearst, William Randolph news, and sensationalism newspapers, and visual communication advertising, and newspapers consumerism, and newspapers values, and newspapers advertising consumerism democracy, and newspapers newspapers, and democracy LB - 10600 PY - 1991 SP - 592-600 ST - The 19th Century World versus the Sun T2 - Journalism Quarterly TI - The 19th Century World versus the Sun VL - 67 ID - 2423 ER - TY - JOUR AB - "Strategic Computing, a 10-year initiative to build faster and more intelligent systems, is ambitious, flawed by overscheduling perhaps and problems of definition, but basically sound." (from Abstract for this article) DARPA's strategic computing program sought to exploit recent advances in computer science, microprocessing, and AI. The article reports that "silicon technology, which is mature and accessible, will be DARPA's main choice for experiments with new chip designs. However, the plan relies on commercial developments and includes no major plans for developing silicon technology. The major provisions are for research in three areas -- gallium arsenide, memory technology, and high-performance technology." (695) The main military application will be for conventionl weaponry and there are "no projects involving nuclear weapons." (697) The article also notes that strategic computing has come under criticism from Computer Professional for Social Responsibility (CPSR). AU - Stefik, Mark DA - July 1985 IS - 7 KW - technology R & D computers materials, and silicon Reagan administration nationalism Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) strategic computing initiative research and development artificial intelligence and biotechnology computers and the Internet artificial intelligence, and R&D Reagan administration, and artificial intelligence presidents and new media critics technology, and critics strategic computing initiative, and critics DARPA microprocessing materials strategic computing initiative, and materials silicon materials, and silicon materials, and gallium arsenide gallium arsenide military communication nationalism and communication Japan supercomputers computers, fifth generation Japan, and supercomputers military communication non-USA microprocessing technology and society LB - 33860 PY - 1985 SP - 690-704 ST - Strategic computing at DARPA: overview and assessment T2 - Communication of the ACM [Association for Computing Machinery] TI - Strategic computing at DARPA: overview and assessment VL - 28 ID - 3024 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author asserts that "this article assesses the entire 50-year scholarly effort, not individual works." He analyzes "the main issues, interpretations, treatments, and trends in the scholarship. It also identifies all books, book chapters, articles and unpublished masters and doctoral theses devoted significantly to individuals as muckrakers and to muckraking in all periods." AU - Stein, Harry H. DA - 1979 KW - values +books, periodicals, newspapers muckraking, and newspapers muckraking, and magazines bibliographies, and muckraking values, and muckraking muckraking bibliographies LB - 10610 PY - 1979 SP - 9-17? ST - American Muckrakers and Muckraking: The 50-year Scholarship T2 - Journalism Quarterly TI - American Muckrakers and Muckraking: The 50-year Scholarship VL - 56 ID - 2424 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article was among the many attacks that feminists made on child pornography, and more generally on all pornography, during the late 1970s. Steinem argues that child pornography is "one logical, inevitable result of raising boys to believe they must control or conquer others as a measure of manhood, and producing men who may continue to believe that success or even functioning -- in sex as in other areas of life -- depends on subservience, surrender, or some clear tribute to their superiority." AU - Steinem, Gloria DA - Aug. 1977 IS - 2 KW - women, and new media sexuality women feminism law censorship and ratings censorship pornography pornography, and women women, and pornography feminism, and pornogrpahy pornography, and feminism censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship LB - 26730 PY - 1977 SP - 1, 43-44 ST - Pornography -- Not Sex but the Obscene Use of Power T2 - Ms. TI - Pornography -- Not Sex but the Obscene Use of Power VL - 6 ID - 1235 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this study of sensationalism in 1920s news, Stevens writes that the mass media played "a vital role in increasing the range of the vicarious participation to those far beyond the courtroom walls. In this view, the mass media perform a valuable function in publicizing the moral dilemmas, and wide attention by the public can be interpreted as a sign of health public involvement.... Perhaps this is no more than an accident of history, but it is nevertheless true that newspapers (and now radio and television) offer their readers the same kind of entertainment once supplied by pubic hangings or the use of stocks and pillories." AU - Stevens, John D. DA - Spring 1985 KW - sensationalism journalism news and journalism newspapers news media +books, periodicals, newspapers sensationalism, and 1920s newspapers, and sensationalism audiences, and sensationalism media effects audiences LB - 10630 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1985 SP - 53-58 ST - The Social Utility of Sensational News: Murder and Divorce in the 1920s T2 - Journalism Quarterly TI - The Social Utility of Sensational News: Murder and Divorce in the 1920s VL - 62 ID - 2426 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this abbreviated article, Stieglitz says that the sharp distinct often drawn between amateur and professional photographers, and the association of amateur with "immature" work are misleading. Amateurs often are doing the best work because "nearly all the greatest work is being, and has always been done, by those who are following photography for the love of it, and not merely for financial reasons." A longer version of this piece most likely is Alfred Stieglitz, "Pictorial Photography," Scribner's, XXVI (Nov. 1899), 528-37. AU - Stieglitz, Alfred DA - Nov. 4, 1899 IS - 44 KW - wood engraving journalism journalism illustrations fame celebrity ref, secondary magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality quotations newspapers, and photographs photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving newspapers, and chalk process newspapers, and zinc process illustrations, and chalk process illustrations, and zinc process photography, and art photography, and amateurs photography, and Alfred Stieglitz Steiglitz, Afred quotations quotations, and amateur photography ref, religious ref, Quakers ref, Friends' Intelligencer illustrations LB - 38540 PY - 1899 SP - 838 ST - Art in Photography T2 - Friends' Intelligencer TI - Art in Photography VL - 56 ID - 3953 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author comments on his changing opinion of detective cameras and the most important characteristics that make them successful. “The first impression which the description of the Detective Camera and its performances gave me was that it was a toy, good for the amusement of grown-up children, but never likely to accomplish any actual work worth keeping. More recent experiences have modified very greatly this impression, and I am now disposed to rank it as the most important recent development in out-of-door photography.... The essential of the Detective Camera is that it shall not attract attention, but be capable of working, when favorable subjects offer, without the object being aware that he is being photographed.... “The primary requisite then for a good Detective Camera is that it shall not be noticeable as a camera....” AU - Stillman, W. J. DA - 1887 KW - surveillance photography law, and privacy law privacy +photography and visual communication cameras, detective photography, and detective cameras photography, and privacy privacy, and photography privacy, and detective cameras cameras LB - 12420 PY - 1887 SP - 87-90 ST - Detective Cameras T2 - American Annual of Photography and Photographic Times: Almanac for 1888 TI - Detective Cameras ID - 2589 ER - TY - JOUR AB - W. M. Stine reviews Park Benjamin's book, The Intellectual Rise in Electricity (New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1896). Stine writes that "Electricity in its manifold applications is the dominant scientific feature of the age; and yet to the large body of thoughtful readers the subject is one shrouded with an air of mystery, because so little understood." (69) Stine says that Benjamin's book "marks the beginning of a new epoch in the literature of electricity, and shows that the science has far transcended the supposed period of its infancy...." (69) AU - Stine, W. M. DA - Feb. 1, 1896 IS - 231 KW - electricity electricity, history of electricity, and Park Benjamin ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary (conservative) ref, Dial LB - 42330 PY - 1896 SP - 69-71 ST - The Historical Development of Electricity [book review] T2 - The Dial TI - The Historical Development of Electricity [book review] VL - 20 ID - 4332 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author notes that the movie industry is still often using cameras and other technology from the 1930s. "It would be difficult to find another American industry using equipment designed and perhaps manufactured before World War II," he says. (226) He suggests the film industry would be much different if only a small fraction of profits were put back into research and development. He says that other industries are using much more advanced technology in 1965. He discusses possible improvements -- cinematographers using a high resolution monitor during filming with immediate videotape playback, for example. (228) Stockert says the industry should not fear using videotape, although he notes that "silver emulsions have a far higher theoretical and practical information content ability than magnetic tape," (228) something that computer manufacturers already knew. AU - Stockert, Hank DA - April, 1965 IS - 4 KW - computers cinematography motion pictures motion pictures, and film technology computers and the Internet computers, and motion pictures motion pictures, and computers videotape motion pictures, and videotape videotape, and motion pictures silver nitrate film videotape, and silver nitrate film film, silver nitrate film magnetic tape magnetic recording computers LB - 30440 PY - 1965 SP - 226-28 ST - Is Filming Technology Losing Ground? T2 - American Cinematography TI - Is Filming Technology Losing Ground? VL - 46 ID - 2799 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The authors argues that in the twentieth-first century, "successful libraries will become teaching libraries that equip students with lifelong learing skills." Stoffle was then Dean of Libraries at the University of Arizona and Williams was in the social sciences at the same university. AU - Stoffle, Carla J. AU - Williams, Karen DA - Summer, 1995 IS - 90 KW - computers computers libraries information storage digital media education libraries, and new media libraries, and digital media computers and the Internet computers, and libraries libraries, and computers LB - 29820 PY - 1995 SP - 63-75 ST - The Instructional Program and Responsibilities of the Teaching Library T2 - New Directions for Higher Education TI - The Instructional Program and Responsibilities of the Teaching Library ID - 2738 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Streitmatter reviews three early labor papers and considers the effect those papers had on early public policy involving the working class. He notes by the 1830s there were already some 50 labor weeklies, mainly in the industrializing Northeast. Streitmatter examined the Mechanic’s Free Press, founded in Philadelphia in 1828 and lasting three years; the Free Enquirer, founded in New York City in 1828 and published until 1835; and the Working Man’s Advocate, which published from 1829 to 1849. Streitmatter noted that the “early Labor Movement leaders recognized the importance of distributing their words to a larger audience through an alternative communication network.” Streitmatter noted that the rise of the dissident press coincided with the rise of Jacksonian democracy. “Because many workers were illiterate, men and women with some education read the papers out loud on street corners and in churches, town halls, and other gathering places to crowds that often numbered 100 or more. Indeed, the fact that laborers came together to hear what the various editors had to say served to stimulate a sense of fraternity among the workers.” The labor papers championed the reduction of the number of hours worked in factories, rules to limit the use of child labor, education for the children of the working class, elimination of the debtors prison, and a role for labor in American politics, according to Streitmatter. He argues that the labor press influenced the future of all of these issues. “One of the most important legacies of the Mechanic's Free Press, Free Enquirer, and Working Man's Advocate, then, was their role in helping to transform measures that were unpopular in the 1820s into key elements in the nation's progress toward increased democracy during the 1830s and beyond.” --Phil Glende AU - Streitmatter, Rodger DA - Autumn 1999 IS - 3 KW - news and journalism Glende, Phil labor labor, and press labor, and newspapers newspapers, and labor labor, and press (origins) newspapers news LB - 1170 N1 - See also: office PY - 1999 SP - 99-106 ST - Origins of the American Labor Press T2 - Journalism History TI - Origins of the American Labor Press VL - 25 ID - 205 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article surveys the rapid spread of electricity in the United States during the last quarter of the nineteenth century. "Outside of the telegraph the history of what we may call applied electricity is practically only twenty-five years old." In 1901, about one million people were employed in endeavors that depended on electricity. A decade earlier, "there were only two or three electric power and light companies here. Today we have 10,000 of them representing a capital of $500,000,000." (151) Fifteen years earlier there were no fully operational electric roads but now in the U. S. there are 15,000 miles of them. (151) It is possible now to send picture by telegraph. "By means of electricity one's handwriting may be sent by telegraph, and half-tone picture reproduced many miles away from the subject. We can crowd a wire with seventy simultaneous messages, and by touching a button in Washington one can in a moment alter clocks all over the United States to the true time. (153) "There is no form of machine but what may be run by this current, from the ponderous engine down to the churn in the dairy; and when we have turned in wonder from the motions of the mighty crank that moves and stops in obedience to the hand that presses the lever we can turn the fluid's sparkling current to account to enable us to see every bone, sinew and muscle in that hand." (153) Syles concludes by saying that "Franklin's key and kite have evolved the mightiest force of nature as a servant to man, tireless, resting neither night nor day." (155) AU - Styles, George DA - Feb. 1901 KW - ref, secondary telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph facsimile photography, and facsimile facsimile, and telegraph telegraph, and facsimile electricity electricity, and photography photography, and electricity photography, and halftones telegraph, and halftones half tones, and telegraph electricity, and business electricity, and capitalism capitalism capitalism, and electricity quotations quotations, and electricity lighting, and electricity electricity, and lighting time and timekeeping electricity, and timekeeping x-rays electricity, and x-rays ref, secondary ref, secular ref, economic ref, economic (Standard Oil) ref, Gunton's Magazine lighting photography LB - 38210 PY - 1901 SP - 151-55 ST - Electrical Development T2 - Gunton's Magazine TI - Electrical Development ID - 3920 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article focuses on "the public of low ideals" and attempts to explain why a "part of the public ... pays handsomely for lewd and bawdy entertainment without regard to the power of example." It asks "what innovation in the social development of the nation has created this type of moron?" (243) It argues that it has only been during the previous 15 years that "the elements going to make up a situation congenial to the Thrill Addict have come upon us...." (244) It starts by noting that only in the late-18th century, perhaps around 1794, that "theatrical entertainments were an infant industry," and says that in the last 153 years "the public stage" has become "a firmly established enterprise, but, unfortunately, commercialized to an extent which seems to preclude the possibility of its ever assuming its rightful status as a branch of pure art." (241) It then offers examples of modern critics and concludes that "the unusual spectacle is presented of an agreement by the pulpit, the theatre and the laity that the New York stage and therefore the American stage is in a deplorable condition." (242) Sumner says that there are about 65 legitimate theaters in New York, and that businessmen and commercial interests are ruining the live stage. However, there is no lack of audiences. "If must be, therefore, that the class who will patronize and tolerate vile stage performances has greatly increased within a comparatively brief space of time. The common statement today that the public is responsible for vulgar plays is very 242/243 largely true, for if such plays were not supported financially by the theatre-going public, they could not endure. There is a joint responsibility for the display of nastiness upon the public stage:..." (242-43) The other culprits are the "vile producer"; the "actor, who participates in lascivious drama and who utters foul words in public, lowering standards of common decency and making a stench of what should be a temple of art" (243); the "writer, who prostitutes his ability at the behest of some scabrous unprofessional producer" (243); and "diffident and dilatory public officials, who close their eyes to such infancy." (243) Beyond these specific factors, the author sees other causes: 1) modern appliances and the home which frees women from housework and increases leisure time; 2) the rise of urban living -- for the first time, he says, more people live in urban areas than in rural areas; 3) new child-rearing practices and the decline of parental influence; 4) trade unionism; 5) other scientific and technological advances that decrease physical labor and make life more effortless. "The leisure brought to humanity by science has been ill employed." (249) 6) Freudian theories about "the dire consequences of repression of the sex instinct." The author expands on psychoanalysis as "expounded by Freud and exploited by the mauve intelligentsia." (247) "There is more dirt in the Austrian brand, and dirt has a sort of fascination, a novelty, for those who have been reared in clean surroundings. And so dirt in the psychoanalytical fiction fascinated the adolescent element and the superficial, and created a curiosity for more dirt, more assuagement of the thirst for knowledge of the newly excavated and exploited antique 'isms.' As the two dollar book of fiction was not accessible to all, the 247/248 benevolent publishers of twenty cent magazines (with cash in view) in turn took up the pleasant and profitable task of supplying unclean literature to a larger public. These magazine publications, published serially, found that the demand for the original fare was waning, and so they had to increase the dose of 'naked souls' and bodies as well. It went over with a bang." (247-48) The art magazines contributed to the problem. "The specious pleas of art and beauty were resorted to, and, presto! the art magazine, devoted of course to one genre, the nude female figure." (248) The author notes that "Corner newsstands blossomed forth, creating neighborhood displays of idealized photography and the most vivid examples of the nude by independent artists. Art in its most thrilling aspect was now being carried to the schoolboy and the schoolgirl, to the toddler on the sidewalk and the infant in arms." (248) Advertisements in these magazines suggested that "art lovers were assumed to be particularly in need of such commodities as self-massaging belts, lotions for reducing think lips, ... sex secrets, marriage guides, ... and the like." (248) Showing his fondness for alliteration, the author points a figure at motion pictures. "The films have had their full share in creating artificially the 248/249 steady demand from an appreciable part of the population for a thrill, or continuous thrills, in every reel. Mental Meals for Morons would correctly characterize much of the product of this industry. Lustful images at lachrymose ladies lured and locked in by leering libertines, prettily describes innumerable cinema scenes to whet the appetites and the ardors of the sex-awakened, the sex-hungry and the sex-starved; and to make the baby ask: 'Mama, why does the man want to hurt the lady?' Yes, the movies have done much, entirely too much, to create and pander to the Thrill Addict." (248-49) Sumner blames "the literary underworld" for the tabloid press for creating some of this public and for corrupting children. Like the criminal who "sells narcotized candies to children," the "tabloid, with exceptions," is doing much the same thing. "Under more respectable auspices," it "is doing to the mind of the child just what the drug panderer on an infinitely smaller scale is doing to its body. It appeals to immature and subnormal mentalities and keeps them so. By lewd, criminal and gruesome pictures it illustrates graphically the news of lust and crime and brutality presented in words of one syllable." (249) Such were there factors leading to the modern stage which, especially since about 1919, has featured "realism and life in the raw. Blasphemy and profanity..., the harlot ... as ... heroine," (250) and finally, "degeneracy." (251) The tone of the stage needs to be elevated, Sumner argues, even if it means using the "policeman's club." (251) AU - Sumner, John S. DA - June 1, 1927 IS - 835 KW - celebrity celebrity culture ref, secondary audiences motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures media effects motion pictures, and media effects media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and stars actors actors, as silent sirens quotations, and actors as silent sirens celebrity culture motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time critics, and modernity modernity, and critics metaphors, and drugs critics critics, and theater theater, and critics critics, and modernity modernity, and critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, anc critics critics, and urban life critics, and modern entertainment theater, and thrill addicts motion pictures, and thrill addicts actors actors, and bias against acting, and bias against acting, and bias against censorship and ratings censorship, and obscenity censorship, and theater actors, and profanity censorship, and language sexuality sexuality, and theater theater, and sexuality children and media children, and modern entertainment children, and thrill addicts quotations quotations, and thrill addicts modernity, and Freudianism sexuality, and Freud theater, and Freud censorship, and Freud motion pictures, and Freud sexuality, and nudity nudity, and magazines magazines, and nudity photography and visual communication photography, and nudity nudity, and photography motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures quotations, and Mental Meals for Morons words vs. images images vs. words critics, and tabloids critics, and pictorial press violence violence, and tabloids ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, North American Review metaphors acting censorship children magazines nudity photography theater LB - 39980 PY - 1927 SP - 241-51 ST - Thrill Addicts and the Theatre T2 - North American Review TI - Thrill Addicts and the Theatre VL - 224 ID - 4096 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This work discusses the cooperation between U. S. Department of State and the motion picture industry in the post-World War II era. AU - Swann, Paul DA - April 1991 IS - 1 KW - nationalism military communication censorship and ratings motion pictures nationalism and communication military, and motion pictures motion pictures, and military LB - 35040 PY - 1991 SP - 2-19 ST - The Little State Department: Hollywood and the State Department in the Postwar World T2 - American Studies International TI - The Little State Department: Hollywood and the State Department in the Postwar World VL - 29 ID - 3144 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Sweeney, who worked in the Motion Picture Engineering Department of Eastman Kodak Company, notes take his Eastman Kodak not was a major supplier of motion picture film but "also an important supplier of magnetic tape and film. During the Fall of 1962, the company marketed its first magnetic film for professional sound recording. This film was designed to achieve the same exacting quality in sound recording as in the photographing of motion pictures. In fact, the same staff and field engineers who service the professional motion picture industry for Eastman Kodak have been trained to work with sound recording engineering to attain the highest possible performance from magnetic sound film. The first actual entertainment industry application of Eastman sound recording film occurred during the final months of the production of MGM's 'Mutiny on the Bounty'" (1962), which starred Marlon Brando. AU - Sweeney, Hart DA - June, 1964 IS - 6 KW - corporations corporations Eastman Kodak cinematography motion pictures sound recording movie, Mutiny on the Bounty (1962) Mutiny on the Bounty (1962) magnetic recording motion pictures, and magnetic sound recording sound recording, and magnetic tape Eastman Kodak, and magnetic sound film Eastman Kodak, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Eastman Kodak LB - 30150 PY - 1964 SP - 322, 340, 342, 344 ST - Magnetic Sound Recording Film: Some Technical Information of Value to Cinematographers T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Magnetic Sound Recording Film: Some Technical Information of Value to Cinematographers VL - 45 ID - 2770 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This short article gives advice on how to use advertising in movie theaters -- e.g., using news, ads, and photographs in the lobby. AU - Sweet, J. C. DA - June 11, 1910 IS - 23 KW - fame fame photography ref, secondary motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity color color, and movies posters advertising, and color color, and advertising motion pictures, and posters advertising, and movie posters photography and visual communication photography, and theaters theaters, and photography theaters photography, and movie advertising advertising, and photography motion pictures, and movie stars fame, and motion pictures actors acting ref, secondary ref, secular ref, movie magazine ref, Moving Picture World advertising LB - 14400 PY - 1910 SP - 987 T2 - Moving Picture World VL - 6 ID - 3597 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In the aftermath of the Soviet Union’s launch of Sputnik, the U. S. Defense Department recommended involving the American public in the space race by “increasing their acceptance of the value of basic research, convincing them that universities deserve more support in training scientists, and giving them a more favorable picture of scientific work and the people who do it.” (583) The article was first presented to the American Sociological Society in Chicago in 1959. The Survey Research Center at the University of Michigan interviewed 1,547 people in an effort to determine the “extent and accuracy of satellite information, patterns of news intake, and attitudes toward science and scientists.” (583) This survey concluded that “wide circulation of news about science is not likely to have much effect on reading habits, attitudes toward scientific topics, or use of a scientific frame of reference in interpreting news events. In order for a greater flow of news to increasing public understanding as well as awareness of scientific work, a knowledge of the distribution of attitudes, information, and media-usage habits in the population must be used in channeling science news by appropriate means to specific audiences.” (589) AU - Swinehart, James W. AU - McLeod, Jack M. DA - 1960 KW - R & D USSR news and journalism Sputnik +aeronautics and space communication satellites Soviet Union military-industrial complex military-industrial-university complex research and development Department of Defense, U. S. Sputnik, and research and development journalism, and science reporting news, and science social science research media effects +military communication military, and research and development journalism news LB - 28880 PY - 1960 SP - 583-89 ST - News About Science: Channels, Audiences, and Effects T2 - Public Opinion Quarterly TI - News About Science: Channels, Audiences, and Effects VL - 24 ID - 2665 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Swinton, A. A. Campbell DA - June 18, 1908 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins +electricity seeing at a distance LB - 7410 PY - 1908 SP - 151 ST - Distant Electric Vision T2 - Nature TI - Distant Electric Vision VL - 78 ID - 2111 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Swinton begins by saying that "The growth of the distemper in our time has been stimulated by the extravagant increase in the number of newspapers, the vast enlargement of the hordes of their readers and the extension of their influence. It has been stimulated also by the immeasurable development of egotism in this age. I must say, too, that it has been stimulated by the unquestionable fact that persons often derive benefit or profit from it." (211) The author goes on to say that "newspaper notoriety is sometimes the beginning of fame, or runs into it, or is the germ of it." Witness the recent attention giving to professional prize fighters. (211) Actors have benefited from this development. "To play-actors, newspaper puffery is better than the applause of the galleries. It fills the house; it affects the manager; it is a means of securing engagements; it is printed on the play bills; it is intoxicating." (212) Swinton acknowledges that many people seek newspaper notoriety. "It is sought for by a good many worldly persons in this age because it is advantageous to them, as things go." (213) AU - Swinton, John DA - Jan. 24, 1901 IS - 2721 KW - public relations journalism entertainment, and journalism entertainment celebrity celebrity culture ref, secondary news and journalism critics critics, and newspapers newspapers, and critics critics, and journalism journalism, and critics modernity modernity, and newspapers newspapers, and modernity new way of seeing journalism, and entertainment entertainment, and journalism newspapers, and entertainment entertainment, and newspapers celebrity culture newspapers, and celebrity culture celebrity culture, and newspapers fame, and newspapers fame newspapers, and fame critics, and newspapers actors, and status of actors, and newspapers newspapers, and actors actors, and fame newspapers, and personality personality, and newspapers quotations quotations, and newspaper publicity actors, and public relations public relations, and actors advertising and public relations public relations, and newspapers newspapers, and public relations ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent actors advertising acting personality LB - 38680 PY - 1901 SP - 211-13 ST - 'Newspaper Notoriety' T2 - The Independent TI - 'Newspaper Notoriety' VL - 53 ID - 3967 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article reports that Universal Pictures fired the ad agency Levenson & Hill because it refused to place local radio and print publicity for Martin Scorcese's controversial movie The Last Temptation of Christ (1988). Universal hired Moroch & Associates. AU - Talmadge, Candace AU - Sharkey, Betsy DA - Sept. 12, 1988 (Southwest Edition) KW - corporations corporations advertising, and public relations Universal Pictures propaganda public relations propaganda advertising motion pictures boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture boycotts, and Last Temptation Last Temptation of Christ (1988) public relations Universal Pictures, and advertising Universal Pictures, and public relations public relations, and Last Temptation advertising advertising, and Last Temptation religion values LB - 24450 PY - 1988 ST - Universal Drops L&H Amid Movie Flap T2 - Adweek TI - Universal Drops L&H Amid Movie Flap ID - 1085 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article provides an interesting commentary on the poster and its relation to modern life in 1897. "The illustrated poster of disputatious coloring, crazy design, and fantastic character, advertising everything, on thousands of papers that other thousands of papers will cover the next day, an oil, a soup, a petroleum -- what can be more violently modern?" this article begins. (457) (emphasis added) The article calls Jules Chéret the "creator of the poster." (457) The modern art poster was of fairly recent origins. "The art post, although not dating from more than thirty years ago, has already been propagated in numerous countries and M. Octave Uzanne, one of its best-informed historians, shows it to be diffused through almost the entire world...." (459) The poster, even more than the modern press, is a reflection of modern life, according to Talmeyer. "These pictures of a day or of an hour, washed off by the rains, charcoaled by the urchins, burned by the sun, covered over by others sometimes to a more intense degree than the press the rapid, jolting, multitudinous life that bears us along. Of this life the poster is a continual reflection. It mingles with it while reproducing it and reproduces it while mingling with it, as the instability of the water reproduces the trembling of the leaves while adding to their trembling. It stores up not only the rapidity, but also the acuteness and the cruelty of life, to reproduce them in strange cries with the deformities of the phonograph. It gives back by its indefinable colors, its perverse tone, its strangeness, all that that life in its brevity contains and gives of disturbing joltings, of intense vanities, of ephemeral frenzies, of sickly efforts toward the sun and victory, destined for the sorry mud of the gutter. The life of the past was strong and slow; its natural expression was found in architecture, in the great things in stone that required the pick and the fire to destroy them; the present life is feverish and disconnected, reflecting many colors, and is summed up in the poster, put up in the morning, torn down in the evening, destined for the street cleaner's cart, and yet embodying a concentrated art." (461) (emphasis added) The author contrasts the ephemeral nature of posters with the more weighted influence of the church and state. "The church cried out to you the eternity of religion; the palace, the splendor of the prince; and the individual, the subject, thus felt himself crushed beneath the weight of a divine or a royal interest in the presence of which his own did not exist. (462) "The poster, on the contrary, speaks to us only of ourselves, our pleasures, our tastes, our interests, our food, our health, our life. It does not say to us, 'Pray, obey, sacrifice thyself, adore God, fear thy master, respect thy king.' It whispers to us, 'Amuse yourself, take care of yourself, feed yourself, go to the concert, read romances, buy good soap, eat good chocolate, take a hand at the carnival, keep yourself fresh, handsome, strong, good humored, paint yourself, comb yourself, perfume yourself, take care of your linen, your clothes, your teeth, your hands, and take pills if you have a cold.'" (462) "Is not this what the art poster, from the top to the bottom of the walls, and from the windows of all shops, repeats to us in all tones, in all colors, by all its fantasmagoria and by all its goddesses of fame with golden 462/463 hair, freely scattering their glances and holding trumpets to their mouths?" (462-63) The author sees the poster as a form of degenerate art and not unlike the kinetoscope or moving pictures. "The necessary result of this nimble and degenerate art, as may easily be imagined, is a special mechanical demoralization, like that of the swift pictures of the kinetoscope. Turn over the leaves of its posters in collections, examine well those of the streets, and you will never find, either on a wall or at a collector's, a fine moral poster whose effect is the exaltation of noble sentiment. ((463) (emphasis added) "The scandalous character of the poster has often been spoken of. The young girl in many attitudes is its special subject. Whether a man wants to make us buy his paste for removing superfluous hair, or his tonic, he always advertises by means of the young girl. She entices us to the shop, and we do not even know what is sold there." (463) (emphasis added) The author sees a difference in the immorality of the modern poster and earlier murals. "An enormous difference exists, ... between the mural immorality of other times and that of our day. When the ancient bas-relief is obscene it is crudely so, with something of the natural, the barbaric, and the mythological. It is an immodest fantasy displayed in all its nakedness, but going no further than fantasy for fantasy's sake and nudity for nudity's sake. It is animal immodesty interpreted by artists' immodesty. The poster is quite a different thing. Its immodesty is wise, systematic, calculated, commercial. It is a professional immodesty, governed and measured according to the demands and the tricks of a trade." (464) (emphasis added) Unlike a book or art work, one cannot avoid seeing a poster. It exists because of the effect it produces. "It is a strange condition of imagination and a strange moral atmosphere in which the poster thus holds us. The masses of people and those especially whose impressions are liveliest, the woman, the child, the young girl, have continual visions of concert halls and night gardens. It is not worship of physical beauty such as existed among the ancients under Phidias or Apelles, nor is it the great high tide of art such as Italy's at the age of Titian or of Raphael, but it is simply a custom of equivocation, of scandal, of double meanings, and of vice. And what here again distinguishes the poster is that it does not propose all this to us more or less persuasively, but it imposes it upon us. I read a book if I want to; I go and see a picture if I feel like it; I do not buy a newspaper in spite of myself; but the poster I see, even if I do not want to see it; whether it irritates me or suits me I must endure it. Does it outrage my delicacy, my convictions, my religion, my taste? It ridicules them, and forces itself into my eyes. It is this that I am obliged to breathe, and it is forced into my blood, and not only into mine, but into my wife's, into the young lady's, into that of the child who is learning it letters and reads as yet nothing but pictures. "The excuse of the poster is that it is itself an effect. It is like those flowers of insalubrious countries which cause fever by exhaling what they have drawn from the soil. A poster gives back to society what it receives therefrom. What an original 464/465 art, truly and spontaneously modern! A morbid art, a perverse art, pestilential, miasmatic, but all all the same; quite contrary to the literary pornography that we have see growing by the side of it, whose fetid eccentricities and unspeakable affectations have never been anything but false art. But in the poster I am sensible of a vigor and a sincerity; it has let loose upon the world a winged horde of incendiaries of joy and of vice. It is truly a flame of perdition. I truly see in it the very art of Gomorrah. The conclusion is self-evident. From the point of view of permanent morality and of self-preservation the poster, such as it flourishes to-day upon our walls, is a terrible agent of perversion. It exalts all that is frivolous and sensual, dissolves every high idea and every strong sentiment...." (464-65) (emphasis added) At the end of this article, the Editor of The Chautauquan takes several paragraphs to refute Talmeyer's argument. He writes: "One may well question, and especially in America, the conclusions reached by M. Talmeyer in this article. They represent views which, even in France, and more so in England and the United States, cannot be permitted to pass for long without protest. While the modern poster flaunts itself everywhere, in the most astounding colors, and not infrequently appeals more or less directly to the sensuous in nature, it is not entirely a thing of perversion.... Posters, like newspapers, reflect human life in th various degrees of its intensity and activity, but it is not by any means to be set down as a fact that the modern poster, even in France, the place of its nativity, is entirely concerned with the abnormal, the sensuous in life. To be sure, posters are oftentimes freighted with offense, but if so they leave without disguise the character of the very things whose index they are." (466) The Editor comments on theatrical posters. "Who can say also that the theatrical poster has not improved ..., and that if some posters of this class are shockingly immoral it is not primarily the fault of the poster but more particularly of the play which it is called upon to represent in advance?" (466) The Editor says that the illustration used in this article show "that much of good in morals as in art may come from the modern poster." (466) AU - Talmeyer, Maurice DA - Jan. 1897 IS - 4 KW - wood engraving theater ref, secondary photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones wood engraving, and posters posters, and wood engraving photo engraving advertising and public relations advertising, and posters posters, and advertising advertising, and theater theater, and advertising France France, and posters posters, and France France, and advertising advertising, and France lithography lithography, and posters posters, and lithography color posters, and color color, and posters photography, and posters posters, and photography Chéret Jules, and posters posters, and Jules Chéret quotations, and modern posters color, and modern posters color, and posters posters, and circus modernity, and color posters quotations, and color posters modernity modernity, and posters posters, and modernity new way of seeing new way of seeing, and posters posters, and new way of seeing quotations, and perverse posters quotations, and feverish modern life critics critics, and modern life critics, and modern posters advertising, and degenerate art quotations, and degenerate posters color, and degenerate posters motion pictures, and posters posters, and motion pictures sexuality sexuality, and posters posters, and sexuality women women, and posters posters, and women media effects media effects, and advertising media effects, and posters posters, and media effects advertising, and media effects children and media children, and immoral posters posters, and children newspapers, and posters posters, and newspapers values values, and color posters posters, and values critics, and modernity modernity, and critics ref, secondary ref, secular ref, educational ref, reform ref, Chautauquan quotations advertising Chéret, Jules children motion pictures news and journalism photography posters LB - 39890 PY - 1897 SP - 457-66 ST - The Age of the Poster [translated from the French] T2 - The Chautauquan TI - The Age of the Poster [translated from the French] VL - 24 ID - 4087 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Tankard writes that "public access programming on cable television appeared as a new form of North American journalism and noncommercial television during the late 1960s and early 1970s. "Public access" refers to any form of noncommercial cable television including "community programming on free cable channels reserved for the public, educational and social service agencies, and government-- known collectively as access channels." AU - Tankard, James W., Jr. DA - Oct. 1990 KW - Federal Communications Commission (FCC) censorship and ratings news and journalism regulation community democracy law regulation news and journalism regulation +television democracy and media television, and cable cable television television, noncommercial television, and public access FCC regulation, and television Sloan Commission cable democracy, and cable television journalism, and cable television television, and journalism journalism LB - 6870 PY - 1990 SP - 1-47 ST - The Origins of Public Access Cable Television, 1966-1972 T2 - Journalism Monographs TI - The Origins of Public Access Cable Television, 1966-1972 VL - 123 ID - 1917 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Tasini argues that the concentration of media ownership in the 1980s led to a dramatic drop in the amount of labor news reported in print and on network broadcasts. “The monopolization of the media has had a direct influence on labor reporting.” Tasini reports on content studies conducted using computer databases for newspaper coverage and Vanderbilt Television News Archives abstracts for nightly network news broadcasts. Among the findings reported by Tasini: In 1989, a little over 2 percent of air time on the three nightly newscasts was devoted to all worker issues, and only half involved U.S. unions. Nearly twice as much time was devoted to business and economic reporting. “In the absence of a strike, stories about the campaigns of workers and their unions have, with few exceptions, disappeared from the printed page and TV screen. ... The labor beat, once a respected assignment, no longer exists at most large- to medium-sized U.S. newspapers.” Tasini includes a summary of a questionnaire sent to 100 major newspapers and case studies of coverage of specific labor news. In addition, the article is followed by Tasini’s list of major labor issues missed by the media and a look at labor and public broadcasting. --Phil Glende AU - Tasini, Jonathan DA - Summer 1990 IS - 7 KW - journalism news and journalism Glende, Phil labor +television labor, and tv news labor, and television television, and labor labor, and new news, and labor labor, and media ownership news LB - 950 N1 - See also: office PY - 1990 SP - 2-10 ST - Lost in the Margins: Labor and the Media T2 - Extra! TI - Lost in the Margins: Labor and the Media VL - 3 ID - 183 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This is a review of Frederick A. Talbot's book Moving Pictures (1912), and for a longer account of that work see under Talbot's name. This review, however, makes some interesting observations about the state of photography and motion pictures in 1912. The exposure time needed to take a photograph had been drastically reduced Daguerre's time. "In our days of the snap-shot, it seems incredible that an exposure of six hours was at first required to secure a recognisable impression of an object. The problem which confronted the pioneers of instantaneous photography was the reduction of the period of exposure from twenty thousand seconds to a thousandth part of one second. In the end it was the chemist who solved it by preparing a surface of exquisite sensitiveness to light."[my emphasis] (307) The reviewer also says that "extremely rapid motion in all its details may now be studied at leisure, since it can be recorded at one-ten millionth part of a second." (308) (emphasis added) For example, a bullet can be shown entering a soap bubble. (308) The camera was by then also being used to show what was seen through the microscope. "As a vehicle for popularizing science, the film is still its infancy," the review maintains, "for up to the present time it has been extremely difficult to humanize the lessons sufficiently." (308) On the significance of celluloid: "As long as glass plates had to be used, investigators were thwarted at every turn; but after trying many substances through fifty years of experiment, they finally discovered in celluloid a fim which made animated photography a commercial practicability." (307) This review notes that in 1912, six million feet of film were being used every week by the movie industry. One second of a movie required 12 inches of film. (307) With regard to movie acting, were required to "look the part" and "every muscle of the body must be called into coherent use to an extent that the real stage does not demand." (307) This review also comments on the changing nature of moving pictures from early films that simply showed scenes of real life to more complex narrative story-lines. By 1912, elaborate religion films were being made. It also acknowledge the competition from French films. The reviewer comments on "stop-motion" photography, "trick" pictures, and "magic effects" in moving pictures. The early use of what later became known as newsreels is discussed. The first "topical picture" was introduced in Great Britain in 1896. It was a horse race that "excited more attention than the actual race." (308) By 1912, "a subject can be thrown on the screen within four hours after its occurrence." (308) (emphasis added) The coronation festivities of King George V were shown in moving pictures in color. However, topical films not common because they were "speculative to a degree" and many production companies were reluctant to gamble on them. Still, the "moving-picture newspaper," as Talbot called it, was "beginning to rival the illustrated weekly" and it could soon also compete with daily publications. Moving pictures were also "competing with the kodak for home use." (309) As for education, the reviewer believed that soon moving pictures in the school room would "impart more definite knowledge in one minute than book and blackboard" could "in hours of hammering." (309) One celluloid is made non-flammable, it will be possible for "a great current event" to "be preserved for an unborn generation." (309) AU - Tassin, Algernon DA - May 1912 IS - 3 KW - Talbot, William Fox home history actors acting actors acting magazines photography ref, secondary motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space special effects motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and microphotography microphotography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines fan magazines magazines, fan color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color Pathé Pathé, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Pathé Pathé, and color films color, and Pathé Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Thomas Edison home and new media motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures home entertainment celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid celluloid, and motion pictures materials materials, and celluloid kinetoscope motion pictures, and animatograph motion pictures, and cinematographe sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sound recording cameras cameras, and motion pictures newsreels motion pictures, and newsreels newsreels, and motion pictures citizen reporters journalism, and citizen reporters cameras, and citizen reporters citizen reporters, and cameras cameras, and amateurs non-USA non-USA, and motion pictures motion pictures, and non-USA motion pictures, and Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures Great Britain photography, instantaneous motion pictures, and Kineograph Kineograph cameras, and bulkiness cameras, portable home entertainment, and Bettini cinema-a-plaque system motion pictures, and Bettini cinema-a-plaque system Bettini cinema-a-plaque system, and home movies motion pictures, and magic motion pictures, and tobacco ads advertising, and tobacco Talbot, F. A., and motion pictures photography, and exposure time acting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and acting religion religion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion quotations quotations, and exposure time quotations, and speed of showing events history and new media history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history photography and visual communication microphotography ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Bookman advertising advertising and public relations journalism LB - 37500 PY - 1912 SP - 306-09 ST - F. A. Talbot's 'Moving Pictures: How they Are Made and Worked' [review] T2 - The Bookman TI - F. A. Talbot's 'Moving Pictures: How they Are Made and Worked' [review] VL - 35 ID - 3849 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Taylor examines the efforts of organized labor to influence the outcome of the 1998 national elections. Taylor provides a detailed account of labor’s coordinated campaigns to mobilize voters in congressional races. The union switched from a strategy employing television advertising and big campaign contributions in 1996 to one using personnel making personal contacts with union supporters. The AFL-CIO and its affiliated unions hired nearly 400 organizers who helped register a half million voters in elected congressional districts. Other communications techniques involved 9.5 million pieces of mail to union households, the distribution of union flyers at thousands of workplaces, and placing 5.5 million personal telephone calls, including hundreds of thousands on election day itself. “In the weeks leading up to the 1998 election, union volunteers went door-to-door, distributed leaflets, and organized phone-banks and rallies to inform other union members about important union issues and candidates' positions.” The AFL-CIO estimated it spent $15 million on these efforts, and $5 million on television advertising. Taylor provides more detailed accounts of campaigns in California, North Carolina, and Oregon. Taylor noted that Democrats did much better than expected at the polls, and that organized labor, which apparently mobilized union voters with its low-tech communications campaign, received and readily accepted credit for the victories. --Phil Glende AU - Taylor, Dark E. III DA - Fall 2000 IS - 4 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations community democracy Glende, Phil labor democracy and media labor, and new media +television advertising +telephones labor, and telephones telephones, and labor television, and labor labor, and television labor, and advertising advertising, and labor LB - 1180 N1 - See also: office PY - 2000 SP - 627-40 ST - Labor and the Democratic Party: A Report on the 1998 Elections T2 - Journal of Labor Research TI - Labor and the Democratic Party: A Report on the 1998 Elections VL - 21 ID - 206 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Offset printing had brought a “quiet revolution” to newspaper offices "which may well have far-reaching and not wholly predictable consequences for the communications industry," Tebbel said. For $10,000 a talented person could a "successful publisher." In 1961, more than 400 weeklies and 40 small dailies were using the process. AU - Tebbel, John DA - Dec. 9, 1961 KW - underground newspapers underground media underground press print printing communication revolution news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers news and journalism communication revolution news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers newspapers, and offset printing magazines, and offset printing offset printing printing, and offset newspapers, and new technology magazines, and new technology newspapers magazines communication revolution, and 1960s offset printing underground press, and offset printing journalism, and offset printing journalism news LB - 17620 PY - 1961 SP - 60-61 ST - The Quiet Offset Revolution T2 - Saturday Review TI - The Quiet Offset Revolution ID - 681 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is part of an entire issue is devoted to "Film and/as Technology." Telotte, who is guest editor, notes that enjoying such technologies such as film we enter into an "unspoken" arrangement with that technology. Film's technological underpinning often go unexamined. This raises important issues "especially to the impact of digital technology and its capacity to reproduce convincingly practically any image." Articles in this issue include: David Lavery, "From Cinescape to Cyberspace: Zionists and Agents, Realists and Gamers in The Matrix and eXistenZ"; J. Robert Craig, "Establishing New Boundaries for Special Effects: Robert Zemeckis's Contact and Computer-Generated Imagery"; Kelly Ritter, "Spectacle at the Disco: Boogie Nights, Soundtrack, and the New American Musical"; Susan A. George, "Not Exactly 'of Woman Born': Procreation and Creation in Recent Science Fiction Films"; and J. P. Telotte, "The Sounds of Blackmail: Hitchcock and Sound Aesthetic." AU - Telotte, J. P. DA - Winter, 2001 IS - 4 KW - computers special effects new media motion pictures digital media digitization computers +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and new technology new media, and motion pictures motion pictures, and digital media digital media, and motion pictures motion pictures, and digital effects digital effects, and motion pictures virtual reality motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and motion pictures +computers and the Internet computers, and special effects special effects, and computers +sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures LB - 180 N1 - See filed under Film & Television articles (2001). PY - 2001 SP - 177-91 ST - The Sounds of Blackmail: Hitchcock and Sound Aesthetic T2 - Journal of Popular Film & Television TI - The Sounds of Blackmail: Hitchcock and Sound Aesthetic VL - 28 ID - 107 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This entire issue is devoted to "Film and/as Technology." Telotte, who is guest editor, notes that enjoying such technologies such as film we enter into an "unspoken" arrangement with that technology. Film's technological underpinning often go unexamined. This raises important issues "especially to the impact of digital technology and its capacity to reproduce convincingly practically any image." Articles in this issue include: David Lavery, "From Cinescape to Cyberspace: Zionists and Agents, Realists and Gamers in The Matrix and eXistenZ"; J. Robert Craig, "Establishing New Boundaries for Special Effects: Robert Zemeckis's Contact and Computer-Generated Imagery"; Kelly Ritter, "Spectacle at the Disco: Boogie Nights, Soundtrack, and the New American Musical"; Susan A. George, "Not Exactly 'of Woman Born': Procreation and Creation in Recent Science Fiction Films"; and J. P. Telotte, "The Sounds of Blackmail: Hitchcock and Sound Aesthetic." AU - Telotte, J. P. DA - Winter 2001 IS - 4 KW - computers special effects, digital special effects, and digitization new media motion pictures digital media computers +motion pictures and popular culture digital cinema, and motion pictures motion pictures, and digital cinema special effects, and digital cinema digital cinema, and special effects special effects digitization virtual reality digital cinema, and virtual reality virtual reality, and digital cinema +sound recording sound recording, and digital cinema motion pictures, and new technology new media, and motion pictures motion pictures, and digital media digital media, and motion pictures motion pictures, and digital effects digital effects, and motion pictures virtual reality motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and motion pictures +computers and the Internet computers, and special effects special effects, and computers digital cinema LB - 3490 N1 - See filed under Film & Television articles (2001). PY - 2001 SP - 146-49 ST - Introduction: Film and/as Technology: Assessing a Bargain T2 - Journal of Popular Film & Television TI - Introduction: Film and/as Technology: Assessing a Bargain VL - 28 ID - 437 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, written by a film photographer for television, talks about the use of new, high-speed color film used by Robert Altman for a TV program. "The surprising quality of the new color film was most noticeable in an interior scene that took place in a night club featuring exotic dancers." (214) AU - Thackery, Ellis "Bud" DA - April, 1964 IS - 4 KW - sex corporations corporations Eastman Kodak cinematography motion pictures color color, and high-speed film cameras motion pictures, and high-speed color film cameras, hand-held hand-held cameras movie, Once Upon a Savage Night Once Upon a Savage Night sexuality sex scenes, and exotic dancers color, and filming exotic dancers television television, and color film color, and television Altman, Robert location shooting motion pictures, and location shooting Eastman Kodak, and color film lighting lighting, and color film LB - 30170 PY - 1964 SP - 212-14, 222 ST - High-Speed Color Film Opens Up New Dramatic Possibilities T2 - American Cinematographer TI - High-Speed Color Film Opens Up New Dramatic Possibilities VL - 45 ID - 2772 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the growing use of picture in news reporting. "Photographs are like figures: they never lie. Moreover, they give us in one quick, comprehensive glance an accurate idea of a situation that columns of words cannot convey, thus adding accuracy to the saving of time. Hence in this busy modern world of news gathering and news reading, the picture's the thing. So our most progressive journals have supplemented the linotype with the half-tone." (467) The author wants the reader to appreciate the work of camera men who work hard to produce the hundreds of pictures seen in magazines and daily newspapers which are then cast aside. (473) Theiss comments on the cameraman. "An interesting chap is this knight of the kodak.... Like the reporter, the camera man must know news.... Like the soldiers of the centurion, a news photographer must go when he is sent, and come when he is bidden." (467) More mobile camera equipment is helpful in this job. What the camera man "sees himself he endeavors to bring back for the rest of us on his little glass plates," the author writes. "To do this his equipment must be large. The newspaper photographer who never get far from his office needs only his camera and a few extra plates. But the traveling commercial photographer, who gathers for us likenesses of foreign parts and strange events, must have an outfit like an explorer's...." (467) Theiss proceeds to give examples and talks about war photographers, those who photograph animals, and those who take pictures at sea (470-71). While it may be true that "pictures ... never lie," he acknowledges, "they can be made to lie." (473) AU - Theiss, Lewis Edwin DA - Feb. 28,1914 KW - journalism journalism words vs. images magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, mag images vs. words news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines photography and visual communication propaganda propaganda, and photography photography, and propaganda news, and propaganda propaganda, and news photography, and half-tones linotype half-tones ref, religious ref, literary ref, congregationalist ref, Outlook motion pictures news LB - 350 PY - 1914 SP - 466 ST - The Man Behind the Camera T2 - Outlook TI - The Man Behind the Camera ID - 3331 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article attacks the lessons taught by modern literature. "The story is the main thing in fiction, even when the purpose, like the sting of a wasp, darts out of the extremity with didactic venom on its point. Venom is the right word; for seldom, indeed do we find a story, professedly loaded with a great moral lesson, that does not in reality teach an immoral lesson. The evil done by the novels of Tolstoi and the plays of Ibsen are of sufficient gravity to lead some thoughtful and observant minds to doubt the desirability of fiction and the drama as elements of popular instruction. I do not go to such a length; but I see clearly the force of the argument. The fact that two such masters of the art of debauchery are hailed as masters of fiction and the drama is a pretty broad foundation for a sweeping condemnation of fiction and the drama in general." (241) Thompson writes that "You inevitably destroy a means of physical or mental recreation the moment that you sophisticate it." (241) The author says that "Fiction writing and fiction reading are like pudding making and pudding eating. We do not poison a pudding in order to teach our guests how deadly arsenic is. But Ibsen and Tolstoi, and Flaubert, and Zola think differently. They poison every dish at their table, from soup to coffee, for morality's sake. And yet, in all my travels, searching diligently, I have never found a single reader of those authors' books who has been saved from sin or shame thereby!" (241) Thompson says that "We are just now witnessing a grand revival of the story-teller's art -- the telling of stories for the sake of the stories themselves -- and this return to the true area and atmosphere of fiction has suddenly purified public taste, or rather awakened a dormant purity already existing." (242) AU - Thompson, Maurice DA - Jan. 25, 1900 IS - 2669 KW - theater status of actors stars (actors) literature entertainment decadence celebrity anti-theatrical prejudice critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater ref, secondary religion religion, and theater theater, and religion values values, and acting censorship and ratings censorship, and theater theater, and censorship actors acting actors, and status of theater, and bias against actors, and bias against entertainment, and immorality morality, and theater anti-theatrical bias quotations quotations, and unintellectual theater quotations, and theater stars newspapers Sunday newspapers, and theater advertising and public relations advertising, and values advertising, and theater advertising, and morality theater, and advertising modernity, and theater modernity theater, and modernity theaters, and stars stars, and theater celebrity culture celebrity culture, and theater theaters, and celebrity culture audiences audiences, and theater theater, and audiences personality personality, and theater stars words vs. images images vs. words modernity, and French plays values, and French plays morality, and French plays French plays, and modernity French plays, and American theater stars, and theater decadence decadence, and American theater decadence, and theater stars modernity, and literature literature, and modernity morality, and modern literature decadence, and modern literature values, and modern literature theater, and modern literature motion pictures, and modern literature morality, and modern literature literature, and morality literature, and values literature, and theater literature, and motion pictures critics, and modern literature critics, and modernity censorship ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent advertising morality motion pictures news news and journalism theaters LB - 38900 PY - 1900 SP - 241-43 ST - The Magnetic Story T2 - The Independent TI - The Magnetic Story VL - 52 ID - 3989 ER - TY - JOUR AB - These are interesting recollections of what the early world of electricity was like. During the 1876 Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia, “no buildings were kept open at night; there was no means of lighting such buildings at night with any kind of ease or safety....There was a railway running through the grounds; of course it was a steam road. Nothing else could have been thought of -- nothing in the way of trolley cars; nothing in the way of electric railways. “Now, what did we find there in the way of electrical display? There were exhibits chiefly of telegraph instruments, and a small exhibit of telephones, but nobody believed that such an instrument was of any account, although it was used for the first time during the Centennial Exposition to transmit articulate speech over a line....” Thomson describes the Paris Exposition in 1878 and the lighting of one street (the Avenue de l’Opera and the Place de l’Opera) by a beautiful but expensive “system called the Jablochkoff.” The author also tells of a fire in which firemen were amazed that their hoses could not extinguish the electric lights in the building that was ablaze. AU - Thomson, Elihu DA - July 1905 IS - 4 KW - non-USA lighting +electricity Centennial Exposition, 1876 lighting, electrical Exposition, Paris (1878) +telegraph +telephones World Fairs expositions World Fairs LB - 5100 PY - 1905 SP - 563-72 ST - Personal Recollections of the Development of the Electrical Industry T2 - The Engineering Magazine TI - Personal Recollections of the Development of the Electrical Industry VL - 29 ID - 1897 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reprints Tiffany's address to the Rembrandt Club of Brooklyn. Tiffany, who discusses his work with glass, notes that when he first traveled to the East "where the people and the buildings also are clad in beautiful hues, the pre-eminence of color in the world was brought forcibly to my attention." (142) He notes that northern Europeans and Americans have trouble enjoying color the way it is experienced in the East. "This reluctance to enjoy what is natural and beneficent, which is found among most of the northern Europeans and Americans, makes it hard to introduce any warmth among us . . . ." (142) Tiffany notes that at Laurelton Hall near Oyster Bay on Long Island he had made a "nude figure in glass which has no surface paint or etched parts to express the flesh, while the garments of other figures of the same composition are rendered by the artful adjustment of glass in different thicknesses." (142) He maintains that "this is one of the most important advances in modern colored windows." (142) With regard to color and Nature, Tiffany told his audience: "'Nature is always right' -- that is a syaing we often hear from the past; and here is another: 'Nature is always beautiful ... but when some one dares to say that on the contrary 'Nature is rarely right -- and to such an extent even, that it almost might be said that Nature is usually wrong' then the people who love Nature and are striving to follow her lead become disgusted and more than angry." (142) He goes on to say: "We read a great deal, and we hear it supported in the present, to the effect that all that is in 142/143 Nature, all that we see and feel, is expressed to our senses by form or by lines. These discriminators between color and line put color in the background to play the second fiddle. They stoutly maintain that it is false doctrine to say that color is superior to line, a doctrine set up and defended by certain men of the early nineteenth century who are called the Romantics. Nay, some go so far as to say the doctrine of the superiority of color to form is one concern which you have to laugh -- in order not to weep! (142-43) As a "believer in Color," Tiffany put forward his on views. "It is curious, is it not, that line and form disappear at a short distance, while color remains visible at a much longer? It is fairly certain ... that the eyes of children at first see only colored surfaces -- the breast and face of the mother, the hear of the father..... Color and movement, not form, are our earliest impressions when babies." (143) "The Orientals have been teaching the Occidentals how to use colors for the past 10,000 years or so.... The men of the East who supplied barbarians with rugs and figured textiles considered color first, and form only incidentally.... We have to discover, as they did, what marvelous power one color has over another, and what the relative size of each different tract of color means to the result -- what the mass of each different color means for the effect of the design as a whole.!" (143) Tiffany notes that in the painting of stained glass in the 13th century and in the painting of flowers, color is most important and that in regard to flowers, "their form is distinctly a secondary consideration...." (143) "The sovereign importance of Color is only beginning to be realized in modern times," Tiffany said. (143) (my emphasis) He says "Let us consider now, whether those reasoners are correct who allot a secondary play to Color." (143) AU - Tiffany, Louis C. DA - May 1917 KW - religion religion, and color media effects emotion decadence censorship ref, secondary ref, Art World color, and Louis Tiffany Tiffany, Louis, and color color, and glass glass, and color color, and research on color color color, and inadequacy of language color, in history color, and theory color, and language color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and poetry color, and religion religion, and color values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations color, and nudity color, and flesh color nude in glass color, and harmony color, and nature color, and Oriental censorship censorship and rating censorship, and color color, and censorship color, and East v. West quotations quotations, and sovereign importance of color LB - 42460 PY - 1917 SP - 142-43 ST - Color and Its Kindship to Sound T2 - The Art World TI - Color and Its Kindship to Sound VL - 2 ID - 4345 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Toffler published his best-selling book entitled Future Shock in 1970. Material from this work appealed in issues of Playboy during that year. See under this book for longer explanation of Toffler's work. AU - Toffler, Alvin DA - Feb., 1970 IS - 2 KW - underground cinema nationalism literature magnetic recording photography underground media underground films References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps publishing preservation sexuality sexuality communication revolution news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers history, and new media materials materials magnetic tape +future and science fiction community democracy freedom history Playboy reproduction revolution +duplicating technologies +motion pictures labor information technology history graphics revolution general studies history, break with Boulding, Kenneth Read, Herbert Diebold, John change, acceleration of communication revolution information age information technology, and factories capitalism information technology, and power +nationalism and communication labor and communication information technology, and labor literature, popular image media +photography and visual communication nudity pinups magazines motion pictures +television information technology, and national culture cameras, and technology videotape cameras, hand-held motion pictures, and technology counterculture photocopying reproduction revolution (1960s) democracy and media publishing, and desktop underground press freedom of expression future utopianism freedom of choice control revolution publishing, and best sellers publishing, and mass production timelines cameras graphics revolution (1960s) +duplicating technologies +sound recording +motion pictures future future, bibliography bibliographies, and future change reproduction revolution graphics revolution bibliographies office LB - 19440 N1 - See also: office PY - 1970 SP - 94-98, 202-04, 206, 208 ST - Future Shock T2 - Playboy TI - Future Shock VL - 17 ID - 780 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Toffler published his best-selling book entitled Future Shock in 1970. Material from this work appealed in issues of Playboy during that year. See under this book for longer explanation of Toffler's work. AU - Toffler, Alvin DA - March, 1970 IS - 3 KW - underground cinema nationalism literature magnetic recording photography underground media underground films References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps publishing preservation sexuality sexuality communication revolution news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers history, and new media materials materials magnetic tape +future and science fiction community democracy freedom history Playboy reproduction revolution +duplicating technologies +motion pictures labor information technology history graphics revolution general studies history, break with Boulding, Kenneth Read, Herbert Diebold, John change, acceleration of communication revolution information age information technology, and factories capitalism information technology, and power +nationalism and communication labor and communication information technology, and labor literature, popular image media +photography and visual communication nudity pinups magazines motion pictures +television information technology, and national culture cameras, and technology videotape cameras, hand-held motion pictures, and technology counterculture photocopying reproduction revolution (1960s) democracy and media publishing, and desktop underground press freedom of expression future utopianism freedom of choice control revolution publishing, and best sellers publishing, and mass production timelines cameras graphics revolution (1960s) +duplicating technologies +sound recording +motion pictures future future, bibliography bibliographies, and future change reproduction revolution graphics revolution bibliographies LB - 19450 N1 - See also: office PY - 1970 SP - 88-90, 96, 174-75 ST - Coping with Future Shock T2 - Playboy TI - Coping with Future Shock VL - 17 ID - 781 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author notes that “one of the most important directions in which photography is now beginning to make itself useful is in the way of newspaper illustration. Undoubtedly the newspaper of the future will be illustrated, not with a few scattering outline cuts like a schoolboy’s first attempts at drawing, but with pictures containing all the detail and half-tones of a photograph. These will be sent by wire the same as messages and put into a stereotype without redrawing.” The author then discusses the Scovill Detective camera which he believes in the future will be “an almost indispensable adjunct in a newspaper office.” He offers recommendations on how to improve the camera. AU - Tolman, Henry L. DA - 1887 KW - photography journalism news and journalism +photography and visual communication cameras, Scovill Detective newspapers, and photography photography, and newspapers photography, and detective cameras newspapers, and detective cameras newspapers news cameras LB - 12410 PY - 1887 SP - 192-94 ST - The Detective Camera for Newspaper Photography T2 - American Annual of Photography and Photographic Times: Almanac for 1888 TI - The Detective Camera for Newspaper Photography ID - 2588 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article explains that the "microprocessor is a computer central processing unit on a single chip. Currently [1977] it is associated with other chips in a microcomputing system." But Toong notes, "complete computer systems on a single chip" are now emerging. AU - Toong, Hoo-Min D. DA - Sept. 1977 IS - 3 KW - computers microprocessing integrated circuits transistors values communication revolution second industrial revolution communication revolution materials materials values religion computers microelectronics +computers and the Internet microprocessors microelectronics revolution chips, computer integrated circuits Random Access Memory (RAM) RAM microcomputers computer chips LB - 3760 PY - 1977 SP - 146-61 ST - Microprocessors T2 - Scientific American TI - Microprocessors VL - 237 ID - 1764 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Townsend argues that the Internet might affect the way people view themselves and their work status and that those changes could also lead to new class awareness and new forms of collective action. “Since individuals are no longer bounded by the physical and cultural realities of their neighborhoods, they may well abandon their old self-definitions, philosophical conventions, and class loyalties.” In addition, workers are much more likely to work with their heads and are paid for performance more than by job category and seniority. Townsend argues that unions face two major challenges in the electronic village: The organization of work eliminates the power once concentrated in the hands of workers able to band together locally for a strike, and the decline of the smokestack town has eliminated the common experience that contributed to class consciousness. Townsend sees the National Education Association as a viable model for the future of unions. “The strength of the NEA lies in its ability to identify enough issues that have common meaning to its members to activate them politically, which gives the NEA tremendous influence politically, ostensibly for the benefit of its members.” Unions, Townsend argues, might be replaced in the future as small political coalitions with specific class interests. The unions of the future, he asserts, might be “defined more by commonly held political and social beliefs than by specific workplace issues.” --Phil Glende AU - Townsend, Anthony M. DA - Summer 2000 IS - 3 KW - computers computers community Glende, Phil labor labor, and new media community, and new media community, and labor labor, and community labor, and electronic media +computers and the Internet labor, and computers computers, and labor LB - 1160 N1 - See also: office PY - 2000 SP - 393-405 ST - Solidarity.com? Class and Collective Action in the Electronic Village T2 - Journal of Labor Research TI - Solidarity.com? Class and Collective Action in the Electronic Village VL - 21 ID - 204 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article presents an interesting account of the day-to-day work of a typical film actress named Edna, a woman who was "half the time ... an extra" and "half the time ... a more and more established actress, one of the first persons whom directors sent for when a small part was important." (654) It describes the often cramped, dingy working conditions, the long hours of standing around waiting for one's scene to be filmed, and the uncertain and often dangerous circumstances under which actors were expected to operate. Edna "came to know moving-pictures as deserts of unregulated tedium, as yawns from six to sixteen hours. They existed in artificially lighted studios, that were only refashioned skating-rinks, churches, and garages, often large enough for only one picture at a time, fusty, airless, as well as unheated through the long winter, with the corpse-like reflections of the yellow accessories falling dispiritedly through the mustard-tinted atmosphere on everybody's skin." (649) There was by this time a stark difference between the stars and the ordinary actors. "Edna had never known conditions so unequal. Here, if ever, the rich were richer and the poor poorer. The world revolved around the stars and poured into their laps fortunes which the most distinguished careers could not have earned upon the stage in a long life, while the rank and file had less than the stage had ever given them in money, in security, in consideration. It was the increasingly crippling tendency of all modern theatrical conditions, but here twenty times intensified; for here there were no gradations, no strong class of Magna Carta barons to stand between the people and the crown. There were the stars, and there was, so to speak, the cannon-fodder. Either one mattered supremely or one didn't matter at all; one was everything or nothing...." (654) The author describes the filming of a movie which proceeded in fits and starts. Scenes were not filmed in chronological order or in the order they appeared in the script. The scenes were filmed often according to the setting. Once the scenes from a particular setting were finished, the crew moved on to another setting. The filming "was not consecutive.... It was taken in tiny scenes, 'flashes' of half a minute, of a few seconds, like little, separate eddies in an invisible stream; they would be run together later when the flowing stream, the whole picture, was 'assembled and cut.'" (643) "In this confused and casual chaos one could hardly tell a rehearsal from a performance. Nothing seemed to have any beginning or end...." (642) Moving pictures were "like nothing on earth but a dress-rehearsal that never comes to a final curtain." (642) This article makes keen observations about the close-up in movie making. Tracy writes of an actress portraying a scene (p. 646): "...The description took root deep down in her eyes, and as it crept to the surface it grew into the emotion of the scene, and flowered there. Terror, caution, the bewilderment of a small, spoiled princess, the desperate courage of little, hunted things -- it was truth that all these not so much crossed her face as grew into it. For the 'close-up,' like all real motion -picture acting, is not an assumption of feeling, but its revelation. [emphasis added] The thing is not that something is done, but that, an X-ray being provided, something is shown. Edna could not make out how the star achieved this effect except by an exercise of pure imagination. The outsider remembered a line from an old poet that ever afterward remained for her the essential description of motion-picture acting: 'Her pure and eloquent blood Spoke in her veins, and so distinctly wrought That you had almost said her body though.' Only , as Edna came to know, it mustn't think too violently." (646) This article points out that very subtle expressions and movements are greatly enlarged by the camera and the screen, unlike in the theater. "What the theater diminishes the camera enlarges. Every motion, taken on strips of celluloid an inch long, is magnified several thousand times before it is thrown on the screen. In consequence, any but the slightest quiver of the lids or twitch of the brows will loom like a thunderstorm. So much as one's action must be slowed down before the camera, so much must it be lightly touched in. [emphasis added] Afterward, when Edna heard glib gabble about the 'necessary exaggeration' of moving-picture acting, it made her laugh." (648) The author, Virginia Tracy, had previously written "The Handicap of Beauty," Century, 90 (July 1915), 401-07. AU - Tracy, Virginia DA - Sept. 1917 IS - 5 KW - facial expressions celebrity ref, secondary women photography and visual communication photography, and actors actors, and photography photography, and acting acting, and facial expressions facial expressions, and acting acting, and eyes quotations, and facial expressions quotations ref, Century facial expressions, and emotion emotion, and facial expressions acting, and close-ups actors, and close-ups acting, and eyes actors, and eyes celebrity culture cameras, and personality personality, and motion pictures acting actors cameras personality photography LB - 42420 PY - 1917 SP - 641-56 ST - Acting for the Camera: The Experiences of a Woman in the Motion-Picture Studios T2 - Century TI - Acting for the Camera: The Experiences of a Woman in the Motion-Picture Studios VL - 94 ID - 4341 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Trend criticizes media effects research, and a defends the conclusions of other critics this research such as Janathan Freedman. Trend says that this work amounts to an "academic Tower of Babel." He writes: “Media violence literature has become a jumble of unrelated excursions into empirical science, narrative analysis, and communication studies…. Nothing could be further from scientific research than the disciplines of film and communication studies.” The author discusses several different approaches to media effects -- laboratory studies, cultivation research, content analysis. He rejects the idea that there is a consensus in this literature about the effects of media violence. Trend acknowledges, though, that carthasis theory "has been largely disproved in research studies." He takes issue with those who argue that "violence in the media is becoming increasingly graphic and 'real'," arguing that "in fact the opposite is taking place" as special effects technology provides an "aesthetization of violence" that "makes it tolerable and enjoyable." Theoretically, Trend cites Michel Foucault and Vicki Goldberg. The author does acknowledge that mass media and popular culture are saturated with violent images. "The profitability of violence drives movie production, television programming, and most computer games, as media corporations compete in developing the most engaging stains of hyper-violence." If this violence in mass media "really isn't hurting anyone that much, at least not directly," he says, it is "doing something much more pernicious." It is "wasting an enormous resource that might otherwise be capable of tremndous public good" and it is doing "something much worse than teaching people to become agressive. It tells them to do nothing." AU - Trend, David DA - Fall 2003 IS - 3 KW - nationalism violence media effects media effects, and critics Freedman, Jonathan television motion pictures motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures nationalism and communication nationalism, and media violence violence, and nationalism capitalism capitalism, and media violence children and media children, and media violence video games violence, and video games television, and violence violence, and television AMA, and violence violence, and AMA Zillmann, Dolf Gerbner, George catharsis theory Foucault, Michel Goldberg, Vicki capitalism capitalism, and media violence children LB - 30590 N1 - ProCite field[8]: PY - 2003 SP - 285-308 ST - Merchants of Death: Media Violence and American Empire T2 - Harvard Educational Review TI - Merchants of Death: Media Violence and American Empire VL - 73 ID - 2814 ER - TY - JOUR AB - L. T. Troland (1889-1932) taught psychology at Harvard University and was also a co-inventor of Technicolor movies. In this article (680-94) he discusses the psychological reaction to color motion pictures. He notes that in 1927 there were three processes in development that were making motion pictures more realistic, that would allow movies to shed "their peculiar movie characteristics and become identical in effect with reality or the best in drama: talking films; "three-dimensional plasticity"; and the use of natural colors. (681) Troland's focus is on color. Troland begins by commenting on movies from the viewpoint of the director for whom their "basis is obviously almost wholly psychological. The function of motion pictures appears to be to stimulate the emotions of an audience, and the director is successful in so far as he accomplishes this result in a not too disagreeable manner." The "average motion picture patron," he assumes has "a mental age of approximately twelve years." (680) Troland examines and attempts to refute assumptions then current about color movies -- that "color interferes with the appreciation of dramatic action" and that the cost is prohibitive. (682) He asks "To what extent is the story-telling capacity of the picture impoverished by the absence of natural color?" (683) (emphasis in original text) He notes that novelists attempt to use color extensively in their works. (683-84) He argues that "the story-telling power of a film is distinctly and unpleasantly curtailed by the absence of color...." (684) Color enhances realism and gives the movie an advantage over the book. "The picture is far more convincing than the written story because it approximates more closely the actual objects and events to which the story refers. The associative processes by which we pass from symbolism to meanings are greatly reduced.... The actual experiences of every day life are usually entirely convincing because they are direct appeals to sense, whereas the majority of the things which we read or hear about are unimpressive because we always doubt their existence to 684/685 some extent. The same reaction applies, of course, to pictures but to a less degree according as the pictures become more and more faithful to our conception of the reality. Thus a photograph is much more convincing than an artist's drawing," Troland argues. (684-85) Troland notes the unsatisfactory nature of black-and-white pictures. "After view a sequence of scenes in color, the black and white pictures give an impression of unnaturalness and weirdness which is highly disagreeable. The loss of reality constitutes a very definite step-down of interest and emotion appeal." (685) The use of color in story telling great increases realism and dramatic impact. In most cases, the use of color is not likely to distract from the story being told. (685) To be sure, though, color is entertaining and "inherently pleasing to look at." (688) The use of color is certainly likely to improve musicals or other elaborate stage revues. (690) The author maintains that color great enhances ambiance. "The effect ... varies with the character of the scene, but certain types of scenes are enhanced in a startling manner by the 686/687 use of natural color. An element of atmosphere may be introduced which is unobtainable in any other way." (686-87) (emphasis in original text) The use of natural colors greatly increases the screen's ability to project sexuality. Color is particularly significant in presenting flesh tones. "The black and white picture is powerless to show the significant difference between deep bronze tan or a rough outdoor character and the delicate bloom of the ideal heroine's cheeks," Troland says. (687) "Undoubtedly the greatest 'kick' of color, at least for the male members of an audience, consists in the value which it adds to the delineation of feminine beauty. All pretty girls in black and white are pale and consumptive. In the color film they look as we like to see 687/688 them in every day life or, even better, on the stage. I do not know to what extent it is moral to advocate the cause of colored motion pictures on the ground that color adds to 'sex appeal.' However, there is a considerable use of this sort of appeal in motion pictures; to such an extent that I believe the appeal in question has been designated as 'it' in this domain." (687-88) Clara Bow is a good example, Troland says. "One well known director hails the advent of commercial colored motion pictures by saying that they 'bring sex into the movies,' which seems to imply that this factor was absent hitherto. I cannot vouch for the truth of this implication, but at any rate it is evident that natural flesh values are of tremendous assistance in this particular matter. Of course, the censors might frown upon the advocacy of color on this basis, but as a psychologist I feel quite sure that the point is a very important one, because all experts admit that the basic appeal of motion pictures must be through primitive emotions, among which eroticism is not the least." (688) (emphasis added) Troland discusses the importance and use of lighting in using Technicolor. (689) He notes that producers have left the research in color technology to experts and says that it is doubtful they really understand this research. (689-90) The use of color, Troland explains, can improve "advertising, educational, and scientific films" just as it has enhanced billboards and ads in magazines. (691) To those people who would question the importance of using color, Troland asks: "Why, then are all billposters advertising motion picture productions uniformly printed in full color? Why do the distributors go to the expense of getting out lobby posters in color? Why does the national advertising of certain producers in the trade magazines utilize so much color? It is is true that color interferes with the appreciation of comedy, why do al Sunday papers insist on the use of elaborate colors in their comic strips?" (691) In this piece, Troland is advocating the two-color process more than the three-color process. In the panel discussion that follows, at least one of the panelists, Dr. Hickman, says he prefers the three-color process. (694) C. E. K. Mees argues that the "two-color process is satisfactory." (695) Following this article is a discussion (694-98) with Troland, Dr. Hickman, C.E.K. Mees, Mr. Richardson, Mr. Kellogg, and Mr. Greene. There is a discussion here with Richardson about the most effective lighting to use in projecting color movies. (696-97) Troland argues that a Mazda lamp is the best way to project two-color pictures. (697) Kellogg comments on his reaction to seeing talking black-and-white films: "When viewing the talking movies I have been struck at once by the fact that when a person begins to talk, his ghostly appearance become more impressive. Education may overcome this little barrier," he speculates. (697) Troland agrees saying that "we have frequently heard the comment which has been offered by Mr. Kellogg concerning the unnaturalness of the black and white image when it begins to speak; and I believe the combination of color with sound will strengthen the total effect by producing a more harmonious relationship between the screen and the sound reproducer. We have already made numerous tests on the combination of color with a number of talking movie systems." (698) Troland argues that Technicolor color film poses far less of a fire hazard that does the usual black-and-white film. In his article he says that because "it contains no silver it is much less liable than black and white to catch fire in the projector when any accident happens." (689) He elaborates on this topic in the discussion section in response to a question from Greene: "Regarding the relative non-inflammability of Technicolor positive, this is due to the fact that the film contains no metallic silver to absorb the heat rays and raise its temperature to the ignition point. The coloring materials which are used are almost wholly transparent to infra-red radiation, and they have about the same absorption as gelatin or film base. Of course, the nitrocellulose base is just as inflammable as ever, but the heat passes through instead of being taken up by the film. We have found it possible with a Mazda lamp source to stop the film in the gate indefinitely without it being ignited. However, this is not recommended with a high intensity or other arc lamp." (698) (emphasis added) AU - Troland, L. T. DA - 1927 IS - 32 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects motion pictures, and talking movies sound recording motion pictures, and 3-D 3-D, and motion pictures color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel color, and print color, and books words vs. images images vs. words color, and language color, and inadequacy of language motion pictures, and black and white motion pictures, and fire hazards film, and fire hazards film, color, and fire hazards women motion pictures, and women women, and motion pictures color, and women in film color, and beauty lighting lighting, and color films motion pictures, and lighting lighting, and motion pictures lighting, and Technicolor Technicolor, and lighting advertising and public relations color, and advertising advertising, and color color, and C. E. K. Mees quotations quotations, and censors fearing color film quotations, and ghostly bw movies materials materials, and celluloid materials, and Technicolor film Technicolor theaters, as fair hazards color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation Troland, Leonard, and motion pictures Troland, Leonard, and psychology Troland, Leonard, and sexualty 3-D advertising film theaters LB - 40020 PY - 1927 SP - 680-98 ST - Some Psychological Aspects of Natural Color Motion Pictures T2 - Transactions of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers TI - Some Psychological Aspects of Natural Color Motion Pictures VL - 11 ID - 4100 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this 120-page monograph, Troland, who was a psychologist at Harvard and a co-inventor of Technicolor, surveys the state of research on visual science. The work begins with Troland offering a historical perspective on the position of visual optics among the sciences. He discusses color vision in Chapter V ("The Salient Problems of Visual Psychophysiology") under the heading "Chromatic Vision" (84-90). This work is written for other scientists and psychologists working in this area of research. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - Dec. 1922 IS - 27 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects motion pictures, and talking movies sound recording motion pictures, and 3-D 3-D, and motion pictures color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures Troland, Leonard 3-D LB - 40130 PY - 1922 SP - 1-120 ST - The Present Status of Visual Science T2 - Bulletin of the National Research Council TI - The Present Status of Visual Science VL - 5, Part 2 ID - 4111 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article was apparently published shortly after Leonard Troland graduated from MIT (he listed as "Leonard T. Troland, B.S."). It reveals Troland's interest in spiritism and psychic phenomenon, and also he familiarity with the work of Sigmund Freud and his theory about the subconscious. Troland writes that "Common sense assumes that the world of space and of thought or memory is perceived as it actually exists, but if we accept the Freudian theory of repression, we must admit that to a certain extent we see and remember the world not as it is or was but as we would desire it to be." We have all a powerful tendency not to perceive, and to fail to recall, incidents and things which are offensive to our own peculiar dispositions." (406) (emphasis in original text). Later he writes about "The Animal Cleverness and Keenness of the Subconscious" and maintains that "The subconscious is not only morally unreliable; it is wonderfully crafty; it possesses physcial sources of perception, and powers of inference and adaptation of an automatic character, which are quite foreign to the introspective mind. We shall point out the significance for mediumistic experiments of two or three such repressed faculties in our discussion of clairvoyance and spirit message. If we accept the Freudian hypothesis with all its implications we must 409/410 admit that the faculties of the subconscious mind are more commensurate with those of dumb animals than with the powers and limitations which we ordinarily recognize as human." (409-10) (emphasis in original text). Troland goes on to discuss telepathy, the work of the medium, and "The Visual Function of the Subconscious." This latter topic is covered on pages 425-26. "Since the retinal 'rods' are more primitive in their function than are the 'cones,' we should expect the subconscious to possess a twilight vision more acute than that of the upper level, the 'rods' being, as is well known, the organs of 'night vision.' This aids us in understanding the physical basis of that cleverness of manipulation of instruments in darkened rooms which we must suppose to be characteristic of such mediums as (say) Eusapia Palladino." (426) The reprint is collected in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. The reprint says that it appear in the Feb.-March, 1914 issue of Journal of Abnormal Psychology. The reprint pagination is 3-26. AU - Troland, Leonard T. DA - 1913-1914 KW - Technicolor, and L. T. Troland ref, secondary Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and Sigmund Freud Troland, Leonard, and psychic research Troland, Leonard, and subconscious Troland, Leonard, and psychoanalysis Troland, Leonard, and morality Technicolor Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor Troland, Leonard, and telepathy LB - 40230 PY - 1913 SP - 405-28 ST - The Freudian Psychology and the Psychical Research T2 - Journal of Abnormal Psychology TI - The Freudian Psychology and the Psychical Research VL - 8 ID - 4121 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article, Leonard Troland, a psychology professor a Harvard who was also noted for his work in opitics and as a co-inventor of Technicolor, reveals his interest in ethics and metaphysics. Written during the early year of World War I (before the United States entered the war), Troland says that Christianity and other religions have either failed or are in decline, especially "since the outbreak of Europe' 'international lunacy'...." (425) "Christianity," he asserts, "can not even claim the credit of having given man's mind the intellectual freedom required for the prosecution of scientific studies." (425) Although Christianity is the "religion of our people and of the most enlightened and successful people," (426) it "and all of the world religions have a fatal and inevitable weakness. It consists in their lack of respect for knowledge." (429) Troland also expresses reservations about technology and science. Technology "has made our twentieth-century civilization powerful and distinctive," but it also "sad to say, threatens nw to annihilate it with an efficiency surpasssing that with which it was constructed." (429) Troland calls for a new "philosophy." It would not ignore the world's religions. "Whatever they contain of truth would necessaily be embraced also by a universal system of knowledge, to which we apply the name 'philosophy.' Such a system, when brought to completion, would possess all of the important chararacteristic of a religion...." (436) Such "a system of knowledge is not only possible, but is absolutely essential to the world's progress and peace. Science alone can not save us; alone, it may even prove our ruin," he argues. "Existing religions, full of valuable truths as they are, are yet too shallow to command lasting respect. What we need is a system of thought, filling the place now occupied by religion, but possessing the strength of science...." (436) This reprint is collected in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - Aug. 3, 1916 IS - 16 KW - religion ethics ethics ref, secondary Troland, Leonard color Troland, Leonard, and color color, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and visual sensation color, and media effects media effects media effects, and color Troland, Leonard, and hedonism Troland, Leonard, and ethics values ethics, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and psychology Troland, Leonard, and metaphysics Troland, Leonard, and religion religion, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and technology LB - 40400 PY - 1916 SP - 421-37 ST - Philosophy and the World's Peace T2 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Method TI - Philosophy and the World's Peace VL - 13 ID - 4138 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Troland begins this article by says that the "word 'color,' as it is used in popular, as well as in psychological discussions, refers to one of the fundamental qualities out which our every-day experience or consciousness is made up; it is the basic stuff or substance of our visual awareness. The world of seen space, out into which we look, presents itself to us at each moment, as a pattern of colors and luminosities, arranged in three dimensions. This world of immediate visual consciousness, freed of the physical interpretations which our laboratory science thrusts upon it, is a subject matter of psychology, and only in this experimental world, so far as we know, does color exist." (21) Troland notes the difficult of using "daylight" lamps to recreated day light at night and says "it is certain that we cannot always accomplish this result by supplying radiatioin identical in wave-length composition to sunlight. A show window illuminated by strict artificial daylight, if set in an environment of ordinary 'tungsten' or even 'nitrogen tungsten' light appears distinctly bluish and cold...." (22) Color is elusive and resists theoretical explanation, he says. "In several respects color vision is one of the most mysterious processes of which nature affords us an example. Even when we lay to one side the fundamental mystery of the relation between consciousness and matter, there are a number of aspects of the process which have proven themselves singularly baffling," he writes. (27) Troland discusses the biological and sexual significance of color. "Another unresolved mystery of color is that of its evolutionary origin and its biological signficance. To the layman it may seem absurd to ask 'What is the use of color vision?' because there are so many practically important discriminations in our every-day life which depend upon, or at least are aided by a perception of color. However, the pertinency of the question increases when we consider, first, that nearly all of these practical situations have been created in the course of social development, because color vision already existed; and, second, that even in our complex colorific civilization the color-blind persons gets along with very little difficulty, so that he may never become aware of his defect until he is carefully tested in the laboratory. (31) "Some reasons exist for believing that originally color vision was developed as an adjunct of the reproductive function, and should be considered virtually as a 'secondary sexual character.' Color blindness appears in heredity to be a 'sex-linked character,' as it occurs some forty times more frequently in the male than in the female. The females of many species are drab, for protection, while the males are highly colored. It is not improbable that this may have been the case with the fur-coated progenitors of the human species, and that color vision is in reality a vestige of by-gone evolutionary conditions, which has now been distorted from its primitive function, the recognition of a mate. [my emphasis] (31) A more plausible view is possibly to be found in the consideration that, although practically every judgment which we make on the basis of color can be made also on a basis of luminosity or shape, color discrimination greatly increases the speed with which such judgments can be delivered. The visual discriminative reactions of the color-blind individual are often slow and hesitatant...." (31) Drawing on the work of S. L. Pressey at Harvard ("The Influence of Color Upon Mental and Motor Efficiency"), Troland says that the "problem of the higher psychology of color [emphasis in original text] may be subdivided into the problems of color preferences, and of the influence of color on mental efficiency. Both of these factors may be supposed to involve the influence of affective tone, i.e., the pleasantness or unpleasantness of the color experience; or the emotional effect...." (32) Troland notes that different people prefer different colors. "Statistically, the literature makes no state-32/33 ments; one color appears to be almost as good as another for any purpose, except that of actually copying the aspects of nature. There is some agreement that brightness and redness have a 'stimulating effects,' but even this is very indefinite." (32-33) Troland says that Pressey's research "does establish a strong presumption that the higher psychological influence of color in illumination -- if it exists -- is of very minor importance." (35) Troland says that the impact that color has on people is unstable. He says that pleasure is often associated with novelty and that colors are a great source of novelty and pleasure because they can be combined into an infinite number of different arrangments. "It is very important to recognize that 'affective values' are by nature unstable, and difficult to attach to definite forms of stimulation. The law of affective adaptation tends to reduce the pleasantness and unpleasantness of any stimulus to a neutral level, with repetition or continuation. Only those stimuli which arouse fundamental instinctive tendencies, such as those of sex, hunger and fear, can be relied upon to yield anything approaching re- 36/37 liable affective results. [my emphasis] Dr. Pressey found this principle of affective adaptation was much in evidence in the introspective reports of his subjects. (36-37) "On the other hand, the law of adaptation itself implies another principle, which is of great practical importance in the control of the affective life. This is the principle of novelty. Outside of the major instinctive emotions, and also to a marked extent within them, most of the pleasures of life are referable to novelty, to the achievement of new experiences. The old scenes and the old melodies pall upon us with repetition, and we look for new. We travel in order to get a change; we stage a new drama; we may even declare war in order to relieve monotony. [my emphasis] (37) "What a remarkable medium for the production of novelty we possess in color, with its infinitude of tones, saturations, shades and contrasts! It may not be the function of illuminating engineering to light our streets with green in order to inhibit robbers and gun-men, or to flood our dining rooms with red to stimulate digestion. On the other hand, to provide us with an infinite variety of colors, which we can choose according to the passing fancy of the hour, may be a real service not only for the pleasure of the instant, but indirectly for our mental and moral efficiency, as it is governed by our satisfaction in living." (37) [my emphasis] The reprint of this piece is collected in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - Feb.11, 1918 IS - 1 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular ref, scientific ref, Transaction Illuminating Engineering Society color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation quotations quotations, and color quotations, and Leonard Troland lighting lighting, and artifical daylight color, and theory color, and red color, and novelty color, and pleasure color, and hedonism color, and lighting lighting, and color LB - 40420 PY - 1918 SP - 21-37 ST - The Psychology of Color in Relation to Illumination T2 - Transactions of the Illuminating Engineering Society TI - The Psychology of Color in Relation to Illumination VL - 13 ID - 4140 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article, Troland comments on the mysterious nature of color vision. He writes: "In the present paper, it has been my aim to discuss the problems of color vision mainly from the point of view of neurology, considering how the facts relate themselves to the principles of action of the nerve conductors and centers. The point of view most frequently adopted is that of the sense-organ or receptor process...." (41) Troland says that "I possess, in my catalogue of visual literature, references to more than sixty different theories of the mechanism of visual response. Out of this large number of more or less independently conceived hypotheses, however, only three have proven sufficiently valuable to be discussed in the text books of psychology, physiology or physics. The three theories in question are those of Young (and Helmholtz), Hering, and Ladd-Franklin. The Young-Helmholtz theory is preferred by physicists because it lays emphasis primarily upon the stimuli to vision, while the Hering theory receives more attention at the hands of the psychologists because its fundamental conceptions are derived from introspective analysis. It is gratifying to note, however, that in a number of recent psychological texts the theory of Mrs. Ladd-Franklin has supplanted the other two theories as a pedagogical instrument, since it takes into account both sets of fundamental facts which the other theories were respectively designed to explain." (8) After wading through these theories, Troland concludes that the "essential mystery of the nature of the mechanism, however, still remains unsolved; we certainly cannot rest content with an analysis of the color function in abstract units like the three 'sensations' of the traditional theory. We must endeavor to penetrate the reality of the process and to find out exactly how the action of different wave-lengths upon the retina varies, and how the results of this selective stimulation are propagated to the brain...." (32) This article is reprinted from the American Journal of Physiological Optics (Vol. 1, No. 4 and Vol. 2, No. 1). This reprint is in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. II: 1920-1928 in Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - 1920-1921 IS - 4 and 1 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation color, and theory LB - 40430 PY - 1920 SP - 2-44 ST - The Enigma of Color Vision T2 - American Journal of Physiological Optics TI - The Enigma of Color Vision VL - 1 and 2 ID - 4141 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reprint is in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. II: 1920-1928 in Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - Feb. 1920 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation LB - 40440 PY - 1920 SP - 376-87 ST - A System of Explaining Affective Phenomena T2 - Journal of Abnormal Psychology TI - A System of Explaining Affective Phenomena ID - 4142 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reprint is in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. II: 1920-1928 in Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - May, 1920 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation LB - 40450 PY - 1920 SP - 161-86 ST - The 'All or None' Law in Visual Response T2 - Journal of the Optical Society of America TI - The 'All or None' Law in Visual Response ID - 4143 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reprint is in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. II: 1920-1928 in Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - July, 1920 IS - 7 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation bibliographies bibliographies, and vision LB - 40460 PY - 1920 SP - 201-28 ST - Vision -- General Phenomena T2 - Psychological Bulletin TI - Vision -- General Phenomena VL - 17 ID - 4144 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reprint is in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. II: 1920-1928 in Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - Sept., 1920 IS - 5 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation LB - 40470 PY - 1920 SP - 323-50 ST - The Physical Basis of Nerve Functions T2 - Psychological Review TI - The Physical Basis of Nerve Functions VL - 27 ID - 4145 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reprint is in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. II: 1920-1928 in Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - 1922 IS - 4 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation bibliographies bibliographies, and vision LB - 40480 PY - 1922 SP - 316-91 ST - The Progress of Visual Science in 1920 T2 - American Journal of Physiological Optics TI - The Progress of Visual Science in 1920 VL - 3 ID - 4146 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reprint is in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. II: 1920-1928 in Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - April 30, 1921 IS - 3 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation bibliographies bibliographies, and vision LB - 40490 PY - 1921 SP - 44-50 ST - Henri Pieron on the Physiological Principles Underlying the Study of Light T2 - Transactions of the Illuminating Engineering Society TI - Henri Pieron on the Physiological Principles Underlying the Study of Light VL - 16 ID - 4147 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reprint is in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. II: 1920-1928 in Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - Oct., 1921 IS - 5 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation LB - 40500 PY - 1921 SP - 344-90 ST - The Colors Produced by Equilibrium Photopic Adaptation T2 - Journal of Experimental Psychology TI - The Colors Produced by Equilibrium Photopic Adaptation VL - 4 ID - 4148 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reprint is in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. II: 1920-1928 in Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard T. DA - Jan., 1922 IS - 1 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation LB - 40510 PY - 1922 SP - 3-26 ST - Brilliance and Chroma in Relation to Zone Theories of Vision T2 - Journal of the Optical Society of America and Review of Scientific Instruments TI - Brilliance and Chroma in Relation to Zone Theories of Vision VL - 6 ID - 4149 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reprint is in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. II: 1920-1928 in Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - March 19, 1922 IS - 6 KW - ethics ethics ref, secondary Troland, Leonard color Troland, Leonard, and color color, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and visual sensation color, and media effects media effects media effects, and color Troland, Leonard, and hedonism Troland, Leonard, and ethics values ethics, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and psychology Troland, Leonard, and metaphysics Troland, Leonard LB - 40520 PY - 1922 SP - 141-62 ST - Psychophysics as the Key to the Mysteries of Physics and of Metaphysics T2 - Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences TI - Psychophysics as the Key to the Mysteries of Physics and of Metaphysics VL - 12 ID - 4150 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reprint is in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. II: 1920-1928 in Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - May, 1922 IS - 3 KW - ethics ethics ref, secondary Troland, Leonard color Troland, Leonard, and color color, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and visual sensation color, and media effects media effects media effects, and color Troland, Leonard, and hedonism Troland, Leonard, and ethics values ethics, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and psychology Troland, Leonard, and metaphysics Troland, Leonard LB - 40530 PY - 1922 SP - 201-11 ST - The Significance of Psychical Monism for Psychological Theory T2 - Psychological Review TI - The Significance of Psychical Monism for Psychological Theory VL - 29 ID - 4151 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reprint is in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. II: 1920-1928 in Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - June, 1922 IS - 4 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation LB - 40540 PY - 1922 SP - 327-35 ST - Helmholtz's Contributions to Physiological Optics T2 - Journal of the Optical Society of America and Review of Scientific Instruments TI - Helmholtz's Contributions to Physiological Optics VL - 6 ID - 4152 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reprint is in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. II: 1920-1928 in Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - Sept.-Oct., 1927 IS - 10 KW - ref, secondary Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and visual sensation Troland, Leonard, and eye exams LB - 40560 PY - 1927 SP - 10 ST - Eminent Psychologist Says Patients Fear Eyesight Examinations T2 - Wellsworth Merchandiser TI - Eminent Psychologist Says Patients Fear Eyesight Examinations VL - 12 ID - 4154 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reprint is in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. Troland is here associated with the Biological Laboratries, MIT. AU - Troland, Leonard T. DA - May 1, 1913 IS - 8-40 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation Troland, Leonard, and biology LB - 40570 PY - 1913 ST - A Definite Physico-Chemical Hypothesis to Explain Visual Response T2 - American Journal of Physiology TI - A Definite Physico-Chemical Hypothesis to Explain Visual Response VL - 32 ID - 4155 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reprint is collected in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard T. DA - Oct., 1914 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation LB - 40590 PY - 1914 SP - 500-27 ST - Adaptation and the Chemical Theory of Sensory Response T2 - American Journal of Psychology TI - Adaptation and the Chemical Theory of Sensory Response VL - 25 ID - 4156 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reprint is collected in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard T. DA - May, 1915 IS - 3 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation LB - 40600 PY - 1915 SP - 167-76 ST - The Theory and Practise of the Artificial Pupil T2 - Psychological Review TI - The Theory and Practise of the Artificial Pupil VL - 22 ID - 4157 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The reprint is collected in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard T. DA - June 1916 KW - religion ethics ethics ref, secondary Troland, Leonard color Troland, Leonard, and color color, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and visual sensation color, and media effects media effects media effects, and color Troland, Leonard, and hedonism Troland, Leonard, and ethics values ethics, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and psychology Troland, Leonard, and metaphysics Troland, Leonard, and religion religion, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and biology LB - 40610 PY - 1916 SP - 1-11 ST - The Enzyme Theory of Life T2 - Cleveland Medical Journal TI - The Enzyme Theory of Life VL - 15 ID - 4158 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The reprint is collected in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard T. DA - June, 1916 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation LB - 40620 PY - 1916 SP - 853-55 ST - Notes on Flicker Photometry: Flicker-Photometer Frequency as a Function of the Color of the Standard, and of the Measured Light T2 - Journal of the Franklin Institute TI - Notes on Flicker Photometry: Flicker-Photometer Frequency as a Function of the Color of the Standard, and of the Measured Light ID - 4159 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The reprint is collected in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard T. DA - July, 1916 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation LB - 40630 PY - 1916 SP - 111-12 ST - The Absence of the Purkinje Phenomenon in the Fovea T2 - Journal of the Franklin Institute TI - The Absence of the Purkinje Phenomenon in the Fovea ID - 4160 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The reprint is collected in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard T. DA - July, 1916 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation LB - 40640 PY - 1916 SP - 113-14 ST - The Heterochromatic Brightness Discrimination Threshold T2 - Journal of the Franklin Institute TI - The Heterochromatic Brightness Discrimination Threshold ID - 4161 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This paper was presented before the Illuminating Engineering Society, Sept., 1916. This reprint is collected in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. In this reprint, see also Abstracts 78, 79, 80, 81, and 84. AU - Troland, Leonard T. DA - [Sept., 1916] IS - 3 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation LB - 40650 SP - 378-82 ST - The Retinal Visibility Function T2 - Bulletin of the Physical Laboratory of the National Electric Lamp Association: Abstract 77 TI - The Retinal Visibility Function VL - 1 ID - 4162 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The reprint is collected in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - 1916 IS - 9 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation LB - 40660 PY - 1916 ST - Apparent Brightness; Its Conditions and Properties T2 - Transactions of the Illuminating Engineering Society TI - Apparent Brightness; Its Conditions and Properties ID - 4163 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The reprint is collected in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - Jan., 1917 IS - 1 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation LB - 40670 PY - 1917 SP - 3-15 ST - The Nature of the Visual Receptor Process T2 - Journal of the Optical Society of America TI - The Nature of the Visual Receptor Process VL - 1 ID - 4164 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reprint is collected in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard T. DA - Feb., 1917 IS - 2 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation LB - 40680 PY - 1917 SP - 1-33 ST - On the Measurement of Visual Stimulation Intensities T2 - Journal of Experimental Psychology TI - On the Measurement of Visual Stimulation Intensities VL - 2 ID - 4165 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reprint is collected in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - June, 1917 KW - religion ethics ethics ref, secondary Troland, Leonard color Troland, Leonard, and color color, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and visual sensation color, and media effects media effects media effects, and color Troland, Leonard, and hedonism Troland, Leonard, and ethics values ethics, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and psychology Troland, Leonard, and metaphysics Troland, Leonard, and religion religion, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and biology LB - 40690 PY - 1917 SP - 321-50 ST - Biological Enigmas and the Theory of Enzyme Action T2 - American Naturalist TI - Biological Enigmas and the Theory of Enzyme Action VL - 51 ID - 4166 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The reprint of this survey of research literature is collected in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - March, 1918 IS - 3 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation bibliographies bibliographies, and vision LB - 40710 PY - 1918 SP - 65-75 ST - Vision -- General Phenomena T2 - Psychological Bulletin TI - Vision -- General Phenomena VL - 15 ID - 4168 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The reprint is collected in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - July, 1918 IS - 4 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation LB - 40720 PY - 1918 SP - 305-29 ST - The Heterochromatic Differential Threshold for Brightness: I. Experimental T2 - Psychological Review TI - The Heterochromatic Differential Threshold for Brightness: I. Experimental VL - 25 ID - 4169 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The reprint is collected in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - Sept. 1918 IS - 5 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation LB - 40730 PY - 1918 SP - 359-77 ST - The Heterochromatic Differential Threshold for Brightness: Theoretical T2 - Psychological Review TI - The Heterochromatic Differential Threshold for Brightness: Theoretical VL - 15 ID - 4170 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reprint is in Collected Papers of Leonard T. Toland Papers, Vol. I: 1913-1919 in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - 1921 IS - 3 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation bibliographies bibliographies, and vision LB - 40740 PY - 1921 SP - 232-68 ST - The Progress of Visual Science in 1919 T2 - American Journal of Physiological Optics TI - The Progress of Visual Science in 1919 VL - 2 ID - 4171 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This reports begins by saying "That the nomenclature and standards of color science are in an extremely unsatisfactory condition is manifest to practically all workers in this field. It is the purpose of the present report to take an initial step towards remedying this state of affairs. That the result cannot be final as regards either nomenclature or standards is a natural consequence of the pioneer character of the effort." (530) AU - Troland, L. T. DA - Aug., 1922 IS - 6 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation bibliographies bibliographies, and vision LB - 40750 PY - 1922 SP - 527-92ff ST - Report of Committee on Colorimetry for 1920-21 T2 - Journal of the Optical Society of America and Review of Scientific Instruments TI - Report of Committee on Colorimetry for 1920-21 VL - 6 ID - 4172 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is aimed at lighting (or illuminating) engineers. Troland begins by explaining that "The word 'color,' as it is used in popular, as well as in psychological discussions, refers to one of the fundamental qualities out of which our every day experience or consciousness is made up; it is the basic stuff o substance of our visual awareness." (114) Yet, he says, "In several respects color vision is one of the most mysterious processes of which nature affords us an example." (115) Troland discusses the problems of color and artificial lighting. "Perhaps the most pervasive, if not the most fundamental principle of psychology is that of association, and it has been clearly shown that the workings of this principle can not only modify our imaginations, but can alter the quality of our perceptions and sensations. Long and constant experience has caused us to add to the actual physical data of evening vision a certain amount of blueness, which is subjective in its manufacture but which nevertheless forms an integral part of ur visual consciousness. To a certain extent it may be true that simply because we are aware that it is evening, we subtract yellow and add blue to every color which we see, just as we subtract red from a snowy mountain peak illuminated by the setting sun, and thus see it still as white and not as pink snow. (114) "This adaptational and associate blue of evening may then be a factor which should always be taken into definite color aims in view. Psychologically, the distribution curve of daylight from an artificial illuminant, may fall to reproduce the color world of daytime experience. Even under the most favorable conditions of contrast and adaptation, such a stimulus may continue to give us a cold and unnatural feeling. For this reason it is quite likey that the common 'daylight' lamp, which is a compromise between true daylight and efficiency, may in fact come closer to the reproduction of actual daylight experience than would the strict photometric daylight." (114) Troland says that "I wish ... to recommend to illuminating engineers who are interersted in the problems of color, that they give some attention to the system of the chromatic qualities which Hering and his followers have developed. The purpose of 'color in lighting' lies in the visual consciousness; Hering's analysis is based upon a direct study of the elements of this consciousness." (115) Hering's position, Troland says, he superior to early students who have studied the problems of color. A note indicates that this piece was taken from the Transactions of the Illuminating Engineering Society, although no date is give is from Feb. 11, 1918, Vol. 13, pp. 21-37. The article ends with "To Be Continued." AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - Aug. 24, 1918 KW - Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Technicolor censorship ref, secondary ref, secular color media effects motion pictures motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and media effects color, and motion pictures color, and media effects media effects, and color media effects, and talking movies censorship and ratings censorship, and color movies sexuality sexuality, and color movies color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and Technicolor Technicolor, and color Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor audiences audiences, and color movies color, and audiences motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures color, and L.T. Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and color color, and sensation quotations quotations, and color quotations, and Leonard Troland lighting lighting, and artifical daylight color, and theory color, and red color, and novelty color, and pleasure color, and hedonism color, and lighting lighting, and color ref, scientific ref, Scientific American LB - 42570 PY - 1918 SP - 114-15 ST - The Psychology of Color -- I: Color as a Form of Consciousness T2 - Scientific American Supplement No. 2225 TI - The Psychology of Color -- I: Color as a Form of Consciousness VL - 86 ID - 4356 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article compares the reception of early motion pictures in two countries, the United States and the Soviet Union. Tsivian writes that "commonly, the impact of film on culture is measured according to what it adds to older arts. However, as far as early films are concerned, such impact is better described in terms of the stereotypical responses that moving pictures elicited in the press. Rather than adding to the edifice of culture, early cinema worked as a Rorshach blot, screening the features intrinsic to national culture(s)." AU - Tsivian, Yuri DA - 1994 IS - 2 KW - advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures seeing at a distance propaganda public relations values postmodernism modernism motion pictures modernity modernism news and journalism freedom news and journalism non-USA posters, and motion pictures new way of seeing motion pictures, and new way of seeing advertising, and movie posters urban studies values, and posters (19th century) values, and motion picture advertising color, and posters posters, as degenerate art freedom of expression, and posters color advertising modernity posters context context, late 19th Russia Russia, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Russia +motion pictures and popular culture newspapers, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and journalism journalism values newspapers news LB - 27890 PY - 1994 SP - 177-88 ST - The Rorschach Test for Cultures: On Some Parallels between Early Film Reception in Russia and the United States T2 - Yale Journal of Criticism TI - The Rorschach Test for Cultures: On Some Parallels between Early Film Reception in Russia and the United States VL - 7 ID - 1341 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This review of Montrose J. Moses's book The American Dramatist (Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1911), argues that the modern drama is essentially taken from the newspapers. Moses develops "the conception that the drama to-day is the newspaper dramatized. The modern dramatist has largely been bred in the newspaper office, and partly on that account, but more because Americans are a newspaper-reading nation par excellence, the modern drama is like the newspaper. 'Newspaper condition, i.e., as the American newspaper sees American condition,' says Mr. Moses, 'is the one original note in our theatre.' The trouble, of course, lies in the fact that the dramatist is satisfied to present in dramatic form -- so called -- what is paraded in the Sunday papers or in the ten-cent magazines, and the public are gratified to have the muck-raking visualized on the stage. The stage has never been far removed from the newspaper, for both appeal immediately and directly to the crowd.... It is not that the drama is closely related to the newspaper, -- it cannot be otherwise and be vital, -- but it is vastly more. There must be in it that which transcends contemporaneousness and has a kind of eternity; it must deal primarily with human passions that are the same for all people and for all times. And yet to do so it must be native to the soil...." (334) Tupper concludes by saying that "there is no literary form from which more can be hoped in this country that from the drama. the theatre is the meeting-place for people from all parts of the nation, and in no other way can the writers come into such close contact with the great public. The dramatist, as he follows the progress of his play over the country, comes to know the common mind and heart as the novelist cannot...." (336) AU - Tupper, James W. DA - Nov. 1, 1911 IS - 609 KW - theater public relations journalism fame celebrity critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater ref, secondary celebrity culture theater and stage celebrity, and actors actors, and celebrity fame, and actors actors, and fame actors acting actors, and fame before movies quotations actors, and status of news and journalism actors, and journalists journalism, and actors personality actors, and personality personality, and actors actors, and public relations public relations, and actors advertising and public relations actors, and stars (origins) newspapers, and theater theater, and newspapers drama, and newspapers newspapers, and drama modernity modernity, and theater theater, and modernity modernity, and newspapers newspapers, and modernity ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary (conservative) ref, Dial advertising theater LB - 39320 PY - 1911 SP - 334-36 ST - The American Newspaper Drama T2 - The Dial TI - The American Newspaper Drama VL - 51 ID - 4031 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this important essay in 1950 on artificial intelligence, Turing began by saying: "I propose to consider the question, 'Can machines think?'" (433) He concludes by writing: "We may hope that machines will eventually compete with men in all purely intellectual fields. But which are the best ones to start with? Even this is a difficult question. Many people think that a very abstract activity, like the playing of chess would be best. It can also be maintained that it is best to provide the machine with the best sense organs that money can buy, and then teach it to understand and speak English. This process could follow the normal teaching of a child. Things would be pointed out and named, etc. Again I do not know what the right answer is, but I think both approaches should be tried. "We can only see a short distance ahead, but we can see plenty there that needs to be done." (460) AU - Turing, A. M. DA - Oct. 1950 IS - 236 KW - computers artificial intelligence and biotechnology computers and the Internet education computers, and education education, and computers artificial intelligence digital media digitization, and AI cybernetics Turing, Alan computers LB - 33890 PY - 1950 SP - 433-60 ST - Computing Machinery and Intelligence T2 - Mind: A Quarterly Review of Psychology and Philosophy TI - Computing Machinery and Intelligence VL - 59 ID - 3027 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Turkle, whose books included The Second Self: Computers and the Human Spirit (1984) and Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet (1995), is an ethnographer and psychologist who is interested in not only understanding what computers do for us but also what they are “doing to us,” including how they the way we think of ourselves and our identity. In this short piece, Turkle suggests several ways in which computers are changing the way we think. These include 1) privacy because “unlike past generations of Americans who grew up with the notion that the privacy of their mail was sacrosanct, our children are accustomed to electronic surveillance as part of their daily lives.” (B26) 2) Turkle argues that by assuming different identities on online, some people “may find it harder to develop authentic selves.” (B26) 3) In an age of PowerPoint, “presentation becomes its own powerful idea” and takes precedence over critical thinking about important ideas. “Indeed, the culture in which our children are raised is increasingly a culture of presentation, a corporate culture in which appearance is often more important than reality.” (B27) 4) Word processing, which the computer facilitates, often takes priority over careful thinking about what is being written. 5) Even though computers have become more sophisticated and have given us the power to make things work for efficiently, few computer users now understand how the computer itself works. “Today, when people say that something is transparent, they mean that they can see how to make it work, not that they know how it works. In other words, transparency means epistemic opacity.” (B27) 6) Computer simulations may allow “their users to think about complex phenomena as dynamic, evolving systems. But they also accustom us to manipulating systems whose core assumptions we may not understand and that may not be true.” (B28) Over the next decade, simulations will increase exponentially in our daily lives. Turkle urges the development of “a new form of media literacy: readership skills for the culture of simulation.” (B28) AU - Turkle, Sherry DA - Jan. 30, 2004 KW - computers children, and media computers and the Internet media literacy simulations computers, and simulations simulations, and computers media effects media effects, and computers values computers, and values values, and computers computers, and media effects democracy democracy, and computers computers, and democracy children children, and computers computers, and children education computers, and education education, and computers privacy surveillance, and computers computers, and privacy privacy, and computers computers, and surveillance surveillance computers LB - 29710 PY - 2004 SP - B26-B28 ST - How Computers Change the Way We Think T2 - Chronicle of Higher Education: Section B: The Chronicle Review: Information Technology TI - How Computers Change the Way We Think ID - 2723 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, liked to think of himself as a student of history and also of oratory. He sometimes quoted Voltaire -- and Shakespeare and Francis Bacon -- in his writings and speeches. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - March 11, 1967 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti LB - 19630 PY - 1967 SP - 27, 138-39 ST - Voltaire's Timeless Eminence T2 - Saturday Review TI - Voltaire's Timeless Eminence VL - 50 ID - 797 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, liked to think of himself as a student of history and also of oratory. He sometimes quoted Francis Bacon -- and Shakespeare and Voltaire -- in his writings and speeches. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - Feb. 17, 1968 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti LB - 19640 PY - 1968 SP - 22-23 ST - Francis Bacon -- The Glory and the Shame T2 - Saturday Review TI - Francis Bacon -- The Glory and the Shame VL - 51 ID - 798 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, discusses the role of motion pictures in improving relations between the West and the communist-bloc nations. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - Dec. 23, 1967 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA non-USA Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and foreign policy foreign films, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and MPAA foreign films MPAA, and foreign films motion pictures, and foreign films motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad Valenti, Jack, and foreign films motion pictures, and communism motion pictures, and capitalism Valenti, Jack, and communism Valenti, Jack, and capitalism LB - 19790 PY - 1967 SP - 8-9, 39-40 ST - Film-Making Behind the Iron Curtain: The Motion Picture Bridge Between East and West T2 - Saturday Review TI - Film-Making Behind the Iron Curtain: The Motion Picture Bridge Between East and West VL - 50 ID - 811 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Valenti argues for a single-term presidency, one that would run for six, rather than four, years. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - Aug. 3, 1968 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and MPAA Valenti, Jack, and politics Valenti, Jack, and U. S. presidency LB - 19800 PY - 1968 SP - 13, 32 ST - The Case for as Six-Year Presidency T2 - Saturday Review TI - The Case for as Six-Year Presidency VL - 51 ID - 812 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Dutch paper makers were leaders in the international paper market until the mid-eighteenth century. After 1700, their leadership declined and this decline accelerated after 1780. Slowly, new machinery and processes arrived from Great Britain and eventually the Dutch paper industry regained status in the international market. "This article attempts to explain the technological aspects of this development in ... light of theories about the economic and technological history of the Netherlands in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries." AU - Van Lente, Dick DA - 1998 IS - 3 KW - materials non-USA materials paper papermaking, and Netherlands Netherlands Netherlands, and papermaking Great Britain Great Britain, and papermaking LB - 3150 PY - 1998 SP - 201-24 ST - Innovation in Paper Making: The Netherlands, 1750-1850 T2 - History and Technology TI - Innovation in Paper Making: The Netherlands, 1750-1850 VL - 14 ID - 403 ER - TY - JOUR AB - VanDerBeek, who experimented with videotape and computers for movie making during the 1960s, says in this piece that "we are on the verge of a new world/new technology/a new art." (15) It was imperative, he said, that "the world's artists ... invent a new world language ... that we invent a non-verbal international picture-language." (16) AU - VanDerBeek, Stan DA - Spring, 1966 IS - 40 KW - computers motion pictures computers and the Internet computers, and animated films motion pictures, and computers (1960s) computers, and motion pictures (1960s) motion pictures, and animated films VanDerBeek, Stan videotape motion pictures, and videotape videotape, and motion pictures videotape, and Stan VanDerBeek videotape magnetic tape magnetic recording computers LB - 32700 PY - 1966 SP - 15-18 ST - Culture: Intercom an Expanded Cinema: A Proposal and Manifesto T2 - Film Culture TI - Culture: Intercom an Expanded Cinema: A Proposal and Manifesto ID - 2926 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Vaughn argues that "few new technologies have affected communications and society more profoundly than motion pictures." This article is an account of efforts to regulate this medium during the late 1920s and early 1930s. The result was the Production Code of 1930, which after the creation of the Production Code Administration (PCA) and the Roman Catholic Legion of Decency in 1934 , was enforced rigorously. Joseph I. Breen, a Catholic layman and for newspaper reporter and press agent, headed the PCA. Daniel A. Lord, a Jesuit priest, was the person most responsible for the philosophical and moral tone of the Code. This article is a detailed account of the negotiations leading up to the Code and the aftermath following the Code's adoption. It is based on extensive research in several primary collections including Lord's Papers, as well as those of Will H. Hays, the president of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors Association. AU - Vaughn, Stephen DA - June 1990 IS - 1 KW - technology values Christianity law censorship and ratings values +motion pictures values, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures Legion of Decency Lord, Daniel A. Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. censorship, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and motion picture censorship technology and society Quigley, Martin Mundelein, George Cardinal Hollywood Catholic Church motion pictures, and culture wars culture wars culture wars, and motion pictures LB - 11580 PY - 1990 SP - 39-65 ST - Morality and Entertainment: The Origins of the Motion Picture Production Code T2 - Journal of American History TI - Morality and Entertainment: The Origins of the Motion Picture Production Code VL - 77 ID - 2189 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This articles examines the 1940 Warner Bros. movie Murder in the Air, in which Ronald Reagan played secret service agent Brass Bancroft and was assigned to project a new weapon, the Inertia Projector, that could use an electromagnetic beam to shoot down airplanes and stop internal combustion engines. It was portray as a weapon that would make America "invincible" in war and would become the "greatest force for world peace" ever invented. Evidence suggests the idea for the story came from newspaper headlines indicating that the Italian inventor Marconi had tested such a weapon in Italy and that Mussolini had used it in Ethiopia. AU - Vaughn, Stephen DA - Fall, 1987 KW - strategic defense initiative (SDI) nationalism motion pictures nationalism and communication military communication presidents and new media Reagan, Ronald Reagan, Ronald, and motion pictures Reagan, Ronald, and Inertia Projector Reagan, Ronald, and SDI Marconi, Guglielmo Reagan administration SDI LB - 33050 PY - 1987 SP - 355-80 ST - Spies, National Security, and the Inertia Projector: The Secret Service Films of Ronald Reagan T2 - American Quarterly TI - Spies, National Security, and the Inertia Projector: The Secret Service Films of Ronald Reagan VL - 39 ID - 2955 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Analyzes 35 Hollywood films and uses several primary collections, including the Production Code Administration Files and the Will H. Hays Papers, to show that the movie industry attempted to portray journalists in a favorable light during the Great Depression and World War II. AU - Vaughn, Stephen AU - Evensen, Bruce DA - Winter, 1991 IS - 4 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) self-regulation Production Code PCA values religion censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) MPPDA Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. MPAA motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Hays, Will H. MPPDA, and public relations motion pictures, and journalists motion pictures, and public relations Production Code (motion pictures) MPPDA, and journalists motion pictures, and culture wars LB - 14210 PY - 1991 SP - 829-38 ST - Democracy's Guardians: Hollywood's Portrait of Reporters, 1930-1945 T2 - Journalism Quarterly TI - Democracy's Guardians: Hollywood's Portrait of Reporters, 1930-1945 VL - 68 ID - 538 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this fascinating piece, Verne talks about collecting energy from the sun, electric lighting and heating, "telephonic journalism," news conveyed by phonograph and other voice transmitters, sending "images by means of sensitive mirrors connected by wires," "electric computers" (in which as many as thirty scientists might work on their "transcendental calculations"), advertising reflected on clouds, travel by "air-coach," color photography, a home entertainment center that would allow one to listen to concert music, and a "Piano-Electro-Reckoner" which performs "the most complex calculations ... in a few seconds." AU - Verne, Jules DA - 1888 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations journalism future and science fiction news and journalism home, and new media home sound recording photography and visual communication newspapers news computers and the Internet telephones future electricity advertising newspapers, and telephones telephonic journalism computers solar power air travel sound recording, and home photography, and color television +photography and visual communication science fiction home, and future home entertainment aeronautics and space communication transportation LB - 4500 PY - 1888 SP - 662-77 ST - In the Year 2889 T2 - The Forum TI - In the Year 2889 VL - 6 ID - 1837 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article the social activist journalist, suffragist, novelist, and theater patron Mary Heaton Vorse discusses the importance of motion pictures in the lives of people who live in small, isolated villages, and for people who may be uneducated and illiterate. "By an ingenious invention all the wonderful things that happened in the diverse world outside their simple lives could come to them. They had no pictures or papers; few of them could read; and yet they sat there at home and watched the inflating of great balloons and saw them rise and soar and go away into the blue, and watched again the strange Oriental crowd walking through the holy streets of Jerusalem. It is hard to understand what a sudden widening of their horizon that meant for them. It is the door of escape, for a few cents, from the realities of life. 441/ 442 It is drama, and it is travel, and it is even beauty, all in one." (441-42) The author defends movies against unreasonable censorship and the view that going to films is an unhealthy experience. This, she says, "is an unjust idea." (442) The article comments on movie audiences in a small Tuscan village and also in large cities such as New York. It talks about audiences that often included women and in the United States especially, many recent immigrants. In entering the movie theater, "They had found the door of escape." (445) "And for the moment they were permitted to drink deep of oblivion of all the trouble in the world." (445) Vorse observes that for many people the travel film was a major attraction. "You see what it means to them; it means Opportunity -- a chance to glimpse the beautiful and strange things in the world that you haven't in your life; the gratification of the higher side of your nature; opportunity which, except for the big moving picture book, would be forever closed to you. You understand still more how much it means opportunity if you happen to live in a little country place where the whole town goes to every change of films and where the new films are gravely discussed. Down here it is that you find people who agree with my friend of the Bowery -- and 'travel films is de real t'ing.' For those people who would like to travel they make films of pilgrims going to Mecca; films of the great religious processions in the holy city of Jerusalem; of walrus fights in the far North...." (447) The article is littered with ethnic stereotypes: Jews who were "swarthy little men, most them, looking undersized according to the Anglo-Saxon standard" (442); native Americas as "painted savages" (445); and in the Bowery, the "dago show." (446) AU - Vorse, Mary Heaton DA - June 24, 1911 IS - 8 KW - history motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity ref, secondary new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel ref, secondary education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, literary ref, Outlook motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures women women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women motion pictures, and immigrants censorship and ratings non-USA Italy Italy, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Italy metaphors quotations metaphors, and door of escape quotations, and door of escape motion pictures, and door of escape motion pictures, and seeing at a distance seeing at a distance, and motion pictures ethnicity, and stereotyping audiences ethnicity seeing at a distance LB - 41840 PY - 1911 SP - 441-47 ST - Some Picture Show Audiences T2 - Outlook TI - Some Picture Show Audiences VL - 98 ID - 4282 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article comments that "the real truth of a documentary film depends as much upon the honesty of the visual style as upon the integrity of its subject matter." (754) It notes that 16mm cameras offer great freedom and fexibility in this kind of film making. "The method makes use of the almost unlimited flexibility of the new 16mm self-blimped cameras, the easily-portable, high-quality sound recording equipment, the high-intensity, light-weight lighting equipment and the new high-speed black and white and color film stocks that are running a close second in quality to the slower emulsions we have been used to. The flexibility and freedom permitted by these improved cameras, recorders, lights and film emulsions naturally gave rise to more sound shooting on location and especially more first-hand coverage of events as they happened. The cameraman discovered that by being able to be on the scene and not be restricted by heavy, hard-to-move equipment, he was able to pho- 788/789 tograh the scene differently from the way he had in the past. He was able to capture those spontaneous occurrences of the moment. Nature photographers and many others have been doing this for years only they didn't know what to call it...." (788-89) The author notes the impact not only on cinema verite but also on sports. AU - Waddell, Mike DA - Oct., 1968 IS - 10 KW - cinematography cinéma vérité motion pictures 16mm cameras cameras, 16mm 16mm cameras documentary films, and 16mm motion pictures, and 16mm motion pictures, and documentaries lighting lighting, and 16mm cameras lighting, and portable cameras sound recording sound recording, and 16mm cameras 16mm cameras, and sound recording color color, and 16mm film news and journalism television television, and 16mm cameras television news, and 16mm cameras photography and visual communication documentaries photography LB - 30140 PY - 1968 SP - 754, 788-89,797-98 ST - Cinema Verite and the Documentary Film T2 - American Cinematographer TI - Cinema Verite and the Documentary Film VL - 49 ID - 2769 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article surveys developments in photography, noting that early pictures could not capture motion (e.g., a street scene might show only a man shoes that were being shined because they were the only stationary object). The first photographic portrait was taken in America. It took Miss. Catherine Draper's brother, professor John Draper, 30 minutes to take the picture. The article discusses how the camera can now be combined with either the telescope or microscope to give images never before possible. "Microphotography is also used in sending long messages which must occupy a small space. During the siege of Paris, Dagron, the inventory of microphotography, made on thin film tiny photographic copies of messages, and 954/955 sent them daily from the city by carrier-pigeons. So minute was this work that five thousand messages weighed but little over an ounce, and could be carried by a single bird. "Microphotography is now used in all studies which require the use of a microscope, and enlarged subjects being photographed, and the pictures studied at leisure." (954-55) The article discusses moving referred to as "chronophotography." (955) The machines for exhibiting them were called "kinetoscope, biograph, vitascope, theatrograph, cinematograph, etc." (955) Wade also covers X-rays and color photography. Color photos were made by what was called "triple heliochromy." (957) The use of photography for military purposes by the army and navy is also examined (957-58). Other uses included: "Photogrammetry -- the art of measuring by photograph" which was "now a part of the education of the surveyor," (958) and "receiving cable messages." (958) Wade concludes: "If the past serves as a prophet for future possibilities, no limit can be placed to the powers of photography. There is a tiny magic key, the persistent use of which has opened the door into many marvelous places." (959) Photography may open more wonderful worlds some day. AU - Wade, Elizabeth Flint DA - Sept. 1898 IS - 11 KW - photography ref, secondary photography and visual communication cameras photography, and x-rays x-rays photography, and motion pictures microphotography, and photography photography, and x-rays motion pictures, and photography military communication photography, and military communication military communication, and photography quotations quotations, and photography modernity photography, and modernity modernity, and photography new way of seeing, and photography photography, and dry plate photography, and telescopes telephotography photography, and microscope microphotography, and Dagron ref, educational ref, illustrated (youth) ref, literary (youth) ref, St. Nicholas ref, secondary ref, secular metaphors metaphors, and photography as magic key quotations quotations, and photography as magic key microphotography motion pictures new way of seeing LB - 38120 PY - 1898 SP - 952-59 ST - Photography: Its Marvels T2 - St. Nicholas: An Illustrated Magazine for Young Folks TI - Photography: Its Marvels VL - 25 ID - 3911 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article examines the way that public celebrations, opposition to colonial rule, and print culture contributed to the origins of American nationalism. The practices of nationalism provided a way to create unity, even though the acts of celebration themselves often exposed class and regional differences among the Patriots. Those differences would frustrate staunch nationalists in the decades to come. “The relationships among ideology and practice, celebration and print, help explain why an abstract nationalism could earn the assent of revolutionaries without guaranteeing a national state or much more than a vague commitment to popular sovereignty,” the author writes. “The invention of the American nation involved the mixing of rites of assent with apparently rebellious rituals of opposition, a mixing that would enable Americans to engage in local divisive politics while celebrating their unified nationhood." --Amy Chu AU - Waldstreicher, David DA - June 1995 IS - 1 KW - nationalism print print culture newspapers journalism community democracy news and journalism Chu, Amy +nationalism and communication nationalism, and print culture nationalism, and American origins nationalism, and celebrations print culture, and nationalism public sphere, and print culture democracy and media democracy, and print culture print culture, and democarcy nationalism, and newspapers news, and nationalism newspapers, and nationalism nationalism, and holidays news public sphere LB - 1680 PY - 1995 SP - 37-61 ST - Rites of Rebellion, Rites of Assent: Celebrations, Print Culture, and the Origins of American Nationalism T2 - Journal of American History TI - Rites of Rebellion, Rites of Assent: Celebrations, Print Culture, and the Origins of American Nationalism VL - 82 ID - 256 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Wallace argues that American liberals during the early 1920s sought to develop worker education that trained laborers to be leaders in unions and in the community. Worker education had traditionally focused on apprenticeship and vocational training. But as the adult education movement grew after World War I, education for workers came to be considered a “meaningful strategy for social and industrial progress. In 1921 alone, the Workers’ Education Bureau, Brookwood Labor College, and the Bryn Mawr Summer School for Women Workers were founded, and the Labor Temple in New York City began classes for workmen. Liberals supported worker education for “union leadership, for social and political effectiveness, and for individual cultural development.” Wallace measures liberal support by examining the work of individuals connected with two leading liberal journals: the New Republic and the Nation. Herbert Croly, progressive and founder of the New Republic, and Oswald G. Villard, editor of the Nation, both were disenchanted with the major political parties and “turned to labor as the growing edge of social progress.” --Phil Glende AU - Wallace, James M. DA - Spring 1986 IS - 1 KW - news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines reform Glende, Phil labor labor, and magazines magazines, and labor reform, and magazines magazines, and reform LB - 820 N1 - See also: office PY - 1986 SP - 16-41 ST - A New Means for Liberals: Liberal Response to Adult and Worker Education in the 1920s T2 - Labor Studies Journal TI - A New Means for Liberals: Liberal Response to Adult and Worker Education in the 1920s VL - 11 ID - 170 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article surveys some of the work of such great inventors as Thomas Edison, Nikola Tasla, Elihu Thomson, and others. It quotes Michael Faraday on the significance of electricity: "Faraday, the great scientist and inventor, himself confessed that the fortuitous discovery made by rubbing a piece of amber released 'an invisible agent which has done for mankind far more wonderful things than the genie of Aladdin did or could have done for him.'...." (236) AU - Walsh, George Ethelbert DA - March 1902 KW - home ref, secondary metaphors electricity home and new media electricity, and nationalism electricity, and home home, and electricity electricity, as Aladdin's genie inventors Edison, Thomas Tesla, Nikola Faraday, Michael Thomson, Elihu quotations quotations, and electricity ref, secondary ref, secular ref, economic ref, economic (Standard Oil) ref, Gunton's Magazine invention LB - 37640 PY - 1902 SP - 235-42 ST - The Inventor's World of Marvels T2 - Gunton's Magazine TI - The Inventor's World of Marvels ID - 3863 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This articles discusses the significance of motion pictures in 1908. "The effect of this new form of pictorial drama on the public is without parallel in modern history, for it more graphically illustrates the panorama of life than the photographs and text of the daily newspaper and intrudes upon the legitimate theater thru the actual dramatization of plays that have had a good run. The moving picture drama is for the multitude, attracting thousands who never go to the theater, and particularly appealing to the children. In the poorer sections of the cities where innumerable foreigners congregate, the so-called 'nickelodeon' has held pre-eminent sway for the last year." (306) Walsh notes that during the past two years moving pictures have shown "in nearly every town and village in the country." (306) Moving pictures have brought "great changes in our cheap enterainment halls" and film companies "have invaded nearly every department of life to secure interesting photographs." (307) Projecting moving pictures on a screen, sometimes "enlarged 200 times," involves deceiving the eye. (307) Walsh also discusses "remarkable tricks" that "can be played by the camera." (307) Moving pictures can reproduce passion plays as well as scenes from real life. (308) Walsh reports that France has been successful in coloring their films, but that these moving pictures are much more expensive, cost about 50 cents. (309-10) He discusses experiments combining the phonograph and moving pictures to bring sound films (309) and says that soon talking pictures will be available. Such developments will bring "grand opera in a way down to the level of the poorest, and when we consider the perfect reproduction of the voices in the modern phonograph and graphhophone, there seems to be little left to be desire." (310) AU - Walsh, George Ethelbert DA - Feb. 6, 1908 IS - 3088 KW - theater stage class children ref, secondary motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel quotations quotations, and motion pictures quotations, and sound recording democracy democracy, and motion pictures motion pictures, and democracy class, and motion pictures, motion pictures, and class motion pictures, and media effects media effects, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures non-USA France France, and color movies color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and movies sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sound recording motion pictures, and talking films phonograph phonograph, and motion pictures motion pictures, and phonograph ref, religious ref, congregationalist ref, reform ref, Independent LB - 38250 PY - 1908 SP - 306-10 ST - Moving Picture Drama for the Multitude T2 - The Independent TI - Moving Picture Drama for the Multitude VL - 64 ID - 3924 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Walters, J. Hopkins DA - March 13, 1873 KW - materials television, and history of +television television, and origins selenium LB - 7480 PY - 1873 SP - 361 ST - Selenium T2 - Nature TI - Selenium VL - 7 ID - 2118 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Brandeis and Warren argue that advances in photography have made it possible "to take pictures surreptitiously." Before the technological advances of the 1880s which made photography much more available to the public, a person generally had to consent to having a photographic portrait made. With the invention of celluloid and George Eastman's innovations making cameras more portable, citizens lost the control over who could reproduce their image. The authors discuss earlier cases such as Pollard v. Photographic Co. (1888) and Tuck v. Priester (1887) involving photography and privacy. In the authors' view, the law needs to take into account advancing technology when considering privacy. AU - Warren, Samuel D. and Louis D. Brandeis DA - Dec. 15, 1891 IS - 5 KW - surveillance photography law, and privacy law privacy photography and visual communication +photography and visual communication photography, and privacy privacy, and photography Brandeis, Louis photography, and legal cameras cameras, and privacy Brandeis, Louis, and photography Brandeis, Louis, and privacy LB - 11570 PY - 1891 SP - 193-220 ST - The Right to Privacy T2 - Harvard Law Review TI - The Right to Privacy VL - 4 ID - 1805 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article is based on research in the Disney archives and and is expanded in Watt's book, The Magic Kingdom. Watts writes that "Walt Disney has been, arguably, the most influential American of the twentieth century." He tries to place Disney's life and work into a cultural context. "Two cultural trends in modern American life--modernism and populism--suggest useful ways of making sense of the artistic and political impulses in Disney's work." The author's acknowledges the influence on Warren Susman on his approach to studying Disney and popular culture. AU - Watts, Steven DA - June 1995 IS - 2 KW - nationalism nationalism corporations imperialism corporations modernism modernity non-USA motion pictures modernity +motion pictures cultural imperialism cartoons, animated motion pictures, and animated cartoons modernism motion pictures, and populism Susman, Warren Disney, Walt Mickey Mouse +nationalism and communication global communication cartoons culture Disney nationalism, and motion pictures surveillance LB - 6440 PY - 1995 SP - 84-110 ST - Walt Disney: Art and Politics in the American Century T2 - Journal of American History TI - Walt Disney: Art and Politics in the American Century VL - 82 ID - 2027 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Joseph I. Breen, who would become head of the movie industry's Production Code Administration in 1934, often wrote under the name Eugene Weare to discuss a wide range of issues including modern education, communism, and marriage. Breen, a newspaper man who also worked in a public relations capacity for the Archdiocese of Chicago, considered himself to be a militant Catholic and strongly anti-Communist. AU - Weare, Eugene [Joseph I. Breen] DA - Feb. 8, 1930 KW - values Christianity modernity modernism Catholic Church +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Breen, Joseph Breen, Joseph, and anticommunism Catholic Church, and motion pictures Breen, Joseph, and Catholic Church modernism, and Joseph Breen Breen, Joseph, and modernism LB - 15310 PY - 1930 SP - 424 (?) ST - Have You a Little Bolshevik in Your Home? T2 - America TI - Have You a Little Bolshevik in Your Home? VL - 42 ID - 553 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Joseph I. Breen, who would become head of the movie industry's Production Code Administration in 1934, often wrote under the name Eugene Weare to discuss a wide range of issues including modern education, communism, and marriage. Breen, a newspaper man who also worked in a public relations capacity for the Archdiocese of Chicago, considered himself to be a militant Catholic. AU - Weare, Eugene [Joseph I. Breen] DA - Feb. 22, 1930 KW - values Christianity modernity modernism Catholic Church +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Breen, Joseph Breen, Joseph, and anticommunism Catholic Church, and motion pictures Breen, Joseph, and Catholic Church Breen, Joseph, and education modernism, and Joseph Breen Breen, Joseph, and modernism LB - 15320 PY - 1930 SP - 475-76 (?) ST - Laymen on a College Council T2 - America TI - Laymen on a College Council VL - 42 ID - 554 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Joseph I. Breen, who would become head of the movie industry's Production Code Administration in 1934, often wrote under the name Eugene Weare to discuss a wide range of issues including modern education, communism, and marriage. Breen, a newspaper man who also worked in a public relations capacity for the Archdiocese of Chicago, considered himself to be a militant Catholic. AU - Weare, Eugene [Joseph I. Breen] DA - Oct. 26, 1929 KW - values Christianity modernity modernism Catholic Church +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Breen, Joseph Breen, Joseph, and anticommunism Catholic Church, and motion pictures Breen, Joseph, and Catholic Church Breen, Joseph, and education modernism, and Joseph Breen Breen, Joseph, and modernism Breen, Joseph, and marriage LB - 15330 PY - 1929 SP - 59-61 (?) ST - Enter: The 'Hick-Town' Parish T2 - America TI - Enter: The 'Hick-Town' Parish VL - 42 ID - 555 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the evolution of the telegraph and telephone systems. It considers problems in transmitting message using such materials as silver and copper wire. It says that there "is nothing unreasonable in the expectation that the problem of the transmission alike of sounds and of visual images, will be solved at an early day, and that both may be instantaneously reproduced over seas, as telegraphic signals now are. We have only one more stage to make before we reach this goal." (164) It says that "natives in newly conquered countries" make it a point to make the telegraph "an object of hostile attack." (169) It discusses other effort by native populations to steal wires and wooden posts and otherwise undermine the telegraphic systems. (170) Other problems in transmitting electricity by cable are discussed, including the challenges of transatlantic or submarine cables. (e.g., 173) The telegraph is “above all things an instrument of material and moral progress," the author writes. (169) AU - Weiller, Lazare DA - Oct. 15, 1898 IS - 2832 KW - progress electricity nationalism and communication electricity, and nationalism nationalism, and electricity religion religion, and telegraph religion, and electricity electricity, and religion electricity, and imperialism nationalism, and evangelization electricity, and progress progress, and electricity progress, and steam power telephones electricity, and telephones space and time telegraph, and distance telephones, and distance progress, and telephones optical telegraph telegraph, optical materials materials, and copper electricity, and copper electricity, and transmission seeing at a distance telegraph, wireless television, early vision of global communication wireless, transatlantic telegraph, transatlantic transatlantic cable cable, transatlantic ref, secular ref, eclectic ref, literary (British) ref, Living Age ref, secondary cable nationalism telegraph television wireless communication LB - 42290 PY - 1898 SP - 163-78 ST - The Annihilation of Distance T2 - The Living Age TI - The Annihilation of Distance VL - 219 ID - 4328 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article offers a revision of previous accounts of Joseph Breen, the head of Hollywood's Production Code Administration, from 1934 to 1954. Where other historians have emphasized Breen's anti-Semitism and considered him "a belligerent, profane, and sanctimonious bigot," (381) especially when he came to Hollywood during the early 1930s, Weinberger says that Breen mellowed after a few years in Hollywood. By the late 1930s, Breen stopped using anti-Semitic language and referred to Jewish producers as "tough babies" or "these people," rather than using some of the blunter terms he employed earlier. As he got older, Breen compromised on such themes as showing rape, making a concession to Elia Kazan and Tennessee Williams in the making of the movie Streetcar Named Desire. (389) Weinberger says that Breen certainly accomplished the aims of the Production Code in that by changing films, they made more money and the spread of censorship boards stopped. He asks, though, if Breen's censorship helped or hurt Hollywood films artistically. Drawing on Anthony Slide's work, he agrees that what is often underestimated in how frequently Breen and the PCA staff intervened in helping to rewriting movie scripts. Breen was an active participant in the movie making process, and Weinberger suggests that this intervention was not always damaging. Weinberger quotes Slide who contends that "'Breen and his associates contributed as much to world 385/386 cinema as did Hollywood's leading producers, directors, and screen writers.'" (Slide quoted, pp. 385-86) Weinberger than uses several films to illustrated this point -- John Huston's Maltese Falcon, Paramount's Double Indemnity, and Tennessee Williams and Elia Kazan's Streetcar Named Desire. Weinberger says that "Rather than necessarily crushing creativity, censors can have the opposite effect of forcing creative people to become more creative.... Out of necessity they learned the art of indirection, successfully appealing to the audience's imagination." (my emphasis) Weinberger notes that of the 100 all-time top films on the American Film Institute's list, 34 (and 8 of the top 12) were made during Breen's tenure as head of the PCA. Therefore, the author believes Breen deserved the honorary Oscar he received in 1954. AU - Weinberger, Stephen DA - 2005 IS - 4 KW - ref, secondary self-regulation Production Code Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) values religion Breen, Joseph motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and Production Code (motion pictures) Breen, Joseph, and Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code, and Joseph Breen Breen, Joseph, and biography Breen, Joseph, and obituary biography censorship, and Joseph Breen Breen, Joseph, and censorship quotations quotations, and censorship forcing creativity censorship, and creativity censorship, and rape Breen, Joseph, and rape PCA, and rape Production Code, and rape censorship PCA Production Code Administration (PCA) LB - 40160 PY - 2005 SP - 380-91 ST - Joe Breen's Oscar T2 - Film History TI - Joe Breen's Oscar VL - 17 ID - 4114 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "Edison, Its Great Inventor, Tells How the Idea Came to Him and How He Worked It Out." The piece is essentially an interview with Edison and he quoted at length. He begins by describing the "Black Maria" and how he and his assistance had no artificial light and so had to depend entirely on the sun. The idea for moving pictures, Edison says, came from his work with the phonograph. Edison says that "I had been working for several years on my experiments for recording and reproducing sound, and the thought occurred to me that it should be possible to devise an apparatus to do for the eye what the phonograph was designed to do for the ear." (82) Edison understood the phenomenon of persistence of vision, but in 1887 most photography was still done from "wet" plates and hence the obstacles to creating a machine that would show pictures in such as way as to give the illusion of movement seemed insurmountable. Edison was aware of the Edward Muybridge's work photographing a race horse for Leland Stanford. (83) It was the development of celluloid for photography and George Eastman's work that led to a solution to creating a moving picture camera. Edison met with Eastman's representative to discussion the problem. (84) His first moving picture camera seemed only "a curiosity with no very large practicable possibilities," he said. (85) There were problems with flicker and the picture jumping. Edison experimented with using 30-40 exposures per minute and then reduced the number from 15 to 20. (85) Edison concludes this interview with a very optimistic view of what motion pictures's influence might be. He thought the motion picture would “revolutionize” education. (85) He predicted here that in the schools, moving pictues would soon “supplant largely, if not entirely” books, which in his opinion, were “clumsy methods of instruction at best.” (85) He said “we get only about two per cent efficiency out of school books as they are written to-day.” (85) “The education of the future, as I see it, will be conducted through the medium of the motion picture, a visualized education, where it should be possible to obtain a one-hundred-per-cent efficiency.” (Edison quoted, 85) “The motion picture has tremendous possibilities for the training and development of the memory. There is no medium for memory-building as productive as the human eye.” (Edison quoted, 85) The article ends with Edison saying: "I do not believe that any other single agency of progress has the possibilities for a great and permanent good to humanity that I can see in the motion picture. And those possibilities are only beginning to be touched." (Edison quoted, 85) AU - Weir, Hugh DA - Nov. 1922 IS - 9 KW - history children ref, reform ref, secular ref, McClure's ref, secondary quotations quotations, and Thomas Edison words vs. images motion pictures motion pictures, and new art form Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Thomas Edison Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures history, and Thomas Edison Edison, Thomas, and history history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space quotations quotations, and movies revolutionize education images vs. words motion pictures, and celluloid materials materials, and motion pictures motion pictures, and materials motion pictures, and phonograph motion pictures, and origins motion pictures, and George Eastman LB - 42250 PY - 1922 SP - 81-85 ST - The Story of the Motion Picture T2 - McClure's Magazine TI - The Story of the Motion Picture VL - 54 ID - 4324 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Wen, Li DA - Aug. 1996 IS - 2 KW - telephones cell phones Asia non-USA +telephones telephones, mobile telephones, cellular cellular telephones China telephones, and China China, and mobile telephones LB - 690 PY - 1996 SP - 214-25 ST - History and Development of Mobile Telephones T2 - Electronics and Radio -- CATV Technical Monthly (Whusiantian jieh yue kan) TI - History and Development of Mobile Telephones VL - 75 ID - 157 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This piece is a clever poem about Farmer Brown who comes to the city and sees, and is confused by, the many electric signs and their advertising messages. Farmer Brown returns home "a gibbering wreck, /His mind in a daze, his eyes a glaze, /A bad twist in his neck, /And now he sits, his brow he knits, /And all day long repines, /The while he tries with feverish doubt/ To twist and turn and straighten oout/ The meaning of the signs!" (757) AU - West, Paul DA - May 1912 IS - 533 KW - electric lighting ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Lippincott's electric signs electricity, and electric signs electricity quotations quotations, and electric signs advertising and public relations advertising, and electric signs electricity, and advertising advertising LB - 41390 PY - 1912 SP - 756-57 ST - Electricsignitis T2 - Lipponcott's Monthly Magazine TI - Electricsignitis VL - 89 ID - 4238 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article begins by saying that "In this age of experiment it is not violent but subtle emotion that attracts us. So in the domain of color it is not intensity but eccentricity of hue that we try to portray."(277) The author gives examples from literature in which descriptions of color draw on images from the world of jewels and minerals (ivory, rubies, pearls, etc.). The author ends by discussing the Belgian poet Veerhaeren, who is portrayed as a leading explorer "in search of color-terms.... Verhaeren's modernity appears in nothing so much as in the color-expression of his poems." (278) AU - Wheeler, Ethel DA - Sept. 1900 IS - 3 KW - media effects emotion ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color color, and inadequacy of language color, in history color, and theory color, and language color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and poetry ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Current Literature LB - 39100 PY - 1900 SP - 277-78 ST - Color Similes T2 - Current Literature TI - Color Similes VL - 29 ID - 4009 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article, New York Times columnist Tom Wicker quotes President Lyndon Johnson calling his assistant Jack Valenti a "valuable hunk of humanity." Valenti, who later would become president of the Motion Picture Association of America, was known was his unrestrained devotion to the President. AU - Wicker, Tom DA - May 3, 1964 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti LB - 19690 PY - 1964 SP - 11, 104-07 ST - Johnson's Men: 'Valuable Hunks of Humanity' T2 - New York Times Magazine TI - Johnson's Men: 'Valuable Hunks of Humanity' ID - 803 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses what is typically shown and/or seen in movie theaters and says that motion pictures are causing a decline in legitimate theater. "Not a town of five thousand is without at least one moving picture 'show.' New York and Chicago each have over a thousand," it says. (454) In Western towns, theaters have sprung up in empty stores, houses, saloons, and even churches. Among the reasons for the rapid growth of movies is that they are cheap and located usually in convenient locations. (454) The cost of maintaining a movie theater is small. (456) Wiley explains the way films work. "On every foot of this strip of celluloid are sixteen miniature pictures, so that if it is five hundred feet long it is a literal moving gallery containing eight thousand pictures." (456) (my emphasis) "The mechanical theatre needs no playwright to get up its attractions. Any good picture story is in its scope, and consequently there is no end to the films it can produce, but an ordinary picture theatre is an enormous consumer. With the programme changed twice a week in a year, it will show its audience enough fim views to cover nearly forty miles if the rolls were extended in a straight line, for, averaging two thousand feet for each programme, it requires over two hundred thousand feet for the twelve monthss. Thus it is that the man with the moving camera is scouring the country in search of scenes he can catch with the lens...." (457) Wiley discusses the distribution system. "To keep ten thousand picture theatres in running order requires an elaborate system. Most of them are divided into circuits. All of the European makers have agencies in this country. These agencies also have American films, but most of the American makers dispose of their own output. One firm or agency may supply a circuit of two hundred resorts, sending out lists of subject in advance." (458) The author draws a parallel between films and newspapers. Noting that the managers who select films for the nation's 10,000 movie theaters rarely buy their product, Wiley writes: "He never buys any except a rare set, because, like a newspaper, once seen they have lost their newness and novelty." (458) AU - Wiley, Day Allen DA - Oct. 1909 IS - 502 KW - stage Chicago, IL ref, secondary motion pictures motion pictures, and New York New York, and motion pictures Chicago, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures phonograph sound recording sound recording, and phonograph phonograph, and motion pictures motion pictures, and phonograph quotations quotations, and motion pictures quotations, and moving gallery motion pictures, and distribution circuits materials materials, and celluloid celluloid ref, secondary ref, secular ref, literary ref, Lippincott's motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures quotations, and movies like newspapers motion pictures, and theaters motion pictures, and stage stage and theater news and journalism LB - 39960 PY - 1909 SP - 454-58 ST - The Theatre's New Rival T2 - Lippincott's Monthly Magazine TI - The Theatre's New Rival VL - 84 ID - 4094 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Will's questions the 1970 President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography Report’s methodology, its inadequate examination of sexual violence in motion pictures and television, and its inability to measure the effects of erotica on children. AU - Wills, Garry DA - Aug., 1977 KW - values Christianity sexuality motion pictures Catholic Church +motion pictures and popular culture pornography media effects media effects, and pornography pornography, and harmful effects Catholics, and pornography pornography, and Catholics +television television, and erotica critics pornography, and critics LB - 22700 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1977 SP - 30-34 ST - Measuring the Impact of Erotica T2 - Psychology Today TI - Measuring the Impact of Erotica ID - 995 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The authors argue that the American motion picture rating system should take into account research on child development and should be based on potential harmfulness of films and videos. AU - Wilson, Barbara AU - Linz, Daniel AU - Randall, Barbara DA - Fall, 1990 IS - 4 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) motion pictures media effects media violence censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification media effects violence violence, and mass media rating system (U. S.) systems, and violence rating system (U. S.), and harmfulness Donnerstein, Edward CARA, and critics rating system (U. S.), and critics media efffects, and rating system (U. S.) children and media children, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and children social science research law, and media effects law, and media effects +motion pictures and popular culture +television motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) television, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and television CARA LB - 27740 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1990 SP - 443-68 ST - Applying Social Science Research to Film Ratings: A Shift from Offensiveness to Harmful Effects T2 - Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media TI - Applying Social Science Research to Film Ratings: A Shift from Offensiveness to Harmful Effects VL - 34 ID - 1328 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article by Harold Wilson, M.D., discusses color's power to awaken emotion -- a point made several times in these pages. Wilson says that "It is true that our knowledge of the world of things about us comes to us largely through the aid of our color sense. The sky above us, the trees and flowers on all sides, the earth beneath our feet, all speak to us in the language of color. It is estimated that the human eye is capable of distinguishing 100,000 different colors, or hues, and twenty shades or tints of each hue, making a total of 2,000,000 color sensations which may be discriminated. If we consider the infinite variations in the color of earth, of plants and their blossoms, of clouds, in fact of all natural objects, such an estimate as this hardly seems excessive, and it is not to be wondered at that color has played an important part in the development of the human race, nor that it has very intimate connections with our affective, or emotional, states." (810) Wilson quotes from William James Psychology (1892, p. 387)) that in animals "'colors are quite as much a sexual irritant as form.'" (811) Wilson says that "Since our knowledge of the psychology of the lower members of the animal kingdom is necessarily limited, we do not know much about their emotional nature, but the evidence is clear that color may powerfully move them, even though we may not name or classify the state of feeling which is produced." (811) Wilson then considers "primitive" or "savage" man and color. He comments on the inadequacy of language to describe color. "Investigations among savage tribes have shown that a clear and accurate discrimination between colors may exist in the absence of names to identify them, and if it is true, as noted above, that we ourselves can distinguish some 2,000,000 different hues, it is certain that we have no words wit which to name each color and tint and shade." (812) In contrast to primitive civilizations, "the relations which color sustains to civilized mankind are much diversified. Everything with which we come into contact has some property of color. Absolute whiteness and absolute blackness are, like other pure sensations, merely mental abstractions." (813) Color is important in food and cooking, in medicine, and in aethetics. (813-14) There is a close connection between the sensation of color and pleasure. "Perhaps the most important of the diversified relations which color has for man are those in the domain of aesthetics. Dugald Stewart, in discussing the successive transitions which the meaning of the word beauty has undergone, believed that 'it must have originally connoted the pleasure of color, which he recognized as primitive.' Among the lower races there is a lively satisfaction in brilliant colors, particularly in those belonging to the red end of the spectrum. Infants show an appreciation for red earlier than for other colors. In a brief inquiry respecting certain relations of color and feeling, which I have recently made by means of a series of questions, seventeen person, mostly artists and musicians, and all person of cultivated tastes, responded. Four-fifths of these expressed a preference for the colors in the lower half of the spectrum, such as red, orange, yellow, and their derivatives, as brown pink, and scarlet. More than half confessed a positive dislike for magenta and other purple colors....." (814) Wilson discusses linking color to music with the possibilities of "great canvases reflecting the most delightful color harmnies, totally emancipated from the shackles of form." (815) Wilson notes the "complex properties of emotion" and the ways both music and color evoke emotion. "And can it be believed that those pathetic passages, those grand traits of harmony, those unexpected changes of tone that always cause suspension, languor, emotions, and a thousand unexpected changes in the soul which abandons itself to them, will lose any of their energy in passing from the ears to the eyes?" (817) Wilson notes, however, the difficulties in linking color and music. "The essential nature of color, as a sensory experience as well as an objective fact, is radically different from that of sound, except perhaps that they are both modes of motion...." (819) Later he writes that "The phychical [sic] relations of sound and color are fortuitous or arbitrary, their analogies misleading, and it is hardly to be doubted that the search for 'color-music' will never result in the evolution of a new art." (821) Wilson writes that "there is an undeniable pleasure in the contemplation of simple color." (815) He goes to say that "Indeed, we may believe color to have been a source of pleasurable feelings among our frugivorous prehuman ancestors." (821) Color is important for the artist in stimulating emotions. "By means of color the painter strives to awaken in those who look upon his pictures emotions which he coould never reach without it aid." (821) And, "Color is so interwoven and applied to the environment in which we find ourselves, as a response to organic necessities, as mere decoration, and as symbol, that its final relation to the mass of color feelings as mature individuals is so complex, so indefinite, so variable, that its analysis is impossible. Even the canons of color in art are more or less indefinite and arbitrary." (821) [my emphasis] How each person responds to color may vary from person to person. "Each of us finds in his own experience that under certain conditions, as, for example, green confectionery may involuntarily excite feelings of antipathy, through the fact that we have been taught to associate this color with poisonous properties. And yet it can hardly be doubted that color may produce within us certain feelings which arise independently of any principle association, although these feelings may be of a very vague character...." (823) Wilson says that "Mental diseases are often accompanied by mystical ideas about color." (824) Also, "Many religious ceremonials and customs have much of color mysticism about them. Black absorbs the sun's light. It signifies death and mourning. White reflects all the colors of the spectrum. It contains and glorifies them Therefore, it denotes purity, victory, holiness...." (824) Color has significance in the secular world. "In secular matters, red is said to be the color of strong feeling of any kind, whether of love or hatred, good or evil." (824) "Yellow signifies the sun." (825) In future, some writers predict (according to Wilson), "ladies will use color to indicate the state of their affections." (826) Wilson concludes by emphasizing the power of color to awaken "particular emotions." (827) "The range of influence which color has upon our feelings is necessarily great. It part, as we have seen, it is essential or inherited.... Nature is lavish with her color charms, but their secrets are not open to the dull eye of inattention....The key to the kabala of color is in the possession of each of us, and we have only to search for it in order to unlock the world of feelings which I have thus briefly indicated." (827) AU - Wilson, Harold DA - June 1898 IS - 103 KW - theater theater religion religion, and color magic emotion decadence censorship censorship censorship ref, secondary color, in literature color, and research on color color color, and inadequacy of language color, in history color, and theory color, and language color, and modernity modernity modernity, and color color, and emotion emotion, and color color, and psychology color, and poetry color, and religion religion, and color values color, and values values, and color color, and decadence decadence, and color color, and morality color, and immorality color, and passion color, and sensations theater and stage color, and theater theater, and color censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color magic, and color color, and magic color, and music media effects color, media effects media effects, and color quotations quotations, and color and emotion color, and 2 million sensations color, and primitives color, and myticism ref, secondary ref, secular ref, reform ref, Arena color, and pleasure LB - 39150 PY - 1898 SP - 810-27 ST - The Relation of Color to the Emotions T2 - The Arena TI - The Relation of Color to the Emotions VL - 19 ID - 4014 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses how recent rock-n-roll singers (Elvis Presley, Fabian) used "non-musical crutches" to make them sound much better than they really were. Presley's "recorded voice was so doctored up with echoes that he sounded as though he were going to shake apart." (16) Echo chambers, tape reverberation, over dubbing or splicing were a few of the technological tricks employed. AU - Wilson, John S. DA - June 21, 1959 KW - rock n' roll sound recording censorship and ratings home and new media rock-n-roll critics magnetic tape recording home magnetic recording magnetic tape LB - 31790 PY - 1959 SP - 16, 52 ST - How No-Talent Singers Get 'Talent' T2 - New York Times Magazine TI - How No-Talent Singers Get 'Talent' ID - 2864 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Wilson indicates that a rise in public interest coupled with increased concern by the Supreme Court resulted in the need for more research on pornography and its impact since there were many unanswered questions at the time. The increased concern resulted from increasing availability of pornography as well as concern with pornography’s effects. Prior to this, initial legislative examinations of pornography and its use began in the early 1950s with examinations of the materials available at the time. These factors ultimately led to a more in-depth examination with the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography formed in 1967 (Report released in 1970). The Commission recruited a number of social scientists and experts to conduct additional research and to testify on the impact of pornography use. As a note, this article is part of a Journal of Social Sciences special issue devoted to research on pornography, as such the issue contains a number of articles examining the “fall-out” from the 1970 Commission. --Michael Boyle AU - Wilson, W. C. DA - 1973 IS - 7-17 KW - presidents and new media social science research values sexuality media effects Boyle, Michael pornography pornography, and new media social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) values, and pornography pornography, and values media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects values LB - 1340 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1973 ST - Pornography: The Emergence of a Social Issue and the Beginning of Psychological Study T2 - Journal of Social Sciences TI - Pornography: The Emergence of a Social Issue and the Beginning of Psychological Study VL - 293 ID - 222 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses the most up-to-date developments in stereopticon machines which "project views of living and moving objects on a screen a succession of views so rapidly that the eye cannot distinguish the transition between one view and the next which takes its place." (518) Wilstach says this is but the latest version of an old technique that has been used for many years. The article shows pictures taken of two girls dancing. "The pictures here shown are but a small fraction of the immense number of photographs taken of this dance. The films move so fast that it is possible to take fifty pictures each second, or 180,000 per hour, so that it took less than half a second to take the pictures herewith shown, and they represent the action that took place only during that half-second or so of duration. Powerful electric light is absolutely necessary in giving a proper exhibition of the pictures." (520) (The set of pictures of the dancing girls is shown on p. 519.) The author discusses the use of electricity in producing effects on stage. "Electricity, a willing slave in the hands of a skilful operator, makes it possible to produce the sound and flash of a bomb so that the full effect is heard and seen, and at the same time with little or no danger." (521) He also discusses creating scenes depicting "a Southern swamp, glowing with the phosphorescent light of fire-flies." (522) AU - Wilstach, Claxton DA - Nov. 1896 IS - 797 KW - photography ref, mag electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and photography photography, and electricity photography and visual communication stereopticons kinetoscope Edison, Thomas motion pictures electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity eidoloscope motion pictures electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity theaters, and lighting lighting ref, secondary ref, secular ref, women ref, Godey's Magazine ref, illustrated LB - 280 PY - 1896 SP - 518-23 ST - Electricity on the Stage T2 - Godey's Magazine TI - Electricity on the Stage VL - 133 ID - 3087 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Winston looks at the fate of HDTV, which seemed to be a superior movie making technology when it was introduced by Sony in 1981. The failure of this technology to find its way into the business is illustrative, Winston argues, of a general rule of thumb in Hollywood regarding new technologies: they have substantial barriers to overcome that are rooted in vested interests. In Winston’s view, “Hollywood has used technology, either because of its complexity or its cost or both, to limit competition by crating barriers to entry." --Gordon Jackson AU - Winston, Brian DA - Summer, 1989 IS - 3 KW - +television +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and new technology television, and new technology television, and high definition (HDTV) HDTV motion pictures, and HDTV Jackson, Gordon color color, and HDTV television, and color LB - 17570 PY - 1989 SP - 123-37 ST - HDTV in Hollywood: Lights, Camera, Inaction T2 - Gannet Center Journal TI - HDTV in Hollywood: Lights, Camera, Inaction VL - 3 ID - 676 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Wolff argues that universities and libraries "need to address the changing character of knowledge and learning and the fundamental interconnectedness of learning technology, information literacy, and the student of the future." He was then associate executive director of the accrediting commission for senior colleges and universities for the Western Association of Schools and Colleges. AU - Wolff, Ralph A. DA - Summer, 1995 IS - 90 KW - computers computers libraries information storage digital media education libraries, and new media libraries, and digital media media literacy computers and the Internet computers, and libraries libraries, and computers LB - 29830 PY - 1995 SP - 77-91 ST - Using the Accreditation Process to Transform the Mission of the Library T2 - New Directions for Higher Education TI - Using the Accreditation Process to Transform the Mission of the Library ID - 2739 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The author, Mrs. Woodrow, begins by observing that it is "undeniable" that "the desire to be photographed is almost universal." (675) Vanity is part of the explanation for this fact. (676) Women also wish to preserve evidence of their beauty. "In a word, the fruit of that desire to retain a record, at least, of the beauty which is exclusively her own -- to render lasting and changeless that which in our nature is elusive and subject to imitation." (678) Recent improvements in photography make taking a portrait easier and more attractive to women. (678) There may be other reasons for want to be photographed. "But, after all, does not the real fascination of being photographed lie deeper than any of these discussed factors? It is not fundamentally a desire to catch a glimpse, even though it be 'as through a glass darkly,' of our real selves?" (682) Men also liked being photographed, but for different reasons, Woodrow asserts. (682-83) The author complains about conventions that deny women their full beauty. "In a large number of these illustration there is noticeable a flowing arrangement of the hair which adds enormously to the softness and expression of the face. This, too, is denied women by the stern canons of dress. We may not appear with unbound tresses, consequently we miss an opportunity of beauty which the camera affords us, and of which we are quick to take advantage." (677) There is a good deal of reflection on the nature of beauty. "We view ourselves not as we are, but as we should be," Woodrow says, "and the hope rises strong within us that perhaps the beauty which is attainable in a photograph may be arrived at in reality." (679) "There is no class of women who are so frequently photographed as actresses," the author reports, and their pictures appear often "on the pages of many magazines and papers." (680) Photographs are important to promoting actresses and they should constantly renew their publicity photographs. (681) The author says that actors must be photographed for business purposes but also because they realize that their fame is fleeting and they want a record to retain it. "It is a matter of business with them. Then, too, their photographs in costume are a record of their various parts. And they cling to all these records, for well they know that an actor's fame is writ in water. Exceeding bitter is their cry: -- "'Where are the passions we essayed And where the tears we made to flow? Where the wild humors we portrayed For laughing worlds to see and know? Othello's wrath and Juliet's woe? Sir Peter's whims and Simon's gall? And Millamant and Romeo? Into the night go one and all.'" (my emphasis) This article is illustrated with several pictures of beautiful women. AU - Woodrow, Wilson Mrs. DA - Oct. 1903 IS - 6 KW - photography journalism journalism fame celebrity magazines, and photography ref, secondary news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality personality women women, and beauty sexuality photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography photography, and beauty women, and photography photography, and women quotations quotations, and actors' fame actors acting ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated ref, reform ref, Cosmopolitan celebrity culture magazines motion pictures LB - 37800 PY - 1903 SP - 675-84 ST - The Fascination of Being Photographed and the Improvement in Photography T2 - Cosmopolitan TI - The Fascination of Being Photographed and the Improvement in Photography VL - 35 ID - 3879 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article discusses D. W. Griffith's rise but also the "revolutionary change" that motion pictures underwent from about 1908 when "the accepted idea of a popular film was, perhaps a policeman chasing a clown-thief....," (109) to 1914 when movies had become an industry comparable to "the telephone, ... woolens,... and distribution of food-stuffs." (109) "To-day," this article argues, "the picture stage -- not always, but in its higher aspects -- is in some respects more powerful than the pulpit." (113) Woolley maintains that Griffith produced "the first modern photo-play," but before Griffith, "the French largely controlled the manufacture of moving picture films." (110) But these films "were trivial and conventional in character. The art represented was the art of pantomime -- flesh-and-blood emotions were unknown." (112) The author comments on the status of moving picture actors before Griffith. "The performers were from the lowest rank of the regular profession. An actor going to rehearsal skulked shamefacedly into the studio -- to do work of this kind was a professional humiliation." (112) Woolley then devotes a section to "Getting Realistic Emotion Effects" in moving pictures. Griffith emphasized facial expressions. "In developing his ideas of facial expression and bodily movments, Griffith became a close student of men and women in real life. He visited every sort of place in New York, from the morgues to the roof-gardens, taking his camera man with him and securing photographs, either motion pictures or 'still' ones. Then, by comparing his drama pictures with these, he could tell how truthfully his people had depicted various emotions." (112) Woolley explains how Griffith got many of his pictures. "He was always on the watch for unwitting persons in the act of registering joy, grief, wrath, pity, and so on. Twice, in his search for types, he was host at, and once he was attacked by a gang of thugs. On the latter occasion, Griffith and his faithful satellite, the camera man, jumped through a window and got away over a roof and down a fire-escape." (113) The author says that Griffith's film Corner in Wheat "was probably the first motion picture that ever presented a social argument." (114) Griffith believed tht Robert Browning, "although counted a failure as a playwright, ... was the great motion picture writer who ever lived." (114) The article discusses Griffith use of the fade-out, make-up, and the close-up. The close-up was "Griffith's Greatest Discovery," Woolley argued. (116) . It was "by far the most vital of is contributions ... -- the discovery that it was a fundamental mistake to attempt to get the whole figure into the picture. As a result of this one contribution from Griffith, the photo actor has a wider range in describing his emotions with his facial muscles than any actor on the legitimate stage ever had." (116) The article concludes by noting the great increase in salaries given to actors and by speculating that future movies may look as different from those of 1914 as those of 1914 looked from only six years earlier. AU - Woolley, Edward Mott DA - Sept. 1914 IS - 5 KW - theater stage history censorship words vs. images metaphors actors acting ref, secondary motion pictures Griffith, D. W. history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures images vs. words war motion pictures, and war war, and motion pictures quotations ref, news motion pictures, and printing press motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings Griffith, D. W., and censorship censorship, and D. W. Griffith images vs. words motion pictures, and new art form quotations motion pictures, and pulpit non-USA non-USA, and motion pictures motion pictures, and non-USA France France, and motion pictures motion pictures, and France motion pictures, and French films in U.S. motion pictures, and French influence actors, and status of actors, and bias against Pickford, Mary acting, and facial expression motion pictures, and close ups motion pictures, and facial expressions motion pictures, and Robert Browning Browning, Robert, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures ref, secondary ref, secular ref, reform ref, illustrated ref, McClure's LB - 37010 PY - 1914 SP - 109-16 ST - Stories of Hundred Thousand Dollar Salaries: The Story of D. W. Griffith, the $100,000 Salary Man of the Movies T2 - McClure's Magazine TI - Stories of Hundred Thousand Dollar Salaries: The Story of D. W. Griffith, the $100,000 Salary Man of the Movies VL - 43 ID - 3802 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article says that sportsmen can now use their cameras to capture the "true colors" of nature. (206) "Color pictures are the big game of photography," the article asserts. (207) The article focuses on "the necessary equipment and manipulations involved in making color transparencies. For successful color prints on paper are still a thing of the future. But if you will make your color transparencies in lantern slide size, and throw them, enlarged, upon a screen, or if you make and view them as stereoscopes, you will, I am sure, be so satisfied with the results that yo will not ask for paper prints." (206) The expense for "adapting an ordinary roll film camera to color plate work need not exceed five dollars," Worstall says. In the United States, the "Autochrome process is probably the most widely used... for making color transparencies." (206) He also discusses the process by which Lumiere Autochromes are manufactured in France. In Great Britain, "a color plate process which is rapidly gaining converts is the Paget." (207) Worstall discusses the advantages of both the Autochrome and Paget processes. (207) AU - Worstall, R. A. DA - April 1915 IS - 4 KW - photography photography and visual communication cameras photography, and color photography, and dry plate color color, and photography photography, and Autochrome process Autochrome process, and photography color, and Autochrome process Autochrome process, and color color, and Lumiere process Lumiere process, and color photography paper, and color photography photography, and paper photography, and color stereoscopes photography, and color latern slides non-USA France France, and Autochromes France, and color photography photography, and Paget color plates Paget color plates, and photography Great Britain Great Britain, and Paget color plates Great Britain, and color photography quotations quotations, and color photography ref, secondary ref, secular ref, outdoor ref, Forrest and Stream paper LB - 37480 PY - 1915 SP - 206-07 ST - Color Photography for the Sportsman T2 - Forest and Stream: A Journal of Outdoor Life, Travel, Nature Study, Shooting.... TI - Color Photography for the Sportsman VL - 84 ID - 3847 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article, written by Carroll D. Wright who was the president of Clark College, discusses the application of new methods of artificial power to industry. "The manufacturing industries of the United States, according to statistics collected in 1907, were carried on by artificial power, meaning steam, water, electricity and gas, equaling 14,500,000 horse-power.." It goes on to days that in "the industries themselves a man's energy to-day is 6 times as great as it was before the introduction of power." (395) These developments had a major impact on the press and printing. "One of the latest sextuple stereotype perfecting presses has an aggregate running capacity of 108,000 eight-page papers an hour. That is to say, 1 of these perfecting presses run by 1 pressman and 4 skilled laborers will print, out at the top, fold, paste and count, with a supplement inserted, if desired, 108,000 eight-page papers in 1 hour. To do the press work alone for this number of paper would take, under the old hand method, a man and a boy, working 10 hours a day, about 130 days; so a paper now published in the morning, printed, folded, cut and posted before breakfast, would, before the edition was completed under the old system, became a quarterly, or perhaps a semi-annual." (395) [Compare this to J. P. Materson's 1890 article that said that 12,000 thirty-two page newspapers could be turned out in one hour.] "In the matter of ruling paper, the changes have been startling. Under the primitive methods, 100 reams of double-cap paper can be ruled on both sides with faint lines, by the use of a hand ruling-machine, in 146 hours, as against 12 hours on a ruling-machine with steam-power, a ratio of over 12 to 1 in favor of the modern method; and 100 reams of single-cap paper, with faint lines on both sides, required 4,800 hours under the primitive method of a ruler and quill, but under the modern method, with a ruling-machine, the work is accomplished in 2 hours and 45 minutes, a ratio of 1,900 to 1 in favor of the modern method." (395) AU - Wright, Carroll D. DA - Aug. 27, 1908 IS - 35 KW - journalism magazines ref, secondary electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing news and journalism electricity, and journalism journalism, and electricity electricity, and newspapers newspapers, and electricity magazines, and electricity electricity, and magazines newspapers, and printing speed (1907) electricity, and Industrial Revolution railroads, and electricity electricity, and railroads books, periodicals, newspapers printing presses printing press, and speed steam power, and newspapers steam power, and printing newspapers, and steam power paper printing, and paper paper, and printing ref, secondary ref, secular ref, illustrated (youth) ref, Youth's Companion print railroads steam power LB - 37060 PY - 1908 SP - 395-96 ST - The Marvels of Machinery T2 - Youth's Companion TI - The Marvels of Machinery VL - 82 ID - 3779 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This study was part of the series of studies Zillmann and Bryant produced from a longitudinal examination of the effects of exposure to pornographic materials. As in the other studies, both male and female and student and non-student participants were used. Two weeks after the six-week exposure period the participants were brought in and given an opportunity to choose a video to watch from either a G-rated, R-rated, X-rated, X-rated with bondage, X-rated with S & M, or X-rated with bestiality. The authors found, consistent with prior expectations, that massive exposure to pornography over a six-week period resulting in a shift in preference of movies chosen. Specifically, those in the exposure condition were more likely to watch the extreme varieties of X-rated movies including bondage, S & M, and bestiality. Those in the control group more often chose “G”, “R”, and standard X-rated movies. Furthermore, there were gender differences in that males were more likely to watch the extreme X-rated fare than were females. This study also suggests support for the desensitization hypothesis in that the more exposure people have to pornographic movies, the more extreme future content needs to be to reach similar levels of interest. --Michael Boyle AU - Zillman, D, and J. Bryant DA - 1986 IS - 4 KW - women, and new media women social science research sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence violence Boyle, Michael pornography media effects pornography, and rape myths violence, and pornography pornography, and violence women, and pornography pornography, and women +motion pictures and popular culture pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects media effects, and violence media effects, and motion pictures pornography, and satiation media effects, and satiation LB - 1360 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1986 SP - 560-78 ST - Shifting Perspectives on Pornography Consumption T2 - Communication Research TI - Shifting Perspectives on Pornography Consumption VL - 13 ID - 224 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This article was the first report issued from a massive experiment conducted by the authors concerning the effects of exposure to pornographic movies. Participants were brought in and put into one of three experimental conditions. The massive condition exposed participants to six one-hour sessions of pornography. The intermediate condition exposed participants to six half-hour sessions. The no exposure condition had subjects watch non-pornographic movies. Each of the pornographic movies depicted standard pornographic fare, largely heterosexual oral, anal, and vaginal intercourse. After the exposure period, respondents were asked a series of questions assessing their assumptions of the prevalence of a variety of sexual acts as well as their sensitivity toward rape. The latter measure was assessed using a mock rape trial in which the respondent had to prescribe a sentence to the rapist. The authors found that massive exposure to pornography resulted in higher estimates of the prevalence of sexual acts such as oral, anal, group, sadomasochistic, and bestial intercourse. A caveat, however, is that there are no assessments of the actual prevalence of these scales. They also found that rape sensitivity decreased as the level of pornography exposure was increased. As such, the massive exposure condition demonstrated the lowest incarceration time, which was their indicator for rape sensitivity. This study is important because it is part of a landmark series of studies produced by Zillmann and Bryant. This series of experiments is an important starting point for any pornography research. --Michael Boyle AU - Zillmann, D. and J. Bryant DA - 1982 IS - 4 KW - women, and new media women social science research sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence violence Boyle, Michael pornography media effects pornography, and rape myths violence, and pornography pornography, and violence women, and pornography pornography, and women +motion pictures and popular culture pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects media effects, and violence media effects, and motion pictures LB - 1350 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1982 SP - 10-21 ST - Pornography, Sexual Callousness, and the Trivialization of Rape T2 - Journal of Communication TI - Pornography, Sexual Callousness, and the Trivialization of Rape VL - 32 ID - 223 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Zillmann and Bryant produced a series of journal articles based on a longitudinal experimental study exposing participants to varying amounts of pornography (in movie form) once a week for a six-week period. This particular study looked at the impact that long-term exposure had on sexual as well as non-sexual happiness, particularly satisfaction with current sexual partner and their sexual habits. A total of 160 subjects were used. This pool was comprised of males and females, and students as well as non-students drawn from the general public. The results indicate that exposure to pornography results in decreased levels of sexual happiness, satisfaction with their partner’s affection toward them, and satisfaction with their partners’ sexual behavior and adventurousness. Interestingly, however, the effect was specific to the sexual realm in that there was no relationship between pornography exposure and nonsexual happiness (i.e. work and family satisfaction). Furthermore, the effects were consistent for male and female participants. The authors argue that this evidence, in conjunction with a consideration of the content of pornographic videos, paints a fairly grim picture for the effects of pornography. Zillmann and Bryant conclude with the following question“And who, confronted with the bounty of readily attainable sexual joys that are continually presented in pornography and nowhere else, could consider his or her sexual life fulfilled?” (452) --Michael Boyle AU - Zillmann, D. and J. Bryant DA - 1988 IS - 5 KW - women, and new media women social science research sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence violence Boyle, Michael pornography media effects pornography, and rape myths violence, and pornography pornography, and violence women, and pornography pornography, and women +motion pictures and popular culture pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects media effects, and violence media effects, and motion pictures pornography, and satiation media effects, and satiation LB - 1370 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1988 SP - 43l8-53 ST - Pornography's Impact on Sexual Satisfaction T2 - Journal of Applied Social Psychology TI - Pornography's Impact on Sexual Satisfaction VL - 18 ID - 225 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Zworykin, Vladimir K. DA - Nov. 1962 KW - television, and history of +television television, and origins LB - 7510 PY - 1962 SP - 69-73 ST - The Early Days T2 - Television Quarterly TI - The Early Days VL - 1 ID - 2121 ER - TY - MGZN AB - An article about Hugh Hefner, Playboy, and the Reagan adminstration's offensive against pornography. DA - Aug 4, 1986 KW - presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality sexuality obscenity Meese Commission law censorship and ratings censorship pornography law, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and pornography pornography, and Reagan judges obscenity, and pornography Meese, Edwin, and pornography pornography, judicial setbacks Playboy pornography, and Playboy Playboy, and pornography Hefner, Hugh values Reagan, Ronald LB - 27620 PY - 1986 SP - 3, 50 ST - The Playboy Philosopher T2 - Newsweek TI - The Playboy Philosopher ID - 1316 ER - TY - MGZN AB - This piece reflects on Will Hays, then president of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors Association, and what influence movies might have on America. A clipping of this article is in the Will H. Hays Papers, Indiana State Library, Indianapolis, IN. AU - Hapgood, Norman DA - Jan. 1933 KW - motion pictures media effects law censorship and ratings censorship motion pictures and popular culture Hays, Will H. Hays, Will H., and background Hays, Will H., and censorship censorship, and Will Hays media effects, and motion pictures LB - 26520 PY - 1933 SP - 75-84? ST - Will Hays and What the Pictures Do to Us T2 - Atlantic Monthly TI - Will Hays and What the Pictures Do to Us UR - Clipping in Will H. Hays Papers, Indiana State Library, Indianapolis, IN VL - 151 ID - 2940 ER - TY - MGZN AB - Eric A. Johnston, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, speaks to his critics. This piece is in Folder 7, Box 6, MS 118, Eric A. Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA. AU - Johnston, Eric DA - Jan. 5, 1949 KW - +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and critics Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and critics LB - 16810 PY - 1949 RP - by MPAA ST - Our Critics! T2 - Variety (43rd Anniversary Number) TI - Our Critics! ID - 629 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - The Cook County police set up the first municipal motion picture censorship board in 1907. Files exist -- usually a sheet detail how much film was cut and for what reasons -- on many early silent movies. Many of these films no longer exist and these files may be one of the few documents indicating what they film were about. The Police Department's Film Review Section, and Chicago's Motion Picture Appeal Board operated through 1983. Their funding was eliminated from the city's budget in early 1984. DA - 1907-1983 KW - primary sources archives primary sources law censorship and ratings censorship primary sources primary sources, local censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and Chicago censorship archives censorship, local archives primary sources, Illinois primary sources, Chicago LB - 2180 PY - 1907 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Illinois Regional Archives Depository (IRAD), Ronald Williams Library, Northeastern Illinois University, Chicago, IL ST - Cook County Police Censorship Records? (1907-1983) TI - Cook County Police Censorship Records? (1907-1983) ID - 306 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Virginia created the censorship division on March 15, 1922. It was one of seven state censorship boards that operated until the 1960s. It was abolished on July 1, 1966. The Collection has about 150,000 items, including letters pertaining to censorship and race in films (e.g., A Son of Satan, c1924; The House Behind the Cedars, c1925). These records are located in the Virginia State Library and Archives. DA - 1922-1966 KW - religion race values primary sources archives law censorship and ratings censorship archives primary sources, Virginia +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and state censorship censorship, and state motion pictures, and race race, and motion picture censorship values, and motion pictures LB - 2190 PY - 1922 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - Division of Motion Picture Censorship Records, 1922-1966 ID - 307 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - These are the records of the motion picture censorship board for the state of Maryland. There are a total of 34 boxes (1 cubic foot per) and 13 ledgers. For example, Box 11 is "Minutes -1945-1970"; and Box 19 -- "Film Analysis Cards I-M, Pre-1963." Minutes for any given meeting typically run a page or two. The pages are numbered consecutively. Often they give an account of theaters examined during the past week, eliminations from specific films (same information appears to be in the PCA files for specific films). Expense accounts given, information on individual board members (e.g., so-and-so, a former serviceman, had applied for reinstatement as a film measurer, etc.). Finanacial statements are given periodically. Occasionally there will be a more extended discussion of films (e.g., The Outlaw, April 24, 1946, p. 109, and Jan. 23, 1947, p. 187; or Parole from the Big House, May 22, 1946, p. 117). The Minutes indicate that the Board cooperated with the National Legion of Decency (e.g., p. 141) on controversial fims (e.g., Father Murphy). These Minutes are good if one is writing a general history of Maryland censorship -- most of the Minutes are cursory with some occasional substantive discussion of objections to individual films. It is usually impossible to determine the reactions of specific board membes from these Minutes. These Records are at the Maryland State Archives, Hall of Records, Annapolis, MD. DA - pre-1963 KW - primary sources archives primary sources law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures primary sources primary sources, Maryland archives motion pictures, and state censorship motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and state censorship, and motion pictures censorship, and Legion of Decency The Outlaw LB - 2200 PY - 1963 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - Maryland Censor Board Records ID - 308 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This collection pertains to the Roman Catholic Legion of Decency, created in 1934 to bring pressure on the motion picture industry. There is an index arranged alphabetically by film title. The file card indicates when the movie was reviewed and volume the Legion's rating appeared in. There were 21 file card drawers (3x5 cards). Then there were 40 file drawers (plus half dozen more file drawers in another room) with folder with correspondence arranged alphabetically by film title. The additional file drawers (6 or so) appear to be arranged around topic (e.g., "pornography," etc.). These latter files appear to be clipping files and offer a good array of published articles on different topics. The Legion of Decency Papers has a good deal of material on the 1950s and 1960s, and less on the 1930s and 1940 (although there are three files on Howard Hughes' The Outlaw). There are also files on such films as And God Created Woman, and The Moon Is Blue. These Papers are located at the New York Catholic Center, 1011 First Avenue, New York, NY. KW - primary sources archives primary sources law censorship and ratings censorship primary sources archives primary sources, New York Legion of Decency censorship, and Legion of Decency And God Created Woman The Outlaw The Moon Is Blue +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and Legion of Decency censorship, and motion pictures Christianity Catholic Church values LB - 2210 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - Legion of Decency Papers ID - 309 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - These records contain a total of 34 boxes (1 cubic foot per) and 13 ledgers. For example, Box 11 is "Minutes -1945-1970"; and Box 19 -- "Film Analysis Cards I-M, Pre-1963." Minutes for any given meeting of the Maryland Censor Board typically run a page or two. The pages are numbered consecutively. Often they give an account of theaters examined during the past week, eliminations from specific films (same information appears to be in the PCA files for specific films). Expense accounts given, information on individual board members (e.g., so-and-so, a former serviceman, had applied for reinstatement as a film measurer, etc.). Finanacial statements are given periodically. Occasionally there will be a more extended discussion of films (e.g., The Outlaw, April 24, 1946, p. 109, and Jan. 23, 1947, p. 187; or Parole from the Big House, May 22, 1946, p. 117). The Minutes indicate that the Board cooperated with the National Legion of Decency (e.g., p. 141) on controversial fims (e.g., Father Murphy). These Minutes are good if one is writing a general history of Maryland censorship -- most of the Minutes are cursory with some occasional substantive discussion of objections to individual films. It is usually impossible to determine the reactions of specific board membes from these Minutes. These Records are at the Maryland State Archives, Hall of Records, Annapolis, MD. DA - 1916-1981 KW - primary sources archives primary sources law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures primary sources primary sources, Maryland archives motion pictures, and state censorship motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and state censorship, and motion pictures censorship, and Legion of Decency The Outlaw LB - 2220 PY - 1916 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - Maryland Censor Board Records (1916-1981) ID - 310 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Richard Heffner headed the motion picture industry's Classification and Rating Administration from 1974 to 1994. But starting in May, 1956, he hosted a television program in New York called "The Open Mind," which ran off and on into the twenty-first century. Most of this collection pertains to "The Open Mind" shows done during the 1980s and 1990s (e.g., Neil Postman and others). There are a few from the 1970s (stored apprently in New Jersey). There apparently is not much for the earliest program done in the 1950s and 1960s. These interviews can be seen at the Museum of Television and Radio, 25 West 52d Street, New York, NY. KW - Classification and Rating Administration CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) television, and values values community democracy television motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Heffner, Richard, and The Open Mind Heffner, Richard, and television CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA democracy, and television television, and democracy values, and television critics values Heffner, Richard CARA LB - 2230 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - The Open Mind [taped guest interviews] ID - 311 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - While this collection does have information pertaining to a few Otto Preminger films, for those looking for information about his movie The Moon Is Blue (1953), which played an important part in the demise of the motion picture industry's Production Code, will be disappointed. These Papers are at the Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison. DA - 1948-1972 KW - self-regulation Production Code values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) primary sources archives primary sources values religion primary sources archives primary sources, Wisconsin primary sources, Madison, WI +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and Production Code (motion pictures) primary sources, Otto Preminger primary sources, Moon Is Blue Production Code, and Moon Is Blue Production Code, and Otto Preminger LB - 2240 PY - 1948 RP - Reprint Edition SP - 13 boxes T2 - Otto Preminger Papers, 1948-1972 ID - 312 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - These records are good for the era before the creation of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors Association and also for the period afterwards. But the records often have little on why the content of specific films was censored. This collection, though, is quite large as indicated by its finding aid: "The Records of the National Board of Review of Motion Pictures." A sampling of the material here includes: Box 7 (correspondence from 1929-39), Box 30 (Folder: "International Federation of Catholic Alumnae"), and Box 32 (has lists of books turned into films, as noted in The Library Journal, 1917, 1918, 1919, 1930, etc.). This material is locate at the Manuscripts and Archives Section, New York Public Library, New York, NY. KW - primary sources archives primary sources law censorship and ratings censorship primary sources, New York primary sources archives National Board of Review +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and local censorship, and motion pictures LB - 2250 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - Records of the National Board of Review of Motion Pictures ID - 313 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - For those interested in movie censorship, Box 6 in this collection contains one folder on The Moon Is Blue (1953). It had quite a lot of press releases, correspndence (from lawyers and those at United Artists) as well as memos from Preminger, and newspaper clippings on the film and efforts to censor it. This material is at the Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison. DA - 1950-1980 KW - self-regulation Production Code values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) primary sources archives primary sources values religion primary sources archives primary sources, Wisconsin primary sources, Madison, WI +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and Production Code (motion pictures) primary sources, Otto Preminger primary sources, Moon Is Blue Production Code, and Moon Is Blue Production Code, and Otto Preminger LB - 2260 PY - 1950 RP - Reprint Edition SE - MCHC 82-46, Box 6, Folder: 6-16 "Preminger -The Moon Is Blue" T2 - United Artists Collection Addition, 1950-1980 ID - 314 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - The Motion Picture Research Council Papers have information pertaining to the Payne Fund Studies, one of the earliest efforts by social scientists, to measure the effects of movie on American youth. CN - California -- Stanford -- Stanford University -- Hoover Institution Archives KW - primary sources archives primary sources +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and social science motion pictures, and media literacy media literacy, and motion pictures Motion Picture Research Council primary sources primary sources, California primary sources, Stanford University archives motion pictures, and critics motion pictures, and anti-Semitism motion pictures, and actors' status motion pictures, and false leaders media literacy LB - 13210 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Hoover Institution Archives, Stanford University, Stanford, CA ST - Motion Picture Research Council Papers TI - Motion Picture Research Council Papers ID - 493 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This large, important collection covers Hays' work with the Motion Pictures Producers and Distributors Association between 1922 and 1945, as well as other aspects of Hays' life. The collection is arranged chronologically and is also on microfilm. The collection is the most detailed on the working of the movie industry's public relations and business dealings. There is nothing comparable for either the presidencies of Eric A. Johnston (1945-1963) or Jack Valenti (1966- ). CN - Indiana -- Indianapolis -- Indiana State Library KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising public relations archives primary sources freedom law censorship and ratings censorship primary sources archives primary sources, Indiana primary sources, Indianapolis Hays, Will H. +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Will Hays public relations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and public relations Breen, Joseph primary sources, Will Hays primary sources, Joseph Breen Adler, Mortimer, and Will Hays Freedom of the Films, and Mortimer Adler Adler, Mortimer, and Freedom of the Films primary sources, Mortimer Adler Adler, Mortimer LB - 13260 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Indiana State Library, Indianapolis, IN T2 - Will H. Hays Papers ID - 498 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - For anyone interested in examining how censors attempted to change the content of motion pictures from 1930 to 1966, this collection is a gold mine. It contains files on about 20,000 movies. Many of the files, which deal with specific films, go into great detail on what was changed and why. The files are particular informative for the period between 1934 and 1954 when Joseph I. Breen headed the Production Code Administration. CN - California -- Beverly Hills -- Margaret Herrick Library KW - self-regulation Production Code PCA values Production Code (motion pictures) primary sources archives primary sources values religion law censorship and ratings censorship archives primary sources censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph primary sources, California primary sources, Beverly Hills, CA LB - 13310 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Margaret Herrick Library, Beverly Hills, CA T2 - Production Code Administration Files ID - 503 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Wilfrid Parsons, who edited the Catholic publication America, corresponded with several people involved with movie censorship, among them Daniel A. Lord and Joseph I. Breen. One finds evidence of Breen's apparent anti-Semitism in this collection. These papers are in the Lauinger Library, Georgetown University, Washington, D. C. CN - District of Columbia -- Washington -- Georgetown University -- Lauinger Library KW - self-regulation Production Code values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) primary sources archives primary sources values religion +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Production Code (motion pictures) primary sources archives primary sources, Washington, D.C. primary sources, District of Columbia Breen, Joseph Production Code, and origins primary sources, Production Code (motion pictures) archives, and Production Code (motion pictures) primary sources, Joseph Breen primary sources, Martin Quigley primary sources, Daniel Lord Lord, Daniel A. Quigley, Martin Breen, Joseph, and anti-Semitism anti-Semitism, and Joseph Breen anti-Semitism LB - 15300 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - Wilfrid Parsons Papers ID - 552 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This collection has a good deal of information on Joseph Breen, who worked for the Archdiocese of Chicago as a public relations man during the 1920s. It has had information on the Archdiocese reaction to motion pictures and other new media of the time. This Collection is at the Archdiocese of Chicago Archives and Record Center, Chicago, IL. CN - Illinois -- Chicago -- Archdiocese of Chicago Archives and Record Center KW - self-regulation Production Code values religion Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives primary sources primary sources, Chicago primary sources, Illinois +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures primary sources, Production Code (motion pictures) primary sources, Joseph Breen primary sources, Cardinal Mundelein Mundelein, George Cardinal Breen, Joseph Production Code, and primary sources Breen, Joseph, and public relations LB - 15340 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - Madaj Collection ID - 556 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This huge collection provides scholars with a detailed look at how specific Warner Bros. films were produced. It has a wealth of information on movie production, the stars, studio executives, and more. These papers are located in the Doheny Library, School of Cinema - Television Collection, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA. CN - California -- Los Angeles -- University of Southern California -- Doheny Library KW - archives primary sources primary sources archives primary sources, Warner Bros. +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures primary sources, California primary sources, Los Angeles LB - 15490 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - Warner Bros. Archive of Historical Papers ID - 562 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Johnston was president of the Motion Picture Association of America from 1945 until his death in 1963. This is a solid collection with considerable material on Johnston's personal life, but it has nowhere near as much information about Johnson and the MPAA as the Will H. Hays Collection in Indianapolis has on Hays's years as head of the movie industry. Johnston's Papers are located in the Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA. CN - Washington -- Spokane -- Eastern Washington State Historical Society KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations primary sources archives primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA freedom archives primary sources addresses +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising advertising advertising, and motion pictures primary sources, Washington state primary sources, Spokane primary sources, Eric Johnston primary sources, MPAA MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures primary sources, speeches LB - 16250 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - Eric A. Johnston Papers ID - 584 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - These U.S. Department of State records pertain to Eric Johnston's efforts to expand markets for American movies abroad. Johnston was then president of the Motion Picture Association of America. These papers are located in National Archives I, Washington, D. C. CN - District of Columbia -- Washington -- National Archives I DA - 1945-49 KW - nationalism nationalism imperialism primary sources archives primary sources Johnston, Eric capitalism non-USA primary sources archives primary sources, District of Columbia motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and State Department, U.S. motion pictures, and foreign policy Johnston, Eric, and foreign policy motion pictures, and anticommunism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures anticommunism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad motion pictures, and Cold War nationalism and communication nationalism, and motion pictures cultural imperialism motion pictures, and foreign markets LB - 16530 PY - 1945 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Record Group 59, Boxes 4452, 5924, 6659 T2 - Department of State Decimal File, 1945-49 ID - 605 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This collection pertains to theater owners in the United States. It contains a good deal of information on the public's reactions to motion pictures. This collection is in Special Collections and Manuscripts, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT. CN - Utah -- Provo -- Brigham Young University -- Harold B. Lee Library KW - audiences National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) theater owners primary sources archives primary sources motion pictures law censorship and ratings censorship audiences primary sources archives primary sources, Utah NATO theaters censorship, and NATO NATO, and censorship NATO primary sources, NATO audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences theaters, and motion pictures theaters LB - 18020 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Boxes 1, 5, 6, 9, Mss 1446 T2 - Records of the National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) ID - 711 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This collection, compiled by the Kinsey Institute, is a good source on the numbers of pornographic films made, especially prior to the late 1960s. It is located in the Kinsey Institute Archives, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN. CN - Indiana -- Bloomington -- Indiana University -- Kinsey Institute Archives KW - Kinsey, Alfred C. photography primary sources archives primary sources sexuality sexuality sexuality primary sources archives primary sources, Indiana primary sources, Bloomington, IN +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures 8mm 16mm 8mm film, and nudity 8mm film, and pornography nudity 16mm film, and nudity 16mm film, and pornography pornography pornography, and Kinsey Institute Kinsey Institute primary sources, Kinsey Institute +photography and visual communication photography, and pornography 16mm film LB - 18190 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - Kinsey Institute Library Film and Video Collection ID - 728 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This collection, compiled by the Kinsey Institute, give evidence of the extent to which photography was used for pornography during the late ninteenth and twentieth centuries. It is located in the Kinsey Institute Archives, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN. CN - Indiana -- Bloomington -- Indiana University -- Kinsey Institute Archives KW - Kinsey, Alfred C. primary sources archives primary sources sexuality sexuality sexuality primary sources archives primary sources, Indiana primary sources, Bloomington, IN +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures 8mm 16mm 8mm film, and nudity 8mm film, and pornography nudity 16mm film, and nudity 16mm film, and pornography pornography pornography, and Kinsey Institute Kinsey Institute primary sources, Kinsey Institute 16mm film LB - 18200 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - Kinsey Institute Collection, Photography Collection ID - 729 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This list, compiled by the Kinsey Institute, gives an indication of how many pornographic movies were shot on 8mm and 16mm motion picture cameras prior to the late 1960s. It is at the Kinsey Institute Archives, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN. CN - Indiana -- Bloomington -- Indiana University -- Kinsey Institute Archives KW - Kinsey, Alfred C. primary sources archives primary sources sexuality sexuality sexuality primary sources archives primary sources, Indiana primary sources, Bloomington, IN +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures 8mm 16mm 8mm film, and nudity 8mm film, and pornography nudity 16mm film, and nudity 16mm film, and pornography pornography pornography, and Kinsey Institute Kinsey Institute primary sources, Kinsey Institute motion pictures, and stag films 16mm film LB - 18210 RP - Reprint Edition ST - KI [Kinsey Institute] Stag Film List T2 - Kinsey Institute Library Film and Video Collection TI - KI [Kinsey Institute] Stag Film List ID - 730 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - These files in the Reagan Library in Simi Valley, CA, cover many subject. For example, they include a report from the Television Information Office entitled "The New Television Pressure Groups: a perspective on the drive against diversity." Also there is some correspondence with Jack Valenti. These files are at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library, Simi Valley, CA. CN - California -- Simi Valley -- Ronald Reagan Presidential Library DA - 1980s KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA values Christianity Christianity Valenti, Jack values primary sources archives primary sources religion values morality values religion law censorship and ratings censorship +television television, and censorship television, and critics +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and TV pressure groups morality, and television Christianity, and television Valenti, Jack, and Reagan Administration Valenti, Jack, and television censorship primary sources archives primary sources, Simi Valley, CA primary sources, California Valenti, Jack, and television LB - 18400 PY - 1980 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - WHORM: Subject Files ID - 739 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This collection in the Archdiocese of Baltimore has material on Catholics and the motion picture industry. Box 4 contains correspondence from Joseph Breen writing as Eugene Weare in 1925-26. Box 23 has some correspondence from Daniel Lord in 1935 saying the "impression grows that big business and administration having recognized Moscow Commission is furthering Mexican tyranny, including communistic destruction of civil and religious liberties. CN - Maryland -- Baltimore -- Archives of the Archdiocese of Baltimore KW - primary sources archives primary sources primary sources, Baltimore primary sources, Maryland Breen, Joseph, and 1920s Breen, Joseph, as Eugene Weare Lord, Daniel A., and communism +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholic Church motion pictures, and Joseph Breen motion pictures, and Daniel Lord Breen, Joseph Lord, Daniel A. LB - 18430 RP - Reprint Edition SE - RG 1, Boxes 4 and 23 (B1244-B1913) (L601-L1254), Archives of the Archdiocese of Baltimore (AAB), Baltimore, MD T2 - Michael J. Curley Collection ID - 740 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This collection deals with the Legion of Decency and more broadly, the Catholic Church's stance on motion pictures. It is located at 3211 4th Street, N.E., Washington, D. C. (Mullen Library?, Catholic University?, Washington, D. C.). CN - District of Columbia -- Washington -- National Conference of Catholic Bishops Archives DA - 1933-1944 KW - values Christianity Christianity values primary sources archives primary sources religion values morality values religion law censorship and ratings censorship primary sources, Washington, D.C. primary sources archives primary sources, Legion of Decency +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Legion of Decency motion pictures, and Catholic Church Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity motion pictures, and morality morality, and motion pictures censorship, and Legion of Decency Legion of Decency censorship, and motion pictures Breen, Joseph Breen, Joseph, and Legion of Decency Quigley, Martin, and Catholic Church Lord, Daniel A. McNicholas, Archbishop John T. Quigley, Martin Catholic Church LB - 18440 PY - 1933 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - National Catholic Welfare Conference, Episcopal Committee on Motion Pictures, 1933-1944, National Conference of Catholic Bishops ID - 741 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This collection contains materials pertaining to the 1968 Senate hearings on movie rating led by Maine Senator Margaret Chase Smith. Smith was especially worried about the rising levels of sex and violence in American movies and television programs. These papers are at National Archives 1, Washington, D. C. CN - District of Columbia -- Washington -- National Archives I DA - 1968 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA government hearings Valenti, Jack Smith, Margaret Chase primary sources archives primary sources government +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Smith, Margaret Chase, and movie classification Smith, Margaret Chase, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Congress hearings hearings, on movie classification (1968) Valenti, Jack, and Congress primary sources archives primary sources, Washington, D. C. primary sources, movie classification (1968) LB - 18670 PY - 1968 RP - Reprint Edition SE - (RG 46), Sen 90A-E6, Box 53 T2 - U. S. Senate Committee on Commerce Papers ID - 752 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This collection contains correspondence to and from Harold Innis as well as copies of his published and unpublished writings. There are also several taped interviews given by people who knew Innis. It is an important collection for scholars wishing to study is important Canadian historian and political economist. Innis's Papers are located at the University of Toronto Archives, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ont., Canada. KW - nationalism time and timekeeping time print primary sources archives primary sources preservation materials cultural imperialism history, and new media history, and new media materials news and journalism non-USA history primary sources, Canada archives primary sources primary sources, Toronto, CA primary sources, Harold Innis geography general studies +nationalism and communication time space (spatial) imperialism Innis, Harold Tremayne, Mark cultural imperialism Egypt Rome Babylonia printing presses printing press paper parchment Greece McLuhan, Marshall history, break with history, and printing history, and newspapers newspapers, and history printing printing, and history newspapers history materials news LB - 19400 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - Harold A. Innis Papers ID - 777 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - The files in the Records of the Office of Technology Assessment Records give insight into the way business leaders, researchers, and government leaders thought about technological change during the late 1970s. The OTA, a Congressional agency, produced dozens of reports from the 1970s until its demise in 1995, on communication technologies. These files are in RG 444, National Archives 2 (NARA 2), University of Maryland, College Park, MD. CN - Maryland -- College Park -- National Archives II DA - 1978 KW - Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) primary sources archives primary sources preservation communication revolution history, and new media history, and new media communication revolution, and second industrial revolution history OTA primary sources archives primary sources, OTA primary sources, Maryland primary sources, College Park microelectronics second industrial revolution history, break with new media communication revolution LB - 19510 PY - 1978 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Technology Assessment Advisory Council Meeting Files T2 - Office of Technology Assessment Records TI - Technology Assessment Advisory Council Meeting Files ID - 786 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - While these records have little on the ratings for specific movies, they do have information pertaining to Jack Valenti and such issues as video piracy of American motion pictures abroad. This material is in the Motion Picture and Television Reading Room, Library of Congress, Washington, D. C. CN - District of Columbia -- Washington -- Library of Congress KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration piracy MPAA National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) magnetic recording video piracy archives primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA materials materials videotape magnetic tape non-USA reports reports, MPAA primary sources primary sources, Washington, D.C. primary sources, Library of Congress +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and video piracy video piracy, and MPAA MPAA, and video piracy Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and video piracy Valenti, Jack, and MPAA reports, Jack Valenti motion pictures, and U. S. films abroad copyright LB - 20110 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - Motion Picture Association of America: Rating Sheets ID - 835 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This was an early study done for theater owners evaluating the new motion picture rating system. It is located in Box 5, Mss 1446, Records of the National Association of Theaters Owners (NATO), Special Collections and Manuscripts, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT. KW - classification audiences self-regulation National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) CARA theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating systems (non-USA) rating system (U. S.) primary sources archives primary sources motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship primary sources archives primary sources, Utah NATO theaters censorship, and NATO NATO, and censorship NATO primary sources, NATO audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences theaters, and motion pictures theaters audiences, and CARA audiences, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and audiences audiences LB - 20370 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Folder 1, ST - Highlights of Opinion Research Corporation 1970 Survey on Code and Rating System TI - Highlights of Opinion Research Corporation 1970 Survey on Code and Rating System ID - 853 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This collection contained seminars on the work of cinematographers Winton C. Hoch (Part I, No. 82) and Haskell Wexler (Part I, No. 188). DA - June 2, 1973; April 10, 1976 KW - Nichols, Mike motion pictures cameras cinematography Wexler, Haskell motion pictures, and videotape videotape videotape, and motion pictures Steadicam cameras, and Steadicam television television, and videotape videotape, and television videotape, and The Graduate Nichols, Mike, and videotape magnetic tape magnetic recording LB - 31920 PY - 1976 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - New York Times Oral History Program, the American Film Institute Seminars UR - Center for Advanced Film Studies, Beverly Hills, CA ID - 2876 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This collection is a major source for any scholar interested in motion picture censorship and the Motion Picture Producers and Assocation of America (MPPDA) between 1930 and the late 1960s. The collection contains files on some 20,000 films. Often the files are detailed with letters and memoranda revealing how the Production Code Administration censored movie scripts, line-by-line, scene-by-scene, usually before production began. AD - Margaret Herrick Library, Beverly Hills, CA KW - censorship and ratings Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures MPPDA censorship, and MPPDA MPPDA, and censorship PCA censorship Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Production Code Administration (PCA) Production Code LB - 34450 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - Production Code Administration Files (1930-1966) ID - 3083 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This study examined how entertainment programs on television depicted age-related issues during the early 1970s. A copy of this material is in Richard D. Heffner Personal Papers, New York, NY, and at the University of California, Los Angeles. AU - [Heffner, Richard D.] Richard Heffner Associates DA - Dec. 1973 KW - magnetic recording media effects magnetic tape +television television, and media effects media effects, and television Heffner, Richard, and television Ford Foundation, and television television, and aging content Heffner, Richard, and Edna McConnell Clark Foundation television, and Edna McConnell Clark Foundation videotape media effects, and videotape videotape, and media effects television, and videotape videotape, and television Heffner, Richard violence sexuality LB - 26780 PY - 1973 RP - Reprint Edition ST - [Report and Proposal: Concerning the Identification of Entertainment Television's Aging-Related Content] TI - [Report and Proposal: Concerning the Identification of Entertainment Television's Aging-Related Content] ID - 1240 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This study, funded by the Ford Foundation, examined how television programs and advertising during the early 1970s portrayed business content. A copy of this study is in Richard D. Heffner Personal Papers, Private Collection, New York, NY; and at the University of California, Los Angeles. AU - [Heffner, Richard D.] Richard Heffner Associates DA - Spring, 1974 KW - magnetic recording advertising, and public relations television, and values propaganda public relations values media effects magnetic tape +television television, and media effects media effects, and television Heffner, Richard, and television Ford Foundation, and television television, and business content advertising, and television advertising, and TV business content videotape media effects, and videotape television, and videotape videotape, and television values values, and television Heffner, Richard advertising LB - 26790 PY - 1974 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Network Television's Business-Related Content TI - Network Television's Business-Related Content ID - 1241 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This study exmained how network television programs depicted environmental issues during the early 1970s. A copy of this material is in Richard D. Heffner Personal Papers, Private Collection, New York, NY, and at the University of California, Los Angeles. AU - [Heffner, Richard] Richard Heffner Associates DA - June 30, 1972 KW - magnetic recording media effects magnetic tape +television television, and media effects media effects, and television Heffner, Richard, and television Ford Foundation, and television television, and environmental content videotape media effects, and videotape videotape, and media effects television, and videotape videotape, and television Heffner, Richard LB - 26770 PY - 1972 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Network Television's Environmental Content TI - Network Television's Environmental Content ID - 1239 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This is a draft of a manuscript that Mortimer Adler prepared for Will H. Hays justifying protecting of movies as a form of free speech. Hays was to deliver it to the Senate committee investigating Hollywood and warmongering in September, 1941, but Hays apparently did not get the chance to give it. A copy of this draft is located at [1942?], Box 60, Will H. Hays Papers, Indiana State Library, Indianapolis, IN; and in Boxes 69-70, Mortimer J. Adler Papers, Regenstein Library, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL. AU - Adler, Mortimer KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) social science research primary sources archives primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA critics freedom archives primary sources Adler, Mortimer primary sources, Chicago primary sources, Illinois +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and social science social science research, and critics critics, and social science motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures motion pictures, and defense of Hays, Will H., and Mortimer Adler Adler, Mortimer, and Will Hays motion pictures, and 1941 Senate hearing MPAA, and 1941 Senate hearings Commission on Freedom of the Press Hutchins Commission Adler, Mortimer, and Freedom of the Films Freedom of the Films, and Mortimer Adler Hays, Will H. media effects primary sources, Mortimer Adler LB - 16360 RP - Reprint Edition ST - ["Freedom of the Films"] TI - ["Freedom of the Films"] ID - 590 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This is a rich collection pertaining to Adler's life and career. There is a good deal in these papers revealing Adler's association with Will H. Hays and the motion picture industry. Hays liked Adler and thought his work gave a strong intellectual justification for motion pictures, one that could be used against the industry's critics. Adler was on Hays' payroll for a time, drafting the MPPDA president's annual reports. AU - Adler, Mortimer J. CN - Illinois -- Chicago -- University of Chicago -- Joseph Regenstein Library KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) social science research primary sources archives primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA critics freedom archives primary sources Adler, Mortimer primary sources, Chicago primary sources, Illinois +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and social science social science research, and critics critics, and social science motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures motion pictures, and defense of Hays, Will H., and Mortimer Adler Adler, Mortimer, and Will Hays motion pictures, and 1941 Senate hearings MPAA, and 1941 Senate hearing Commission on Freedom of the Press Hutchins Commission Adler, Mortimer, and Freedom of the Films Freedom of the Films, and Mortimer Adler Freedom of the Press, and Mortimer Adler Adler, Mortimer, and Freedom of the Press Hays, Will H. media effects primary sources, Mortimer Adler Adler, Mortimer LB - 13690 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Joseph Regenstein Library, University Chicago, Chicago, IL T2 - Mortimer J. Adler Papers ID - 533 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This collection is a major source for any scholar interested in motion picture censorship between 1930 and the late 1960s. The collection contains files on some 20,000 films. Often the files are detailed with letters and memoranda revealing how the Production Code Administration censored movie scripts, line-by-line, scene-by-scene, usually before production began. AD - Margaret Herrick Library, Beverly Hills, CA AU - America, Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of DA - 1930-1966 KW - censorship and ratings Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures MPPDA censorship, and MPPDA MPPDA, and censorship PCA censorship Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Production Code Administration (PCA) Production Code LB - 34470 PY - 1930 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - Production Code Administration Files (1930-1966) ID - 3085 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - In early 1956, MPAA president Eric Johnston appointed a committee of four studio executive and himself to make suggestions for revising the movie industry's Production Code. The work was farmed out to a subcommittee chaired by Kenneth W. Clark and composed of J. Raymond Bell, Paul J. Quinn, Robert J. Rubin, Sidney Schreiber, and PCA director Geoffrey Shurlock . On Oct. 11, 1955, they made several recommendations for abandoning social taboos that included miscegnation, abortion, drug addiction, prostitution, and kidnapping. They also made recommendation about streamlining the Code's approach to profanity. AU - Clark, Kenneth, et al. DA - Oct. 11, 1956 KW - self-regulation motion pictures censorship and ratings Production Code (1956) motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and miscegnation motion pictures, and drugs motion pictures, and prostitution motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and kidnapping children and media violence motion pictures, and violence Production Code, and decline of Johnston, Eric Shurlock, Geoffrey Johnston, Eric, and Production Code Production Code, and Eric Johnston Production Code, and Geoffrey Shurlock Production Code, and Kenneth Clark children Production Code LB - 35690 PY - 1956 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Report of MPAA Subcommittee on Self-Regulation T2 - Dore Schary Papers TI - Report of MPAA Subcommittee on Self-Regulation UR - Folder: "Motion Picture Assoc 1953, 1956," Box 20, Dore Schary Papers, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison, WI ID - 3208 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Edgar Dale wanted a national policy regarding motion pictures that would protect free expression in order that real artists could get the chance to put their visions on screen. As with great writers or painters, it did not matter that the movie maker’s vision might be “incorrect,” or that it might conflict with society’s conventions. In fact, he acknowledged that his plan might lead to pictures which were “flatly opposed to prevailing notions about things.” Dale wrote three volumes in the Payne Fund Studies. AU - Dale, Edgar DA - Sept. 15, 1933 KW - addresses +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and critics Payne Fund Studies Dale, Edgar motion pictures, and critics motion pictures, and social science Motion Picture Research Council LB - 13520 PY - 1933 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Box 57 ST - First Symposium on Elements Out of Which a Program Looking Towards National Film Policies in Motion Pictures Can Be Selected T2 - Motion Picture Research Council Papers TI - First Symposium on Elements Out of Which a Program Looking Towards National Film Policies in Motion Pictures Can Be Selected ID - 522 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - These papers are helpful in studying the response of the Roman Catholic Church in Philadelphia, and more generally in the United States, to motion pictures. Cardinal Dougherty was highly critical of movies he deemed to be immoral, and he played an important role in the creation of the Roman Catholic Legion of Decency which asked the faithful to pledge that they would boycott offensive films. AU - Dougherty, D. Cardinal DA - 1930s? KW - values Christianity values primary sources archives primary sources motion pictures religion values morality law censorship and ratings censorship archives primary sources Legion of Decency Catholic Church censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Dougherty, D. Cardinal morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality motion pictures, and critics values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values values, and new media values primary sources, Pennsylvania primary sources, Philadelphia, critics values LB - 12940 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Archdiocese of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA ST - D. Cardinal Dougherty Papers (?) T2 - Archdiocese of Philadelphia, Archives and Historical Collections TI - D. Cardinal Dougherty Papers (?) ID - 471 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - The Papers of U. S. Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas have drafts of opinions that related to freedom of expression, motion pictures, and other media. These papers are in the Container 1182 of the Douglas Papers, Library of Congress, Washington, D. C. AU - Douglas, William O. KW - U. S. Supreme Court motion pictures, and religion self-regulation Roth case (1957) Production Code Burstyn v. Wilson obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) primary sources archives primary sources values obscenity freedom values religion law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases court cases, Miracle case court cases, First Amendment Burstyn, Joseph Miracle case Production Code, and decline of freedom, and motion pictures motion pictures, and freedom movies, and religion motion pictures, and religion primary sources, Washington, D.C. primary sources, Library of Congress sacrilege, and Supreme Court (U. S.) Supreme Court (U. S.), and sacrilege archives Roth v. U. S. (1957) Supreme Court (U. S.), and Roth v. U. S. (1957) Roth case (1957) (1957), and Supreme Court (U. S.) Roth v. U. S. (1957) obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.) definitions LB - 16700 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Container 1182 T2 - William O. Douglas Papers ID - 618 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - In 1988, Richard H. Frank, of Walt Disney Studio and a former president of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, said that the “media... have an undeniable responsibility to become a full partner with the government and citizens” in the war on drugs and he offered a lengthy twelve-point plan that would force the entertainment industry to adopt even stricter policies than the Motion Picture Association of America and the Classification and Ratings Adminstration (CARA) had in place. Richard D. Heffner, who was head of CARA, objected to Frank’s proposal. The most effective contribution that the rating system could make to the campaign against narcotics abuse, he told Jack Valenti, “should be rating explanations generally ... with drug content prominently included.” This document is Exhibit 88-11, Box 4, Columbia Oral History Collection, Butler Library, Columbia University, New York, NY. AU - Frank, Richard H. DA - May 1988 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation corporations corporations Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) archives primary sources motion pictures Disney law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA primary sources Disney Studio Frank, Richard H., and Disney +motion pictures and popular culture +television motion pictures, and war on drugs television, and war on drugs censorship censorship, and war on drugs Heffner, Richard, and war on drugs CARA, and drug use rating system (U.S.), and drug abuse Valenti, Jack, and war on drugs Heffner, Richard LB - 24150 PY - 1988 RP - Reprint Edition SE - attached to Jack Valenti to Richard Heffner/Simon Barsky (Inter-Office Memo), June 16, 1988, Exhibit 88-11, Box 4, "RDH Pre-Oral History Memo for Chuck Champlin for the Year 1988" ST - Media/Entertainment White House Conference for a Drug Free America, Post Conferees Meeting Version, May 1988 T2 - Reminiscences of Richard D. Heffner TI - Media/Entertainment White House Conference for a Drug Free America, Post Conferees Meeting Version, May 1988 ID - 1062 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Frantz, a historian who had a long relationship with Lyndon Johnson, mentioned in this interview that Jack Valenti came back to the White House with the President after John F. Kennedy was assassinated. He had never been there before than "that night going through the darkened basement over to the West Wing in the Executive Office Building said he didn't know who was the butler and who was the cabinet officer because he had never seen any of these people before. They all impressed him, in the dark." (p. 27) AU - Frantz, Joe B. DA - Sept. 10, 1972 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Johnson, Lyndon Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Johnson, Lyndon Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and LBJ presidents and new media oral histories, and Joe B. Frantz oral histories LB - 28870 PY - 1972 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Oral History Interview of Joe B. Frantz: II (interviewd by David G. McComb) T2 - Oral History Collection, Lyndon Baines Johnson Library, Austin, TX TI - Oral History Interview of Joe B. Frantz: II (interviewd by David G. McComb) UR - http://www.lbjlib.utexas.edu/johnson/archives.hom/oralhistory.hom ID - 2664 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This work attempts to cast doubt on social science research that showed a connection between watching motion pictures and juvenile delinquency. Will Hays, the president of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America, used such findings in an effort to counter the Payne Fund Studies, the first large-scale study by social scientists of the effects of movies. This material is in the Will H. Hays Papers, Indiana State Library, Indianapolis, IN. AU - Goldsmith, Alfred N. DA - May 26, 1933 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) self-regulation Production Code PCA social science research Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. MPAA MPPDA censorship and ratings children +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Payne Fund Studies MPPDA, and Payne Fund Studies social science research, and motion pictures motion pictures, and social science MPPDA, and public relations MPPDA, and experts Hays, Will H., and social science children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children juvenile delinquency, and motion pictures motion pictures, and juvenile delinquency reports Hays, Will H. junvenile delinquency media effects Production Code (motion pictures) juvenile delinquency children, and media LB - 17430 PY - 1933 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Avoiding Pseudo Scientific Studies of the Movies T2 - Will H. Hays Papers TI - Avoiding Pseudo Scientific Studies of the Movies ID - 664 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - A copy of Eric Johnston's congressional testimony, "Film Knows No International Barriers," is in these files. AU - Halverstadt, Dallas C. KW - Truman administration Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union self-regulation nationalism MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism Cold War war Johnston, Eric capitalism motion pictures, and communism Truman, Harry presidents and new media motion pictures, and Harry Truman Truman, Harry, and motion pictures military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and U.S. foreign policy MPAA, and foreign policy MPAA, and Truman administration MPAA, and Cold War USSR motion pictures, and USSR propaganda democracy motion pictures, and democracy media effects motion pictures, and media effects capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism LB - 36130 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - Folder: "Motion Picture [Research] Clippings," Box 3, Files of Dallas C. Halverstadt, Harry S. Truman Library, Independence, MO UR - Harry S. Truman Library, Independence, MO ID - 3247 ER - TY - MANSCPT AU - Hays, Will H. DA - April 26, 1922 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) addresses, Will Hays self-regulation PCA Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. MPAA MPPDA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures addresses Hays, Will H. Hays, Will H., MPPDA, and press MPPDA, and public relations Hays, Will H., and press Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 13420 N1 - In this address, Hays, then the new president of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America, argues that motion pictures deserves respect as a medium of serious ideas no less than does the press. Hays assumed cinema’s influence to be profound. Motion pictures, he believed, were not unlike photographs, which when mass produced and circulated in newspapers and magazines had given people new ideas about how to live. The movies were much more powerful agents of change. Their influence on national life, on public taste and conduct, on the dreams and hopes of the young, was “absolutely limitless.” No more potent means existed “to influence the thought of the nation towards common ideals.” Hays assumed that modern media possessed the power to change the way people thought, to implant -- at least indirectly -- “standards of taste and morals and arts in the public mind.” PY - 1922 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Box 16 ST - Address to the Publishers of the United States T2 - Will H. Hays Papers TI - Address to the Publishers of the United States ID - 513 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Public taste was malleable, “to a certain degree, plastic,” Will Hays told the Rotarians in 1934. It could “be molded into new and better forms.” He saw motion pictures as one of the most powerful means of influencing public opinion. Hays was president of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America from 1922 until 1945. AU - Hays, Will H. DA - April 2, 1934 KW - +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Hays, Will H. Hays, Will H., and public relations Hays, Will H., LB - 13430 PY - 1934 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Rotary Interviews Will H. Hays About the Movies T2 - Will H. Hays Papers TI - Rotary Interviews Will H. Hays About the Movies ID - 514 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - As president of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America, Will Hays emphasized the postive qualities of motion pictures. He saw them as means to promote capitalism and more affluent life styles. They were "international salesmen" for American business, he said. AU - Hays, Will H. DA - May 22, 1930 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) addresses, Will Hays self-regulation Production Code PCA Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. MPAA MPPDA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures addresses Hays, Will H. Hays, Will H., MPPDA, and press MPPDA, and public relations Hays, Will H., and press Hays, Will H., and business motion pictures, and business motion pictures, and international relations international relations, and motion pictures Hays, Will H., and international relations Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 13440 PY - 1930 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Box 41 ST - Film As an International Salesman T2 - Will H. Hays Papers TI - Film As an International Salesman ID - 515 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This major collection covers both Hays private life and his work with the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America from 1921 until his retirement in 1945. The collection is organized chronologicallyl. AD - Indiana State Library, Indianapolis, IN AU - Hays, Will H. KW - Hays, Will H. motion pictures motion pictures, and Will Hays motion pictures, and archives MPPDA censorship and ratings motion pictures, and censorship archives, and motion pictures archives values motion pictures, and values values, and motion pictures LB - 20 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - Will H. Hays Papers ID - 2829 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This important oral history provides the first behind-the-scenes look at how the motion picture ratings system operated while Jack Valenti was president of the Motion Picture Association of America. Heffner headed the Classification and Rating Administration from 1974 until 1994. The 20 volumes in this oral history are in the Columbia Oral History Collection, Butler Library, Columbia University, New York, N.Y. AU - Heffner, Richard D. KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation entertainment, home Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) primary sources archives primary sources new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric home entertainment home freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification primary sources archives primary sources, Richard Heffner primary sources, New York addresses, Richard Heffner +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and cable TV Heffner, Richard, and home entertainment Heffner, Richard, and VCRs Heffner, Richard, and satellite TV new media, and home classification, and new technology CARA, and new technology rating system (U. S.), and new technology home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and Richard Heffner censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner primary sources, New York oral histories archives primary sources primary sources, and Richard Heffner archives, and Richard Heffner oral histories oral histories, and Richard Heffner +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture censorship censorship, and motion pictures Valenti, Jack MPAA MPAA, and censorship CARA CARA, and censorship CARA, and Richard Heffner CARA, and Aaron Stern Stern, Aaron Mosk, Richard CARA, and Richard Mosk CARA, and Jack Valenti Wasserman, Lew CARA, and Lew Wasserman rating system (U. S.) CARA, and rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and classification classification, and CARA Heffner, Richard Heffner, Richard, and drug abuse Heffner, Richard, and sex Heffner, Richard, and violence Heffner, Richard, and language Heffner, Richard, and Jack Valenti oral histories home, and new media addresses LB - 28610 RP - Reprint Edition SP - 20 volumes ST - Reminiscences of Richard D. Heffner [Oral History] TI - Reminiscences of Richard D. Heffner [Oral History] ID - 102 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This important collection provides the first behind-the-scenes look at how the motion picture ratings system operated while Jack Valenti was president of the Motion Picture Association of America. Heffner headed the Classification and Rating Administration from 1974 until 1994. These papers are in the Columbia Oral History Collection, Butler Library, Columbia University, New York, N. Y. AU - Heffner, Richard D. KW - entertainment Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation entertainment, home Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) primary sources archives primary sources new media home entertainment freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA home, and new media home primary sources archives primary sources, Richard Heffner primary sources, New York addresses, Richard Heffner +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and cable TV Heffner, Richard, and home entertainment Heffner, Richard, and VCRs Heffner, Richard, and satellite TV new media, and home classification, and new technology CARA, and new technology rating system (U. S.), and new technology home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and Richard Heffner censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard addresses LB - 28260 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Papers of Richard D. Heffner T2 - Papers of Richard D. Heffner TI - Papers of Richard D. Heffner ID - 662 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Heffner, who chaired the movie industry's Classification and Rating Administration, also hosted a television program, "The Open Mind." It started in 1956 and ran off-and-on into the twenty-first century. The program interviewed intellectuals and political leaders on the leading issues of the day. Many of these interview -- although not most -- are in the Museum of Television and Radio in New York, N.Y. Most of the interviews there are from the 1980s and 1990s. Among the interviews that are available include Neil Postman and Oliver Stone. Some of the interviews (including those with Postman and Stone) can be seen at the Museum of Television and Radio, New York, N.Y. AU - Heffner, Richard D. KW - motion pictures censorship and ratings children Heffner, Richard +television +motion pictures and popular culture Heffner, Richard, and television Postman, Neil Wertham, Fredric Heffner, Richard, and Charles Siepmann children and media Heffner, Richard, and children Heffner, Richard, and politics Heffner, Richard, and Theodore Shapiro Heffner, Richard, and Peter Neubauer LB - 26640 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Open Mind, Interviews TI - Open Mind, Interviews ID - 697 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Heffner was concerned about the impact of such new media as cable television and video cassettes which brought restricted or even X-rated entertainment directly into homes, thus bypassing the box office and making the movie industry's rating system much less effective. He worried that unlike movie maker exhibited restraint that they might create a climate in which the majority would impose censorship on the rest of society. This material appeared earlier in Richard D. Heffner, "'Narrowcasting' and the Treat to Morals," New York Times, Aug. 17, 1980. A draft of this piece is in Richard D. Heffner's Private Collection, New York, NY. AU - Heffner, Richard D. DA - March 22, 1982 KW - entertainment Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation entertainment, home Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) +television censorship and ratings rating system (U. S.) archives primary sources new media home entertainment freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA home, and new media home primary sources archives primary sources, Richard Heffner primary sources, New York addresses, Richard Heffner +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and cable TV Heffner, Richard, and home entertainment Heffner, Richard, and VCRs Heffner, Richard, and satellite TV new media, and home classification, and new technology CARA, and new technology rating system (U. S.), and new technology home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and Richard Heffner censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and Tocqueville Heffner, Richard, and John Milton Heffner, Richard, and Thomas Jefferson narrowcasting television, and narrowcasting First Amendment First Amendment, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and First Amendment critics Heffner, Richard addresses LB - 19940 PY - 1982 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Freedom and Responsibility in Mass Communications [Address delivered in London, England] T2 - Papers of Richard D. Heffner TI - Freedom and Responsibility in Mass Communications [Address delivered in London, England] ID - 820 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Heffner chaired the movie industry's Classification and Rating Administration from 1974 until 1994. He found John Milton, John Stuart Mill, and Tocqueville to be influential in his thinking about freedom of expression and censorship. He sometimes quoted Milton who had asked in Areopagitica, “Who ever knew truth put to the worse, in a free and open encounter?” Rarely, though, did the contest for truth occur in a fair arena, Heffner believed. AU - Heffner, Richard D. DA - Sept. 18, 1984 KW - entertainment Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation entertainment, home Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) primary sources archives primary sources new media media effects media violence home entertainment freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA home, and new media home primary sources archives primary sources, Richard Heffner primary sources, New York addresses, Richard Heffner +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and cable TV Heffner, Richard, and home entertainment Heffner, Richard, and VCRs Heffner, Richard, and satellite TV new media, and home classification, and new technology CARA, and new technology rating system (U. S.), and new technology home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and Richard Heffner censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and Thomas Jefferson Heffner, Richard, and violence violence, and home entertainment violence First Amendment First Amendment, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and First Amendment critics Heffner, Richard addresses LB - 19950 PY - 1984 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Jefferson Revisited [Address delivered in Toronto] T2 - Papers of Richard D. Heffner TI - Jefferson Revisited [Address delivered in Toronto] ID - 821 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Hoch, a cinematographer, explains how he got started as a color specialist. He was at Caltech and Technicolor hired him as a physicist. He worked for Technicolor for two years on their three-color camera. At the time, Technicolr was "an additive to color processing." (T2A/P50) AU - Hoch, Winton C. DA - June 3, 1973 KW - motion pictures cameras cinematography Hoch, Winton motion pictures, and color color color, and motion pictures Technicolor color, and Technicolor The American Film Institute and American Society of Cinematographers Seminar with Winton C. Hoch LB - 31910 PY - 1973 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Winton C. Hoch: An American Film Institute Seminar on His Work T2 - New York Times Oral History Program, the American Film Institute Seminars, Part I, No. 82 TI - Winton C. Hoch: An American Film Institute Seminar on His Work UR - Beverly Hills, CA: Center for Advanced Film Studies, 1977 (microfilm -- Glen Rock, N.J.: Microfilming Corporation of America, 1977) ID - 2875 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - The Papers of Supreme Court Justice Robert H. Jackson cover many subject including the landmark case in 1952 involving the movie The Miracle (Joseph Bustyn v. Wilson). In its decision the Court abandoned the 1915 Mutual case and recognized motion pictures as “a significant medium for the communication of ideas.” The justices concluded that sacrilege was too vague a basis for censorship. Delivering the decision Justice Tom C. Clark wrote of censors set “adrift upon a boundless sea amid a myriad of conflicting currents of religious views, with no charts but those provided by the most vocal and powerful orthodoxies.” It was not the government’s business “to suppress real or imagined attacks upon a particular religious doctrine, whether they appear in publications, speeches, or motion pictures.” Jackson's paper contain correspondence regarding the Court consideration of the meaning of sacrilege. This material is in Container 175, Papers of Robert H. Jackson, Library of Congress, Washington, D. C. AU - Jackson, Robert H. KW - U. S. Supreme Court motion pictures, and religion self-regulation Production Code Burstyn v. Wilson Supreme Court (U. S.) values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) primary sources archives primary sources freedom values religion law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases court cases, Miracle case court cases, First Amendment Burstyn, Joseph Miracle case Production Code, and decline of freedom, and motion pictures motion pictures, and freedom movies, and religion motion pictures, and religion primary sources, Washington, D.C. primary sources, Library of Congress sacrilege, and Supreme Court (U. S.) Supreme Court (U. S.), and sacrilege archives LB - 16680 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Container 175 T2 - Papers of Robert H. Jackson ID - 616 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Eric Johnston, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, argued that movies were potent weapons in the Cold War against communism. An ardent foe of communism, he argued that movies gave the United States an advantage over the Soviet Union, were “America’s best advertisement to the world,” its most persuasive medium of ideas. Hollywood got something in return for its support of U. S. foreign policy. Johnston enlisted Secretary of State George C. Marshall in 1948 to end outside quotas placed on Hollywood movies. This piece is in Folder 85, Box 7, MS 118, Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA. AU - Johnston, Eric DA - Sept. 25, 1962 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration addresses, Eric Johnston MPAA self-regulation Production Code CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) primary sources archives primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA freedom values religion censorship and ratings children capitalism archives primary sources addresses +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising advertising advertising, and motion pictures primary sources, Washington state primary sources, Spokane primary sources, Eric Johnston primary sources, MPAA MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures primary sources, speeches Johnston, Eric, and capitalism capitalism, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and anticommunism Production Code, and decline of Johnston, Eric, and Production Code Production Code, and Eric Johnston children, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric, and children motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures children, and media LB - 16240 PY - 1962 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Folder 85, Box 7, MS 118 ST - The Motion Picture: Advertisement for Freedom [an address delivered to the Advertising Club of Metropolitan Washington, Washington, D. C.] T2 - Eric A. Johnston Papers TI - The Motion Picture: Advertisement for Freedom [an address delivered to the Advertising Club of Metropolitan Washington, Washington, D. C.] ID - 583 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Motion Picture Association of American president, Eric A. Johnson, saw movies as a means to assist capitalism, and to spread the American Way economically. Where his predecessor Will H. Hays had referred to cinema as America’s “international salesman,” Johnston described Hollywood as “America’s traveling salesman to all the world.” A copy of this piece is in Folder 84, Box 7, MS 118, Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA. AU - Johnston, Eric DA - May 28, 1957 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration addresses, Eric Johnston MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations primary sources archives primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA freedom capitalism non-USA archives primary sources addresses +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising advertising advertising, and motion pictures primary sources, Washington state primary sources, Spokane primary sources, Eric Johnston primary sources, MPAA MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures primary sources, speeches Johnston, Eric, and capitalism capitalism, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and anticommunism motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad LB - 16350 PY - 1957 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Folder 84, Box 7, MS 118 ST - Hollywood: America's Traveling Salesman [Address to the New York Sales Executive Club, New York] T2 - Eric A. Johnston Papers TI - Hollywood: America's Traveling Salesman [Address to the New York Sales Executive Club, New York] ID - 589 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Eric Johnston, president of the Motion Picture Association of American, discusses the role of American films abroad. Iron Curtain countries made up a small percentage of Hollywood films shown abroad. By 1960, the foreign market for American movies dwarfed attendance in the United States. Johnston boasted that 100,000 theaters around the world ran American movies. AU - Johnston, Eric DA - July 28, 1958 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration addresses, Eric Johnston MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations primary sources archives primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA freedom capitalism non-USA archives primary sources addresses +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising advertising advertising, and motion pictures primary sources, Washington state primary sources, Spokane primary sources, Eric Johnston primary sources, MPAA MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures primary sources, speeches Johnston, Eric, and capitalism capitalism, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and anticommunism motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad LB - 16570 PY - 1958 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Folder 84, Box 7, MS 118 ST - American Movies in World Perspective [Lecture at the Warren R. Austin Institute of World Understanding, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT T2 - Eric A. Johnston Papers TI - American Movies in World Perspective [Lecture at the Warren R. Austin Institute of World Understanding, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT ID - 606 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Eric Johnston, president of the Motion Picture Association of American, discusses the role of American films abroad. Iron Curtain countries made up a small percentage of Hollywood films shown abroad. By 1960, the foreign market for American movies dwarfed attendance in the United States. Johnston boasted that 100,000 theaters around the world ran American movies. Although attendance in the United States had dropped to 40-45 million a week, down a half from fifteen years earlier, abroad nearly 250 million saw American films weekly. AU - Johnston, Eric DA - Oct. 14, 1960 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration addresses, Eric Johnston MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations primary sources archives primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA freedom capitalism non-USA archives primary sources addresses +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising advertising advertising, and motion pictures primary sources, Washington state primary sources, Spokane primary sources, Eric Johnston primary sources, MPAA MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures primary sources, speeches Johnston, Eric, and capitalism capitalism, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and anticommunism motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad LB - 16580 PY - 1960 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Folder 85, Box 7, MS 118 ST - New Bridges to Understanding [Address before the World Newspaper Forum of the California Newspaper Publishers Association, Los Angeles, CA T2 - Eric A. Johnston Papers TI - New Bridges to Understanding [Address before the World Newspaper Forum of the California Newspaper Publishers Association, Los Angeles, CA ID - 607 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Eric Johnston, then president of the Motion Picture Association of America, saw movies as potent weapons in the Cold War against communism. Seemingly innocent entertainment films offered the best propaganda. By merely showing the standard of living of Americans they contrasted with the starkness of daily life in communist nations, he said. This piece is in Folder 84, Box 7, MS 118, Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA. AU - Johnston, Eric DA - Nov. 12, 1958 KW - R & D Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration addresses, Eric Johnston MPAA self-regulation Production Code CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations values religion advertising propaganda) public relations censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives primary sources MPAA NATO MPAA CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPPDA motion pictures war research and development military communication community Cold War freedom children censorship and ratings capitalism war addresses +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and community Johnston, Eric, and community community, and motion pictures community, and Eric Johston motion pictures, and Cold War Cold War, and motion pictures capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism values, and motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising advertising advertising, and motion pictures primary sources, Washington state primary sources, Spokane primary sources, Eric Johnston primary sources, MPAA MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures primary sources, speeches Johnston, Eric, and capitalism capitalism, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and anticommunism Production Code, and decline of Johnston, Eric, and Production Code Production Code, and Eric Johnston children, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric, and children motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures values democracy children, and media LB - 16620 PY - 1958 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Folder 84, Box 7, MS 118 ST - Motion Pictures and Social Responsibility [Address to International Social Service, New York, N.Y.] T2 - Eric A. Johnston Papers TI - Motion Pictures and Social Responsibility [Address to International Social Service, New York, N.Y.] ID - 611 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Johnston discusses his early life and career, including his time as president of the U. S. Chamber of Commerce. This materials is in Folder 8, Box 6, MS 118, Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA AU - Johnston, Eric KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories archives primary sources oral histories primary sources primary sources, Spokane primary sources, Washington state Johnston, Eric primary sources, Eric Johnston +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Eric Johnston LB - 16860 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Folder 8, Box 6, MS 118 ST - [Oral History] T2 - Eric A. Johnston Papers TI - [Oral History] ID - 634 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - In this account, Eric Johnston explains how he got the job as president of the Motion Pictures Association of America in 1945. Hollywood executives spoke with Johnston in 1944 and told him that Will H. Hays would soon retire from the MPPDA and be retained in a ceremonial post. The idea of heading the movie industry intrigued Johnston, although a highly placed friend in the Justice Department told him that he “had enough on Hays to put him behind bars for 50 years.” And Hays, for his part, did not appear ready to go. Walter Winchell reported that he had gone to the White House in a futile effort to gather President Harry S. Truman’s support. Johnston cautiously refused to take the film post until Hays was out of the way. This material is in Folder 20, Box 9, MS 118, Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA. AU - Johnston, Eric KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) primary sources archives primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures archives primary sources primary sources, Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and MPAA MPAA, and Eric Johnston LB - 16910 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Folder 20, Box 9, MS 118 ST - How I Got the Job [Notes on Johnston Recollections - Friday, March 31] T2 - Eric A. Johnston Papers TI - How I Got the Job [Notes on Johnston Recollections - Friday, March 31] ID - 637 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Eric Johnston, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, discusses the role of movie theaters iand advertising n communities. He called the movie theater “an important economic and social core of the community,” of equal importance to the public library, town hall, post office, the newspaper, and corner grocery. A copy of this material is in Folder 83, Box 7, MS 118, Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA. AU - Johnston, Eric DA - June 4, 1952 KW - audiences advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations primary sources community capitalism archives +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and theaters Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and theaters theaters motion pictures, and community Johnston, Eric, and community motion pictures, and family advertising, and motion pictures advertising, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric, and advertising advertising community, and movie theaters capitalism, and movie theaters motion picture theaters, and capitalism advertising capitalism, and Eric Johnston LB - 16920 PY - 1952 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Folder 83, Box 7, MS 118 ST - Why Premium Rates for Movie Advertising? [Address at Hartfort Time Press - Motion Picture Symposium, Talcott Mountain, CT T2 - Eric A. Johnston Papers TI - Why Premium Rates for Movie Advertising? [Address at Hartfort Time Press - Motion Picture Symposium, Talcott Mountain, CT ID - 638 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Responsibility for what children saw in the movie rested with the family, Eric Johnston believed. Good parents would take responsibility in this arena, Johnston said in 1962. He opposed any classification scheme that designated motion pictures appropriate for different age groups: it was unworkable because no one was wise enough to classify films for everyone; it undermined individual and parental responsibility; and was unnecessary because citizens had information on which to base decisions. Johnston was then president of the Motion Picture Association of America. This material is in Folder 8, Box 6, MS 188, Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA. AU - Johnston, Eric DA - Feb. 21, 1962 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification addresses, Eric Johnston MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations censorship and ratings propaganda advertising public relations archives primary sources NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric, and classification classification, and Eric Johnson Johnston, Eric MPAA, and classification classification, and MPAA motion pictures, and public relations MPAA, and public relations public relations, and MPAA public relations, and motion pictures primary sources primary sources, Eric Johnston addresses? LB - 16930 PY - 1962 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Folder 8, Box 6, MS 118 ST - Selection of Films for the Family T2 - Eric A. Johnston Papers TI - Selection of Films for the Family ID - 639 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Notes on Eric A. Johnston's meeting with Vice President Richard Nixon. Nixon askes for his advise on likely campaign against John F. Kennedy. Johnston says most of Hollywood is too liberal for him. Johnston was then president of the Motion Picture Association of America. A copy of this material is in Folder 31, Box 9, MS 118, Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA AU - Johnston, Eric DA - March 11, 1960 KW - Nixon, Richard presidents, and new media primary sources archives primary sources Nixon administration +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Richard Nixon Nixon, Richard, and Eric Johnston primary sources primary sources, Eric Johnston archives Johnston, Eric, and liberals LB - 16940 PY - 1960 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Folder 31, Box 9, MS 118 ST - Conversation with Richard Nixon T2 - Eric A. Johnston Papers TI - Conversation with Richard Nixon ID - 640 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Johnston's notes on visit to the White House regarding a newsreel of Eisenhower and Nikita Khrushchev. This material is in Folder 24, Box 9, MS 118, Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA. AU - Johnston, Eric DA - Jan. 7, 1959 KW - Eisenhower, Dwight D. presidents, and new media primary sources archives primary sources Eisenhower administration +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Dwight Eisenhower Eisenhower, Dwight, and Eric Johnston primary sources primary sources, Eric Johnston archives Johnston, Eric, and Soviet Union LB - 16970 PY - 1959 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Folder 24, Box 9, MS 118 ST - Report on Visit to the President -- January 7, 1959 T2 - Eric A. Johnston Papers TI - Report on Visit to the President -- January 7, 1959 ID - 641 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - In this address delivered over he American Broadcasting Company, Sept. 1, 1946, Johnston, then MPAA president, says that movie theaters are "centers of community life, pleasant parts of your individuals everyday life." (1) Cinema "can be a medium of enlightenment unlike any other ever dreamed about" because it "combines all the arts" and "is men's nearest approach to a universal language. It re-creates life." (2) In the struggle to "capture the minds of men," (5)movies offer the possible to defeat "ignorance, inteolerance, injustice" (7) through reason rather than coercion. AU - Johnston, Eric DA - Sept. 1, 1946 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) addresses, Eric Johnston archives addresses speeches motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and education education education, and motion pictures MPAA MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric, and capitalism capitalism, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and anticommunism motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad capitalism freedom LB - 34850 PY - 1946 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Folder "Motion Picture Assoc. (Johnston Office)," Box 3 ST - The Modern Tool for Teaching (Address delivered over the American Broadcasting Company) T2 - Files of Dallas C. Halverstadt TI - The Modern Tool for Teaching (Address delivered over the American Broadcasting Company) UR - Folder "Motion Picture Assoc. (Johnston Office)," Box 3, Harry S. Truman Library, Independence, MO ID - 3127 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Johnston, the president of the MPAA, says that "among all media of mass communication, the American film ranks first in universal appeal." (2) The report then offers quotations from leaders around the world about the influence of motion pictures. AU - Johnston, Eric DA - April, 1961 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) addresses, Eric Johnston self-regulation nationalism archives addresses speeches motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising advertising advertising, and motion pictures MPAA MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric, and capitalism capitalism, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and anticommunism Production Code, and decline of Johnston, Eric, and Production Code Production Code, and Eric Johnston children, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric, and foreign markets advertising and public relations motion pictures, and foreign markets nationalism and communication motion pictures, and foreign policy capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures children freedom Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) children, and media LB - 34950 PY - 1961 RP - Reprint Edition ST - The Impact of U. S. Motion Pictures Abroad (report to the Board of Directors, MPAA) TI - The Impact of U. S. Motion Pictures Abroad (report to the Board of Directors, MPAA) UR - Folder 8, Box 6, Ms 118, Eric A. Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA ID - 3137 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Johnston argues in this address launching the 1951 observance of Brotherhood Weeks, sponsored by the National Conference of Christians and Jews, that in the current world crisis, America cannot afford bigotry. "Bedsheets belong on beds," he said in reference to the Ku Klux Klan. (9) AU - Johnston, Eric DA - 1951 KW - Truman administration Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union self-regulation nationalism MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism Cold War war Johnston, Eric capitalism motion pictures, and communism Truman, Harry presidents and new media motion pictures, and Harry Truman Truman, Harry, and motion pictures military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and U.S. foreign policy MPAA, and foreign policy MPAA, and Truman administration MPAA, and Cold War USSR motion pictures, and USSR propaganda democracy motion pictures, and democracy media effects motion pictures, and media effects capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and bigotry Johnston, Eric, and bigotry LB - 35140 PY - 1951 RP - Reprint Edition ST - The High Cost of Bigotry (Address Broadcast Over the ABC National Network, 1951) T2 - New York: National Conference of Christian and Jews TI - The High Cost of Bigotry (Address Broadcast Over the ABC National Network, 1951) ID - 3154 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - In this address, Eric Johnston called the movie theater “an important economic and social core of the community,” (3) of equal importance to the public library, town hall, post office, the newspaper, and corner grocery. He also discusses the important of movie advertising, to newspapers and to the community. The talk was giver at the Hartford Times Press-Motion Picture Symposium, Time Tower, Talcott Mountain, CT, June 4, 1952. AU - Johnston, Eric DA - June 5, 1952 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) addresses, Eric Johnston audiences archives addresses speeches motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising advertising advertising, and motion pictures MPAA MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric, and capitalism capitalism, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and anticommunism motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad capitalism advertising and public relations freedom democracy democracy, and advertising theaters motion pictures, and theaters LB - 35590 PY - 1952 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Why Premium Rates for Movie Advertising? T2 - Eric A. Johnston Papers TI - Why Premium Rates for Movie Advertising? UR - Folder 83, Box 7, Ms 118, Eric A. Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA ID - 3198 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - In 1958, Eric Johnston, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, negotiated an exchange program with the Soviet Union. The Soviets agreed that ten American films and seven Soviet pictures would be exhibited in the United States. These were the first new American films shown in the USSR since World War II. In the article prepared for Variety, Johnston talks about the Soviet film industry. The Soviets took their cinema seriously. “Of all the arts,” a sign that Johnston had seen in Tashkent read, “the motion picture is the most important to us.” The Soviets eschewed the star system and actors were generally at the bottom of the production pecking order, but it was clear that they liked American stars. Getting Hollywood films into the USSR, Johnston realized, would be a coup. In addition to the 5,500 theaters there were perhaps another 50,000 places where movies were shown. “There is hardly a village from the Artic to the vast deserts of the south that is untouched by the motion picture,” he reported. This material appeared in Eric Johnston, "On Films and the Soviet Union," Variety, Nov. 26, 1958. See also Folder 7, Box 6, MS 118, Eric A. Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA AU - Johnston, Eric DA - Nov. 26, 1958 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) addresses, Eric Johnston Soviet Union self-regulation community addresses motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and community Johnston, Eric, and community community, and motion pictures community, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and Cold War Cold War, and motion pictures capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism values, and motion pictures archives addresses motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising advertising advertising, and motion pictures MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric, and capitalism capitalism, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and anticommunism Production Code, and decline of Johnston, Eric, and Production Code Production Code, and Eric Johnston children, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric, and children motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures USSR USSR, and motion pictures motion pictures, and USSR non-USA capitalism children Cold War freedom MPAA Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) war advertising and public relations children, and media values LB - 36210 PY - 1958 RP - Reprint Edition ST - On Films and the Soviet Union T2 - Eric A. Johnston Papers TI - On Films and the Soviet Union UR - Folder 7, Box 6, MS 118, Eric A. Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA ID - 3254 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This collection deals mostly with Johnston's life outside the Motion Pictures Association of America (MPAA). There is a good deal here pertaining to Johnston's early career, his work with the U. S. Chamber of Commerce, and his diplomatic efforts on behalf of the Franklin D. Roosevelt, Dwight D. Eisenhower, and other presidential administrations. AD - Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA AU - Johnston, Eric A. KW - Johnston, Eric motion pictures motion pictures, and Eric A. Johnston motion pictures, and archives archives censorship and ratings motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and archives archives, and motion pictures LB - 30 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - Eric A. Johnston Papers ID - 2830 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Ina Johnston, the wife of Eric A. Johnston who was president of the Motion Picture Association of America (1945-1963), reminiscences about her life and marriage. This oral history is found in OH -- 345, Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA AU - Johnston, Mrs. Eric (Ina) DA - 1977 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) primary sources archives MPAA NATO) CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPPDA motion pictures archives Johnston, Ina +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures primary sources, Eric Johnston primary sources, MPAA MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and wife oral histories oral histories, and Ina Johnston LB - 16300 PY - 1977 RP - Reprint Edition SE - OH -- 345 ST - [Oral History] T2 - Eric A. Johnston Papers TI - [Oral History] ID - 585 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - In this 30-page interview, conducted by Michael L. Gillette, Arthur Krim discusses his relationship with John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson. Krim became an important fund raiser from both presidents, including Kennedy's 1962 birthday party in Madison Square Garden (Marilyn Monroe sang "Happy Birthday"). Krim became an even closer associate of President Johnson. AU - Krim, Arthur DA - Oct. 8, 1981 KW - Weisl, Edwin, Sr. Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Johnson, Lyndon Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon presidents and new media Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Johnson, Lyndon, and Lew Wasserman Krim, Arthur Krim, Arthur, and Lyndon Johnson Krim, Arthur, and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and Arthur Krim oral histories Krim, Arthur, and oral histories Kennedy, John F. Kennedy, John F., and Arthur Krim Krim, Arthur, and Ed Weisl, Sr. Weisl, Ed, Sr., and Arthur Krim Valenti, Jack LB - 28820 PY - 1981 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Oral History Interview of Arthur Krim: I (interviewed by Michael L. Gillette) T2 - Oral History Collection, Lyndon Baines Johnson Library TI - Oral History Interview of Arthur Krim: I (interviewed by Michael L. Gillette) UR - http://www.lbjlib.utexas.edu/johnson/archives.hom/oralhistory.hom ID - 2659 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - In this 44-page interview, conducted by Michael L. Gillette, Arthur Krim discusses his relationship Lyndon Johnson beginning with the weekend of Aug. 6, 1965. Krim was a close adviser and associate of President Johnson. AU - Krim, Arthur DA - May 17, 1982 KW - Weisl, Edwin, Sr. Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Johnson, Lyndon Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon presidents and new media Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Johnson, Lyndon, and Lew Wasserman Krim, Arthur Krim, Arthur, and Lyndon Johnson Krim, Arthur, and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and Arthur Krim oral histories Krim, Arthur, and oral histories Kennedy, John F. Kennedy, John F., and Arthur Krim Krim, Arthur, and Ed Weisl, Sr. Weisl, Ed, Sr., and Arthur Krim Valenti, Jack LB - 28830 PY - 1982 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Oral History Interview of Arthur Krim: II (interviewed by Michael L. Gillette) T2 - Oral History Collection, Lyndon Baines Johnson Library TI - Oral History Interview of Arthur Krim: II (interviewed by Michael L. Gillette) ID - 2660 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Krim was a close adviser and associate of President Lyndon B. Johnson. Among the topics covered in this interview are Johnson decision to leave the race in 1968. Krim notes (p. 48) that Jack Valenti was among those who help to write Hubert Humphrey's acceptance speech at the nominating convention in Chicago. "It was a very tricky speech to write," Krim recalled. Humphrey was trying "to avoid vooing for the President of the United States and at the same time" wanted to let LBJ "knw that he was not going to deviate from his policies." AU - Krim, Arthur DA - Nov. 9, 1982 KW - Weisl, Edwin, Sr. Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Johnson, Lyndon Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon presidents and new media Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Johnson, Lyndon, and Lew Wasserman Krim, Arthur Krim, Arthur, and Lyndon Johnson Krim, Arthur, and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and Arthur Krim oral histories Krim, Arthur, and oral histories Kennedy, John F. Kennedy, John F., and Arthur Krim Krim, Arthur, and Ed Weisl, Sr. Weisl, Ed, Sr., and Arthur Krim Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and Hubert Humphrey LB - 28840 N1 - Accession No. 85-10 PY - 1982 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Oral History Interview of Arthur Krim: IV (interviewed by Michael L. Gillette) T2 - Oral History Collection, Lyndon Baines Johnson Library, Austin TX TI - Oral History Interview of Arthur Krim: IV (interviewed by Michael L. Gillette) UR - http://www.lbjlib.utexas.edu/johnson/archives.hom/oralhistory.hom ID - 2661 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This is a good archival collection pertaining to Daniel A. Lord, who was the primary architect of the motion picture Production Code of 1930. Lord was a prolific writer and staunch critics of sex and violence in the cinema, and more generally of modernism. This collection contains not only Lord's many pamphlets and other writings, but much personal correspondence. This is a rich source for anyone interested in the early effort to control what appeared in motion pictures. Lord died in 1955. AU - Lord, Daniel A. CN - Missouri -- St. Louis -- Jesuit Missouri Provice Archives KW - self-regulation Production Code values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) primary sources archives primary sources values religion motion pictures, and critics Lord, Daniel A. +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures primary sources archives primary sources, St. Louis, MO primary sources, Missouri Production Code, and Daniel Lord Lord, Daniel A., and Production Code (motion pictures) values, and motion pictures critics LB - 15240 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Jesuit Missouri Province Archives, St. Louis, MO T2 - Daniel A. Lord Papers ID - 546 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - By 1931, Daniel A. Lord, who was the primary architect of the movie industry's Production Code of 1930, was unhappy with the way Hollywood had enforced the Code. Jean Harlow’s blatant effort to seduce a pilot in Howard Hughes' Hell’s Angels (1930) shocked him. After examining Hays Office files for 1930-1931, Lord singled out other films: Paramount’s Confessions of a Co-ed (1931), MGM’s Just a Gigolo (1931) and Laughing Sinners (1931), Columbia’s Good Bad Girl (1931), and Universal’s Back Street (1932). This material is in Folder: "Class Attendance," Daniel A. Lord Papers, Jesuit Missouri Province Archives, St. Louis, MO. AU - Lord, Daniel A. DA - April 23, 1931 KW - self-regulation Production Code values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) primary sources archives primary sources values religion motion pictures, and critics Lord, Daniel A. +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures primary sources archives primary sources, St. Louis, MO primary sources, Missouri Production Code, and Daniel Lord Lord, Daniel A., and Production Code LB - 15250 PY - 1931 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Folder: "Class Attendance" ST - The Code -- One Year Later T2 - Daniel A. Lord Papers TI - The Code -- One Year Later ID - 547 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Daniel Lord, the primary architect of the movie industry Production Code of 1930, which attempted to bind films to the Ten Commandments, was unhappy in 1934 by the way the Code was being enforced. This material is in Folder: "Lord, Daniel A., S. J., 1934," National Catholic Welfare Conference, Episcopal Committee on Motion Pictures, 1933-1944, Washington, D. C. AU - Lord, Daniel A. DA - [1934] KW - values Christianity Christianity values primary sources archives primary sources religion values morality values religion law censorship and ratings censorship primary sources, Washington, D.C. primary sources archives primary sources, Legion of Decency +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Legion of Decency motion pictures, and Catholic Church Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity motion pictures, and morality morality, and motion pictures censorship, and Legion of Decency Legion of Decency censorship, and motion pictures Lord, Daniel A. Catholic Church LB - 18450 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Folder: "Lord, Daniel A., S. J., 1934" ST - Clean the Motion Pictures: Sodalists Asked to Join Bishops In Campaign against Dirt T2 - National Catholic Welfare Conference, Episcopal Committee on Motion Pictures, 1933-1944 TI - Clean the Motion Pictures: Sodalists Asked to Join Bishops In Campaign against Dirt ID - 742 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Jack McLeod comments on media effects research dealing with violence and sexuality in mass media. Most researchers “would not deny” that watching a single violent movie, or small number of them, “could trigger violence,” according to McLeod, one of the leading authorities on media effects. “In fact, the experimental research controlled exposure and studied immediate effects though often delayed effects as well.” If some people have exaggerated the number of studies linking violence in mass media to violence in the real world, scholars such as McLeod have “shied away from overly strident claims.” McLeod did so, he explained, “not so much from doubting the research but more from worrying about bringing about censorship and repressive measures. AU - McLeod, Jack KW - media effects, Jack McLeod violence media effects media effects, and violence violence, and media effects sexuality media effects, and sexuality sexuality, and media effects pornography pornography, and media effects media effects, and pornography LB - 30540 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Email to Author, Aug. 30, 2004 TI - Email to Author, Aug. 30, 2004 ID - 2812 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - In this interview, McPherson talks briefly about "the Valenti syndrome." Those who were around Lyndon Johnson in the White House wanted the President's approval. "When I was in favor," McPherson recalled, "I was on topi of the world; when I was out of favor, I was in the dumps." (p. 2) AU - McPherson, Harry DA - Jan. 16, 1969 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Johnson, Lyndon Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Johnson, Lyndon Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti presidents and new media Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and LBJ oral histories, and Harry McPherson oral histories LB - 28850 N1 - Accession No. 74-210 PY - 1969 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Oral History Interview of Harry McPherson: III (interviewed by T. H. Baker) T2 - Oral History Collection, Lyndon Baines Johnson Library, Austin, TX TI - Oral History Interview of Harry McPherson: III (interviewed by T. H. Baker) UR - http://www.lbjlib.utexas.edu/johnson/archives.hom/oralhistory.hom ID - 2662 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - In this interview, McPherson comments that Jack Valenti was "a hell of a lot more important" that the press made him out to be. The press called Valenti the President's "valet." McPherson said that Valenti was "a tremendously active member of the staff," indeed, "almost hyperactive." He and Bill Moyers played a critical role in keeping things functioning for Johnson. AU - McPherson, Harry DA - Dec. 19, 1968 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Johnson, Lyndon Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Johnson, Lyndon Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti presidents and new media Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and LBJ oral histories, and Harry McPherson oral histories LB - 28860 PY - 1968 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Oral History Interview of Harry McPherson: II (interviewed by T. H. Baker) T2 - Oral History Collection, Lyndon Baines Johnson Library, Austin, TX TI - Oral History Interview of Harry McPherson: II (interviewed by T. H. Baker) UR - http://www.lbjlib.utexas.edu/johnson/archives.hom/oralhistory.hom ID - 2663 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Carl E. Milliken, who was an assistant to Will H. Hays, pulls together findings that counter behavior scientists findings that linked motion pictures to juvenile delinquency. This memorandum is in the Will H. Hays Papers, Indiana State Library, Indianapolis, IN. AU - Milliken, Carl E. DA - Dec. 11, 1933 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) self-regulation Production Code PCA Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. MPAA MPPDA media effects government critics censorship and ratings children testimony reports hearings, new motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and crime motion pictures, and juvenile delinquency motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures MPPDA, and public relations motion pictures, and social science MPPDA, and social science media effects, and motion pictures critics, and social science Production Code (motion pictures) violence sexuality children, and media LB - 13650 PY - 1933 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Memorandum on the Question of Scientific Findings as to the Behavioristic Influences of the Screen Particularly with Regard to Juvenile Delinquency TI - Memorandum on the Question of Scientific Findings as to the Behavioristic Influences of the Screen Particularly with Regard to Juvenile Delinquency ID - 529 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This collection is informative on the Meese Commission. The testimony of witnesses, much of it never published, is here, as are the dliberations of the Commission's members. Much of the source material for the drafts in Boxes 55-57 appears to come from heaings held by the Commission in such cities as Houston, Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, and Washington. Testimony of Jack Valenti, researchers, and others as well as discussions among commissioners are in Boxes 1-4, RG 60. These records are at National Archives and Records Administration (NARA 2), College Park, MD. AU - Pornography, Attorney General's Commission on CN - Maryland -- College Park -- National Archives II DA - 1985-1986 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment computers Classification and Rating Administration video cassette recorders (VCRs) MPAA post office government hearings entertainment, home CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) magnetic recording photography National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) social science research archives primary sources sexuality NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA media effects news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines satellites home entertainment government magnetic tape First Amendment +computers and the Internet color freedom law cable home home, and new media home reports reports, Messe Commission Meese Commission +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography law, and pornography pornography, and law pornography, and new media home entertainment revolution pornography, and home home, and pornography +television +postal service television, and cable cable television, and pornography +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and television television, and satellites +computers computers, and pornography pornography, and computers VCRs VCRs, and pornography pornography, and VCRs magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines +photography and visual communication photography, and pornography pornography, and photography color, and pornography pornography, and color primary sources primary sources, Maryland primary sources, College Park primary sources, Meese Commission media effects, and pornography social science research, and pornography pornography, and social science research First Amendment, and Meese Commission First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and legal pornography, and First Amendment primary sources hearings testimony Zillmann, Dolf Donnerstein, Edward Malamuth, Neil Court, J. H. Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and pornography MPAA, and pornography primary sources, Maryland primary sources, College Park LB - 20250 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1985 RP - Reprint Edition SE - RG 60 (Justice Dept. Records), 1,2, 3, 4, 30, 31, 55, 56, 57, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 77A, 80 T2 - Records of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography ID - 844 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - These Reminiscences of movie maker Otto Preminger cover his career. Preminger made The Moon Is Blue (1953), which was an important film in the decline of the movie industry's Production Code Administration (PCA). The film played and did well at the box office despite not have the PCA's approval. This material is in the Hollywood Film Industry Oral History Project, Columbia Oral History Collection, Butler Library, Columbia University, New York, NY. AU - Preminger, Otto KW - self-regulation Production Code Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Production Code (motion pictures) values religion law censorship and ratings censorship oral histories oral histories, Otto Preminger +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures The Moon Is Blue Production Code (motion pictures) motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and Otto Preminger PCA, and Otto Preminger censorship, and The Moon Is Blue Production Code, and The Moon Is Blue PCA Production Code Administration (PCA) LB - 21000 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Reminiscences of Otto Preminger (Sept. 14, 1971) TI - Reminiscences of Otto Preminger (Sept. 14, 1971) ID - 901 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - During the early 1950s, Otto Preminger demonstrated that it was possible to make a profitable motion picture despite opposition from the Production Code Administration (PCA), Joseph Breen, and the Legion of Decency. His film The Moon Is Blue (1953) was based on a Broadway sex farce of the same name. Breen rejected the script because of its light treatment of virginity, seduction, and divorce. Preminger believed that the American Constitution provided that no one could tell someone else “what to see, what to read, what to say, and what to listen to.” The movie played without the PCA seal and did well at the box office. This interview is in the Popular Arts Project Series, Series I, Volume 4, Part 2, Columbia Oral History Collection, Butler Library, Columbia University, New York, NY. AU - Preminger, Otto KW - self-regulation Production Code Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Production Code (motion pictures) values religion law censorship and ratings censorship oral histories oral histories, Otto Preminger +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures The Moon Is Blue Production Code (motion pictures) motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and Otto Preminger PCA, and Otto Preminger censorship, and The Moon Is Blue Production Code, and The Moon Is Blue PCA Production Code Administration (PCA) LB - 21010 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Interview with Otto Preminger (Sept. 1958) TI - Interview with Otto Preminger (Sept. 1958) ID - 902 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This collection is rich with primary material relating to Hollywood during the 1940s and 1950s. It covers Dore Schary's career and touches on such important matters and the blacklisting of the Hollywood Ten, the revising of the motion picture Production Code in 1956, and the uproar that his movie Blackboard Jungle (1956) caused, both in the United States and abroad. For example, Box 20 deals with revisions in the Production Code in 1956. Box 34 has material on Blackboard Jungle. AU - Schary, Dore KW - self-regulation motion pictures motion pictures, primary Hollywood Ten Production Code (1956) Blackboard Jungle censorship and ratings motion pictures, and reform freedom capitalism democracy motion pictures, and freedom motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and democracy Johnston, Eric Hollywood Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 35700 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Dore Schary Papers TI - Dore Schary Papers UR - Boxes 20, 34, Dore Schary Papers, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison, WI ID - 3209 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Like so many of his contemporaries, William H. Short believed that the difference between good and bad films was clear. Unlike many censors, though, he was unwilling (at least in 1933) to impose a single moral standard on the nation, nor did he favor setting up a government commission or any other agency to dictate what could be shown. He favored letting local communities make such decisions. He opposed block booking and blind selling because they undercut community control. Because children could not choose films intelligently, the most important question revolved around who would control what movies they saw -- the community’s “collective judgment” or the film producers. Short was the Executive Director of the Motion Picture Research Council. The Payne Fund Studies had originated in 1928 when he had invited several university researchers to examine what effects the movies had on children. Short was a Congregational minister, who had been a leader in the New York Peace Society, the League to Enforce Peace, and the League of Nations Non-Partisan Association, he was an outspoken critic of the movies. In 1928, he had published A Generation of Motion Pictures, a redundant book which pulled together material from many sources condemning films. This material is in Box 57, Motion Picture Research Council Papers, Hoover Institution Archives, Stanford University, Stanford, CA AU - Short, William H. DA - Sept. 15, 1933 KW - addresses +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and critics Payne Fund Studies Short, William H. motion pictures, and critics motion pictures, and social science Motion Picture Research Council critics LB - 13510 PY - 1933 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Box 57 ST - First Symposium on Elements Out of Which a Program Looking Towards National Film Policies in Motion Pictures Can Be Selected T2 - Motion Picture Research Council Papers TI - First Symposium on Elements Out of Which a Program Looking Towards National Film Policies in Motion Pictures Can Be Selected ID - 521 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - In June, 1968, Maine Senator Margaret Chase Smith spearheaded a brief Senate hearing on motion picture classification. Smith believed that movies, television program, and their advertising had become too violent and sexual for children. She did not favor censorship but did want some kind of rating system to give parents warning. Smith Papers have a great deal of information about the senator's effort to improve the movies. The Smith Papers are at the Margaret Chase Smith Library, The Northwood Institute, Skowhegan, ME. AU - Smith, Margaret Chase KW - classification children, and media self-regulation CARA censorship and ratings primary sources archives media effects media violence censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification primary sources primary sources, Maine archives +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and critics classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children Smith, Margaret Chase motion pictures, and government critics children children, and motion pictures LB - 17450 RP - Reprint Edition T2 - Margaret Chase Smith Papers ID - 666 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - In June, 1968, Maine Senator Margaret Chase Smith spearheaded a brief Senate hearing on motion picture classification. Smith believed that movies, television program, and their advertising had become too violent and sexual for children. She did not favor censorship but did want some kind of rating system to give parents warning. During the 1960s, Smith heard complaints about drive-in theaters, and she alsodenounced the spread of adult entertainment from downtown art houses into suburban and neighborhood theaters, which in this piece, she says, amounted to “a dagger in the heart” for mothers and their children. Of movie ads on television, Smith said, they often exclaimed: “More Hideous than Jack the Ripper ... In Bloody Vision and Bloody Color.” Children often watched trailers on television unaccompanied by parents. “Often, a Walter Disney movie,” Smith claimed, was “accompanied by 20 minutes of rape.” A copy of this piece is in the Margaret Chase Smith Papers, Margaret Chase Smith Library, The Northwood Institute, Skowhegan, ME. AU - Smith, Margaret Chase KW - classification children, and media addresses, Margaret Chase Smith self-regulation CARA censorship and ratings primary sources archives media effects media violence censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification primary sources primary sources, Maine archives +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and critics classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children Smith, Margaret Chase motion pictures, and government addresses primary sources, Margaret Chase Smith, critics children children, and motion pictures LB - 17480 RP - Reprint Edition ST - My One Year War for Better Movies T2 - Margaret Chase Smith Papers TI - My One Year War for Better Movies ID - 669 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - In June, 1968, Maine Senator Margaret Chase Smith spearheaded a brief Senate hearing on motion picture classification. Smith believed that movies, television program, and their advertising had become too violent and sexual for children. She did not favor censorship but did want some kind of rating system to give parents warning. A transcript of this interview is in the Margaret Chase Smith Papers, Margaret Chase Smith Library, The Northwood Institute, Skowhegan, ME. AU - Smith, Margaret Chase DA - Nov. 11, 1967 KW - classification children, and media self-regulation CARA Smith, Margaret Chase censorship and ratings primary sources archives primary sources motion pictures censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification motion pictures, and critics motion pictures, and children motion pictures, and classification classification, and children children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Congress Smith, Margaret Chase, and classification primary sources, radio archives critics children children, and motion pictures LB - 17700 PY - 1967 RP - Reprint Edition ST - [Radio Interview] T2 - Margaret Chase Smith Papers TI - [Radio Interview] ID - 689 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - In June, 1968, Maine Senator Margaret Chase Smith spearheaded a brief Senate hearing on motion picture classification. Smith believed that movies, television program, and their advertising had become too violent and sexual for children. She did not favor censorship but did want some kind of rating system to give parents warning. In this piece, Smith argues that children should be prevented from seeing "adult" films. A copy of this piece is in the Margaret Chase Smith Library, The Northwood Institute, Skowhegan, ME. AU - Smith, Margaret Chase DA - undated [1966?] KW - children, and media addresses, Margaret Chase Smith Smith, Margaret Chase primary sources archives sexuality pornography censorship and ratings law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA motion pictures, and critics Smith, Margaret Chase, and foreign films motion pictures, and foreign films censorship, and foreign films foreign films motion pictures, and independent producers censorship, and independent producers +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and independent producers pornography, and foreign films addresses primary sources archives critics children children, and motion pictures LB - 17710 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Let's Keep Our Children Out of 'Adult' Movies T2 - Margaret Chase Smith Papers TI - Let's Keep Our Children Out of 'Adult' Movies ID - 690 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This 93-page paper, most likely unpublished, is located library at Dartmouth University. It was written two years after Troland graduated from MIT and probably while he was a graduate student at Harvard. Troland examines problems associated with showing motion pictures, especially the flickering and jumpy quality of early films. Here he says that "Regarded on 2/3 the sensory level alone the pictures are extremely crude, a fact which one does not always realize until he abstracts from the more subjective factors." (2-3) He summarized "the imperfections in existing [1914] motion picture projection" that "have an hygienic significance" as follows: "We may classify the derangements produced by these imperfections under two general heads, as affective and as functional.. The first includes the temporary unpleasantness of the flicker, the jerkiness of the movements, the dancing of the pictures upon the screen, etc., the second, those more permanent disorders which continue after exhibition is over. The latter are all to be regarded as effects of eye-strain, produced under the influence of the primary unpleasantness." (59) Although this is a technical paper written most likely for specialists in physics and psychology, occasionally Troland steps back and offers an assessment of motion pictures and purposes behind them. The primary goal of creating movies, he said, was largely psychological and hedonistic. "It is the purpose of the manufacture and projection of motion-pictures to produce a certain state of consciousness in the minds of the audience. The aim is wholly psychological. Moreover, it is primarily hedonistic: the best moving-picture is the one which gives the greatest pleasure to the greatest number." (14) Moving pictures have the best psychological effects the closer they come to mimicking reality, he argues. "It seems safe to assume that for any given objective action that representation will be psychologically most satisfactory which most closely resembles reality. The perceptual mechanism of consciousness is very efficient in minimizing the conscious effects of unnaturalnesses [sic] in the stimulus given by the projection, and eliminating artifacts, and in filling up gaps; but the greater the strain which is placed upon the perceptional process in this way the less are, so to speak, the 'affective chances' of the picture." (14) He goes on to say that "The involuntary effort of the witness to adjust himself to 'flicker,' for example, results in eye-strain, headache, and other disorders." (15) At the present time (1914), he says, "It is practically impossible to produce an artificial stimulus which shall exactly duplicate that provided in the original action...." (15) Later in this paper, Troland says that "it is the purpose of improvements in kinematography to reduce the artificialities involved to sub-liminal dimensions. At the present time one of the most disagreeable features in the projection is the dancing of the image upon the screen, due to lack of register in successive series of film-pictures. It would be impossible to eliminate this dancing entirely, but if it could be reduced so as to fall below the distance threshold for motion, or the velocity threshold, the result would be equally satisfactory. An angular displacement of less than 20" would not be noticed, nor would one which occurred at a rate less than 1' per second." (56) AD - Presented to Professor Adelbert Ames, Jr. from the files of W. B. Wescott, Dover, Masschusetts AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson DA - July 7, 1914 KW - Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Technicolor ref, thesis ref, thesis (B.S.) Troland, Leonard color Troland, Leonard, and color color, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and visual sensation color, and media effects media effects media effects, and color Troland, Leonard, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Leonard Troland Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and hedonism values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and eye strain Troland, Leonard, and eye strain motion pictures LB - 40260 PY - 1914 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Report on the Contents of Extant Physiological and Psychological Literature with Respect to Psycho-Physiological Processes Especially Important in Motion Picture Exhibitions TI - Report on the Contents of Extant Physiological and Psychological Literature with Respect to Psycho-Physiological Processes Especially Important in Motion Picture Exhibitions ID - 4124 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Valenti was special assistant to President Lyndon Johnson from November, 1963 until 1966, when he left the White House to become president of the Motion Picture Association of America. In this 29-page interview, Valenti recounts his early association with LBJ from the first time he saw Johnson in 1957, through Johnson vice-presidency. Valenti worked for the Kennedy-Johnson ticket in 1960 in Texas, but did not begin to become intimate with Johnson until the fall of 1961. By then Valenti was dating Johnson's secretary, Mary Margaret Wiley, and was invited to the Texas ranch. From that point on, Valenti developed a closer association with Johnson. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - June 14, 1969 KW - Weisl, Edwin, Sr. Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Johnson, Lyndon Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon presidents and new media Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Johnson, Lyndon, and Lew Wasserman Krim, Arthur Krim, Arthur, and Lyndon Johnson Krim, Arthur, and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and Arthur Krim Weisl, Ed., Sr., and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and Ed Weisl, Sr. oral histories Valenti, Jack oral histories, Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and oral histories LB - 29030 PY - 1969 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Oral History Interview of Jack Valenti: I (interviewed by T. H. Baker) T2 - Oral History Collection, Lyndon Baines Johnson Library, Austin, TX TI - Oral History Interview of Jack Valenti: I (interviewed by T. H. Baker) ID - 2681 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This 46-page interview took place in Valenti's home in Washington, D. C. Valenti was special assistant to President Lyndon Johnson from November, 1963 until 1966, when he left the White House to become president of the Motion Picture Association of America. Valenti is interviewed by historian Joe B. Frantz. In this interview, Valenti discusses John Kennedy's assassination. Lyndon Johnson had asked Valenti to come to Texas to help with a dinner on November 21 in Houston and to prepare a program for Austin which followed Kennedy's visit to Dallas. Valenti was in the motorcade on November 22. Also in this interview, Valenti discusses the early months of the Johnson administration, the friction with such Kennedy staff as Theodore Sorensen, the first State of the Union message, and Johnson's efforts to move Kennedy's legislation through Congress. Valenti describes his approach to dealing with members of Congress -- his effort to treat each member with respect. The interviews ends with Valenti discussing the selection of Hubert Humphrey to run with Johnson in 1964 and the presidential campaign that year. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - Oct. 18, 1969 KW - Weisl, Edwin, Sr. Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Johnson, Lyndon Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon presidents and new media Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Johnson, Lyndon, and Lew Wasserman Krim, Arthur Krim, Arthur, and Lyndon Johnson Krim, Arthur, and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and Arthur Krim Weisl, Ed., Sr., and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and Ed Weisl, Sr. oral histories Valenti, Jack oral histories, Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and oral histories LB - 29040 PY - 1969 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Oral History Interview of Jack Valenti: II (interviewed by Joe B. Frantz) T2 - Oral History Collection, Lyndon Baines Johnson Library, Austin, TX TI - Oral History Interview of Jack Valenti: II (interviewed by Joe B. Frantz) ID - 2682 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This 12-page interview took place in Valenti's Washington, D. C. office. Valenti was special assistant to President Lyndon Johnson from November, 1963 until 1966, when he left the White House to become president of the Motion Picture Association of America. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - Feb. 19, 1971 KW - Weisl, Edwin, Sr. Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Johnson, Lyndon Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon presidents and new media Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Johnson, Lyndon, and Lew Wasserman Krim, Arthur Krim, Arthur, and Lyndon Johnson Krim, Arthur, and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and Arthur Krim Weisl, Ed., Sr., and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and Ed Weisl, Sr. oral histories Valenti, Jack oral histories, Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and oral histories LB - 29050 PY - 1971 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Oral History Interview of Jack Valenti: III (interviewed by Joe B. Frantz) T2 - Oral History Collection, Lyndon Baines Johnson Library, Austin, TX TI - Oral History Interview of Jack Valenti: III (interviewed by Joe B. Frantz) ID - 2683 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This 33-page interview took place in Valenti's Washington, D. C. office. Valenti was special assistant to President Lyndon Johnson from November, 1963 until 1966, when he left the White House to become president of the Motion Picture Association of America. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - March 3, 1971 KW - Weisl, Edwin, Sr. Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Johnson, Lyndon Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon presidents and new media Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Johnson, Lyndon, and Lew Wasserman Krim, Arthur Krim, Arthur, and Lyndon Johnson Krim, Arthur, and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and Arthur Krim Weisl, Ed., Sr., and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and Ed Weisl, Sr. oral histories Valenti, Jack oral histories, Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and oral histories LB - 29060 PY - 1971 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Oral History Interview of Jack Valenti: IV (interviewed by Joe B. Frantz) T2 - Oral History Collection, Lyndon Baines Johnson Library, Austin, TX TI - Oral History Interview of Jack Valenti: IV (interviewed by Joe B. Frantz) ID - 2684 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This 35-page interview took place in Valenti's Washington, D. C. office. Valenti was special assistant to President Lyndon Johnson from November, 1963 until 1966, when he left the White House to become president of the Motion Picture Association of America. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - July 12, 1972 KW - Weisl, Edwin, Sr. Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Johnson, Lyndon Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon presidents and new media Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Johnson, Lyndon, and Lew Wasserman Krim, Arthur Krim, Arthur, and Lyndon Johnson Krim, Arthur, and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and Arthur Krim Weisl, Ed., Sr., and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and Ed Weisl, Sr. oral histories Valenti, Jack oral histories, Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and oral histories LB - 29070 PY - 1972 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Oral History Interview of Jack Valenti: V (interviewed by Joe B. Frantz) T2 - Oral History Collection, Lyndon Baines Johnson Library, Austin, TX TI - Oral History Interview of Jack Valenti: V (interviewed by Joe B. Frantz) ID - 2685 ER - TY - MANSCPT AU - Warner, Harry DA - Jan. 10, 1930 KW - motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures speeches addresses motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures Warner, Harry Warner Bros. corporations LB - 31150 PY - 1930 RP - Reprint Edition ST - "Harry Warner Tells Story of Birth of Sound Pictures," Speech to League of American Penwomen TI - "Harry Warner Tells Story of Birth of Sound Pictures," Speech to League of American Penwomen UR - Will H. Hays Papers, Indiana State Library, Indianapolis, IN ID - 2835 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Former Chief Justice of the U. S. Supreme Court Earl Warren's Papers cover many subjects including cases involving obscenity and First Amendment issues relating to motion pictures and other mass media. With regard to sex and obscenity, the heart of the problem, Chief Justice Warren was told by one of his advisers in 1957, was that “no community conscience on the subject of sex” existed. “There is instead a vast range of personal views from the extreme sophisticate to innocent and immature.” In the Roth case that year, Warren dissented, rejecting the idea of a national standard for obscenity, and saying that when Roth said “community standards” should be the basis for judgment, it meant just that. This material is in Containers 552 and 579, Papers of Earl Warren, Library of Congress, Washington, D. C. AU - Warren, Earl KW - U. S. Supreme Court motion pictures, and religion self-regulation Roth case (1957) Production Code Burstyn v. Wilson obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.) religion Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) primary sources archives values obscenity freedom values religion law censorship and ratings censorship court cases primary sources law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases primary sources, court cases court cases, Miracle case court cases, First Amendment Burstyn, Joseph Miracle case Production Code, and decline of freedom, and motion pictures motion pictures, and freedom movies, and religion motion pictures, and religion primary sources, Washington, D. C. primary sources, Library of Congress sacrilege, and Supreme Court (U. S.) Supreme Court (U. S.), and sacrilege archives Roth v. U. S. (1957) Supreme Court (U. S.), and Roth v. U. S. (1957) Roth case (1957) (1957), and Supreme Court (U. S.) Roth v. U. S. (1957) obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.) definitions Ginsberg v. New York Interstate Circuit, Inc. v. Dallas LB - 16720 RP - Reprint Edition SE - Containers 552, 579 T2 - Papers of Earl Warren ID - 620 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - In this 36-page interview, conducted by historian Joe B. Franz, Lew Wasserman discusses his fund raising efforts for John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson and more generally his association with LBJ. He also briefly discusses Jack Valenti and his selection to head the Motion Picture Association of America. Johnson doubted that Valenti "could cut it" in Hollywood. AU - Wasserman, Lew DA - Dec. 21, 1973 KW - Weisl, Edwin, Sr. Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Johnson, Lyndon Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon presidents and new media Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Johnson, Lyndon, and Lew Wasserman Krim, Arthur Krim, Arthur, and Lyndon Johnson Krim, Arthur, and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and Arthur Krim Weisl, Ed., Sr., and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and Ed Weisl, Sr. oral histories Valenti, Jack LB - 28810 PY - 1973 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Oral History Interview of Lew Wasserman: II (interviewed by Joe B. Frantz) T2 - Oral History Collection, Lyndon Baines Johnson Library TI - Oral History Interview of Lew Wasserman: II (interviewed by Joe B. Frantz) UR - http://www.lbjlib.utexas.edu/johnson/archives.hom/oralhistory.hom/ ID - 2658 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Cinematographer Wexler discusses his work and notes that Mike Nichols used videotape in doing the tests for the movie The Graduate in 1967. AU - Wexler, Haskell DA - April 10, 1976 KW - Nichols, Mike Steadicam motion pictures cameras cinematography Wexler, Haskell motion pictures, and videotape videotape videotape, and motion pictures Steadicam cameras, and Steadicam television television, and videotape videotape, and television videotape, and The Graduate Nichols, Mike, and videotape The American Film Institute and American Society of Cinematographers Seminar with Haskell Wexler magnetic tape magnetic recording LB - 31900 PY - 1976 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Haskell Wexler: An American Film Institute Seminar on His Work T2 - New York Times Oral History Program, the American Film Institute Seminars, Part I, No. 188 TI - Haskell Wexler: An American Film Institute Seminar on His Work UR - Beverly Hills, CA: Center for Advanced Film Studies, 1978 (microfilm -- Glen Rock, N.J.: Microfilming Corporation of America, 1977) ID - 2874 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - Wiley, a Republican senator from Wisconsin, was chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in 1953-54, and then ranking Republican on that committee. This part of the collection contains Wiley's speeches, including one he gave May 1, 1955, in Burlington, Wisconsin, in which said that some films sent abroad were "poisoning the minds of some people in the world against us." (7) He said that an "unscrupulous few" (8) were making movies that "portrayed an America of sex, sin and sadism, of gangsterism, corruption, filth and degradation." (6) This was an address that Wiley gave in Burlington, WI, at a "May Day - Loyalty Day" celebration, May 1, 1955. AU - Wiley, Alexander DA - May 1, 1955 KW - nationalism motion pictures critics motion pictures, and critics nationalism and communication motion pictures, and foreign policy speeches LB - 34940 PY - 1955 RP - Reprint Edition ST - May Day - Loyalty Day [Address, Burlington, WI] T2 - Alexander Wiley Papers TI - May Day - Loyalty Day [Address, Burlington, WI] UR - Mss 15, Series 11, Box 7, Folder 7 (11-7-11), Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison, WI ID - 3136 ER - TY - MANSCPT AB - This folder contains a May Day Loyalty Day speech that Senator Wiley delivered in Burlington, WI, May 1, 1955. In it Wiley criticized some irresponsible movie makers for damaging America's prestige abroad. Their movies had emphasized "realism" and "portrayed an America of sex, sin and sadism, of gangterism, corruption, filth and degradation." (6) Though few in number, these films "have literally been poisoning the minds of some people in the world against us." (6-7) Wiley was a member of the Kefauver committee that investigated juvenile delinquency, and also a former chair of the U. S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee. AU - Wiley, Alexander KW - critics motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and values censorship and ratings Wiley, Alexander LB - 35720 RP - Reprint Edition ST - Alexander Wiley Papers TI - Alexander Wiley Papers UR - Folder 11, Box 7, Series 11, Mss 15, Publications. Speeches: 1953, July -- 1955, May, Alexander Wiley Papers, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison, WI ID - 3211 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Southland Corp.'s decision to stop it 7-Eleven stores from selling Playboy, Penthouse, and Forum will cost these magainze about 100,000 newstands sales each per month. DA - April 21, 1986 KW - sexuality pornography Playboy sexuality sexuality Penthouse Meese Commission news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines law censorship and ratings censorship boycotts +books, periodicals, newspapers censorship, and boycotts boycotts, and pornography pornography, and boycotts magazines, and boycotts Meese Commission, and boycotts Playboy, and boycotts Penthouse, and boycotts LB - 3480 PY - 1986 SE - Midwest Edition ST - Skin Mags to Lose Newsstands Sales in 7-11 Decision T2 - Adweek TI - Skin Mags to Lose Newsstands Sales in 7-11 Decision ID - 436 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with the appointment of Will H. Hays to head the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors Association. DA - [March 18, 1922?] KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) self-regulation Production Code PCA Production Code Administration (PCA) Breen, Joseph Hays, Will H. MPAA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Hays, Will H. MPPDA MPPDA, and Will Hays Quigley, Martin Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 13390 PY - 1918 SP - 37 ST - M.P.P.D.A. Is Organized With Will H. Hays at Helm T2 - Exhibitors Herald [-World?] TI - M.P.P.D.A. Is Organized With Will H. Hays at Helm ID - 510 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Statistician Roger Babson quotes on movies as a cause of crime. DA - June 27, 1929 KW - +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and crime LB - 13570 PY - 1929 T2 - Rochester (NY) Journal ID - 527 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Statistician Roger Babson quoted on movies as a cause of crime. DA - June 21, 1929 KW - +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and crime LB - 13580 PY - 1929 T2 - Roanoke (VA) News ID - 528 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This obituary deals with the man who was perhaps the most powerful film censor in the United States from 1934 to 1954. DA - Dec. 8, 1965 KW - self-regulation Production Code values religion censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) motion pictures Breen, Joseph +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Production Code (motion pictures) Breen, Joseph, and Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code, and Joseph Breen Breen, Joseph, and biography Breen, Joseph, and obituary LB - 15290 PY - 1965 SP - 47 ST - [Breen, Joseph Obituary] T2 - New York Times TI - [Breen, Joseph Obituary] ID - 551 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The obituary for the former head of the motion picture industry's Production Code Administration. DA - Dec. 7, 1965 KW - self-regulation Production Code values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) values religion Breen, Joseph +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Production Code (motion pictures) Breen, Joseph, and Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code, and Joseph Breen Breen, Joseph, and biography Breen, Joseph, and obituary LB - 15390 PY - 1965 ST - Joe I. Breen Dies; Former Code Head T2 - Hollywood Reporter TI - Joe I. Breen Dies; Former Code Head ID - 559 ER - TY - NEWS AB - See also the story related to Breen's obituary in Variety, Dec. 8, 1965, p. 3. DA - Dec. 15, 1965 KW - self-regulation Production Code Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) values religion Breen, Joseph +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Production Code (motion pictures) Breen, Joseph, and Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code, and Joseph Breen Breen, Joseph, and biography Breen, Joseph, and obituary biography LB - 15630 PY - 1965 SP - 13 ST - [Breen, Joseph] T2 - Variety TI - [Breen, Joseph] ID - 571 ER - TY - NEWS AB - A piece about the new president of the Motion Picture Association of America, Eric A. Johnston. C1 - 56 DA - Sept. 20, 1945 KW - +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and MPAA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and MPAA Johnston, Eric, and Will Hays Hays, Will H., and Eric Johnston Hays, Will H. LB - 16870 PY - 1945 SE - 88 SP - 1, 7, 8, 13, 15 ST - Johnston Maps M. P. Institute: Johnston MPPDA President; Hays, Consultant T2 - Film Daily TI - Johnston Maps M. P. Institute: Johnston MPPDA President; Hays, Consultant ID - 635 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The East Village Other was an underground newspaper during the 1960s, one that, like other underground papers, used relatively inexpensive printing technology and made innovative use of color. DA - 1960s KW - underground media news and journalism title color color underground newspapers news LB - 17160 PY - 1960 T2 - East Village Other (EVO) (New York) ID - 645 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The Boston Avatar was an underground newspaper during the 1960s, one that, like other underground papers, used relatively inexpensive printing technology and made innovative use of color. DA - 1960s KW - underground films underground media underground cinema news and journalism color color underground newspapers LB - 17170 PY - 1960 T2 - Avatar (Boston) ID - 646 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The San Francisco Oracle was an underground newspaper during the 1960s, one that, like other underground papers, used relatively inexpensive printing technology and made innovative use of color. DA - 1960s KW - underground films underground media underground cinema news and journalism color color underground newspapers LB - 17180 PY - 1960 T2 - Oracle (San Francisco) ID - 647 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The Berkeley Barb was an underground newspaper during the 1960s, one that, like other underground papers, used relatively inexpensive printing technology. DA - 1960s KW - underground films pornography underground media underground cinema news and journalism color color motion pictures, and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography advertising pornography underground newspapers advertising and public relations LB - 17190 PY - 1960 T2 - Berkeley Barb ID - 648 ER - TY - NEWS AB - As an underground newspaper during the 1960s, the Village Voice was like other underground papers in that it used relatively inexpensive printing technology and made innovative use of color. DA - 1960s KW - underground media underground films news and journalism 8mm motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and underground film 16mm film, and underground 8mm film, and underground underground cinema 16mm news journalism 16mm film news LB - 17340 PY - 1960 T2 - Village Voice ID - 659 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses Joseph Breen, who then began as head of the motion picture industry's Production Code Administration. A clipping of it is located in Folder: "Breen, Joseph, 1933-43," National Catholic Welfare Conference, Episcopal Committee on Motion Pictures, 1933-1944, Washington, D.C. DA - July 11, 1934 KW - self-regulation Production Code PCA values Christianity Christianity values Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) religion values morality values religion religion law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Legion of Decency motion pictures, and Catholic Church Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity motion pictures, and morality morality, and motion pictures censorship, and Joseph Breen Production Code Administration (PCA) Production Code, and Joseph Breen censorship, and motion pictures Breen, Joseph Breen, Joseph, and PCA LB - 18460 PY - 1934 ST - Film Cleanup Drive Begun By New Dictator Of Morals [Joseph Breen] T2 - Cincinnati Enquirer TI - Film Cleanup Drive Begun By New Dictator Of Morals [Joseph Breen] ID - 743 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article covers the report of the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence in 1969. The article discusses research that had then been done linking violence in mass media (e.g., television and movies) to real-world violence. CY - June 5, 1969 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA government hearings Valenti, Jack television, and media effects social science research media effects media violence government hearings censorship and ratings children +television violence television, and violence violence, and television violence, and social science research social science research, and violence children, and media +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures violence, and bibliography +bibliographies bibliographies, and TV violence National Commission on Causes and Prevention of Violence hearings, Causes and Prevention of Violence (1969) Valenti, Jack, and media violence Valenti, Jack, and Congress LB - 20020 SP - 1A, 13A ST - [National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence] T2 - St. Louis Post Dispatch TI - [National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence] ID - 827 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This is one of many newspaper accounts about the Surgeon General's Report on Television Violence. DA - Sept. 4, 1971 KW - television, and media effects Surgeon General social science research media effects media violence media effects censorship and ratings children +television violence television, and violence violence, and television violence, and social science research social science research, and violence children, and media +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures Surgeon General's Report (1972) television, and Surgeon General's Report (1972) violence children, and TV violence media effects, and television LB - 20070 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1971 SP - 1 ST - [Surgeon General's Report on TV Violence] T2 - Indianapolis Star TI - [Surgeon General's Report on TV Violence] ID - 831 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses Richard D. Heffner, recently named to head the movie industry's Code and Rating Administration. DA - July 11, 1974 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Heffner, Richard CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA CARA LB - 20230 PY - 1974 SP - 24 ST - Professor at Rutgers New Film-Rating Chief T2 - New York Times TI - Professor at Rutgers New Film-Rating Chief ID - 843 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The study announced that the Ford Foundation will spend $240,000 for an intensive 18-month study of how network TV is affecting Americans attitudes toward the environment. The project will be under the direction of R. D. Heffner, former general manager of WNDT-TV. It will videotape 400 hours of programming on three networks. These studies are part of Heffner personal papers. Heffner was also a communications professor at Rutgers University and headed the motion picture industry's Classification and Rating Administration from 1974 to 1994. DA - March 23, 1971 KW - +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and background Heffner, Richard Open Mind, and Richard Heffner +television television, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and television Heffner, Richard, and Open Mind Heffner, Richard, and educational TV Heffner, Richard, and Am. opinion LB - 20820 PY - 1971 SP - 75 ST - [Heffner to Study TV's Impact on Americans' Attitudes about Environment] T2 - New York Times TI - [Heffner to Study TV's Impact on Americans' Attitudes about Environment] ID - 883 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses to revive the Production Code. The movie industry adopted a rating system in November, 1968. DA - July 2, 1968 KW - self-regulation Production Code PCA motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality sexuality sex values Production Code (motion pictures) motion pictures media effects media violence violence values religion law censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code Administration (PCA) Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and censorship censorship censorship, and motion pictures violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence sex, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sex LB - 21140 PY - 1968 ST - Revised Code -- Approved Pix Up First 6 Months of 68 T2 - Variety TI - Revised Code -- Approved Pix Up First 6 Months of 68 ID - 915 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the increase in motion pictures with so-called "mature" themes. This article appeared four months before the motion picture industry adopted its rating system. DA - July 2, 1968 KW - self-regulation Production Code PCA motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality sexuality sex values Production Code (motion pictures) motion pictures media effects media violence violence values religion law censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code Administration (PCA) Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and censorship censorship censorship, and motion pictures violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence sex, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sex values, and motion pictures values LB - 21150 PY - 1968 ST - 'Mature' Films % Jump in 1968 T2 - Hollywood Reporter TI - 'Mature' Films % Jump in 1968 ID - 916 ER - TY - NEWS AB - During the early 1980s, Jack Valenti of the Motion Picture Association of America had considered video cassette recorders to be a dire threat to the movie industry but by 1989, he was willing to seek an accommodation with video makers. "The trend is that the more a person watches a movie on a VCR, the more that person seems to be drawn to wanting to see a movie in a theater," Valenti concluded. DA - Jan. 9, 1989 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment piracy video cassette recorders (VCRs) MPAA entertainment, home magnetic recording motion pictures home entertainment Hollywood videotape magnetic tape home +motion pictures and popular culture video piracy VCRs Hollywood, and new technology home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and VCRs Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and VCRs Valenti, Jack, and video piracy home home, and new media copyright LB - 21620 PY - 1989 SE - Business SP - 3A ST - Valenti Seeks VCR Collaboration T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Valenti Seeks VCR Collaboration ID - 930 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals legislation passed to fight child exploitation and child pornography. DA - May 22, 1984 KW - presidents and new media Reagan administration sexuality motion pictures mass media censorship and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture pornography child pornography children mass media, and children children, and pornography media effects media effects, and children Meese Commission Reagan administration, and pornography Reagan, Ronald Reagan, Ronald, and pornography children, and media LB - 22260 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1984 SE - A SP - 20A ST - Child Pornography Law Enacted T2 - New York Times TI - Child Pornography Law Enacted ID - 954 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This important trade publication is informative about Hollywood personalities, studios, new media, and reactions to such movies in 1988 as The Last Temptation of Christ. DA - 1988 KW - values motion pictures First Amendment freedom +motion pictures and popular culture Last Temptation of Christ (1988) First Amendment, and motion pictures motion pictures, and First Amendment religion LB - 23690 PY - 1988 T2 - Hollywood Reporter ID - 1031 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This brief article discusses the Ronald Reagan administration and pornography. Reagan, in a live satellite address to fifty cities, called pornography "vicious and dangerous" and harmful to children and women. Reagan praised Attorney General Edwin Meese's antipornography efforts. DA - Oct. 26, 1986 KW - conservatives Reagan, Ronald presidents, and new media Reagan administration sexuality sexuality nudity motion pictures mass media media effects crime law censorship and ratings censorship pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and crime crime, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship Reagan administration, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and nudity nudity, and Ronald Reagan Reagan, Ronald, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and secular humanism Reagan, Ronald, and liberalism Reagan, Ronald, and spiritual awakening addresses primary sources LB - 23700 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1986 SE - 1 SP - 2 ST - The Nation T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - The Nation ID - 1032 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article gives an account of the Reagan administration's tough stance on child pornography. Reagan "signed legislation strengthening federal law against child pornography. The measure amends a section of law that prohibits the interstate transportation of children to engage in sexual activity for commercial purposes." DA - Nov. 8, 1986 KW - conservatives Reagan, Ronald presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality sexuality nudity motion pictures mass media media effects crime values religion censorship and ratings law censorship and ratings censorship pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and crime crime, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship Reagan administration, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and nudity nudity, and Ronald Reagan Reagan, Ronald, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and secular humanism Reagan, Ronald, and liberalism Reagan, Ronald, and spiritual awakening addresses primary sources children children, and pornography pornography, and children Reagan, Ronald, and child pornography religion religion, and pornography pornography, and religion Reagan, Ronald, and religion Reagan, Ronald children, and media LB - 23710 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1986 SE - 2 SP - 3 ST - Toughened Child Pornography Bill Signed by Reagan T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Toughened Child Pornography Bill Signed by Reagan ID - 1033 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This articles covers religious leaders, President Ronald Reagan, and antipornography efforts. "Representatives of 200 American religious leaders said today that they had won President Reagan's commitment to make a national anti-pornography campaign a major priority of his Administration," this article begins. DA - Nov. 15, 1986 KW - conservatives Reagan, Ronald presidents, and new media Reagan administration values archives primary sources sexuality sexuality nudity motion pictures mass media media effects crime values religion censorship and ratings law censorship and ratings censorship pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and crime crime, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship Reagan administration, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and nudity nudity, and Ronald Reagan Reagan, Ronald, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and secular humanism Reagan, Ronald, and liberalism Reagan, Ronald, and spiritual awakening addresses primary sources children children, and pornography pornography, and children Reagan, Ronald, and child pornography religion religion, and pornography pornography, and religion Reagan, Ronald, and religion Reagan, Ronald children, and media LB - 23720 PY - 1986 SE - 1 SP - 9 ST - Clerics Say President Vows a Major Drive to Curb Smut T2 - New York Times TI - Clerics Say President Vows a Major Drive to Curb Smut ID - 1034 ER - TY - NEWS AB - An editorial critical of the Meese Commission and inaccurate in its account of the Commission's work. The Commission "ended up appealing more to sensibility than evidence," it says. DA - June 2, 1986 KW - sexuality pornography Meese Commission Meese Commission, and critics pornography, defined Meese Commission, and inaccurate press LB - 23750 PY - 1986 SP - 2A ST - Defeated by Pornography [editorial] T2 - New York Times TI - Defeated by Pornography [editorial] ID - 1037 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with Penthouse's efforts to counter anti-pornography boycotts that had targeted the magazine. DA - April 21, 1986 KW - morality sexuality sexuality First Amendment freedom boycotts pornography Penthouse First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment Penthouse, and First Amendment First Amendment, and Penthouse Moral Majority pornography, and opponents boycotts, and pornography boycotts, and Penthouse Falwell, Jerry, and pornography law LB - 23780 PY - 1986 SP - 24 ST - Penthouse Fights Moral Majority T2 - Financial Times (London) TI - Penthouse Fights Moral Majority ID - 1040 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on Nancy Reagan, Jack Valenti, and such movie stars as Clint Eastwood and Dudley Moore and their efforts in the war on drugs. C1 - 2 DA - July 13, 1987 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack presidents, and new media Reagan administration motion pictures Hollywood +motion pictures and popular culture Reagan, Nancy Reagan, Nancy, and war on drug Reagan, Nancy, and Hollywood Valenti, Jack, and Nancy Reagan Wasserman, Lew, and Nancy Reagan Valenti, Jack, and drug use Hollywood, and war on drugs Weintraub, Jerry, and war on drugs Eastwood, Clint, and war on drugs Moore, Dudley, and war on drugs Midler, Bette, and war on drugs Weintraub, Jerry LB - 24110 PY - 1987 SE - 6 (Calendar) ST - Morning Report: Movies T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Morning Report: Movies ID - 1060 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with President George H. W. Bush's attack on Hollywood's depiction of substance abuse. DA - March 23, 1989 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Bush, George H. W. Valenti, Jack presidents, and new media Bush, George H. W. administration values Hollywood Bush, George H. W. Hollywood, and substance abuse Bush administration (1989), and substance abuse Bennett, William, and Hollywood Valenti, Jack, and war on drugs Valenti, Jack, and George Bush (1989) values, and motion pictures values motion pictures LB - 24220 PY - 1989 ST - Bush Lashes Hollywood's Lax Attitude Toward Drugs T2 - Toronto Star TI - Bush Lashes Hollywood's Lax Attitude Toward Drugs ID - 1069 ER - TY - NEWS AB - William Bennet, then head of the nation's war on drugs, here urges the motion picture industry to be more active in antidrug campaign. DA - Oct. 24, 1989 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Bush, George H. W. Valenti, Jack presidents, and new media Bush, George H. W. administration values motion pictures Hollywood Bush, George H. W. Hollywood, and substance abuse Bush administration (1989), and substance abuse Bennett, William, and Hollywood Valenti, Jack, and war on drugs Valenti, Jack, and George Bush (1989) values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values values LB - 24240 PY - 1989 SP - 3A ST - Bennett Urges Entertainment Industry to Join War on Drugs T2 - St. Petersburg Times TI - Bennett Urges Entertainment Industry to Join War on Drugs ID - 1071 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that the Rev. Billy Graham will not see the movie The Last Temptation of Christ (1988). "I do not plan to see the film but will not take overt boycotting action by demonstrating in front of a theater that may be showing it," the evangelist said. DA - Sept. 17, 1988 KW - corporations corporations values Christianity advertising, and public relations Universal Pictures propaganda advertising Protestants values motion pictures Hollywood values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion Last Temptation of Christ (1988) boycotts, and Last Temptation motion pictures, and boycotts Catholics, and Last Temptation Protestants, and Last Temptation of Christ motion pictures, and anti-religion boycotts, and Universal Universal Pictures, and boycotts censorship, and Last Temptation Bright, Bill public relations public relations, and Last Temptation Last Temptation, and public relations Last Temptation, and marketing strategies Graham, Billy, and Last Temptation Last Temptation, and Billy Graham Last Temptation, and Mother Teresa critics LB - 24550 PY - 1988 SE - 2 (Metro) SP - 7 ST - Religion Briefs: Billy Graham Says He Will Not See "Last Temptation," Calls It Sacrilegious T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Religion Briefs: Billy Graham Says He Will Not See "Last Temptation," Calls It Sacrilegious ID - 1095 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The article deals with a large theater chain's (Edwards Cinemas) decision not to show the controversial movie Last Temptation of Christ (1988). It also notes that a campaign against the film led by fundamentalist minister Rev. R. L. Hymers, Jr., has been anti-Semitic. DA - Aug. 7, 1988 KW - corporations corporations values Christianity Universal Pictures Protestants values motion pictures Hollywood values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion Last Temptation of Christ (1988) boycotts, and Last Temptation motion pictures, and boycotts Catholics, and Last Temptation Protestants, and Last Temptation of Christ motion pictures, and anti-religion boycotts, and Universal Universal Pictures, and boycotts censorship, and Last Temptation boycotts, and theater chains Last Temptation, and Edwards Cinemas Chain anti-Semitism, and Last Temptation of Christ (1988) Last Temptation of Christ (1988), and anti-Semitism motion pictures, and anti-Semitism anti-Semitism LB - 24560 PY - 1988 SE - 2 (Metro) SP - 8 ST - Edwards Cinemas Chain Won't Run "Last Temptation" T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Edwards Cinemas Chain Won't Run "Last Temptation" ID - 1096 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This trade publication contains articles not only on movie personalities and studios, but also new technologies as they appeared in Hollywood. DA - 1930s- 1990s KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations motion pictures First Amendment freedom +motion pictures and popular culture First Amendment, and motion pictures motion pictures, and First Amendment advertising advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising law LB - 24990 PY - 1930 T2 - Daily Variety ID - 1100 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This piece deals with the court case that had challenged the motion picture industry's X rating given to the movie Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!. DA - July 22, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner motion pictures, and morality Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Valenti, Jack, and critics Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! Kunstler, William Miramax Films Miramax Films, and Hardware Miramax Films, and sex, lies, and videotape Miramax Films, and Scandal Miramax Films, and My Left Foot Heffner, Richard LB - 25160 PY - 1990 SP - E03 ST - Judge Adds A.P. S. to X-Rated Film Ruling T2 - Bergen County Record (New Jersey) TI - Judge Adds A.P. S. to X-Rated Film Ruling ID - 1116 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This brief article discusses film makers' dissatisfaction with the motion picture rating system in the months before the movie industry abandoned the X-rating for a new category, NC-17. Prominent directors presented a petition to Jack Valenti. DA - July 21, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U. S.) values NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner motion pictures, and morality Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Valenti, Jack, and critics Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 Valenti, Jack, and legal challenges theater owners, and rating system (U. S.) theater owners, and NC-17 MPAA, and NC-17 Coppola, Francis Ford Lee, Spike Reiner, Rob Pollack, Sydney values, and motion pictures values, and movie rating system (U. S.) values Heffner, Richard LB - 25270 PY - 1990 SE - 1 SP - 14 ST - Hollywood Film Makers Protest Rating System T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood Film Makers Protest Rating System ID - 1123 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about the first movie to be given an NC-17 rating by the motion picture industry. Henry and June was made by Lew Wasserman's studio, Universal. DA - Sept. 26, 1990 KW - music Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation corporations sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality corporations corporations homosexuality CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters MCA Universal Pictures theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) motion pictures Music Corporation of America (MCA) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture Wasserman, Lew CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 NC-17 rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 movie, Henry and June motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex lesbianism motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and homosexuality motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies Wasserman, Lew, and NC-17 Universal Pictures, and NC-17 Miller, Henry Kaufman, Philip MCA, and NC-17 MCA, and Cineplex Odeon theater chain theater owners, and NC-17 NC-17, and theater owners Pollock, Tom, and Universal Universal Pictures, and Tom Pollock Pollock, Tom, and NC-17 Kaufman, Philip, and Henry and June Heffner, Richard, and NC-17 Heffner, Richard, and Henry and June Heffner, Richard, and rating system (U. S.) NC-17 NC-17, and origins LB - 25370 PY - 1990 ST - Universal to Release "Henry & June" as First Film with NC-17 Rating T2 - PR Newswire TI - Universal to Release "Henry & June" as First Film with NC-17 Rating ID - 1133 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses how the movie industry's Classification and Rating Administration operates, notes that many theaters in urban malls will not carry NC-17 movies, that the largest video rental chain, Blockbuster, will not carry X or NC-17 rated motion pictures, and the uncut version of Sliver (1993) grossed twice as much abroad as it did in the United States. DA - Jan. 23, 1994 KW - music Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation corporations sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality corporations corporations homosexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters MCA Universal Pictures theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) R-rating PG-13 motion pictures Music Corporation of America (MCA) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture Wasserman, Lew CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 NC-17 rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 movie, Henry and June motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex lesbianism motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and homosexuality motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality CARA, and rating system (U. S.), and controversies Wasserman, Lew, and NC-17 Universal Pictures, and NC-17 Miller, Henry Kaufman, Philip MCA, and NC-17 MCA, and Cineplex Odeon theater chain theater owners, and NC-17 NC-17, and theater owners Pollock, Tom, and Universal Universal Pictures, and Tom Pollock Pollock, Tom, and NC-17 Kaufman, Philip, and Henry and June Heffner, Richard, and NC-17 Heffner, Richard, and Henry and June Heffner, Richard, and rating system (U. S.) NC-17 NC-17, and origins rating system (U. S.) system, and explanations R-rating, and explantions Valenti, Jack, and rating explanations Heffner, Richard, and rating explanations PG-13, and rating explanations CARA, and rating explanations Sliver (1993) NC-17, and Sliver (1993) LB - 25400 PY - 1994 SE - Show SP - 4 ST - NC-17, R or PG-13? How the MPAA Votes T2 - Chicago Sun-Times TI - NC-17, R or PG-13? How the MPAA Votes ID - 1136 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the efforts of Cardinal Roger M. Mahoney of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles to promote stronger anti-pornography laws and prosecution. This came in the aftermath of the Meese Commission report and at a time when cable televsion and video cassettes were making pornography much more available to the public. The article also discusses Dennis Jarrard and the archdiocese's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. DA - March 15, 1987 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) video cassette recorders (VCRs) MPAA values Christianity magnetic recording video rentals values sexuality motion pictures religion values morality Hollywood videotape magnetic tape Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture morality, and motion pictures values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and values Catholic Church, and motion pictures Catholic Church, and new production code (1992) Mahony, Roger Mahony, Roger, and production code (1992) (1992) Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and new production code (1992) Mahony, Roger, and pornography pornography, and Roger M. Mahony Hollywood, and Roger M. Mahony Archdoicese, Los Angeles pornography pornography, and Archdiocese of L.A. Jarrard, Dennis Morality in Media Citizens for Decency through Law (CDL) National Religious Alliance Against Pornography pornography, and opponents Catholics, and pornography pornography, and boycotts pornography, and Catholics VCRs pornography, and VCRs video stores video stores, and boycotts video stores, and pornography pornography, and video stores boycotts, and video stores boycotts, and pornography Catholics, and pornography Catholics, and L.A. Archdiocese Catholic Church LB - 25610 PY - 1987 SE - A SP - 32 ST - Archdiocese Demands Stronger Anti-Porn Laws and Prosecution T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Archdiocese Demands Stronger Anti-Porn Laws and Prosecution ID - 1157 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article covers Cardinal Mahony's proposed new production code for motion pictures, the Cardinal's turn away from that plan, and his critics. The article says that "on Wednesday the cardinal, in a pastoral letter to the entertainment industry, disavowed any intention of saddling the film industry with Torquemada-like edicts and instead offered 'suggestions' on the need for more 'human values' in entertainment." DA - Oct. 2, 1992 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA values Christianity advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations values archives primary sources sexuality motion pictures religion values morality Mahony, Roger Hollywood Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture morality, and motion pictures values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and values Catholic Church, and motion pictures Catholic Church, and new production code (1992) Mahony, Roger Mahony, Roger, and production code (1992) (1992) Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and new production code (1992) Mahony, Roger, and pornography pornography, and Roger M. Mahony Hollywood, and Roger M. Mahony Archdoicese, Los Angeles pornography pornography, and Archdiocese of L.A. Jarrard, Dennis Morality in Media Citizens for Decency through Law (CDL) National Religious Alliance Against Pornography primary sources boycotts, and pornography advertising, and pornography pornography, and advertising boycott Jarrard, Dennis, and Roger Mahony Mahony, Roger, and Dennis Jarrard critics advertising LB - 25680 PY - 1992 SE - B (Metro) SP - 6B ST - Culture Watch; Cardinal Rules T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Culture Watch; Cardinal Rules ID - 1162 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with political pressure building to force the television industry to adopt a rating system. DA - July 11, 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Federal Communications Commission (FCC) entertainment, home Clinton, William Jefferson CARA V-chip, and television violence television, and parents telecommunications presidents, and new media censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) PTA motion pictures home entertainment government regulation Clinton Administration law regulation law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification Gore, Al home, and new media home +television +motion pictures and popular culture Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.), and TV (1997) V-chip television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and V-chip home entertainment revolution home entertainment, and V-chip television, and PTA PTA, and television television, and critics rating system (U. S.), and critics hearings new media Collings, Tim V-chip, and Tim Collings Telecommunications Act (1996) regulation, and television Valenti, Jack, and television television, and Jack Valenti Clinton, Bill Clinton, Bill, and TV rating system (U. S.) Clinton administration, and TV rating system (U. S.) Gore, Al, and TV rating system (U. S.) McCain, John, and TV rating system (U. S.) Lieberman, Joseph, and TV rating system (U. S.) FCC FCC, and TV rating system (U. S.) Markey, Ed, and V-chip home, and new media violence LB - 26010 PY - 1997 SE - News/World SP - 6 ST - TV Ratings T2 - Tampa Tribune TI - TV Ratings ID - 1192 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article details charges that Bruce Ritter, a Catholic priest who had been a member of the antipornography Meese Commission in 1985-86, had himself been involved in sexual misconduct. DA - Aug. 5, 1990 KW - sexuality pornography Meese Commission Ritter, Bruce Covenant House, and Bruce Ritter Ritter, Bruce, and pornography pornography, and Bruce Ritter Meese Commission, and Bruce Ritter LB - 26940 PY - 1990 SE - B (Metro) SP - 3B ST - Charity's Report Backs Allegations that Priest Engaged in Misconduct T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Charity's Report Backs Allegations that Priest Engaged in Misconduct ID - 1252 ER - TY - NEWS AB - An article dealing with the sex scandal that involved Father Bruce Ritter, a former member of the Meese Commission. DA - Aug. 4, 1990 KW - sexuality pornography Meese Commission Ritter, Bruce Covenant House, and Bruce Ritter Ritter, Bruce, and pornography pornography, and Bruce Ritter Meese Commission, and Bruce Ritter LB - 26950 PY - 1990 SE - A SP - 21A ST - Sex Reports on Priest Called Confirmed; Inquiry: Covenant House Says Probe Found Evidence of Misconduct by Father Ritter, Founder of Shelter for Runaways. He Has Denied Wrongdoing T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Sex Reports on Priest Called Confirmed; Inquiry: Covenant House Says Probe Found Evidence of Misconduct by Father Ritter, Founder of Shelter for Runaways. He Has Denied Wrongdoing ID - 1253 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses that fact that women make up a significant part of the market for pornographic video tapes. DA - Dec. 22, 1985 KW - magnetic recording women, and new media women sexuality pornography motion pictures videotape magnetic tape +motion pictures and popular culture pornography, and women women, and pornography videotape, and women videotape, and pornography motion pictures, and videotape pornography, and videotape women, and videotape LB - 27050 PY - 1985 SE - Metro (Part 2) SP - 13 ST - View in Privacy of Home; Women Form Big Market for Hard-Core Porn Tapes T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - View in Privacy of Home; Women Form Big Market for Hard-Core Porn Tapes ID - 1262 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Eszterhas, the screenwriters for the NC-17 rated movie Showgirls, urges teenagers to sneak into theaters to see the film, thus putting him at odds with MGM/UA and the Motion Picture Association of America. DA - Sept. 15, 1995 KW - classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality CARA sexuality advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Showgirls motion pictures, and sex sex, and motion pictures lCARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 Eszterhas, Joe Verhoeven, Paul advertising LB - 27180 PY - 1995 SE - E (Arts and Living Section) SP - 8E ST - Eszterhas Urges Teenagers to Sneak into Showgirls T2 - Plain Dealer [Cleveland] TI - Eszterhas Urges Teenagers to Sneak into Showgirls ID - 1275 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with efforts to rate video games which were rapidly become a big business and already widely popular with youth. DA - Jan. 4, 1994 KW - classification self-regulation CARA censorship and ratings media effects censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification video games rating system (U. S.), and video games video games, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and Software Publishers Association media effects, and video games children children, and video games children, and media LB - 27470 PY - 1994 SE - D (Financial) SP - D11 ST - Ratings for Video Games T2 - New York Times TI - Ratings for Video Games ID - 1302 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with the opposition of the American Library Association to the record keeping provision of the Child Protection and Oscenity Enforcement Act of 1988. DA - Feb. 26, 1991 KW - presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality obscenity Meese Commission First Amendment freedom censorship and ratings children censorship and ratings censorship pornography law, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and pornography pornography, and Reagan judges obscenity, and pornography Meese, Edwin, and pornography Child Protection and Obscenity Enforcement Act (1988) pornography, judicial setbacks American Library Association First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment law values Reagan, Ronald children, and media LB - 27550 PY - 1991 SE - A SP - A20 ST - Librarians in Court, Again [editorial] T2 - Washington Post TI - Librarians in Court, Again [editorial] ID - 1309 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This work concerns the Child Protection and Obscenity Enforcement Act of 1988. It notes that a three-judge panel of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia reinstated a provision in this law required those who made explicit sex films, magazines, and other materials to keep records of all the actors, including their ages, names, and nicknames. DA - Sept. 21, 1994 KW - American Library Association presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality obscenity Meese Commission law censorship and ratings children censorship and ratings censorship pornography law, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and pornography pornography, and Reagan judges obscenity, and pornography Meese, Edwin, and pornography Child Protection and Obscenity Enforcement Act (1988) pornography, judicial setbacks American Library Association, and pornography pornography, and American Library Association values Reagan, Ronald children, and media LB - 27560 PY - 1994 SE - A SP - A6 ST - Court Upholds Porn Film Law T2 - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette TI - Court Upholds Porn Film Law ID - 1310 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with Playboy's suit against Attorney General Edwin Meese. Playboy was the target of anti-pornography boycotts at the time and several chains stopped carrying the magazine. These developments came at a time when video cassettes were changing the way Americans experienced erotica. DA - May 26, 1986 KW - presidents, and new media Reagan administration sexuality sexuality obscenity Meese Commission law censorship and ratings censorship pornography law, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and pornography pornography, and Reagan judges obscenity, and pornography Meese, Edwin, and pornography pornography, judicial setbacks Playboy pornography, and Playboy Playboy, and pornography Reagan, Ronald LB - 27580 PY - 1986 SE - Southeast Edition SP - website ST - Playboy Sues Meese, Porn Panel, Cite 'Blacklist' T2 - Adweek TI - Playboy Sues Meese, Porn Panel, Cite 'Blacklist' ID - 1312 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This articles asks: "Is a crusade against pornography needed, as Attorney General Meese says? The issue is one of tone. Crusades can be indiscriminate, trampling the rights of many to honest, wholesome expression." It goes on to says that "It is not sexual content of itself that necessarily makes pornography deplorable. It is how it fails to pass some fundamental but easily understood tests: Does the material strengthen human affections, deepen trust, elevate purpose, safeguard the individual and society's interest in stable, liftetime bonds? A public effort to make such a review widespread would be welcome." DA - July 10, 1986 KW - presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality sexuality obscenity Meese Commission law censorship and ratings censorship pornography law, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and pornography pornography, and Reagan judges obscenity, and pornography Meese, Edwin, and pornography pornography, judicial setbacks Playboy pornography, and Playboy Playboy, and pornography values Reagan, Ronald LB - 27600 PY - 1986 SP - 15 ST - Tests that Pornography Fails [editorial] T2 - Christian Science Monitor TI - Tests that Pornography Fails [editorial] ID - 1314 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Despite the boycot efforts anti-pornography groups following the Meese Commission Final Report 91986) to get drug and convenience stores to stop selling Playboy and Penthouse, by 1987, 7-Elevens had begun to sell Playboy with nude pictures of game show hostess Vanna White. DA - April 13, 1987 KW - presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality sexuality obscenity Meese Commission law censorship and ratings censorship pornography law, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and pornography pornography, and Reagan judges obscenity, and pornography Meese, Edwin, and pornography pornography, judicial setbacks Playboy pornography, and Playboy Playboy, and pornography values Reagan, Ronald LB - 27610 PY - 1987 SE - National Newswire ST - 7-Elevens Drawn Back to 'Playboy' by Vanna Issue T2 - Adweek TI - 7-Elevens Drawn Back to 'Playboy' by Vanna Issue ID - 1315 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the rise of pornography as a big business, thanks in part to its exploitation of such new media as cable television, satellites, and video cassettes. DA - Sept. 23, 1989 KW - computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) corporations corporations, multinational magnetic recording satellites, and communication video sexuality new media multinational corporations motion pictures Internet satellites magnetic tape non-USA home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture new media, and home home, and new media pornography pornography, and corporations pornography, and home pornography, and new media pornography, and cable TV +television television, and cable television, and pornography pornography, and television pornography, and satellites satellites, and space communication pornography, and hotels capitalism, and pornography pornography, and capitalism pornography, and multinational corporation multinational corporations, and pornographny cable, and pornography satellites, and pornography new media, and pornography VCRs video, and pornography pornography, and VCRs pornography, and video +computers and the Internet Internet, and pornography videotape videotape, and pornography pornography, and videotape +aeronautics and space communication cable capitalism LB - 27660 N1 - In section: World Politics and Current Affairs: American Survey PY - 1989 SP - 28 (p. 58, UK Edition) ST - Pornography: Smut City T2 - The Economist TI - Pornography: Smut City ID - 1320 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This is an account of Pope John Paul II's address to entertainment leaders at Universal Studios in Hollywood. He talked about the moral influence in motion pictures, music, and other forms of entertainment. The communication industry should "support human dignity because the world is constantly tempted to forget it," the Pope said. DA - Sept. 16, 1987 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA values Christianity Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack values motion pictures Hollywood values religion Catholic Church non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +television Pope John Paul II, and motion pictures Pope John Paul II Pope John Paul II, and television television, and Pope John Paul II motion pictures, and Pope John Paul II Valenti, Jack, and Pope John Paul II Wasserman, Lew, and Pope John Paul II Hollywood, and Catholic Church Hollywood, and religion Catholic Church, and Hollywood values critics values, and virtual reality virtual reality LB - 28330 PY - 1987 SP - A3 ST - Pope Calls on Media to Stem Spread of Porn and Violence T2 - Toronto Star TI - Pope Calls on Media to Stem Spread of Porn and Violence ID - 1372 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The article concerns the settlement of a suit brought against the Meese Commision by the Magazine Publishers Association charging that the Commission had sent a letter to chain stores urging them to stop selling such magazines as Playboy and Penthouse, thus creating a blacklist. The article says that Playboy and Penthouse still have suits against the Commission still outstanding. DA - Jan. 30, 1987 KW - sexuality sexuality sexuality pornography Meese Commission Meese Commission, and blacklists Playboy Penthouse Meese Commission, and boycotts Meese Commission, and Playboy Meese Commission, and Penthouse LB - 28430 PY - 1987 SP - 20 ST - Suit Against Meese's Commission on Pornography Reported Settled T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Suit Against Meese's Commission on Pornography Reported Settled ID - 1380 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This news release says that according the Parade magazine, at least sixty major movies during the past five years have portrayed "the use of illegal drugs in a positive, upbeat way." DA - July 18, 1985 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +television motion pictures, and drug use motion pictures, and substance abuse television, and drug use television, and substance abuse Valenti, Jack, and substance abuse Valenti, Jack, and drug use MPAA, and drug use rating system (U.S.), and drug abuse rating system (U. S.), and substance abuse CARA, and drug use CARA, and substance abuse rating system (U. S.), and controversies CARA, and rating controversies LB - 28490 PY - 1985 ST - To City Desk and Entertainment Editor T2 - PR Newswire TI - To City Desk and Entertainment Editor ID - 1386 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about a one-hour film made by Kenneth Berg in Israel entitled His Last Days, designed to counter the interpretation of Jesus in Martin Scorcese's Last Temptation of Christ (1988). DA - Sept. 2, 1988 KW - values motion pictures values critics values +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and religion religion, and motion pictures religion LB - 28530 PY - 1988 ST - David Fights Goliath: His Last Days Film Offers C.I.A. View of Christ's Life in Contrast to Scorsese's Last Temptation T2 - Southwest Newswire, Inc. TI - David Fights Goliath: His Last Days Film Offers C.I.A. View of Christ's Life in Contrast to Scorsese's Last Temptation ID - 1390 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses a new invention by M. Armengaud, a French scientist/inventor, that promises the "annihilation of distance." He explained it, it was "merely an extension of the system under which photographs at present are being transmitted by telegraphy." The article goes to say that "it means that in everything but physical contact we will be in momentary presence of the people in the furthermost part of the earth. That we will be as familiar with the daily lives of the inhabitant of China as we are with the dwellers in State street." The invention promises to give people scenes of "actual war" and such disasters as the San Francisco earthquake. There are implications for history, too: “The nickel moving picture show may be the nucleus of an institution which will beggar the gladiatorial shows of the Roman emperors and bring our ancestors back from their graves in astonishment.” "Secrecy Would Be Impossible," the articles says, and notes this new invention will “implies the absolute destruction of all privacy.” In the future, "it will mean that men will have to live their lives in the full glare of publicity." There will also be changes in the newspaper of the future. "The newspaper office of the future," Armengaud predicted, "will be really a theater where on an enormous screen the principal events of the world will be reproduced, with phonographs giving the words of the actors. Who would care to read a description of the installation of a president or of a battle in Morocco when he could go and see the whole event portrayed in actuality before his eyes?" DA - Oct. 25, 1908 KW - history photography motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity ref, news new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel television telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph selenium cameras phonograph quotations news and journalism newspapers, and new media war privacy privacy, and new media ref, CDT LB - 480 PY - 1908 SP - F3 ST - Will Scientists Succeed in Destroying Distance T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Will Scientists Succeed in Destroying Distance ID - 1565 ER - TY - NEWS C1 - 17 DA - April 27, 1924 KW - television, and history of +radio +television television, and origins LB - 7240 PY - 1924 SE - 9 ST - Radio Moving Pictures T2 - New York Times TI - Radio Moving Pictures ID - 2094 ER - TY - NEWS DA - March 15, 1924 KW - non-USA television, and history of +television television, and origins France, television France LB - 7430 PY - 1924 SP - 17 ST - Television Promised by French Inventor T2 - New York Times TI - Television Promised by French Inventor ID - 2113 ER - TY - NEWS DA - Dec. 7, 1924 KW - radio +television +radio seeing at a distance television, and origins radio, and pictures LB - 7500 PY - 1924 SE - 9 SP - 1 ST - Will Wireless Next Bring Us Radio Sight? T2 - New York Times TI - Will Wireless Next Bring Us Radio Sight? ID - 2120 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This section is devoted to considering the impact of DVDs. "In the six years that DVD's have been available in this country, they have reshaped the way we experience culture. Film was the first medium to feel the effects, but it's not the last. In the era of the DVD, it's not enough to sit back and watch. We're invited to meet the directors, interview the performers, read the scripts, study the storyboards, argue with the commentaries and play along with the scores." The articles in this section consider how material on DVDs is conceptualized and created. DA - Aug. 17, 2003 KW - holography sexuality +motion pictures and popular culture digitization DVDs pornography sexuality virtual reality 3-D motion pictures, and DVDs motion pictures, and digital media motion pictures, and interactive holograms motion pictures, and holograms +television television, and DVDs DVDs, and television digital media motion pictures LB - 28720 PY - 2003 SE - 2 (Arts & Leisure) SP - 1-26 ST - The DVD Comes of Age T2 - New York Times TI - The DVD Comes of Age ID - 2648 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the National Commission on Causes and Prevention of Violence. DA - June 5, 1969 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA television violence television, and violence violence, and television violence, and social science research social science research, and violence children, and media television, and effects motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures violence, and bibliography bibliographies bibliographies, and TV violence National Commission on Causes and Prevention of Violence reports hearings, Causes and Prevention of Violence (1969) Valenti, Jack, and media violence Valenti, Jack, and Congress children social science research Valenti, Jack hearings LB - 29160 PY - 1969 SP - 1A, 13A ST - [article] T2 - St. Louis Post Dispatch TI - [article] ID - 2689 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that Governor Reagan signed two laws making it harder to peddle pornography to children. One established a separate standard for judging what is obscene for those under 18. The other incorporated a "pandering" concept in to advertising in cases involving obscenity. DA - June 27, 1969 KW - advertising and public relations children children, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and child porn law obscenity law, and pandering law, and advertising advertising, and law law, and obscenity children, and obscenity Reagan, Ronald pornography sexuality Reagan, Ronald, and pornogrphy Reagan, Ronald, and student activists Reagan, Ronald, and drug abuse advertising Reagan administration children, and media LB - 29270 PY - 1969 SP - 42 ST - Reagan Signs Two Laws to Combat Pornography T2 - New York Times TI - Reagan Signs Two Laws to Combat Pornography ID - 2697 ER - TY - NEWS DA - 1978 KW - motion pictures and popular culture First Amendment, and motion pictures motion pictures, and First Amendment I Spit on Your Grave First Amendment motion pictures LB - 29350 PY - 1978 T2 - Variety ID - 2702 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This MPAA press releases announced Dan Glickman's appointment as president of the Motion Picture Association of America, replacing Jack Valenti. It give biographical background on Glickman. It notes that "Valenti will continue to supervise (with the President of the National Association of Theatre Owners) the voluntary film rating system which he devised in 1968." DA - July 1, 2004 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) motion pictures censorship and ratings censorship Valenti, Jack MPAA Valenti, Jack, and MPAA MPAA, and Jack Valenti Glickman, Dan MPAA, and Dan Glickman CARA, and Dan Glickman Valenti, Jack, and CARA CARA, and Jack Valenti NATO, and CARA CARA, and NATO CARA NATO National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) LB - 30500 PY - 2004 ST - Dan Glickman To Succeed Jack Valenti as Head of MPAA; Valenti Resigns after 38-Year Tenure T2 - Motion Picture Association of America Press Release TI - Dan Glickman To Succeed Jack Valenti as Head of MPAA; Valenti Resigns after 38-Year Tenure UR - See MPAA website ID - 2806 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Democratic Senator Estes Kefauver (D-TN) and the members of his subcommittee who were investigating possible links between the movies and juvenile delinquency, believed that violent films provided possible “trigger mechanisms” for some youth. Kefauver praised the revised Production Code in 1956. Kefauver was also pleased by another revision in the Code. His subcommittee had called for a relaxation in the Code’s restrictions that forbade treating such topics as drug addiction and kidnapping. DA - Dec. 15, 1956 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality Kefauver, Estes motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media Kefauver committee motion pictures, and juvenile delinquency LB - 34890 PY - 1956 SP - 21 ST - Kefauver Lauds Code: Says Changes in Film Rules Parallel Committee Ideas T2 - New York Times TI - Kefauver Lauds Code: Says Changes in Film Rules Parallel Committee Ideas ID - 3131 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Democratic Senator Estes Kefauver (D-TN) and the members of his subcommittee who were investigating possible links between the movies and juvenile delinquency, and concluded that violent films provided possible “trigger mechanisms” for some youth. Later, in December, 1956, Kefauver praised the revision of the motion picture Production Code which relax restrictions on showing narcotic abuse and kidnapping, and tightened restriction on brutality in films. DA - March 27, 1956 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality Kefauver, Estes motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media Kefauver committee motion pictures, and juvenile delinquency LB - 34900 PY - 1956 SP - 37 ST - Senate Unit Hits Violence in Films T2 - New York Times TI - Senate Unit Hits Violence in Films ID - 3132 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses hearings before the subcommittee on foreign trade and shipping of the Special Committee on Post-War Economic Policy and Planning in the U. S. House of Representatives. Eric Johnston offered testimony for the Motion Picture Association of America, and he and others pledge to screen more carefully films sent abroad so that they did not reflect badly on the United States. Officials cited in this story comment on the fact that the Soviet Union was sending out blatant propaganda films, but that at that time, U. S. officials did not want to impose restrictions on Soviet films, even though the USSR had imposed restriction on American commercial movies. DA - Dec. 21, 1946 KW - Truman administration Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union self-regulation nationalism MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism Cold War war Johnston, Eric capitalism motion pictures, and communism Truman, Harry presidents and new media motion pictures, and Harry Truman Truman, Harry, and motion pictures military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and U.S. foreign policy MPAA, and foreign policy MPAA, and Truman administration MPAA, and Cold War USSR motion pictures, and USSR propaganda democracy motion pictures, and democracy media effects motion pictures, and media effects capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism LB - 34960 PY - 1946 SP - 13 ST - Film Heads Pledge Reform in Exports T2 - New York Times TI - Film Heads Pledge Reform in Exports ID - 3138 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In 1956, the Motion Picture Association of America revised its Production Code, relaxing restrictions on several topics including drug addiction, abortion, prostitution, and child kidnapping. The ACLU argued, however, that the changes actually served to give the censors greater power over films. The ACLU favored abandoning the movie Production Code. DA - April 24, 1957 KW - self-regulation , news motion pictures censorship and ratings Production Code Production Code, 1956 ACLU critics critics, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code LB - 35290 PY - 1957 SP - 29 ST - Liberties Group Scores Film Code: Recent Changes Would Serve to Tighter Curbs on Movie Content, A.C.L.U. Says T2 - New York Times TI - Liberties Group Scores Film Code: Recent Changes Would Serve to Tighter Curbs on Movie Content, A.C.L.U. Says ID - 3168 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This British-made movie dealt with homosexuality and was denied a Production Code Administration seal of approaval in the US. "Independently produced overseas by Allied Filmmakers and starring Dirk Bogarde, the movie is a dramatized condemnation, based on the Wolfenden Report, of Britain's laws on homosexuality," this article reports. The film gained acclaim abroad and Pathe-America Distributing Company picked it up to exhibit in the United States. Budd Rogers who was head of the company said the movie would play in the U. S. with or without the PCA seal, and indeed, it opened in New York on Feb.. 5, 1962. DA - Nov. 16, 1961 KW - censorship self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality foreign films, and sexuality , news motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings Johnston, Eric, and Production Code sexuality motion pictures, and sex Production Code, and sex Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality homosexuality, and motion pictures censorship, and homosexuality Production Code, and homosexuality motion pictures, and foreign films foreign films foreign films, and homosexuality non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Great Britain LB - 35370 PY - 1961 SP - 45 ST - British Movie on Homosexuality Denied Seal of Approval Here T2 - New York Times TI - British Movie on Homosexuality Denied Seal of Approval Here ID - 3176 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Speaking to about 90 MPAA representatives on the fifteenth anniversary of his becoming MPAA president, Eric Johnston said: "I predict that long before another fifteen years pass, the Supreme Court will have declared once and for all that no one has the right to censor a motion picture." DA - April 11, 1961 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism LB - 35420 PY - 1961 SP - 41 ST - Johnston Sees End to Film Censorship T2 - New York Times TI - Johnston Sees End to Film Censorship ID - 3181 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that 55 movie scripts were submitted to the Production Code Administration during the first quarter of the year compared to only 37 during the first quarter during the previous year. The article notes, thought that "very few [films] are turned down" by the PCA. DA - April 3, 1963 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism LB - 35440 PY - 1963 SP - 42 ST - Production Code Unit Sees Increase in Film Production T2 - New York Times TI - Production Code Unit Sees Increase in Film Production ID - 3183 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the first appeals case under the motion picture Production Code to be decided since Eric Johnston, MPAA president, doubled the size of the Code's Appeals Board by bringing in independent producers and directors. This appeal involved overturning the PCA rejection of a movie entitled Happy Anniversary (1959) that involved pre-martial sex. Dialogue was added to add compensating moral values and the film received the PCA's seal. DA - Nov. 6, 1959 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Production Code, and Appeals Board Happy Anniversary LB - 35490 PY - 1959 SP - 23 ST - Code Is Reversed on Seal for Film: Review Board Takes Action on 'Happy Anniversay' -- Dialogue to Be Added T2 - New York Times TI - Code Is Reversed on Seal for Film: Review Board Takes Action on 'Happy Anniversay' -- Dialogue to Be Added ID - 3188 ER - TY - NEWS AB - After the revision of the motion picture industry's Production Code in 1956, criticism remained that the appeals process was dominated by executives from the nine member studios of the MPAA and its president Eric Johnston. This article reports that Johnston doubled the size of the Appeals Board by adding exhibitors and producers who were not MPAA members. DA - June 14, 1957 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Production Code, and Appeals Board LB - 35510 PY - 1957 SP - 20 ST - Film Code Board to be Augmented: Ten Representatives Will Be Added to Motion Picture Production Appeal Unit T2 - New York Times TI - Film Code Board to be Augmented: Ten Representatives Will Be Added to Motion Picture Production Appeal Unit ID - 3190 ER - TY - NEWS AB - After the revision of the motion picture industry's Production Code in 1956, criticism remained that the appeals process was dominated by executives from the nine member studios of the MPAA and its president Eric Johnston. This article reports that Johnston doubled the size of the Appeals Board by adding exhibitors and producers who were not MPAA members. New members included John Ford, William Goetz, F. Hugh Herbert, and George Sidney. DA - Sept. 18, 1957 KW - self-regulation sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Production Code, and Appeals Board Ford, John Goetz, William LB - 35520 PY - 1957 SP - 37 ST - 10 Members Join New Movie Board: Film Review Group Doubled in Size as Representation Covers Added Fields T2 - New York Times TI - 10 Members Join New Movie Board: Film Review Group Doubled in Size as Representation Covers Added Fields ID - 3191 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article explains that MPAA president Eric Johnston has appointed a committee to study revision the movie industry's Production Code. Among those appointed to this committee were Barney Balaban (Paramount), Abe Schneider (Columbia), Daniel O'Shea (RKO). The actual work of the committee (not mentioned in this article) was farmed out to a subcommittee chaired by Kenneth Clark and overseen by PCA director Geoffrey Shurlock. This article does not that the Loew's theaters and other large theater circuits had shown The Man with the Golden Arm (1956), a movie about drug addiction, even though the PCA had banned it. DA - Jan. 25, 1956 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Production Code, and Appeals Board LB - 35560 PY - 1956 SP - 26 ST - Film Code Study Set by Industry: Johnston to Head Inquiry of Self-Regulation System -- Wide Changes Foreseen T2 - New York Times TI - Film Code Study Set by Industry: Johnston to Head Inquiry of Self-Regulation System -- Wide Changes Foreseen ID - 3195 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This articles notes that the 1956 revision of the MPAA's movie Production Code eased restriction on showing drug addition, abortion, kidnapping, and prostitution but keep the bans on "sex perversion" (i.e., homosexuality) and venereal disease. DA - Dec. 12, 1956 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and miscegnation LB - 35580 PY - 1956 SP - 1, 51 ST - Old Movie Taboos Eased in New Code for Film Industry T2 - New York Times TI - Old Movie Taboos Eased in New Code for Film Industry ID - 3197 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In November, 1955, the New York Times reported that United Artist would release the movie, The Man with the Golden Arm, with or without the PCA’s seal. It was the first time that a major studio had announced its intention to exhibit a controversial film before submitting it to the PCA. The studio did submit the film to the PCA but the PCA refused to approve it. Johnston and the MPAA’s Appeals Board upheld this decision on December 6, 1955, but the studio heads were divided. Only five voted to uphold the appeal while four other abstained. The following day, Arthur Krim announced that United Artist would withdraw from the MPAA in protest. This episode contributed to Johnston's decision to revise the Production Code in 1956. The revised Code permitted treatments of narcotics use in movies. DA - Dec. 8, 1955 KW - Sinatra, Frank self-regulation motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) Legion of Decency , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of Legion of Decency, effectiveness motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and drugs motion pictures, and drugs censorship and ratings Production Code (1956) Krim, Arthur Preminger, Otto Production Code, and United Artists Man with the Golden Arm Catholic Church values LB - 35620 PY - 1955 SP - 46 ST - United Artists Quits Film Group: Studio Resigns After Denial of Code Seal to 'The Man with the Golden Arm' T2 - New York Times TI - United Artists Quits Film Group: Studio Resigns After Denial of Code Seal to 'The Man with the Golden Arm' ID - 3201 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In November, 1955, the New York Times reported that United Artist would release the movie, The Man with the Golden Arm, with or without the PCA’s seal. It was the first time that a major studio had announced its intention to exhibit a controversial film before submitting it to the PCA. The studio did submit the film to the PCA but the PCA refused to approve it. Johnston and the MPAA’s Appeals Board upheld this decision on December 6, 1955, but the studio heads were divided. Only five voted to uphold the appeal while four other abstained. The following day, Arthur Krim announced that United Artist would withdraw from the MPAA in protest. This episode contributed to Johnston's decision to revise the Production Code in 1956. The revised Code permitted treatments of narcotics use in movies. DA - Dec. 7, 1955 KW - Sinatra, Frank self-regulation motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) Legion of Decency news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of Legion of Decency, effectiveness motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and drugs motion pictures, and drugs censorship and ratings Production Code (1956) Krim, Arthur Preminger, Otto Production Code, and United Artists Man with the Golden Arm Catholic Church values LB - 35640 PY - 1955 SP - 48 ST - Code Appeal Lost by Narcotics Films: Movie Association Directors, After Showing, Refuse Seal to 'Man with Golden Arm' T2 - New York Times TI - Code Appeal Lost by Narcotics Films: Movie Association Directors, After Showing, Refuse Seal to 'Man with Golden Arm' ID - 3203 ER - TY - NEWS AB - During the mid-1950s, many groups denounced the motion picture industry's Production Code for being too restrictive. The ACLU was among those groups urging that the Code be eliminated entirely. DA - Dec. 6, 1955 KW - self-regulation , news motion pictures censorship and ratings Production Code Production Code, 1956 ACLU critics critics, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code LB - 35650 PY - 1955 SP - 45 ST - End To Movie Code Urged by A.C.L.U. T2 - New York Times TI - End To Movie Code Urged by A.C.L.U. ID - 3204 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with the movie John Paul Jones (1959), one of the many so-called American-interest or "runaway" films that were produced abroad with some American talent. Hollywood labor groups protested this film and especially the fact that the signing of the Declaration of Independence in the movies actually took place in Spain. DA - March 31, 1958 KW -, news motion pictures motion pictures, and American-interest films motion pictures, and labor labor motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings LB - 35760 PY - 1958 SP - 19 ST - AFL Unit Hints Boycott of Movie: Council Protests Filming of 'John Paul Jones' in Spain T2 - New York Times TI - AFL Unit Hints Boycott of Movie: Council Protests Filming of 'John Paul Jones' in Spain ID - 3215 ER - TY - NEWS AB - When grilled by U. S. House Post Office subcommittee in early 1960 about homosexuality references in a movie then being made based on Allen Drury’s 1959 novel Advise and Consent, Shurlock assured members: “That will come out. That will come out.” DA - Feb. 4, 1960 KW - censorship self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Production Code, and homosexuality censorship, and homosexuality children LB - 35810 PY - 1960 SP - 34 ST - Head of Film Code at House Hearing T2 - New York Times TI - Head of Film Code at House Hearing ID - 3218 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This obituary provides good information on Eric Johnston's life prior to 1945, before he became president of the Motion Picture Association of America. Johnston is described as an "ebullient extrovert." His rise to the presidency of the U. S. Chamber of Commerce is covered. He was hailed as "the first breath of fresh air to blow through the Chamber in 20 years." (25) His work traveling to the USSR for the Franklin Roosevelt administration in 1944 is discussed as is his service to the Truman and Eisenhower administrations. This article says that Johnston ran for the Senate in Washington state in 1940 as a Republican and lost. DA - Aug. 23, 1963 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) nationalism , news motion pictures Johnston, Eric nationalism and communication capitalism capitalism, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric, and obituary MPAA MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric, and MPAA LB - 35930 PY - 1963 SP - 1, 25 ST - Eric Johnston Dies; Aided 3 Presidents [obituary] T2 - New York Times TI - Eric Johnston Dies; Aided 3 Presidents [obituary] ID - 3230 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article points out that only the United States and Japan do not have a classification system for motion pictures. Eric Johnston is quoted as saying "I am against any system which involves censorship." Reacting to criticism from religious groups and women’s organizations, Johnston said: “From most of the critical letters I received, it is evident that the bulk of criticism is aimed at picture without Code seals. …More than 760 foreign pictures were imported last year, while 218 were produced in Hollywood. Only 280 Production Code Seals were issued. Pictures without the Code Seals are by far the largest offenders.” DA - Oct. 6, 1959 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism LB - 35960 PY - 1959 SP - 45 ST - Johnston Joins Film Censor Talk: Starts Producer Parleys -- Weighs Proposal for the Classification of Movies T2 - New York Times TI - Johnston Joins Film Censor Talk: Starts Producer Parleys -- Weighs Proposal for the Classification of Movies ID - 3233 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on a survey conducted by the Opinion Research Corporation in Princeton, NJ, for the movie industry. It found that by 1957 more than half of the 54 million people who went to movies each week were under 20. About 75 percent of the audience was under 30. The report said that TV had become "a prime reason for the decline in theatre attendance." The South was the region of the U. S. "most ethusiastic" about going to the movies. DA - Jan. 17, 1958 KW -, news motion pictures television motion pictures, and audiences television, and movie attendance audiences motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures LB - 35970 PY - 1958 SP - 15 ST - Moviegoer Habits Traced in Survey: Film Industry's First Canvass of Its Audience Shows Loyal Core Despite TV Inroads T2 - New Youk Times TI - Moviegoer Habits Traced in Survey: Film Industry's First Canvass of Its Audience Shows Loyal Core Despite TV Inroads ID - 3234 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on a survey conduct by Hollywood film unions and published in 1957 (see Irving Bernstein, Hollywood at the Crossroads). The study found that attendance in the United States had dropped from 90,000,000 in 1946, to less than 47,000,000 by 1956, and that when drive-ins were subtracted, that fewer than 12,000,000 people went to four-wall theaters. The article gives several reasons for the decline in attendance -- eg., increased leisure time, blockbuster films, and television which had "changed living patterns." (25) It also noted the jobs lost to so-called American-interest films -- movies in which American producers when abroad to film. The study also commented on the potential for future movie attendance during the 1960s and 1970s from the baby boom generation. DA - April 7, 1958 KW -, news motion pictures motion pictures, and American-interest films motion pictures, and labor labor motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings television motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures children children and media audiences motion pictures, and audiences LB - 35980 PY - 1958 SP - 1, 25 ST - Movies' Decline Held Permanent: Survey by Film Unions Finds '46 Status 'Gone Forever' T2 - New York Times TI - Movies' Decline Held Permanent: Survey by Film Unions Finds '46 Status 'Gone Forever' ID - 3235 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article, written about the time Eric Johnston organized a bi-partisan conference for President Eisenhower to support U.S. foreign aid, gives biographical details of the MPAA president's life. It begins by call Johnston "the personality boy of United States capitalism." It then quotes Johnston saying: "We are too mealy-mouthed. We fear the word capitalism is unpopular. So we talk about the 'free enterprise system' and run to cover in the folds of the flag and talk about the American way of life.'" The article says that Johnston preferred not to use his middle name or initial (Allen). DA - Feb. 26, 1958 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) self-regulation Eisenhower administration community , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and community Johnston, Eric, and community community, and motion pictures community, and Eric Johston motion pictures, and Cold War Cold War, and motion pictures capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism values, and motion pictures addresses speeches motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising advertising advertising, and motion pictures MPAA, and Eric Johnston Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and freedom freedom, and motion pictures Johnston, Eric, and capitalism capitalism, and Eric Johnston motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and anticommunism Production Code, and decline of Johnston, Eric, and Production Code democracy democracy, and capitalism capitalism, and democracy Eisenhower, Dwight D. democracy capitalism Cold War freedom MPAA Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) values war advertising and public relations LB - 36000 PY - 1958 SP - 8 ST - Capitalism's Pin-Up Boy: Eric Allen Johnston T2 - New York Times TI - Capitalism's Pin-Up Boy: Eric Allen Johnston ID - 3237 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Eric Johnston, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, will travel to the USSR to negotiate an agreement for the exchange of American and Soviet films. The article notes that he "will be traveling as an official United States representative by State Department designation and not as an officer" of the Motion Picture Export Association, of which Johnston was also president. DA - Sept. 5, 1958 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union Eisenhower administration , news motion pictures USSR non-USA motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and foreign policy Eisenhower, Dwight D. presidents and new media Eisenhower, Dwight D., and motion pictures Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and USSR MPAA Motion Picture Export Association LB - 36030 PY - 1958 SP - 23 ST - Johnston Will Seek Film Pact in Soviet T2 - New York Times TI - Johnston Will Seek Film Pact in Soviet ID - 3239 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Eric Johnston, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, traveled to the USSR as an official representative of the U. S. State Departmeent to negotiate an exchange of American and Soviet films. This article says that Soviet Premier Nikita Khruschchev invited Johnston to have dinner with his family, the first time, it was believed, that Khrushchev had ever introduced an American to his family. DA - Oct. 7, 1958 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union Khrushchev, Nikita Eisenhower administration , news motion pictures USSR non-USA motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and foreign policy Eisenhower, Dwight D. presidents and new media Eisenhower, Dwight D., and motion pictures Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and USSR MPAA Motion Picture Export Association Khruschchev, Nikita, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Nikita Khruschchev LB - 36040 PY - 1958 SP - 42 ST - Khrushchev, Johnston Talk T2 - New York Times TI - Khrushchev, Johnston Talk ID - 3240 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In 1958, Eric Johnston, president of the MPAA, negotiated a deal with Soviet Premeir Nikita Khrushchev to exchange films. Cecil B. DeMille's movie The Ten Commandments was shown to a Russian audience but the Soviets rejected the movie as one of those to part of the exhange between the two countries. DA - Oct. 24, 1958 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union Khrushchev, Nikita Eisenhower administration , news motion pictures USSR non-USA motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and foreign policy Eisenhower, Dwight D. presidents and new media Eisenhower, Dwight D., and motion pictures Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and USSR MPAA Motion Picture Export Association Khruschchev, Nikita, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Nikita Khruschchev Ten Commandments religion values motion pictures, and religion motion pictures, and values DeMille, Cecil motion pictures, and American-interest films hybrid films LB - 36060 PY - 1958 SP - 38 ST - Russians Reject Film On Ten Commandments T2 - New York Times TI - Russians Reject Film On Ten Commandments ID - 3242 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Making films abroad sometimes offered movie makers freedom to deal with topics in ways that might not have been possible in the United States. Cecil B. DeMille shot much of his epic film, The Ten Commandments, in Egypt where new movie making technologies such as 70mm film, CinemaScope, and VistaVision allowed him to emphasize the area’s spectacular settings. DeMille took inspiration from classical painters and paid much attention to the use of color in the film. In Egypt, DeMille found it possible to create, according to historian Peter Lev, “a level of sexual display scanty costumes and suggestive scenes which would have otherwise encountered censorship problems in the United States and many other countries,” concludes one film historian. There were other matters with which religious purists might have quarreled. DeMille’s movie dealt with thirty years of Moses’s life not chronicled in the Bible. And in it “emphasis on freedom and the blending of religious and political discourses,” it reflected contemporary American Cold War values. When Eric Johnston, president of the MPAA, negotiated a film exchange with the USSR in 1958, the Soviets declined to take this movie as part of the package. This article nots that the Rev. Edward O. Miller, rector of St. George's Protestant Episcopal Church in New York City, criticized the sensationalism in this film which he said failed to show the "thrilling, centuries-old struggle and yearning of mankind for moral uprightness." The movie shows God burning the Ten Commandments into the tablets of stone with "a sort of spiritual acetylene torch." DA - Dec. 3, 1956 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union Eisenhower administration , news motion pictures USSR non-USA motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and foreign policy Eisenhower, Dwight D. presidents and new media Eisenhower, Dwight D., and motion pictures MPAA Motion Picture Export Association Ten Commandments religion values motion pictures, and religion motion pictures, and values DeMille, Cecil motion pictures, and American-interest films hybrid films values LB - 36350 PY - 1956 SP - 34 ST - Rector Attacks Decalogue Film: 'Ten Commandments' Called Fundamentalism at Worst in St. George's Service T2 - N ew York Times TI - Rector Attacks Decalogue Film: 'Ten Commandments' Called Fundamentalism at Worst in St. George's Service ID - 3268 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This brief account notes that this movie was written by Tennessee Williams with "collaboration with a friend, Gore Vidal." The movie was based on an off-Broadway play. Several pictures from the movies accompany this piece. Suddenly, Last Summer was one of the so-called American-interest or "runaway" films made during the 1950s and 1960s. This film had problems with the Production Code Administration because it dealt with homosexuality and cannibalism. DA - Dec. 13, 1959 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Suddenly, Last Summer (1960) motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and American-interest film motion pictures, and cannibalism LB - 36380 PY - 1959 SP - SM72 ST - 'Suddenly, Last Summer' T2 - New York Times TI - 'Suddenly, Last Summer' ID - 3271 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that the Legion of Decency has give Columbia's movie, Suddenly, Last Summer, which had such themes as homosexuality and cannibalism, as "Separately Classified" rating. Other films recently given this rating were Anatomy of a Murder, The Case of Dr. Laurent, and Martin Luther. DA - Dec. 4, 1959 KW - classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Suddenly, Last Summer (1960) motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and American-interest film Legion of Decency Legion of Decency, and classification classification, and Legion of Decency classification LB - 36400 PY - 1959 SP - 36 ST - Legion Labels Film: 'Suddenly, Last Summer' Is 'Separately Classified' T2 - New York Times TI - Legion Labels Film: 'Suddenly, Last Summer' Is 'Separately Classified' ID - 3273 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses seven foreign films scheduled to play in the United States, including Never On Sunday, a Greek picture by the blacklisted director Jules Dassin. Also noted are two films about homosexuality condemned by the Roman Catholic Legion of Decency, Oscar Wilde and The Trials of Oscar Wilde. Both were from Great Britain. The Legion's statement on the latter two films read: "The subject matter of these films, dealing with a social aberration (perversion), is treated in such a way as to glamorize and to arouse undue sympathy on the part of an audience for the tragic weakness rather than for the genius of the character (Oscar Wilde) who is the principal of the story depicted." DA - July 2, 1960 KW - self-regulation sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality foreign films, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Trials of Oscar Wilde motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and American-interest film Never On Sunday (1960) Legion of Decency Legion of Decency, and homosexuality foreign films, and homosexuality foreign films LB - 36420 PY - 1960 SP - 10 ST - 7 Foreign Films Set for Release: Lopert, Around-the-World Get Imports -- Wilde Films Hit by Legion of Decency T2 - New York Times TI - 7 Foreign Films Set for Release: Lopert, Around-the-World Get Imports -- Wilde Films Hit by Legion of Decency ID - 3275 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the 1966 revision of the motion picture Production Code. Valenti says that there are no rigid restrictions on any topics that can be treated in the movies and that there are "gauzily defined boundaries" relating to good taste in treating crime and sexuality. DA - Sept. 28, 1966 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation CARA , news motion pictures Valenti, Jack Production Code, 1966 censorship and ratings Shurlock, Geoffrey Johnston, Eric classification motion pictures, and classification motion pictures, and censorship Production Code LB - 36560 PY - 1966 SP - 5, 68 ST - Valenti in Ode to Code: Wisdom Behind Administration T2 - Variety TI - Valenti in Ode to Code: Wisdom Behind Administration ID - 3289 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the new Production Code that Hollywood adopted in 1966. It added a "suggested for mature audiences" rating. "As they come dwn the chute," Valenti said of new films, "we'll label them." DA - Sept. 21, 1966 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification self-regulation National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) sexuality sexuality MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality CARA , news abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion Production Code Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey, and abortion motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and PCA +television television, and motion pictures television, and abortion motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and sex television, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings Production Code, 1966 Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey classification motion pictures, and classification MPAA, and classification NATO audiences censorship and ratings Nizer, Louis LB - 36820 PY - 1966 SP - 2 ST - Movies' Own Censor Lifts Some Taboos: Hollywood Adopts New Film-Making Code T2 - Chicago Tribune TI - Movies' Own Censor Lifts Some Taboos: Hollywood Adopts New Film-Making Code ID - 3314 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle for the article reads: "Florence Lawrence, at Present Credited with Being the Most Popular and Highest Salaried Emotional Pantomimist in America, Plays 300 Roles a Year, Is Photographed 4,000,000 Times and Is Mistress of a Thousand Faces." This article offers interesting information on motion picture acting and the role of the camera. In it, Lawrence talks about performing become movie cameras and mentions that her first moving picture was "Daniel Boone." In a time before sound film was commonly used, pantomime was an important skill and this article notes how this actress was able to use her facial expressions to convey many moods (hence the subtitle “Mistress of a Thousand Faces”) She emphasizes the importance of not looking directly at the motion picture camera. Perhaps most interesting is how often the actress was photographed. For every foot of moving picture there were "fourteen separate and distinct photographs" and in a typical film of about 1,000 feet, there were therefore 14,000 photographs. "This is one day's work!" the article says. Over the course of one year, she will play perhaps 300 roles and she will have been photograph 4,000,000 times. The article notes that she is known worldwide and that she receives "'Mash Notes' from the World Over." The article is encircled with ten different pictures of the actress showing different facial expressions. DA - March 20, 1910 KW - journalism illustrations celebrity celebrity culture actors acting magazines photography photography and visual communication motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines fan magazines magazines, fan ref, news motion pictures, and cameras motion pictures, and acting acting, and cameras acting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pantomime motion pictures, and movie stars movie stars movie stars, and cameras movie stars, and acting movie stars, and facial expression personality, and magnification of acting, and facial expression sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and stars (origins) illustrations newspapers, and illustrations women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women women personality actresses, and number of time photographed ref, CDT LB - 440 PY - 1910 SP - G7 ST - The Maude Adams of the Moving Picture Drama T2 - Chicago Daily Trubune TI - The Maude Adams of the Moving Picture Drama ID - 3340 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about the first moving pictures of the Arctic DA - Sept. 21, 1902 KW - history motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity ref, news new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel ref, news education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures ref, LAT LB - 490 PY - 1902 SP - 2 ST - Baldwin at London T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Baldwin at London ID - 3344 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the first moving pictures taken of the Arctic. The article's subtitle reads: "Arctic Explorer Gives Further Details of Voyage." DA - Sept. 21, 1902 KW - history motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity ref, news new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel ref, news education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures ref, CDT LB - 500 PY - 1902 SP - 14 ST - Baldwin Tells of Trip T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Baldwin Tells of Trip ID - 3345 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In this lecture, Dr. De Kennet showed a moving picture taken in Russia. DA - Jan. 24, 1899 KW - history motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity ref, news new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel ref, news education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures ref, LAT LB - 510 PY - 1899 SP - 14 ST - 'Heart of Russia'; Dr. De Kannet Lectures at the State Normal School T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - 'Heart of Russia'; Dr. De Kannet Lectures at the State Normal School ID - 3346 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that a film has been made of the Congo River: “The distance traversed was 5,000 miles, the longest journey through a savage country that has so far ever been made by a moving picture outfit, he [explorer James Barnes] said.” DA - May 28, 1914 KW - history motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity ref, news new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel ref, news ref, NYT LB - 520 PY - 1914 SP - 9 ST - Met Old Chief Lobo; Moving Picture Man Saw Stanley Guide in Africa T2 - New York Times TI - Met Old Chief Lobo; Moving Picture Man Saw Stanley Guide in Africa ID - 3347 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article comments that “The scope of the motion picture camera is unlimited. Not only can the little machine, probably twelve pounds in weight, with which the negatives for the films are taken, faithfully record everything that can be reproduced with photography, but by clever manipulation the films can be so doctored as to make pictures do the impossible. That is a sort of Irish bull, but it is true. For instance, the films can be so manipulated as to make a human being actually defy the laws of gravity; make a mere man turn a backward somersault over objects as high as the Washington Monument; even make the tiny house fly apparently juggle stick of cordwood and dumbbells incredibly large.” The article comments on the popularity and accessibility of movies: “The motion-picture theater is frequently spoken of as the poor man’s theater, probably because of the extraordinary cheapness of admission, but in all the big cities, as well as in Washington, the most refined of the social circle, the exclusive of the elite, may be found seated side by side with the poor man or the poor woman enjoying a motion-picture exhibit. One evening recently there were twenty-eight automobiles of the finest type lined up against the sidewalk on Pennsylvania avenue while those who came in them were enjoying a motion-picture show on the inside of one of the theaters. One alone, whose seating capacity is 168, had an actual attendance of 14,000 people in one week.” Color films are now possible, the article says: “The manufacturers of films have also succeeded in producing motion pictures in the natural colors of the objects. It is a most difficult and delicate undertaking to color the thousands of these miniature film pictures that go to make up a series, and yet it has been accomplished in a remarkable way.” The article goes on to say: “But it is not the trick pictures that the greatest interest lies. There are films that are instructive as well as entertaining; those that show foreign lands and the customs of the people; those that virtually take the audience to some far-away city or country and give a series of views of its industries…. “Pictures of this sort are classed as educational. One need not go abroad to see foreign countries; they are brought to his door by the motion picture.” On the relation between moving pictures and history, the article maintains: “Indeed, the development of the motion-picture film has called into play every conceivable factor necessary to the reproduction of historic, dramatic, and national incidents and events.” The subtitle to the article reads: "A Large Industry Developed by the Novel Entertainment System of Exchange of Films Saves Large Cost to Individual Theatre A Trust Now Formed." DA - Nov. 7, 1909 KW - theater stage sensationalism nationalism Los Angeles history class motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity ref, news new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel ref, news education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures nationalism and communication color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures nationalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and nationalism motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and motion pictures ref, news motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures class, and motion pictures motion pictures, and class motion pictures motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and sensationalism sensationalism, and cameras patriotism patriotism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and patriotism motion pictures, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures ref, LAT motion pictures, and magic motion pictures, and special effects special effects LB - 530 PY - 1909 SE - VI SP - 4 ST - Moving-Picture Manufacture. Ten Thousand Theaters Using the Picture Films T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Moving-Picture Manufacture. Ten Thousand Theaters Using the Picture Films ID - 3348 ER - TY - NEWS AB - During the lecture Holmes "regaled their eyes with richly colored stereopticon views of the blood-red granite cliffs of Corsica and its picturesque villages and castles…” “The moving pictures at the close are of the best. The most laughable one given last night was that of Neapolitans eating macaroni, and the best was the dash to a fire by the Omaha department.” The subtitle of this article reads: "Takes an Audience at Central Music Hall on a ‘Cycling Trip Through Corsica’." DA - Nov. 20 1897 KW - history photography motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity ref, news new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel ref, news education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures photography and visual communication ref, CDT LB - 540 PY - 1897 SP - 4 ST - Lecture by Burton Holmes T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Lecture by Burton Holmes ID - 3349 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about efforts to spread "the name, fame and productiveness of California" and notes the work of public lecturers equipped with "mving-picture machines and many thousand feet of films descriptive of California" The subtitle to the article reads: "Many Homeseekers Expected from World Over; The Moving Picture Machines Show Resources …." DA - July 25, 1911 KW - Los Angeles ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business motion pictures, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and motion pictures theaters theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures audiences audiences, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and audiences advertising and public relations motion pictures, and advertising advertising, and motion pictures patriotism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and patriotism patriotism education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures ref, LAT advertising LB - 16000 PY - 1911 SE - II SP - 5 ST - Traffic Record. Are Booming Country T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Traffic Record. Are Booming Country ID - 3354 ER - TY - NEWS AB - An account of how "Pretty Scrub Girls Invade the Loop" in Chicago. DA - Sept. 27, 1914 KW - fame celebrity photography, and celebrity culture photography photography and visual communication celebrity, and motion pictures celebrity culture motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography ref, news privacy women women, and photography photography, and women fame motion pictures, and fame fame, and motion pictures photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality personality celebrity, and photography photography, and celebrity actors acting ref, CDT LB - 610 PY - 1914 SE - G SP - 3 ST - Everything Grist for Camera Mill T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Everything Grist for Camera Mill ID - 3356 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "‘Movies’ Made Beneath Surface of Bahama Harbor Shown at Natural History Museum; Men Lowered in Big Globe; One of the Inventors Fought and Killed Man-Eating Shark in Front of Camera." DA - Aug. 12, 1914 KW - motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space ref, news cameras cameras, and movement cameras, and portability motion pictures, and movement ref, NYT LB - 630 PY - 1914 SP - 9 ST - See First Pictures Taken Under Water T2 - New York Times TI - See First Pictures Taken Under Water ID - 3358 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article draws distinctions between the motion picture and the live stage. “The stage has always been handicapped by the fact that you can’t tell the story as the novelist can." (8) It considers motion pictures and their relation to modernity. “We are just at the dawn of the moving picture as a feature of modern life. As has been said, its utilization in the drama is only a thing of five years. Sociological and philanthropic organizations are beginning to make use of it in a limited way. One enthusiastic moving picture man looks forward to its use in the schools. (11) “‘Why not?’ said he. ‘Picture are the best way of impressing things on the mind of a child. Properly speaking, there is no other methods. I read about Niagara Falls in my school geography, but I read only words. When I saw the falls it was a revelation to me. If it had been put on the screen in the classroom I would have understood what the teaching was telling me. (11) "'Then think of the possibilities in the way of teaching history and, for that matter, of teaching almost any branch. There is no end to them.’ “There is, by the way, a strong demand for historical plays…. Many other scenes in European and American history which have defied production on the regular stage because of intrinsic difficulties offer no obstacle to the moving-picture man. The education possibilities of this new form of drama are seemingly limitless. (11) “It is impossible to conjecture how great a part it may play in our civilization by, say, the dawn of the twenty-first century.” (quotations, p. 11) This article notes that movie actors lack fame but that this state of affairs is changing. Notes the creation of a fan magazine, Motion Picture Magazine. As movies become more technically sophisticated, they will rival the stage. Up to this point, theater managers treated movies as only an “interlude” to the live performance on stage. The article notes the limitations of the stage and the advantages of film e.g., movies are more flexible that the stage and have better scenery. There is better pay in the movies. However, movie actors can use their voices and must use pantomime. The article mentions efforts to add sound to moving pictures. It says movies are a way to teach history. Movies are “just at the dawn … as a feature of modern life.” (11) DA - Aug. 20, 1911 KW - theater stage journalism history children celebrity photography, and celebrity culture actors acting actors acting magazines photography photography and visual communication celebrity, and motion pictures celebrity culture motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space ref, news cameras cameras, and movement cameras, and portability motion pictures, and movement history and new media education motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and education theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures fame personality motion pictures, and fame actors, and fame motion pictures, and actors news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines fan magazines magazines, fan celebrity, and photography photography, and celebrity motion pictures, and stars (origins) motion pictures, and geography geography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and travel children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children ref, NYT quotations, and movies as interlude for stage geography quotations LB - 650 PY - 1911 SE - SM SP - 8, 11 ST - Is the Moving Picture to be the Play of the Future? T2 - New York Times TI - Is the Moving Picture to be the Play of the Future? ID - 3360 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Pictures that can be magnified 2,000,000 to 76,000,000 times, this article explains in 1909. “Urban has also perfected a device for micro-photography in connection with moving picture machines that enables him to display thousands of things that no one ever sees with his naked eye. He has now reached the point where he can magnify things from 2,000,000 to 76,000,000 times. In order to do this, it was necessary to turn a 2,000-candle power light on the speck that he wanted to photograph, and this without generating enough heat to spoil the speck.” Other examples of new photography are given. This article provides insight into the status of color photography in 1909. In England, Albert Smith, who worked for Charles Urban, worked on making moving pictures that record colors. Parallels drawn to the way the phonograph captures sound. Notes that “colored moving pictures have for months been shown in three of the most important theatres of Europe at the Palace in London, at the Winter Garden in Berlin, and the Follies Bergera(?) in Paris. Every publication in the British Isles, as well as on the Continent, has testified to the fidelity with which black and white negatives have been made to reproduce all of the colors of the rainbow but the American moving-picture man was skeptical. He didn’t believe colored pictures could be made that way.” Demonstration given at Madison Square Garden of a vase of flowers, motor boat on open water, and other scenes. The film reproduced a rainbow over Potomac Falls. “And it wasn’t a splash out of all the point pots. It was an infinitely delicate commingling of colors -- a rainbow!” “Mr. Smith, the inventor of the color process … is a short, compact little Englishman of middle age, who has had one of the greatest honors that Englishmen hope to get. He has been commanded to appear before the King” where he “showed his colored moving pictures to Edward VII, and was told he was all right.” Smith discussed Urban’s efforts at producing education films. “His films are flying text books.” They cover almost every subject science, medicine. Notes film important to teaching the art of surgery or art of war. Urban has also perfect micro-photography that can magnify things from 2 to 76 million times. Geographic and historic scenes also shown. The subtitle to this article reads: "Their Recent Developments and Services to Commerce. Some Interesting Experiments With the Camera That Open Up Suggestive Fields Of Usefulness in Science and Photography." DA - Dec. 12, 1909 KW - photography photography and visual communication quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space ref, news cameras cameras, and movement cameras, and portability motion pictures, and movement education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and education color non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and color films motion pictures, and Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures non-USA, and motion pictures motion pictures, and non-USA education capitalism education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and education motion pictures, and business color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures photography and visual communication motion pictures, and science war war, and motion pictures motion pictures, and war motion pictures, and medicine microphotography photography, and microscope photography, and microphotography ref, NYT kinemacolor kinemacolor, and George Albert Smith kinemacolor, and Charles Urban photography, and pictures magnified 76 million LB - 660 PY - 1909 SE - SM SP - 4 ST - The New Moving Pictures T2 - New York Times TI - The New Moving Pictures ID - 3361 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Novelist Rex Beach is quoted in this article saying that “the tendency of the moving picture has been to make authors visualize more clearly than ever before their characters and scenes that they are writing about.” The article's subtitle reads: "Rex Beach Says They Have Made Authors More Careful Regarding Actuality and Vividness." DA - July 11, 1915 KW - theater stage motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing ref, news motion pictures, and writers theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 670 PY - 1915 SE - SM SP - 9 ST - 'Movies' Improve Our Fiction T2 - New York Times TI - 'Movies' Improve Our Fiction ID - 3362 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article estimates that 3.45 trillion photos, or 40,909 miles of films shown daily in the 18,000 movies theaters. “Say that the 18,000 operators throughout the United States run through the machines three 1,000-foot reels of film four times daily, there would at that rate be thrown upon the screen 216,000,000 feet of film. And when it is remembered that each thousand feet of film contains 16,000 single pictures, we arrive at a total of 3,456,000,000,000 complete pictures. [editor's note: Surely a miscalculation. 3.45 billion pictures seems more accurate.] Reduce the number of feet of film to miles, and we have a total of 40,909 miles.” (quotation, X4) It discusses the improvement in films and notes the rise of good quality educational films, many of which deal with religion. It talks about educational films dealing with army and navy (military) life. It also says the moving picture “drives away dull care from many who can afford no more expensive recreation. While it is accomplishing this it is also sowing seeds of knowledge into minds vulnerable to such an entry only. This article says that previously theaters had been “showing crimes in their horrible nakedness,” (X4) but now the censors had cleaned up content and now “seldom” does a movie show anything “harmful.” (X4) The article goes on to say that movies are improving, and it gives examples of the number of educational films that deal with religion, sociology, local government, army and navy life, customs, folklore, medicine, science, technology, and history (says 272 films make up history films). Movies will not replace books in schools but will “revolutionize our educational system. (quotation, p. X4) Says the moving picture “drives away dull care from many who can afford no more expensive recreation. While it is accomplishing this it is also sowing seeds of knowledge into minds vulnerable to such an entry only. “The same lessons in printed form would probably reach a tenth of those brought under the spell of the ‘movies.’” ( X5) Quoting from a letter from a scenario editor of a large film company: “‘What the outcome of moving pictures will be no man can predict. Their vast possibilities have not even been touched upon. In all lines of learning they have become an eminent factor and the surface of development has hardly been scratched.’” (X5) With regard to movie theaters the article says that “the country is fairly studded with these little theaters. Figuratively speaking, they have sprung up over night, reminding you of so many mushrooms which bob up before your eyes as you walk through the field after a heavy rain.” 1,200 movie theaters in NYC; 18,000 in US and 10.8 million attend daily. Movies are now in every village. C1 - 4, 5 DA - Sept. 7, 1913 KW - censorship censorship words vs. images photography motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space photography and visual communication cameras photography, 3.4 trillion images vs. words education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures religion religion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, as mushrooms theaters, and motion pictures metaphors democracy motion pictures, and democracy democracy, and motion pictures motion pictures, and printing press motion pictures, as positive force military communication military communication, and motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings censorship, and crime motion pictures, and crime metaphors, and mushrooms motion pictures, and New York New York, and motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures audiences audiences, and theaters theaters, and audiences motion pictures, and attendance ref, NYT LB - 680 PY - 1913 SE - X ST - Amazing Developments in the Moving Picture Field T2 - New York Times TI - Amazing Developments in the Moving Picture Field ID - 3363 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "Lieut. Webb of Mail Service Will Carry Operator and Camera." DA - July 2, 1918 KW - motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space ref, news motion pictures, and travel ref, NYT LB - 700 PY - 1918 SP - 11 ST - To Take Movies Up in Air T2 - New York Times TI - To Take Movies Up in Air ID - 3365 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses how the moving picture camera works. “The projecting machines known as the variscope, magniscope, vitascope, biograph, cinematograph, and similar names consist essentially of a bright light, some lenses, and a means of moving the film across in front of the light.” Filming the recent prize fight in Carson City required about 8,000 feet of film using at least 125,000 pictures. Types of scenes filmed: “The picture of Dearborn street in the busy hours is only one of the numerous subjects constantly being reproduced by the moving picture machine.” “Photographing a moving train is one of the hardest of the views attempted so far by the moving-picture artists, and the great success met has encouraged them to try many other pieces of rapid motion. The wave rushing over the breakwaters along the lake shore, the exhibition of blooded animals at the Stock-Yards, snowball fights, fire drills,” and many others. E. H. Amet, whose moving picture machine is discussed, “is convinced that the production of moving pictures is yet in its infancy, and hopes for great things. The introduction of some successful method of color photography, such as that reported to have been discovered across the water, will greatly add to the attractiveness of the views. “By a possible phonographic attachment these colored views may be run with the sounds which actually accompany them. Speeches, songs from prima donnas, the roar of a waterfall, or a train, or even the noise of a crowded street would then become possible adjunct to these lifelike representations, resulting ultimately in one of the greatest sources of popular amusement ever devised.” Article notes efforts for censorship and prevention of showing film of prize fight in Carson City, NV. “It is the kinetosopic pictures of the recent prizefight at Carson City that are so agitating the lawmakers. In Illinois, Minnesota, Massachusetts, New York, and Washington bills have been introduced looking to the prohibition of these inoffensive appearing bits of transparent film.” The subtitle for this article reads: "Done Here in the West; Factory Making Much-Talked-Of Views in Waukegan; Camera Turned by Crank; Films Sixty Feet Long Easily Developed and Printed; Machines for Exhibiting Them." DA - April 4, 1897 KW - Chicago, IL photography motion pictures, and sports ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures photography, and number of pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and boxing quotations motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures photography and visual communication ref, CDT motion pictures, and motion motion pictures, and movement LB - 710 PY - 1897 SP - 37 ST - Move As If Alive; How Pictures That Show Life Are Now Produced T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Move As If Alive; How Pictures That Show Life Are Now Produced ID - 3366 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses Thomas Edison's vitascope. It has been popular. "Night after night numbers of people have gone to the Orpheum at about 10 o'clock, going with the sole object in view of seeing the wonderful moving pictures with their startling similarity to real life. The mystery in which it is shrouded doubtless, the more interesting to the public." DA - July 12, 1896 KW - ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Thomas Edison vitascope Edison, Thomas, and vitascope quotations audiences motion pictures, and audiences ref, LAT LB - 720 PY - 1896 SP - 9 ST - A Mysterious Invention; Precautions to Keep the Vitascope a Profound Mystery T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - A Mysterious Invention; Precautions to Keep the Vitascope a Profound Mystery ID - 3367 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This is a humorous story about a woman who goes to movies and sees film of herself being arrested by the traffic cop. DA - Jan. 18, 1914 KW - ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space ref, LAT LB - 730 PY - 1914 SE - VIII SP - 5 ST - Mazie the Motor Maid T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Mazie the Motor Maid ID - 3368 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Commenting on the impact of motion pictures, this article says that “So great an influence have moving pictures become in the home that it is difficult to appraise the extent of their hold upon the minds and the hearts, the morals and the fashions of us all. Pictures are well-nigh as vital to our thought and entertainment as oxygen and hydrogen to the water we drink and the air we breathe. As an influence they rank with the churches, the schools and the newspapers.” The rest of this article continues in the same vein. DA - Oct. 7, 1917 KW - home ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space values motion pictures, and values home and new media motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures motion pictures, and social influence children children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children media effects motion pictures, and media effects media effects, and motion pictures ref, LAT children, and media LB - 740 PY - 1917 SE - II SP - 6 ST - The Pictures and Their Part in Modern Life T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - The Pictures and Their Part in Modern Life ID - 3369 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article comments on the showing of the first moving pictures in Chicago. “A Paris photographer, M. Promio, was in Chicago last week taking photographs for this tiny piece of mechanism that is now delighting thousands of Chicago people by throwing upon canvas lifelike, moving pictures of the streets, of battles, of pageants, of love making, of children at play, and almost everything else that goes to make up the life of the world.” “During the entire scene not a movement is lost. Every shade of action is faithfully portrayed and the picture is charming. “The vitascope can reproduce photographs in colors and does so on occasion. One of the best pictures of this kind is that of two girls dancing. One of them holds a big, red parasol. They dance in perfect time and their movements are graceful and pleasing. The girl with the parasol suddenly drops it an instant later two heads are seen but only one body and one pair of legs. One has jumped upon the back of the other, who keeps up the dance and gives a very cleaver imitation of the two-headed girl. “The cinematographe has been exhibited in every country in Europe, although it was first shown to the public on Christmas day, 1895. It was brought to this country last June. The vitascope has never been shown abroad, but it will be taken to Paris and London this year.” The subtitle of this article reads: "Marvelous Productions of Cinematographe and Vitascope. Two Thousand Photographs Necessary to Produce a Single Picture of Minute’s Duration How the Photographs Are Made and Prepared for the Machines and Afterwards Reproduced on Canvas, Lifelike in Size and Action and Color." DA - Oct. 5, 1896 KW - ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Thomas Edison vitascope Edison, Thomas, and vitascope quotations audiences motion pictures, and audiences color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color cinematograph color, and vitascope vitascope, and color France Great Britain non-USA France, and motion pictures Great Britain, and motion pictures motion pictures, and number of photographs motion pictures, and speed ref, CDT LB - 750 PY - 1896 SP - 6 ST - Show Life and Beauty T2 - Chicago Daily TI - Show Life and Beauty ID - 3370 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Virtually every vaudeville theater has its on moving picture machine, according to this piece, and during the past year the subject matter of moving pictures had changed from natural scenes of water falls and going over bridges, to scenes in which comedy played a large role. It also discuss how movie illusions are created (chicken and egg trick; “Impossible Bathing”; “The Tramp’s Miraculous Escape”; “The Photographer’s Mishap”; and “One Man Orchestra.” “Of late nearly all the pictures produced have been either of a comic or a mysterious nature. Where a year or so ago those ‘in front’ were treated to realistic scenes of Niagara Falls, a trip across Brooklyn Bridge, or a view taken from the locomotive of an English railway train, they will now be sow with humorous exaggeration how Mrs. O’Grady deals with her husband when he come unsteadily home on Saturday night minus his wages, or they will be permitted to gaze upon the remarkable spectacle of a clown ambling about the canvas, detaching his head or limbs at will…. “It is perhaps regrettable that such a wonderful invention as the reproduction of life motion by aid of the camera should have degenerated into a mere toy, but shrewd caterers to the amusement-loving public know that it order to interest they must amuse and mystify at the same time. Hence the retirement of the scenic view and the advancement of the clown with the accommodating organism.” It notes that some of the illusions, such as “the clown with the adjustable head” had been performed on stage. “Views on the order of the clown with the adjustable head are of course made by the aid of mirrors. The same thing is done on the stage, and is familiar to every one. What appears on canvas is simply a photograph of what appears on the stage, only in many cases the mystic effect can be greatly intensified by the way it which the camera may be juggled, so to speak.” This article's subtitle reads: "Recent Development of Mysterious and Puzzling Photographs Apparent Impossibilities Accomplished by the Camera How the Egg-and-Chicken Illusion Is Produced." DA - June 29, 1902 KW - theater stage ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology motion pictures, and magic motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and motion pictures ref, NYT special effects LB - 760 PY - 1902 SP - 25 ST - New Things in Moving Pictures T2 - New York Times TI - New Things in Moving Pictures ID - 3371 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses Thomas Edison's new invention, the Kinetoscope. DA - Oct. 18, 1894 KW - theater stage ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and new art form Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures Edison, Thomas, and kinetoscope motion pictures, and Thomas Edison non-USA motion pictures, and Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures ref, Times London Great Britain LB - 770 PY - 1894 SP - 4 ST - The Kinetoscope T2 - The Times [London] TI - The Kinetoscope ID - 3372 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that a film showing reptilian life took three years to make and reptiles filmed at night under electric light because that was the only way they could be made to act naturally. DA - Oct. 23, 1914 KW - science photography photography and visual communication quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing ref, news motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures science, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science electricity electricity, and lighting lighting, and electricity lighting ref, NYT LB - 16220 PY - 1914 SP - 18 ST - Moving Pictures Show Reptile Life T2 - New York Times TI - Moving Pictures Show Reptile Life ID - 3373 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This piece discusses a new development in making moving pictures. DA - Dec. 23, 1911 KW - ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Thomas Edison vitascope Edison, Thomas, and vitascope audiences kinetoscope ref, Times London LB - 790 PY - 1911 SP - 11 ST - A New Cinematograph Process T2 - The Times [London] TI - A New Cinematograph Process ID - 3374 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about the early reaction from audiences to Thomas Edison's invention of moving pictures. DA - April 24, 1896 KW - ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Thomas Edison vitascope Edison, Thomas, and vitascope audiences kinetoscope audiences motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 800 PY - 1896 SP - 5 ST - Edison’s Vitascope Cheered. ‘Projecting Kinetescope’ Exhibited for First Time at Koster & Bail’s T2 - New York Times TI - Edison’s Vitascope Cheered. ‘Projecting Kinetescope’ Exhibited for First Time at Koster & Bail’s ID - 3375 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about the early reaction from audiences to Thomas Edison's invention of moving pictures. DA - April 4, 1896 KW - ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Thomas Edison vitascope Edison, Thomas, and vitascope audiences kinetoscope audiences motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures ref, LAT LB - 810 PY - 1896 SP - 2 ST - Edison’s New Invention….Life-size Figures Made to Walk and Dance…. T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Edison’s New Invention….Life-size Figures Made to Walk and Dance…. ID - 3376 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is on what was shown on Edison’s Vitascope. See also Charles Musser's, Emergence of Cinema (p. 122) on the dates the Vitascope premiered in various cities. DA - June 28, 1896 KW - ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Thomas Edison vitascope Edison, Thomas, and vitascope audiences kinetoscope audiences motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures ref, CDT LB - 820 PY - 1896 SP - 36 ST - Hopkins’ South Side Theater T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Hopkins’ South Side Theater ID - 3377 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article mentions that "Picture of a Kiss" was shown on vitascope. DA - July 19, 1896 KW - ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Thomas Edison vitascope Edison, Thomas, and vitascope audiences kinetoscope audiences motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures sexuality ref, CDT LB - 830 PY - 1896 SP - 31 ST - Hopkins' South Side Theater T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Hopkins' South Side Theater ID - 3378 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about what was shown at the premiere of Vitascope in Niagara Fall -- e.g., a kissing scene, and a “graceful woman who danced in skirts.” DA - July 10, 1896 KW - ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Thomas Edison vitascope Edison, Thomas, and vitascope audiences kinetoscope audiences motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures sexuality ref, LAT LB - 840 PY - 1896 SP - 36 ST - At the Playhouses T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - At the Playhouses ID - 3379 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article mentions a new, more powerful light, Vitascope, and also Nikola Tesla. DA - May 23, 1896 KW - ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Thomas Edison vitascope Edison, Thomas, and vitascope audiences kinetoscope audiences motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures Tesla, Nikola lighting motion pictures, and lighting ref, LAT LB - 850 PY - 1896 SP - 6 ST - Edison's New Light T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Edison's New Light ID - 3380 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses a movie theater that was once an opera house. “Where once he heard the voice of Melba, of Schumann-Heink and Calve one sits and looks at something he cannot hear at all. At the Majestic, where once Sothern and Marlowe reigned, where Mantell towered in strength, where Faversham and Forbes-Robertson moved with grace, and Nazimova blazed like a gem, we are now to see a procession of shadows. They are interesting shadows, but we shall miss the compelling magnetism and vibrant voices of the rich personalities who have in the past brought life to the stage of that beautiful house. It is the mood of the public to people their erstwhile temples of dramas with these ghosts of today. For some of us this will be like returning to a beautiful home, where we once lived in happiness, to find our garden gone to seed and indifferent renters occupying the property that once we cherished. On the other hand, the moving pictures have made their place with us and that place is too large to be confined in houses of small capacity.” The reference to silent film "ghosts" brings to mind Maksim Gorky's similar comments on seeing silent film, discussed in Matt K. Matsuda, The Memory of the Modern, p. 175. DA - April 7, 1915 KW - theater stage celebrity ref, secondary photography, and celebrity culture words vs. images photography photography and visual communication ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space images vs. words theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures personality motion pictures, as shadows history and new media Gorky, Maksim personality motion pictures, and personality motion pictures, and fame celebrity, and motion pictures celebrity culture photography, and celebrity celebrity, and photography metaphors actors acting ref, LAT actors, and shadows actors, as ghosts metaphors metaphors, and actors as ghosts metaphors, and actors as shadows history LB - 870 PY - 1915 SE - II SP - 4 ST - The ‘Movie’ Movement T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - The ‘Movie’ Movement ID - 3382 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about the "seeing telegraph" and sending photographs over telegraph lines. “Not long ago a poplar writer on electricity made this startling prediction of coming wonders: ‘Lovers conversing at a great distance will hold each other as in the flesh. Doctors will examine patients’ tongues in another city, and the poor will enjoy visual trips whenever their fancy inclines. In hot weather, too, Alpine glaciers and artic snows will be made visible in sweltering cities, and when piercing northeast winds do blow, we shall gloat over tropical vistas of orchids and palms.’ “This is no dream. The new ‘telephotograph’ invention of Dr. Arthur Korn, Professor of Physics in Munich University, is a distinct step nearer the realization of all this, and he assures us that ‘television,’ or seeing by telegraph, is merely a question of a year or two with certain improvements in apparatus.” This article predicts the arrival of television soon. The article's subtitle reads: "Professor Korn has Triumphantly Succeeded in Transmitting Portraits over Long Distances by Wire. Experiments in France and Germany Conclusive. Description of the Marvellous [sic] Instrument." DA - Feb. 24, 1907 KW - post office journalism future magazines, and photography facsimile magazines photography ref, news electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and photography photography, and electricity photography and visual communication motion pictures electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines television telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph future and science fiction telephotography Korn, Arthur, and telephotography seeing at a distance modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity non-USA Germany Germany, and photography by wire Germany, and telegraph telegraph, and Germany facsimile, and telegraph telegraph, and facsimile duplicating technologies postal service postal service, and facsimile facsimile, and postal service postal service, and telegraph telegraph, and postal service ref, NYT LB - 910 PY - 1907 SE - SM SP - 7 ST - Sending Photographs by Telegraph T2 - New York Times TI - Sending Photographs by Telegraph ID - 3386 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Places that show moving picture have been drawing so much power it was not possible to light all the street lights. DA - Oct. 25, 1911 KW - electricity theaters electricity, and theaters motion pictures electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity ref, news modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing ref, NYT LB - 940 PY - 1911 SP - 1 ST - Prefers Shows to Light. Newton, N. J. Couldn’t Have Moving Pictures and Light Streets, Too T2 - New York Times TI - Prefers Shows to Light. Newton, N. J. Couldn’t Have Moving Pictures and Light Streets, Too ID - 3389 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The New York Giants baseball team watched moving pictures of the World Series from that fall. The article's subtitle says: "Moving Pictures of the World’s Series Thrown on a Screen at the Imperial. Everything Was Baseball." DA - Oct. 29, 1911 KW - celebrity celebrity culture ref, news motion pictures, and sports motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and baseball baseball, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 950 PY - 1911 SP - 13 ST - Giants at Dinner See a Camera Game T2 - New York Times TI - Giants at Dinner See a Camera Game ID - 3390 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Commenting on the historical evolution of motion pictures, this article says: “In the beginning the moving picture play was not thought of, the first pictures being photographic representations of ordinary life. The idea of telling a story by means of pictures came later, but early attempts at this were confined to slap-stick comedy. Then producers turned to serious work and sought to make screen plays that should have real dramatic and spectacular value, and some of them sometimes have succeeded tremendously.” DA - May 19, 1918 KW - theater stage ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 960 PY - 1918 SP - 53 ST - The Movies Are Forty T2 - New York Times TI - The Movies Are Forty ID - 3391 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article compares cinema with printing press. It is also more accessible to masses; more “spaciousness” that stage. It can show things not possible on stage; it has a magical quality. In 1910, this article estimates that in Chicago there were 650 moving picture theaters and another 50 vaudeville houses that show movies. It costs $10,000 to produce movie in Chicago; perhaps 150,000 daily attendance in 1910 that brings in $12,000 daily. The article predicts that there will be motion pictures in color and with sound. This article claims, rather naively, that movies will have permanence of paintings and statues. DA - Nov. 23, 1910 KW - theater stage magic history history Chicago, IL metaphors photography ref, news motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and printing press motion pictures, and magic motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago color color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures photography and visual communication sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business Chicago, and motion pictures motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures audiences audiences, and theaters theaters, and audiences motion pictures, and attendance ref, CDT magic, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magic special effects LB - 980 PY - 1910 SE - A SP - 14 ST - Moving Picture Drama of People T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Moving Picture Drama of People ID - 3393 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes differences between the stage play and the movie. Live plays are only given occasionally while the movie is shown constantly; movies appeal to millions who never read books. The article also discusses a different class of people who attend movies. It makes other points such as acting is a “wonderful business.” It considers acting before a machine -- more has to be expressed by pantomime. An actor says "'Yes, the old order changeth. Melodrama belongs to the dark ages now, and this thing [moving pictures] has come to stay.’” DA - March 20, 1910 KW - theater stage class ref, news motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and class class, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 990 PY - 1910 SE - SM SP - 7 ST - Moving Pictures Sound Melodrama’s Knell T2 - New York Times TI - Moving Pictures Sound Melodrama’s Knell ID - 3394 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article describes a device that combines the gramophone and moving picture, the “theatorium,” presents plays without actors. The subtitle of this article reads: "Charles H. Perry Perfects Deal for Use of the ‘Theatorium’ in Leading Houses; the Shuberts Take a Hand; Shakespeare’s Plays, ‘Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde,’ and Other Dramas to be Presented without Actors." DA - April 13, 1908 KW - theater stage ref, news motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures gramophone gramophone, and motion pictures motion pictures, and gramophone sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 1000 PY - 1908 SP - 7 ST - Plays on the Stage by Machinery Alone T2 - New York Times TI - Plays on the Stage by Machinery Alone ID - 3395 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In Germany, there was an effort to confine movies to scientific and educational areas and to keep it out of drama. “Kintopps,” as they were called there, had “brought the theatre business to the brink of ruin.” Actors were being tempt away from stage by lure of high salaries. This article's subtitle reads: "Theatre Managers, Alarmed at the Invasion, Call for United Defense of the Drama; Leading Actress Deserts; Tempted by Big Salary, She Plays for the Picture Men in a Stirring Lake Drama." DA - March 24, 1912 KW - theater stage actors acting ref, news theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures Germany Germany, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Germany non-USA motion pictures, and stage actors actors acting ref, NYT motion pictures LB - 1010 PY - 1912 SE - C SP - 5 ST - Moving Picture War Starts in Germany T2 - New York Times TI - Moving Picture War Starts in Germany ID - 3396 ER - TY - NEWS AB - TThe salaries of movie actors are much higher than the pay given to stage performers. DA - Nov. 13, 1913 KW - theater stage actors acting ref, news motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and stage actors motion pictures, and salaries actors acting ref, NYT LB - 1020 PY - 1913 SP - 7 ST - Film Actors Thrive; Dyer Says Some Earn as Much as $500 a Week T2 - New York Times TI - Film Actors Thrive; Dyer Says Some Earn as Much as $500 a Week ID - 3397 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article comments on the type of people who attend the 5-cent theaters. “The body of the house was filled with men and women largely of the class to be found in the near north side region, in the middle of which the theater stands." The article also notes that near nudity in stage show “Mlle. Salomo.” “The scene was so baldly and openly an attempt to play on the lower tastes of the audience that when the curtain fell no one in the house had the temerity to applaud, and Salomo disappeared amid silence, which finally was broken by a man’s hoarse guffaw, followed by a hysterical giggle from one of the women in the gallery.” The article offers an unflattering description of the theaters. “In close proximity to the nickel theaters which infest the downtown district, many of them touched with vicious suggestiveness, there stand a number of more pretentious places of entertainment which outrival their less ostentatious neighbors in the vulgar spectacles they produce. These theaters in recent months have grown bold and unrestrained.” The subtitle of this article reads: "Some More Pretentious Theaters Have Just as Vicious Spectacles; Children Are Patrons; Theater on North Side Shows ‘Girl in the Pie’ and a ‘Salome’ Dance." DA - April 17, 1907 KW - immorality class children Chicago, IL censorship ref, news motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children motion pictures, and class class, and motion pictures sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sexuality nudity motion pictures, and nudity nudity, and motion pictures sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures quotations nudity nudity, and the stage theaters theaters, and 5-cent values, and theater values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values theater, and values values immorality, and theater immorality, and motion pictures motion pictures,and immorality motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and crime motion pictures, and class ref, CDT advertising and public relations theater LB - 1030 PY - 1907 SP - 2 ST - Variety Houses Like 5 Cent Kind T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Variety Houses Like 5 Cent Kind ID - 3398 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article comments on the filming of movies and how they are attended by live audiences. Violence is common in the storylines. “Have you a deadly enemy your wish ‘removed’? Entice him out to Western avenue, where more murders are committed per second and more kidnappings to the square yard than in any other place in the country.” These and many other similar scenes are enacted, not before live audiences, but in silence before the “moving picture machine.” The subtitle of this article reads: "Every Day In the Week, Heroes and Villains, the Woman in the Case, and a Company of Supernumeraries act In Pantomime Before the Moving Picture Machine." DA - May 3, 1908 KW - Chicago, IL actors acting ref, news motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and acting motion pictures, silent motion pictures, and pantomime violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences acting actors ref, CDT LB - 1040 PY - 1908 SE - F SP - 6 ST - Where Melodramas Are Produced Without an Audience T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Where Melodramas Are Produced Without an Audience ID - 3399 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article gives a description of open-air movie making in the area around Fort Lee, NJ. One scene involving clergy was interrupted by locals who protested. The subhead of this article reads: "Scenes That Never Come Before the Public An Open Air Performance." DA - Dec. 19, 1909 KW - actors acting ref, news motion pictures motion pictures, and New Jersey New Jersey, and motion pictures motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and acting motion pictures, silent motion pictures, and pantomime religion religion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences acting actors ref, NYT LB - 1050 PY - 1909 SE - SM SP - 11 ST - Woes of the Moving Picture Man T2 - New York Times TI - Woes of the Moving Picture Man ID - 3400 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This was a letter to the Editor of the New York Times from the Entertainment Director, the Educational Alliance. DA - May 1, 1911 KW - motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences ref, NYT LB - 1060 PY - 1911 SP - 10 ST - The Photoplay: It Has Achieved a Distinct Technique and Appeal to the Public T2 - New York Times TI - The Photoplay: It Has Achieved a Distinct Technique and Appeal to the Public ID - 3401 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Performer Geraldine [Farrar] comments on differences between live opera acting and film acting; projecting personality; how the gramophone and movies reach many more people that live stage. “‘I have done now,’ Miss Farrar answered, ‘what I have always wanted to do but could not because of the limitations of the operatic stage. To me the acting of a role has always appealed more strongly than the singing, but in opera one must use repression, and indicate while singing a few bars all the play of emotions that one may have a whole scene for in the photo drama. When ‘Carmen’ was produced at the Metropolitan there were things I wanted to do that were physically impossible on the operatic stage, so my Carmen was much like all the others. When you see my Carmen of the picture you will see my real Carmen, and some day I am gong to liven things up a bit at the opera. “‘Opera in America is for the very limited public, the public that can pay $6 for orchestra seats. The graphophone reaches a much larger public, and through it my voice has been carried to thousands who will never hear me sing. But the movies reach the millions, and so I have added a vast new public to the restricted one I had before. All of these millions can appreciate to a greater or less degree whatever art I have recorded for the screen; many of them probably could not appreciate my singing. For the eye registers more universally than the ear.’ “‘Would you advise other prima donnas to go in for movies?’ “'If the have the face and the figure, yes. The screen more surely than the operatic stage is for the artiste while she has youth and beauty and vitality. I have proved what I have always contended, that it is personality that counts whether in ‘Carmen’ on the screen or ‘Carmen’ on the stage.’” DA - Aug. 22, 1915 KW - theater stage history fame fame celebrity actors acting actors acting ref, news motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, silent motion pictures, and oratory fame celebrity culture motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and celebrity motion pictures, and stage actors celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures status of actors actors, and status of personality motion pictures, and personality personality, and motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures graphophone sound recording, and graphophone motion pictures, and opera ref, NYT LB - 1080 PY - 1915 SE - X SP - 4 ST - Our Geraldine Is Home Again from Movie Land T2 - New York Times TI - Our Geraldine Is Home Again from Movie Land ID - 3403 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article, written by Mr. De La Pointe of the Tribune's pictorial department, explains the process of illustrating a newspaper. "After the etching leaves the engraving room three complete processes are requisite before a copy of it appears on the cylindrical matrix from which possibly an enormous issue is printed." He then discusses electric engraving. Following La Point's commentary is a piece entitled "Photographic" (by "Stevens"?). It talks about "print production," "improved paper," "retouching machine," and "color photography." "The production of color negatives is still impracticable..... The discoverer of color-photography will rank with Daguerre." Just above this piece is P. J. Masterson's commentary on "The Newspaper Printing-Press." DA - April 27, 1890 KW - wood engraving journalism journalism magazines, and photography magazines photography news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving electricity electricity, and journalism journalism, and electricity electricity, and newspapers newspapers, and electricity illustrations, and newspapers newspapers, and illustrations newspapers, and electric engraving electric engraving newspapers, and printing speed (1890) color color, and photography photography, and color newspapers, and color color, and newspapers ref, CDT illustrations motion pictures LB - 16440 PY - 1890 SP - 36 ST - Newspaper Illustration T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Newspaper Illustration ID - 3404 ER - TY - NEWS AB - German author Dr. Karl Vollmoeller says movies don’t threatened the theater quoting him: “‘It is very interesting, but, after all, the moving-picture show has nothing to do with the theatre. There is no art about it.’” The subtitle of this article reads: "Famous German Author of ‘The Miracle’ Now in This Country Believes That a Dozen of Them Could be Dispensed with and Has Hopes that Moving Pictures Will Clear the Atmosphere." DA - April 12, 1914 KW - theater stage ref, news motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures critics motion pictures, and critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and new art form ref, NYT LB - 1120 PY - 1914 SE - SM SP - 8 ST - Far Too Many Theatres Here, Says Dr. Vollmoeller T2 - New York Times TI - Far Too Many Theatres Here, Says Dr. Vollmoeller ID - 3407 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that “Moving picture posters powerfully reinforce the attraction of moving pictures for their peculiar public and casual pedestrians who are not remotely interested in moving pictures stop to marvel at the amazing posters which simply obliterate every other feature of the surrounding neighborhood. Often the posters are atrocious in every detail that goes to form the subject and execution of a picture. There need no school of new art to challenge the world by means of sensation in line and color. Moving picture posters are postier than post art of any nomenclature whatsoever.” The article notes that the “underworld is a favorite theme of the moving picture poster.” Poster different from the content of the film; sensationalizes sex and infidelity. The article gives examples of suggestive phrasing. This article also appeared in the New York Times, May 25, 1913, p. X 4, under the title "Freak 'Movie' Posters: A Riot of Strange Art Advertises the Pictures at the 5-Cent Theatres." DA - May 4, 1913 KW - children Chicago, IL censorship photography advertising and public relations ref, news motion pictures advertising advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures violence, and advertising advertising, and violence posters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and posters censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings censorship, and movie posters children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, and movie advertising theaters, and posters posters, and theaters advertising, and movie theaters motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures ref, CDT color color, and movie posters color, and advertising advertising, and color color, and circus posters color, and posters posters LB - 1140 PY - 1913 SE - B SP - 4 ST - Gaudy Posters Lure to ‘Movies’ T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Gaudy Posters Lure to ‘Movies’ ID - 3409 ER - TY - NEWS AB - According to this piece, “Moving picture posters powerfully reinforce the attraction of moving pictures for their peculiar public and casual pedestrians who are not remotely interested in moving pictures stop to marvel at the amazing posters which simply obliterate every other feature of the surrounding neighborhood. Often the posters are atrocious in every detail that goes to form the subject and execution of a picture. There need no school of new art to challenge the world by means of sensation in line and color. Moving picture posters are postier than post art of any nomenclature whatsoever.” This article is a reprint of the article "Gaudy Posters Lure to 'Movies,' published in the Chicago Daily Tribune, May 4, 1913, p. B 4. DA - May 25, 1913 KW - children censorship photography advertising and public relations ref, news motion pictures advertising advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures violence, and advertising advertising, and violence posters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and posters censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings censorship, and movie posters children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, and movie advertising theaters, and posters posters, and theaters advertising, and movie theaters theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity color color, and movies posters advertising, and color color, and advertising ref, NYT posters LB - 1160 PY - 1913 SE - X SP - 4 ST - Freakish ‘Movie’ Posters. A Riot of Strange Art Advertises the Pictures at the 5-Cent Theatres T2 - New York Times TI - Freakish ‘Movie’ Posters. A Riot of Strange Art Advertises the Pictures at the 5-Cent Theatres ID - 3411 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that the “cameras recorded images of critical moments far more graphic than a writer’s pen could.” Such pictures “were found in much greater variety than had been expected.” It reports that the assassination of Prince Hirobumi Ito in Japan was captured by moving picture camera. Movie makers often use such film of actual events holding the showing of the film until a movie story could be invented to fit the pictures. The subtitle of the article reads: "Work of Camera Men with Presence of Mind to Press the Button at Critical Times." DA - Aug. 14, 1910 KW - journalism history magazines ref, news motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures cameras special effects motion pictures, and special effects Japan non-USA Japan, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Japan modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 1170 PY - 1910 SE - SM SP - 7 ST - Unusual Snapshots Taken at Thrilling Moments T2 - New York Times TI - Unusual Snapshots Taken at Thrilling Moments ID - 3412 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that special effects make it possible for one to enjoy “Alice in Wonderland” as a child again and “in life-size and startling realism.” Notes that live events are sometimes filmed by accident or chance and that movie stories are then build around these pictures. Talks about the technical qualities of the camera that makes tricks possible. It mentions double exposure of film. The article's subtitle reads: "Ingenious Devices Make It easy for a Man Apparently to Walk on the Ceiling, Climb Up the Side of a House and Work Other Impossibilities." DA - Aug. 21, 1910 KW - ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space special effects motion pictures, and special effects motion pictures, and magic cameras cameras, and special effects special effects, and cameras ref, NYT LB - 1180 PY - 1910 SE - SM SP - 11 ST - How Those Amusing Freak Moving Pictures Are Made T2 - New York Times TI - How Those Amusing Freak Moving Pictures Are Made ID - 3413 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with the moving pictures of the Jack Johnson-Jeffries 1910 heavyweight boxing match. The subtitle reads: "Official of Half Dozen Large Places Act Because of Race Hatred While Followed Contest; Plan Nation Wide War; Christian Endeavor Societies Will Urge Every Governor to Prevent All of Film Expositions." DA - July 6, 1910 KW - sensationalism children Chicago, IL censorship motion pictures, and sports ref, news motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and boxing motion pictures, and race motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures violence race race, and motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and sensationalism sensationalism, and cameras motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence ref, CDT LB - 1190 PY - 1910 SP - 1 ST - Cities Prohibit Fight Pictures T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Cities Prohibit Fight Pictures ID - 3414 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle reads: "Big Scene in ‘Quo Vadis’ in Which Christians Are Devoured, Required Nerve and Quickness in the Making Actors Trained but Had to Take Big Chances." DA - Aug. 31, 1913 KW - sensationalism ref, news motion pictures motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and sensationalism sensationalism, and cameras special effects, and motion pictures special effects motion pictures, and special effects religion religion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence ref, LAT LB - 1200 PY - 1913 SE - III SP - 1 ST - Camera Men Dare Death in Arena with Lions T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Camera Men Dare Death in Arena with Lions ID - 3415 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "Matador Is of Straw, but the Steer Is Alive, and Having Been Goaded to Frenzy Nearly Kills a Cowboy Who Falls Into the Arena." DA - Nov. 22, 1898 KW - sensationalism ref, news motion pictures motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and sensationalism sensationalism, and cameras special effects, and motion pictures special effects motion pictures, and special effects violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence ref, CDT LB - 1210 PY - 1898 SP - 1 ST - Bull Fight Is Held at the Stock-Yards for Moving Pictures T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Bull Fight Is Held at the Stock-Yards for Moving Pictures ID - 3416 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This articles reports that 10,000 to 20,000 people watched as a movie company filmed a fake train wreck. The article's subtitle reads: "Four Players Nearly Drown After Engine and Cars Fall Forty Feet from Trestle. Train Plunges Too Far. 10,000 Mistake Actor’s Cries for Part of Drama Heavy Loss in Spoiled Film." DA - Sept. 28, 1914 KW - sensationalism ref, news motion pictures motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and sensationalism sensationalism, and cameras special effects, and motion pictures special effects motion pictures, and special effects violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence audiences motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures ref, LAT LB - 1240 PY - 1914 SP - 13 ST - Film Train Wreck Almost a Tragedy T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Film Train Wreck Almost a Tragedy ID - 3419 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that “The verb ‘to film’ having gained currency, it must be graciously admitted to the language.” DA - May 26, 1914 KW - ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and language language, and motion pictures ref, NYT language LB - 1250 PY - 1914 SP - 10 ST - The Verb ‘To Film’ T2 - New York Times TI - The Verb ‘To Film’ ID - 3420 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that the automobile is used to take movies even to the remotest village; where electricity is a problem, the car can be used as a generator. “The most remote hamlet can now have a moving picture show.” These were movies on farming made for/by universities and government. DA - Dec. 27, 1914 KW - motion pictures electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity electricity motion pictures, and automobiles automobiles, and motion pictures motion pictures, and rural areas modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space democracy motion pictures, and democracy democracy, and motion pictures ref, news ref, NYT automobiles LB - 1260 PY - 1914 SE - X SP - 5 ST - ‘Movies’ by Auto Now; Novel Scheme Uses Car Motor to Show Films in Rural Districts T2 - New York Times TI - ‘Movies’ by Auto Now; Novel Scheme Uses Car Motor to Show Films in Rural Districts ID - 3421 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article describes the showing of a moving picture in a tent. “At the rear of the tent is a moving picture machine mounted on a tripod, and a roll of film is brought from some hiding place of art treasure and put in place. Then follows the low hum of the machine, and more flickering upon the white muslin. The manipulator of the machine is equally erudite and recondite with the barker in front, and accompanies the pictures with an eloquence of description not to be imitated, except feebly, as I shall attempt to do. He keeps a few second ahead of the pictures that flash upon the muslin, so that no part of the thrilling story may be lost, and preliminary to the portrayal of the ‘tradegy’ he explains how the ‘great mori, spirchewel, and elevatin’ lesson’ came to be save to the world about as follows:…. “The machine stops buzzing, and we have see ‘de great mori tradegy’ in all its verisimilitude. We will come again and bring the children.” The subtitle for the article reads: "Moving Pictures, and a Barker with a Copious Imagination that Deals with History, Portray the Killing of Stanford White." DA - June 30, 1907 KW - history motion pictures electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity electricity motion pictures, and automobiles automobiles, and motion pictures motion pictures, and rural areas modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space democracy motion pictures, and democracy democracy, and motion pictures ref, news history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures ref, NYT automobiles LB - 1270 PY - 1907 SE - SM SP - 5 ST - The Latest ‘Triumph of Science’ for Western Towns T2 - New York Times TI - The Latest ‘Triumph of Science’ for Western Towns ID - 3422 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article comments on the reaction of city crowds to the realization they are being photographed. It also notes the presents of many new automobiles. “A moving picture concern had possession of one of these busses, which was stationed on the Fiftieth Street corner of Fifth Avenue, opposite St. Patrick’s Cathedral. The lens was aimed at the filing out. When this was over the operator aimed his machine at the sidewalk near the bus on the west side of the street and began to take of the parade in progress. The first few feet of films were good, but as soon as people saw they were getting into moving pictures they quit marching and stood at attention under the bull’s-eye of the camera. In a few minutes the whole block was jammed with persons struggling either to move on down the street or to supplant some one who was sticking to his position in the film with a pertinacity that bordered on selfishness. The congestion here lasted for more than half an hour and seriously blocked the parade. “One woman with a camera who attracted a good deal of attention leaned from a window in the fifth floor of a private residence, studied the crowd patiently as if picking out the genuine Poirets and Paquins and snapped her camera at intervals. A battalion of photographers lined up along the Vanderbilt and Sloane residence on Fifth Avenue, at Fifty-first and Fifty-second Streets, some of them even establishing their base on the stairs and in the entrance to the Vanderbilt residence. Probably there were more than a thousand photographers out altogether. Amateur and professional and the paraders, as a rule, walked right into the cameras’ mouths without flinching visibly.” The subtitle of the article reads: "Thousands of Visitors Out to See the Annual Spring Fashion Parade. Cameras Are Everywhere. Strong Desire of Many to Appear in Moving Pictures Blocks Traffic Near Cathedral." DA - April 13, 1914 KW - sensationalism fame celebrity celebrity culture photography ref, news cameras cameras, and sensationalism sensationalism, and cameras democracy motion pictures, and democracy democracy, and motion pictures motion pictures, and New York New York, and motion pictures photography and visual communication motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences celebrity culture cameras, and celebrity celebrity, and cameras fame, and cameras cameras, and fame LB - 1290 PY - 1914 SP - 5 ST - Fifth Avenue Gay with Easter Host T2 - New York Times TI - Fifth Avenue Gay with Easter Host ID - 3424 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article comments on the ability of motion pictures to influence tastes and fashions. “For with the moving picture business has come a new capriciousness to the public mind, a feverish desire for change which is new even to the amusement world. Old fashions in plays lasted two or three seasons; old fashions in books the same. Fashion, with the moving pictures, however, is not a question of two years, or one year. It has come to be only a question of months when a vogue for a certain character of film as utterly passes away as do the snows of yesteryear, or even more undecorative things. It is a strange phenomenon which, as has been said, the possessing competition of the moving-picture companies themselves created, without possibly considering its effect upon the public.” The article goes on to say that “… men search the furthest corners of the earth for ‘settings’ and appropriate scenery for thrilling dramatic event, and an organization, world-wide, like some mammoth industrial machine, spreads absorptive tentacles over the earth in the grim desire to discover new fashions of moving pictures for every civilized people.” This article also mentions changes brought to the coverage of news. Its subtitle reads: "Public Demands New Subjects Constantly Enormous Sums Spent in Organization and in Keeping Pace with Changing Requirements Element of Great Personal Danger in Getting Films." DA - Aug. 4, 1912 KW - nationalism journalism ref, news motion pictures advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space travel, and motion pictures motion pictures, and travel capitalism nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology values motion pictures, and values values, and motion pictures capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism media effects media effects, and audiences audiences, and media effects audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences ref, NYT advertising audiences transportation LB - 1300 PY - 1912 SE - SM SP - 14 ST - Quick Fashion Changes in Moving-Picture Plays T2 - New York Times TI - Quick Fashion Changes in Moving-Picture Plays ID - 3425 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the camera technology used to film the Fitzsimmons-Corbett heavyweight boxing match. The machine and filming equipment weighted over a ton. To reproduce the fight used over two miles of film. With 48 pictures to each foot, there were about 513,600 pictures. The article's subtitle reads: "Grand Opera-House Temporarily Closed to Set Up Reproduction of Fitzsimmons-Corbett Fight." DA - June 7, 1897 KW - ref, secondary motion pictures, and sports motion pictures, and boxing cameras cameras, and motion pictures cameras, and sports motion pictures, and cameras sports, and cameras motion pictures, and Veriscope motion pictures, and number of pictures ref, CDT motion pictures LB - 1310 PY - 1897 SP - 7 ST - Installing Veriscopic Exhibition T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Installing Veriscopic Exhibition ID - 3426 ER - TY - NEWS AB - On the death of comedian John Bunny, The Times of London wrote: “Though he is dead moving pictures will keep him before the public for many years.” DA - April 29, 1915 KW - theater stage history fame celebrity actors acting photography ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality Bunny, John Bunny, John, and celebrity culture theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures ref, Times London LB - 6330 PY - 1915 SP - 5 ST - Death of Mr. John Bunny: A Comedian of the Films T2 - The Times [London] TI - Death of Mr. John Bunny: A Comedian of the Films ID - 3430 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The New York Times commented on comedian John Bunny's fame as a result of film: “Thousands who had never heard him speak, in numberless [sic] towns he had never visited, recognized him as the living symbol of wholesome merriment. Therefore his loss will be felt all over the country, and the films which preserve his humorous personality in action may in time have a new value. It is a subject worthy of reflection, the value of a perfect record of a departed singer’s voice, of the photographic films perpetuating thee drolleries of a comedian who developed such extraordinary capacity for acting before the camera.” DA - April 27, 1915 KW - history fame celebrity actors acting photography ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality Bunny, John ref, NYT LB - 6340 PY - 1915 SP - 12 ST - The Loss of Bunny T2 - New York Times TI - The Loss of Bunny ID - 3431 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Commenting on moving pictures and their ability to portray things out of their natural context, this article says that “…The horses and the woman and the trees appear on the street as if they had nothing to do with the future or with the past…. Let alone the strange way in which isolating something from its context heightens the meaning, there is also the sheer excitement and curiosity of the sights themselves.” DA - April 9, 1913 KW - history ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures history, break with ref, Times London LB - 6360 PY - 1913 SP - 11 ST - Cinematographs: Truth and Fiction T2 - The Times [London] TI - Cinematographs: Truth and Fiction ID - 3433 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reprints excerpts from top three winner in essay contest on the experience of going to the movies. The winner talks about movies and vicarious travel, movies and the news, and says of movies and history (quoting from the essay): “‘Great characters who have swayed the destines of national reappear before me and I live in ages past, experiencing their glorious triumphs and ignominious defeats.’” The winner also says of movies that “‘They unlock the treasure house of Romance and keep its scared fire burning.’” The third place winner was a recent immigrant and talks about movies and Americanization. DA - Oct. 17, 1926 KW - nationalism journalism history motion pictures, and Americanism ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures Americanization Americanization, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Americanization news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 6370 PY - 1926 SE - X SP - 5 ST - Wins World Tour for Two with Essay on Pictures T2 - New York Times TI - Wins World Tour for Two with Essay on Pictures ID - 3434 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The article's subtitle is: "D. W. Griffith Says They Are Sure to Come with the Remarkable Advance in Film Productions." D. W. Griffith when asked if he was going to do away with words in his films responded that on the contrary that more attention than ever is given to words used and that in one of his films he put on the screen more than 7,000 words (four pages) from Woodrow Wilson’s History of the United States. Article says that Griffith’s annual salary was $100,000. DA - March 28, 1915 KW - history words vs. images photography ref, news presidents and new media photography and visual communication motion pictures Wilson, Woodrow Wilson, Woodrow, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Woodrow Wilson Griffith, D. W. history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures images vs. words ref, NYT LB - 6380 PY - 1915 SE - SM SP - 16 ST - Five Dollar Movies Prophesied T2 - New York Times TI - Five Dollar Movies Prophesied ID - 3435 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This newspaper ad for Birth of a Nation quotes Richard Harding Davis saying “For the first time in a theatre a battle scene has been presented as it actually is.” It quotes Griffith saying that this movie “will never be presented in any but the highest class theatres and at prices customarily charted in such playhouses.” DA - June 7, 1915 KW - history words vs. images photography ref, news presidents and new media photography and visual communication motion pictures Wilson, Woodrow Wilson, Woodrow, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Woodrow Wilson Griffith, D. W. history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures images vs. words war motion pictures, and war war, and motion pictures advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures Davis, Richard Harding, and Birth of a Nation ref, CDT advertising LB - 6390 PY - 1915 SP - 12 ST - [Newspaper advertisement for Birth of a Nation] T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - [Newspaper advertisement for Birth of a Nation] ID - 3436 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This ads says: “Night Photography of Battle Scenes, Invented and Perfected at a Cost of $12,000.” DA - June 20, 1915 KW - history words vs. images photography ref, news presidents and new media photography and visual communication motion pictures Wilson, Woodrow Wilson, Woodrow, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Woodrow Wilson Griffith, D. W. history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures images vs. words war motion pictures, and war war, and motion pictures advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures photography and visual communication lighting motion pictures, at night motion pictures, and lighting lighting, and motion pictures lighting, and photography photography, and lighting Birth of a Nation Griffith, D. W., and Birth of a Nation ref, CDT advertising LB - 6400 PY - 1915 SE - E SP - 4 ST - [Newspaper advertisement for Birth of a Nation] T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - [Newspaper advertisement for Birth of a Nation] ID - 3437 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Newspaper ad for Birth of a Nation: “Wonderful Artillery Duels, in Which Real Shells Costing $80 Apiece Were Used. Miles of Trenches. Thousands of Fighters 'War As It Actually Is.’” DA - June 27, 1915 KW - history words vs. images photography ref, news presidents and new media photography and visual communication motion pictures Wilson, Woodrow Wilson, Woodrow, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Woodrow Wilson Griffith, D. W. history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures images vs. words war motion pictures, and war war, and motion pictures advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures photography and visual communication Birth of a Nation Griffith, D. W., and Birth of a Nation ref, CDT advertising LB - 6410 PY - 1915 SE - E SP - 4 ST - [Newspaper advertisement for Birth of a Nation] T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - [Newspaper advertisement for Birth of a Nation] ID - 3438 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In this newspaper ad for Birth of a Nation is an excerpt from the New York American (Friday, March 5, 1915) which carried an article by Rev. Thomas B. Gregory entitled “‘Birth of a Nation’ True and Wonder Work.” Gregory wrote: “‘Seeing is believing’ and in this wonderful photo play we actually see the birth, growth and coronation of this King of Nations, this giant of the Powers of the earth a people compared with whom the Romans were but as pygmies. “As if by the waving of some magician’s wand the great scenes are, one after another, unrolled before us.” DA - March 14, 1915 KW - history words vs. images photography ref, news presidents and new media photography and visual communication motion pictures Wilson, Woodrow Wilson, Woodrow, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Woodrow Wilson Griffith, D. W. history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures images vs. words war motion pictures, and war war, and motion pictures advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures photography and visual communication Birth of a Nation Griffith, D. W., and Birth of a Nation quotations motion pictures, and magic special effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and special effects motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology motion pictures, and Thomas Gregory Birth of a Nation, and Thomas Gregory ref, NYT advertising special effects LB - 6420 PY - 1915 SE - X SP - 10 ST - [Newspaper advertisement for Birth of a Nation] T2 - New York Times TI - [Newspaper advertisement for Birth of a Nation] ID - 3439 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Thomas Edison believed that moving pictures would be a great tool for education. On teaching geography, physics, natural history and other subjects by using movies, this article says: “'Make Every School Room a Motion Picture Show for the Children, in Which Instructive Films Are Shown and You Have Solved the Problem of Effective Education of the Small Boy,’ Says World’s Greatest Inventor.” DA - Dec. 10, 1911 KW - history children ref, news motion pictures motion pictures, and new art form Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Thomas Edison Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures history, and Thomas Edison Edison, Thomas, and history history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children ref, CDT LB - 6490 PY - 1911 SE - G SP - 4 ST - How Thos. A. Edison Plans to Cure Hookey T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - How Thos. A. Edison Plans to Cure Hookey ID - 3446 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The author of this article is reviewing a book by Austin C. Lescarboura entitled Behind the Motion Picture Screen (Scientific American Publishing Co.). He quotes Lescarboura saying of Edison’s view of movies and teaching history: “‘It was Edison, if our memory serves us correctly, who once said that he could teach more history in fifteen minutes by means of motion pictures than could ever be learned from any book. That statement is precisely true.’ “The writer believes in the great capacity of the screen to teach history, but ‘more history in fifteen minutes’ than can ‘ever be learned from any book’? Precisely true? Precisely absurd.” DA - Oct. 12, 1919 KW - history ref, news motion pictures motion pictures, and new art form Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Thomas Edison Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures history, and Thomas Edison Edison, Thomas, and history history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 6500 PY - 1919 SP - 45 ST - From Behind the Screen T2 - New York Times TI - From Behind the Screen ID - 3447 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with the export of American films. “There is one American article of export out of which fortunes are being coined in every corner of the world, and which, under its rightful name, does not appear upon a single steamer’s manifest. This is the picturesque -- what is bizarre, exciting, and unusual in American life, chiefly scenes of cowboys and Indians. This picturesque, a real, definite commodity of genuine commercial importance, goes with many another moving picture film across the seas, and Britain, South American, Australian, and South African [sic] clap their hands with joy, or otherwise show their approval when the exploits of their ‘Yankee’ brothers are flashed upon the screen.” “Exporting the picturesque has thus become a money maker. The average American film on other subjects is not apt to ‘take’ with the foreigner. He likes, beyond all, dash and action. The cowboy and Indian, especially when they have a strong, simple story behind them that he can readily catch, appeal to the most uninformed peasant and the most stolid mechanic. The story must be simple, for his delight is not at its keenest unless he fully understands what the strange figures are doing. Then they are very much to his taste. “… This is the America that they have long imagined and heard about…. “… In England alone, according to the latest reliable statistics, there are more than two thousand theaters showing moving pictures…. “…Russia, curiously enough, is getting to be a stronghold of moving pictures and the most insignificant towns and villages, even in remote districts, are being well provided with these amusements. There are reported to be 1,200 electric theatres alone in the Russian Empire. On Sundays and holidays the crowds, as a Moscow visitor recently wrote home to this country, ‘are so great that additional police officers are often required to keep the immense number of people moving and to prevent possible accidents.’” DA - July 30, 1911 KW - nationalism history motion pictures, and Americanism motion pictures nationalism motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, foreign nationalism and communication motion pictures, and Americanization motion pictures, and westerns history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Civil War motion pictures, and American Revolution ref, news Abel, Richard motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad quotations non-USA Great Britain Russia Great Britain, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Great Britain Russia, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Russia modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel ref, NYT LB - 6520 PY - 1911 SE - SM SP - 4 ST - Exporting an Imaginary America to Make Money. Moving Picture Lovers in Foreign Cities Prefer Indian and Cowboy Films to All Others T2 - New York Times TI - Exporting an Imaginary America to Make Money. Moving Picture Lovers in Foreign Cities Prefer Indian and Cowboy Films to All Others ID - 3449 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Written in 1897, this article reports on the invention of a home movie camera and how it allows the user to recall dead family members. “The pang of death’s parting is somewhat lessened by the fact that we can now have a photograph album around the house by which it is possible to reproduce not only the face and form of some loved one, but also their every characteristic, as shown in their walk and other movements. S. Lubin of Philadelphia has succeeded in designing a machine for taking these picture and for showing them, which is so compact that it can be carried into one’s parlor or favorite lounging-room and a sheet of pictures secured that will in after years show departed kinsmen or some domestic scene in which a family group may be shown, all as in life. Mr. Lubin has designed a cineograph which is so compact that it is exceedingly portable, and can be set up in any room without any special arrangement. “A picture of this kind proves more satisfactory than an expensive oil painting, which can never portray the love and affection that goes with a found glance or the merry twinkle of the eye of a 4-year-old.” A drawing of this camera accompanies the article. The subtitle to this article reads: "Philadelphian Invents a Portable Cineograph for Use as a Family Album." DA - Dec. 26, 1897 KW - illustrations home history ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures home and new media motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures cameras cameras, portable cameras, home movie cameras Lubin, S., and home movie cameras home entertainment motion pictures, and Cineograph modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space cameras, illustrations illustrations, and cameras ref, CDT illustrations LB - 6530 PY - 1897 SP - 28 ST - Living Pictures at Home T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Living Pictures at Home ID - 3450 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Edison gives demonstration of “a new home moving-picture outfit.” The cost would be $50 to $75 retail. One goal is to focus on “religious and education subject.” Edison’s “hobby,” it is reported, is “to get the moving picture into the realm of education.” DA - Dec. 9, 1911 KW - home history ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures home and new media motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures cameras cameras, portable cameras, home movie cameras Edison, Thomas, and home movie cameras home entertainment motion pictures, and Cineograph modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Thomas Edison education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 6540 PY - 1911 SP - 6 ST - Edison Now Making Concrete Furniture;… Home Moving Pictures, Too; … T2 - New York Times TI - Edison Now Making Concrete Furniture;… Home Moving Pictures, Too; … ID - 3451 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses Thomas Edison’s electric country house with a gasoline generator and storage batteries to create electricity. This house also has a “home kinetoscope, … a moving picture machine on a small scale, and is fed with miniature films and throws its pictures on a four-by-five aluminum screen. These little negatives are so small that as many of them can be spaced on 75 feet of film as would require, if they were of average size, something more than 2,000 feet.” The subtitle of the article reads: "Any One May Now Have an Electric Plant in His Own Cellar at a Comparatively Small Cost Which Will Light and Heat It and Make House Work Easy." DA - Sept. 15, 1912 KW - home home history electricity ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures home and new media motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures cameras cameras, portable cameras, home movie cameras Edison, Thomas, and home movie cameras home entertainment motion pictures, and Cineograph modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Thomas Edison education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures electricity, and Thomas Edison Edison, Thomas, and electricity home, and electricity electricity, and home electricity, and home entertainment ref, NYT LB - 6550 PY - 1912 SE - SM SP - 9 ST - Edison’s Latest Marvel The Electric Country House T2 - New York Times TI - Edison’s Latest Marvel The Electric Country House ID - 3452 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that Thomas Edison has demonstrated his Home Kinetoscope. “This invention, which is the product of a great deal of labor and a great deal of money, is simply a miniature moving picture machine, a biograph that a child can handle, and that an ordinary living room can hold. Its chief difference from the ordinary commercial kinetosope lies in the fact that it is very simple, very compact, and that its films are non-inflammable.” It has a roll of film 80 feet long “which carries in infinitesimal proportions the material for moving pictures that take sixteen minutes to operate.” Children in “Public School 155 are saving up to buy one of the new machines for their own edification. A textbook publisher is already on the road looking into the possibilities, and he is arranging to have scenarios made from school books.” This fits into “Edison’s great dream” which was “one of education by moving pictures.” This article's subtitle reads: "Tiny Machine Has Non-Inflammable Film and Throws a Picture 2 by 1 ½ Feet. Would Use It in Schools. Geography Would Become Impressive, He Says, and Innumerable Stories Could Be Told." DA - March 28, 1912 KW - home home history electricity ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures home and new media motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures cameras cameras, portable cameras, home movie cameras Edison, Thomas, and home movie cameras home entertainment motion pictures, and Cineograph modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Thomas Edison education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures electricity, and Thomas Edison Edison, Thomas, and electricity home, and electricity electricity, and home electricity, and home entertainment motion pictures, home Kinetoscope ref, NYT LB - 6560 PY - 1912 SP - 11 ST - Edison Shows the Home Kinetoscope T2 - New York Times TI - Edison Shows the Home Kinetoscope ID - 3453 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This articles says that “By means of the magic lantern, or stereopticon, the smallest Kodak views can be reproduced in brilliant pictures of life size, or larger, for the enjoyment of family and friends, and a little skill with colors will enable the amateur to reproduce in vivid hues and with striking fidelity as to actual size and color all of the characters, incidents, scenes, and experiences met with during a summer vacation or in the fishing, hunting, or traveling adventure which are the delight of all true amateur photographers.” Article goes on to say that “Slides Easily Colored.” DA - Sept. 25, 1904 KW - home photography ref, news color color, and photography photography, and color photography and visual communication home and new media home, and color photography photography, and home Kodak photography, and Kodak Kodak, and color photography color, and Kodak Kodak, and color ref, CDT LB - 6570 PY - 1904 SE - E SP - 3 ST - How to Make Magic Lantern Slides for Your Own Entertainment T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - How to Make Magic Lantern Slides for Your Own Entertainment ID - 3454 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the invention of a seven-pound movie camera. DA - Feb. 25, 1914 KW - home ref, news motion pictures home and new media motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and home movie cameras cameras, and home entertainment cameras, portable motion pictures, and cameras cameras, and motion pictures ref, Times London LB - 6580 PY - 1914 SP - 10 ST - Cinematography for the Amateur: A New Invention T2 - The Times [London] TI - Cinematography for the Amateur: A New Invention ID - 3455 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This is an advertisement for the Pathéscope and home movies. DA - Dec. 5, 1912 KW - illustrations home home history electricity ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures home and new media motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures cameras cameras, portable cameras, home movie cameras Edison, Thomas, and home movie cameras home entertainment motion pictures, and Pathéscope modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Thomas Edison education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures home, and electricity electricity, and home electricity, and home entertainment motion pictures, home Pathéscope illustrations illustrations, and home entertainment illustrations, and home movies home entertainment, and illustrations ref, Times London LB - 6590 PY - 1912 SP - 11 ST - The Great Sensation This Season: The Cinema at Home T2 - The Times [London] TI - The Great Sensation This Season: The Cinema at Home ID - 3456 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This is a newspaper advertisement for a home movie camera. DA - Jan. 4, 1913 KW - illustrations home home history electricity ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures home and new media motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures cameras cameras, portable cameras, home movie cameras Edison, Thomas, and home movie cameras home entertainment modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Thomas Edison education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures home, and electricity electricity, and home electricity, and home entertainment illustrations illustrations, and home entertainment illustrations, and home movies home entertainment, and illustrations ref, Times London LB - 6600 PY - 1913 SP - 4 ST - Astonishing Success of Drawing Room Cinema T2 - The Times [London] TI - Astonishing Success of Drawing Room Cinema ID - 3457 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This articles says that "the Pathescopes are moving picture machines made especially for home entertainment….” DA - Feb. 4, 1915 KW - home home history electricity ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures home and new media motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures cameras cameras, portable cameras, home movie cameras Edison, Thomas, and home movie cameras home entertainment motion pictures, and Pathéscope modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Thomas Edison home, and electricity electricity, and home electricity, and home entertainment motion pictures, home Pathéscope ref, NYT LB - 6610 PY - 1915 SP - 14 ST - What Are Pathescopes?; Question Before the General Appraisers for Decision T2 - New York Times TI - What Are Pathescopes?; Question Before the General Appraisers for Decision ID - 3458 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article has a picture of “The Most Powerful Loudspeaker in the World.” The article's subtitle reads: "Elaborate Radio- Phonograph Machines Among Latest Styles Introduced." DA - Nov. 9, 1924 KW - illustrations home home history electricity ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures home and new media motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures cameras cameras, portable cameras, home movie cameras Edison, Thomas, and home movie cameras home entertainment modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Thomas Edison home, and electricity electricity, and home electricity, and home entertainment sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures loudspeakers sound recording, and loudspeakers illustrations illustrations, and loudspeakers loudspeakers, and illustrations LB - 6620 PY - 1924 SE - XX SP - 14 ST - Radio Show Revealed New Improvements T2 - New York Times TI - Radio Show Revealed New Improvements ID - 3459 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on an early demonstration of television. The article's subtitle reads: "John L. Baird of Scotland Demonstrates Apparatus Which Sends and Detects Pictures of Moving Objects." DA - April 25, 1926 KW - home history electricity ref, news motion pictures history and new media television, and history history, and motion pictures home and new media television, and home home, and television cameras cameras, portable cameras, home movie cameras home entertainment modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing television, and space and time space and time television, and time motion pictures, and space home, and electricity electricity, and home electricity, and home entertainment television television, and John Baird Baird, John, and television seeing at a distance ref, NYT LB - 6630 PY - 1926 SE - XX SP - 17 ST - Televisor Lets Radio Fans ‘Look In’ As Well As Listen T2 - New York Times TI - Televisor Lets Radio Fans ‘Look In’ As Well As Listen ID - 3460 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses plans to provide short films for those who own home movie equipment. The subtitle of this article reads: "Eastman Kodak Company to Start Monthly Service of Four-Minute Pictures. Chaplin to Figure Early; ‘Releases’ of Stars and News Reels Will be Available to Owners of Small Projectors." DA - May 27, 1927 KW - home history ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures home and new media motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures cameras cameras, portable cameras, home movie cameras Edison, Thomas, and home movie cameras home entertainment modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space news and journalism home entertainment, and newsreels newsreels newsreels, and home Kodak Kodak, and home entertainment home entertainment, and Kodak Edison, Thomas ref, NYT LB - 6640 PY - 1927 SP - 29 ST - Will Issue Films for Home Movies T2 - New York Times TI - Will Issue Films for Home Movies ID - 3461 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on the progress of television research. The article's subtitle reads: "De Forest, Pupin and Others Are Pessimistic As to Early Use of Radio Vision Sets in the Home Much Research Remains to Be Done Present Apparatus Is Too Complex." DA - April 22, 1928 KW - home history De Forest, Lee electricity ref, news motion pictures history and new media history, and motion pictures home and new media television, and home home, and television home entertainment modernity modernity, and television television, and modernity new way of seeing television, and space and time space and time television, and time television, and space De Forest, Lee, and television television, and Lee De Forest home, and electricity electricity, and home electricity, and home entertainment television radio radio, and television television, and radio seeing at a distance ref, NYT LB - 6650 PY - 1928 SP - 145 ST - Television Is Evolving at Slow but Sure Pace T2 - New York Times TI - Television Is Evolving at Slow but Sure Pace ID - 3462 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses research related to talking films and television. The article's subtitle reads: "Phenomena Which Produce Television and Talking Films Topic of Society Here." DA - Feb. 23, 1930 KW - home history ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures home and new media motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures cameras cameras, portable cameras, home movie cameras home entertainment modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures ref, NYT television television, and photo electric cell LB - 6660 PY - 1930 SP - 21 ST - Physicists Discuss Photo-Electric Cell T2 - New York Times TI - Physicists Discuss Photo-Electric Cell ID - 3463 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that “Television activity and possibilities of seeing by radio are said to be the inspiration for the organization of the Freed Television and Radio Corporation….” DA - May 31, 1931 KW - home history De Forest, Lee electricity ref, news motion pictures history and new media history, and motion pictures home and new media television, and home home, and television home entertainment modernity modernity, and television television, and modernity new way of seeing television, and space and time space and time television, and time television, and space De Forest, Lee, and television television, and Lee De Forest home, and electricity electricity, and home electricity, and home entertainment television radio radio, and television television, and radio seeing at a distance ref, NYT LB - 6670 PY - 1931 SE - XX SP - 11 ST - New Company Organized to Promote Television T2 - New York Times TI - New Company Organized to Promote Television ID - 3464 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses some of the latest developments in home entertainment in 1931. The subtitle of the article reads: "Receiving Set, Phonograph and Reel Combined in Single Cabinet by Number of Manufacturers." DA - June 28, 1931 KW - home ref, news motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures home and new media motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures home entertainment radio radio, and home home, and radio phonograph phonograph, and home home, and phonograph sound recording, and phonograph ref, NYT LB - 6680 PY - 1931 SE - XX SP - 9 ST - Radio, Disk and Talking Film Join for Home Entertainment T2 - New York Times TI - Radio, Disk and Talking Film Join for Home Entertainment ID - 3465 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on progress in developing television. DA - Aug. 11, 1933 KW - home history electricity ref, news motion pictures history and new media television, and history history, and motion pictures home and new media television, and home home, and television cameras cameras, portable cameras, home movie cameras Edison, Thomas, and home movie cameras home entertainment modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing television, and space and time space and time television, and time motion pictures, and space home, and electricity electricity, and home electricity, and home entertainment television seeing at a distance television Edison, Thomas ref, NYT LB - 6690 PY - 1933 SP - 18 ST - Television Declared Ready to Broadcast, Starting Sectionally, With Relays Later T2 - New York Times TI - Television Declared Ready to Broadcast, Starting Sectionally, With Relays Later ID - 3466 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on actress, Pauline Chase, who will sell autographed photos abroad. “The first among these will be one of Theodore Roosevelt, which Miss Chase went to Paris to obtain from the ex-President.” The article's subtitle reads: "Pauline Chase Will Make Notable Trip from London to Aid Actors’ Fund Fair. Will Sell Photographs. Has Autographed Pictures from Roosevelt and Leaders of the Theatrical Profession Abroad." DA - May 1, 1910 KW - journalism celebrity photography ref, news Roosevelt, Theodore motion pictures, and Theodore Roosevelt Roosevelt, Theodore, and photography nationalism and communication photography, and nationalism nationalism, and photography news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography presidents and new media photography and visual communication personality personality, and photography photography, and personality celebrity culture Roosevelt, Theodore, and new media photography, and Theodore Roosevelt Roosevelt, Theodore, and photography ref, NYT motion pictures nationalism LB - 15680 PY - 1910 SE - C SP - 2 ST - Actress to Cross Atlantic for a Day T2 - New York Times TI - Actress to Cross Atlantic for a Day ID - 3467 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Alexander Konta wants a Modern Historic Records Association to preserve movies and phonograph recordings. This article notes the fragileness of some records such as paper (unlike Egyptian papyrus). DA - July 13, 1911 KW - history history ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures sound recording, and historical preservation historical preservation, and sound recording phonograph phonograph, and history history, and phonograph phonograph, and historical preservation historical preservation, and phonograph Konta, Alexander, and historical preservation historical preservation, and Alexander Konta Modern Historic Records Association ref, NYT LB - 13110 PY - 1911 SP - 8 ST - Records for Posterity T2 - New York Times TI - Records for Posterity ID - 3470 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Alexander Konta says “light and sound waves never lie” (Konta quoted). Notes that Lincoln’s voice and Napoleon’s actions forever lost. “But posterity in its remembrances of things past may summon back the voices and the prominent figures of this and succeeding generations.” Article goes on to say that “Print, the photographic plate, the phonographic roll, and the kinetoscope have superseded the goose-quilled manuscripts of the fallible copyists of old. But our modern paper is perishable; the new society will do well to return to parchment.” DA - Nov. 11, 1911 KW - history history ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures sound recording, and historical preservation historical preservation, and sound recording phonograph phonograph, and history history, and phonography phonograph, and historical preservation historical preservation, and phonograph Konta, Alexander, and historical preservation historical preservation, and Alexander Konta Modern Historic Records Association paper materials, and paper paper, and historical preservation historical preservation, and paper parchment materials, and parchment ref, NYT LB - 13120 PY - 1911 SP - 12 ST - Boons for Posterity T2 - New York Times TI - Boons for Posterity ID - 3471 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The Modern Historic Records Association, the article says, "employing the inventions of our age, purposes to preserve in imperishable form the record of history, heretofore 'writ on water,' in order that future generations may know the exact nature of our wisdom and our ignorance, our achievements and our failures." Alexander Konta, who helped organize this association, is quoted in this article as saying that moving pictures and the phonograph give us “a view taken from actual life….” He says that through these media “we may expect to live again for our descendants with a vividness and accuracy which could not be possible through the medium of the printed word alone.” Korda notes that "the problem of permanent storage is not so simple." He proposed a building to house records that would be safe from floods and earthquakes, one made of concrete with reinforced steel. Some of the records were to be "printed on hand-made vellum imported from Japan, and ... deposited in a glass vial, embedded in concrete...." The subtitle of the article reads: "New Society Will Preserve History in Concrete for Peoples of the Future; Phonograph to be Used; Our Singers and Orator May Be Heard from Records Thousands of Years Hence." DA - Dec. 10, 1911 KW - history history ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures sound recording, and historical preservation historical preservation, and sound recording phonograph phonograph, and history history, and phonograph phonograph, and historical preservation historical preservation, and phonograph Konta, Alexander, and historical preservation historical preservation, and Alexander Konta Modern Historic Records Association Edison, Thomas ref, NYT LB - 13130 PY - 1911 SP - 17 ST - Record of Our Time to be Imperishable T2 - New York Times TI - Record of Our Time to be Imperishable ID - 3472 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that former President William Howard Taft is the honorary president of the Modern Historic Records Association. DA - Nov. 20, 1914 KW - Taft, William Howard administration history history ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures sound recording, and historical preservation historical preservation, and sound recording phonograph phonograph, and history history, and phonograph phonograph, and historical preservation historical preservation, and phonograph Konta, Alexander, and historical preservation historical preservation, and Alexander Konta Modern Historic Records Association presidents and new media Taft, William Howard Taft, William Howard, and new media Taft, William Howard, and motion pictures Taft, William Howard, and historical preservation historical preservation, and William Howard Taft motion pictures, and William Howard Taft ref, LAT LB - 13140 PY - 1914 SE - I SP - 6 ST - 'Movie' Records of War T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - 'Movie' Records of War ID - 3473 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle for this article reads: "Congressman Lorimer Prepares a Spectacular Program for Opening His Campaign. Pictures with Oratory. Scenes of the War and Portraits of Heroes Will Intersperse Arguments for Re-election." This article says that a Republican congressman to use moving pictures of Spanish American War engagements at Santiago, war vessels parading in New York harbor, and its heroes in reelection campaign. “‘Coon’ songs and moving pictures of the war, the captivating attractions of the summer gardens and theaters of Chicago, will be used by Congressman William Lorimer in his campaign for reelection as Representative from the Second Illinois District. The first trial of this new idea in politics will be made tomorrow night at Bartlett, in Hanover Township. Following that will be one night stands at all the country towns in the Lorimer territory…. “Besides the picture already mentioned, ‘The Bombardment of Matanzas,’ ‘The Battle of Balquiri,’(?) and some scenes of life in the camps will be shown, as well as pictures of McKinley, Dewey, Schley, Miles, Shafter, Merritt, and other heroes. It is the first time anything of this kind has ever been attempted in a political campaign.” DA - Sept. 13, 1898 KW - politics journalism history magazines photography ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines photography and visual communication presidents and new media McKinley, William McKinley, William, and motion pictures McKinley, William, and assassination motion pictures, and William McKinley politicians, and new media war war, and motion pictures motion pictures, and war Spanish American War motion pictures, and Spanish American War Spanish American War, and motion pictures ref, CDT LB - 13460 PY - 1898 SP - 1 ST - ‘Coon’ Songs in Politics T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - ‘Coon’ Songs in Politics ID - 3474 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that Bernard Shaw, Admiral Dewey, “and Others Contribute to the Modern Historical Records Associations Ambitious Project,” by writing on parchment to preserve a record of their work. DA - June 2, 1912 KW - history history celebrity celebrity culture ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures sound recording, and historical preservation historical preservation, and sound recording phonograph phonograph, and history history, and phonography phonograph, and historical preservation historical preservation, and phonograph Konta, Alexander, and historical preservation historical preservation, and Alexander Konta Modern Historic Records Association paper materials, and paper paper, and historical preservation historical preservation, and paper parchment materials, and parchment Shaw, George Bernard celebrity culture celebrity, and new media ref, NYT LB - 13160 PY - 1912 SE - SM SP - 9 ST - Celebrities Write on Parchment for Future Ages T2 - New York Times TI - Celebrities Write on Parchment for Future Ages ID - 3475 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about the fact that celluloid film bought in Europe, and that the acids in the celluloid destroy its sensitiveness of the emulsion before and after development. It is hard to carry on a long bicycle trip with the film deteriorating. The subtitle of the article reads: " In the Domain of Science, Industry and Electricity. From Our Own Correspondent. Celluloid Films." DA - Aug. 29, 1898 KW - history history photography ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation celluloid materials, and celluloid historical preservation, and celluloid celluloid, and historical preservation motion pictures, and celluloid celluloid, and motion pictures celluloid, and materials photography and visual communication celluloid, and photography photography, and celluloid ref, LAT LB - 13170 PY - 1898 SP - 5 ST - Dynamic Forces T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Dynamic Forces ID - 3476 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that government offices have been asked to contribute prints, films, or negatives. The article's subtitle reads: "Government Proposes to Issue the Works Asks for Contributions." DA - March 7, 1899 KW - history history ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation celluloid materials, and celluloid historical preservation, and celluloid celluloid, and historical preservation LB - 13180 PY - 1899 SP - 8 ST - Photographic War History T2 - New York Times TI - Photographic War History ID - 3477 ER - TY - NEWS AB - President William McKinley and his assassin were filmed the day before the president’s murder, according to this article. “Only for a fraction of a second does he [Czolgosz] stand still; then he again begins to move forward. The kinetoscope pictures his movements exactly. He makes his way to the foot of the stand on which the President is speaking. Again he turns his face toward the kinescope. This time he looks wild and excited. His derby at is pulled down over his eyes, but as he raises his head they can be seen readily.” DA - Sept. 25, 1901 KW - journalism history history magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones presidents and new media McKinley, William McKinley, William, and motion pictures McKinley, William, and assassination motion pictures, and William McKinley ref, LAT LB - 13200 PY - 1901 SP - 5 ST - Czolgosz Present T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Czolgosz Present ID - 3479 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This articles says that “For the first time in history of criminal procedure a moving picture exhibition was made part of a criminal trail last night.” The article's subtitle reads: "Room in General Sessions Transformed for Trial of Producers of White Slave Play." DA - March 5, 1914 KW - journalism journalism history history censorship magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures law motion pictures, and law law, and motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and white slavery white slavery, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings photography and visual communication ref, NYT LB - 13210 PY - 1914 SP - 2 ST - Moving Pictures Shown in Court T2 - New York Times TI - Moving Pictures Shown in Court ID - 3480 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that “For the first time in the history of the White House moving pictures of an event of national importance will be taken to-morrow when President Taft signs the proclamation admitting Arizona to the Union.” DA - Feb. 14, 1912 KW - Taft, William Howard administration journalism history history ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation presidents and new media Taft, William Howard Taft, William Howard, and new media Taft, William Howard, and motion pictures Taft, William Howard, and historical preservation historical preservation, and William Howard Taft motion pictures, and William Howard Taft news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 13220 PY - 1912 SP - 12 ST - Taft in Moving Pictures; Will be Snapped as He Signs Arizona Statehood Proclamation T2 - New York Times TI - Taft in Moving Pictures; Will be Snapped as He Signs Arizona Statehood Proclamation ID - 3481 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Both the camera and the phonograph will be used to cover the 1912 political conventions. The article laments these media were available for earlier important events in the nation’s history. “Much can be done, nowadays, with the moving picture machine and the perfected phonograph.” However, there were still major limitations: “As for the phonograph, it can make nothing worth preserving of a Babel of sounds. A complete record, pictorial and vocal, seems out of the question. A charge of cavalry on a battlefield the moving picture man might catch, but never a wild stampede in a convention hall.” DA - Dec. 26, 1911 KW - Taft, William Howard administration journalism history history ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures sound recording, and historical preservation historical preservation, and sound recording phonograph phonograph, and history history, and phonograph phonograph, and historical preservation historical preservation, and phonograph presidents and new media Taft, William Howard Taft, William Howard, and new media Taft, William Howard, and motion pictures Taft, William Howard, and phonograph historical preservation, and William Howard Taft motion pictures, and William Howard Taft Roosevelt, Theodore motion pictures, and Theodore Roosevelt Roosevelt, Theodore, and motion pictures Wilson, Woodrow Wilson, Woodrow, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Woodrow Wilson Wilson, Woodrow, and phonograph phonograph, and Woodrow Wilson phonograph, and William Howard Taft phonograph, and Theodore Roosevelt Wilson, Woodrow, and new media Roosevelt, Theodore, and new media news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 13230 PY - 1911 SP - 8 ST - Hard Work for the Machines T2 - New York Times TI - Hard Work for the Machines ID - 3482 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that the assassination of Prince Hirobumi Ito in Japan was captured by moving picture camera. The article's subtitle reads: "Japan Will Use Films in Prosecution of Korean Slayer of Former Premier One Roll Will be Exhibited China Fears Ito’s Death Will Cause Trouble." DA - Dec. 10, 1909 KW - journalism history magazines ref, news motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures cameras special effects motion pictures, and special effects Japan non-USA Japan, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Japan modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures ref, LAT LB - 13240 PY - 1909 SE - I SP - 5 ST - Moving Picture of Ito Murder; Photographer Catches the Assassination Scene T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Moving Picture of Ito Murder; Photographer Catches the Assassination Scene ID - 3483 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the filming of Pope Leo XIII. The article's subtitle says: "Leo XIII. Represented Amid the Scenes of His Daily Life Exhibition at Studebaker Hall." DA - Jan. 9, 1899 KW - journalism journalism history history magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures religion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones religion, and photography photography, and religion religion motion pictures, and Pope Leo XIII religion, and Pope Leo XIII ref, CDT LB - 13250 PY - 1899 SP - 7 ST - Moving Pictures of the Pope T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Moving Pictures of the Pope ID - 3485 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the filming of Pope Leo XIII. "Pope Leo XIII has posed before a moving picture machine. In pictures now he may be seen to walk, bow, take off his hat, smile, drive in his landau through the alleys of the Vatican gardens, and give, with his right hand raised, the apostolic benediction. "To the faithful that apostolic benediction reproduced in the pictures will have the same effect as if it were conferred directly, personally. The camera was blessed. (emphasis added) "In Baltimore on Tuesday, in Washington on Wednesday, before Cardinal Gibbons, the Apostolic Delegate; Mgr. Martinelli; Dr. Garrigan, rector of the University of America; the rector of the Georgetown University, and many other dignitaries of the Roman Catholic Church, the moving pictures are to be shown. "There are to be displayed on these two occasions before they are displayed elsewhere. They may not be displayed elsewhere if they are considered adversely there. The exhibitions are to be absolutely under the control of the church in America." DA - Nov. 25, 1898 KW - journalism journalism history history magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures religion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones religion, and photography photography, and religion religion motion pictures, and Pope Leo XIII religion, and Pope Leo XIII newsreels (origins) newsreels, and Pope Leo XIII motion pictures, and news motion pictures, and newsreels newsreels ref, CDT LB - 13260 PY - 1898 SP - 7 ST - Pope Leo in Moving Pictures T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Pope Leo in Moving Pictures ID - 3486 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article on funeral of Vice President Garret Augustus Hobart in 1899 says that people with Kodak cameras and kinescope moving picture cameras captured the procession: “All along the line of march the kodak fiends were active, and even the ubiquitous kinetoscopoe man got a series of moving pictures of the cortège as it came through Broadway.” DA - Nov. 26, 1899 KW - journalism journalism history history magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones presidents and new media McKinley, William McKinley, William, and motion pictures McKinley, William, and assassination motion pictures, and William McKinley motion pictures, and Garret Hobart ref, NYT LB - 13270 PY - 1899 SP - 4 ST - Vice President’s Funeral. Mr. McKinley and Many Distinguished Persons Go to Paterson T2 - New York Times TI - Vice President’s Funeral. Mr. McKinley and Many Distinguished Persons Go to Paterson ID - 3487 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that film of the Fitzsimmons-Corbett boxing match showed a foul. The subtitle of the article is: "First of Verascope Illustrations of the Carson Fight. Fitzsimmons Appears to Be Striking Corbett While the Latter Is on His Knees. Referee Silver Declare It Is Not an Accurate Reproduction He Shows Where It Is Wrong and Complains of Talk about Unfairness Since the Battle." DA - May 15, 1897 KW - sensationalism motion pictures, and sports ref, news motion pictures motion pictures, and boxing motion pictures, and race motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures violence race race, and motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and sensationalism sensationalism, and cameras ref, CDT LB - 13280 PY - 1897 SP - 7 ST - Picture Shows a Foul T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Picture Shows a Foul ID - 3488 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the showing of the film of the Fitzsimmon-Corbett boxing match. The article's subtitle reads: "Opening Exhibition in New York Fairly Satisfactory. Crowd Watches the Flickering Show with Much Interest But Disputed Points in Regard to the Fight Are Left Unsettled Illustrations of the Knockout Blow and of Corbett’s Despair While Being Counted Out by Silver." DA - May 24, 1897 KW - sensationalism motion pictures, and sports ref, news motion pictures motion pictures, and boxing motion pictures, and race motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures violence race race, and motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and sensationalism sensationalism, and cameras LB - 13290 PY - 1897 SP - 4 ST - Fight Pictures Shown T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Fight Pictures Shown ID - 3489 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that “Among the moving pictures the football scrimmages on the University of Chicago campus in the Thanksgiving game aroused the greatest interest, with the polo and golf scenes a close second.” DA - Nov. 27, 1897 KW - sensationalism motion pictures, and sports ref, news motion pictures motion pictures, and football motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures violence theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and sensationalism sensationalism, and cameras ref, CDT LB - 13300 PY - 1897 SP - 8 ST - Burton Holmes’ Third Talk. Gives His Illustrated Lecture on ‘The Cities of the Barbary Coast’ Football Pictures T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Burton Holmes’ Third Talk. Gives His Illustrated Lecture on ‘The Cities of the Barbary Coast’ Football Pictures ID - 3490 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The highlights of Queen Victoria's life have been captured on moving pictures. The article's subtitle reads: "Striking Events of the Reign." DA - Nov. 4, 1913 KW - journalism history ref, news motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures Great Britain motion pictures, and Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures newsreels newsreels, and Great Britain Great Britain, and newsreels history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures ref, Times London LB - 13310 PY - 1913 SP - 4 ST - Queen Victoria’s Life on the Cinematograph T2 - The Times [London] TI - Queen Victoria’s Life on the Cinematograph ID - 3491 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses William Randolph Hearst's use of movies and the phonograph in his election campaign. DA - Oct. 10, 1906 KW - politics history history historical preservation motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures sound recording, and historical preservation historical preservation, and sound recording phonograph phonograph, and history history, and phonograph phonograph, and historical preservation historical preservation, and phonograph history, and sound recording sound recording, and history politicians, and new media politicians, and motion pictures politicians, and phonograph Hearst, William Randolph Hearst, William Randolph, and motion pictures Hearst, William Randolph, and gramophones Hearst, William Randolph, and phonograph motion pictures, and William Randolph Hearst phonograph, and William Randolph Hearst ref, LAT LB - 13340 PY - 1906 SE - I SP - 4 ST - Machines Talk for Hearstites; Graphophones and Moving Pictures Enter Campaign T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Machines Talk for Hearstites; Graphophones and Moving Pictures Enter Campaign ID - 3494 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses William Randolph Hearst's use of movies and the phonograph in his 1906 election campaign. The article's subtitle reads: "He Talks It and Gestures It Into Phonograph and Camera. A 12-Cylinder Harangue. The Absent-Treatment Candidate Will Be Projected in Sound and Shadow Before the Voters of the Remoter Regions." DA - Oct. 10, 1906 KW - politics history history historical preservation motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures sound recording, and historical preservation historical preservation, and sound recording phonograph phonograph, and history history, and phonograph phonograph, and historical preservation historical preservation, and phonograph history, and sound recording sound recording, and history politicians, and new media politicians, and motion pictures politicians, and phonograph Hearst, William Randolph Hearst, William Randolph, and motion pictures Hearst, William Randolph, and gramophones Hearst, William Randolph, and phonograph motion pictures, and William Randolph Hearst phonograph, and William Randolph Hearst ref, NYT LB - 13350 PY - 1906 SP - 1 ST - Hearst Speech ‘Canned’ for Up-State Farmers T2 - New York Times TI - Hearst Speech ‘Canned’ for Up-State Farmers ID - 3495 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article relates to William Randolph Hearst's use of movies and the phonograph in his 1906 election campaign. DA - Oct. 18, 1906 KW - politics history history historical preservation motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures sound recording, and historical preservation historical preservation, and sound recording phonograph phonograph, and history history, and phonograph phonograph, and historical preservation historical preservation, and phonograph history, and sound recording sound recording, and history politicians, and new media politicians, and motion pictures politicians, and phonograph Hearst, William Randolph Hearst, William Randolph, and motion pictures Hearst, William Randolph, and gramophones Hearst, William Randolph, and phonograph motion pictures, and William Randolph Hearst phonograph, and William Randolph Hearst ref, NYT LB - 13360 PY - 1906 SP - 1 ST - Hearst Oratory for London. Music Hall Manager Sends Here for Phonograph Records T2 - New York Times TI - Hearst Oratory for London. Music Hall Manager Sends Here for Phonograph Records ID - 3496 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article relates to William Randolph Hearst's use of movies and the phonograph in his 1906 election campaign. The article's subtitle reads: "It’s Cold and Moving Picture Sauce Fails to Give Warmth. Vaudeville in Between. Lantern Slide Maker Causes the Crowd to Laugh by Twisting the Candidate’s Idea." DA - Oct. 30, 1906 KW - politics history history historical preservation motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures sound recording, and historical preservation historical preservation, and sound recording phonograph phonograph, and history history, and phonograph phonograph, and historical preservation historical preservation, and phonograph history, and sound recording sound recording, and history politicians, and new media politicians, and motion pictures politicians, and phonograph Hearst, William Randolph Hearst, William Randolph, and motion pictures Hearst, William Randolph, and gramophones Hearst, William Randolph, and phonograph motion pictures, and William Randolph Hearst phonograph, and William Randolph Hearst ref, NYT LB - 13370 PY - 1906 SE - A SP - 3 ST - Hearst Canned Speech Opened at Kinston T2 - New York Times TI - Hearst Canned Speech Opened at Kinston ID - 3497 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about the Democrats used film to promote William Jennings Bryan. DA - Sept. 13, 1908 KW - politics history history historical preservation motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures sound recording, and historical preservation historical preservation, and sound recording phonograph phonograph, and history history, and phonograph phonograph, and historical preservation historical preservation, and phonograph history, and sound recording sound recording, and history politicians, and new media politicians, and motion pictures Bryan, William Jennings Bryan, William Jennings, and motion pictures motion pictures, and William Jennings Bryan ref, LAT LB - 13380 PY - 1908 SE - I SP - 2 ST - Spring New Scheme. Democrats to Show Moving Pictures of Bryan in Chicago on Labor Union Day T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Spring New Scheme. Democrats to Show Moving Pictures of Bryan in Chicago on Labor Union Day ID - 3498 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article mentions the use of motion picture machines during the 1912 campaign. DA - July 4, 1912 KW - politics journalism history history ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation presidents and new media Wilson, Woodrow Wilson, Woodrow and new media Wilson, Woodrow, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Woodrow Wilson news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures politicians, and new media ref, NYT LB - 13390 PY - 1912 SP - 1 ST - Wilson Won’t Resign at Once T2 - New York Times TI - Wilson Won’t Resign at Once ID - 3499 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that "While the Pictures Move a Phonograph Will Say the Lines." DA - Sept. 7, 1903 KW - ref, news motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures phonograph phonograph, and motion pictures motion pictures, and phonograph motion pictures, and talking films (origins) ref, NYT LB - 15750 PY - 1903 SP - 1 ST - See Plays by Machine T2 - New York Times TI - See Plays by Machine ID - 3500 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that actors dressed as TR and negro make film next Capitol. “The story soon spread throughout the city and many people imagined the act was intended to put the president in an attitude of ‘overpoliteness’ to the negro, to emphasize the Booker Washington dinner incident for campaign purposes.” The article's subtitle reads: "Pal (?) Appears as Roosevelt. Plan to Grind Moving Pictures Believed Advertising Dodge." DA - May 20, 1904 KW - journalism history photography ref, secondary motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures Roosevelt, Theodore motion pictures, and Theodore Roosevelt Roosevelt, Theodore, and motion pictures motion pictures, and race race, and motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures presidents and new media photography and visual communication presidents and new media ref, CDT race racism LB - 13410 PY - 1904 SP - 1 ST - Hoax in Color Line. Minstrel Plays Unique First Act Near White House T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Hoax in Color Line. Minstrel Plays Unique First Act Near White House ID - 3501 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that a fictitious film showing Theodore Roosevelt helping negro into a carriage is destroyed by authorities. “Major Sylvester, the Superintendent of Policy, to-day announced that he has had destroyed all of the films of the moving pictures taken a day or two ago for Lew Dockstander on the east front of the Capitol building, when President Roosevelt was impersonated in the act of helping a fictitious negro into his carriage. “The police authorities say that this closes the incident.” DA - May 22, 1904 KW - journalism history photography ref, secondary motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures Roosevelt, Theodore motion pictures, and Theodore Roosevelt Roosevelt, Theodore, and motion pictures motion pictures, and race race, and motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures presidents and new media photography and visual communication ref, NYT race racism LB - 13420 PY - 1904 SP - 3 ST - Dockstander’s Films Gone. Washington Police Destroy Them to Save President’s Feelings T2 - New York Times TI - Dockstander’s Films Gone. Washington Police Destroy Them to Save President’s Feelings ID - 3502 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The Republican Party considers using moving pictures to convey its message to the public. The subtitle of the article reads: "Republican National Committee Considers Proposition to Supply Novel Campaign Argument in Photographic Reproductions of Evidences of Returned Good Times Chairman Payne Says Letter of Contractors Will Not Change Labor Day Plans." DA - Aug. 25, 1900 KW - politics history ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures politicians, and motion pictures ref, CDT LB - 13430 PY - 1900 SP - 4 ST - May Use a Kinetoscope. To Show Prosperity by Aid of Moving Pictures T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - May Use a Kinetoscope. To Show Prosperity by Aid of Moving Pictures ID - 3503 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Republican party is using moving pictures to attract voters, according to this piece. The article's subtitle reads: "Feature of Big Republican Mass Meeting Where Political Issues Are Discussed." DA - Oct. 17, 1902 KW - politics history ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures politicians, and motion pictures ref, CDT LB - 13440 PY - 1902 SP - 7 ST - Moving Pictures for Voters T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Moving Pictures for Voters ID - 3504 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Senator Charles W. Fairbanks (Indiana) who was Theodore Roosevelt running mate for Vice President, reluctantly allows himself to be film, according to this report. Fairbanks did not think posing in front of a moving picture camera was “dignified.” However, “the pictures will be in the theaters next week and the republican managers believe that they have hit on an effect scheme of making the vice presidential candidate known to about thirty times the number of people he possibly could have met by touring the state.” The article's subtitle reads: "Vaudeville Stage to Be Medium of Showing Candidate to Public. Dignity Yield a Point. Senator Finally Consents to Let ‘Political Exigencies’ Command." DA - Aug. 27, 1904 KW - politics journalism history celebrity photography ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures politicians, and motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures presidents and new media photography and visual communication politicians, and new media Roosevelt, Theodore motion pictures, and Theodore Roosevelt Roosevelt, Theodore, and motion pictures Fairbanks, Charles, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Charles Fairbanks personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality celebrity culture actors acting ref, CDT motion pictures, and magnifying personality photography, and reluctance to be photographed LB - 13450 PY - 1904 SP - 5 ST - Moving Pictures Depict Fairbanks T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Moving Pictures Depict Fairbanks ID - 3505 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article maintains that “Calvin Coolidge is the best known President in the history of the United States. [Theodore] Roosevelt does not compare with him, and no other President ever compared with Roosevelt. Even Coolidge’s voice is known to millions who never saw him. His opinions and intentions have wider publicity than had those of any President from Washington to Harding. His face, mannerisms and gestures are familiar to every one of the multitudes who go to the movies or look at the newspapers.” Talks about the use of press conferences, photography, newsreels, radio. The article also discusses Andrew Jackson (“the inventor of Presidential publicity”), Lincoln, McKinley, and Wilson. The subtitle reads: "Radio, Movies, Newspapers and His Own Personality Make Him the Widest Known of Our Presidents The Whims of Other Chief Executives." DA - Aug. 7, 1927 KW - journalism history ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures presidents and new media Coolidge, Calvin Coolidge, Calvin, and new media Coolidge, Calvin, and motion pictures Coolidge, Calvin, and radio radio, and Calvin Coolidge motion pictures, and Calvin Coolidge news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures radio newsreels newsreels, and Calvin Coolidge Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt, Theodore, and new media McKinley, William McKinley, William, and new media Wilson, Woodrow Wilson, Woodrow, and new media Lincoln, Abraham Jackson, Andrew Jackson, Andrew, and new media Lincoln, Abraham, and new media ref, NYT LB - 13470 PY - 1927 SE - XX SP - 11 ST - Coolidge Has Learned the Art of Publicity T2 - New York Times TI - Coolidge Has Learned the Art of Publicity ID - 3506 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes the difficulty capturing Theodore Roosevelt's personality in facial photographs because his expressions changed to quickly. “Of the two Republicans Mr. Roosevelt suffers the more because his countenance is at all times so influenced in its expression by the swift and changing play of his emotions that its appearance at any one instant cannot be isolated and fixed without a real perversion of the effect it actually produces on those who are watching and hearing him. We all recall the impression of grotesqueness imparted by the instantaneous photographs of a horse in motion when they were first produced…. There is a like miscarriage in the photographs of our Governor ‘in motion.’…” William Jennings Bryan’s photos are also unsatisfactory, the article says. DA - Oct. 28, 1900 KW - nationalism journalism history facial expressions celebrity photography ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures Roosevelt, Theodore motion pictures, and Theodore Roosevelt Roosevelt, Theodore, and motion pictures nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures presidents and new media photography and visual communication personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality celebrity culture presidents and new media Roosevelt, Theodore, and new media photography, and Theodore Roosevelt Roosevelt, Theodore, and photography facial expressions, and photography photography, and celebrity culture celebrity culture, and photography Roosevelt, Theodore, and instantaneous photography Bryan, William Jennings, and photography photography, and William Jennings Bryan Bryan, William Jennings photography, instantaneous ref, NYT LB - 13480 PY - 1900 SP - 20 ST - Instantaneous Portraiture T2 - New York Times TI - Instantaneous Portraiture ID - 3507 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "Amelie Rives, Booth Tarkington, George Ade, Ida Tarbell, Rex Beach, George Barr McCutcheon, and Others as Film Actors." Ida Tarbell talks about appearing before the camera. She had been working on a biography of Abraham Lincoln. Here the article quotes Tarbell: “‘Here is a great human undertaking with limitless possibilities to bring amusement and instruction to the whole world. What was I that I should say “I will have none of it”? So I did the best I could to follow the instructions of the serious and enthusiastic young man who had undertaken to pose me. I discovered afterward that the young man had been impersonating Lincoln in my little sketch, so I understood better his natural interest in having me smile up at the Lincoln portrait, catch my inspiration from the corner of the frame, where I had been told to look, and fall to writing furiously. “‘I did feel a little foolish, but only because I realized what a stupid amateur I was as an actress. All the revolt had been taken out of me by the bigness of the things I had seen. The only “emotions” I have to record, then, are the haughtiness with which I went in and the meekness with which I came out.’” DA - Feb. 8, 1914 KW - history ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures Tarbell, Ida, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Ida Tarbell women women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women motion pictures, and reform reform, and motion pictures ref, NYT reform LB - 13510 PY - 1914 SE - SM SP - 5 ST - Well-Known Authors Act Their Own Plays in ‘Movies’ T2 - New York Times TI - Well-Known Authors Act Their Own Plays in ‘Movies’ ID - 3510 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that Professor Frederick Starr is going to Africa to take pictures and bring back phonographic records of natives’ songs. This article's subtitle reads: "University of Chicago Professor to be Away a Year. Educator Will Spend Time in Heart of the Jungle…. Photographs Will Be Taken, Phonographic Records Secured of Voices, and Much Valuable Data Brought Back." DA - Sept. 15, 1905 KW - nationalism motion pictures, and Americanization ref, news motion pictures nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures Americanism motion pictures, and Americanism Americanism, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel motion pictures, and new art form race race, and motion pictures motion pictures, and race sound recording phonograph Starr, Frederick ref, CDT LB - 13530 PY - 1905 SP - 3 ST - Starr Going to Africa T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Starr Going to Africa ID - 3512 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article indicates that speeches, songs, and moving pictures were shown new citizens to instill love of flag, government, and country. The article subtitle read: "Must Be ‘Unhyphenated and Unhesitating Americans,’ Says Mayor Mitchel; …Patriotism and Its Meaning the Only Topic of Speech, Song, and Picture." DA - Oct. 30, 1915 KW - nationalism motion pictures, and Americanization ref, news motion pictures nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures Americanism motion pictures, and Americanism Americanism, and motion pictures modernity patriotism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and patriotism motion pictures, and Americanization ref, NYT patriotism LB - 13540 PY - 1915 SP - 5 ST - 2,000 New Citizens Learn Voter’s Duty T2 - New York Times TI - 2,000 New Citizens Learn Voter’s Duty ID - 3513 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that movies will probably be used to teach Americanism. DA - July 28, 1916 KW - nationalism children Chicago, IL motion pictures, and Americanization ref, news modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures Americanism motion pictures, and Americanism Americanism, and motion pictures patriotism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and patriotism patriotism ref, CDT motion pictures LB - 13550 PY - 1916 SP - 10 ST - What Schools to Use Movies T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - What Schools to Use Movies ID - 3514 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that children cheered moving pictures and telephotographs. “The popular generals and well-known warships were instantly recognized and their appearance n the screen was greeted with a deafening hubbub of whistling and yelling that the patient lecturer had difficulty quelling. “Roosevelt in his Rough Ride uniform and Wheeler, both ever present where any fighting was going on, were the most popular of the warriors, and the Brooklyn and Oregon warships, aroused the greatest enthusiasm.” DA - Feb. 23, 1899 KW - nationalism history motion pictures, and Americanization motion pictures nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures Americanism motion pictures, and Americanism Americanism, and motion pictures patriotism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and patriotism patriotism history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures telephotography Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt, Theodore, and motion pictures Roosevelt, Theodore, and new media presidents and new media Roosevelt, Theodore, and motion pictures Roosevelt, Theodore, and new media ref, NYT children LB - 13560 PY - 1899 SP - 12 ST - Children Cheered War Heroes; Two Thousand Little Ones the Happy Guests of the City History Club T2 - New York Times TI - Children Cheered War Heroes; Two Thousand Little Ones the Happy Guests of the City History Club ID - 3515 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about movies being used to get new recruits in the Army. DA - July 13, 1913 KW - nationalism motion pictures, and Americanization motion pictures nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures Americanism motion pictures, and Americanism Americanism, and motion pictures patriotism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and patriotism patriotism military communication motion pictures, and military military communication, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 13570 PY - 1913 SE - SM SP - 11 ST - ‘Movies’ To Solve Problem of Getting Army Recruits T2 - New York Times TI - ‘Movies’ To Solve Problem of Getting Army Recruits ID - 3516 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article comments that “No longer does a hero have to depend on the uncertain pleasure of the bards of posterity to celebrate his aristeia; he comes home and lectures about it himself, usually to his credit be it said, for the benefit of some worthy cause. Or, it may be his achievements pass into the running record of the film, with Himself as Himself if possible; if he lacks the technique, another may impersonate him with greater or less fidelity; the public is pleased just the same. “Rome would have howled with joy could it have seen upon the screen ‘My Seven Years in Gaul,’ by C. J. Ceasar….” DA - March 26, 1918 KW - history fame fame celebrity celebrity culture ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures war war, and motion pictures motion pictures, and war war, and fame fame, and war celebrity culture motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame history, and fame fame, and history actors acting ref, NYT history LB - 13580 PY - 1918 SP - 10 ST - What the Ancients Missed T2 - New York Times TI - What the Ancients Missed ID - 3517 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that the New York Times will offer four full pages of photographs of President Woodrow Wilson inauguration, five days after that event, and thus will beat the paper's Sunday magazine in providing pictures. The paper will provide half-tone pictures using a faster presses and "specially made paper of high quality." The Sunday Times will also provide photographs new spring fashions. "Readers of next Sunday's Times will not have to wait a couple of weeks for the magazine to furnish them with an adequate pictorial review of the inauguration, finely printed on smooth surfaced paper. The Times has taken care of that. The fifth morning after the great National celebration is over every Times reader will have spread before him four great newspaper pages of wonderful photographs -- pictures so well chosen and so well produced that no desires will be left for the formal magazine to satisfy later on.... "To accomplish this the Times has made extensive preparations. Special photographers will be everywhere in Washington to-morrow snapping pictures which together will constitute a pictorial history of the entire inauguration. "These will be rushed to the Times office in New York City where, the next day, they will be converted into special metal plates. Fast presses will stand ready with specially made paper of high quality on the reels in readiness for a run at a speed which will make still another record for half-tone pictures of the quality of these. "The Sunday Times of next Sunday will be notable for another reason, also. It is the occasion of the Spring Fashion Number.... The half-tone pictures were reproduced from exclusive hats and gowns, and will be seen then for the first time in America." The work of some of the most famous Parisian dressmakers will be shown. The subtitle for the article reads: "The Sunday Times Will Make a New Record in Publishing High Quality News Pictures. Special Paper, High Speed. With Same Issue Will Appear the Annual Authoritative Spring Fashion Section." DA - March 2, 1913 KW - journalism magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media photography, and history history, and photography Wilson, Woodrow presidents and new media Wilson, Woodrow, and photography photography, and Woodrow Wilson photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers photography, and advertising advertising, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and high speed ref, NYT advertising history LB - 37200 PY - 1913 SP - 2 ST - The Inauguration Rapidly Pictured T2 - New York Times TI - The Inauguration Rapidly Pictured ID - 3518 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on the difficulties of capturing live fighting in the Spanish-American War and in the Philippines. Some film purporting to show charges up San Juan Hill were actually filmed in the Philippines. Also notes movies cameras vary from electric ones used by big companies that weigh 800 pounds, to one turned by hand crank that weigh perhaps 20 pounds. DA - Aug. 4, 1902 KW - history photography ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures war war, and motion pictures motion pictures, and war military communication military communication, and motion pictures cameras, portable war, and cameras cameras, and war Spanish American War motion pictures, and Spanish American War cameras war, and Philippines motion pictures, and live war action cameras, and live war action photography and visual communication photography, and war war, and photography ref, CDT LB - 13600 PY - 1902 SP - 12 ST - The Moving Picture Man T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - The Moving Picture Man ID - 3519 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The British are now using moving pictures to encourage enlistments into the military. DA - Sept. 16, 1900 KW - nationalism motion pictures, and Americanization motion pictures nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures Americanism motion pictures, and Americanism Americanism, and motion pictures patriotism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and patriotism patriotism military communication motion pictures, and military military communication, and motion pictures Great Britain non-USA Great Britain, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Great Britain military communication, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Boer War war war, and motion pictures motion pictures, and war ref, CDT LB - 13610 PY - 1900 SP - 10 ST - England Hard Up for Troops. Moving Pictures of Army Life to Be Sent Through the Country to Attract Enlistments T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - England Hard Up for Troops. Moving Pictures of Army Life to Be Sent Through the Country to Attract Enlistments ID - 3520 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This two-article story reports on a camera designed to capture action on battlefield with Francisco Villa. Quoting H. A. Aikten: “‘Meanwhile there was the question of the cameras. We wanted a camera that would stand up and take pictures of a battlefield and yet operate in such a way that the man with it could keep under cover while the machine was exposed. “‘Such a camera was designed, and ten of them were ordered. We next had to consider the question of men. We wanted daring men, of course, and also men who would know how to take care of themselves in military operations. We didn’t want greenhorns in army matters, who would welch out at the first experience under fire. “‘We have ten men in our squad at the front, two of them operating cameras to take pictures where the movies [sic] cameras will not be practicable. We are holding another man here ready to go at a moment’s notice to any point where there may be a chance to catch some good manoeuvre.” (Subhead for this article reads: “Villa to War for ‘Movies’; Become Partner of H. A. Aitken Who Sends Camera Squad to Front.”) The subtitle of the article reads: "Brings 3,500 Recruits and Moving-Picture Contract to Ojinaga. Camera Record of Battle. The General Will Provide the Pictures and Care for Operators for a Percentage of Receipts." DA - Jan. 7, 1914 KW - history photography ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures war war, and motion pictures motion pictures, and war military communication military communication, and motion pictures cameras, portable war, and cameras cameras, and war motion pictures, and live war action cameras, and live war action photography and visual communication photography, and war war, and photography war, and Mexico war, and Francisco Villa cameras ref, NYT LB - 13620 PY - 1914 SP - 1 ST - Villa at the Front; ‘Movies’ Sign Him Up T2 - New York Times TI - Villa at the Front; ‘Movies’ Sign Him Up ID - 3521 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that reports from photographers about capturing real scenes of combat are vastly inflated and are but “advance notices” printed for free “as straight reading matter” “We have been credibly informed that movie men have been permitted by Gen. Villa for a consideration, of course to accompany him into as much of danger as they have inclination to encounter, and the exultant reports given out as coming from these representatives of the greatest and most enterprising of new industries are just about what they would be expected to send. “Skepticism whispers to credulity, however, that only by the luckiest and rarest of chances would a movie man be confronted at convenient distance in real war with a scene that would show up well in a picture, while highly impressive battles could be produced by the adroit manipulation of properly clothed actors in front of skillfully designed backgrounds. Between nature and art the comparison is so often in favor of the latter nowadays that the former can hardly be credited with holding its own and still less with the catching up of the Whistlerian legend. “If only these telegrams from the photographers were not such good ‘advance notices’ all printed free and as straight reading matter, too! confidence in their veracity would be easier. Still, faith is not impossible. The fact that this sort of photography would be dangerous counts for nothing. Fortunately for the welfare and preservation of the human race, a good many of its members like danger and enjoy taking risks, especially when both glory and money can be won by doing it. “So whoever will may doubt that we are soon to see moving pictures taken in the intrenchments [sic] and streets of Torreon while the most desperate fighting of recent years was going on. The probabilities are, however, that we shall do just that and a fine argument against war they ought to be if they bear out the hideous stories of wholesale slaughter coming from that dreadful city.” DA - April 2, 1914 KW - history photography ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures war war, and motion pictures motion pictures, and war military communication military communication, and motion pictures cameras, portable war, and cameras cameras, and war motion pictures, and live war action cameras, and live war action photography and visual communication photography, and war war, and photography war, and Francisco Villa cameras ref, NYT LB - 13630 PY - 1914 SP - 10 ST - Photography Under Difficulties T2 - New York Times TI - Photography Under Difficulties ID - 3522 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that American films are preferred in other countries although “the life of the films manufactured in the United States is said to be much shorter than that of most other films.” American films in almost every country and even are popular in China. Cowboy films popular but their popularity is now on the wane. Many want at least one scientific film about bird and animal life or industrial and commercial welfare. Types of films not liked love affairs; fooling or mocking police and government officials; pictures instilling “revolutionary ideas in the heart of the youth.” The subtitle of this article reads: "Subject Matter of Moving Pictures is Given as Reason for Popularity. Demand Is for Real Life. Japan Considers Our Actors Inferior Reports on Enterprise from China to Turkey." DA - June 30, 1912 KW - nationalism history motion pictures, and Americanism motion pictures motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, foreign nationalism and communication motion pictures, and Americanization motion pictures, and westerns history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures ref, news motion pictures, and westerns motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad ref, NYT LB - 13640 PY - 1912 SE - X SP - 8 ST - American Films Now Circle the Globe T2 - New York Times TI - American Films Now Circle the Globe ID - 3523 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discuss the reaction to American films in China (note the racist language): “China has always been shy of the devices of the outside barbarian, and it is little wonder that a moving picture show with a gasoline attachment which blew up as soon as the concern was arranged for business should have created a local panic in that country and an apprehension that the machine was some diabolical instrument of invasion intended to overthrow the empire and cut off every pious pigtail pendent therein.” DA - Aug. 31, 1906 KW - nationalism history motion pictures, and Americanism motion pictures motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, foreign nationalism and communication motion pictures, and Americanization motion pictures, and westerns history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures ref, news motion pictures, and westerns motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad China non-USA China, and U.S. motion pictures motion pictures, and U.S. in China race race, and motion pictures motion pictures, and race ref, NYT LB - 13650 PY - 1906 SP - 8 ST - Moving Pictures in China T2 - New York Times TI - Moving Pictures in China ID - 3524 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This articles discusses Germany's effort to expand the global market for its motion pictures. DA - Nov. 8, 1913 KW - nationalism history motion pictures nationalism motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, foreign nationalism and communication history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures ref, news motion pictures, and German films abroad quotations non-USA Germany Germany, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Germany modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel motion pictures, and Germany abroad ref, NYT LB - 13670 PY - 1913 SP - 1 ST - To Boom Germany in Motion Pictures. Big Publicity Plan Launched for the Capture of Foreign Markets T2 - New York Times TI - To Boom Germany in Motion Pictures. Big Publicity Plan Launched for the Capture of Foreign Markets ID - 3526 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that “there is observable in recent publications in England and America a disposition to enter the field of the French novel…. There have lately appeared, and have been published in this country, several English novels, which, it appears to us, no clean-minded man or woman can read without loathing. This condemnation involves no assertion that fiction must close its eyes to a single fact of human existence…. To present pornography and perversity as a picture of the whole of life is to set up in the stead of sober art a monstrous and hideous caricature. “It isn’t, therefore, in the interest of morality especially that a stand should be made against the surrender of the Anglo-Saxon for the French idea of the novel it is in the interest of sound art. By all means let us emancipate ourselves from the silly prudishness which has wrought the literary neglect of the fact that the world is peopled by men and women, but by equal means let us keep our senses and refuse to allow the erotic to shatter the rounded integrity of true art.” DA - Sept. 28, 1907 KW - stage nationalism eroticism censorship ref, news motion pictures censorship censorship, and literature literature, and censorship censorship and ratings sexuality literature, and sexuality sexuality, and French novels nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures non-USA France motion pictures, and French influence stage and theaters, and French influence France, and novels in U.S. religion religion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion non-USA non-USA, and French novels quotations values immorality values, and French novels Great Britain immorality, and French novels French novels, in U.S. Great Britain, and French novels eroticism, and French novels ref, NYT literature LB - 13680 PY - 1907 SP - BR584 ST - The French Novel and the American Public T2 - New York Times TI - The French Novel and the American Public ID - 3527 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that “The immodesty of many picture post cards and the immorality of moving-picture shows occupied the attention of the South Coast Civic League….” DA - March 11, 1909 KW - stage post office postal service French postcards eroticism censorship ref, news postcards censorship censorship, and French postcards French postcards, and censorship censorship and ratings sexuality postcards, and sexuality sexuality, and French postcards nationalism and communication postcards, and nationalism nationalism, and postcards non-USA France motion pictures, and French influence stage and theaters, and French influence France, and postcards in U.S. religion religion, and postcards postcards, and religion non-USA non-USA, and French postcards values immorality values, and French postcards immorality, and French postcards French postcards, in U.S.. eroticism, and French postcards motion pictures values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and French postcards ref, LAT nationalism LB - 13690 PY - 1909 SE - II SP - 10 ST - Ban Immodest Postals T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Ban Immodest Postals ID - 3528 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the effort to eliminate "immoral" postcards. The article's subtitle reports: "‘Activity’ Is Kept Up. Sleuths’ Report Shows One Shop Display Censored in the Last Month." DA - Sept. 15, 1907 KW - stage post office postal service French postcards eroticism Chicago, IL censorship ref, news postcards censorship censorship, and French postcards French postcards, and censorship censorship and ratings sexuality postcards, and sexuality sexuality, and French postcards nationalism and communication postcards, and nationalism nationalism, and postcards non-USA France motion pictures, and French influence stage and theaters, and French influence France, and postcards in U.S. religion religion, and postcards postcards, and religion non-USA non-USA, and French postcards values immorality values, and French postcards immorality, and French postcards French postcards, in U.S.. eroticism, and French postcards motion pictures values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and French postcards saloons values, and saloons immorality, and saloons motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures ref, CDT nationalism LB - 13700 PY - 1907 SE - A SP - 3 ST - Saloon Pictures Must Be Pure, Too; Police Who Are Busy ‘Suppressing’ Immoral Postcards Say So T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Saloon Pictures Must Be Pure, Too; Police Who Are Busy ‘Suppressing’ Immoral Postcards Say So ID - 3529 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about picture post cards made in France or Germany. Five police assigned to the cards and hunt for the manufacturers. The article explains about window displays, art pictures in book stores, “bathing scenes,” “model posing,” and “half nude women in bathing and art costumes.” The article's subtitle reads: "Government Inspectors Try in Vain to Check Tide of Improper Pictures. Want Source Attacked. Urge Raids by City Police on Numerous Shops Selling Such Things." DA - Aug. 29, 1907 KW - stage post office postal service French postcards eroticism Chicago, IL censorship ref, news postcards censorship censorship, and French postcards French postcards, and censorship censorship and ratings sexuality postcards, and sexuality sexuality, and French postcards nationalism and communication postcards, and nationalism nationalism, and postcards non-USA France motion pictures, and French influence stage and theaters, and French influence France, and postcards in U.S. religion religion, and postcards postcards, and religion non-USA non-USA, and French postcards values immorality values, and French postcards immorality, and French postcards French postcards, in U.S.. eroticism, and French postcards motion pictures values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and French postcards nudity nudity, and French postcards motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures ref, CDT nationalism LB - 13710 PY - 1907 SP - 3 ST - Evil Post Cards Flood the Mails T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Evil Post Cards Flood the Mails ID - 3530 ER - TY - NEWS AB - An account of the Rockefeller Report on White Slavery. It mentions such films as Traffic in Souls (1913). DA - Nov. 3, 1913 KW - prostitution children censorship photography ref, news motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures white slavery, and motion pictures motion pictures, and white slavery prostitution, and motion pictures motion pictures, and prostitution ref, NYT advertising LB - 13720 PY - 1913 SP - 9 ST - Film Company Gets Criterion Theatre … Special Performance Shortly of Dramatization of Rockefeller White Slavery Report T2 - New York Times TI - Film Company Gets Criterion Theatre … Special Performance Shortly of Dramatization of Rockefeller White Slavery Report ID - 3531 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that more women in police work would help stop white slavery. The article's subtitle reads: "Dr. Anna Shaw Tells the Belmont Art League That the City Needs 1,000." DA - Jan. 25, 1911 KW - censorship ref, news motion pictures law motion pictures, and law law, and motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and white slavery white slavery, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings ref, NYT LB - 13790 PY - 1911 SP - 7 ST - She’d Have Women Police T2 - New York Times TI - She’d Have Women Police ID - 3538 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about Roman Catholic efforts to regulate the theater. The subtitle of this article reads: "Cardinal, Who Says He Never Went to Theatre In His Life, Backs Catholic Movement; McGean Blames the People…." DA - Dec. 19, 1912 KW - immorality children censorship actors acting actors acting photography ref, news motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures quotations nudity nudity, and the stage theaters theaters, and 5-cent values, and theater values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values theater, and values values immorality, and theater immorality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and immorality religion religion, and motion pictures religion, and theater theater, and religion motion pictures, and religion quotations actors, and status of ref, NYT advertising theater LB - 13800 PY - 1912 SP - 9 ST - Farley Begins War on Infamy of Stage T2 - New York Times TI - Farley Begins War on Infamy of Stage ID - 3539 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Lieut. Alexander McDonald, head of Chicago’s new “nickel theater bureau” quoted: “‘In my estimation the penny arcades are more in need of reform than the nickel theaters, and the theaters need it badly enough…. I will venture that there weren’t 20 per cent of the penny moving pictures that could be called decent.’” The subtitle of this articles reads: "Find Many Bad Shows in Them and Worse in the Penny Arcades; Have Much to Condemn; Expect to Cover City in Three Days and Make a Complete Report. Penny Arcades the Worst. Thaw and Other Murder Scenes." DA - May 1, 1907 KW - immorality children Chicago, IL censorship actors acting actors acting photography ref, news motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures quotations nudity nudity, and the stage theaters theaters, and 5-cent values, and theater values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values theater, and values values immorality, and theater immorality, and motion pictures motion pictures,and immorality religion religion, and motion pictures religion, and theater theater, and religion motion pictures, and religion quotations actors, and status of motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and crime quotations quotations, and nickel theaters ref, CDT advertising theater LB - 13810 PY - 1907 SP - 6 ST - Censors Inspect Nickel Theaters T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Censors Inspect Nickel Theaters ID - 3540 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses Thomas Edison's effort to control patents relating to moving pictures. It reports that in 1908, 10,000 moving picture theaters in the United States; in 1910, there were 13,000 theaters with a daily attendance of 4 million people, each paying 7 cents. DA - March 9, 1910 KW - censorship ref, news motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and technological censorship censorship, and technology Edison, Thomas motion pictures, and Thomas Edison Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures motion pictures, and patents theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures audiences audiences, and theaters theaters, and audiences motion pictures, and attendance ref, NYT LB - 13850 PY - 1910 SP - 8 ST - Edison Controls Pictures T2 - New York Times TI - Edison Controls Pictures ID - 3543 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the dangers of 5-cent theaters and the fact that many of the moving picture shows are run by people who do not have licenses. This article's subtitle reads: "More than 300 Moving Picture Shows in City Are Run Without Licensed Operators; Police May Close Them; Examining Board Displays Little Zeal in Requiring Compliance with Ordinance." DA - Dec. 27, 1908 KW - Chicago, IL censorship censorship ref, news motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and technological censorship censorship, and technology motion pictures, and projectionists censorship, and projectionists motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures censorship, and Chicago Chicago, and movie censorship law motion pictures, and law law, and motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures LB - 13860 PY - 1908 SP - 1 ST - Nickel Theater Perils Revealed T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Nickel Theater Perils Revealed ID - 3544 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on the effort to require licenses for people who run moving picture shows. This article subtitle reads: "Operators Warned to Get Licenses by Jan. 15 or Places Will Be Ordered Closed; Police Chief in Haste; Tells Commissioners to Rush the Examinations; Argument on Murder Films." DA - Dec. 30, 1908 KW - Chicago, IL censorship censorship ref, news motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and technological censorship censorship, and technology motion pictures, and projectionists censorship, and projectionists motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures censorship, and Chicago Chicago, and movie censorship law motion pictures, and law law, and motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures ref, CDT LB - 13870 PY - 1908 SP - 6 ST - Nickel Picture Men Must Hurry T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Nickel Picture Men Must Hurry ID - 3545 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on efforts to control moving picture patents. The article's subtitle reads: "Contest Over Patent Rights Threatens Temporary End to 10,000 Theaters; Fight to Center Here; ‘Trust’ and ‘Independents Each Desires Other Put Out of Business by Courts." DA - March 9, 1908 KW - Chicago, IL censorship censorship ref, news motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and technological censorship censorship, and technology motion pictures, and projectionists censorship, and projectionists motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures censorship, and Chicago Chicago, and movie censorship law motion pictures, and law law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and patents ref, CDT LB - 13880 PY - 1908 SP - 5 ST - Moving Pictures Menaced by War T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Moving Pictures Menaced by War ID - 3546 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Movie posters without permits must be removed from Chicago theaters. DA - Feb. 17, 1914 KW - Chicago, IL censorship motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures censorship, and movie advertising advertising, and censorship motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures posters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and posters advertising, and posters advertising, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and movie advertising sensationalism, and sexuality sexuality, and sensationalism ref, news ref, CDT advertising posters LB - 13890 PY - 1914 SP - 11 ST - Gleason Dooms ‘Movie’ Signs T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Gleason Dooms ‘Movie’ Signs ID - 3547 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that although movie content dealing with sex is censored, the posters and ads are “unrestricted.” The article gives lengthy list of sexually suggestive movie titles. DA - June 15, 1918 KW - Chicago, IL censorship motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures censorship, and movie advertising advertising, and censorship motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures posters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and posters advertising, and posters advertising, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and movie advertising sensationalism, and sexuality sexuality, and sensationalism ref, news ref, CDT advertising posters LB - 13900 PY - 1918 SP - 13 ST - Alcock Forces Suggestive Ads Off Movie Doors; Inquiry Reveals Sex Lure Undermining Business T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Alcock Forces Suggestive Ads Off Movie Doors; Inquiry Reveals Sex Lure Undermining Business ID - 3548 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article describes that first electrical parade in Los Angeles history. DA - May 7, 1903 KW - ref, news electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time color electricity, and color color, and electricity advertising and public relations electricity, and advertising advertising, and electricity ref, LAT advertising LB - 14630 PY - 1903 SE - A SP - 1 ST - Wondrous Beauty. Wednesday Night’s Pageant T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Wondrous Beauty. Wednesday Night’s Pageant ID - 3549 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Women in New Orleans are upset by the comic pages in newspapers. DA - Jan. 30, 1912 KW - censorship ref, news news and journalism censorship and ratings censorship, and comics censorship, and Sunday newspapers news, and entertainment women values values, and newspaper illustrations newspapers, and illustrations newspapers, and comics censorship ref, NYT news LB - 13920 PY - 1912 SP - 1 ST - Fight Comic Supplements. New Orleans Club Women Want Artistic Illustrations T2 - New York Times TI - Fight Comic Supplements. New Orleans Club Women Want Artistic Illustrations ID - 3550 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reflects fears within the Woodrow Wilson administration of motion pictures supporting bolshevism. DA - April 19, 1919 KW - censorship ref, news motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures communism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and communism motion pictures, and bolshevism motion pictures, and Russia ref, NYT capitalism communism LB - 13930 PY - 1919 SP - 6 ST - Raps ‘Bolshevist’ Movie. Secretary Wilson Asks Officials to Bar Make-Believe Riots T2 - New York Times TI - Raps ‘Bolshevist’ Movie. Secretary Wilson Asks Officials to Bar Make-Believe Riots ID - 3551 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article give specific examples of films cut or censored by Chicago authorities. DA - Aug. 28, 1914 KW - Chicago, IL censorship motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures ref, news censorship, and Chicago Chicago, and movie censorship ref, CDT advertising and public relations LB - 13940 PY - 1914 SP - 8 ST - Not in the ‘Movies’ T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Not in the ‘Movies’ ID - 3552 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This articles gives specific examples of films that would censored because of violence. It also notes that in censoring “Merchant of Venice,” authoritieis substituted “Shylock” for “the Jew.” The subtitle for the article reads: "Indorse Two Cuts; Hear Orders to Reduce Crime in One Film and Trim Immorality from Another. Shylock Receives O. K.; ‘Citizens’ Jury Makes Only Change in Subtitle in ‘Merchant of Venice'." DA - Feb. 20, 1914 KW - Chicago, IL censorship ref, news motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures violence, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures censorship, and Chicago Chicago, and movie censorship censorship, and violence violence, and censorship motion pictures, and anti-Semitism anti-Semitism, and motion pictures ref, CDT anti-Semitism LB - 13950 PY - 1914 SP - 1 ST - Women Censors See Twelve Reels T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Women Censors See Twelve Reels ID - 3553 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with the showing of the film of the Jeffries-Jack Johnson heavyweight title fight. It lists cities where the fight cannot be shown. The article's subtitle reads: "Nine States ad Twenty-five Municipalities Closed to Film Shows Now. Owners Plan to Fight. Gov. Deneen Says It Is Not in His Power to Prevent Exhibits." DA - July 7, 1910 KW - sensationalism children Chicago, IL censorship motion pictures, and sports ref, news motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and boxing motion pictures, and race motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures violence race race, and motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and sensationalism sensationalism, and cameras motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence ref, CDT LB - 13960 PY - 1910 SP - 3 ST - More Cites Bar Fight Pictures T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - More Cites Bar Fight Pictures ID - 3554 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article lists many crimes shown in movies that violate state laws. The article's subtitle reads: "Order by Chief Steward Also Embraces Art and Drama. Stirs Up a Buzz of ‘Ifs.’ Agree However Ruling Affects Merely Reno Encounter Views." DA - July 25, 1910 KW - Chicago, IL censorship ref, news motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures violence, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures censorship, and Chicago Chicago, and movie censorship censorship, and violence violence, and censorship motion pictures, and crime censorship, and crime ref, CDT LB - 13970 PY - 1910 SP - 1 ST - Fight Films’ Ban Is Broad T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Fight Films’ Ban Is Broad ID - 3555 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Here is an account of the reaction to the moving picture of the Jefferies-Jack Johnson heavyweight boxing match. The article's subtitle reads: "Pictures Renew Interest in Reno Affair at New York. Big Crowds See the Films. Public Should Let Jeff Alone Now, Says James J. Corbett." DA - Aug. 7, 1910 KW - sensationalism children Chicago, IL censorship motion pictures, and sports ref, news motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and boxing motion pictures, and race motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures violence race race, and motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and sensationalism sensationalism, and cameras motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence ref, CDT LB - 13980 PY - 1910 SE - C SP - 1 ST - Fans Still Talk of Fight T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Fans Still Talk of Fight ID - 3556 ER - TY - NEWS AB - About 3,000 stenographers protested movies showing them “as chewers of gum and wearers of ‘rats.’” DA - March 25, 1913 KW - censorship censorship ref, news censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings censorship, and crime women women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women ref, NYT motion pictures LB - 13990 PY - 1913 SP - 5 ST - Girls Protest to Film Makers T2 - New York Times TI - Girls Protest to Film Makers ID - 3557 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This report on movie makers who supported some form of regulation on films has the subtitle: "Concur in the Plan to Have a Public Board Pass on Their Films." DA - Oct. 11, 1910 KW - censorship ref, news motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings ref, NYT LB - 14000 PY - 1910 SP - 8 ST - Picture Men Favor Censors T2 - New York Times TI - Picture Men Favor Censors ID - 3558 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on the formation of the United Film Service Protective Association of the United States. The article's subtitle reads: "Pledge to 'Cut Out' Objectionable Films Made in Manufacturers and Renters' Association." DA - Dec. 15, 1907 KW - Chicago, IL censorship ref, news motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures ref, CDT LB - 14010 PY - 1907 SP - 2 ST - Offensive Moving Pictures Are Barred by New Combine T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Offensive Moving Pictures Are Barred by New Combine ID - 3559 ER - TY - NEWS AB - With regard to crime shows, this article says: “Nothing is more popular on the stage than crime and criminals if one may judge by the titles of the plays that are being presented throughout the country. A Lawyer can hardly find any kind of a law that is not broken every night on the stage, and as often as otherwise the criminal is applauded and becomes the hero before the last curtain drops. “Sometimes the criminal hero reforms, and sometimes he proves himself innocent, but the managers have proven the public sympathy for the wrongdoer so often that most any kind of crime play seems to have a good chance for success.” A list of play titles follows including “James Brothers in Missouri.” DA - Dec. 1, 1907 KW - theater stage Chicago, IL censorship censorship ref, news censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings censorship, and crime motion pictures, and crime motion pictures audiences motion pictures, and crime audiences, and crime violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures censorship, and theater theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures ref, CDT LB - 14020 PY - 1907 SE - A SP - 8 ST - People Like Crime Shows T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - People Like Crime Shows ID - 3560 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that “Anthony Comstock appeared before the Assembly Codes Committee to urge favorable action on Senator Wagner’s bill making it a misdemeanor to exhibit any indecent moving pictures in slot machines. The committee decided to report the bill favorably. It has already passed the Senate.” DA - Feb. 28, 1900 KW - censorship motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings ref, news Comstock, Anthony Comstock, Anthony, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Anthony Comstock censorship, and Anthony Comstock Comstock, Anthony, and movie censorship ref, NYT LB - 14030 PY - 1900 SP - 9 ST - To Prohibit Indecent Pictures T2 - New York Times TI - To Prohibit Indecent Pictures ID - 3561 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article quotes author Philip Curtiss saying that the movies should admit “they really are a primitive entertainment for simple minds.” DA - June 1, 1919 KW - censorship censorship ref, news censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings censorship, and crime motion pictures, and crime motion pictures critics motion pictures, and critics critics, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 14050 PY - 1919 SP - 46 ST - Written on the Screen; Authors and the Screen T2 - New York Times TI - Written on the Screen; Authors and the Screen ID - 3563 ER - TY - NEWS AB - “Children need no instruction in murders…,” says Judge Mary Bartelme. The subtitle to this article reads: "Gun Play Film Shows Attacked by Social Workers, Police, and Judiciary." DA - Sept. 19, 1913 KW - reform children Chicago, IL censorship ref, news motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and crime audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences motion pictures, and reformers reformers, and motion pictures critics critics, and reformers reformers, and critics law motion pictures, and law law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures women women, and censorship women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women censorship, and women ref, CDT LB - 14080 PY - 1913 SP - 1 ST - War Declared on Crime in ‘Movies’ T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - War Declared on Crime in ‘Movies’ ID - 3565 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that Board of Censorship of Moving Pictures and the People’s Institute gave a demonstration mainly to school teachers and it was a “model show.” The subtitle of the articles reads: "Had the Theatre So Lighted That the Audience Could See to Read; Exhibit Biblical Pictures; Also Statues and Paintings A Comic Side, Too Speaker Thinks Clergy Fear Human Nature." DA - May 16, 1909 KW - children censorship ref, news motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children religion religion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and reformers censorship,and reformers ref, NYT LB - 14090 PY - 1909 SP - 7 ST - Censors Conduct Model Picture Show T2 - New York Times TI - Censors Conduct Model Picture Show ID - 3566 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This piece reports on efforts by women to influence the tone and content of motion pictures. The article's subtitle reads: "Mrs. Jane S. Johnson Urges General Federation to Use Its Influence Upon Producers." DA - May 28, 1916 KW - reform children Chicago, IL censorship ref, news motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children motion pictures, and reformers reformers, and motion pictures critics critics, and reformers reformers, and critics law motion pictures, and law law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures women women, and censorship women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women censorship, and women motion pictures, and General Federation of Women's Clubs ref, NYT LB - 14100 PY - 1916 SE - X SP - 12 ST - Club Women Want Cleaner Photo Plays T2 - New York Times TI - Club Women Want Cleaner Photo Plays ID - 3567 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This articles reports on two approaches to regulating motion pictures. The article's subtitle reads: "Children’s Society Going Before the Legislature and Conference Appeals to the Mayor; Not Agreed in Their Views; Children’s Society Regards It as a Moral Question and Conference as an Administrative Detail." DA - March 14, 1911 KW - reform children censorship ref, news motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children reformers, and motion pictures motion pictures, and reformers censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and reformers censorship,and reformers women women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women critics critics, and reformers values values, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 14120 PY - 1911 SP - 7 ST - Two-Sided Attack on Picture Shows T2 - New York Times TI - Two-Sided Attack on Picture Shows ID - 3569 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Women objected to moving pictures of a bull fight at lecture (given by Prof. Dwight L. Elmendorf) before the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences. DA - Nov. 13, 1904 KW - Chicago, IL censorship ref, news motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures violence, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures censorship, and Chicago Chicago, and movie censorship censorship, and violence violence, and censorship women women, and violence women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women censorship, and women women, and censorship ref, CDT LB - 14130 PY - 1904 SP - 2 ST - Women Object to Pictures of Bull Fight T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Women Object to Pictures of Bull Fight ID - 3570 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subhead in this article reads: “How It Has Swept Over the Country Until It Represents an Investment of Forty Millions of Dollars and the Employment of 100,000 Persons. Some Moving Picture Tricks. Amusing Incidents Often Occur in Creating ‘Magical’ Illusions.” The text of the article goes on to say that “The old saw that things are seldom what they seem is nowhere more true than with the moving picture….” DA - Jan. 3, 1909 KW - censorship actors acting actors acting ref, news censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and deception actors, and status of motion pictures, and magic motion pictures, and special effects special effects, and motion pictures motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business ref, NYT capitalism special effects LB - 14150 PY - 1909 SE - SM SP - 10 ST - The Nation-Wide Wave of Moving Pictures. T2 - New York Times TI - The Nation-Wide Wave of Moving Pictures. ID - 3572 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on censorship efforts in New York City. The article's subtitle reads: "New York Mayor Yields to Ministers and Fills Showmen with Dismay." DA - Dec. 25, 1908 KW - censorship ref, news motion pictures motion pictures, and New York New York, and motion pictures religion religion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion critics critics, and religion censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings censorship, and Chicago ref, CDT censorship, and New York LB - 14160 PY - 1908 SP - 2 ST - McClellan Stops Moving Pictures T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - McClellan Stops Moving Pictures ID - 3573 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This articles lists some of the materials that vice-hunter Anthony Comstock had confiscated during the previous year. DA - Jan. 23, 1896 KW - censorship photography motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings ref, news Comstock, Anthony Comstock, Anthony, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Anthony Comstock censorship, and Anthony Comstock Comstock, Anthony, and movie censorship ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and Anthony Comstock Comstock, Anthony, and photography ref, NYT LB - 14170 PY - 1896 SP - 9 ST - Year’s Fight with Vice. Anthony Comstock’s Annual Report About What He Has Done. Tons of Bad Things Captured…. T2 - New York Times TI - Year’s Fight with Vice. Anthony Comstock’s Annual Report About What He Has Done. Tons of Bad Things Captured…. ID - 3574 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle to this article reads: "Fighting of Hostile Censorship Legislation the Chief Aim of New Body. Big Firms Represented. Plans Publicity Campaigns to Further the Industry and the Holding of Expositions." DA - Sept. 10, 1915 KW - censorship motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings ref, NYT LB - 14180 PY - 1915 SP - 11 ST - Movie Men Form a Board of Trade T2 - New York Times TI - Movie Men Form a Board of Trade ID - 3575 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about the danger of fire from cellulod film and other materials. DA - Feb. 12, 1905 KW - ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, as fire hazards celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid materials materials, and celluloid celluloid, as fire hazard ref, LAT LB - 14190 PY - 1905 SE - I SP - 16 ST - Ice Box for Cineographs T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Ice Box for Cineographs ID - 3576 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that draperies giving theater Oriental atmosphere caught fire. DA - Feb. 4, 1907 KW - ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, as fire harzards ref, NYT LB - 14200 PY - 1907 SP - 2 ST - 5-Cent Theatre Burns; Panic on Bowery T2 - New York Times TI - 5-Cent Theatre Burns; Panic on Bowery ID - 3577 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on movie theaters thought to be unsafe by fire officials. Part of the article subtitle reads: "Prisoners Charged with Maintaining a Nuisance -- 'Movies' Seemed to be in Communication." DA - Feb. 10, 1913 KW - ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, as fire hazards celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid materials materials, and celluloid celluloid, as fire hazard ref, NYT LB - 14210 PY - 1913 SP - 3 ST - Firemen Go Raiding the Picture Shows T2 - New York Times TI - Firemen Go Raiding the Picture Shows ID - 3578 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that “A number of fires have occurred in the theaters, due to the burning out of some portion of the electric apparatus or to this films catching fire.” It notes that “Five cent theaters are springing up all over Chicago like mushrooms.” Articles notes that “A big plant where the pictures will be manufactured is now being erected at Belmont and Western avenues” in Chicago. The article gives the titles of several crime pictures. It notes that “Residence Districts Invaded.” It says “Suggestive Picture Shown” and says of a film of “Parisian manufacture” called “Cupid’s Thermometer,” that “There is enough hugging and kissing in that series of pictures to make a foolish girl dream of love for a solid week.” It also discusses the film “The Unwritten Law” about the “Thaw Case.” The article contends that: “Influence on Children Bad” from these kinds of films. This article's subtitle reads: "Judge Cleland Says Children Should Not Be Allowed to Attend Some of Them. Vice Shown in Pictures. Illustrations of the Thaw Case Displayed in Many Places in the City." DA - April 13, 1907 KW - children Chicago, IL ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, as fire hazards celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid materials materials, and celluloid celluloid, as fire hazard electricity electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity theaters, and electricity electricity, and theaters children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures children, and theaters theaters, and children media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children motion pictures, and crime values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures electricity, as fire hazard metaphors theaters, as mushrooms sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Unwritten Law motion pictures, and Thaw Case motion pictures, and Cupid's Thermometer Cupid's Thermometer motion pictures, and business metaphors, and mushrooms LB - 14220 PY - 1907 SP - 3 ST - Nickel Theaters Crime Breeders T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Nickel Theaters Crime Breeders ID - 3579 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that “An incipient fire riot emptied one nickel theater yesterday.” The article's subtitle reads: "Nickel Theaters Replete in Crime Pictures, Lacking Fire Aid, Are Filled with Children. Bad Influences Shown. Investigation of Five Cent Playhouses Proves Corrupt Tendency of Performances on Young." DA - April 15, 1907 KW - children Chicago, IL ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, as fire hazards celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid materials materials, and celluloid celluloid, as fire hazard electricity electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity theaters, and electricity electricity, and theaters electricity, as fire hazard audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children ref, CDT LB - 14230 PY - 1907 SP - 1 ST - Film Shows Busy; Panic Stops One T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Film Shows Busy; Panic Stops One ID - 3580 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This subtitle of this article reads: "Man Burned and People Terrified on Eve of Crusade. Must Take Out Licenses. Mayor Busse Determined to Enforce the Ordinances at Once." DA - Dec. 26, 1908 KW - children Chicago, IL censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, as fire hazards celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid materials materials, and celluloid celluloid, as fire hazard electricity electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity theaters, and electricity electricity, and theaters electricity, as fire hazard audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and technological censorship censorship, and technology ref, CDT LB - 14240 PY - 1908 SP - 1 ST - Panic in Five Cent Theater T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Panic in Five Cent Theater ID - 3581 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This is a report on the fire dangers posed by moving picture theaters. The article's subtitle reads: "Electric Spark Sets Fire to Picture Films and Causes Scare in an Up-Town Theatre." DA - Feb. 27, 1900 KW - children ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, as fire hazards celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid materials materials, and celluloid celluloid, as fire hazard electricity electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity theaters, and electricity electricity, and theaters children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures children, and theaters theaters, and children media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children electricity, as fire hazard ref, NYT LB - 14250 PY - 1900 SP - 1 ST - Panic Narrowly Averted T2 - New York Times TI - Panic Narrowly Averted ID - 3582 ER - TY - NEWS AB - A report on a disastrous fire in a Mexican movie theater. DA - Feb. 27, 1900 KW - children ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, as fire harzards celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid materials materials, and celluloid celluloid, as fire harzard electricity electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity theaters, and electricity electricity, and theaters children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures children, and theaters theaters, and children media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children motion pictures, and crime values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and Mexico Mexico, and motion pictures electricity, as fire hazard non-USA Mexico Mexico, and movie theaters motion pictures, and Mexico ref, NYT LB - 14260 PY - 1900 SP - 1 ST - 300 Burn to Death in Mexican Theatre T2 - New York Times TI - 300 Burn to Death in Mexican Theatre ID - 3583 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle to this article reports that "Women Faint and Several Are Trampled in Rush for the Doors." DA - Dec. 5, 1904 KW - ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, as fire harzards celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid materials materials, and celluloid celluloid, as fire harzard electricity electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity theaters, and electricity electricity, and theaters children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures children, and theaters theaters, and children women women, and movie theaters motion pictures, and women electricity, as fire hazard ref, NYT children LB - 14270 PY - 1904 SP - 1 ST - Cry of Fire in Theatre T2 - New York Times TI - Cry of Fire in Theatre ID - 3584 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on the fire hazard posed by celluloid. DA - April 1, 1913 KW - ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, as fire harzards celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid materials materials, and celluloid celluloid, as fire harzard electricity electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity theaters, and electricity electricity, and theaters children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures children, and theaters theaters, and children women women, and movie theaters motion pictures, and women electricity, as fire hazard non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures Great Britian, and celluloid ref, Times London children LB - 14280 PY - 1913 SP - 7 ST - The Celluloid Danger T2 - The Times [London] TI - The Celluloid Danger ID - 3585 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This report is on the fire dangers of celluloid. DA - June 25, 1912 KW - ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, as fire harzards celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid materials materials, and celluloid celluloid, as fire hazard electricity electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity theaters, and electricity electricity, and theaters children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures children, and theaters theaters, and children women women, and movie theaters motion pictures, and women electricity, as fire hazard non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures Great Britain, and celluloid ref, Times London children LB - 14290 PY - 1912 SP - 4 ST - Non-Inflamable Cinematograph Film T2 - The Times [London] TI - Non-Inflamable Cinematograph Film ID - 3586 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on possible replacement material for flamable celluloid. DA - Dec. 18, 1912 KW - ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, as fire harzards celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid materials materials, and celluloid celluloid, as fire hazard electricity electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity theaters, and electricity electricity, and theaters children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures children, and theaters theaters, and children women women, and movie theaters motion pictures, and women electricity, as fire hazard non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures Great Britain, and celluloid ref, Times London children LB - 14300 PY - 1912 SP - 21 ST - Non-Inflamable Cinematograph Films: Substitutes for Celluloid T2 - The Times [London] TI - Non-Inflamable Cinematograph Films: Substitutes for Celluloid ID - 3587 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle to the article reads: "Strict Rules to Prevent Fires Rigidly Enforced, Write Consul Thackara. No Inflammable Film. None Yet in Use by the German, He Says Paris Also Take Precautions Against Fire." DA - June 30, 1915 KW - ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, as fire harzards celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid materials materials, and celluloid celluloid, as fire harzard electricity electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity theaters, and electricity electricity, and theaters children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures children, and theaters theaters, and children women women, and movie theaters motion pictures, and women electricity, as fire hazard non-USA Germany Germany, and motion pictures Germany, and celluloid France France, and motion pictures France, and celluloid ref, NYT children LB - 14310 PY - 1915 SP - 15 ST - Berlin Safeguards Picture Theaters T2 - New York Times TI - Berlin Safeguards Picture Theaters ID - 3588 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about “A cold light moving picture projector on which the film may be stopped without danger of ignition.” The subtitle of this article reads: "M. Dussaud, French Engineer, Has Just Reported Definite Progress in Solving Problem That Will Be Revolutionary." DA - July 23, 1916 KW - ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, as fire harzards celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid materials materials, and celluloid celluloid, as fire harzard electricity electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity theaters, and electricity electricity, and theaters children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures children, and theaters theaters, and children lighting lighting, and cold light lighting, and celluloid celluloid, and cold light motion pictures, and cold light theaters, and cold light ref, NYT children LB - 14320 PY - 1916 SE - SM SP - 7 ST - Will ‘Cold Light’ Soon Be a Scientific Fact? T2 - New York Times TI - Will ‘Cold Light’ Soon Be a Scientific Fact? ID - 3589 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that during World War I, the U. S. Fuel Administration ordered that electric signs advertising movies be turned off certain nights of the week. DA - Dec. 11, 1917 KW - ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity ref, NYT advertising LB - 14330 PY - 1917 SP - 9 ST - 3 Lightless Nights a Week Advocated T2 - New York Times TI - 3 Lightless Nights a Week Advocated ID - 3590 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on the effort to conserve electricity during World War I and when motion picture theaters could be open. DA - Jan. 20, 1918 KW - ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity motion pictures, and New York New York, and motion pictures ref, NYT advertising LB - 14340 PY - 1918 SP - 2 ST - Theatres Can Open on ‘Idle Mondays’ T2 - New York Times TI - Theatres Can Open on ‘Idle Mondays’ ID - 3591 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on efforts to conserve electricity during World War I. The subtitle of this article reads: "There Will Not Be So Many, However, as in Northern Part of the State." DA - Aug. 4, 1918 KW - Los Angeles ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity motion pictures, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and motion pictures ref, LAT advertising LB - 14350 PY - 1918 SE - II SP - 7 ST - ‘Lightless’ Nights Will Begin Here Tomorrow T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - ‘Lightless’ Nights Will Begin Here Tomorrow ID - 3592 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that Chicago Mayor Busse appalled by billboard for “James Boys in Missouri,” to be shown at the Alhambra theater. “A smoking revolver was held in the hand of a villain who was standing over his victim.” “‘I wonder how that is for the morals of the general public,’ said Mayor Busse. ‘I believe this would bear some investigation.’” He also did not like a handbill for “The Moonshiner’s Daughter.” “It was filled with pictures of blood curdling adventures…. The hero was seen in a big jug of ‘moonshine’ whisky, while another bottle protruded from the ‘here’s vest pocket. There were more pictures of the kind that make school boys thirst for toy pistols and worse. ‘Don’t fail to see the great fight in the whisky still,’ was a ‘tip’ found on the bottom of the poster.” “Electrical signs also were found to be objectionable, although many have been removed by order of Capt. McCann. No more permits will be issued for electric signs of any sort in the district. Subtitles to the article reads: "Believes Lurid Melodrama at Theaters Will Bear Investigation." DA - June 2, 1907 KW - electric lighting children Chicago, IL censorship actors acting actors acting ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures actors, and status of censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and crime children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children James Boys in Missouri (1908) motion pictures, and alcohol censorship, and alcohol motion pictures, and electric signs electric signs, and motion pictures ref, CDT advertising LB - 14360 PY - 1907 SP - 2 ST - Busse Sees Levee; Changes Ordered; Mayor Visits ‘Red Light’ District, and Many Blows to Vice Follow; Takes Slash at Stage T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Busse Sees Levee; Changes Ordered; Mayor Visits ‘Red Light’ District, and Many Blows to Vice Follow; Takes Slash at Stage ID - 3593 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that “Saturday night pedestrians in the Madison street movie Rialto blinked their eyes last evening and looked again. In a blaze of electricity their gaze met lurid signs and wild pictures suggestive of all the scenes of immorality that a film could well show to a curious public. “Shortly after the suspension of Maj. Funkhouser as inspector of city morals The Tribune exposed the billboard methods of many movies houses in trying to tempt the public inside to set a scandalous bit of high life or a girl gone wrong. For a few weeks the signs disappeared. But they are back in force now…. “‘Will a girl go wrong for bread?’ was one subtle question with which it worked on the psychology of the man with a little time and the price of admission, plus war tax. ‘See traps of the underworld exposed’ was another sign, and ‘See the lure of the country girl to wine rooms.’ Under a picture of wild night life is another caption: ‘Exposure of the fast life of the bohemian set.’ “Working back toward State street another large electric sign used the old drawing card of ‘For adults only.’ …and ‘No children admitted.’” DA - Aug. 25, 1918 KW - children Chicago, IL censorship actors acting actors acting ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures actors, and status of censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and crime children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures censorship, and sexuality sexuality, and electricity electricity, and sexuality values values, and motion pictures values, and advertising advertising, and values ref, CDT advertising LB - 14370 PY - 1918 SP - 10 ST - Lurid Signs of Movies Flaunt Bid to Prurient. Promises Scenes of Immorality, but Fail to Make Good T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Lurid Signs of Movies Flaunt Bid to Prurient. Promises Scenes of Immorality, but Fail to Make Good ID - 3594 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "Showman Says He’ll Fight. How Can One Show How Physical Culture Has Improved the Body if the Body is Clothed?” DA - Oct. 6, 1905 KW - children Chicago, IL censorship actors acting actors acting ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures actors, and status of censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and crime children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures censorship, and sexuality Comstock, Anthony Comstock, Anthony, and movie posters Comstock, Anthony, and advertising advertising, and nudity Comstock, Anthony, and nudity nudity, and advertising nudity, and Anthony Comstock posters, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures censorship, and movie advertising advertising, and censorship posters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and posters advertising, and posters advertising, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and movie advertising sensationalism, and sexuality sexuality, and sensationalism ref, NYT advertising nudity posters LB - 14380 PY - 1905 SP - 9 ST - Comstock Takes Hand in Physical Culture Show. Has Promoters Arrested for Putting Up Posters T2 - New York Times TI - Comstock Takes Hand in Physical Culture Show. Has Promoters Arrested for Putting Up Posters ID - 3595 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that a "novel form of entertainment" in the form of "countless moving-picture houses," have “cropped up, as if by magic all over the continent….” The article discusses the work of screen writing. The play, it says, is only about five percent of the successful film. The subtitle of this article is: "This Latest of Professions Assuming Great Proportions and Making Fortunes for Those Who Can Make a Success of It -- Some of the Men and Women Who Have Hit the Right Note -- Why Most of Those Who Attempt It Are Unsuccessful." DA - Aug. 3, 1913 KW - ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures metaphors metaphors, and magic motion pictures, and magic motion pictures motion pictures, and screen writing motion pictures, and writers ref, NYT LB - 14410 PY - 1913 SE - SM SP - 4 ST - Writing the Movies: A New and Well-Paid Business T2 - New York Times TI - Writing the Movies: A New and Well-Paid Business ID - 3598 ER - TY - NEWS AB - According to the author of this piece, the "city’s moral health demands the immediate cleansing of the festering plague spots known as ‘phonograph parlors.’ Vile pictures are on exhibition there ….” DA - Aug. 9, 1899 KW - censorship censorship censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures metaphors metaphors, and plague spots sound recording sound recording, and phonograph censorship and ratings censorship, and movie theaters censorship, and phonograph parlors metaphors, and theaters ref, LAT LB - 14420 PY - 1899 SP - 5 ST - Plague Spots T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Plague Spots ID - 3599 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article explains that opening a nickel theater to show moving pictures is inexpensive and is likely to bring substantial profits. DA - April 8, 1906 KW - Chicago, IL censorship censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship and ratings censorship, and movie theaters Chicago, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago ref, CDT LB - 14440 PY - 1906 SE - I SP - 3 ST - Nickel Theater Pays Well; Small Cost and Big Profit T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Nickel Theater Pays Well; Small Cost and Big Profit ID - 3601 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In addition to billboards, this article talks about licenses required for theater film machine operators. The article's subtitle reads: "Aldermen Propose Ordinance That Will Do Away with Unsightly Signs." DA - June 27, 1908 KW - children Chicago, IL censorship photography advertising and public relations ref, news motion pictures advertising advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures violence, and advertising advertising, and violence posters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and posters censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings censorship, and movie posters children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, and movie advertising theaters, and posters posters, and theaters advertising, and movie theaters motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures motion pictures, and technological censorship censorship, and technology ref, CDT posters LB - 14600 PY - 1908 SP - 18 ST - Try to Wipe Out Billboard Evil T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Try to Wipe Out Billboard Evil ID - 3602 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that “The moving picture machine has gone around the world. On every side cheap theaters are springing up like the soldiers from the dragon’s teeth, and German scientists and occultists have characterized them as a positive peril to the eyesight of the next generation. No nation of the earth, they say, will escape the torture of defective eyesight if the use of the moving picture as a form of amusement becomes general, as it threatens to become, and one occultist adds ‘The next generation may be incapable of using the sense of sight with exactitude….” “From Germany the warning has been sent out, and in Chicago there are more moving picture machines and nickel theaters than in any city in the world. The streets are dotted with them, they are penetrating into the residential districts, they have swooped down upon State street with their electric pianos, their hoarse voiced spielers, their lurid posters, their hair raising portrayals of crime and murder, their sensational pictures of train robberies and the mad pursuit of the bandits attracting throngs of children into their doors. And will these children who squander their pennies and nickels in the pursuit of the excitement of the moving picture show grow to manhood with worthless eyesight? Will they become recruits in the great and growing army of physical defectives? This is a question that the Berlin occultists already had undertaken to answer. “…The German scientist suggests that the peril to the eyesight of the moving picture is greater than the danger of moral corruption. The peril is one that the police cannot check.” “At no time in the history of the race was the sense of sight more essential to man’s reconciliation with his physical environment; but at no time, complains the Berlin authority, has the aid of science been more readily given to make man, through the medium of his eyes, a stranger to reality.” DA - Sept. 29, 1907 KW - children Chicago, IL censorship censorship censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures metaphors metaphors, and plague spots sound recording sound recording, and phonograph censorship and ratings censorship, and movie theaters censorship, and phonograph parlors metaphors, and theaters children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children electricity electricity, and theaters sound recording theaters, and sound recording sound recording, and electric pianos non-USA Germany Germany, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Germany Chicago, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago motion pictures, and eyes motion pictures, and deception metaphors, and dragon teeth theaters, as dragon teeth ref, CDT LB - 14460 PY - 1907 SE - F SP - 2 ST - ‘Moving Picture Eye’; The Strange Affliction Caused by Electric Theaters T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - ‘Moving Picture Eye’; The Strange Affliction Caused by Electric Theaters ID - 3603 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that “The nickel theater and penny arcade furnish most of the distinctive features connected with the mechanical side of theater development. They came into being about the same time, and have grown, mushroom-like, into a noisy popularity.” The article's subtitle reads: "‘Store Shows’ Throttle the Picture Machines. Malevolent Little Pests May be Self-Destroying." DA - May 31, 1907 KW - Los Angeles censorship censorship censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures metaphors metaphors, and plague spots sound recording sound recording, and phonograph censorship and ratings censorship, and movie theaters censorship, and phonograph parlors metaphors, and theaters metaphors, and mushrooms metaphors, and microbes theaters, as mushrooms theaters, as microbes Los Angeles, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Los Angeles metaphors, and little pests theaters, as little pests ref, LAT LB - 14470 PY - 1907 SE - II SP - 8 ST - How Nickel Eats Penny. How Arcade Microbes Prey on Each Other T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - How Nickel Eats Penny. How Arcade Microbes Prey on Each Other ID - 3604 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that the "Rialto Picture Theater’s To Open Soon." DA - April 1, 1917 KW - ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, as palace ref, LAT LB - 14480 PY - 1917 SE - III SP - 23 ST - Beauty Pervades New Show Shop T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Beauty Pervades New Show Shop ID - 3605 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that theaters such as the Strand have elevated “the standard of entertainment.” But Daniel Frohman, who was an experience manager and producers, says that the popularity of movies has peaked and that they need sound and color to hold their audiences. The article's subtitle reads: "So Says Daniel Frohman, Who Believes That the Popularity of the Motion Picture Has Already Reached Its Zenith." DA - May 9, 1915 KW - ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, as palace color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 14490 PY - 1915 SE - X SP - 6 ST - The Movie Here to Make the Spoken Drama Behave T2 - New York Times TI - The Movie Here to Make the Spoken Drama Behave ID - 3606 ER - TY - NEWS AB - There are about 10,000 theaters showing association films and “about 2,000 using the independent films.” (p. II 20) The article's subtitle reads: "Southern California Conditions Found to Be Ideal for Moving Picture Work Because of Very Small Size of Negatives and Great Rapidity of Exposures Real Actors in Demand for Pictures." DA - Oct. 10, 1909 KW - Los Angeles censorship actors acting actors acting ref, news motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and technological censorship censorship, and technology theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures audiences audiences, and theaters theaters, and audiences motion pictures, and attendance motion pictures, and independent films Los Angeles, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Los Angeles motion pictures, and business motion pictures, and independent films theaters, and independent films actors, and status of modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business advertising and public relations motion pictures, and advertising advertising, and motion pictures ref, LAT advertising LB - 14500 PY - 1909 SE - II SP - 16, 20 ST - New Plays Without Words Are Put on Films Here T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - New Plays Without Words Are Put on Films Here ID - 3607 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "Biggest of Movies; Handsome Theatre at Broadway and 47th Street Seats Almost 3,500 People; Orchestra and Quartet…." DA - April 12, 1914 KW - ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, as palace ref, NYT LB - 14510 PY - 1914 SP - 15 ST - New Strand Opens T2 - New York Times TI - New Strand Opens ID - 3608 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article concerns Sunday blue laws. DA - Dec. 22, 1907 KW - censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and Sunday movies motion pictures, and blue laws censorship, and blue laws ref, NYT LB - 14520 PY - 1907 SP - 2 ST - Theatres to Open for Shows To-Day; … Moving Pictures Barred T2 - New York Times TI - Theatres to Open for Shows To-Day; … Moving Pictures Barred ID - 3609 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This piece concerns Sunday blue laws. The subtitle reads: "All Vaudeville Theatres Open, with Programmes Shaped to Meet Doull Ordinance." DA - Dec. 23, 1907 KW - censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and Sunday movies motion pictures, and blue laws censorship, and blue laws ref, NYT LB - 14530 PY - 1907 SP - 3 ST - Few Arrests Under New Sunday Law T2 - New York Times TI - Few Arrests Under New Sunday Law ID - 3610 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that Tammany Hall wants to keep theaters open on Sunday. DA - Dec. 13, 1916 KW - censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and Sunday movies motion pictures, and blue laws censorship, and blue laws motion pictures, and New York New York, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 14540 PY - 1916 SP - 24 ST - Tammany Aids Movie Fight; Democratic Committee Sees No Objection to Sunday Shows T2 - New York Times TI - Tammany Aids Movie Fight; Democratic Committee Sees No Objection to Sunday Shows ID - 3611 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "Dr. Fitch Says Working People Have Right to Recreation." DA - July 17, 1916 KW - censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and Sunday movies motion pictures, and blue laws censorship, and blue laws motion pictures, and New York New York, and motion pictures censorship, and critics critics critics, and censorship motion pictures, and class religion religion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion ref, NYT LB - 14550 PY - 1916 SP - 9 ST - Assails ‘Puritans’ Sunday’ T2 - New York Times TI - Assails ‘Puritans’ Sunday’ ID - 3612 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "Meeting Condemns Aldermen for Passing ‘Contradictory’ Ordinance and Criticises [sic] Judges; To Appeal to the Mayor." DA - Jan. 9, 1908 KW - censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and Sunday movies motion pictures, and blue laws censorship, and blue laws motion pictures, and New York New York, and motion pictures censorship, and critics critics critics, and censorship motion pictures, and class religion religion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion ref, NYT LB - 14560 PY - 1908 SP - 8 ST - Sabbath Champions Rap New Sunday Law T2 - New York Times TI - Sabbath Champions Rap New Sunday Law ID - 3613 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In Chicago, this article says, “Along Milwaukee avenue are nearly a dozen of these cheap amusement places, between West Ohio and West North Avenue. The ‘shows’ offered principally are ‘moving pictures,’ showing train robberies, lynchings, safeblowing, ‘black hand’ conspiracies, and all manner of crime and bloodshed.” The subtitle to this article's headline reads: "Moving Pictures of Scenes of Violence Declared to Demoralize Children. Will Protest to Mayor. Ald. Beilfuss Says Cheap Theaters Must Be Supplanted or Made Harmless." The subhead that follows in the article reads: “Crime Taught to Children.” DA - Oct. 6, 1906 KW - children Chicago, IL censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and violence violence motion pictures, and crime censorship, and violence motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago and motion pictures censorship, and violence motion pictures, and class children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children ref, CDT LB - 14570 PY - 1906 SP - 7 ST - Citizens Roused by Crime Shows T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Citizens Roused by Crime Shows ID - 3614 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article maintains that “The 5 cent theaters are great educators. Unfortunately the education they supply is not that of which the young people who are the main supporters of the 5 cent theaters are in need. They are worse than the cheap fiction which has long been a power for evil, by so much more as moving scenes in real life are more stimulating to the imagination than printed words. They are worse, too, because often the moving pictures shown are of scenes the description of which in a book would not be tolerated.” DA - April 14, 1907 KW - children Chicago, IL censorship words vs. images images vs. words ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and violence violence motion pictures, and crime censorship, and violence motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago and motion pictures censorship, and violence motion pictures, and class children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children images vs. print education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures ref, CDT LB - 14580 PY - 1907 SE - B SP - 4 ST - The Five Cent Theaters T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - The Five Cent Theaters ID - 3615 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "Judge Cleland Says Juvenile Offenders Owe Downfall to This Cause. Has Law to Check It. Offers Ordinance Barring Children from Shows Unless Parents Take Them." This article has the following subheadings: “Cause of Every Juvenile Crime”; “Debauches the Imagination;” “Little Boy Attempts Robbery”; “Small Girls Find Ruin." CY - Chicago Daily Tribune DA - April 14, 1907 KW - children Chicago, IL censorship words vs. images images vs. words ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and violence violence motion pictures, and crime censorship, and violence motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago and motion pictures censorship, and violence motion pictures, and class children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children images vs. print education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures ref, CDT LB - 14590 PY - 1907 SP - 3 ST - Traces Crime to Nickel Theater TI - Traces Crime to Nickel Theater ID - 3616 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "Squad Detailed to Nickel and 10 Cent Places; Chief Says First Class Houses Are Often Just as Bad, but He Will Not Tackle Them If Any Cheap Theater Gives Vicious Exhibitions Manager Will Be Notified to Stop Under Penalty of Immediate Revocation of License." DA - April 30, 1907 KW - immorality children Chicago, IL censorship actors acting actors acting photography ref, news motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures quotations nudity nudity, and the stage theaters theaters, and 5-cent values, and theater values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values theater, and values values immorality, and theater immorality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and immorality religion religion, and motion pictures religion, and theater theater, and religion motion pictures, and religion quotations actors, and status of motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and crime ref, CDT advertising theater LB - 14610 PY - 1907 SP - 2 ST - Police to Censor Shows T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Police to Censor Shows ID - 3617 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article tells of youth selling smelling salts to offset the horrors to be seen inside the movie house. DA - Sept. 24, 1911 KW - immorality children censorship actors acting actors acting photography ref, news motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures quotations nudity nudity, and the stage theaters theaters, and 5-cent values, and theater values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values theater, and values values immorality, and theater immorality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and immorality religion religion, and motion pictures religion, and theater theater, and religion motion pictures, and religion quotations actors, and status of motion pictures, and New York New York, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and crime ref, NYT advertising theater LB - 14620 PY - 1911 SE - SM SP - 6 ST - Prepared for the Worst; Little Stories of Fact and Fancy T2 - New York Times TI - Prepared for the Worst; Little Stories of Fact and Fancy ID - 3618 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article begins by saying that "When Aladdin rubbed the magic ring, and by the power of the genii worked his will in such delightfully mysterious fashion, and wandered through the subterranean region where the glint and sheen of myriad-hued shops reflected their light into his eyes, he witnessed no more dazzling array of scenic beauty than was apparent last evening in this city. "Wander where one might, gay Chinese lanterns twinkled brightly, and cast grotesque shadows on the moving throng beneath. In the dim light the bunting flapped lazily in the breeze, but the quiet color tone later on gave place to a blaze of light than transformed the scene as if by magic. Throughout the streets along the line of march during the time of the passage of the procession, the scene seemed like a little bit of fairyland. The air was filled with fiery bolts of many hues; at intervals the cauldrons of red fire blazed up and cast their weird shadows, which the somber background of foliage only rendered more intense...." DA - April 21, 1895 KW - ref, news electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time color electricity, and color color, and electricity advertising and public relations electricity, and advertising advertising, and electricity electricity, and magic metaphors metaphors, and Aladdin electricity, and Aladdin ref, LAT advertising LB - 14640 PY - 1895 SP - 6 ST - The Night Parade T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - The Night Parade ID - 3619 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article begins by saying that "Aladdin and his lamp could not have conjured up a more brilliant demonstration than was seen in Sacramento tonight. California's capital city was aflood with light, a light which rivaled the moon. The people were celebrating the introduction of a mighty electric power, generated at Folsom, twenty-two miles away, and brought here in sufficient quantity to turn all of the wheels of commerce and illuminate every house. "It was a carnival night in every sense of the word.... All the trees in the front of the building were covered with incandescent lamps, in carnival colors, cherry red, apple green and poppy yellow, making them look like an enormous collection of Christmas trees." DA - Sept. 10, 1895 KW - ref, news electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time color electricity, and color color, and electricity advertising and public relations electricity, and advertising advertising, and electricity metaphors metaphors, and Aladdin electricity, and Aladdin electricity, and magic ref, LAT advertising LB - 14650 PY - 1895 SP - 1 ST - The Night Display T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - The Night Display ID - 3620 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that "Tonight witnessed the culmination of San Francisco's three days' greeting to the First California Volunteer Infantry and the California Heavy Artillery, the return from the Philippines of these organizations marking an epoch in local annals.... "The events of the past three days are now matters of more than local history. The arrival of the transport Sherman, the splendid demonstrations of the bay and the Aladdin-like transformation of the city's chief streets into the semblance of an enchanted realm by the artistic and lavish arrangement of electric lights in many colors -- all these were enough to turn the heads of ordinarily self-possessed people...." The article goes on to describe the celebration honoring the returning troops. DA - Aug. 27, 1899 KW - ref, news electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time color electricity, and color color, and electricity advertising and public relations electricity, and advertising advertising, and electricity electricity, and magic metaphors metaphors, and Aladdin electricity, and Aladdin nationalism and communication electricity, and nationalism nationalism, and electricity Americanism electricity, and Americanism Americanism, and electricity patriotism, and electricity electricity, and patriotism patriotism ref, LAT advertising nationalism LB - 14660 PY - 1899 SE - A SP - 1 ST - Close of the Celebration: A Veritable Hot Time in the Old Town Last Night T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Close of the Celebration: A Veritable Hot Time in the Old Town Last Night ID - 3621 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The article quotes Acting Chief of Police Alcock in Chicago on movie posters: “‘The posters some of the movies have displayed are vile. I have ordered all these removed. It is bad enough to have a picture based on sex matters without having posters outside promising something “racy” inside.’” The article's subtitle reads: "Runways Must Go Unless the Women Put on More Clothes." DA - June 18, 1918 KW - Chicago, IL censorship motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures censorship, and movie advertising advertising, and censorship motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures posters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and posters advertising, and posters advertising, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and movie advertising sensationalism, and sexuality sexuality, and sensationalism ref, news nudity nudity, and theaters theaters, and nudity ref, CDT advertising posters LB - 14670 PY - 1918 SP - 18 ST - ‘Be Decent or Close,’ Alcock Warns Theaters T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - ‘Be Decent or Close,’ Alcock Warns Theaters ID - 3622 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Children attracted to movie posters -- and one of the dangers. DA - Feb. 26, 1917 KW - children censorship photography advertising and public relations ref, news motion pictures advertising advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures violence, and advertising advertising, and violence posters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and posters censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings censorship, and movie posters children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, and movie advertising theaters, and posters posters, and theaters advertising, and movie theaters ref, CDT posters LB - 14690 PY - 1917 SP - 13 ST - Boy Admiring Movie Posters Hit by Truck T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Boy Admiring Movie Posters Hit by Truck ID - 3624 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "Miss Alice Minnie Herts Outlines Interesting Plan for a Permanent Institution of National Scope." The article goes on to quote Herts. “‘To commercialize the imagination of the child seems to me to be a terrible thing,’ averred Miss Herts, in explaining the rules of the children’s theatre. ‘The object of this whole scheme is to entertain, educate and develop children poor children. It is not to declare dividends!’” DA - Nov. 12, 1911 KW - reform citizenship children censorship ref, news motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and crime audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences motion pictures, and reformers reformers, and motion pictures critics critics, and reformers reformers, and critics law motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and citizenship citizenship, and motion pictures women women, and censorship women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women censorship, and women quotations quotations, and motion pictures quotations, and commercializing imagination ref, NYT education LB - 14710 PY - 1911 SE - SM SP - 7 ST - ‘To Make Good Citizens the Theatre for Children’ T2 - New York Times TI - ‘To Make Good Citizens the Theatre for Children’ ID - 3626 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle to the articles reads: "Hull House Workers to Operate Moving Pictures; Performances to Continue from 6 to 11 O’Clock Every Night and All Day on Saturdays and Sundays Scheme Announced by Mrs. Gertrude H. Britton and Approved by Judge Mack and Others Improvements in Cheap Amusement Places." DA - May 24, 1907 KW - reform citizenship children Chicago, IL censorship ref, news motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and crime audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences motion pictures, and reformers reformers, and motion pictures critics critics, and reformers reformers, and critics law motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and citizenship citizenship, and motion pictures women women, and censorship women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women censorship, and women theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures audiences children, and theaters theaters, and children Chicago, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago Addams, Jane, and motion pictures Addams, Jane motion pictures, and Hull House ref, CDT education LB - 14730 PY - 1907 SP - 7 ST - Plan Clean 5-Cent Show T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Plan Clean 5-Cent Show ID - 3628 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle to this article reads: "Berlin Police Act as Result of Medical Theory That They Are Harmful to Eyes." DA - June 2, 1907 KW - reform children censorship ref, news motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and crime audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences motion pictures, and reformers reformers, and motion pictures critics critics, and reformers reformers, and critics law motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures non-USA Germany Germany, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Germany ref, CDT education LB - 14740 PY - 1907 SE - B SP - 3 ST - War of Moving Pictures T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - War of Moving Pictures ID - 3629 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this film reads: "Orders Boys and Girls Under 18 Years Old Be Kept from Public Unless Attended by Parents. To Stop Immoral Plays. Ordnance to Go Into Effect on Thursday Will Prevent Depiction of Vice in the Local Theaters." Collins was Chief of Police in Chicago. DA - Feb. 13, 1906 KW - reform citizenship children Chicago, IL censorship ref, news motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and crime audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences motion pictures, and reformers reformers, and motion pictures critics critics, and reformers reformers, and critics law motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and citizenship citizenship, and motion pictures women women, and censorship women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women censorship, and women Chicago, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago ref, CDT education LB - 14750 PY - 1906 SP - 1 ST - Collins Cleanses the Dance Hall T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Collins Cleanses the Dance Hall ID - 3630 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The article reports on New York City mayor's committee on safeguarding the public at motion picture entertainment; it wanted movies to be “clean, safe, and healthful, and moral.” The subtitle to the article reads: "Organized Efforts to Censor Exhibitions Which Under Existing Conditions Are Harmful." DA - July 2, 1911 KW - reform citizenship children censorship ref, news motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and crime audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences motion pictures, and reformers reformers, and motion pictures critics critics, and reformers reformers, and critics law motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and citizenship citizenship, and motion pictures women women, and censorship women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women censorship, and women New York, and motion pictures motion pictures, and New York ref, NYT education LB - 14760 PY - 1911 SE - SM SP - 15 ST - The Campaign to Curb the Moving Picture Evil in New York T2 - New York Times TI - The Campaign to Curb the Moving Picture Evil in New York ID - 3631 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article quotes Chief of Police Kern as saying: "I do not propose to allow the moving picture theaters of this city to conduct schools of crime. That is what picture films showing robberies, theft and diamond nipping amount to. On account of the low price of admission, these shows are attended by young boys of an impressionable age. Some sort of city ordinance must be found to stop these exhibitions of crime." The subtitle of the article reads: "Cheap Moving Pictures Appeal to Boys' Wrong Side, and Chief of Police Says They Must Be Stopped. How They Operate." Next to this article on the same pages ia an article "Making Crooks," by Fred R. Bechdolt. DA - Dec. 21, 1906 KW - Los Angeles children censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and violence violence motion pictures, and crime censorship, and violence motion pictures, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and motion pictures censorship, and violence motion pictures, and class children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children motion pictures, and class quotations ref, LAT LB - 14770 PY - 1906 SE - II SP - 1 ST - Five-Cent Theaters Schools of Crime T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Five-Cent Theaters Schools of Crime ID - 3632 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that movies are more dangerous to children than the live theater. It says that “If the rapid increase noticed this year in the number of penny arcades and nickel electric theaters meant only that speculators were reaping a rich harvest of small coins at little expense to themselves there would be no objection to it.” But “there would be no call for police interference if the children were not taught immorality as well as encouraged in thriftlessness.” While some stage plays are “depraved,” the movies are “more dangerous to children because they are brought near to the children’s schools and homes, and the price is so low that children who never have been to the theater in their lives are habitual patrons of the penny or nickel shows.” Article says that movies have “as many … criminal or disreputable scenes as the imagination of the kinetoscope artist can suggest are presented with lifelike distinctness for young children to gloat over.” The machines show things that “no father would wish his young son or daughter to look upon.” DA - Oct. 9, 1906 KW - theater stage children Chicago, IL censorship actors acting actors acting ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing electricity theaters electricity, and theaters electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures actors, and status of censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and crime children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children values values, and movie theaters theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures ref, CDT advertising LB - 14780 PY - 1906 SP - 8 ST - The Children in Danger T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - The Children in Danger ID - 3633 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the showing of the Jack Johnson-Jeffries heavyweight boxing match; it also reports that two 18-year-olds were arrested after trying to rob street car; they had just seen a movie -- a western -- about a train robbery. DA - July 11, 1910 KW - children Chicago, IL censorship actors acting actors acting ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures actors, and status of censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and crime children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children values values, and movie theaters motion pictures, and crimes motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and race race, and motion pictures violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sports motion pictures, and boxing violence ref, CDT advertising race LB - 14790 PY - 1910 SP - 2 ST - Fight Pictures Are Taken East; ... Crime Due to Moving Pictures T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Fight Pictures Are Taken East; ... Crime Due to Moving Pictures ID - 3634 ER - TY - NEWS AB - William A. Pinkerton says that movie scenes have more powerful effect on children than written stories. “'The moving picture has become a mode of instruction, as well as a form of entertainment," Pinkerson said in an address before the Association of Chiefs of Police. "'Its appeal is universal and its achievements wonderful. Within its province lies a dangerous power for evil that cannot be too seriously considered. A written story of crime and human frailty may pass from memory, but a picture delineation is apt to remain. Like an anecdote in a speech, which a hearer remembers long after the subject and words of the speaker have flown, the pictured scenes of evil deeds adhere to the mind like shadows to the sun. But take a serial picture of sordid crime, what good purpose can any normal, unselfish person expect them to serve? To the rough and weak and ignorant it is like throwing more fuel upon a fire already hard to control. "'I am so deeply impressed with the educational value of the moving picture, and so partial to its realistic entertainment, I cannot refrain from calling attention to these corrupting influences.'" In this story, "Pinkerton Declares Moving Pictures Should Be Strictly Censored to Prevent Displays Depicting Crime and Holding Authority of Low Up to Ridicule," according to a subtitle. DA - June 18, 1914 KW - children censorship words vs. images ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and violence violence motion pictures, and crime censorship, and violence censorship, and violence motion pictures, and class children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children motion pictures, and crime images vs. words education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and class ref, LAT LB - 14800 PY - 1914 SE - II SP - 5 ST - Scores Movie Crime Films; Pinkerton Sounds Warning T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Scores Movie Crime Films; Pinkerton Sounds Warning ID - 3635 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This story implies that an Arizona rancher (not a child) might have gotten the idea for trying counterfeiting from the movies. Says “A month passed in this city, amid the lurid attractions of crime-depicting melodramas and moving-picture shows, made an alleged counterfeiter of Henry Stove, an Arizona cowboy, now in jail at Tombstone…. he had never thought of passing bogus coins until the idea came to him while he was living here. After the evil germ found lodgment in his brain, the visitor went to the public library and there passed days poring over books on metallurgy and kindred subjects.” The subtitle to this story reads: "Takes Tip from Film, Make Bad Gold Coins. Has High Old Time, But Is Quickly Jailed." DA - Dec. 22, 1908 KW - children censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and violence violence motion pictures, and crime censorship, and violence censorship, and violence motion pictures, and class children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children motion pictures, and crime ref, LAT LB - 14810 PY - 1908 SE - II SP - 1 ST - Queer Germ Contagious. Moving Pictures Inoculate Arizona Cowboy T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Queer Germ Contagious. Moving Pictures Inoculate Arizona Cowboy ID - 3636 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle to this article reads: "12-Year-Old Girl Moved to It by a Lurid Romance She Saw Depicted. Yearned to Die a Heroine. Swallowed the Deadly Tablet at Her Mother’s Side Heroic Measures Save Her." DA - June 7, 1911 KW - children censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and suicide violence motion pictures, and crime children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children ref, NYT LB - 14820 PY - 1911 SP - 3 ST - Child Takes Poison after Picture Show T2 - New York Times TI - Child Takes Poison after Picture Show ID - 3637 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "Twelve-Year-Old Ethel Allen Confesses to Setting a Tenement Ablaze Twice; Wrote a Black Hand Note; Demanded $50 from Her Father She Says She Saw These Things in a Bronx Moving-Picture Theatre." DA - July 15, 1910 KW - children censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and violence violence motion pictures, and crime censorship, and violence censorship, and violence motion pictures, and class children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children motion pictures, and crime ref, NYT LB - 14830 PY - 1910 SP - 16 ST - Turned to Arson by Moving Pictures T2 - New York Times TI - Turned to Arson by Moving Pictures ID - 3638 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this articles reads: "Six Young Girls in Juvenile Court, Tell Stages in Downward Path. Blame Penny Arcades. Judge Mack Promises Gaston Thely All the Punishment Law Will Allow." DA - Jan. 21, 1905 KW - children Chicago, IL censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children motion pictures, and crime Chicago, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago ref, CDT LB - 14850 PY - 1905 SP - 14 ST - Owe Life Wreck to Dance Hall T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Owe Life Wreck to Dance Hall ID - 3640 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle to the article reports: "Free Tickets to Dance Halls and Nickel Theaters Are Offered to Pupils; Teachers Tell of Evil; Policed Department Will Be Called Upon to Put an End to the Practice." DA - April 26, 1907 KW - children Chicago, IL censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and violence violence motion pictures, and crime censorship, and violence motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago and motion pictures censorship, and violence motion pictures, and class children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures ref, CDT LB - 14860 PY - 1907 SP - 4 ST - Efforts to Lure School Children T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Efforts to Lure School Children ID - 3641 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the effects of movie scenes of horror and crime on children. DA - April 4, 1913 KW - children censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and violence violence motion pictures, and crime censorship, and violence motion pictures, and Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures censorship, and violence motion pictures, and class children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures non-USA Great Britain motion pictures, and horror motion pictures, and crime ref, Times London LB - 14870 PY - 1913 SP - 7 ST - The Abuse of Cinematograph T2 - The Times [London] TI - The Abuse of Cinematograph ID - 3642 ER - TY - NEWS AB - A report on what impact moving pictures may have on juveniles. DA - Jan. 16, 1917 KW - children censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and violence violence motion pictures, and crime censorship, and violence motion pictures, and Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures censorship, and violence motion pictures, and class children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures non-USA Great Britain motion pictures, and crime ref, Times London LB - 14880 PY - 1917 SP - 5 ST - Effect on Juvenile Character: Subject and Treatment T2 - The Times [London] TI - Effect on Juvenile Character: Subject and Treatment ID - 3643 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that moving picture shows tend “to exert an evil influence on the young.” The subtitle of the article reads: "American Films Disliked. Characters Called ‘Inane’ and ‘Sticky’ Manchester Makes Regulations as to Children’s Admission." DA - March 23, 1913 KW - children censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and violence violence motion pictures, and crime censorship, and violence motion pictures, and Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures censorship, and violence motion pictures, and class children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures non-USA Great Britain motion pictures, and crime ref, NYT LB - 14890 PY - 1913 SE - C SP - 4 ST - Find Evil Effects from Cinema Shows. English Investigators Believe Their Education Value Much Exaggerated T2 - New York Times TI - Find Evil Effects from Cinema Shows. English Investigators Believe Their Education Value Much Exaggerated ID - 3644 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle to the article, dateline Cleveland, reports that "Deaf Mute Lip Readers Say Picture Show Actors Use Vile Language." DA - Dec. 13, 1910 KW - children censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and violence violence motion pictures, and crime censorship, and violence motion pictures, and class children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and deaf motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and profanity ref, NYT LB - 14900 PY - 1910 SP - 1 ST - Object to Film Profanity T2 - New York Times TI - Object to Film Profanity ID - 3645 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "Deaf and Dumb Children 'Hear" Conversation Not Meant for Public on Censored Films." DA - Jan. 12, 1913 KW - children censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and violence violence motion pictures, and crime censorship, and violence motion pictures, and class children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and deaf motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and profanity ref, CDT LB - 14910 PY - 1913 SE - A SP - 1 ST - Read Bad Stories on Lips of Moving Picture Actors T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Read Bad Stories on Lips of Moving Picture Actors ID - 3646 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that newsboys attened a meeting in which they first heard about Abraham Lincoln’s life and “then settled in their seats to take in a series of stirring moving pictures. Among them was a train robbery, with the pursuit and capture of the thieves, after a desperate battle with a Sheriff’s posse.” The article's subtitle reads: "Three Hundred of Them the Guests of F. Delano Weeks." DA - Feb. 12, 1905 KW - nationalism history children motion pictures, and Americanization ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship, and violence children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures Americanism motion pictures, and Americanism Americanism, and motion pictures patriotism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and patriotism patriotism censorship censorship and ratings ref, NYT LB - 14920 PY - 1905 SP - 2 ST - Newsies Cheer for Lincoln T2 - New York Times TI - Newsies Cheer for Lincoln ID - 3647 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses using film to identify criminals and the Bertillon System. The subtitle to the articles reads: "Hope to Warn Children; Police Expect They Will See How Easy It Is to Be Detected." DA - Jan. 12, 1911 KW - children Chicago, IL censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and violence violence motion pictures, and crime censorship, and violence motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago and motion pictures censorship, and violence motion pictures, and class children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children ref, CDT LB - 14930 PY - 1911 SP - 2 ST - Films Used to Stop Crime; Bertillon System Workings Are Shown by Moving Pictures T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Films Used to Stop Crime; Bertillon System Workings Are Shown by Moving Pictures ID - 3648 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that the use of color by actors for make-up produces various shades of gray. It discussing its use for mulattos and blacks. DA - July 9, 1916 KW - photography ref, news motion pictures color color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures photography and visual communication motion pictures, and race race, and motion pictures ref, LAT race LB - 14950 PY - 1916 SE - II SP - 2 ST - 'Making-Up' for Movies; Regard Must Be Had for Vagaries of the Photographic Film T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - 'Making-Up' for Movies; Regard Must Be Had for Vagaries of the Photographic Film ID - 3651 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that Thomas Edison has improved talking film. “In the newly perfected process the records and pictures are taken at the same time, a sufficiently sensitive record having been devised to catch and retain the slightest sound accompanying the portrayed action. Here has been the stumbling block in the effort to accomplish this result. Hitherto the pictures and records had to be taken separately. In the face of the difficulty of receiving in the horn the voices of the actors, and at the same time, having them move freely and as far as possible, dramatically around in an unobstructed range of the camera. The special recorder used for the kinetophone permits of the speaker being twenty feet away.” The article reports that Edison also “hopes soon to have the pictures reproduce the natural color of the originals.” The article's subtitle reads: "Edison Invents a Machine that Combines the Kinetoscope and Phonograph; Records Taken Together; When the Pictured Man Acts the Voice in the Box Speaks, and Illusion Is Perfect." DA - Aug. 27, 1910 KW - ref, news motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and sound recording Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures Edison, Thomas, and color films color ref, NYT LB - 14960 PY - 1910 SP - 8 ST - Motion Pictures Are Made to Talk T2 - New York Times TI - Motion Pictures Are Made to Talk ID - 3652 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This review of Frank M. Chapman’s Bird-Life, A Study of Our Common Birds says: “Wild Life in Color Most people will acknowledge that the so-called color photography has not yet been developed to an excellence which is superior in toning and tint to the best specimens of old-time lithography. And yet color photography has made it possible to present nature books with colored illustrations well within the reach of the reading public; this would have been impossible had lithography been employed….” DA - May 25, 1901 KW - photography ref, news education photography, and education education, and photography color lithography, and color color, and lithography color, and photography photography, and color photography and visual communication color, and books books, periodicals, newspapers lithography ref, NYT LB - 14970 PY - 1901 SE - BR SP - 6 ST - Books and Authors T2 - New York Times TI - Books and Authors ID - 3653 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reports: "Process of a Chicago Man is Exciting the East. Work of James W. McDonough. It Is Said, Will Soon Bring About the Formation of a Corporation to Turn His Discoveries to Commercial Account Two Processes at Present Used Attainments of a Scientific Investigator." DA - June 26, 1896 KW - photography color, and photography photography, and color photography and visual communication ref, news color ref, CDT LB - 14980 PY - 1896 SP - 9 ST - Does Photos in Colors T2 - Chicago Daily TI - Does Photos in Colors ID - 3654 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article says: "J. H. Powrie Claims He Has Solved Old Problem." DA - Oct. 10, 1903 KW - photography color, and photography photography, and color photography and visual communication ref, news color ref, CDT LB - 14990 PY - 1903 SP - 3 ST - Takes Photos in Colors T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Takes Photos in Colors ID - 3655 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle for the 2-page article reads: "New Color Photography Now Officially Recognized. Is a Chemical Process. Certain Secret Solutions and Pigments Are used. Invention of Frenchman. Tested by English Scientists with the Greatest Success. Chance for Counterfeiters." DA - April 4, 1897 KW - photography color, and photography photography, and color photography and visual communication ref, news color ref, CDT LB - 15000 PY - 1897 SP - 45 ST - In Hues of Nature T2 - Chicago Daily TI - In Hues of Nature ID - 3656 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reports that "The Hues of Nature Reproduced by the Camera." DA - June 18, 1893 KW - photography color, and photography photography, and color photography and visual communication ref, news color ref, CDT LB - 15010 PY - 1893 SP - 27 ST - Next to Color Photography T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Next to Color Photography ID - 3657 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle to this article reads: "The Color Negatives Obtained by the Lippman Process." DA - July 9, 1893 KW - Lippmann process photography Lippmann process, and color photography color, and photography photography, and color photography and visual communication ref, news color color, and Lippmann process ref, CDT LB - 15020 PY - 1893 SP - 35 ST - The Rainbow in the Camera T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - The Rainbow in the Camera ID - 3658 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle to this article reads: "Two Chicago Men Near the Goal." DA - Jan. 19, 1896 KW - Lippmann process photography Lippmann process, and color photography color, and photography photography, and color photography and visual communication ref, news color color, and Lippmann process ref, CDT LB - 15030 PY - 1896 SP - 33 ST - To Photograph in Colors T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - To Photograph in Colors ID - 3659 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about electricity and color and 1893 Columbian Exposition: “The opening display in the Electricity Building last evening was a charming one. Overpowering in its magnificence, rivaling nature in the variety of her wealth of tint and color and in splendor almost challenging comparison with the mid-day sun, it may fitly [sic] be described as the crowning glory of the Fair. It is so in the most complete sense of the term, for the electric force as there exhibited in the greatest aggregation of power yet obtained by mortals and developed in a bewildering variety of expression is at once the perfection of the beautiful and the highest realization of the useful. The youngest of all the arts based upon scientific investigation, the application of electricity to the service of civilized man is the most brilliantly successful of them all. … “The display of the evening included lighting evolved by the hand of man, running up a column of changing hues, and thence merging into a steadier light; and automatic pencil that seemed to write letters in living fire and the most effects in coloring; while everywhere was a flood of light, here soft, there brilliant, in some places concentrated, in other diffused. The tout ensemble was one of fact as far surpassing in grandeur the palace which the imagination of an Oriental writer conjured up for Aladdin as that exceeded the fitfully illuminated tent of the humble wanderer in the Arabian desert. It was a masterly exhibit of the triumph which mind has in these later days achieved over matter, of the way in which man has harnessed the most occult forces of nature in his chariot and forced it into more prosaic service in his workshop to do his mighty will.” DA - June 2, 1893 KW - ref, news electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time color electricity, and color color, and electricity metaphors metaphors, and Aladdin electricity, and Aladdin Columbian Exposition (1893) lighting ref, CDT LB - 15040 PY - 1893 SP - 4 ST - Electricity at the Fair T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Electricity at the Fair ID - 3660 ER - TY - NEWS AB - “The latest invention in photography is the discovery of a process by which colors as well as objects may be photographed. By the use of several plates instead of one, three negatives are taken on plates specially prepared….” DA - May 26, 1888 KW - photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography color ref, CDT LB - 15050 PY - 1888 SP - 2 ST - Photographing in Colors T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Photographing in Colors ID - 3661 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle for the article reads: "Prediction of the Coming Success of Photography in Colors." DA - June 28, 1886 KW - photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography color photography, instantaneous ref, CDT LB - 15060 PY - 1886 SP - 6 ST - Color Photography. Advances Made Possible by the Instantaneous Plate T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Color Photography. Advances Made Possible by the Instantaneous Plate ID - 3662 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses M. Lippmann (a professor of physics at the Sorbonne) and his process for color photography. DA - Feb. 22, 1891 KW - Lippmann process photography Lippmann process, and color photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography color photography, and Lippmann process color, and Lippmann process non-USA France France, and color photography photography, and France non-USA, and color photography ref, CDT LB - 15070 PY - 1891 SP - 6 ST - Photographing in All Colors. An Alleged Remarkable Discovery by a Parisian Scientist T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Photographing in All Colors. An Alleged Remarkable Discovery by a Parisian Scientist ID - 3663 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article describes the effect of electrical lighting at the 1893 Columbian Exposition in Chicago. “At the southeast corner, running up another column and away in various directions along the floor of the balcony, ran waves of electric light, showing alternately in red, white, and blue. Hanging from the floor of the balcony, were globes of fire that revolved swiftly and changed color with every revolution. From the north half a dozen big crystal globes, lifted high above the floor, cast a dazzling light across the building. They are part of the French exhibit and are designed for use in lighthouses. Half way down the east balcony a large electric ‘finger’ wrote the name of the exhibiter in fiery script upon a frame of incandescent globes. The whole building was filled with light….” DA - June 2, 1893 KW - ref, news electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time color electricity, and color color, and electricity metaphors metaphors, and Aladdin electricity, and Aladdin Columbian Exposition (1893) lighting France non-USA France, and electrical lighting non-USA, and electrical lighting ref, CDT LB - 15080 PY - 1893 SP - 1 ST - Dazzles Ben’s Eyes. Grand Illumination in the Electricity Building T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Dazzles Ben’s Eyes. Grand Illumination in the Electricity Building ID - 3664 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle for this article says: "Edward Stigleman of Richmond, Ind., Claims to Have Perfected an Invention." DA - April 7, 1894 KW - photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography color ref, CDT LB - 15090 PY - 1894 SP - 7 ST - Has a Plan to Photograph Colors T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Has a Plan to Photograph Colors ID - 3665 ER - TY - NEWS AB - “It is at last announced in an authoritative manner that photography in colors is an assured fact,” the Tribune reports. It then discusses a patent held by James D. McDonough of Chicago. DA - June 26, 1896 KW - photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography color ref, CDT LB - 15100 PY - 1896 SP - 6 ST - Photography in Colors at Last T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Photography in Colors at Last ID - 3666 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the first color photograph taken in America using the Lumiere process. “The Tribune today prints the first successful photograph in colors of a living woman to be taken in America. This remarkable photograph was taken on a Lumiere autochromen plate by Emmett V. O’Neill, staff photographer of The Sunday Tribune. The subject is Mrs. Edward T. Breitung in the wonderful gown in which she appeared as Madame La Pompadour in the Tableux Vivant. “The autochrome plate of the Lumieres has made the taking of photographs in colors not only a possibility for professionals but it has given into the hands of even the amateur photographer the power to reproduce even the most delicate shades of color found in still life and in nature. “The color photographic plate is the invention of the Lumiere Brothers of Lyons, France, and bears their name. It is not merely a scientific experiment, as the other color processes in photography have been. It does not involve the long and intricate processes the tedious hours or work in the dark room, the expert knowledge, the keen eye for color, the extravagant use of chemicals that other inventions for photographing color have demanded.” Until O’Neill’s photograph, “no color photograph had been taken in America by the Lumiere process.” (Mrs. Breitung was the wife of Edward Breitung of Marquette, Mich., a millionaire copper mine owner.) DA - Jan. 5, 1908 KW - photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography color Lumiere process, and color photography color, and Lumiere process photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography women women, and color photography photography, and women non-USA France France, and color photography France, and Lumiere process ref, CDT sexuality LB - 15110 PY - 1908 SE - A SP - 8 ST - First Photograph In Colors of a Living Woman to be Taken in America T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - First Photograph In Colors of a Living Woman to be Taken in America ID - 3667 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is accompanied by picture on a color photograph taken of a woman, probably Charlotte Spaulding in Buffalo, NY, in 1908. The photographer, Edward Steichen, used a process developed by the Lumiere brother in France. Steichen, the article says, brought this process to the United States. The article then discusses how this photograph came to light almost a century after it was taken. The article describes the pictures. "Autochromes are positive images, meaning they are unique and not negatives that can be used to create prints. They were made using a complex process in which tiny dyed grains of potato starch were spread across a piece of glass and light was passed through them to a photo-sensitive plate. "The three colors of the starch grains -- bright blue-violet, bright orange-red and Kelly green -- worked together to produce a wide range of realistic-looking colors, in the same way that combinations of red, blue and green dots produce a color-television picture.... "Unlike most other antique prints, autochromes are usually displayed with a light source behind them, allowing their colors, which are dim in regular light, to shine through the semi-transparent glass or to reflect onto a mirror. But prolonged exposure to light can wash out the images. After Eastman House displays the pictures they will be returned to storage. (The pictures will be exhibited on a light table sometime in October, although a date has not been set.)" DA - May 21, 2007 KW - photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography color Lumiere process, and color photography color, and Lumiere process photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography women women, and color photography photography, and women Steichen, Edward, and color photography photography, and Edward Steichen color, and Edward Steichen photography, and autochromes color, and autochromes ref, NYT sexuality LB - 15120 PY - 2007 SE - B SP - 1, 5 ST - A Splash of Photo History Comes to Light T2 - New York Times TI - A Splash of Photo History Comes to Light ID - 3668 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on the first color moving pictures that were not hand-painted. “Moving pictures projected on the screen in natural colors by the agency of light only had their first public demonstration in America last night at a meeting of the New York Electrical Society, in its lecture room at 29 West Twenty-ninth Street. Into the coloring of these pictures no hand work, stencil work, or similar method enters…. “The kinemacolor films are not yet on the market here, but that is said to be a matter of only a few weeks…. “One of the most successful views was of a big orange being cut open in a man’s hands. The fresh tints of the hands and the rich color of the orange were effective enough, and the applause came when the orange was squeezed and the juice trickled out…. “Besides the greater accuracy of the kinemacolor process, it has the advantage over hand coloring in greater speed of production. Coloring the films means skilled craftsmen and much labor. The invention already has been exhibited in England and has been used in the London theatres for some months. It will reach American audiences in midwinter. “It is understood that the perfection of this process is stealing Mr. Edison’s fire….” Edison had talked of moving pictures combined with the phonograph in natural colors. The subtitle to this article reads: "A New Process of Color Photography Exhibited at the Electrical Society. Invented in England. Pictures Taken Through Red and Green Glass and Double Usual Speed All Hues Perfectly Shown." DA - Oct. 29, 1910 KW - photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography color motion pictures color motion pictures, and color non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and color movies motion pictures, and Great Britain non-USA, and color movies motion pictures, and non-USA ref, NYT LB - 15130 PY - 1910 SP - 8 ST - Shows Moving Views in Natural Colors T2 - New York Times TI - Shows Moving Views in Natural Colors ID - 3669 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that “When the audience viewed the composite picture through the complementary colored glasses a startling stereoscopical effect was produced.” The subtitle to the article reads: "Royal Society Tries Method That May Be Applied to Moving Pictures." DA - Feb. 21, 1909 KW - photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography color motion pictures color motion pictures, and color photography, and 3D motion pictures, and 3D photography, and stereoscopical slides non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and color movies motion pictures, and Great Britain non-USA, and color movies motion pictures, and non-USA ref, NYT LB - 15140 PY - 1909 SE - C SP - 2 ST - Color View of Photos T2 - New York Times TI - Color View of Photos ID - 3670 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the Lumiere brothers and their process of taking color photographs. “They simplify the process of color photography to such an extent that almost any photographer may make colored negatives.” The article's subtitle reads: "It is Claimed That a Simple Methods for Making Colored Prints Has been Found." DA - Sept. 8, 1907 KW - photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography color Lumiere process, and color photography color, and Lumiere process non-USA France France, and color photography France, and Lumiere process media effects media effects, and color color, and media effects ref, NYT LB - 15150 PY - 1907 SE - X SP - 8 ST - Problem of Color Photography About Solved After Many Experiments By the Lumieve [sic] Process, the Discovery of Two French Inventors T2 - New York Times TI - Problem of Color Photography About Solved After Many Experiments By the Lumieve [sic] Process, the Discovery of Two French Inventors ID - 3671 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle to this article reports that "Dr. [Herbert T.] Kalmus Exhibits Technicolor Films at Engineering Building." The articles says that about 2,000 feet of film was shown. DA - Feb. 22, 1917 KW - Kalmus, Herbert photography ref, news motion pictures color color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures photography and visual communication ref, NYT color, and Herbert Kalmus Kalmus, Herbert, and color LB - 15160 PY - 1917 SP - 9 ST - Moving Pictures in Color T2 - New York Times TI - Moving Pictures in Color ID - 3672 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the status of color motion pictures in 1913. DA - Jan. 17, 1913 KW - photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography color motion pictures color motion pictures, and color non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and color movies motion pictures, and Great Britain non-USA, and color movies motion pictures, and non-USA ref, Times London LB - 15180 PY - 1913 SP - 44 ST - Moving Pictures in Natural Colours: A New Process T2 - The Times [London] TI - Moving Pictures in Natural Colours: A New Process ID - 3674 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reports: "New Process and Its Advantages." DA - March 31, 1914 KW - photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography color motion pictures color motion pictures, and color non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and color movies motion pictures, and Great Britain non-USA, and color movies motion pictures, and non-USA ref, Times London LB - 15190 PY - 1914 SP - 10 ST - Natural Colours on the Cinematograph T2 - The Times [London] TI - Natural Colours on the Cinematograph ID - 3675 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article gives an account of the state of films in color in 1908. DA - Dec. 10, 1908 KW - photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography color motion pictures color motion pictures, and color non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and color movies motion pictures, and Great Britain non-USA, and color movies motion pictures, and non-USA ref, Times London LB - 15200 PY - 1908 SP - 12 ST - Moving Pictures in Natural Colours T2 - The Times [London] TI - Moving Pictures in Natural Colours ID - 3676 ER - TY - NEWS DA - March 23, 1915 KW - photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography color motion pictures color motion pictures, and color non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and color movies motion pictures, and Great Britain non-USA, and color movies motion pictures, and non-USA ref, Times London LB - 15210 PY - 1915 SP - 3 ST - House of Lords: Coloured Moving Pictures: Validity of Patent T2 - The Times [London] TI - House of Lords: Coloured Moving Pictures: Validity of Patent ID - 3677 ER - TY - NEWS AB - An update on developing in making color moving pictures. DA - April 3, 1912 KW - photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography color motion pictures color motion pictures, and color non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and color movies motion pictures, and Great Britain non-USA, and color movies motion pictures, and non-USA ref, Times London LB - 15220 PY - 1912 SP - 23 ST - Colour Cinematography: Recent Advances T2 - The Times [London] TI - Colour Cinematography: Recent Advances ID - 3678 ER - TY - NEWS AB - A report on the status of color photography in Great Britain in 1896. DA - April 18, 1896 KW - photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography color non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and color movies motion pictures, and Great Britain non-USA, and color movies motion pictures, and non-USA ref, Times London LB - 15230 PY - 1896 SP - 12 ST - A New Colour Photography T2 - The Times [London] TI - A New Colour Photography ID - 3679 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The Times provides an account of progress in color photography. DA - Aug. 20, 1908 KW - photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography color non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and color movies motion pictures, and Great Britain non-USA, and color movies motion pictures, and non-USA Lumiere process, and color photography color, and Lumiere process photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography women women, and color photography photography, and women ref, Times London sexuality LB - 15250 PY - 1908 SP - 6 ST - Pictorial Photography in Colours T2 - The Times [London] TI - Pictorial Photography in Colours ID - 3681 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article offers a description of electric lighting at a fiesta in Los Angeles. “It was a dream that man, the alchemist, had stored within the carbon’s subtle coil and loosed to share the splendor of the starry night. It was born with a gentle murmur and came upon the town by stealth. The streets were charmed with light and flame, and every passer was lured by color’s wondrous robes. The chancel of the evening’s worship was new lighted for a festival. “The spectacle was one of varied beauty. Pendants of luminous bulbs stretched from pole to pole through the principal thoroughfares. From the hills that overlook the downtown portion it was a scene of fairy splendor. It lay palpitant [sic] in the breathing night like a great lily pad, gemmed with jewels, and from time to time the cyclopean eye of a search light stabbed through the gloom and pierced it with ivory…. “Shortly after 6 o’clock the lights on Broadway were tested, and at 7:15 all were turned on. A man was stationed in the middle of each block on each side of the street…. One Main and Spring streets Woodill & Hulse installed 4500 lamps, and on Broadway G. T. Bennett placed 2200….” Note: Sub-headline: “Glory of Coloring; City Bright and Pretty” “Los Angeles never looked prettier. “Always a queen of beauty as a city, she can yet enhance her charms like a lovely woman by donning her most stunning gown. That is what she has done. “The effect speaks for itself. “The principal streets and stores are like miniature poppy pastures in their blaze of orange and green, the colors always indicative of Southern California spring. There is read, too, lots of it not the rosy red of the maiden’s blush, for Los Angeles has nothing to blush for save pride; but the rich, wine-red of the heart’s blood in its joyousness.” The sub-title of this article reads: "Los Angeles Beautiful for Great Fete. Streets and Stores Wondrous With Color Elks Will Show Today." DA - May 1, 1902 KW - ref, news electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time color electricity, and color color, and electricity advertising and public relations electricity, and advertising advertising, and electricity metaphors metaphors, and poppy field metaphors, and cyclopean eye metaphors, and jewels metaphors, and fairy splendor metaphors, and great lily pad ref, LAT advertising LB - 15300 PY - 1902 SP - 5 ST - Like a Dream But It’s Real. Fiesta’s Dazzling Light Glow to Heaven T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Like a Dream But It’s Real. Fiesta’s Dazzling Light Glow to Heaven ID - 3689 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The sub-title of this article reads: "President Cleveland and Wife in the Photograph Gallery. Talks with Photographers Arthur and Garfield -- … The Cabinet and the Camera." DA - March 11, 1894 KW - fame celebrity celebrity culture photography ref, news presidents and new media photography and visual communication motion pictures presidents, and photography McKinley, William Arthur, Chester Cleveland, Grover McKinley, William, and photography photography, and William McKinley Arthur, Chester, and photography Cleveland, Grover, and photography photography, and Chester Arthur photography, and Grover Cleveland false leaders false leaders, and photography photography, and false leaders photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality personality ref,LAT LB - 15310 PY - 1894 SP - 13 ST - Before the Camera. Photographing Statesmen and Generals. The Vanity of Posing Public Men Exposes Itself T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Before the Camera. Photographing Statesmen and Generals. The Vanity of Posing Public Men Exposes Itself ID - 3690 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article draws a parallel between the movies and Plato’s cave: “…They cannot see each other, the fire or the performers carrying objects to and fro on the low wall behind them any more than the spectators in a modern movie can see the dummy substituted on the floating cake of ice as it nears the dam. They take the capering shadows for reality. It one is released from his bonds and taken into the light where the real persons and objects are pointed out to him, he does not rejoice. The light hurts his eyes. It pains him to turn his neck. He does not believe that he has been seeing silly things and that he is now nearer to reality. He flies back to his dark cavern as fast as he can. “That pessimistic view of the movies may in time have to be changed. They are now in the romantic stage, falling into the general classification of ‘escape’ literature. Their patrons, charmed by false glory, are in the habit of identifying themselves with the protagonist, which necessitates a happy ending, no matter how art must be dragged and plausibility outraged. But the movies are camping on the trail of the theatre. A few realistic pictures have been done, some without too much loss of money. Perhaps it will be possible to illuminate the cave if the audience there refuses to be brought out into the light.” DA - Oct. 2, 1926 KW - fame fame celebrity actors acting ref, news false leaders motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and false leaders false leaders, and motion pictures motion pictures, and deception motion pictures, and Plato's cave metaphors metaphors, and Plato's cave critics critics, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 15330 PY - 1926 SP - 18 ST - Plato and the Movies T2 - New York Times TI - Plato and the Movies ID - 3692 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The sub-title to the article reads: "Movie Funmaker. Fat, Big, Round-Faced Actor Who Made Millions Laugh Succumbs at 52." DA - April 27, 1915 KW - fame celebrity actors acting photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars Bunny, John Bunny, John, and celebrity culture ref, NYT LB - 15340 PY - 1915 SP - 13 ST - John Bunny Dies T2 - New York Times TI - John Bunny Dies ID - 3693 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle to the article reads: "Film and Legitimate Stage Actors Attend Services at Elks’ Club." DA - April 29, 1915 KW - theater stage fame celebrity actors acting photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars Bunny, John Bunny, John, and celebrity culture theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 15350 PY - 1915 SP - 14 ST - Throng at Bunny Funeral T2 - New York Times TI - Throng at Bunny Funeral ID - 3694 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article explains why talking films were not yet feasible in 1908. It discusses the problems of actors having to speak directly into phonograph and then again before the camera. The two performances must by matched perfectly. “The performance as yet must be limited by the capacity of the phonograph records, which does not exceed three minutes. The phono-cinematograph thus is limited to topical songs or brief dramatic scenes; it cannot yet play the part of a people’s theater, which seems to be its manifest destiny.” DA - Aug. 30, 1908 KW - ref, news motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and sound film motion pictures, and talking films (origins) ref, CDT LB - 15690 PY - 1908 SE - E SP - 4 ST - New Device for Moving Pictures T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - New Device for Moving Pictures ID - 3695 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article uses the word “star” to discuss effort to bring famous actors into the ‘Movies.” “Denying that ‘the movies’ incite to riot, instigate crime, corrupt manners and injure the theater business, Daniel Frohman jumps into the arena as a ‘moving -picture manager,’ with a list of stars which include Sarah Bernhardt, …. “Into this ‘temple of the new art’ will come as many of the famous players of our generation as can be got to pose, bringing with them the play in which each has made his greatest success. This does not by any chance mean that Mrs. Fiske or Miss Marlowe is ‘going into the movies.’ It means simply that each of these actresses will go to Mr. Frohman’s studio for two, or , perhaps three weeks, between engagements, and present, in moving picture form, the one play in which the American people will most want to remember her; as she might, for example, have a plaster cast made of her hand.” The subtitle of this article reads: "Famous Manager Expects to Work a Revolution in the Moving Picture Field with Film Plays by Bernhardt, Sothern and Marlowe, Viola Allen, James K. Hackett, Mrs. Fiske, Beerbohm Tree, and Others Noted Plays and Characterizations Will Be Preserved for All Time." DA - Dec. 22, 1912 KW - theater stage history history fame fame celebrity actors acting photography ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising motion pictures, and new art form Bernhardt, Sarah advertising and public relations motion pictures, and press agents ref, NYT celebrity culture actors acting materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation celluloid materials, and celluloid historical preservation, and celluloid celluloid, and historical preservation celebrity culture theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures celebrity, and actors actors, and celebrity fame, and actors actors, and fame motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures Frohman, Daniel advertising LB - 15390 PY - 1912 SE - SM SP - 7 ST - Daniel Frohman Gets Big Stars to Act for ‘Movies’ T2 - New York Times TI - Daniel Frohman Gets Big Stars to Act for ‘Movies’ ID - 3698 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article, which appeared in Feb., 1910, notes the appearance of something new, the “motion picture hero.” “There has sprung up a new matinee hero. Unlike the matinee idol of debutantes of a few years ago, the new person, attracting the attention of High School girls and others, performs on the screen. In a word he is a motion picture hero. “Regular patrons of the many moving picture theaters of the city and the most of the patrons are regulars have learned to know the different characters of the pictures, and no matter what character is assumed by the actors, their mannerisms are easily detected. “Just to see these persons in the different characters, large parties of young women may be found any afternoon in the places where the pictures are shown….” Goes on to say that to the uninitiated, the different performances may be the same but to those who go to many films, the differences in characters are well known. Often the actors can be found relaxing in the lobbies of L.A. hotels. The subtitle for this article reads: "They Watch His Actions in Moving Pictures. Regular Patrons Learn to Spot Favorite Posers in the Various Characters in Which They Appear The Real Stars May Be Seen in Los Angeles, Too." DA - Feb. 6, 1910 KW - Los Angeles history fame celebrity actors acting photography ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and stars (origins) advertising and public relations motion pictures, and press agents heroes heroes, and motion pictures motion pictures, and heroes motion pictures, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and motion pictures ref, LAT advertising LB - 15400 PY - 1910 SE - II SP - 3 ST - New Hero for Matinee Girls T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - New Hero for Matinee Girls ID - 3699 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that at the second annual International Moving Picture Trades Exposition that Cooper Hewitt Co. was “installing an extensive lighting plant, and there will be shown the rehearsing, playing, talking and developing in the studio of a playlet and then the finished picture on a screen will be run.” Among the actors taking part: Mary Pickford, John Bunny, Pearl White, and others named. DA - May 18, 1914 KW - theater stage fame fame celebrity celebrity culture ref, secondary words vs. images actors acting motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures images vs. words motion pictures, and new art form electricity lighting mercury vapor electric light lighting, and Cooper Hewitt lighting, and mercury vapor motion pictures, and lighting motion pictures, and Cooper Hewitt lighting acting, and lighting lighting, and acting motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and celebrity motion pictures, and fame fame, and motion pictures celebrity, and motion pictures celebrity culture actors, and status of Bunny John Pickford, Mary Cooper Hewitt lighting ref, NYT LB - 15410 PY - 1914 SP - 9 ST - Movies’ Exposition. International Show to Open at Grand Central Palace June 8 T2 - New York Times TI - Movies’ Exposition. International Show to Open at Grand Central Palace June 8 ID - 3700 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article contains advice given to a graduating class of actors on how to “make your voice clear and distinct….” It also advises marrying someone outside their profession “as interests may clash.” DA - March 14, 1914 KW - theater stage history fame fame celebrity actors acting actors acting ref, news motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, silent motion pictures, and oratory fame celebrity culture motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and celebrity motion pictures, and stage actors celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures status of actors actors, and status of personality motion pictures, and personality personality, and motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures women women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women acting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and acting ref, NYT LB - 15430 PY - 1914 SP - 11 ST - Miss Bates Tells How to Beat Movies T2 - New York Times TI - Miss Bates Tells How to Beat Movies ID - 3702 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is a about an artist who uses moving pictures of model who has grown tired of posing. The moving pictures helped to capture the real person. DA - July 26, 1903 KW - fame fame celebrity actors acting actors acting photography ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, silent motion pictures, and oratory fame celebrity culture motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and celebrity motion pictures, and stage actors celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures status of actors actors, and status of personality motion pictures, and personality personality, and motion pictures women women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women acting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and acting photography and visual communication women women, and photography photography, and women women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women sexuality photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography Germany non-USA Germany, and photography photography, and Germany ref, CDT LB - 15440 PY - 1903 SE - A SP - 5 ST - The Most Beautiful Models in Germany T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - The Most Beautiful Models in Germany ID - 3703 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This ad is about a "Beauty and Brains" contest and Photoplay magazine. The writer Kitty Kelly is also mentioned. DA - Oct. 1, 1916 KW - journalism celebrity celebrity culture magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news photography and visual communication women women, and photography photography, and women women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women advertising, and women women, and advertising advertising and public relations sexuality sexualty, and advertising advertising, and sexuality magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines Photoplay motion pictures, and fan magazines fan magazines celebrity culture motion pictures, and celebrity advertising, and celebrity motion pictures, and fame advertising, and fame Kelly, Kitty actors acting ref, CDT advertising motion pictures news and journalism LB - 15450 PY - 1916 SE - I SP - 4 ST - Beauty and Brains T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Beauty and Brains ID - 3704 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This advertisement has a picture of Jackie Saunders and considerable text about the virtue of using Senreco toothpaste and visiting the dentist regularly for good gums. It projects an image of beauty. DA - Nov. 2, 1919 KW - journalism celebrity celebrity culture actors acting magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news photography and visual communication women women, and photography photography, and women women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women advertising, and women women, and advertising advertising and public relations sexuality sexualty, and advertising advertising, and sexuality magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines Photoplay motion pictures, and fan magazines fan magazines celebrity culture motion pictures, and celebrity advertising, and celebrity motion pictures, and fame advertising, and fame motion pictures, and stars advertising, and beauty actors acting ref, CDT advertising motion pictures news and journalism LB - 15460 PY - 1919 SE - E SP - 5 ST - What Helped Me to Success Will Help You, Says Jackie Saunder Movie Star T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - What Helped Me to Success Will Help You, Says Jackie Saunder Movie Star ID - 3705 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article gives examples of the strict terms of contacts that many stage actors were expected to sign. The subtitle of the article reads: "Some Thrive on the Susceptibility of the Mummers. The Players as a Wage-Earner. Condition of Rhetorical Servitude. Why Successful Acts Say ‘Don’t’ to Stage Aspirants." DA - Feb. 22, 1903 KW - stars (actors) theater stage fame fame celebrity actors acting actors acting ref, news celebrity culture fame personality theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures actors, and fame theater, and stars ref, NYT motion pictures LB - 15480 PY - 1903 SP - 21 ST - Queer Contracts Made with Actors T2 - New York Times TI - Queer Contracts Made with Actors ID - 3707 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about actors’ personality and danger of ego and boasting. The article's subtitle reads: "Annie Russell and Kyrie Bellew Give Advice to Young Actors." DA - March 23, 1902 KW - theater stage history celebrity actors acting actors acting ref, news motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing actors, and oratory fame celebrity culture theater, and fame theater, and celebrity motion pictures, and stage actors celebrity, and theater fame, and theater status of actors actors, and status of personality motion pictures, and personality personality, and motion pictures ref, NYT theater LB - 15490 PY - 1902 SP - 15 ST - Actors as Speechmakers T2 - New York Times TI - Actors as Speechmakers ID - 3708 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of the article reads: "Monarch Throwing Rice at Royal Couple Caught by Camera." DA - Oct. 19, 1913 KW - journalism journalism fame celebrity actors acting magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality ref, NYT LB - 15580 PY - 1913 SE - C SP - 3 ST - 'Human' Picture of King T2 - New York Times TI - 'Human' Picture of King ID - 3717 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that “Photographs of persons and places are perfectly legitimate accompaniments of modern journalism. They often greatly increase the interest of the daily record of news.” However, in the case of the photographer discussed in this story, he went too far taking pictures at a private funeral. DA - March 29, 1909 KW - journalism journalism fame celebrity actors acting magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality quotations ref, NYT quotations quotations, and vulgar snapshot LB - 15590 PY - 1909 SP - 6 ST - The Vulgar Snapshot Man T2 - New York Times TI - The Vulgar Snapshot Man ID - 3718 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This interesting article notes that the camera has replaced the illustrator in weekly papers and also in the illustrated daily newspapers and in cheap magazines. The cost of producing an illustrated paper has dropped significantly during the past five or six years. The cost of using photographs is about one-fifth as much as using traditional illustrations supplied by artists. The article compares the news coverage of William McKinley's assassination in 1901 with that given to Abraham Lincoln's assassination in 1865, and how differently pictures were obtained during in 1865 and in 1901. In Lincoln's time, artists were sent to sketch the scene and wood engraving were used. It took one to two days to engrave a drawing on wood, and perhaps four days before the image was ready to publish. At the time of McKinley's assassination, newspapers had many photographs (many stock photos, to be sure) to choose from. Newspapers had photographs even of obscure places on file and they were readily available. It cost Collier's about one-tenth as much to put out an extra edition after McKinley's death as it did Harper's to produce an extra issue after Lincoln's assassination. The article notes that even five or six years before McKinley's death, an extra required sending out several artists. By 1901, photos could be gotten from Buffalo to NYC in about 14 hours. This article also discusses the use of photographs in cheap magazines and that illustrations are still used in fiction. DA - Nov. 3, 1901 KW - wood engraving journalism journalism fame celebrity actors acting magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality quotations newspapers, and photographs photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving presidents and new media McKinley, William McKinley, William, and photography McKinley, William, and new media McKinley, William, and assassination Lincoln, Abraham Lincoln, Abraham, and assassination Lincoln, Abraham, and newspaper illustrations Lincoln, Abraham, and new media ref, NYT LB - 15600 PY - 1901 SE - SM SP - 12 ST - Camera's Inroads in Field of Illustrating T2 - New York Times TI - Camera's Inroads in Field of Illustrating ID - 3719 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about sending a photograph of King Edward from England to Paris by telegraph and asks, “If Pictures Can be Flashed by Wire from One Country to Another, Why Not Transfer Views in the Same Way?" The article's subtitle reads: "Successful Test of Prof. Korn’s Remarkable Invention Indicates the Possibility of Another Field for Scientific Discoverer." DA - Nov. 24, 1907 KW - post office journalism future magazines, and photography facsimile magazines photography ref, news electricity electricity, and photography photography, and electricity photography and visual communication motion pictures electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines television telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph future and science fiction telephotography Korn, Arthur, and telephotography seeing at a distance modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity television television, and origins future and science fiction non-USA France France, and photography photography, and France Great Britain Great Britain, and photography photography, and Great Britain non-USA Germany Germany, and photography by wire Germany, and telegraph telegraph, and Germany facsimile, and telegraph telegraph, and facsimile duplicating technologies postal service postal service, and facsimile facsimile, and postal service postal service, and telegraph telegraph, and postal service ref, NYT LB - 15610 PY - 1907 SE - SM SP - 7 ST - Photographs by Telegraph: Television Next? T2 - New York Times TI - Photographs by Telegraph: Television Next? ID - 3720 ER - TY - NEWS AB - According to this article, actors say that being photographed in England is more of an event than in the U. S. DA - Jan. 11, 1914 KW - fame celebrity actors acting photography motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality ref, news ref, NYT LB - 15620 PY - 1914 SE - X SP - 7 ST - Being Photographed T2 - New York Times TI - Being Photographed ID - 3721 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that some of the best-know actors on a list of 3,000 names used as models for photographers. It notes that these photographs must be much more carefully done than facial pictures in the movies. The subtitle to the article reads: "Models Pose for Photographs Showing Scenes in the Story How Two Artists Originated the Plan." DA - Jan. 6, 1918 KW - fame celebrity actors acting photography motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality ref, news sexuality sexuality, and photography women women, and photography photography, and sexuality ref, news ref, NYT LB - 15630 PY - 1918 SP - 75 ST - Using the Camera to Illustrate Fiction T2 - New York Times TI - Using the Camera to Illustrate Fiction ID - 3722 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article quotes the owner of fashionable stationery store saying that nine out of ten people who get photos of stage people are women. DA - Feb. 23, 1884 KW - fame celebrity actors acting photography motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality ref, news sexuality sexuality, and photography women women, and photography photography, and sexuality audiences audiences, and women women, and audiences ref, news ref, CDT LB - 15640 PY - 1884 SP - 8 ST - Negative Prints. Actors and Actresses Whose Photographs Are Most Popular T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Negative Prints. Actors and Actresses Whose Photographs Are Most Popular ID - 3723 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "Inspectors Arrest Isadore Meyers, Head of Series of Agencies. Stage Photos His Stock. Fifty Thousand Copies of Six Pictures Ready to Be Mailed to Applicants." DA - March 5, 1908 KW - fame Chicago, IL celebrity censorship actors acting photography motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality ref, news sexuality sexuality, and photography women women, and photography photography, and sexuality audiences audiences, and women women, and audiences ref, news censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures ref, CDT LB - 15650 PY - 1908 SP - 7 ST - Strike Near Top of Cupid Trust T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Strike Near Top of Cupid Trust ID - 3724 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle for this article reads: "Here Is the Answer, Also Data About Other Celebrities Who Attract Collectors." This article is on the popularity of celebrity photos. Actresses most popular but many sales abroad because of antipathy from non-acting women. (my emphasis) “According to a leading dealer in photographs of celebrities in this city, the business which he conducts may be considered a thermometer of the public’s feeling toward its favorites of the stage and in other walks of life which bring them into prominence. “The dealer along keeps on hand a stock of about one million photographs. (my emphasis) They include pictures of actors, actresses, singers, members of royal families and of the nobility of foreign countries, men prominent in politics, scientists, and every other kind of celebrity known to the human race. “Of all these the most popular are the picture of actresses. (my emphasis) And first and foremost among the favorite actresses of the American stage is Maude Adams….” (she played Peter Pan) Ethel Barrymore second most popular. “Fully 25,000 pictures of Maude Adams in her various roles are sold in this city by the leading dealer in photographs of celebrities alone. This represents somewhat less than one-half of the total number of pictures of actors and actresses purchased from him by collectors each year. “The pictures of actors and actresses represent about one-third of the entire number of celebrities’ pictures which that dealer sells….” (Maude Adams represents about one-sixth of all celebrity sales by this dealer.) Next to stage celebrities, pictures of royalty are next in popularity. Opera singers and politicians (e.g., TR) are also popular as are scientists and writers. Pictures of TR a greater seller in US and abroad. “The reason that the collections of ‘types of American beauties’ sent abroad to fill the order received from foreign dealers are drawn so largely from the acting profession is the fact that there exists an antipathy among American ladies not on the stage to allowing the sale of their photographs.” DA - Feb. 9, 1908 KW - presidents and new media fame celebrity anti-theatrical bias censorship actors acting photography motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality ref, news sexuality sexuality, and photography women women, and photography photography, and sexuality audiences audiences, and women women, and audiences ref, news censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings actors, and status of anti-theatrical prejudice actors, and bias against women, and actresses actors, and women celebrity, and Maude Adams Adams, Maude, and photography Barrymore, Ethel Barrymore, Ethel, and celebrity Barrymore, Ethel, and photography president and new media Roosevelt, Theodore, and photography photography, and Theodore Roosevelt ref, news ref, NYT Roosevelt, Theodore LB - 15660 PY - 1908 SE - SM SP - 6 ST - Whose Picture Is the Best Seller? T2 - New York Times TI - Whose Picture Is the Best Seller? ID - 3725 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle to this articles reads "Vast Advances in the Science of Photography in Recent Years," and the article discusses the progress in photography over the past generation. It talks about “instantaneous photography” and cameras with exposure time of one millionth of a second, a photographic gun that than takes dozen picture a second, and sending pictures by telegraph. It says that "today the camera's sensitive eye ... shows every motion of a bullet from the instant it leaves the muzzle of the gun until it comes in contact with the target." DA - Sept. 28, 1895 KW - photography motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space ref, secondary motion pictures, instantaneous motion pictures, and number of pictures electricity photography and visual communication photography, instantaneous photography, and speed of ref, news telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph ref, NYT LB - 15670 PY - 1895 SP - 3 ST - Wonderful Things Done by the Camera T2 - New York Times TI - Wonderful Things Done by the Camera ID - 3726 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article claims that a German inventor has succeeded in making a talking moving picture. The subtitle to this article reads: "German Inventor [Oskar Messier] Succeeds in Efforts to Combine the Phonograph and Photograph Machine." DA - Sept. 2, 1903 KW - ref, news motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures Germany non-USA Germany, and sound films non-USA, and sound films motion pictures, and talking films (origins) ref, CDT color LB - 15700 PY - 1903 SP - 1 ST - Makes Moving Pictures Talk T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Makes Moving Pictures Talk ID - 3727 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses Thomas Edison's kinetophone, which combined the phonograph and moving pictures. DA - Jan. 20, 1914 KW - ref, news motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and sound film kinetophone Edison, Thomas, and kinetophone ref, Times London LB - 15710 PY - 1914 SP - 8 ST - Talking Pictures: The New Kinetophone T2 - The Times [London] TI - Talking Pictures: The New Kinetophone ID - 3728 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle to the article reads: "Comedian Refused to Enter Movies When He Saw Them, He Tells Court." DA - Sept. 15, 1926 KW - ref, news motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures Warner Bros., and sound recording Jolson, Al, and sound film ref, NYT Warner Bros. LB - 15720 PY - 1926 SP - 26 ST - Jolson Screen Tests ‘Rotten,’ Lawyer Says T2 - New York Times TI - Jolson Screen Tests ‘Rotten,’ Lawyer Says ID - 3729 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses Thomas Edison's kinetophone which combined moving picture machines and a phonograph. “Seven films were shown,” the article reports. Edison is quoted: “‘This will put the finest operas and the best dramas within the reach of the poorest man.’” Indeed, the article's subtitle reads: "Edison Declares His Latest Device Will Be a Big Agency for the Uplift of the Poor." DA - Jan. 4, 1913 KW - class ref, news motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and sound film kinetophone Edison, Thomas, and kinetophone motion pictures, and class sound recording, and class class, and motion pictures class, and sound recording ref, LAT LB - 15730 PY - 1913 SE - I SP - 1 ST - Tries Out Kinetophone T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Tries Out Kinetophone ID - 3730 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that Woodrow Wilson will use the phonograph and moving pictures. He send out phonograph of a speech (with things edited and added from the original) along with moving pictures taken of him. The subtitle of the article reads: "Planned to Let Nation Hear Him as the Moving Pictures Show Him in Action; Sits for Portrait Here." DA - Aug. 9, 1912 KW - politics journalism history history photography ref, news motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures presidents and new media Wilson, Woodrow motion pictures, and Woodrow Wilson sound recording, and Woodrow Wilson Wilson, Woodrow, and sound recording Wilson, Woodrow, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and Woodrow Wilson Wilson, Woodrow, and photography phonograph Wilson, Woodrow, and phonograph phonograph, and Woodrow Wilson history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation presidents and new media Wilson, Woodrow and new media news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures politicians, and new media phonograph, and history history, and phonograph ref, NYT LB - 15740 PY - 1912 SP - 1 ST - Phonograph to Give Wilson To All of Us T2 - New York Times TI - Phonograph to Give Wilson To All of Us ID - 3731 ER - TY - NEWS AB - From a humorous poem: “‘The greatest study of mankind is man,’ /At least it used to be -- for now ‘tis seen / That we have found a more effective plan, / To study mankind out of a machine, / But that the show was speechless, made us sad; / No tale of life in silence should be told; / So science brought the phonograph, to add / A tongue to these dumb phantom forms. / ‘To hold / The mirror up to nature’ now we go / Into a moving- talking, ten-cent picture shows…. “Oh, mighty triumph of dramatic art! / Oh, inspiration, far beyond our reach! / You to these cold flat figures could impart / This modern miracle of seeming speech; / That human interest has been thus cut out / From modern drama used not make us grieve; / It suits an age whose joys beyond a doubt / Are part mechanical, part make-believe; / Now life itself with nature once aglow / Is but a moving talking, ten-cent picture show.” DA - May 25, 1912 KW - ref, news motion pictures sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures phonograph phonograph, and motion pictures motion pictures, and phonograph quotations ref, LAT LB - 15770 PY - 1912 SE - II SP - 4 ST - Deus ex Machina T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Deus ex Machina ID - 3733 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "Favorites of Motion Picture World Lionized at Coliseum Ball. Crush Smashes Camera. Adulation of Crowd for Movie Actors and Actresses Reaches High Mark. Major Funkhauser Eyes Dancers." DA - May 15, 1914 KW - journalism fame celebrity actors acting magazines photography modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines fan magazines magazines, fan motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and stars (origins) ref, CDT motion pictures LB - 15780 PY - 1914 SP - 1 ST - Film Stars Tango and Gossip with 10,000 Happy Fans T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Film Stars Tango and Gossip with 10,000 Happy Fans ID - 3734 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is on a new technology, rotogravure, that allows newspapers to reproduce photographs faster. It is also adaptable to the rotary press. The subtitle to the article reads: "Photogravure Process Adapted to a Cylinder for Printing at a Rapid Rate. Shown in Christmas Times. All Times Pictorial Sections Will Soon Be Made by This New Method." DA - Nov. 27, 1913 KW - wood engraving rotogravure rotogravure process journalism journalism fame fame celebrity photography, and celebrity culture actors acting magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving rotogravure photography, and rotogravure process rotogravure, and photography newspapers, and rotogravure rotogravure, and newspapers motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity ref, NYT photography, and rotogravure process LB - 15790 PY - 1913 SP - 4 ST - How Rotogravure Makes a Picture T2 - New York Times TI - How Rotogravure Makes a Picture ID - 3735 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Jeanette Rankin, the first woman elected to Congress, is hounded by cameramen, this article reports. Rankin is quoted as saying that “I positively refuse to allow myself to be photographed and will not leave the house while there is a camera man on the premises.” The article's subtitle reads: "Woman Congressman Elect Doesn’t Want to be Classed as a Freak." DA - Nov. 17, 1916 KW - politics photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and politicians women women, and photography photography, and women politicans, and photography Rankin, Jeanette, and photography ref, NYT photography, and Jeanette Rankin photography, and reluctance to be photographed LB - 15800 PY - 1916 SP - 4 ST - Miss Rankin Bans Cameras T2 - New York Times TI - Miss Rankin Bans Cameras ID - 3736 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article announcing that a special issue of The Times will be devoted to the cinematograph as part of the papers celebration of its 10,000 number. This article also discusses an exhibit from the day before of films dealing with medical and scientific topics. DA - Nov. 18, 1913 KW - science medicine journalism journalism fame fame celebrity photography, and celebrity culture actors acting magazines, and photography magazines photography photography and visual communication quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines photography and visual communication education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and medicine medicine, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures non-USA non-USA, and motion pictures motion pictures, and non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Great Britain ref, Times London LB - 15810 PY - 1913 SP - 5 ST - Journalism and the Cinema T2 - The Times [London] TI - Journalism and the Cinema ID - 3737 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article, part of The Times celebration of its 10,000th number, reports on a "world's fashion revue" given in kinemacolor. KW - science medicine journalism journalism fame fame celebrity photography, and celebrity culture actors acting magazines, and photography magazines photography photography and visual communication photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines photography and visual communication education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and medicine medicine, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures non-USA non-USA, and motion pictures motion pictures, and non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Great Britain color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures Great Britain, and color films ref, Times London color, and Kinemacolor color, and Charles Urban LB - 15820 ST - Fashions in Kinemacolor T2 - The Times [London] TI - Fashions in Kinemacolor ID - 3738 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses how press agents attempt to publicize movies and their stars. It talks about the differences between publicizing stage plays and movies the press agent for a play is concerned with only a limited number of cities; a 150 or more prints of a film will be sent out and the agent doesn’t always know where. On the use of photographs “every paper receives a shower of ‘stills’ each week from local theatres where films are being shown, including a “goodly number of ‘star’ portraits.’” One movie company regularly mails five “stills” each week to 400 publications. To cover the country for a film, about 3,000 ‘stills’ are needed to filter down through exchanges to local papers, etc. “Many other forms of printed publicity are issued, or have been issued, in the still-experimental life of the movies. Some companies, like Metro, publish complete weekly magazines, dressed to imitate the best of the ‘fan’ publications, but featuring one line of stars only. Triangle at one time published a very handsome rotogravure weekly of this character.” Also used are “house organs.” The article talks about press sheets, and press book. It notes that the some press sheets look like newspaper. “Essanay makes up a similar press sheet and dresses it to look like a miniature newspaper. Triangle’s press sheet is larger, running to five columns, and carrying four illustrations.” DA - Feb. 3, 1918 KW - theater stage rotogravure process history fame celebrity actors acting magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising motion pictures, and new art form advertising and public relations motion pictures, and press agents newspapers, and photography photography, and newspapers magazines, and photography photography, and magazines news and journalism motion pictures, and distribution motion pictures, and public relations rotogravure rotogravure, and newspapers newspapers, and rotogravure rotogravure, and movie stars theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures ref, NYT advertising LB - 15840 PY - 1918 SP - 45 ST - Pressagenting the Movies T2 - New York Times TI - Pressagenting the Movies ID - 3740 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that "Peter Cooper Hewitt Has Been Making Studies for Eighteen Years Which Promise to Result in Telephoning Between America and Europe, and in Other Miracles." DA - Nov. 22, 1914 KW - wireless communication fame fame celebrity celebrity culture actors acting ref, news electricity lighting mercury vapor electric light lighting, and Cooper Hewitt lighting, and mercury vapor motion pictures, and lighting motion pictures, and Cooper Hewitt lighting acting, and lighting lighting, and acting motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and celebrity motion pictures, and fame fame, and motion pictures celebrity, and motion pictures celebrity culture actors, and status of motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space vacuum tubes vacuum tubes, and lighting lighting, and vacuum tubes Hewitt, Peter Cooper telephones telephones, and trans-Atlantic telephones, and Peter Cooper Hewitt wireless radio ref, NYT LB - 15870 PY - 1914 SE - SM SP - 9 ST - Mercury Vapor May Work Wireless Marvels T2 - New York Times TI - Mercury Vapor May Work Wireless Marvels ID - 3743 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses "Edison Day" at the Panama-Pacific Exposition in San Francisco and the trans-continental telephone call made to Thomas Edison and his wife as part of the celebration. DA - Oct. 22, 1915 KW - ref, news electricity lighting electricity, and telephones telephones telephones, and trans-continental Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and lighting Edison, Thomas, and telephones ref, NYT LB - 15880 PY - 1915 SP - 3 ST - Send Greetings to Edison; Good Wishes Telephoned Across the Continent to Famous Inventor T2 - New York Times TI - Send Greetings to Edison; Good Wishes Telephoned Across the Continent to Famous Inventor ID - 3744 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that "Electric light is produced at the present time by heating a body white hot when we use its incandescence. This is an expensive and crude way, and the future light will be produced directly from the vibrations of the ether which constitute light. This is accomplished in part at present, for instance, in the mercury vapor tube invented by Peter Cooper Hewitt and also in what is known as the Moore's tube...." DA - Sept. 22, 1907 KW - ref, news electricity lighting mercury vapor electric light lighting, and Cooper Hewitt lighting, and mercury vapor motion pictures, and lighting motion pictures, and Cooper Hewitt lighting modernity modernity, and motion pictures electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time electricity, and time electricity, and space vacuum tubes vacuum tubes, and lighting lighting, and vacuum tubes Hewitt, Peter Cooper theaters theaters, as fire hazards lighting, and Moore's tube electricity, and Moore's tube ref, LAT motion pictures LB - 15890 PY - 1907 SE - VI SP - 10 ST - Editorial Round Table ... Revolution in Lighting T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Editorial Round Table ... Revolution in Lighting ID - 3745 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that "Peter Cooper Hewitt, inventor of the well-known mercury vapor electric lamp which bears his name, grandson of Peter Cooper, and son of the late Mayor Hewitt, has at last won a hard-fought legal battle which has been waged in the Patent Office and the United States courts for six years over the question of priority of invention of another electrical device, perhaps even more important than the lamp." That is "a remarkable static device for transforming alternating currents into direct currents." DA - April 20, 1910 KW - ref, news electricity lighting mercury vapor electric light lighting, and Cooper Hewitt lighting, and mercury vapor motion pictures, and lighting motion pictures, and Cooper Hewitt lighting modernity modernity, and motion pictures electricity, and modernity new way of seeing vacuum tubes vacuum tubes, and lighting lighting, and vacuum tubes Hewitt, Peter Cooper Hewitt, Peter Cooper, and patents electricity, and direct current electricity, and alternating current ref, NYT motion pictures LB - 15900 PY - 1910 SP - 6 ST - Hewitt's Patent Granted T2 - New York Times TI - Hewitt's Patent Granted ID - 3746 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This lengthy article details how the New York Times building is now using electricity in early 1905. "Electricity actuates all its moving machinery from the ponderous 100-ton presses to the drop of the annunciator that summons an office boy," this story says. He details several aspects of the building from the electricity in the switchboard and telephones, to the telegraph and Western Union, to timekeeping. The article gives 17 reasons why the Times decided to use the Edison electrical connections. The subtitle for the article reads: "Greater Variety and Greater Number of Uses of Electricity Than in Any Other Place -- An Electrical Show Place -- Many Kinds of Lights -- Why Outside Service Was Preferred to an Isolated Plant -- An Unusual Switchboard -- Novel Three-Throw Kiss Switch -- Load Diagram of the Building -- 74 Miles of Wire and 21 Miles of Conduits." DA - Jan. 1, 1905 KW - motors journalism ref, news news and journalism electricity telephones telegraph timekeeping newspapers, and electricity electricity, and newspapers electricity, and telegraph electricity, and telephones electricity, and timekeeping electricity, and Western Union Western Union, and electricity telegraph, and electricity telephones, and electricity journalism, and electricity electricity, and journalism time and timekeeping Edison, Thomas electricity, and motors motors, and electricity electricity, and lighting lighting, and electricity electricity, and Moore vacuum tube Moore's vacuum tube vacuum tubes electricity, and New York Times lighting ref, NYT Western Union LB - 15910 PY - 1905 SE - BS SP - 27 ST - Electricity in the Times Building T2 - New York Times TI - Electricity in the Times Building ID - 3747 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that "The Times Building, when finished, will be an electrical marvel." He sets out 17 reasons why the Times decided to use the Edison Central Station Service. It set out some of the uses electricity will be put to including 111 motors that will drive four Hoe octuple presses, and many other types of machinery. The article's subtitle reads: "To Operate Over One Hundred Different Appliances. Will Run the Presses, Light the Building, and Furnish Various Conveniences in the Interests of Tenants." DA - Jan. 10, 1904 KW - motors journalism ref, news news and journalism electricity telephones telegraph timekeeping newspapers, and electricity electricity, and newspapers electricity, and telegraph electricity, and telephones electricity, and timekeeping electricity, and Western Union Western Union, and electricity telegraph, and electricity telephones, and electricity journalism, and electricity electricity, and journalism time and timekeeping Edison, Thomas electricity, and motors motors, and electricity electricity, and lighting lighting, and electricity electricity, and Moore vacuum tube Moore's vacuum tube vacuum tubes electricity, and New York Times lighting ref, NYT Western Union LB - 15920 PY - 1904 SP - 17 ST - Electricity's Uses in the Times Building T2 - New York Times TI - Electricity's Uses in the Times Building ID - 3748 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article begins by saying that "The educational moving pictures, so long threatened, have arrived." It then offers examples. "Most highly educational, though not particularly pretty, is the fly film, made up at the request of the Water Pollution Association. Nothing is left to the imagination. First, there is the fly laying eggs in unsavory places, and then, before the eyes of the spectators, the eggs develop into a wriggling heap of maggots...." The subtitle of the article reads: "Scientists Expect Value Results from Photographing Chemical Processes; Already Used in Europe; Geography and History Among the Branches Taught -- Educational Films Show by Censorship Board Here." DA - Feb. 27, 1910 KW - history censorship photography photography and visual communication quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing ref, news motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science non-USA non-USA, and educational films motion pictures, and geography censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings ref, NYT LB - 15940 PY - 1910 SP - 4 ST - New Field Found for Moving Pictures T2 - New York Times TI - New Field Found for Moving Pictures ID - 3750 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Chicago is at the center of movie making in 1907. DA - Nov. 3, 1907 KW - Chicago, IL ref, news motion pictures capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures ref, CDT LB - 15950 PY - 1907 SE - B SP - 3 ST - Film Makers’ New Industry T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Film Makers’ New Industry ID - 3751 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about Chicago's place in supplying the growing moving picture business. DA - Feb. 7, 1909 KW - Chicago, IL ref, news motion pictures capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures ref, CDT LB - 15960 PY - 1909 SE - Q SP - 9 ST - Center for Moving Picture Supplies T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Center for Moving Picture Supplies ID - 3752 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on the Motion Picture Exhibitors’ League of America visiting the Essanay Film Manufacturing company in Chicago. The subtitle of this article says: "Picture Men Visit Plants Where Films Are Made; Life Comedy Crops Out. Actors Talk of Colds and Quinine While ‘Speaking’." DA - Aug. 15, 1912 KW - Chicago, IL ref, news motion pictures capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures ref, CDT LB - 15970 PY - 1912 SP - 10 ST - See ‘Canning’ of Dramas T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - See ‘Canning’ of Dramas ID - 3753 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of the article reads: "More Than Hundred Theatres to Exhibit Moving Pictures of Los Angeles Winter Wonders." DA - Dec. 27, 1908 KW - Los Angeles ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business motion pictures, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and motion pictures theaters theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures audiences audiences, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and audiences ref, LAT LB - 15980 PY - 1908 SE - I SP - 7 ST - In the Limelight T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - In the Limelight ID - 3754 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about the growth of the motion picture industry and the increasing place that Los Angeles has in that business. “When the lights wink out in the motion picture houses of this and other lands and the projection machines begin their sputtering songs, 10,000,000 armchair travelers mount a magic carpet that whisks them away on their nightly visits to modern Bagdad [sic] -- Los Angeles, the photo-play capital of the world. [my emphasis] “Springing into life with the rapt suddenness that a plant springs and blooms at the behest of an Indian magician, the motion-picture business has taken on mammoth proportions in much less than a generation and has secured a sure place in the affections of untold millions of ‘fans.’ And it is but in its infancy, say not only those who make the pictures, but the candid even the scoffers at this baby in the family of Thepis.” Articles says that L.A. makes 85 percent of the films made in the USA today and the that the movie “field has only been scratched….” L.A. has scenery compared to southern California. There is a growing demand for American movies abroad in Europe, South America, Australia. The subtitle of this article says of Los Angeles: "It’s the Photoplay Capital of the World, and Wonder Cities of Steel and Concrete Spring up to House this Vast Industry." DA - Nov. 29, 1914 KW - nationalism magic Los Angeles motion pictures, and Americanization ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business motion pictures, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and motion pictures theaters theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures audiences audiences, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and audiences metaphors metaphors, and magic carpet motion pictures, as magic carpet magic, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magic metaphors, and Baghdad motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures Americanism motion pictures, and Americanism Americanism, and motion pictures patriotism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and patriotism patriotism education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures ref, LAT LB - 15990 PY - 1914 SE - II SP - 1, 10 ST - Ten Million Persons See Los Angeles Every Night T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Ten Million Persons See Los Angeles Every Night ID - 3755 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the advantages of Los Angeles for making movies. It also talks about the impact of movies on actors. DA - March 12, 1911 KW - Los Angeles actors acting actors acting ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business motion pictures, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and motion pictures theaters theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures audiences audiences, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and audiences advertising and public relations motion pictures, and advertising advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and actors actors, and status of ref, LAT advertising LB - 16010 PY - 1911 SP - 1 ST - Film Batteries Wink and Things Do Move T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Film Batteries Wink and Things Do Move ID - 3756 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about “every man with his own picture machine.” It costs about $225 and can be “purchased as readily as chalk or cheese.” (II, 9) The article also says that Los Angeles is predicted to be moving picture center of U. S. next year. It talks about the rise of privately owned film companies (p. 9), and also French films in U. S. The subtitle to the article reads: "Moving Picture Enterprises Develop Rapidly Along Educational, News, Advertising, Private and Theatrical Ways. Headed for Los Angeles." DA - Oct. 16, 1910 KW - theater stage Los Angeles journalism home magazines ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business motion pictures, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and motion pictures theaters theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures audiences audiences, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and audiences advertising and public relations motion pictures, and advertising advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines news and journalism education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and education electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity electricity motion pictures, and automobiles automobiles, and motion pictures motion pictures, and rural areas democracy motion pictures, and democracy democracy, and motion pictures ref, news home and new media motion pictures, and home home, and motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and home entertainment cameras, portable France France, and motion pictures motion pictures, and France motion pictures, and French films in U.S. motion pictures, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and motion pictures Pathé ref, LAT advertising automobiles LB - 16020 PY - 1910 SE - II SP - 1, 9 ST - Films Thrive Here on Quintuple Lines T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Films Thrive Here on Quintuple Lines ID - 3757 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle to the article says: "Enormous Expenditures. 20 producing companies spend more than $1 million a month in L.A.; employ 12,000 people." DA - Jan. 1, 1916 KW - Los Angeles actors acting actors acting ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business motion pictures, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and motion pictures theaters theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures audiences audiences, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and audiences advertising and public relations motion pictures, and advertising advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and actors actors, and status of capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism ref, LAT advertising LB - 16040 PY - 1916 SE - III SP - 66 ST - Film-making Means Millions to Los Angeles T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Film-making Means Millions to Los Angeles ID - 3758 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article's subtitle says: "Kinemacolor Company’s New Process Here First. Takes Pictures at the Rate of Seventy to Second. Propose to Display Local Scenery All Over the World." DA - Feb. 16, 1912 KW - Los Angeles ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business motion pictures, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and motion pictures theaters theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color Kinemacolor motion pictures, and Kinemacolor color, and Kinemacolor cameras, and speed of motion pictures, and number of photographs cameras ref, LAT LB - 16070 PY - 1912 SE - II SP - 8 ST - California Color Films T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - California Color Films ID - 3761 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle for this article reads: "Police Say $500,000 Worth of Pictures Have Been Stolen in Last Six Months." DA - Nov. 11, 1919 KW - ref, news capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business motion pictures motion pictures, and piracy piracy, and motion pictures ref, NYT piracy LB - 16080 PY - 1919 SP - 17 ST - $50,000 Film Theft Leads to Arrests T2 - New York Times TI - $50,000 Film Theft Leads to Arrests ID - 3762 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about the multiple uses of celluloid but notes that in 1903 only three United States companies manufacture celluloid for sale. The discusses the fire hazards posed by celluloid and the process by which the material was made. DA - May 18, 1903 KW - photography ref, news motion pictures materials celluloid motion pictures, and celluloid celluloid, and motion pictures materials, and celluloid celluloid, and materials photography and visual communication celluloid, and photography photography, and celluloid ref, LAT LB - 16090 PY - 1903 SP - 4 ST - The World’s Busy Workers. Celluloid T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - The World’s Busy Workers. Celluloid ID - 3763 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article touches on ways that moving pictures are used to advance science. DA - July 16, 1907 KW - science ref, news motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures ref, LAT LB - 16100 PY - 1907 SE - II SP - 4 ST - Science Notes T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Science Notes ID - 3764 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that moving pictures are "Already in Use in Medical Schools and May Be Extended for Other Work." DA - Sept. 20, 1908 KW - science medicine ref, news motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures medicine, and motion pictures motion pictures, and medicine ref, LAT LB - 16110 PY - 1908 SE - V SP - 15 ST - Teaching by Moving Pictures T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Teaching by Moving Pictures ID - 3765 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that surgery, agriculture, and metallurgy are already being taught by moving pictures. DA - Oct. 11, 1909 KW - science medicine photography photography and visual communication quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing ref, news motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures medicine, and motion pictures motion pictures, and medicine ref, NYT LB - 16120 PY - 1909 SP - 9 ST - Moving Pictures in Science T2 - New York Times TI - Moving Pictures in Science ID - 3766 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reports: "French Physician Shows Films Illustrating Action of the Muscles." DA - April 7, 1914 KW - science medicine photography photography and visual communication quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing ref, news motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures medicine, and motion pictures motion pictures, and medicine France non-USA France, and motion pictures motion pictures, and France ref, NYT LB - 16130 PY - 1914 SP - 6 ST - ‘Movies’ to Aid Doctors T2 - New York Times TI - ‘Movies’ to Aid Doctors ID - 3767 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reports: "Films Here Portray Removal of Shrapnel Ball from a Living Man’s Heart; Human Wrecks Salvaged…." DA - Oct. 7, 1916 KW - science medicine photography photography and visual communication quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing ref, news motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures medicine, and motion pictures motion pictures, and medicine France non-USA France, and motion pictures motion pictures, and France war war, and motion pictures motion pictures, and war ref, NYT LB - 16140 PY - 1916 SP - 11 ST - War Surgery Shown in Moving Pictures T2 - New York Times TI - War Surgery Shown in Moving Pictures ID - 3768 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article says: "Moving Pictures a Feature of the Physiotherapy Congress in Berlin." DA - Mach 27, 1913 KW - science medicine photography photography and visual communication quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing ref, news motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures medicine, and motion pictures motion pictures, and medicine Germany non-USA Germany, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Germany ref, NYT LB - 16150 PY - 1913 SP - 7 ST - Show Stomach at Work T2 - New York Times TI - Show Stomach at Work ID - 3769 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article's subtitle reports: "Operations Shown in Germany by Means of Cinematograph P. D. Armour Recovered." A French surgeon name Doyen who was dissatisfied with the limited number of people who could watch clinical demonstrations took "had a special cinematograph made and took instantaneous photographs of a variety of operations, showing every detail." They were then shown to a "large sceintific audience." DA - July 4, 1899 KW - science medicine photography photography and visual communication quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing ref, news motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures medicine, and motion pictures motion pictures, and medicine Germany non-USA Germany, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Germany ref, CDT LB - 16160 PY - 1899 SP - 1 ST - Moving Pictures in Surgery T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Moving Pictures in Surgery ID - 3770 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The article's subtitle reports: "Agricultural Department Engaged in a Series of Experiments." DA - July 3, 1899 KW - science photography photography and visual communication quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing ref, news motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures agriculture, and motion pictures motion pictures, and agriculture ref, NYT agriculture LB - 16170 PY - 1899 SP - 2 ST - Moving Pictures for Science T2 - New York Times TI - Moving Pictures for Science ID - 3771 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on the use of slow motion moving pictures in the study of physiology. (Erik Barnouw also discussed use of slow motion as earlier as 1899. See Erik Barnouw, The Magician and the Cinema [New York: Oxford University Press, 1981], 99.) DA - Oct. 4, 1913 KW - science medicine photography photography and visual communication quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing ref, news motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures science, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science motion pictures, and medicine medicine, and motion pictures motion pictures, and slow motion Great Britain non-USA Great Britian, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Great Britain modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Barnouw, Erik ref, Times London LB - 16180 PY - 1913 SP - 3 ST - The Use of Cinematography in Physiology: Some Recent Applications T2 - The Times [London] TI - The Use of Cinematography in Physiology: Some Recent Applications ID - 3772 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on developments in using moving pictures in medicine. DA - Oct. 29, 1910 KW - science medicine photography photography and visual communication quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing ref, news motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures science, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science motion pictures, and medicine medicine, and motion pictures Great Britain non-USA Great Britain, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Great Britain ref, Times London LB - 16190 PY - 1910 SP - 8 ST - Medical Cinematography T2 - The Times [London] TI - Medical Cinematography ID - 3773 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about the use of moving picture to study the rapid flight of insects. Cameras must be able to take many pictures in much less than one second's time. DA - May 13, 1911 KW - science photography photography and visual communication quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing ref, news motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures science, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science Great Britain non-USA Great Britian, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Great Britain motion pictures, and instantaneous photography motion pictures, and race photography and visual communication quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing ref, Times London LB - 16200 PY - 1911 SP - 6 ST - The Cinematograph’s Value In Biology: Recording the Flight of Insects T2 - The Times [London] TI - The Cinematograph’s Value In Biology: Recording the Flight of Insects ID - 3774 ER - TY - NEWS AB - A report on a French physicist's invention. DA - May 21, 1914 KW - science photography ref, news photography and visual communication quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing ref, news motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures science, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science France non-USA France, and motion pictures motion pictures, and France motion pictures, and microphotography ref, Times London LB - 16210 PY - 1914 SP - 7 ST - Molecular Motion Shown by Cinematograph T2 - The Times [London] TI - Molecular Motion Shown by Cinematograph ID - 3775 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on conflicting views about using motion pictures in the classroom. The article's subtitle reads: "Board Can’t Agree, Therefore Asks More Light." DA - April 4, 1916 KW - Los Angeles children ref, news modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and motion pictures ref, LAT motion pictures LB - 16250 PY - 1916 SE - II SP - 5 ST - Many Minds. Opinions Vary on Movies in Schools T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Many Minds. Opinions Vary on Movies in Schools ID - 3778 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The members of the New England Society of Orange saw one of Thomas Edison's films at a dinner. The article, paraphrasing Edison, said that the inventor expected to “revolutionize education through motion pictures.” The article reported that it was first time women were allowed at this meeting. DA - Dec. 22, 1912 KW - ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Thomas Edison education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures women women, and motion pictures ref, NYT LB - 16270 PY - 1912 SE - C SP - 6 ST - New Edison Films Shown T2 - New York Times TI - New Edison Films Shown ID - 3780 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The writer of this article is “convinced that the photoplay has the possibilities of a truly great art.” The article goes on to say: “And, of course, there is the universality of the moving-picture language. It is more universal, even, than the language of music.” DA - March 9, 1919 KW - ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and music motion pictures, and universality motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, as positive influence ref, NYT LB - 16280 PY - 1919 SP - 48 ST - Taking Movies Seriously T2 - New York Times TI - Taking Movies Seriously ID - 3781 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In this article, Jewish American producer Morris Gest discusses movies and Hollywood as an art and intellectual center. The article's subtitle says: "Within Two Years the Greatest Minds of the World Will Be at Work in Hollywood, He Says. Art Gaining in Industry. Producer Declares He Will Divide Time Between Films and Stage Already Has Picture Planned." DA - March 27, 1927 KW - history ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and music motion pictures, and universality motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, as positive influence motion pictures, and Hollywood Hollywood, as intellectual center history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures Hollywood, as cultural center motion pictures, and art ref, NYT Hollywood LB - 16290 PY - 1927 SE - E SP - 3 ST - Movie Revolution Predicted by Gest T2 - New York Times TI - Movie Revolution Predicted by Gest ID - 3782 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about the Electrical Show at Madison Square Garden in New York City and part of that exhibit for President Theodore Roosevelt pressing a key that lighted the exhibit. "Whether one visits the Garden, while electricity reigns there, for the purpose of witnessing the demonstration of its spectacular phenomena, or whether one is drawn by the genuine interest in the manifold uses of the electric fluid in the home of to-day, the factory, the office, or the railroad, there is no chance of disappointment." The article goes on to discuss how electricity can add "to the comforts of home life." One exhibit was the "theatrephone" where one could "listen to the words and music of several performances now going on in New York." Many other types of talking machines were on display. Also mentioned are demonstration wireless to ships at sea by the De Forest Wireless Telegraph Company, and X-rays. The article ends by mentioning that this evening, the new "Moore light" with its changing colors will be on exhibit at the Garden. The article's subtitle reads: "Golden Key in White House Floods the Garden with Light. Scene a Brilliant One. Show Includes Both the Latest Popular Electrical Devices and the More Technical Exhibits." DA - Dec. 13, 1905 KW - wireless communication home ref, news electricity presidents and new media Roosevelt, Theodore telephones home and new media Roosevelt, Theodore, and electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time color electricity, and color color, and electricity home, and electricity electricity, and home telephones, and theatrephone home entertainment sound recording home, and sound recording office and new media office, and electricity electricity, and office X-rays wireless radio radio, and wireless ref, NYT office LB - 36970 PY - 1905 SP - 6 ST - President Roosevelt Opens Electrical Show T2 - New York Times TI - President Roosevelt Opens Electrical Show ID - 3798 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that "Jewish citizens of the United States and especially those residing in New York are called upon by Rabbi Alexander Lyons to assist in the uplifting of the modern drama. "Dr. Lyons makes his appeal in an article on 'The Purification of the American Stage,' which appears in the August number of the Federation Review." DA - Aug. 8, 1909 KW - theater Jews Chicago, IL censorship ref, news motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings anti-Semitism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and anti-Semitism religion values religion, and motion pictures values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion motion pictures, and Jews Jews, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values censorship, and Jews Jews, and censorship censorship, and religion religion, and censorship motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures religion, and theater values, and theater theater, and religion theater, and Jews Jews, and theater theater, and values ref, CDT anti-Semitism LB - 37140 PY - 1909 SP - 1 ST - Asks Jews to Uplift Stage T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Asks Jews to Uplift Stage ID - 3814 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that the New York Times will publish a special edition of 250,000 copies with color pictures of art work using the rotogravure process. The article's subtitle reads: "Another Special Number Next Sunday to Contain 38 Rotogravure Reproductions. Easter Number Sold Out. 250,000 Copies with Splendid Color Section, Quickly Bought Up -- Praise from Art Experts." The article notes that the first rotogravure pictures had been published four years earlier (about 1910) in Germany in the Freiburger Zeitung. "If the unqualified approval of artists and critics of art and the eagerness with which the general public bought out the newsdealers' supply all over the city may be accepted as proof, the Times achieved another notable triumph yesterday with its Easter Number containing thirteen gems of the Altman collection of old masters reproduced in color. "The edition was limited to 250,000 copies and orders for more than that number were received at the Times office by Friday night. By yesterday afternoon very few copies were on sale anywhere in the city, and many newsdealers who had underestimated the demand for the paper were disappointed in their efforts to obtain an emergency supply. Telephone orders for 'more papers' began coming into the Times office at 6 a. m. and continued through the better part of the day, but no one was supplied. The Times did not have a paper to sell. "But yesterday's Easter Number was only the forerunner of another special number to be published next Sunday which, in the opinion of many, will even surpass the Easter Number as an artistic achievement. Thirty-eight additional old masters from the Altman collection will be reproduced by the famous German rotogravure process. Rotogravure press built in Germany and having the latest improvements devised by Karl Klic, who perfected the process, have recently been installed in the Times Annex. "The pictures to be printed will closely resemble original etchings, the rotogravure process being an elaboration of intaglio engraving combined with the highest development of the modern art of photography. The Freiburger Zeitung caused a stir in Europe four years ago when it published the first rotogravure pictures, and the improvements in the process have since been many and important." The articles says the pictures will be suitable for framing and art experts praised the color. "In praise of the color section Robert W. de Forest, President of the Art Commission and Trustee of the Metropolitan Museum, said: "'The reproductions are exceedingly fine. I consider them a very important contribution to the art education of the country. The Times has made it possible for thousands of people to have and display on their walls much of the best in the work of the old masters. I think that the service is of the highest importance....'" DA - March 30, 1914 KW - rotogravure journalism magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media photography, and rotogravure process rotogravure process rotogravure process, and photography rotogravure process, and newspapers newspapers, and rotogravure process journalism, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and journalism photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers photography, and advertising advertising, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and high speed color color, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and color color, and newspapers newspapers, and color rotogravure process (origins) rotogravure process, and Karl Klic rotogravure process, and intaglio engraving ref, NYT advertising history LB - 37210 PY - 1914 SP - 9 ST - More Altman Gems For Times Readers T2 - New York Times TI - More Altman Gems For Times Readers ID - 3820 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about the reproduction in color in the New York Times by the rotogravure process of art work from the Altman collection. The paper asks: "Is it not clear that these are the very impressions the original painting makes upon the eye and mind? But if that is the case, then the picture in the Times to-day is a faithful reproduction of Hobbema's canvas, it is the landscape Hobbema saw, seen through the medium of Hobbema's temperament indeed, but offered to the eye by a medium other than Hobbema's canvas. "That is very evidently the truth about the rotogravure process. It is a wonderful interpretative method, rendering with a fidelity hitherto unattainable the very truth, the quality, the beauty, the tenderness, and the sentiment of the painter's own work with the brush. These great pictures are reproduced upon presses which the Times has imported and set up in its Annex Building. The success attained in the very first use of these presses, which is extraordinary, encourages the belief that this new method of printing will be in the future very freely employed in the production of this newspaper." DA - April 5, 1914 KW - rotogravure journalism magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media photography, and rotogravure process rotogravure process rotogravure process, and photography rotogravure process, and newspapers newspapers, and rotogravure process journalism, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and journalism photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers photography, and advertising advertising, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and high speed newspapers, and presses duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and art art, and duplicating technologies ref, NYT advertising art history LB - 37220 PY - 1914 SP - 14 ST - A New Printing Process T2 - New York Times TI - A New Printing Process ID - 3821 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the rotogravure process the New York Times used to reproduce color pictures of art work from the Altman collection. It notes that the presses were imported from Germany and that the Times is the only paper in the New York City area to use this process. The article says this is the first time the Times rotogravure presses have been used to reproduce picture and it describes how the process works. The article refers to the previous Sunday edition. "Admired as this color section was, it is the opinion of many artists, art dealers, and others who have had the opportunity to examine advance copies of today's art section that, although it is in one color, it surpasses the multi-color section issued a week ago. "To-day's art supplement is the first work produced by the Times upon the new rotogravure presses which it has imported from Germany and installed in the Times Annex. In this process there is no stereotyping or or electrotyping to mar the delicacy of the work. Also there is no printing surface to be worn away by the printing of a large edition. "The picture to be reproduced is transferred by photographic processes to a copper cylinder and etched thereon by the application of chemicals. The picture is therefore composed of a multitude of small depressions on the cylinder. In its revolution this cylinder is entirely covered with ink, but just before the printing it passes under a steel blade which removes all the ink except that in the depressions. The paper received the ink from this etching, with what wonderful softness and beauty of effect may be seen in the examples presented to-day. "While to-day's rotogravure supplement was regarded by the Times as something of an experiment, the photographers, engravers, and pressmen employed being all new to their tasks, the results have been so satisfactory that it is hoped to supply rotogravure sections with the Sunday Times hereafter without interruption. "The Times has, for a term of years, the exclusive right to the use of this process in connection with newspaper work in New York, which promises to its Sunday readers picture sections of a quality never before equaled and not elsewhere obtainable. "The next rotogravure art section will be issued with next Sunday's Times. Appropriate to the day, Easter Sunday, it will contain seventeen pictures of Jerusalem and the Holy Land from photographs taken only a few weeks ago for the New York Times by Earle Harrison, the well-known travel photographer." The subtitle for the article reads: "Reproductions of the Altman Pictures Are of a Quality Never Before Attained. The Times's New Process. Belongs to This Newspaper Exclusively in New York -- Presses Imported from Germany." DA - April 5, 1914 KW - rotogravure journalism magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media photography, and rotogravure process rotogravure process rotogravure process, and photography rotogravure process, and newspapers newspapers, and rotogravure process journalism, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and journalism photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers photography, and advertising advertising, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and high speed newspapers, and presses duplicating technologies color color, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and color color, and newspapers newspapers, and color rotogravure process (origins) duplicating technologies, and color color, and duplicating technologies photography, and space and time space and time photography, and time photography, and space photography, and travel ref, NYT advertising history LB - 37230 PY - 1914 SP - 9 ST - Wonderful New Picture Section T2 - New York Times TI - Wonderful New Picture Section ID - 3822 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article describes the artwork that was reproduced in the New York Times using the paper's new rotogravure process. See also related stories on this topic in this issue of the paper. The article's subtitle reads: "These, with the Thirteen Pictures Reproduced in Last Sunday's New York Times, Make up the Great Collection That Will Shortly Be Housed in the Metropolitan Museum." DA - April 5, 1914 KW - rotogravure journalism history magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media photography, and rotogravure process rotogravure process rotogravure process, and photography rotogravure process, and newspapers newspapers, and rotogravure process journalism, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and journalism photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers photography, and advertising advertising, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and high speed newspapers, and presses duplicating technologies color color, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and color color, and newspapers newspapers, and color rotogravure process (origins) duplicating technologies, and color color, and duplicating technologies ref, NYT advertising LB - 37240 PY - 1914 SE - SM SP - 8 ST - Thirty-Eight Masterpieces of the Altman Collection T2 - New York Times TI - Thirty-Eight Masterpieces of the Altman Collection ID - 3823 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports the reaction of several artists and others to the New York Times publication of art work using the rotogravure process. Among those quoted are Charles Dana Gibson and John G. Anar, President of the National Arts Club. DA - April 6, 1914 KW - rotogravure journalism history magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media photography, and rotogravure process rotogravure process rotogravure process, and photography rotogravure process, and newspapers newspapers, and rotogravure process journalism, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and journalism photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers photography, and advertising advertising, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and high speed newspapers, and presses duplicating technologies color color, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and color color, and newspapers newspapers, and color rotogravure process (origins) duplicating technologies, and color color, and duplicating technologies Gibson, Charles Dana, and rotogravure process ref, NYT advertising Gibson, Charles Dana LB - 37250 PY - 1914 SP - 9 ST - The Times Pictures Praised by Critics T2 - New York Times TI - The Times Pictures Praised by Critics ID - 3824 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Here the editor and publisher of the New York Times explains the paper's new rotogravure process and how it is "an improvement of the slow and expensive process of photogravure." It uses a rotary press and is thus much faster. The picture is etched on a copper cylinder rather than on a copper plate; it uses fewer rollers than an ordinary press. Other newspaper using this process in 1914 included the Boston Sunday Herald, Philadelphia Public Ledger, and the Chicago Tribune. The article notes that the rotogravure process cost equals about that of half-tone printing. DA - April 15, 1914 KW - rotogravure journalism history magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media photography, and rotogravure process rotogravure process rotogravure process, and photography rotogravure process, and newspapers newspapers, and rotogravure process journalism, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and journalism photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers photography, and advertising advertising, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and high speed newspapers, and presses duplicating technologies color color, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and color color, and newspapers newspapers, and color rotogravure process (origins) duplicating technologies, and color color, and duplicating technologies rotogravure process vs. photogravure process photogravure process vs. rotogravure process ref, NYT advertising LB - 37260 PY - 1914 SP - 12 ST - The Times' Rotogravure Presses. From the Editor and Publisher T2 - New York Times TI - The Times' Rotogravure Presses. From the Editor and Publisher ID - 3825 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article begins by saying that "It is not too much to say that the New York Times Easter colored supplement, illustrating the gems of the Altman collection, and, even more, the first rotogravure supplement, caused a general sensation in art circles here and elicited many commendations on the enterprise displayed, as well as what is termed the immernse service rendered to the cause of art." It quotes one the mural painter Frank Brangwyn as saying of the rotogravure pictures: "I have neer seen anything as good even in high-class magazines.... You can get a much better and truer idea of the original from these rotogravures than from small magazine pictures...." DA - April 19, 1914 KW - rotogravure journalism history magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media photography, and rotogravure process rotogravure process rotogravure process, and photography rotogravure process, and newspapers newspapers, and rotogravure process journalism, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and journalism photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers photography, and advertising advertising, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and high speed newspapers, and presses duplicating technologies color color, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and color color, and newspapers newspapers, and color rotogravure process (origins) duplicating technologies, and color color, and duplicating technologies ref, NYT advertising LB - 37280 PY - 1914 SE - C SP - 4 ST - Times's Pictures Win British Praise T2 - New York Times TI - Times's Pictures Win British Praise ID - 3827 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article summarizes its content: "Color Section Containing Reproductions of Boutet de Monvel's Joan of Arc Paintings an Unparalleled Achievement -- Together with the Rotogravure and Halftone Sections, the Special Articles and Other Features. It Marks New Era in Journalism." DA - Dec. 6, 1914 KW - rotogravure journalism history magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media photography, and rotogravure process rotogravure process rotogravure process, and photography rotogravure process, and newspapers newspapers, and rotogravure process journalism, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and journalism photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers photography, and advertising advertising, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and high speed newspapers, and presses duplicating technologies color color, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and color color, and newspapers newspapers, and color rotogravure process (origins) duplicating technologies, and color color, and duplicating technologies religion religion, and newspapers newspapers, and religion religion, and photography photography, and religion ref, NYT advertising LB - 37290 PY - 1914 SE - XX SP - 1 ST - Today's Christmas Edition of the New York Times Is the Finest Ever Issued by a Newspaper T2 - New York Times TI - Today's Christmas Edition of the New York Times Is the Finest Ever Issued by a Newspaper ID - 3828 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about the Tribune's use of the rotogravure process. It notes that the paper has been installing the new presses and that the process comes from Germany. It also discusses how the process works, its use of color, and its expense. "Mechanical engineers and experts in the art of photographic reproduction have been engaged for several weeks in installing a number of intricate machines in the Tribune building. When these machines are set in motion within a few weeks, another Tribune achievement will have been attained -- an achievement unequaled in the history of newspaper picture work in the United States. "On Feb. 28 the first rotogravure work ever 'run off' of a rotary newspaper press on roll paper will be in the hand of the Tribune's readers. This work, from an artistic standpoint, will surpass in faithful reproduction of the gradations of light and shadow and detail any picture printed in the country except ... the most expensive of book paper and will be superior in softness of tone to most of these." The subtitle of the article reads: "Machinery Installed for Highest Achievement in American Newspaper Publishing. Superior Process Is Used." DA - Feb. 7, 1915 KW - rotogravure journalism history magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media photography, and rotogravure process rotogravure process rotogravure process, and photography rotogravure process, and newspapers newspapers, and rotogravure process journalism, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and journalism photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers photography, and advertising advertising, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and high speed newspapers, and presses duplicating technologies color color, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and color color, and newspapers newspapers, and color rotogravure process (origins) duplicating technologies, and color color, and duplicating technologies non-USA non-USA, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and Germany Germany, and rotogravure process Germany ref, CDT advertising LB - 37300 PY - 1915 SE - A SP - 1 ST - Tribune to Print Toned Pictures by Rotogravure T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Tribune to Print Toned Pictures by Rotogravure ID - 3829 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that the "largest and heaviest rotogravure cylinder ever made was 'put to bed' last night in the Tribune's engraving department. Etched on its copper surface are the pictures which will be printed next Sunday in the Tribune's special eight page pictorial supplement, just a small sample of which is furnished with the paper today. The Mary Pickford picture was run off on the smaller auxiliary press for printing two-page inserts. "The larger cylinder is 60 inches long and 47 1/2 inches in circumference. It weights 2,500 pounds.... "The Tribune is the only newspaper in Chicago to own and operate a rotogravure plant. It has taken experts six months to get the delicate and intricate machinery into shape to give the public the best and most accurate service attainable both as to art and to faithful reproduction. "Adolph Boltz, who has been at work for weeks placing the heavy machinery in position and assembling the many part, left Germany two days before war was declared. Fred Geiger, New York representative of the company which has the American rights of the Martens methods, has been directing the work. "Many of the special chemicals and delicate gelatin and carbon papers used in transferring the pictures to the copper surface have to be imported." It is perhaps noteworthy that the Chicago Tribune's first rotogravure supplement was used to publicize a movie star, Mary Pickford. The New York Time's first rotogravure supplement, which appears in April 1914, was used to publicize the art work in the Altman collection. (emphasis added) DA - Feb. 28, 1915 KW - journalism illustrations fame celebrity magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media photography, and rotogravure process rotogravure process rotogravure process, and photography rotogravure process, and newspapers newspapers, and rotogravure process journalism, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and journalism photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers photography, and advertising advertising, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and high speed newspapers, and presses duplicating technologies color color, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and color color, and newspapers newspapers, and color rotogravure process (origins) duplicating technologies, and color color, and duplicating technologies non-USA non-USA, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and Germany Germany, and rotogravure process Germany illustrations illustrations, and rotogravure press materials materials, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and materials celebrity culture celebrity, and rotogravure process personality personality, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and personality fame, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and fame rotogravure process, and stars photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality ref, CDT rotogravure process, and Mary Pickford Pickford, Mary, and rotogravure process advertising history Pickford, Mary rotogravure LB - 37310 PY - 1915 SP - 5 ST - Largest Rotogravure Roller in World -- for Next Sunday's Tribune; 'Tribune' Makes World's Largest 'Roto' Cylinder T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Largest Rotogravure Roller in World -- for Next Sunday's Tribune; 'Tribune' Makes World's Largest 'Roto' Cylinder ID - 3830 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This page-one ad reads: "Be Sure You Get the Tribune's Pictorial Supplement Today. Mary Pickford, "Queen of the Movies" -- 8-Page Rotogravure Supplement for Next Sunday." DA - Feb. 28, 1915 KW - rotogravure journalism illustrations fame celebrity magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media photography, and rotogravure process rotogravure process rotogravure process, and photography rotogravure process, and newspapers newspapers, and rotogravure process journalism, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and journalism photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers photography, and advertising advertising, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and high speed newspapers, and presses duplicating technologies color color, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and color color, and newspapers newspapers, and color rotogravure process (origins) duplicating technologies, and color color, and duplicating technologies non-USA non-USA, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and Germany Germany, and rotogravure process Germany illustrations illustrations, and rotogravure press materials materials, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and materials celebrity culture celebrity, and rotogravure process personality personality, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and personality fame, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and fame rotogravure process, and stars photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality advertising and public relations advertising, and Mary Pickford ref, CDT advertising history LB - 37320 PY - 1915 SP - 1 ST - [Newspaper Advertising for Rotogravure Supplement] T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - [Newspaper Advertising for Rotogravure Supplement] ID - 3831 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article gives a short biography of Mary Pickford and then discusses the photograph of her that will be shown in the Tribune's using the paper's new rotogravure process. DA - Feb. 28, 1915 KW - rotogravure journalism illustrations fame celebrity magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media photography, and rotogravure process rotogravure process rotogravure process, and photography rotogravure process, and newspapers newspapers, and rotogravure process journalism, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and journalism photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers photography, and advertising advertising, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and high speed newspapers, and presses duplicating technologies color color, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and color color, and newspapers newspapers, and color rotogravure process (origins) duplicating technologies, and color color, and duplicating technologies non-USA non-USA, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and Germany Germany, and rotogravure process Germany illustrations illustrations, and rotogravure press materials materials, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and materials celebrity culture celebrity, and rotogravure process personality personality, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and personality fame, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and fame rotogravure process, and stars photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality advertising and public relations advertising, and Mary Pickford ref, CDT advertising history LB - 37330 PY - 1915 SE - B SP - 11 ST - A Little About 'Little Mary' T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - A Little About 'Little Mary' ID - 3832 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes the huge volume of advertising in the July 29, 1917, Sunday edition of the Los Angeles Times. It included: "Classified Advertising, 145 columns, 3 inches. Individual liners, 7074 in number. Display advertising, 397 columns, 4 inches. Total advertising (linear and display), 542 columns 7 inches. Number of full-page advertisements, 28. Twice as much merchandise advertising as any competitor." The article's subtitle reads: "New Standard of Excellence Set by Huge Issue. Notable in News, Features and Heavy Advertising. Public Demand Exhausts the Whole Edition by Noon." DA - July 30, 1917 KW - sensationalism journalism journalism illustrations fame celebrity cartoons celebrity culture actors acting actors acting magazines photography ref, news books, periodicals, newspapers advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers newspapers, and Sunday papers newspapers, and linotype color color, and Sunday papers newspapers, and color newspapers, and illustrations illustrations, and Sunday papers newspapers, and religion religion, and newspapers religion newspapers, and novels newspapers, and fiction actors, and Sunday papers newspapers, and sports newspapers, and cartoons cartoons, and Sunday papers values values, and Sunday papers newspapers, and values modernity modernity, and newspapers newspapers, and modernity new way of seeing news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Sunday papers newspapers, and motion pictures photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and advertising women women, and Sunday papers newspapers, and women photography and visual communication women, and photography photography, and women celebrity, and Sunday papers photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality newspapers, and celebrity culture critics critics, and Sunday papers newspaper syndicates newspapers, and syndicates Sunday newspapers personality ref, LAT advertising motion pictures LB - 37350 PY - 1917 SE - II SP - 5 ST - Sunday 'Times' Greatest Yet T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Sunday 'Times' Greatest Yet ID - 3834 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In this interview, illustrator Mortimer W. Loewi talks about the changes that have occurred in display advertising over the past 12 or 15 years (since the turn of the century). They involved using photographs, "star" actors, and color, among other things. "In a dozen years the business of display advertising has been more than evolved, it has been revolutionized," the article says. Loewi recalls that "'When I was studying... it was taken for granted that there was a great gulf between commercial work and any sort of art.'" In 1914, Loewi says that one word that summed up advertising demand was "suggestion." The older advertising set out a commodity "in great detail" where as "the advertising of to-day suggests it," according to the article. "An illustrated advertisement used to present an article. Now it suggests it benefits. And sometimes the suggestion if very subtle indeed." In advertising men's fashion, Loewi explains that he "had a lot of photographs made. And then I painted the fashion picture right on the photograph. The fashion picture was just the same old type of advertising, but I gave it a background." Loewi notes that advertising drew on developments taking place in the world of theater and acting. "'Then we got a new idea. We showed our clothes with pictures from popular plays. That was about the time, I think, that magazines were beginning to make such a feature of theatrical photographs. We ran a series of advertisements with scenes from the play on one side, and the star dressed in our clothes on the other. You see, that was interesting. It gave a new idea to clothing advertisements -- the idea of connecting them with something of general interest and association. People looked at those pictures. They read those advertisements. They were interested in them, couldn't help being. "'And all this time the pictures of the people in the advertisements were getting humanized...." Loewi says that he did scenes from Europe (e.g., Rome, Paris) "in color, and they were used as posters and showcards as well as prints in magazine advertisements. The picture of the place was the background; in the foreground was a man or a group of men dressed in the clothes we were advertising. The idea was "to convey the suggestion or something cosmopolitan and distinctive." (emphasis added) Loewi notes the pay for his field has gotten much better. Often a $1,000 for a picture large enough for a double-page ad and $500 for smaller paintings. DA - May 17, 1914 KW - status of actors stars (actors) fame fame celebrity art art celebrity culture photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and art art, and photography color color, and advertising advertising, and color advertising and public relations advertising, and art art, and advertising advertising, and photography photography, and advertising advertising, and posters posters, and advertising color, and posters posters, and color magazines, and advertising advertising, and magazines modernity advertising, and modernity modernity, and advertising new way of seeing advertising, and new way of seeing new way of seeing, and advertising advertising, and travel photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality advertising, and celebrity culture celebrity, and advertising advertising, and fame fame, and advertising personality, and advertising advertising, and personality stars, and advertising stars, and color personality ref, NYT advertising magazines posters LB - 37360 PY - 1914 SE - SM SP - 4 ST - The Making of Advertising Pictures Has Become a Genuine Art T2 - New York Times TI - The Making of Advertising Pictures Has Become a Genuine Art ID - 3835 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article details the reason why Chicago authorities censored the film The Miracle (1913?). The article's subtitle reads: "'Depicts Immorality and Is Insulting to Religion.'" DA - April 11, 1913 KW - Chicago, IL censorship ref, news motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings religion religion, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion religion, and censorship censorship, and religion censorship, and The Miracle (1913) ref, CDT LB - 37690 PY - 1913 SP - 10 ST - Censor Bars 'The Miracle' T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Censor Bars 'The Miracle' ID - 3868 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that the "Anti-stage Jew vigilance committee of Chicago has sent out an appeal to 10,000 citizens asking assistance in abolishing the caricaturing of the Hebrew on the stage." The appeal, reprinted in full, reads in part: "'If, inadvertently, you should attend a playhouse where the Jew is the target of the comedian's vulgar horse play for the gusto of the audience, register at once a vigorous protest to the management. The Jew has submitted long enough to public slurs and insults on the stage.'" DA - Sept. 3, 1913 KW - theater Jews Chicago, IL censorship ref, news motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings anti-Semitism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and anti-Semitism religion values religion, and motion pictures values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion motion pictures, and Jews Jews, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values censorship, and Jews Jews, and censorship censorship, and religion religion, and censorship motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures religion, and theater values, and theater theater, and religion theater, and Jews Jews, and theater theater, and values ref, CDT anti-Semitism LB - 37700 PY - 1913 SP - 9 ST - Jews Wage Battle on Stage Caricature T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Jews Wage Battle on Stage Caricature ID - 3869 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that amateur photographers are finding that they have more sophisticated equipment that they can afford. Lenses are improving and cameras are becoming less expensive and more portable. "The cost of cameras has very materially decreased in the last few years, yet the price of a fine instrument must necessarily remain high." The article says that "fully one-half of the smaller cameras now sold are what is called in the trade cycle cameras. The larger of these come in a box much flatter than that used with the ordinary camera designed to produce like results. This difference in form is that the camera may be swung under the bicycle without coming in contact with the rider's legs. Still other smaller cycle cameras merely have a strap or hook attachment to fasten them on wherever is most convenient. It has about come to the pass that a bicycle that is used for mere pleasure riding is hardly fully equipped for the road unless it has a camera swung from some part of its anatomy, ...." Amateurs have shown increasing interest in telephotography. "A good deal has been printed concerning this branch of photographic work in certain of the foreign magazines, the descriptive articles being accompanied by reproductions of photographs which showed some very remarkable results...." The article comments on portable moving pictures cameras. "One of the latest developments of the camera in small size is an instrument that will take pictures of motion. It is in other words nothing more or less than the attachments of the biography mechanism on a greatly reduced scale. One of these cameras can be carried in the hand as readily as the ordinary Kodak, and the amateur will be able to take a picture of any scene of action about him that he chooses. Of course, to reproduce this picture the corresponding machinery must be maintained at home, unless as is already the case with the larger biographs, the hand camera is provided with mechanism to project the picture upon the screen as well as take it. As a matter of fact the amateurs have not as yet made intimate acquaintance with this particular form of camera and only comparatively a few of them have been produced. (emphasis added) "Probably the next step forward in the matter of inventions touching photographic supplies will be in the way of developers. These will be made much simpler than they now are and hence more successfully handled by those who do amateur work." The article's subtitle reads: "Costly Instruments Manufactured for Amateur Photographers -- A Hand Biograph." DA - Jan 4, 1901 KW - lenses home ref, news cameras cameras, and movement cameras, and portability motion pictures, and movement cameras, hand cameras, and lenses lenses, and cameras cameras, and affordability cameras, and amateurs photography and visual communication photography, and cameras photography, and lenses motion pictures telephotography photography, and telephotography telephotography, and amateurs motion pictures, and hand cameras home and new media home, and home movies cameras, and home movies motion pictures, and amateurs cameras, and cycle cameras cameras, and bicycles photography, and bicycles ref, LAT photography LB - 37730 PY - 1901 SP - 9 ST - New Cameras T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - New Cameras ID - 3872 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that the key to achieving celebrity status is having your photograph taken. "It costs no more to become a 'well known society woman,' a 'rising young lawyer,' a 'prominent author,' or a 'successful physician' than it does to have three dozen photographs taken. Indeed, the taking of the photographs and the making of the celebrity are parts of the one and same transaction.... (my emphasis) "Pick up any of those magazines which make a feature of a photographic department. In these pages you will find pictures of celebrities you have not met till now. You will wonder how they have escaped you. But there is their picture, with the line which certifies the original of the picture to be a 'prominent,' or a 'rising,' or a 'well known,' or a 'successful' this, that, or the other. "Take those periodicals that are devoted to specialties - to the law, to sports, to medicine, to engineering. There again you will find the same pictures of the same persons.... "In many cases you happen to know that the originals of these pictures really have done some notable thing. They have done something for which they should be honored. You do not wonder that their pictures appear in the public prints. But as for the others -- those celebrities who, as it were, have sprung up like the mushroom between the setting of the sun and rising of the same -- of those celebrities you are skeptical. "You need be uncertain no longer. For herein is revealed the secret spring from which many of our heroes and heroines come. "The first step to be taken by one who would shine in the fierce white light of publicity is to have pictures taken. If the applicant for the sittings is a well known actor or actress or a politician of great prominence these pictures will not cost a cent. "Most photographers are glad of the advertisement they get from the connection of their name with that of their distinguished subject. But these people who can get photographs for nothing are not the people who need the advertising." The subhead then reads: "Seeks Fame's Advance Agent." "He who would like to see his picture in public print together with a written notice in which his merits are alluded to hies [sic] himself either in Chicago or in New York to the professional celebrity maker.... "Three dozen photographs are at once taken. There was a time when the camera told the truth, but that was many, many years ago. Now the most commonplace face in the world can when it is looked upon by the magic lens, transform itself into a thing of beauty, which will be a joy as long as the photograph lasts. The pictures are taken...." DA - Nov. 22, 1903 KW - press agents photography journalism heroes fame fame celebrity critics critics, and actors critics, and theater critics, and acting critics, and degenerate theater photography, and celebrity culture actors acting magazines, and photography actors acting ref, news celebrity culture cameras, and celebrity celebrity, and cameras fame, and cameras cameras, and fame quotations quotations, and celebrities quotations, and publicity quotations, and photography metaphors metaphors, and mushrooms metaphors, and celebrities photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity photography, and cameras fame, and photography photography, and fame personality personality, and photography photography, and personality news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines heroes, and celebrity photography, and heroes heroes, and photography actors, and photography actors, and celebrity false leaders false leaders, and celebrities false leaders, and actors actors, and false leaders celebrities, and false leaders celebrity, and press agents press agents, and fame fame, and press agents photography, and truth photography, and beauty cameras ref, CDT metaphors metaphors, and actor as mushrooms quotations quotations, and fame's advance agent celebrity magazines press LB - 37740 PY - 1903 SP - 34 ST - Celebrities Made While You Wait T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Celebrities Made While You Wait ID - 3873 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Mojonier is described as "one of the leading photographic figures in the West." The article says that "there isn't a daily newspaper in Los Angeles that doesn't decorate its columns, every few days, with Mojonier pictures." DA - March 26, 1911 KW - journalism fame celebrity celebrity culture photography, and celebrity culture magazines, and photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity photography, and cameras fame, and photography photography, and fame personality personality, and photography photography, and personality news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and daily newspapers ref, LAT magazines photography LB - 37750 PY - 1911 SE - II SP - 2 ST - Mojonier of Photo Fame Treks Over to Broadway T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Mojonier of Photo Fame Treks Over to Broadway ID - 3874 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about who buys photographs and its subtitle reads: "Artists, Architects and Educators Among the Best Customers." The article notes that recent advances in photography have greatly changed the nature of businesses that sell pictures. "The development of photography in the last few years has had the effect of changing entirely the character of the shops in which photographs are sold, and these have become as interesting in many respects as the art stores and studios, says the New York Sun. Every dealer in photographs who is up to the times considers it necessary to have a room set apart for his regular customers. The casual customer, who merely wishes to buy a photograph or two, does not see this at all; but the collectors, students, artists, architects and others who seek photographs to complete collections, or for assistance in work they have in hand, find this special room a great convenience. It is fitted as a combination studio and library; is as free from disturbance as possible, and does not look at all like a shop." Quoting a leading dealer: "'The patrons of my shop may be divided into two classes -- those who purchase foreign photographs and prints, as well as domestic productions, for educational or practical use, and those who collect for purely personal pleasure. The former far outnumber the latter. The magazines and daily newspapers are probably the largest purchasers. [emphasis added] The come the colleges, museums and other educational institutions. The college professors are among our best customers.... "'...There are so many new photographs on special subjects, both foreign and domestic, placed on the market constantly, that those who want them all must be continually looking for them. They do not know what they want until they do look, and cannot rely entirely upon the discretion of a dealer to select them for them.'" DA - July 16, 1895 KW - wood engraving journalism journalism magazines, and photography ref, news news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures magazines, and motion pictures motion pictures, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving education education, and photography photography, and education actors acting ref, LAT magazines motion pictures photography LB - 37790 PY - 1895 SP - 3 ST - People Who Buy Photos T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - People Who Buy Photos ID - 3878 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses a proposal to use "electro-chemistry" to change the skin color of African Americans. It also discusses Marconi and the wireless. The subtitle to the article reads: "New Plans of Telegraphing without Wires. Black Skins Made White by Electricity -- New Methods of Using Morse Symbols -- The Hughes Microphone." DA - April 21, 1897 KW - wireless communication ref, news electricity electricity, and race race race, and electricity Marconi, Guglielmo radio radio, and wireless wireless, and Marconi microphones microphones, Hughes telegraph telegraph, and wireless telegraph, and Morse code ref, LAT wireless LB - 37830 PY - 1897 SP - 3 ST - Field of Electricity T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Field of Electricity ID - 3882 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses several inventions on exhibit including the Cooper Hewitt mercury vapor lamp and "H. R. Palmer's 'fac simile [sic] picture telegraph." The latter "instrument is worked on a system whereby half-tone pictures, sketches, handwriting, and the like can be transmitted over long distances by employing ordinary telegraph circuits. The original picture is enlarged for transmission, but is photographically reduced to its normal size when received. The enlargement is for the purpose of obtaining a greater contact surface for the transmitting stylus. "An attempt was made to send three pictures to Chicago, the instrument on exhibition having been connected with telegraph wires, but the experiment failed this time, although the efficacy of the appliance has previously been demonstrated over great distances. Late at night word was received from Chicago that attempts had also been made to send pictures here [New York ] from there, and the explanation for the failure was tat the wires had been rendered useless by too much induction at this end." The subtitle of this article reads: "Attractions at a 'Conversazione' at Columbia University; Effect of Peter Cooper Hewitt's New Light -- The Deaf Made to Hear -- An Experiment that Failed." DA - April 13, 1901 KW - journalism magazines, and photography photography ref, news telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines lighting lighting, and Cooper Hewitt mercury vapor Cooper Hewitt mercury vapor lighting facsimile electricity, and photography photography, and electricity electricity ref, NYT Cooper Hewitt lighting magazines LB - 38130 PY - 1901 SP - 2 ST - Marvelous Electrical Inventions Displayed T2 - New York Times TI - Marvelous Electrical Inventions Displayed ID - 3912 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses a new invention, the telectrsocope, by Jan Szczepanik in Vienna, that can transmit pictures and printed material such as manuscript over long distances by telegraph wire. The pictures can all be sent in color. This instrument may make the current telegraph superfluous. The subtitle of the article reads: "Details of the Instrument That Is to Transmit Pictures Over a Telegraph Wire. Szczepanik's Weird Machine. Claims of the Polish Schoolmaster as to What His Telectroscope Will Do and How It Does It -- A Scheme for the Transmission of Colored Rays." DA - April 3, 1898 KW - ref, news telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph photography, and telectroscope telectroscipe, and photography color color, and photography photography, and color color, and telectroscope facsimile photography, and facsimile facsmile, and telegraph telegraph, and facsmile ref, NYT photography telectroscope LB - 38140 PY - 1898 SP - 22 ST - That New Telectroscope T2 - New York Times TI - That New Telectroscope ID - 3913 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that "a life-sized portrait of President William R. Harper of the University of Chicago was transmitted by wire from the engineering building of Columbia University tonight to the Quadrangle club in Chicago, and at the same time a similar picture of Seth Low was flashed from Chicago to this city. The experiment was one of the features of the program at the conversazione of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers at the Columbia University this evening. "The pictures were sent by an entirely new system, which was explained at length by H. R. Palmer. By the system halftone pictures, sketches, handwriting, and the like can be transmitted over long distances, employing ordinary telegraph circuits." The concluding paragraph explains how this invention works. Other exhibits are discussed here, including Nicola Tesla's experiments with an electric oscillator, and R. M. Hutchison "akouphone and akoulalion" described as "a microtelephonic instrument." The latter might enable the "deaf to hear." DA - April 13, 1901 KW - ref, news telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph facsimile photography, and facsimile facsimile, and telegraph telegraph, and facsimile electricity electricity, and photography photography, and electricity photography, and halftones telegraph, and halftones half tones, and telegraph sound recording, and hearing impaired Tesla, Nikola Tesla, Nikola, and electric oscillator sound recording, and akouphone ref, CDT photography sound recording LB - 38150 PY - 1901 SP - 1 ST - Pictures Sent by Wire T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Pictures Sent by Wire ID - 3914 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article quotes Thomas Edison saying that he is working with the artist Homer Davenport to develop an instrument whereby photographs can be sent by telegraph wire. He also predicts that automobiles will be much more commonly used in the future but says that at present electric storage batteries are too heavy and impractical. DA - Feb. 21, 1899 KW - ref, news telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph facsimile photography, and facsimile facsimile, and telegraph telegraph, and facsimile electricity electricity, and photography photography, and electricity photography, and halftones telegraph, and halftones half tones, and telegraph Edison, Thomas Edison, Thomas, and pictures by wire electricity, and storage batteries automobiles transportation transportation, and automobiles ref, CDT photography LB - 38160 PY - 1899 SP - 2 ST - Send Pictures by Telegraph T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Send Pictures by Telegraph ID - 3915 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports from Cleveland, Ohio, that "a series of long distance experiments in the transmission of pictures have recently been made over the wires of the Western Union Telegraph company, the last taking place between Cleveland and St. Louis. "Among the pictures received during this test were those of Rear Admiral Schley, General Manager Melville E. Stone of the Associated Press, and J. C. Barclay, electrician of the Western division of the Western Union Telegraph Company. "Telegraph electricians and others who were present at this test are a unit in expressing their belief that the machines will do all that is claimed for them. Printed or written matter can be transmitted and reproduced much more rapidly than pictures, though only a few moments are consumed in transmitting a cabinet size photograph." The rest of the article explains how this instrument works. The article's subtitle reads: "Latest Experiments in Long-Distance Transmission Said to Prove the Success of New System." DA - June 25, 1899 KW - ref, news telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph facsimile photography, and facsimile facsimile, and telegraph telegraph, and facsimile electricity electricity, and photography photography, and electricity photography, and halftones telegraph, and halftones half tones, and telegraph Western Union Western Union, and pictures by wire Associated Press, and pictures by wire Associated Press, and photography duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and photography duplicating technologies, and facsimile ref, CDT Associated Press photography LB - 38170 PY - 1899 SP - 12 ST - Sending Pictures by Wire T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Sending Pictures by Wire ID - 3916 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reports: "New Device Solves a Difficult Problem and Increases Newspaper Possibilities." The article goes on to say that "Last week the New York Herald made the first use of an invention which enables pictures to be telegraphed to any distance. The tests have been uniformly and completely successful, and the device is now in daily operation. Ernest A. Hummel of St. Paul is the inventor, and he will certainly realize a fortune from his machine. "The picture to be transmitted is first drawn on a piece of tin four and a half inches square. That piece of tin is placed on a stationary bed in the transmitter and locked in. The drawing is uppermost...." The article goes on to explain how the device works. DA - Jan. 9, 1898 KW - ref, news telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph facsimile photography, and facsimile facsimile, and telegraph telegraph, and facsimile electricity electricity, and photography photography, and electricity photography, and halftones telegraph, and halftones half tones, and telegraph New York Herald, and pictures by wire New York Herald, and photography duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and photography duplicating technologies, and facsimile photography, and New York Herald telegraph, and New York Herald New York Herald, and facsimile facsimile, and New York Herald ref, CDT photography LB - 38180 PY - 1898 SP - 28 ST - Pictures Sent by Wire T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Pictures Sent by Wire ID - 3917 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The Tribune covers briefly several innovations including "Grand Opera of Future" (about "Preserving Grand Opera Records for Future Generations"), "Ocean Wave Telegraphy," and "Pictures by Telegraph." The latter concerns Arthur Korn's invention in Germany. DA - Aug. 16, 1908 KW - wireless communication history historical preservation historical preservation, and sound recording ref, news telegraph photography and visual communication telegraph, and photography photography, and telegraph facsimile photography, and facsimile facsimile, and telegraph telegraph, and facsimile electricity electricity, and photography photography, and electricity photography, and halftones telegraph, and halftones half tones, and telegraph duplicating technologies duplicating technologies, and photography duplicating technologies, and facsimile wireless telegraph, and ocean wave telegraphy history and new media sound recording, and opera sound recording, and historic preservation historical preservation, and sound recording sound recording, and music Korn, Arthur Korn, Arthur, and pictures by wire materials materials, and selenium non-USA non-USA, and pictures by wire Germany Germany, and pictures by wire ref, CDT photography sound recording LB - 38190 PY - 1908 SE - F SP - 4 ST - New Scientific Marvels That Are Channing [sic] the Habits and History of Humanity T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - New Scientific Marvels That Are Channing [sic] the Habits and History of Humanity ID - 3918 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on an address given by Prof. Leonard Troland to the Optical Society of America on disagreement between two camps of psychologists, the "behaviorists" and the "introspectionists." Troland says that psychologist do not give property importance to optics and that optical scientist are (quoting Troland) are "'even more blind to the nature and the importance of psychology than the average psychologist is to the significance of optics.'" In his talk, Troland disagreed with the "behaviorists" whom, he said (quoting Troland) believed "'that the concept of mind is difficult if not impossible to use in scientific research.'" Troland claimed that several problems "'are not intentionally or adequately considered by any physical science.'" (Troland quoted) Among these problems "were color, musical tones and noises, and many qualitative phenomena, like those of feeling." (quoted from NYT article) The subtitle to the article reads: "Dr. Troland of Harvard Urges Research Into Effect of Light Upon the Mind." DA - Nov. 4, 1928 KW - Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Technicolor Münsterberg, Hugo ref, news Troland, Leonard color Troland, Leonard, and color color, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and visual sensation color, and media effects media effects media effects, and color Troland, Leonard, and hedonism Troland, Leonard, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and book review book review, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and Hugo Munsterberg Munsterberg, Hugo, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and psychology Troland, Leonard, and physics Munsterberg, Hugo LB - 40320 PY - 1928 SP - 12 ST - Links Psychology to Study of Optics T2 - New York Times TI - Links Psychology to Study of Optics ID - 4130 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports the death of Leonard Troland, a co-inventor of Technicolor, from a fall on Mount Wilson in California. It notes that he had worked on developing devices to listen for submarines during World War I and was involving in creating a process to make movies in natural color. DA - May 28, 1932 KW - ref, news Troland, Leonard, and sound recording Troland, Leonard, and World War I World War I, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and death Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor Troland, Leonard, and color color color, and Leonard Troland World War I war LB - 40330 PY - 1932 ST - Dr. Troland Dies When He Falls Over Precipice T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Dr. Troland Dies When He Falls Over Precipice ID - 4131 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports the death of Leonard Troland, a co-inventor of Technicolor, from a fall on Mount Wilson in California, noting that he had been in ill health and that witnesses said his death was clearly accidental. DA - May 29, 1932 KW - ref, news Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and death Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor Troland, Leonard, and color color color, and Leonard Troland LB - 40340 PY - 1932 SE - A SP - 1 ST - Troland's Body Sent Homeward T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Troland's Body Sent Homeward ID - 4132 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that the Los Angeles Sheriff's office has closed its investigation of Leonard Troland's death, declaring it an accident. The article says that "Dr. Troland, suffering from the affects of a recent nervous breakdown, had gone into the mountains on a hiking trip with an associate, R. D. Eaton. Dr. Troland had climbed out on a rock to pose for a photograph when he fell into the canyon." DA - May 29, 1932 KW - ref, news Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and death Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor Troland, Leonard, and color color color, and Leonard Troland LB - 40350 PY - 1932 SP - 6 ST - Troland's Death Accident T2 - New York Times TI - Troland's Death Accident ID - 4133 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that Leonard Troland has been appointed assistant professor at Harvard after serving six years as an instructor in psychology. DA - July 2, 1922 KW - ref, news Troland, Leonard Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor Troland, Leonard, and color color color, and Leonard Troland LB - 40360 PY - 1922 SP - 5 ST - Harvard Faculty Changes T2 - New York Times TI - Harvard Faculty Changes ID - 4134 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports the circumstances of Leonard Troland's accident death from a fall while climbing on Mount Wilson in California, and also recounts his versatile career in psychology and optics, as well as his work with Technicolor. It says that at the time of his death he had been dividing his time between doing research in Hollywood with the Technicolor Motion Picture Company and Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he taught at Harvard University. DA - May 28, 1932 KW - Technicolor, and L. T. Troland Technicolor ref, news Troland, Leonard color Troland, Leonard, and color color, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and visual sensation color, and media effects media effects media effects, and color Troland, Leonard, and hedonism Troland, Leonard, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and Technicolor Technicolor, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and psychology Troland, Leonard, and physics Troland, Leonard, and obituary obituaries, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and motion pictures Troland, Leonard, and death obituaries, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and obituary LB - 40370 PY - 1932 SP - 16 ST - Dr. L. T. Troland Dies in Fall Over Cliff T2 - New York Times TI - Dr. L. T. Troland Dies in Fall Over Cliff ID - 4135 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses color's ability to arouse emotions and the interest that has been shown in this topic by movie makers who have used Technicolor. "Makers of Technicolor movies, naturally are deeply interested in the capacity of color to induce emotion. The affinity is a heaven-made one -- emotions being so to say, the primary colors of the movie palette. Because there is no adequate research on the subject, problems involving color emotion (?) are almost without precedent. But serious attempts have been made by the staff of Selznick-International to break down color effects and establish a sort of emotion spectrum." The article mentions Dr. Robert T Ross of Stanford University and also William A. Wellman. DA - Nov. 21, 1937 KW - Kalmus, Herbert censorship motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Technicolor, and Natalie Kalmus Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color ref, news color, and research on LB - 40990 PY - 1937 SP - 178 ST - Chasing an Emotional Rainbow T2 - New York Times TI - Chasing an Emotional Rainbow ID - 4198 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This brief article reads: "The new movement of pictures toward color was discussed by Natalie M. Kalmus, leading color authority and executive, before the Hollywood Woman's Club Wednesday noon. Mrs. Kalmus talked on the subject, 'What It Requires to Make a Picture in Technicolor,' and read two papers on 'Color Consciousness' and 'Color Music.'" DA - April 12, 1935 KW - Kalmus, Herbert censorship motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Technicolor, and Natalie Kalmus Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color censorship, and Natalie Kalmus ref, secondary color, and primitives color, and cinematographers color, and novelty color, and music Kalmus, Natalie, and color music LB - 41030 PY - 1935 SP - 13 ST - Natalie Kalmus Talks on Color T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Natalie Kalmus Talks on Color ID - 4202 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The LA Times mentions that Natalie Kalmus, who was head of Technicolor's color advisory service, has a chapter in a book entitled "Lovely Wall, Lovely Lady," published by "the makers of a new type, washable wall finish which gives a velvety texture to walls." Kalmus says that the color of one's walls should be chosen to accent a woman's natural colors. The paint dealer was apparently a local firm in the Los Angeles area. DA - April 10, 1939 KW - Kalmus, Herbert censorship censorship motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Technicolor, and Natalie Kalmus Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color censorship, and Natalie Kalmus ref, secondary color, and primitives color, and cinematographers color, and novelty color, and music Kalmus, Natalie, and color music women women, and color beauty, and color color, and beauty color, and beautiful women ref, news LB - 41040 PY - 1939 SE - B SP - 12 ST - New Walls Aid Beauty T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - New Walls Aid Beauty ID - 4203 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This piece reprints part of an article by Philip E. Rosen, a photographer and director, that appeared in The American Cinematographer. DA - March 18, 1923 KW - Marked ref, news color motion pictures motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures critics critics, and color movies color, and critics critics, and color color, and realism color, and emotion LB - 41100 PY - 1923 SE - X SP - 3 ST - Against Colored Photoplays T2 - New York Times TI - Against Colored Photoplays ID - 4209 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about the relationship between photography and a woman's beauty. Photographers, it notes, are "trying to lift" their "profession to a place among the fine arts." Quoting Bliss Carmen, the article says that "no one 'has the power of reaching his own ideal, unless he inculcates that ideal of himself in the minds of others.'" The article goes to say that the "new photography makes its own creation, not imitation. The sensible qualities of beauty, which Burke enumerates as 'smallness, smoothness, variety in the direction of parts, flowing lines, delicacy of form without remarkable appearance of strength, freshness and contrast of color,' are as important in this art as in every other. But the photographer concerns himself directly with the visible effort which nature is making in every individual, spiritually even more than physically, toward that beauty that philosophers recognize as the normal state of man." The article emphasizes the importance of the face and eyes in revealing beauty. "A recent issue of a photographic magazine gives this rule of interpretation of facial expression; 'The eyes reveal the soul, the nose will power, the mouth and chin stand for purpose and determination; and what we call expression, the combination of all, is the mirror through which the inmost character of each subject is reflected.' It is usually through emphasis of some one feature that the photographer is most successful." [my emphasis] "If a girl has beautiful eyes and an ugly mouth, he either poses the head or veils the face in such a way that the beautiful eyes catch and hold the attention. If she has a sweet and tender mouth and her eyes are so light in color that photographed they will seem to pop out from their background, he turns her face so that the beauty of the mouth will be its distinguishing feature...." The article is accompanied with five photographs and one drawing of women's faces. DA - Feb. 28, 1904 KW - photography facial expressions ref, news women photography and visual communication photography, and women women, and photography photography, and beauty photography, and facial expressions facial expressions, and photography photography, and eyes quotations, and photographing the face quotations ref, CDT LB - 41490 PY - 1904 SE - A SP - 5 ST - What Makes a Woman's Beauty T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - What Makes a Woman's Beauty ID - 4248 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article, illustrated with woodcuts of men's faces, discussion how the face expresses emotion. In Ancient Greece, actors were more honest. They wore masks to symbolize emotion and made no effort to use facial expressions. Modern actors use their facial expressions but rely on conventional forms of expression rather reflecting true emotion. "The hardest task of an artist, sculptor, or even actor is the reproduction of delicate shades of human emotions. Certain ??, well defined emotions have certain conventional physical signs which frequently are used by the person trying to express the feeling. .... "The actor can represent a whole series of emotions by a series of expressions and can change from one to another at will. He has the still further advantage of being able to illustrate the emotion by word as well as by expression. "In spite of this freedom the actor, as well as the artist, is found using the old conventional forms, which, like a Greek mask, are supposed to be the types for certain emotions. "The Greek actors were more honest than the modern actor who pretends to give a real and natural expression of emotion. They in the old days of the stage made no attempt at facial expression. They put on a mask which represented the conventional idea -- whether of anger, horror, reverence, or whatever might be required. "These conventional and much used expressions are declared to be entirely opposed to the true and natural representations. The actor, when he portrays the emotions of anger, for instance, is more apt to be using an expression that some actor before him used than one which he knows would be natural expression. "These facts are apparent to a stranger to the art of mimicry, as well as those who have made it a careful study. Scientists like Darwin, Meynert, Mantegazza, and especially Pederit, were the first to apply scientific methods in investigating the subject. They used physiology as a foundation for the study, but they did what others had not done and focused their entire attention on the features alone, to the exclusion of the body. "Pederit gave the results of his study to the world in the shape of his book, "Mimicry and Physiognomy." He is said to have been unfortunate in his classification of the emotions. "Dr. [H.] Heller, who has gone farther and his illustrated the emotion with plaster models for the study of artists and actors, was an admirer of Pederit....." DA - Nov. 29, 1903 KW - facial expressions ref, news women photography and visual communication photography, and actors actors, and photography photography, and acting acting, and facial expressions facial expressions, and acting acting, and eyes quotations, and facial expressions quotations ref, CDT facial expressions, and emotion emotion, and facial expressions acting, and physiology facial expressions, and physiology acting actors photography LB - 41520 PY - 1903 SE - A SP - 5 ST - Studies in the Emotions of Man T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Studies in the Emotions of Man ID - 4251 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The Tribune says that four new, unique presses (three octuples and a multi-color printing machine) of "entirely new types" are being constructed for the Tribune by the R. Hoe & Company of New York. When finished, the "combined capacity of the pressroom in the new building, not counting the color press, per hour, will be: "558,000 eight-page papers. "324,000 twelve-page papers, all inset. "279,000 sixteen-page papers, all inset. "Larger papers will be printed in the same relative ratio. At one revolution of the printing cylinder a sixty-four-page paper, folioed from pages 1 to 64, can be printed by first making an inset of sixteen pages and then collected as four sixteenths in one offset, which is placing each section in its relative position." Other information provided included: "When running each press will be fed from four rolls of paper at one time, running at railroad speed. To make the plates for one run will require 10,000 pounds of stereotype metal, and 3,000 pounds of ink will be required to fill the fountains. The presses will start with twenty-four rolls of paper in position, each weighing 1,500 pounds, or 36,000 pounds in all. "Many wonder comparisons might be made to show what such an amount of paper and ink and stereotype metal means in the more common affairs of life. The paper on each roll, if stretched out on the ground, would reach five miles, and there is accordingly on the presses when they start 120 miles of white paper. Counting stereotype metal at six cents a pound, it will cost ??? to furnish the metal to make the plates. The 3,000 pounds of ink, mixed in proper quantity in oil, would paint every elevated railroad structure in town. By supplying new rolls of paper as the old are exhausted and running the presses at full speed it would take but five hours to give a stretch of paper to San Francisco. It run four hours a day the presses would eat up paper from a half-acre of poplar trees." The new machines are much faster to operate and thus to produce the news, the article says. "As soon as the new plates are put on, all that will be necessary to do will be to slacken the speed of the moving part, while the part receiving new plates is getting under way. But a minute or two is required to make the change." The article is accompanied by a picture of the new presses. DA - Jan. 27, 1901 KW - journalism ref, news ref, CDT electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing news and journalism electricity, and journalism journalism, and electricity electricity, and newspapers newspapers, and electricity magazines, and electricity electricity, and magazines newspapers, and printing speed (1901) electricity, and Industrial Revolution railroads, and electricity electricity, and railroads books, periodicals, newspapers printing presses printing press, and speed steam power, and newspapers steam power, and printing newspapers, and steam power paper printing, and paper paper, and printing magazines print railroads steam power LB - 41560 PY - 1901 SP - 33 ST - New Multi-Color Press Now Being Built for the Tribune T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - New Multi-Color Press Now Being Built for the Tribune ID - 4255 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article describes the way in which electric lighting has transformed night life along the Great White Way of Los Angeles. It talks about the use of electricity in advertising and the use of "sign language art." It observes that there are three ways of lighting buildings -- high-candle-power lights that are placed on the sides of buildings; using many small lights to outline the structure of buildings; and the use of flood lights. The article quotes extensively Charles M. Masson (?) of the Edison. Of motion pictures use of high-candle-power gas-filled lamps attached with reflectors, he said: "'Our friends the "movies" have adopted this scheme, and it is these sort of lights at Universal city which make possible "electric sunshine."'" DA - Nov. 28, 1915 KW - Edison, Thomas electricity modernity modernity, and electricity electricity, and modernity new way of seeing electricity, and space and time space and time electricity, and time electricity, and space electricity, and travel lighting lighting, and electricity electricity, and lighting ref, news ref, LAT advertising and public relations electricity, and advertising advertising, and electric light advertising, and electric signs electricity, and electric signs electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity advertising, and sign language art quotation, and sign language art electricity, and lighting electricity, and flood lights lighting, and flood lights lighting, and electricity electricity, and Edison company motion pictures, and Edison company Edison company, and motion pictures Edison company, and electric lighting advertising motion pictures quotations LB - 41920 PY - 1915 SE - VIII SP - 8 ST - Making the Night Bright T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Making the Night Bright ID - 4291 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that the Modern Historical Records Association (William Howard Taft was the honorary president) presented a special film "which gave a complete record of the facial expression of President Wilson, concluding with his broadest smile." It was presented to the New York Public Library which planned to seal the film in an airtight, watertight, and fireproof container and put it into its vault, not to be opened for 100 years. Alexander Konta, founder of the Modern Historical Records Association, accepted the film. Also to be played in 100 years are phonographs of Thomas Edison talking and of leading opera singers of the day. DA - Dec. 5, 1913 KW - history history ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation sound recording motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures sound recording, and historical preservation historical preservation, and sound recording phonograph phonograph, and history history, and phonograph phonograph, and historical preservation historical preservation, and phonograph Konta, Alexander, and historical preservation historical preservation, and Alexander Konta Modern Historic Records Association paper materials, and paper paper, and historical preservation historical preservation, and paper parchment materials, and parchment ref, NYT Modern Historical Records Association motion pictures, and personality motion pictures, and magnified personality personality, magnified by film Wilson, Woodrow presidents and new media Edison, Thomas, and phonograph Edison, Thomas personality personality, and magnification of LB - 42100 PY - 1913 SP - 20 ST - Seals Up Wilson's Smile. Historical Record on Film Not to be Opened for 100 Years T2 - New York Times TI - Seals Up Wilson's Smile. Historical Record on Film Not to be Opened for 100 Years ID - 4309 ER - TY - NEWS AB - "With the advent of the half-tone reproduction, engraving on wood bids fair soon to become a lost art," this article says. However much such developments were “to be regretted,” the New York Times said in 1895, the fact remained that “the future of the engraver on wood offers little promise and few possibilities; the spirit of the age is against him; the photograph brought under intelligent control and utilized by chemicals has usurped his place.” DA - April 23, 1895 KW - wood engraving journalism magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, mag electricity home and new media electricity, and newspapers electricity, and books newspapers, and electricity magazines, and electricity photography and visual communication quotations news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and Daily Graphic photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving ref, news ref, secular ref, NYT home LB - 42170 PY - 1895 SP - 4 ST - The Passing of the Wood Engraver T2 - New York Times TI - The Passing of the Wood Engraver ID - 4316 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is reprinted from the St. Agustine (Fla.) Record and it says that the New York Times Sunday supplement recently devoted "a couple of page to snap shots of the Grant parade." It says that the Times's Sunday supplement's use of halftone pictures is "worthy of the highest commendation." DA - May 18, 1897 KW - ref, news ref, NYT news and journalism Sunday newspapers journalism, and halftones photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography photography, and halftones newspapers, and first halftones Sunday newspapers, and halftones photography and visual communication journalism LB - 42180 PY - 1897 SP - 6 ST - The Times's Magazine Supplement T2 - New York Times TI - The Times's Magazine Supplement ID - 4317 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article indicates that newspapers had begun to publish photographs taken at night. For example, in November, 1906, the New York Times used thirty pounds of flashlight powder to take a photograph of crowds outside the Times Building in New York on election night. Reprinted from the Louisville Courier-Journal. DA - Nov. 21, 1906 KW - journalism photography news and journalism ref, news ref, NYT photography, and news photographs photography, and night photographs photography, and journalism journalism, and photography newspapers, and photography photography, and newspapers LB - 42220 PY - 1906 SP - 8 ST - 'An Achievement in Journalism' T2 - New York Times TI - 'An Achievement in Journalism' ID - 4321 ER - TY - NEWS AB - "Color is here. Television is much nearer than any of us think. Three-dimensional photography is one the way," this article begins. "But even that doesn't comprehend everything that may be accomplished in making entertainment available to the public. Probably the day will arrive when the individual, as part of that public, will himself be projected, so that he will be able to witness actual events both in and out of the theater without actually being there in the flesh. And he will be just as much a spectator as the person who is genuinely there." There were predictions made by Robert Edmond Jones, this article says. Jones foresaw three-dimensional TV. Quoting Jones: "'Television as long as it is just two-dimensional will not completely compensate. We can probably look forward to the day when the semblances of real figures (three-dimensional) will seem actually to be projected into our presence, possibly by means of some sort of light or radio beam, or other electrical means. "'The reverse will probably be even more important -- the individual himself being projected to any part of the world at will. If there be a Metropolitan Opera House he will visit that. If there is a war in Ethiopia he will want to be right on the scene. Just as television gives promise of bringing such events to us; so we, in the future will be able actually to "go" to them.'" This will mean the end of privacy, Jones said. "'That be the ultimate, for it will probably become a difficult time for human being to enjoy any privacy,' Jones said." Jones commented on the color in movies "'In pictures today color is by far the most important thing in lending reality,' he continued. 'The only difficulty is that so far we have produced mostly "colored" pictures rather than "color" pictures. We have not used color for its full emotional value. We are not as yet making color an integral part of the picture -- a necessity. Furthermore we too often select picture subjects which over-emphasize colors. For that reason, nothing would be more beneficial than the production of a modern story.'" Jones thought too much emphasis had been placed on subduing color and it is interesting to speculate if this was an indirect criticism of Natalie Kalmus who was hired by studios to coordinate color on movie sets. Quoting Jones: "'Subduing colors, which has come much into vogue, is just an expedient. A very happy expedient, perhaps; but still not what will really make color fulfill its proper function. It's an easy way out of the difficulty, but it still isn't using color to the greatest advantage.'" Jones say that color would change acting, making it not more flamboyant but closer to real life. "'Color is going to change acting. Some think that it will become more flamboyant. Personally, I don't believe that. I think it will take the form of a closer approach to the simplicity that prevails on the modern stage. Color won't demand exaggeration in acting. It will call for a nearer approach to life.'" DA - May 3, 1936 KW - Kalmus, Herbert motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Technicolor, and Natalie Kalmus Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature ref, secondary ref, LAT color, and new way of seeing motion picture, and Becky Sharp motion pictures, and La Cacuracha color, and La Cacuracha color, and Becky Sharp motion pictures, and 3-D media effects, and color films motion pictures, and magic color films, and magic television television, and 3-D 3-D 3-D, and Robert Edmond Jones 3-D, and television actors acting actors, and color movies acting, and color movies seeing at a distance television, and seeing at a distance motion pictures, and seeing at a distance privacy television, and privacy privacy, and television cameras cameras, and privacy privacy, and cameras privacy, and Robert Edmond Jones media effects LB - 42870 PY - 1936 SE - C SP - 4 ST - 'Projection' of Audiences Prophesied: Robert Edmond Jones Envisons Ultimate Step in Television T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - 'Projection' of Audiences Prophesied: Robert Edmond Jones Envisons Ultimate Step in Television ID - 4339 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The stage and color designer Robert Edmond Jones predicts that within 25 years movies will be "felt" and "smelled." He also predicted there would be "time machines" that would "shatter all privacy by projecting themselves into the past and present. Quoting Jones: "'I, as Mr. Priestley in his play "Time and the Conways," believe the time will come when we will be able to see, hear, feel and smell the present, past and future, all in one flash,' Mr. Jones declared. (39) "'It even may come to where there will be no privacy -- a horrible thought to me, but it may become a reality!'" (39) Jones noted that perfume was already being used in theaters during romantic movie scenes. As for the time machine, Mr. Jones later amplified his remarks with the assertion that he believes 'we actually will have' in twenty-five to fifty years such inventions as H. G. Wells and Aldous Huxley have described in their imaginative writings. The senses of 'touch' and 'smell' well be added to the 'talkies,' he declared.... "He visualized a 'time machine,' such as Maxwell Anderson fancifully describes in his play, 'The Star Wagon,' which will transpose events of the past to the present. "'By this machine,' he [Jones] 'I believe it will be possible, say, to wonder what the Prince of Wales or the President is doing, turn your machine on them, and actually see what is going on. Impossible? Why? Television is here today, isn't it?'" (39) DA - Jan. 23, 1938 KW - Kalmus, Herbert motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Technicolor, and Natalie Kalmus Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature ref, secondary ref, NYT color, and new way of seeing television seeing at a distance television, and seeing at a distance motion pictures, and seeing at a distance privacy television, and privacy privacy, and television cameras cameras, and privacy privacy, and cameras privacy, and Robert Edmond Jones motion pictures, as time machine motion pictures, and privacy history and new media motion pictures, and history motion pictures, as time machine history LB - 42910 PY - 1938 SP - 39-40 ST - Movies to Be 'Felt' and 'Smelled' Forecast in New Era by Jones T2 - New York Times TI - Movies to Be 'Felt' and 'Smelled' Forecast in New Era by Jones ID - 4374 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article presents an excerpt from an article by Alexander Black in Scribner's (Sept. 1985) issue on the nature of the "picture play." Black said that "Primarily my purpose was to illustrate art with life. Five or six years ago, when my plan was first made, I discovered several instances in which photographs from life were used to illustrate fiction, and many other instances in which fiction evidently had been adjusted to photographs from life. Neither of these phases offered any practical hint toward the picture play. The suggestion definitely came through a group of photographic studies from living characters, which were tossed together in a 'picture talk' that I called 'Ourselves as Others See Us.' After outlining a combination of fiction and photography, each devised with a regard for the demands and limitations of the other, it began to be quite clear that the pictures must do more than illustrate. Thus there would be two points of radical difference from the illustrator's scheme. In the first place, the pictures would be primary, the text secondary. Again, the pictures would not be art at all in the illustrator's sense, but simply the art of tableau vivant plus the science of photography. If it is the function of art to translate nature, it is the privilege of photography to transmit nature. But in this case the tableaux vivants must be progressive, that the effect of reality may arise not from the suspended action of isolated pictures, but from the blending of many. Here the stereopticon came to my aid." AU - [Black, Alexander] DA - Aug. 28, 1895 KW - stereopticons art photography ref, news motion pictures presidents and new media photography and visual communication president, and motion pictures Black, Alexander picture plays motion pictures, and picture plays motion pictures, and new art form photography, and picture plays stereopticons, and picture plays art, and photography photography, and art actors acting ref, LAT LB - 36980 PY - 1895 SP - 10 ST - A Novel Photographic Play T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - A Novel Photographic Play ID - 3799 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads "Number 3: The Psychology and Sociology of Criminals and Students Compared," and says that the article reports the "results of observations made in penal and Reformatory Institutions of this Country by Miss F. A. Kellor of the University of Chicago." Kellor's studies examined choices of color, tested taste, hearing and memory of women criminals. Kellor said that female criminals tended to prefer "bright colors" because they "attract more attention" and because they are often "cheaper." Criminals much preferred blue, then pink, red, and yellow. Students, however, preferred red. AU - [Kellor, Frances A.] DA - Jan. 21, 1900 KW - psychology ref, news color color, and psychology psychology, and color critics critics, and color color, and criminals women women, and color color, and women color, and criminals color, and Frances Kellor ref, CDT LB - 39460 PY - 1900 SP - 42 ST - The American Female Offender T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - The American Female Offender ID - 4044 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article, the third in a series, reports on the research of Frances A. Kellor at the University of Chicago. Among the things measured to see if traits of women criminals could be detected were the size of noses, hearings, the sense of smell, and so on. Color preferences between white women criminals and black women were compared. Black women much preferred purple; "strangely," red was preferred by only one person. White women criminals preferred blue, pink, red, and yellow in that order. "Thus among immoral women in the North, red, pink, and yellow are more showy, attract more attention, and are cheaper. In the South the colors chosen make the negro more attractive. Immoral persons use color quite as much to attract attention as to satisfy their taste. This variation in color preference has a racial as well as economic and social element. Negroes are particularly partial to these colors because they believe it enhances their beauty and attractiveness, and they do not need to dress as much to attract attention. Races vary in the colors which are adapted to them." AU - [Kellor, Frances A.] DA - Oct. 28, 1900 KW - psychology ref, news color color, and psychology psychology, and color critics critics, and color color, and criminals women women, and color color, and women color, and criminals color, and race race, and color quotations quotations, and immoral colors color, and Frances Kellor ref, CDT race LB - 39470 PY - 1900 SP - 34 ST - Psychological Studies of Southern Criminals T2 - Chicago Daily TI - Psychological Studies of Southern Criminals ID - 4045 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Daniel A. Lord discusses his role in writing the motion picture industry's Production Code of 1930. Lord was the primary architect of this document that was used to censor motion pictures until the mid-1960s. Lord was profoundly troubled by the new technology of motion pictures and the modern ideas it seemed to convey. This material is in Folder: "Lord, Daniel A., S.J. 1934," National Catholic Welfare Conference, Episcopal Committee on Motion Pictures, 1933-1944, Washington, D. C. AU - [Lord, Daniel] DA - June 20, 1940 KW - self-regulation Production Code values Christianity Christianity values religion Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) motion pictures morality law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Legion of Decency motion pictures, and Catholic Church Christianity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Christianity motion pictures, and morality morality, and motion pictures censorship, and Daniel Lord Production Code, and origins Production Code, and Daniel Lord Lord, Daniel A. Lord, Daniel A., and Production Code origins LB - 18470 PY - 1940 ST - Father Lord Reveals He Wrote Movie Code T2 - Catholic Action of the South TI - Father Lord Reveals He Wrote Movie Code ID - 744 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In this address, called for a patriotic and spiritual revival in the United States and would "transcent communism." AU - [Reagan, Ronald] DA - May 18, 1981 KW - nationalism Reagan, Ronald presidents, and new media Reagan administration values nationalism and communication motion pictures motion pictures, and nationalism motion pictures, and patriotism patriotism patriotism, and motion pictures communism Cold War Reagan, Ronald, and communism Reagan, Ronald, and Cold War war LB - 33030 PY - 1981 SE - B SP - 7 ST - Excepts from President's Reagan's Commencement Address, Notre Dame University T2 - New York Times TI - Excepts from President's Reagan's Commencement Address, Notre Dame University ID - 2953 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This review denounces the violence in Sergio Leone’s The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly (1966), filmed in Spain and starring Clint Eastwood. AU - Alder, Renada DA - Jan. 25, 1968 KW -, news violence motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and foreign motion pictures, foreign censorship and ratings Smith, Margaret Chase, and motion pictures Smith, Margaret Chase LB - 36540 PY - 1968 SP - 33 ST - The Screen: Zane Grey Meets the Marquis de Sade T2 - New York Times TI - The Screen: Zane Grey Meets the Marquis de Sade ID - 3287 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about the Clinton administration's attack on the entertainment industry's calculated effort to market violent movies and video games to young children, some as young as 10 years of age. AU - Allen, Mike AU - Nakashima, Ellen DA - Sept. 12, 2000 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Clinton, William Jefferson Bush, George H. W. advertising, and public relations Valenti, Jack presidents, and new media Bush, George H. W. administration censorship and ratings propaganda public relations motion pictures media effects media violence violence FTC Clinton Administration censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification Gore, Al motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and children children, and media children, and violence motion pictures, and violence advertising advertising, and motion pictures advertising, and children advertising, and movie violence media effects FTC, and motion pictures motion pictures, and FTC Valenti, Jack, and violence Valenti, Jack, and children Valenti, Jack, and advertising video games video games, and children children, and video games rating system (U. S.), and controversies video games rating system (U. S.), and children children, and music rating system (U. S.) violence, and motion pictures violence, and video games violence, and children violence, and music Clinton, Bill, and movie rating system (U. S.) Clinton, Bill, and video game rating system (U. S.) Clinton, Bill, and music rating system (U. S.) Gore, Al, and movie rating system (U. S.) Gore, Al, and video game rating system (U. S.) Gore, Al, and music rating system (U. S.) Bush, George H. W., and movie rating system (U. S.) Bush, George H. W., and video game rating system (U. S.) Bush, George H. W., and music rating system (U. S.) Clinton, Bill LB - 27080 PY - 2000 SE - A SP - 1 ST - Clinton, Gore Hit Hollywood Marketing; Ads Aimed at Kids Could Spur Rules, Industry Is Told T2 - Washington Post TI - Clinton, Gore Hit Hollywood Marketing; Ads Aimed at Kids Could Spur Rules, Industry Is Told ID - 1265 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article by Leonid Andreyev, the Russian novelist and dramatist, was originally published in the Almanac Shipobnik of Petrograd in 1912. The excerpts from that piece which appear in the New York Times were translated by the Russian actor Manart Kippen. Andreyev begins by discussing the skepticism many intellectuals had about cinema, or as he says, "living photography." They tended to view it as akin to such entertainments as the skating rink. Andreyev says that many writers and artists considered early cinema to be "An artistic Apache, and aesthetic Hooligan, a free and grabbing arrival on the wheel of true art...." Andreyev believed that cinema would "free the theatre from ... unnecessary and useless things," and that future cinema would become increasingly powerful and influential. He writes: "The cinema will be a mirror the size of the screen, but not a mirror which will reflect you. What is the nature of this? Technique? No, for the mirror is not technique: the mirror is life reflected a second time. Will this be lifeless? No, because what is reflected in the mirror is neither lifeless nor living: it is a secondary life, an existence of a vision or hallucination. Here the curtain is raised, the fourth wall seems to [fail? fall?], and a thirty-five foot opening as if in a colossal window, appear living pictures of the world. Clouds pass across the sky, grain fields wave and the sultry distance swoons." Cinema is much more effective than the theater in showing action, spectacle, and settings. "In addition to the decoration it can also give realistic effects which are not in the power of the theatre. The cinema has the advantage, commanding the entire extent of the world capable of many instantaneous reincarnations, a master about when it pleases to bring into action thousands of people, automobiles, aeroplanes, mountains and seas incontestable and clear." Andreyev says that "No matter where the action takes place, whatever extraordinary forms it assumes, the cinema will reach out and get if for the magic screen." The movie camera captures "everything except the spoken word." "Only one thing it cannot give -- speech. Here is the end of its power, the boundary of its might." Movies also could revive the dead. "Do you wish to see those who have died? They humbly appear, look, smile, and, you having passed through the same door, they now sit at table with you." Clearly Andreyev believed cinema would change thinking, although he writes that "I am not going to speak here of what revolution in psychology at the very beginning of thought the motion picture of the future will bring about." Andreyev thought cinema was an international language and comparable to the airplane, telegraph, and telephone. "Wonderful Moving Picture! If the highest and holy purpose of art is to create intercourse among peoples and their similar souls, then what a tremendous unimaginable, socio-psychological task is this modern Apache destined to perform. And alongside it, of the same staff, is navigation of the air, the telegraph, the telephone. Portable, placed in a box, films are sent by post all over the world like an ordinary newspaper. Having no language, understood equally by savages of Petrograd or Calcutta, they become indeed the genius of international intercourse, make nearer the ends of the earth and the borders of souls. They sweep within one fast current all pulsating humanity." AU - Andreyev, Leonid DA - Oct. 19, 1919 KW - stage magic history motion pictures stage and theater motion pictures, and stage Andreyev, Leonid, and motion pictures non-USA motion pictures, and Russia Russia, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Leonid Andreyev quotations motion pictures, and electricity electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and revolution in psychology quotations, and living photography photography motion pictures, and photography photography, and motion pictures motion pictures, as mirror metaphors metaphors, and motion pictures motion pictures, as colossal window motion pictures, as second life motion pictures, as hallucination motion pictures, and history motion pictures, and the dead history, and motion pictures history, and new media motion pictures, as magic screen magic, and motion pictures motion pictures, as genius of international discourse motion pictures, and internationalism ref, news ref, NYT electricity Russia LB - 41910 PY - 1919 SE - XX SP - 5 ST - Andreyev on Motion Pictures T2 - New York Times TI - Andreyev on Motion Pictures ID - 4290 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article relates Jack Valenti's defense of the movie rating system, then under heavy criticism from critics. Valenti notes that about a third of the 225 most recent appeals of movie rating have been changed. He also admitted that they rating might be harsher on sex than on violence. "We've been unable to define what is too much violence, any more than the Supreme Court has been able to define, to this hour, what is pornography," he said. "The definition of violence is gauzy and very shadowy. It's almost like trying to pick up mercury with a fork." AU - Arar, Yardena DA - Nov. 25, 1993 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation CARA censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) motion pictures media effects media violence violence law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, rating system (U. S.) Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and violence violence, and Jack Valenti rating system (U. S.) LB - 21160 PY - 1993 SP - 3L ST - Movie-Ratings Boss Says System Works T2 - Plain Dealer [Cleveland] TI - Movie-Ratings Boss Says System Works ID - 917 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This discusses the release to home video of the controversial movie, The Last Temptation of Christ (1988). Many Christian groups boycotted this film and tried also to limit video rentals by pressuring rental chains. The article notes that the video was sent to rental stores "minus any promotion or advertising." AU - Atkinson, Terry DA - June 30, 1989 KW - corporations values Christianity advertising, and public relations Universal Pictures propaganda advertising Protestants values motion pictures Hollywood values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion Last Temptation of Christ (1988) boycotts, and Last Temptation motion pictures, and boycotts Catholics, and Last Temptation Protestants, and Last Temptation of Christ motion pictures, and anti-religion boycotts, and Universal Universal Pictures, and boycotts censorship, and Last Temptation Bright, Bill public relations public relations, and Last Temptation Last Temptation, and public relations Last Temptation, and marketing strategies boycotts, and video Last Temptation, and video boycott LB - 24570 PY - 1989 SE - 6 (Calendar) SP - 25 ST - Home Tech: Quiet Release of Controversial "Last Temptation of Christ" T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Home Tech: Quiet Release of Controversial "Last Temptation of Christ" ID - 1097 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that "when Star Wars: Episode II starts production next month in Australia it will be the first major motion picture created mostly using high-resolution digital videotape rather than film." AU - Austen, Ian DA - May 25, 2000 KW - motion pictures digital media digital cinema digital cinema digitization +motion pictures and popular culture digital movies digital media, and motion pictures motion pictures, and digital videotape digital media, and Star Wars: Episode II LB - 2690 PY - 2000 SE - D SP - D8 ST - A Galaxy Far, Far Away Is Becoming Fully Digital T2 - New York Times TI - A Galaxy Far, Far Away Is Becoming Fully Digital ID - 357 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that almost "100 Roman Catholic bishops have written to President Reagan in the last month to ask that a Federal coordinator be named to monitor enforcement of obscenity laws, according to Morality in Media, an interfaith organization concerned with pornography."/ AU - Austin, Charles DA - May 25, 1983 KW - conservatives values Christianity Reagan, Ronald presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality sexuality nudity motion pictures religion values morality mass media media effects crime values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and crime crime, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship Reagan administration, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and nudity nudity, and Ronald Reagan Reagan, Ronald, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and secular humanism Reagan, Ronald, and liberalism pornography, and evangelicals evangelicals, and pornography religion, and pornography pornography, and religion Reagan, Ronald, and religion Catholics, and pornography pornography, and Catholics critics values Morality in Media LB - 22490 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1983 SE - A SP - 19A ST - Bishops in Plea Against Smut T2 - New York Times TI - Bishops in Plea Against Smut ID - 977 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article explains how digital movies work and considers their relationship to traditional, non-digital film making. AU - Bailey, John DA - Feb. 18, 2001 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography projection motion pictures home entertainment digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema digitization computers 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movie +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality LB - 26110 PY - 2001 SE - 2 (Arts and Leisure) SP - 9, 20 ST - Film or Digital? Don't Fight. Coexist T2 - New York Times TI - Film or Digital? Don't Fight. Coexist ID - 1202 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about the V-chip, which Congress required to be placed in all new television sets, and notes that relatively few people are aware of this technology and even fewer choose to use it. AU - Barnhart, Aaron DA - April 28, 2000 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Federal Communications Commission (FCC) entertainment, home Clinton, William Jefferson CARA V-chip, and television violence television, and parents telecommunications presidents, and new media censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) PTA motion pictures home entertainment government regulation Clinton Administration law regulation law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification Gore, Al home, and new media home home +television +motion pictures and popular culture Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.), and TV (1997) V-chip television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and V-chip home entertainment revolution home entertainment, and V-chip television, and PTA PTA, and television television, and critics rating system (U. S.), and critics hearings new media Collings, Tim V-chip, and Tim Collings Telecommunications Act (1996) regulation, and television Valenti, Jack, and television television, and Jack Valenti Clinton, Bill Clinton, Bill, and TV rating system (U. S.) Clinton administration, and TV rating system (U. S.) Gore, Al, and TV rating system (U. S.) McCain, John, and TV rating system (U. S.) Lieberman, Joseph, and TV rating system (U. S.) FCC FCC, and TV rating system (U. S.) Markey, Ed, and V-chip V-chip, and public reception violence LB - 26050 PY - 2000 SP - 1D, 3D ST - ‘V’ is for virtually ignored: In a software age, the hard-wired V-chip hasn’t caught on T2 - Wisconsin State Journal (Madison) TI - ‘V’ is for virtually ignored: In a software age, the hard-wired V-chip hasn’t caught on ID - 1196 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article concerns the legal challenge against the X rating given to Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! This challenge was one of several made against the movie rating system in 1990 in the month preceding the adoption of a new rating category, NC-17. Civil rights attorney William Kunstler represented the movie and its makers. AU - Barricklow, Denis DA - April 24, 1990 KW - independent moving making Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality advertising, and public relations sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda advertising motion pictures media effects media violence substance abuse drug abuse law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA CARA non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture X-rated films NC-17 rating system (U. S.), and controversies CARA, and rating controversies Heffner, Richard, and rating controversies Miramax Films Spain foreign films Spain, and motion pictures violence sex, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sex Ebert, Roger X-rating, and legal challenges drug use, and motion pictures motion pictures, and drug use motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and drugs public relations motion pictures, and public relations public relations, and motion pictures independent film producers rating system (U. S.), and independent producers CARA, and independent producers CARA, and foreign films rating system (U. S.), and exploitation of CARA, and appeals process Kunstler, William, and Tie Me Up! Ramos, Charles E. Heffner, Richard CARA Kunstler, William LB - 25060 PY - 1990 ST - Almodovar Appeals X Rating on Latest Film T2 - UPI release TI - Almodovar Appeals X Rating on Latest Film ID - 1107 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that although Jack Valenti's selection as the new MPAA president may have been a surprise, it appears to have been a "pleasant" one. Valenti hoped to make the movie Production Code "treat the world as it is and at the same time remain within rational standards of community conduct." It notes that Valenti in his news conferences exhibited "persuasiveness, energy, contagious enthusiasm." AU - Bart, Peter DA - June 26, 1966 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA self-regulation Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and MPAA Production Code, and decline of Production Code, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and Production Code Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 36730 PY - 1966 SP - 87 ST - More Than a Lobbyist T2 - New York Times TI - More Than a Lobbyist ID - 3305 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses Los Angeles as a center of movie making in early 1916. AU - Bartlett, Lanier DA - Jan. 1, 1916 KW - Los Angeles actors acting ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business motion pictures, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and motion pictures theaters theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures audiences audiences, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and audiences advertising and public relations motion pictures, and advertising advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and actors actors, and status of capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism ref, LAT advertising LB - 16050 PY - 1916 SE - III SP - 67, 73 ST - How the Motion Picture Industry Thrives Here: Birth and Soul T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - How the Motion Picture Industry Thrives Here: Birth and Soul ID - 3759 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses Los Angeles as a center for movie making in early 1916. The article notes that 40,000 miles of film is used each day in southern California. It maintains that 10-15 million people attend movies each day in the United States. It says that American movies are superior to European films in "story, direction and acting." It notes that "the fundamental rules of morality, public decency and patriotism must be the guides of the motion picture business." AU - Bartlett, Lanier DA - Jan. 1, 1916 KW - Los Angeles censorship actors acting actors acting ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business motion pictures, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and motion pictures theaters theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures audiences audiences, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and audiences advertising and public relations motion pictures, and advertising advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and actors actors, and status of capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and celluloid celluloid celluloid, and motion pictures patriotism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and patriotism patriotism censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings ref, LAT advertising LB - 16060 PY - 1916 SE - III SP - 70 ST - Los Angeles the Film Capital of the World. Miles of Story T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Los Angeles the Film Capital of the World. Miles of Story ID - 3760 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about television cable operator Encore starting a network devoted to nonviolent programming. AU - Bates, James DA - Feb. 2, 1994 KW - media effects media violence censorship and ratings +television cable television television, and violence television, and cable children violence violence, and cable television television, and nonviolent cable cable children, and media LB - 28350 PY - 1994 SE - D SP - 3D ST - Encore Launches 'Nonviolent' TV Network T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Encore Launches 'Nonviolent' TV Network ID - 1374 ER - TY - NEWS AB - By 1960, the impact of runaway pictures and foreign films on American movie making was substantial. “Never has Europe affected Hollywood so much,” the New York Times reported in 1960. This article also quotes producer-director Mark Robson saying that in general, Europeans regard U. S. movies as "too slick" and "sterile." The author of this article then goes on to say that "Hollywood products often lack a point of view, and the films that attract the most interest abroad, he [Robson] said, are those that have been opposed by various pressure groups in the United States." AU - Becker, Bill DA - June 26, 1960 KW -, news motion pictures motion pictures, and American-interest films motion pictures, and labor labor motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings LB - 35850 PY - 1960 SP - X7 ST - Hollywood Specter: European Competition Worries Industry T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood Specter: European Competition Worries Industry ID - 3222 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Bedwell notes that movie stars have a powerful influence on clothing styles. "...There are always ideals of clothes beauty -- ideals that vary with different strata of society. The stars of the cinema have become one of the most potent sources of clothes idealism for great masses of women." (1) Bedwell quotes Robert Edmond Jones on the power of beautiful film stars. "As Robert Edmond Jones wrote: 'Unreal, intangible as they are, they have in some curious way the power to enthrall our imaginations.' And, 'Watching them we slip insensibly over the border into a day dream where they work their spells upon us.' True indeed. And the wish to snatch some of this magic of the stars, and add it to our own lives, is what supplies the potency to styles worn by the stars. Another reason, almost as powerful, is the frequency with which these glamorous beings, in their glamorous clothes, are to be seen by women everywhere." (1) Bedwell concludes by saying that "By bring to the movies your mind and eyes, clear of unwise glamor, you can learn to dress yourself with infinitely more effect in the world where you are a star." (2) AU - Bedwell, Bettina DA - Feb. 3, 1935 KW - Jones, Robert Edmond censorship motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color ref, news color, and primitives color, and cinematographers color, and novelty color, and Robert Edmond Jones Jones, Robert Edmond, and color quotations quotations, and glamour color, and emotions ref, CDT ref, newspaper quotations, and color movies create moods actors acting actors, and magnifying personality acting, and magnifying personality color, and magnifying personality acting, and eyes color, and eyes color, and personality motion pictures, and magnifying personality color, and lighting lighting motion pictures, and lighting Jones, Robert Edmond, and beautiful girls capitalism capitalism, and movie stars LB - 42890 PY - 1935 SE - D SP - 1-2 ST - 'Glamorous' Styles of Films Don't Flatter Average Girl T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - 'Glamorous' Styles of Films Don't Flatter Average Girl ID - 4372 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about conservatives inveighing about the dangers of pornography and other immorality in mass media. These conservative formed a coalition supporting Ronald Reagan's candidacy in 1980. The issues they support were often defined as "traditional moral values" which emphasized the scantity of the family and which often opposed abortion, the equal rights amendment for women, drafting women into military service, homosexuality, and pornography. AU - Bennetts, Leslie DA - July 30, 1980 KW - conservatives values sexuality motion pictures mass media First Amendment media effects crime freedom law censorship and ratings censorship pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and crime crime, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment values, and pornography critics values LB - 22440 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1980 SE - A SP - 1A ST - Conservatives Join on Social Concerns T2 - New York Times TI - Conservatives Join on Social Concerns ID - 972 ER - TY - NEWS AB - J. W. Binder, Executive Secretary of the Motion Picture Board of Trade, quotes the NYT as saying that “Movie Posters Lure Boys from Their Home.” He says movies are only the latest scapegoat for wayward youth. Cigarettes and dime novels had been blamed before. AU - Binder, J. W. DA - Oct. 23, 1915 KW - children censorship photography advertising and public relations ref, news motion pictures advertising advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures violence, and advertising advertising, and violence posters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and posters censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings censorship, and movie posters children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, and movie advertising theaters, and posters posters, and theaters advertising, and movie theaters ref, NYT posters LB - 14680 PY - 1915 SP - 10 ST - The Persecuted Movies [letter to editor] T2 - New York Times TI - The Persecuted Movies [letter to editor] ID - 3623 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article covers legal strategies to prosecute pornographers in the aftermath of the Meese Commission report on pornography. It discusses a new federal enforcement unit and the use of racketeering laws in obscenity cases. AU - Bishop, Katherine DA - Aug. 22, 1987 KW - presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality values obscenity Meese Commission pornography pornography, and Meese Commission pornography, and opponents pornography, and legal obscenity, and pornography pornography, and obscenity obscenity, and legal Reagan administration, and pornography pornography, and Reagan administration censorship and ratings law LB - 23730 PY - 1987 SP - 6A ST - Justice Dept. Team Leading Broad Effort on Obscenity T2 - New York Times TI - Justice Dept. Team Leading Broad Effort on Obscenity ID - 1035 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Alexander Black attempts to demystify trick photography, explaining, for example, how photographs can be made to picture "ghosts." In taking a portrait, the exposure time might be five seconds. At the end of two seconds the camera opening in closed, a person gets up and leaves, and then the camera opening is opened again. Black concludes the articles by saying that "Photography is an energetic science. It has shown us th upper surface of thunder clouds in action. It has shown us the heart of a coal mine. The camera gets into the rigging of ships, and into the catacombs. It registers vibrations in the vocal cords of the human throat. It is reporting men, as well as the earth, inside and out." The article's subtitle reads: "Its Work Is Not So Mighty Mysterious. When You Know How It Is Done -- The Camera Wizard Always Waits for Your Expression of Astonishment." AU - Black, Alexander DA - Dec. 3, 1893 KW - ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and truth photography, and ghosts photography, and special effects special effects, and photography photography, and exposure time cameras, and exposure time cameras, and trick photography cameras ref, LAT photography special effects LB - 37810 PY - 1893 SP - 7 ST - The Photograph T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - The Photograph ID - 3880 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In this article, Blashfield, who was a well-known artist and decorator and President of the Advisory Committee of the Photoplay League, writes about the artistic and educational future of movies. He notes that movies are popular because they are cheap and are available even in small towns where life is dull. But there is a deeper reason for their popularity and it is because they appeal to the eye and are much easier to understand than the printed word. This deeper reason “reaches into the remotest past. When the world was young, man learned to speak long before he learned to write or read. But before he even spoke intelligibly he learned to observe through his eyes. The visual appear came first of all. And today the immediacy of that visual appeal is the same and bridges the ages between the cave man and the spectator of the movies. From this fact we cannot get away. We must reckon with it and we must make the best of it,” Blashfield writes. Blashfield continues by saying that “Centuries after came St. Augustine and summed up the situation in seven words, ‘Pictures are the Books of the Ignorant.’ To teach her ignorant the Church used them until each cathedral became a great stone Bible, sculptured without and painted within, storied all over with The Word written in marble and stained glass and mosaic. The popularity of the graphic presentation was universal. No written or spoken sentence can reach the mind as swiftly and concentratedly as the thing seen. Music comes next in the suddenness of appeal, but the latter is to the emotions, the road from the eye to the brain still remains shorter than that from the ear. If such was the case in earlier times, what wonder that, when modern science set the pictures moving, their fascination became irresistible. “Particularly irresistible it must be to those unused to reading, who find here the quick and easy short cut to the story’s understanding. Again think what a mutual message the motion picture carries in a country where common speech is not an inheritance. Before the ‘movies’ Russian and German, Scandinavian and Italian, Englishman and Frenchman, may sit elbow to elbow and vibrate sympathetically, for here is the tongue that was spoken before ever Babel was built, the language of images. “The man in the street, the dull, featureless street of the little town, or the even duller street far removed from the centre of the great city, has found the short cut to entertainment. It makes no double draft upon him, he does not have to use ears as well as eyes, he is not puzzled with hard words or construction, he can concentrate at once upon what interests him most. His imagination, if sluggish, is stimulated, and if active, is whipped. No wonder that where the way is so clear for him he persists in it.” Blashfield said that “Crudity, harsh contrasts, violent sensationalism are well liked. The lack of spoken language and the consequent need for dumb show must be supplied by incessant happening….” Blashfield says that to attempt to censor bad movies will only draw more attention to them. One must encourage good films and only by so doing will cinema become “a read national asset.” The subtitle of this article reads: "Visual Appeal Always the Same; Says Noted Artist, Who Discusses the Educational and Artistic Future of Motion Pictures." AU - Blashfield, Edwin H. DA - March 4, 1917 KW - journalism motion pictures critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and critics words vs. images media effects media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures images vs. words critics quotations motion pictures, and quotations education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity quotations ref, NYT ref, news quotations, and movies appeal to primitive critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and critics audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences censorship and ratings censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship LB - 41800 PY - 1917 SE - SM SP - 8 ST - 'Movies' Bridge Ages from Cave Man to Us T2 - New York Times TI - 'Movies' Bridge Ages from Cave Man to Us ID - 4278 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that Richard D. Heffner, head of the movie industry's Classification and Rating Administration, will chair a conference called "Liberty -- the Next 100 Years." A number of prominent people will participate: psychologist Dr. Kenneth B. Clark, NOW president, Eleanor Smeal, and Holocaust historian, Elie Wiesel. AU - Blau, Eleanor DA - June 22, 1986 KW - sexuality community democracy freedom +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and background Heffner, Richard Open Mind, and Richard Heffner +television television, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and television Heffner, Richard, and Open Mind Heffner, Richard, and educational TV Heffner, Richard, and freedom democracy, and media pornography First Amendment First Amendment, and pornography Heffner, Richard Heffner, Richard, and First Amendment Liberty--the Next 100 Years Conference Gore, Tipper MacKinnon, Catharine ACLU Heffner, Richard, and ACLU Burns, James MacGregor Wiesel, Elie Heffner, Richard, and Elie Wiesel critics law LB - 20830 PY - 1986 SP - 26 ST - A Good Time to Ask: What Do We Mean By 'Liberty'? T2 - New York Times TI - A Good Time to Ask: What Do We Mean By 'Liberty'? ID - 884 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses Dan Glickman who will replace Jack Valenti as head of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA). It talks about Glickman's sense of humor and his ability to work with Congress (he was a former congressman from Kansas). "It's always been my style not to be a bomb thrower, but a diplomat," Glickman said. "You have to be able to work both sides of the aisle. At the Agriculture Department, I was often referred to as the red state diplomat." The article notes that Glickman is active as a donor to the Democratic Party ($20,000 to the Democratic Party, and $2,000 to Senator John Kerry's campaign). Glickman was Secretary of Agriculture under President Bill Clinton. AU - Boliek, Brooks DA - July 2, 2004 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) motion pictures censorship and ratings censorship Valenti, Jack MPAA Valenti, Jack, and MPAA MPAA, and Jack Valenti Glickman, Dan MPAA, and Dan Glickman CARA, and Dan Glickman CARA LB - 30480 N1 - Accessed July 5, 2004 PY - 2004 ST - Glickman Relishes New Role T2 - The Reporter ( Hollywood Reporter) (online) TI - Glickman Relishes New Role UR - http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/thr/film/ ID - 2803 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article concerns efforts in the Los Angeles area to persuade theaters not to show NC-17 rated movies such as Showgirls (1995). AU - Bowman, Lisa M. DA - Sept. 30, 1995 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising motion pictures media effects media violence lesbianism law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and lesbianism public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Showgirls motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures lesbianism, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 Eszterhas, Joe Verhoeven, Paul advertising LB - 27210 PY - 1995 SE - B (Metro) SP - 1B ST - City May Ask Theaters Not to Screen NC-17 Films T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - City May Ask Theaters Not to Screen NC-17 Films ID - 1278 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article indicates that the movie Beyond the Forest, starring Bette Davis, was playing in several first-run theaters even though the Roman Catholic Legion of Decency had condemned the film. The movie was based on Stuart Engstrand's novel by the same title. One of the controversial issues from the movie censors' point of view was the treatment of abortion in this film. AU - Brady, Thomas DA - Nov. 20, 1949 KW - self-regulation motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) censorship and ratings values abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and novels motion pictures, and abortion novels novels, and motion pictures Davis, Bette Breen, Joseph, and abortion abortion, and Joseph Breen Johnston, Eric, and abortion abortion, and Eric Johnston abortion, and Production Code Administration Production Code, and abortion Legion of Decency Legion of Decency, and abortion Breen, Joseph Johnston, Eric Christianity Catholic Church PCA, and abortion Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) PCA LB - 36550 PY - 1949 SP - X5 ST - Hollywood Wire: Two Studios in Conflict With Legion of Decency Screen Writers Elect T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood Wire: Two Studios in Conflict With Legion of Decency Screen Writers Elect ID - 3288 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that Joseph Breen, head of the Production Code Administration in Hollywood, regularly intervened in movies thought to have an anti-capitalist tone. Specific films such as "Born Yesterday" and "The Lawless" are discussed. AU - Brady, Thomas F. DA - Dec. 10, 1950 KW - self-regulation nationalism sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and capitalism motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings Production Code, and violence motion pictures, and foreign policy nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Breen, Joseph, and capitalism Production Code, and capitalism Breen, Joseph, and communism PCA, and communism Breen, Joseph PCA Production Code Administration (PCA) LB - 34920 PY - 1950 SP - X9 ST - Hollywood Checks: 'Born Yesterday' Controversy Sheds Light On Another Delicate Censorship Issue T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood Checks: 'Born Yesterday' Controversy Sheds Light On Another Delicate Censorship Issue ID - 3134 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This brief piece announces that Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, will appear on television with film critics Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel to discuss whether adult, non-pornographic movies deserve rating other than the industry's X. Valenti defended the present system, although later that year the industry adopted the NC-17 rating. AU - Braxton, Greg DA - May 21, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) NC-17 Ebert, Roger law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 motion pictures, and morality Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Valenti, Jack, and X-rating rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Valenti, Jack, and critics Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 NC-17, and Valenti's opposition Ebert, Roger, and NC-17 Siskel and Ebert Show Valenti, Jack, and Roger Ebert Siskel, Gene, and NC-17 LB - 25140 PY - 1990 SE - F (Calendar) SP - 2F ST - Morning Report: TV & Video T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Morning Report: TV & Video ID - 1114 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that 200 Christians protested the scheduled opening of Martin Scorcese's film The Last Temptation of Christ (1988). The protest occurred outside Universal Studios. AU - Braxton, Greg DA - July 17, 1988 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) motion pictures, and religion Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation corporations motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality corporations Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) advertising, and public relations universities censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda advertising values sexuality motion pictures First Amendment freedom values religion law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA CARA boycotts motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and religion religion religion, and motion pictures movies, and religion nudity motion pictures, and nudity motion pictures, and nudity CARA, and religion CARA, and nudity Kazantzakis, Nikos Schrader, Paul Cocks, Jay Universal Pictures Wasserman, Lew universities, and religion motion pictures, and boycotts CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies Wall, James Robertson, Pat Dobson, James First Amendment, and motion pictures motion pictures, and First Amendment public relations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and public relations public relations Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and religion Valenti, Jack, and First Amendment First Amendment, and Jack Valenti Heffner, Richard, and religion censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and boycotts boycotts, and motion pictures Bright, Bill Campus Crusade for Christ Scorsese, Martin Blockbuster Video Valenti, Jack, and censorship nudity, and religion religion, and nudity Dafoe, Willem Hershey, Barbara Bowie, David Southern Baptist Christian Life Commission critics values Heffner, Richard LB - 28560 PY - 1988 SE - 2 (Metro) SP - 4 ST - 200 Christians Protest Universal's Depiction of Jesus T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - 200 Christians Protest Universal's Depiction of Jesus ID - 1393 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with critics of secular humanism, many of them Christian evangelicals and supporters of Ronald Reagan. In general, they were interested in changing the tone of modern mass media. Many were also against what they considered to be the high level of pornography in mass media entertainment. This article discusses Rev. D. James Kennedy, a pastor of Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church in Fort Lauderdale, FL, who challenged radio and television broadcasters to fight secular humanism which he said was "the established religion of America." Kennedy said much of the American public had been "brainwashed" by secular humanism. AU - Briggs, Kenneth A. DA - Jan. 27, 1981 KW - conservatives values sexuality motion pictures mass media First Amendment media effects crime freedom values religion law censorship and ratings censorship pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and crime crime, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment pornography, and evangelicals evangelicals, and pornography religion, and pornography pornography, and religion critics secular humanism +television +radio television, and secular humanism radio, and secular humanism television, and values radio, and values LB - 22450 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1981 SE - A SP - 12A ST - Evangelicals Debate Their Role in Battling Secularism T2 - New York Times TI - Evangelicals Debate Their Role in Battling Secularism ID - 973 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that people who market movie find the NC-17 rating helpful. Richard Rush, the director of Color of Night (1994), says Disney marketing people used the rating controversy to stir controversy. The film featured full-frontal nudity from its star Bruce Willis. "From the beginning this was a kinky picture," Rush said. "It was Disney's plan all along to use the erotic elements to attract an audience." AU - Brodie, John DA - Sept. 6, 1994 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation corporations sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality corporations Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising press motion pictures media effects media violence lesbianism Disney law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and lesbianism public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Basic Instinct motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures lesbianism, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising Willis, Bruce motion pictures, and bad press coverage press, and poor movie coverage Color of Night NC-17, and critics Disney, and Color of Night Rush, Richard LB - 25480 PY - 1994 SE - 2 SP - 27 ST - NC-17 Threat Highly Rated by Marketers T2 - Chicago Sun-Times TI - NC-17 Threat Highly Rated by Marketers ID - 1144 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This brief piece covers an eight-page "discussion guide" that Universal Pictures funded that was mailed to religious leaders, teachers, and librarians to counter criticism of Martin Scorcese's The Last Temptation of Christ (1988). Approximately 200,000 copies were mailed by the nonprofit Cultural Information Service. AU - Broeske, Pat H. DA - Sept. 18, 1988 KW - corporations corporations advertising, and public relations Universal Pictures propaganda public relations propaganda advertising motion pictures boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture boycotts, and Last Temptation Last Temptation of Christ (1988) public relations Universal Pictures, and advertising Universal Pictures, and public relations public relations, and Last Temptation advertising advertising, and Last Temptation Cultural Information Service, and Universal Pictures Universal Pictures, and Cultural Information Service religion values cultural imperialism LB - 24460 PY - 1988 SE - Calendar SP - 19 ST - Outtakes: Missing Link T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Outtakes: Missing Link ID - 1086 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that Richard D. Heffner, the former head of the movie industry's Classification and Ratings Administration, turned 71 and celebrates the 40th anniversary of his television program, "The Open Mind." AU - Brozan, Nadine DA - Aug. 5, 1996 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner CARA CARA, and Richard Heffner Valenti, Jack Heffner, Richard, and CARA censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and background Heffner, Richard, and Jack Valenti Heffner, Richard Open Mind, and Richard Heffner +television television, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and television Heffner, Richard, and Open Mind LB - 20910 PY - 1996 SE - B SP - B8 ST - Chronicle [Richard Heffner, 71, and Open Mind] T2 - New York Times TI - Chronicle [Richard Heffner, 71, and Open Mind] ID - 892 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This is a condensed version of an article Calvert did for Equity, the official publication of the Actors' Equity Association. Calvert says that actors too often have no sense of their responsibilities or of the stage's power for good or evil. "The stage excites massed emotions," he says. He notes, for example, how a performance of the "Merchant of Venice" flamed anti-Semitism. Calvert says that hard work is needed to make actors good craftsmen and he call for greater effort to uplife the theater. "We give our livess for the civilization of the world, and we give our money and our work to feed the starving, but we do not give even a crust or a cup of water to our Modern Art, without whose aid we could not, as actors, live." AU - Calvert, Louis DA - March 9, 1919 KW - Jews censorship actors acting actors acting ref, news motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings anti-Semitism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and anti-Semitism religion values religion, and motion pictures values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and religion motion pictures, and Jews Jews, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values actors, and status of actors, and professionalism acting, and professionalism ref, NYT anti-Semitism LB - 37710 PY - 1919 SP - 46 ST - Actor and the Stage T2 - New York Times TI - Actor and the Stage ID - 3870 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article by New York Times film critic, Vincent Canby, discusses the growing audiences for movies with sex and violence. AU - Canby, Vincent DA - Jan. 24, 1968 KW - audiences self-regulation Production Code sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality exploitation circuit values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) sexuality values religion non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures nudity motion pictures, and nudity Production Code, and nudity foreign films Production Code, and foreign films motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex theaters motion pictures, and porn theaters exploitation circuit motion pictures, and exploitation circuit LB - 18660 PY - 1968 SP - 38C ST - Films Exploiting Interest in Sex and Violence Find Growing Audience Here T2 - New York Times TI - Films Exploiting Interest in Sex and Violence Find Growing Audience Here ID - 751 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In this article, Canby discusses the new rating system that the motion picture industry had just put into place. It replaced the Production Code. A clipping of this article can be found in the U. S. Senate Committee on Commerce Papers, RG 46, Sen 90A-E6, Box 53, National Archives I, Washington, D. C. AU - Canby, Vincent DA - Nov. 1, 1968 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) sexuality law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures nudity motion pictures, and nudity rating system (U. S.), and nudity foreign films rating system (U. S.), and foreign films motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex X-rated films rating system (U. S.), and X-rating motion pictures, and X-rating CARA rating system (U. S.), and origin CARA, and origin LB - 18680 PY - 1968 ST - For Better or Worse, Film Industry Begins Ratings T2 - New York Times TI - For Better or Worse, Film Industry Begins Ratings ID - 753 ER - TY - NEWS AB - New York Times film critic Vincent Canby discusses the public reaction to the X-rated film, Deep Throat (1972), a film that was being shown in mainstream movie theaters. "For reasons that still baffle me, 'Deep Throat' became the one porno film in New York chic to see and to be seen at," Canby wrote. He went on to say that obscenity laws "are wrong but the film isn't worth fighting for." AU - Canby, Vincent DA - Jan. 21, 1973 KW - values sexuality pornography sexuality sexuality values obscenity law censorship and ratings censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures X-rated films motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and motion pictures Playboy Penthouse obscenity, and pornography motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures law, and pornography Deep Throat (1972) movie Knight, Arthur, and pornography pornography, and Arthur Knight LB - 20980 PY - 1973 SE - 2 SP - 1, 33 ST - What Are We To Think of 'Deep Throat' T2 - New York Times TI - What Are We To Think of 'Deep Throat' ID - 899 ER - TY - NEWS AB - After the MPAA revised the Production Code for a last time in 1966, Blow-Up was the first movie to test it. Geoffrey Shurlock, who was head of the PCA, objected to the movie’s scenes of intercourse and nudity, first viewed the movie in black-and-white. It was a color film, though, and contain a brief glimpse of pubic hair. Some censors felt that the color magnified the impact of the nudity. AU - Canby, Vincent DA - Feb. 7 1967 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality , news pornography motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures nudity motion pictures, and nudity Production Code, and nudity foreign films Production Code, and foreign films motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex Shurlock, Geoffrey Production Code, and nudity nudity, and Production Code color motion pictures, and color sexuality sexuality, and color color, and sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 35830 PY - 1967 ST - 'Blow-Up' May Get New Code Review: Picture Shown May Differ from One Disapproved T2 - New York Times TI - 'Blow-Up' May Get New Code Review: Picture Shown May Differ from One Disapproved ID - 3220 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article speculates that an attorney, Louis Nizer, who has represented many of the major studios in legal matters, will be chosen to be the new president of the Motion Picture Association of America. Ralph Hetzel, who had been an economist in the Truman administration, had filled the post on an interim basis since the death of Eric Johnston in August, 1963. AU - Canby, Vincent DA - March 26, 1966 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA self-regulation National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and MPAA Production Code, and decline of Production Code, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and Production Code ,news Hetzel, Ralph, and MPAA MPAA, and Ralph Hetzel Nizer, Louis MPAA, and Louis Nizer Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 36700 PY - 1966 SP - 14 ST - Film Trade Body May Elect Nizer T2 - New York Times TI - Film Trade Body May Elect Nizer ID - 3303 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that this movie, Alfiie, had an abortion (performed off-screen, but described vividly by one of the characters), in direct violation of the U. S. motion picture Production Code. Canby speculates that this film may push the MPAA and Jack Valenti to revise the Code. AU - Canby, Vincent DA - July 19, 1966 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality , news abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion Production Code Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey, and abortion motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and PCA +television television, and motion pictures television, and abortion motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and sex television, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, foreign motion pictures, and foreign censorship and ratings Production Code, 1966 Production Code, and abortion Alfie Shurlock, Geoffrey LB - 36740 PY - 1966 SP - 33 ST - 'Alfie' May Speed Film Code Change: Abortion Sequence in British Import Challenges Taboo T2 - New York Times TI - 'Alfie' May Speed Film Code Change: Abortion Sequence in British Import Challenges Taboo ID - 3306 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Canby explains that the British-made film, Alfie, has won a seal of approval from Hollywood's Production Code Administration, despite violating the Code's prohibition on treating abortion in films. AU - Canby, Vincent DA - Aug. 3, 1966 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality , news abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion Production Code Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey, and abortion motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and PCA +television television, and motion pictures television, and abortion motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and sex television, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, foreign motion pictures, and foreign censorship and ratings Production Code, 1966 Production Code, and abortion Alfie Shurlock, Geoffrey LB - 36750 PY - 1966 SP - 43 ST - Appeal by 'Alfie' Wins a Movie Code Certificate T2 - New York Times TI - Appeal by 'Alfie' Wins a Movie Code Certificate ID - 3307 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that about 2,000 people attended the first two showings of Warner Bros.'s Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, despite its controversial dialogue. Canby speculates that this film may push the MPAA and Jack Valenti to revise the motion picture Production Code so that "it will allow the public morality in films to reflect more accurately the state of private morality." AU - Canby, Vincent DA - June 25, 1966 KW - classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality CARA , news abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion Production Code Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey, and abortion motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and PCA +television television, and motion pictures television, and abortion motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and sex television, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, foreign motion pictures, and foreign censorship and ratings Production Code, 1966 Production Code, and abortion Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? classification censorship and ratings Shurlock, Geoffrey LB - 36760 PY - 1966 SP - 20 ST - Public Not Afraid of Big Bad 'Woolf' T2 - New York Times TI - Public Not Afraid of Big Bad 'Woolf' ID - 3308 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that the MPAA's appeals board over turned a decision by the industry Production Code Administration rejected Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? because it violated the Code's rules on profane language. It notes that only 18 months earlier, the appeal board had overturned another PCA rejection of The Pawnbroker, which violated the Code's ban on nudity. AU - Canby, Vincent DA - June 11, 1966 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality CARA , news abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion Production Code Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey, and abortion motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and PCA +television television, and motion pictures television, and abortion motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and sex television, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, foreign motion pictures, and foreign censorship and ratings Production Code, 1966 Production Code, and abortion Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Shurlock, Geoffrey classification motion pictures, and classification MPAA, and classification LB - 36770 PY - 1966 SP - 46 ST - 'Virginia Woolf' Given Code Seal: Industry's Censors Exempt Film from Speech Rules T2 - New York Times TI - 'Virginia Woolf' Given Code Seal: Industry's Censors Exempt Film from Speech Rules ID - 3309 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Jack Valenti asks the National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) to revised the Production Code and add a "suggested for mature audiences" classification for films inappropriate from those under 18. Theater owners and movie producers had resisted this form of classification believing that if it failed, it would give the state and local government increased leverage to pass censorship laws. AU - Canby, Vincent DA - Aug. 18, 1966 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation sexuality sexuality MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality CARA , news abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion Production Code Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey, and abortion motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and PCA +television television, and motion pictures television, and abortion motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and sex television, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, foreign motion pictures, and foreign censorship and ratings Production Code, 1966 Production Code, and abortion Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Shurlock, Geoffrey classification motion pictures, and classification MPAA, and classification Valenti, Jack LB - 36780 PY - 1966 SP - 27 ST - Valenti Suggests Classified Films: Asks a Change Producers Have Long Resisted T2 - New York Times TI - Valenti Suggests Classified Films: Asks a Change Producers Have Long Resisted ID - 3310 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Jack Valenti tells theater owners that the revised 1966 Production Coode "will unleash the creative man from artificial fetters." The National Association of Theater Owners (NATO) endorsed the new Code even though it had a provision they had long resisted -- a form of film classes called "suggested for mature audiences" designed to point out films inappropriate for those under 18. AU - Canby, Vincent DA - Oct. 1, 1966 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification self-regulation National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) sexuality sexuality MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality CARA , news abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion Production Code Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey, and abortion motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and PCA +television television, and motion pictures television, and abortion motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and sex television, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, foreign motion pictures, and foreign censorship and ratings Production Code, 1966 Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey classification motion pictures, and classification MPAA, and classification NATO audiences censorship and ratings LB - 36790 PY - 1966 SP - 34 ST - New Production Code for Films Endorsed by Theater Owners T2 - New York Times TI - New Production Code for Films Endorsed by Theater Owners ID - 3311 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that Warner Bros. is threatening to withdraw from the MPAA because the PCA has refused to approve Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, because of its strong language. The articles notes this brings to mind the reaction to an earlier film, The Man With the Golden Arm. AU - Canby, Vincent DA - May 28, 1966 KW - classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality CARA , news abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion Production Code Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey, and abortion motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and PCA +television television, and motion pictures television, and abortion motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and sex television, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, foreign motion pictures, and foreign censorship and ratings Production Code, 1966 Production Code, and abortion Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? classification censorship and ratings Shurlock, Geoffrey LB - 36800 PY - 1966 SP - 12 ST - Valenti Facing First Film Crisis: Movie Association Refuses Seal to 'Virginia Woolf' T2 - New York Times TI - Valenti Facing First Film Crisis: Movie Association Refuses Seal to 'Virginia Woolf' ID - 3312 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the new motion pictures Production Code, adopted in September, 1966. It gave the PCA more flexibility in determining what was permissible in movies, and for the first time established a classification scheme with a "for mature audiences only" category. Louis Nizer, Geoffrey Shurlock, and Jack Valenti are quoted on the Code. AU - Canby, Vincent DA - Sept. 21, 1966 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) sexuality sexuality MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality CARA , news abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion Production Code Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey, and abortion motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and PCA +television television, and motion pictures television, and abortion motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and sex television, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, foreign motion pictures, and foreign censorship and ratings Production Code, 1966 Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey classification motion pictures, and classification MPAA, and classification NATO audiences censorship and ratings Nizer, Louis Valenti, Jack LB - 36810 PY - 1966 SP - 1, 42 ST - A New Movie Code Ends Some Taboos T2 - New York Times TI - A New Movie Code Ends Some Taboos ID - 3313 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that even though the Catholic Church had condemned five movies, they were released under the movie industry's 1966 Production Code with a rating of "for mature audiences." The movies included Blow-Up, Hurry Sundown, The Penthouse, and Reflections in a Golden Eye. AU - Canby, Vincent DA - Oct. 13, 1967 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification self-regulation National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) sexuality sexuality MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality CARA , news abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion Production Code Production Code, and sexuality Shurlock, Geoffrey, and sexuality motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and PCA television television, and motion pictures television, and abortion motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and sex television, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, foreign motion pictures, and foreign censorship and ratings Production Code, 1966 Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey classification motion pictures, and classification MPAA, and classification NATO audiences censorship and ratings Catholic Church, and movie censorship motion pictures, and Catholic Church Legion of Decency motion pictures, and NCOMP motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholic Church values Christianity LB - 36850 PY - 1967 SP - 35 ST - Filmmakers Show Less Fear of Catholic Office T2 - New York Times TI - Filmmakers Show Less Fear of Catholic Office ID - 3317 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Jack Valenti, the new president of the MPAA, denies saying that "I don't ever remember seeing a bad movie," a statement attributed to him. He says that the he had not seen "any really bad movies recently." The article also says that Valenti intended to initiative MPAA policy, something that his predecessor Eric Johnston had been criticized for not doing. AU - Canby, Vincent DA - May 20, 1966 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) sexuality sexuality MPAA motion pictures, and sexuality CARA , news motion pictures Production Code Production Code, 1966 Shurlock, Geoffrey television television, and motion pictures television, and abortion motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and sex television, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, foreign motion pictures, and foreign censorship and ratings Production Code, 1966 Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey classification motion pictures, and classification MPAA, and classification NATO audiences censorship and ratings Nizer, Louis Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric LB - 36880 PY - 1966 SP - 40 ST - Valenti Disowns Movie Quotation: Hasn't Seen Bad One Since He Stopped Seeing Any T2 - New York Times TI - Valenti Disowns Movie Quotation: Hasn't Seen Bad One Since He Stopped Seeing Any ID - 3320 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In discussing the controversial Swedish film I Am Curious - Yellow, film critic Canby says that “a revolution in movie mores of really stunning rapidity and effect” occurred in the United States since 1952 and the Miracle case. AU - Canby, Vincent DA - March 23, 1969 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) sexuality sexuality MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality Burstyn v. Wilson Burstyn, Joseph CARA , news abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion Production Code Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey, and abortion motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and PCA +television television, and motion pictures television, and abortion motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and sex television, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, foreign motion pictures, and foreign censorship and ratings Production Code, 1966 Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey classification motion pictures, and classification MPAA, and classification NATO audiences censorship and ratings Valenti, Jack sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and violence violence values motion pictures, and values freedom Miracle case LB - 36900 PY - 1969 SP - D1, D16 ST - 'I Am Curious (Yes)' T2 - New York Times TI - 'I Am Curious (Yes)' ID - 3322 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Canby writes that in the aftermath of the revised movie Production Code of 1966, "the movies, once the mass medium of entertainment, are going through a revolution that could remove all the old taboos concerning subject matter and treatment." AU - Canby, Vincent DA - Jan. 5, 1967 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) sexuality sexuality MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality CARA , news abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion Production Code Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey, and abortion motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and PCA +television television, and motion pictures television, and abortion motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and sex television, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, foreign motion pictures, and foreign censorship and ratings Production Code, 1966 Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey classification motion pictures, and classification MPAA, and classification NATO audiences censorship and ratings Nizer, Louis Valenti, Jack LB - 36910 PY - 1967 SP - 27 ST - 'Adult Themes' Head for Screen: Many of Old Taboos Seen Rapidly Disappearing T2 - New York Times TI - 'Adult Themes' Head for Screen: Many of Old Taboos Seen Rapidly Disappearing ID - 3323 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses movie special effects. The article's subtitle reads: "Wonderful Moving Picture Reel Played. A Complete Placer Mine Dynamited. Rex Beach’s Novel, ‘The Spoilers’." AU - Carr, Harry DA - July 18, 1913 KW - sensationalism ref, news motion pictures motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and sensationalism sensationalism, and cameras special effects, and motion pictures special effects motion pictures, and special effects violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence ref, LAT LB - 1220 PY - 1913 SE - III SP - 1 ST - Blowing Up Movie Town T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Blowing Up Movie Town ID - 3417 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Champlin, a film critic for the Los Angeles Times, reports on Pope John Paul II's visit to Los Angeles and his address to members of the entertainment industry. This piece gives a good account of the Pope's views about mass media. The Pope tells his audience that "working constantly with images, you face the temptation of seeing them as reality. Seeking to satisfy the dreams of millions, you can become lost in a world of fantasy." AU - Champlin, Charles DA - Sept. 17, 1987 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA values Christianity Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack values motion pictures Hollywood values religion Catholic Church non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +television Pope John Paul II, and motion pictures Pope John Paul II Pope John Paul II, and television television, and Pope John Paul II motion pictures, and Pope John Paul II Valenti, Jack, and Pope John Paul II Wasserman, Lew, and Pope John Paul II Hollywood, and Catholic Church Hollywood, and religion Catholic Church, and Hollywood critics values values, and virtual reality virtual reality LB - 24260 PY - 1987 SE - 6 (Calendar) SP - 1 ST - Small Screen Takes on the Big Issues -- Again; Show-Biz Star Makers Dazzled by a Luminary from Another Galaxy T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Small Screen Takes on the Big Issues -- Again; Show-Biz Star Makers Dazzled by a Luminary from Another Galaxy ID - 1073 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In this article, film critic Champlin discusses Martin Scorsese's reaction to attacks on his movie, The Last Temptation of Christ (1988), from Christian and other conservative groups. It notes that actress Barbara Hershey had first given Scorsese Niko Kazantzakis' novel on which the movie was based. AU - Champlin, Charles DA - Jan. 19, 1989 KW - values Christianity Protestants values motion pictures Hollywood values religion Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion Last Temptation of Christ (1988) boycotts, and Last Temptation motion pictures, and boycotts Catholics, and Last Temptation Protestants, and Last Temptation of Christ motion pictures, and anti-religion Scorsese, Martin critics values LB - 24360 PY - 1989 SE - 6 (Calendar) SP - 1 ST - Critics at Large: Scorsese in the Wake of "Temptation" T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Critics at Large: Scorsese in the Wake of "Temptation" ID - 1082 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Champlin, a film critic for the Los Angeles Times, discusses the criticisms of the motion picture rating system and pressure to adopt a new "adult" rating category, which would become NC-17. Having experts on the rating board such as psychiatrists would be "a nightmare of intrusion in the creative process that would dwarf any of the present cries that the ratings constitute censorship," Champlin writes. The article speculates that legal challenges may result in the ratings being "sued out of existence." AU - Champlin, Charles DA - July 24, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) values NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner motion pictures, and morality Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Valenti, Jack, and critics Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 Valenti, Jack, and legal challenges theater owners, and rating system (U. S.) theater owners, and NC-17 MPAA, and NC-17 critics values law, and movie rating system (U. S.) Heffner, Richard LB - 25240 PY - 1990 SE - F (Calendar) SP - 3F ST - Critics at Large: MPAA Ratings: A Crisis of Confidence, a System in Disarray T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Critics at Large: MPAA Ratings: A Crisis of Confidence, a System in Disarray ID - 1120 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Los Angeles Times Arts Editor Charles Champlin writes that the "first and last irony about The Last Temptation of Christ is that it is certainly not guilty of blasphemy as charged, but that its honorable and admirable intentions are only intermittently achieved." Champlin offers a favorable portrayal of Martin Scorsese, the film's director. AU - Champlin, Charles DA - Aug. 16, 1988 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) motion pictures, and religion Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation corporations motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality corporations Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) military-industrial complex advertising, and public relations universities censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda advertising values sexuality motion pictures First Amendment freedom values religion law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA CARA boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and religion religion religion, and motion pictures movies, and religion nudity motion pictures, and nudity motion pictures, and nudity CARA, and religion CARA, and nudity Kazantzakis, Nikos Schrader, Paul Cocks, Jay Universal Pictures Wasserman, Lew universities, and religion motion pictures, and boycotts CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies Wall, James Robertson, Pat Dobson, James First Amendment, and motion pictures motion pictures, and First Amendment public relations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and public relations public relations Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and religion Valenti, Jack, and First Amendment First Amendment, and Jack Valenti Heffner, Richard, and religion censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and boycotts boycotts, and motion pictures Bright, Bill Campus Crusade for Christ Scorsese, Martin Blockbuster Video Valenti, Jack, and censorship nudity, and religion religion, and nudity Dafoe, Willem Hershey, Barbara Bowie, David Southern Baptist Christian Life Commission values critics Heffner, Richard LB - 28540 PY - 1988 SE - 6 (Calendar) SP - 1 ST - Critic at Large: Lasting Imprint of 'Last Temptation' T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Critic at Large: Lasting Imprint of 'Last Temptation' ID - 1391 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with protesters who appeared at the gates of Universal Pictures to protest the movie The Last Temptation of Christ (1988). AU - Chandler, Russell DA - Aug. 12, 1988 KW - corporations corporations values Christianity Universal Pictures Protestants values motion pictures Hollywood values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion Last Temptation of Christ (1988) boycotts, and Last Temptation motion pictures, and boycotts Catholics, and Last Temptation Protestants, and Last Temptation of Christ motion pictures, and anti-religion boycotts, and Universal Pictures Universal Pictures, and boycotts censorship, and Last Temptation Bright, Bill critics values LB - 24480 PY - 1988 SE - 1 SP - 1 ST - 25,000 Gather at Universal to Protest Film T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - 25,000 Gather at Universal to Protest Film ID - 1088 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article by the Los Angeles Times religion writer is about how protests, especially from religious groups, actually helped the box office for The Last Temptation of Christ (1988). The protests generated publicity for a movie that otherwise would have attracted far less attention. Generating publicity, even negative in nature, was often a strategy of studio marketers. AU - Chandler, Russell DA - Aug. 14, 1988 KW - corporations corporations values Christianity advertising, and public relations Universal Pictures propaganda advertising Protestants values motion pictures Hollywood values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion Last Temptation of Christ (1988) boycotts, and Last Temptation motion pictures, and boycotts Catholics, and Last Temptation Protestants, and Last Temptation of Christ motion pictures, and anti-religion boycotts, and Universal Universal Pictures, and boycotts censorship, and Last Temptation Bright, Bill public relations public relations, and Last Temptation Last Temptation, and public relations Last Temptation, and marketing strategies critics public relations, and motion pictures values LB - 24510 PY - 1988 SE - 2 (Metro) SP - 1 ST - Protests Aided "Temptation," Foes Concede T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Protests Aided "Temptation," Foes Concede ID - 1091 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The authors were both interns on the Code and Rating Administration (later Classification and Rating Administration). They are critical of the leadership of CARA director, Aaron Stern. They argue that Stern and another board member, Dr. Jacqueline Bouhoutsos, a child psychologist, were repressive. Stern and Bouhoutsos both opposed films about rebellion against the Establishment or movies with the "theme of insurrection," preferring to give them restricted ratings. The repressiveness amounted to making CARA another censorship body. Stern, it should be noted, was a psychiatrist. The authors contend that their psychological theories about the possible damaging effects of movies on children were unproven. However, they warned that psychologists and psychiatrists may well impose controls over movies no less severe than those imposed earlier by the Catholic Church. AU - Changas, Estelle AU - Farber, Stephen DA - Aug. 8, 1971 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and motion pictures classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification CARA CARA, and psyhologists CARA, and censorship CARA, and themes of rebellion Stern, Aaron CARA, and Aaron Stern critics LB - 21120 PY - 1971 SE - Calendar SP - 1, 22-25 ST - Insiders Rate Film Code Board as 'Unreformed' T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Insiders Rate Film Code Board as 'Unreformed' ID - 913 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the Dunning Process, developed by Carroll H. Dunning, for making color motion pictures. It covers how the Dunning Process works and how it differed from Technicolor. AU - Churchill, Douglas W. DA - Jan. 31, 1937 KW - censorship censorship motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Dunning Process Dunning Process cameras, and Dunning Process cameras color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color censorship, and Natalie Kalmus color, and primitives color, and cinematographers color, and novelty color, and Robert Edmond Jones Technicolor, and two-color process Technicolor, and three-color process lighting lighting, and motion pictures motion pictures, and lighting color, and lighting lighting, and color ref, news color, and Technicolor Technicolor LB - 41000 PY - 1937 SP - 159 ST - Hollywood's New Color Scheme T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood's New Color Scheme ID - 4199 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports K. L. Dickson is making moving pictures of the Boer War. "Kennedy L. Dickson, who accompanies General Buller to take moving pictures of the battles, is praised by the papers as a hero, and they say he is doing the people a great service in showing just how the troops act under fire." The sub-title of this article reads: "British Troops Said to Have Repulsed the Boers North of Ladysmith. First Blood of the War. Fifteen English Soldiers Believed to Have Been Killed in Attack on Armored Train. Buller To Sail Today." AU - Clarke, Arthur L. DA - Oct. 14, 1899 KW - history ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures war war, and motion pictures motion pictures, and war Dickson, W. K. L. motion pictures, and Boer War ref, CDT LB - 37190 PY - 1899 SP - 1 ST - Report of Big Fight at Napal T2 - Chicago Tribune TI - Report of Big Fight at Napal ID - 3819 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In January, 1991, the nation’s biggest retailer of videos, Blockbuster, announced that it would not carry movies designated for adults only (the chain later considered unrated movies on a case-by-case basis). Pope John Paul II commended this decision. Blockbuster Video grew rapidly during the early 1990s and altered the dynamics of the video rental business. Between early 1991 and mid-1993, its outlets expanded from 1,600 to 3,000. The chain put many local video rental stores out of business. Many of these smaller concerns had carried NC-17 and X-rated films, and as they disappeared from the scene, speciality shops that offered adult rental entertainment moved in to fill the vacuum. By the end of 1992, K-Mart and Walmart had also refused to handle NC-17 films. These two outlets plus Blockbuster accounted for more than half of the video cassette sales in the United States. AU - Clemmons, C. J. AU - Puzzanghera, Jim DA - July 7, 1993 KW - entertainment Classification and Rating Administration classification video cassette recorders (VCRs) self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality entertainment, home Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Blockbuster Video magnetic recording sexuality video rentals video sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) motion pictures media effects media violence lesbianism home entertainment videotape magnetic tape law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA home home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures lesbianism, and motion pictures CARA, and rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation VCRs Blockbuster Video, and NC-17 NC-17, and Blockbuster video stores NC-17, and video home entertainment revolution video, and home home, and video LB - 27520 PY - 1993 SE - Nassau and Suffolk edition SP - 7 ST - How a Ban Changed All T2 - Newsday TI - How a Ban Changed All ID - 1307 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with President Ronald Reagan speech to the 42d annual meeting of the National Association of Evangelical in Columbus, Ohio and his hopes to combat pornography and secular humanism, and to raise the general level of national morality. Reagan described the 1970s as a time of rampant drug abuse, sexual promiscuity and abortion. "In recent years, we must admit, America did seem to lose her religious and moral bearings," the President said. AU - Clines, Francis X. DA - March 7, 1984 KW - conservatives nationalism values Christianity Reagan, Ronald presidents, and new media Reagan administration values archives primary sources sexuality sexuality nudity motion pictures mass media media effects crime values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and crime crime, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship Reagan administration, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and nudity nudity, and Ronald Reagan Reagan, Ronald, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and secular humanism Reagan, Ronald, and liberalism pornography, and evangelicals evangelicals, and pornography religion, and pornography pornography, and religion Reagan, Ronald, and religion Catholics, and pornography pornography, and Catholics critics values +nationalism and communication nationalism, and morality critics values +nationalism and communication nationalism, and morality nationalism, and Ronald Reagan LB - 22510 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1984 SE - A SP - 1 ST - Reagan See U.S. Regaining "Moral Bearings" T2 - New York Times TI - Reagan See U.S. Regaining "Moral Bearings" ID - 979 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In this article, Cobb gives an account of his experience as a movie actor. Also under this headline, there is a paragraph saying that Woodrow Wilson had seen d’Annunzio’s Cabiria at the White House and that “the President pronounced it the most remarkable spectacle he had ever seen, and said it seemed almost unbelievable in its magnitude.” Wilson said the film “revealed new and wondrous possibilities in motion photography as a real art.” AU - Cobb, Irvin S. DA - July 5, 1914 KW - history words vs. images actors acting actors acting photography ref, news presidents and new media photography and visual communication motion pictures Wilson, Woodrow Wilson, Woodrow, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Woodrow Wilson Griffith, D. W. history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures images vs. words war motion pictures, and war war, and motion pictures quotations motion pictures, history written with lightning Wilson, Woodrow, and Cabiria motion pictures, and acting acting, and motion pictures images vs. print ref, NYT LB - 6470 PY - 1914 SE - X SP - 6 ST - ‘How to Act in Movies’ Told by Irvin S. Cobb T2 - New York Times TI - ‘How to Act in Movies’ Told by Irvin S. Cobb ID - 3444 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes a growing "militaristic spirit" in America and contrasts the Ronald Reagan's administration attack on pornography with its lack of a similar program against rising levels of violence in society. AU - Cockburn, Alexander DA - June 19, 1986 KW - conservatives presidents, and new media Reagan administration sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence violence mass media media effects crime law censorship and ratings censorship pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports mass media, and pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and crime crime, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship Reagan administration, and pornography pornography, and violence violence, and pornography pornography, defined LB - 22520 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1986 SE - 1 SP - 31 ST - Violence Has Become the Pornography of the '80s T2 - Wall Street Journal TI - Violence Has Become the Pornography of the '80s ID - 980 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article covers Maine Senator Margaret Chase Smith's criticism of motion pictures which she believed had become too sexually explicit and violent. In June, 1968, Smith chair a brief Senate hearing on movie classification. A clipping of this article can be found in the Margaret Chase Smith Papers, Margaret Chase Smith Library, The Northwood Institute, Skowhegan, ME. AU - Coe, Richard L. DA - Feb. 4, 1968 KW - classification self-regulation government hearings CARA advertising, and public relations censorship and ratings propaganda public relations values media effects media violence government law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification violence Smith, Margaret Chase +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification hearings +television television, and violence violence, and television advertising advertising, and TV violence violence, and TV advertising, critics values LB - 17440 PY - 1968 ST - Senator Smith Vs. Violence in Films T2 - Washington Post TI - Senator Smith Vs. Violence in Films ID - 665 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This Op-Ed piece questions the assertion made by the majority of Meese Commission members that there was a causal link between pornography and asocial, if not outright criminal, behavior. The Commission's conclusion, "more a wish than a scientific finding, was a foregone conclusion," Cohen writes. AU - Cohen, Richard DA - June 3, 1986 KW - sexuality pornography Meese Commission Meese Commission, and critics pornography, and crime pornography, and social science research critics LB - 23760 PY - 1986 SP - 19A ST - Pornography: The "Causal Link" [Op-Ed] T2 - Washington Post TI - Pornography: The "Causal Link" [Op-Ed] ID - 1038 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In the Op-Ed piece, Cohen criticized the hypocrisy involved in the effort to have 7-Eleven stores remove Penthouse from its shelves. He notes that the most recent issue of the magazine runs an except from a book by conservative William F. Buckley. AU - Cohen, Richard DA - March 22, 1986 KW - values sexuality sexuality law censorship and ratings censorship pornography values Penthouse Meese Commission Meese Commission, and Penthouse pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship pornography, and boycotts LB - 28420 PY - 1986 SE - A SP - A27 ST - Soft-Core Hypocrisy T2 - Washington Post TI - Soft-Core Hypocrisy ID - 1379 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In this letter to the editor of the New York Times, the author who is identified as "Secretary Board of Censorship," is responding to an Times article on April 20, 1909, entitled "The Perils of the Moving Picture Shows" which reported on the fire hazards at movie theaters. This writer says that "with the exception of two or three large fireproofed theatres, every moving picture show in the city has it machine inclosed [sic] in a fireproof booth: real fireproof -- Chief Beggin of the Fire Department has seen to this." The subtitle to this article reads: "Most Machines Are Inclosed [sic] in Fireproof Booths." AU - Collier, John DA - April 23, 1909 KW - censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, and fire motion pictures, and celluloid celluloid materials materials, and celluloid theaters, as fire hazard censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and New York ref, NYT LB - 37840 PY - 1909 SP - 8 ST - Moving Picture Shows T2 - New York Times TI - Moving Picture Shows ID - 3883 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article seems to be a tongue-in-cheek reflection on the nature of modern heroes in 1921. “Think most people are hero worshippers, don’t you? Only nowadays they do not pick their heroes from the ranks of soldiers and Senators. Five years of war gave us no outstanding figure, but one year of peace gave us Babe Ruth? Foch merely saved the world. The Babe has founded a legend. His is the fame of Ulysses and Charlemagne and Chaplin. His deeds will be told from father to son. His place in history is secure. He’s a hero. “…My sister Minnie, with whom I live in New Rochelle, doesn’t agree with me. She says John Barrymore is the greatest American. Minnie is one of those people there seems to be thousands of them who are quite without shame in their attitude toward the people on the bright side of the footlights….” 8/25? “…Thus is hero worship spread from Broadway to Main Street. “But it wasn’t until they found a way of putting up heroes in cans and shipping them all over the world that the truly universal character of this emotion was thoroughly demonstrated….” “… Several fat men with bald spots may think they had something to do with the popular success of the motion picture, but it was little Mary [Pickford?] the first of the celluloid heroines projecting her personality from the silver screen to the public heart that first institutionalized the movies by giving the world a new thing to worship. She and her contemporaries have made a permanent place for the screen by bringing hero worship within the reach of all. They may not have cornered heroism, but they certainly have trade-marked it. The movie has revived the Heroic Age and made it pay!” This is list as starting on page 47 (APS Online) although the copy indicates pages 8 and 25 in the original paper/ AU - Collins, Frederick DA - Oct. 2, 1921 KW - fame celebrity actors acting photography ref, news false leaders false leaders, and photography photography, and false leaders photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and false leaders false leaders, and motion pictures heroes motion pictures, and heroes heroes, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sports heroes, and sports ref, NYT LB - 15320 PY - 1921 SP - 8, 25 ST - 'Heroes by Any Other Name' T2 - New York Times TI - 'Heroes by Any Other Name' ID - 3691 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Film makers were unhappy in 1990 that no rating existed for serious adult films that were not pornographic. The uncopyrighted X, originally designed for such adult pictures (e.g., Midnight Cowboy and Last Tango in Paris), had become synonymous with the hard-core industry. To be X-rated, or unclassified, had several drawbacks. Many newspapers would not take advertising for such movies. It meant being excluded from desirable theater locations because some theater chains would not play X-rated films, and many malls had real estate contracts that prohibited their showing. Television stations often would not carry such entertainment. All this amounted to economic coercion and it was nothing less than censorship, movie makers complained. This article runs about 2,300 words. AU - Collins, Glenn DA - April 9, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters X-rated films Valenti, Jack theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture NC-17 rating system (U. S.), and controversies CARA, and rating controversies Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and NC-17 Valenti, Jack, and critics X-rating, and disadvantages X-rated films, and disadvantages theater owners, and X-rated films Heffner, Richard, and X-rated films Heffner, Richard, and adult films critics Heffner, Richard LB - 25000 PY - 1990 SE - C SP - 11C ST - Guidance or Censorship? New Debate on Rating Films T2 - New York Times TI - Guidance or Censorship? New Debate on Rating Films ID - 1101 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with the suit challenging the X-rating given to the movie Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! (1990). AU - Collins, Glenn DA - June 22, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) religion values morality freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality CARA, and William Kunstler Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Ramos, Charles E. Heffner, Richard LB - 25090 PY - 1990 SE - C SP - 4C ST - Judge to Rule in July on X Rating for "Tie Me Up!" T2 - New York Times TI - Judge to Rule in July on X Rating for "Tie Me Up!" ID - 1109 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with the suit challenging the X-rating given to the movie Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! (1990). The Motion Picture Association of America found Judge Charles E. Ramos’s ruling troubling. Although he upheld the X rating and agreed that Miramax had brought the suit, in part, to gain publicity, he questioned the system’s integrity. The ratings amounted to “censorship from within the industry” and they failed to shield children from inappropriate images. “The industry that profits from scenes of mass murder, dismemberment and the portrayal of war as noble and glamorous apparently has no interest in the opinions of professionals, only the opinions of its consumers,” the judge concluded. He criticized the lack of medical and psychiatric professionals to advise CARA. The MPAA’s more lenient approach toward violence was inexcusable, and he urged the industry either to revise the system or to abandon it. Ramos did not rule out future legal challenges. “My hands were tied,” he remarked after releasing the opinion, “but I left open the door ... for a case to be made of discrimination against foreign film makers, or against certain types of film makers.” AU - Collins, Glenn DA - July 20, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) freedom censorship and rating system (U.S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner motion pictures, and morality Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Valenti, Jack, and critics Almodovar, Pedro Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! Kunstler, William Miramax Films Ramos, Charles E. critics values children children, and motion pictures children, and violent movies Heffner, Richard children and violence children, and media LB - 25220 PY - 1990 SE - C SP - 12C ST - Judge Upholds X Rating for Almodovar Film T2 - New York Times TI - Judge Upholds X Rating for Almodovar Film ID - 1118 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the hypnotic or magnetic power that moving pictures seem to have on their audiences. “It is the opinion of the ‘The Spectator’ that every individual connected with the production or exhibition of motion pictures should consider carefully the thought presented last week in this column, vis.; that the strange power of attraction possessed by motion pictures lies in the semblance of reality which the pictures convey; that by means of this impression of reality the motion picture exerts on the minds of the spectators an influence akin to hypnotism or magnetism by visual suggestion; that this sort of limited hypnotic influence is capable of more powerful exertion through the medium of motion pictures than is possible in any sort of stage production or in printed fact or fiction, and that it is therefore the part of wisdom to cultivate absolute realism in every department of the motion picture art. Artificial drama and artificial comedy appeal to have no attraction for the public mind when displayed in motion pictures, no matter how satisfactory they may be on the stage or in printed literature." This article offers advice about how actors can appear more realistic. Don't face the camera or let on that you know you are being filmed. Advice for actors not to play to the “front”: “Realism being the chief end of motion picture acting and directing, just as probability is the thing most to be desired in framing the original story, we may now turn to some of the details. The most conspicuous offense committed by motion picture producers and players against this quality of reality is the tendency that nearly all of them have at times to play to the front, thus betraying unconsciously that they know they are being pictured, and giving the impression to the spectators that they are going through their parts before an audience which is not seen in the picture but which appears to be located in front of the scene. The arrangement of interiors almost invariably accentuates this impression. The chairs almost always face the camera, sometimes reminding one of a minstrel first art. The actor almost always sits at a table sideways so that he can show his full face front. Sometimes he will seat himself with his back squarely to the table located behind his chair while he faces the camera trying to eat, write or talk by occasionally twisting his neck and body into unnatural positions. Two people conversing will deliberately walk down front and instead of facing each other as in real life will face the camera, turning only occasionally to look at the person addressed. An entire room full of people may be seen facing front we see nothing but a sea of white faces with never a back or side view. “Many actors and directors will contend that it is necessary to get the facial expressions over to the spectators and that this continual and monotonous facing front is there unavoidable. How weak this contention is must be apparent after a moment’s thought. When the movement or attitude of the player is obviously unnatural in turning his face toward the camera he betrays by the act the fact that he is acting that there is some one in front unseen by the spectators to whom the actor is addressing himself. Immediately the sense of reality is destroyed and the hypnotic illusion that has taken possession of the spectator’s mind, holding him by the power of visual suggestion, is gone. It is as if the hypnotist were to snap his finger in the face of the subject and say ‘[Light!?]’ The motion picture spectator does not realize and analyze this shock, but he experiences it, and the subtle charm of the picture action is weakened. It therefore follows, and this writer advances it as fundamental, that no player should face the front except when his movements and attitudes may be made to appear to consistently permit it. Be natural above all things, and it will be found that the face may be presented to the front quite frequently enough for all real purposes of perfect expression.” “There are other ways to convey expression than by making faces to the front. Side views should be just as expressive when the situations call for them. Even the back may be eloquent if the actor knows his business. Indeed, the player who can only express his emotions by contortions of the face is no real picture player at all, and he should get out of the profession….” AU - Comments, "Spectator's" DA - May 14, 1910 KW - theater stage fame fame celebrity actors acting ref, news celebrity culture fame personality motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars audiences media effects motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures media effects, and audiences media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and acting acting, and facial expression motion pictures, and not facing camera acting, and not facing camera acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting ref, New York Dramatic Mirror motion pictures LB - 1130 PY - 1910 SP - 18 ST - The Motion Picture Field T2 - New York Dramatic Mirror TI - The Motion Picture Field ID - 3408 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article answers newspapers that denounced “the way the common people continue blindly and ignorantly to attend these ‘vicious,’ ‘degrading,’ ‘demoralizing, ‘hell holes,’ and ‘dens of iniquity,’ especially in face of the repeated warnings of certain good clergymen and jurists, ably assisted by those great moral agents, the cub reporters…. “The whole evil of the motion picture, therefore, lies in its cheapness. They are so cheap that people flock to see them. That is the real curse and no other. Pay $2 on Broadway and you could see Maud Odell stark naked or the Duncan woman and a score of others nearly so, and you can hear nasty jokes that will make your face burn red for a week, but pay 5 or 10 cents to see a picture show of Pippa Passes or the Life of Moses and you’re eternally damned by the cub reporters for the daily press.” AU - Comments, "Spectator's" DA - June 18, 1910 KW - immorality children censorship photography ref, news motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures quotations nudity nudity, and the stage theaters theaters, and 5-cent values, and theater values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values theater, and values values immorality, and theater immorality, and motion pictures motion pictures,and immorality religion religion, and motion pictures religion, and theater theater, and religion motion pictures, and religion quotations ref, New York Dramatic Mirror advertising theater LB - 13770 PY - 1910 SP - 17 ST - The Motion Picture Field T2 - New York Dramatic Mirror TI - The Motion Picture Field ID - 3536 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article offers advice to actors to act natural and not look directly at the camera. “The tendency to be theatrical is perhaps the most difficult thing the stage player has to overcome in working before the camera. Formerly nearly all picture players raved and posed on all occasions, … The remedy lies in the simple rule already laid down in this discussion: Be natural! .... …. “To make a picture appear real every detail should be carefully watched, not alone in the manner of the acting but also in the properties and settings, and in the general directing of the scene…. “…Too many people know that picture shows are not ‘hell holes,’ as one clergyman called them, nor are they ‘the principle cause for young people going astray,’ as a city magistrate alleges….” AU - Comments, "Spectator's" DA - May 28, 1910 KW - immorality fame facial expressions children celebrity censorship actors acting photography ref, news motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures quotations nudity nudity, and the stage theaters theaters, and 5-cent values, and theater values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values theater, and values values immorality, and theater immorality, and motion pictures motion pictures,and immorality religion religion, and motion pictures religion, and theater theater, and religion motion pictures, and religion quotations celebrity culture cameras cameras, and acting acting, and facial expression facial expressions, and acting fame, and acting acting, and fame motion pictures, and acting personality motion pictures, and stars ref, New York Dramatic Mirror advertising theater LB - 13780 PY - 1910 SP - 20 ST - The Motion Picture Field T2 - New York Dramatic Mirror TI - The Motion Picture Field ID - 3537 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article gives advice on how actors can project realism control eyes and not let on that you know that you are being observed. “Another word about this business of actors playing to the front, since the matter of realism is again under discussion. Improvement can be discovered in the work of nearly all film makers in this respect, especially since The Mirror in this department has taken the matter up for treatment. But there is great room for still further improvement. Not until the motion picture players learn to make their eyes behave entirely will the fault be even measurably eliminated. And making a player’s eyes behave is a difficult matter, beyond doubt. This Spectator has in mind an excellent picture of recent issue that was marred by the leading lady’s frequent tendency to glance momentarily toward the camera, as if she knew there was an audience in front. The situation in the picture did not suppose any such audience to exist. No motion picture drama or straight comedy supposes an unseen audience to be located out in front looking at the action. We, the spectators, are not a part of the picture, nor is there supposed to be a camera there making a motion photograph of the scene. And yet this young actress, and many others like her, male and female, just can’t make their eyes behave. Many of them try, but few succeed. “…Let the motion picture players endeavor to imagine themselves out in front looking on and then ask themselves this question: Are we making this action appear like reality or are we betraying by the slightest glance or movement the fact that we are actors, and that we know we are being observed?” AU - Comments, "Spectator’s" DA - June 25, 1910 KW - theater stage fame fame celebrity actors acting ref, news celebrity culture fame personality motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars audiences media effects motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures media effects, and audiences media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and acting acting, and facial expression motion pictures, and not facing camera acting, and not facing camera acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and stars (origins) ref, New York Dramatic Mirror motion pictures LB - 15510 PY - 1910 SP - 17 ST - The Motion Picture Field T2 - New York Dramatic Mirror TI - The Motion Picture Field ID - 3710 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article comments on the importance of having a "big idea" in making a compelling motion pictures. “Second, we may inquire how one may be able to decide on the qualities necessary to the popularity of the individual film, and it is here that we come to the meat of this entire matter…. Let us call it the big idea not commonplace or trivial, but novel or unusual and always logical, telling a story that make a lasting impression. Therefore it follows that the first essential is the big or unusual logical idea….” AU - Comments, "Spectator's" DA - April 9, 1910 KW - theater stage fame fame celebrity actors acting ref, news celebrity culture fame personality motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars audiences media effects motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures media effects, and audiences media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and acting acting, and facial expression motion pictures, and not facing camera acting, and not facing camera acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and stars (origins) ref, New York Dramatic Mirror motion pictures LB - 15530 PY - 1910 SP - 17 ST - The Motion Picture Field T2 - New York Dramatic Mirror TI - The Motion Picture Field ID - 3712 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses how moving picture acting differs from the live stage and the importance of projecting realism before the camera. “The picture play also differs from the stage play in this: There is no hint of footlights, nor an audience, nor even outside spectators. This writer has before now pointed out this fact as constituting one of the chief charms of motion pictures and at the risk of tiresome repetition…. “It should therefore be the aim of the picture producer and the picture player to strive all the time to give the impression of reality and to avoid, above all other things, the slightest intimation to the spectator that what he is looking at is not the genuine record of actual events. Any action or situation that betrays to the spectator that the players know they are being looked at destroys or weakens the advantage that has been gained by the illusion of the motion picture. The appreciation of the art value and the psychological influence of the motion picture should encourage producers, players and exhibitors to join in doing their utmost to maintain throughout the element of reality. It is the foundation of motion picture effect the secret of motion picture power. It is the reason why the inanimate reflection on the on the screen appears sometimes to exert personal magnetism on the spectators, like the magnetic actor or speaker. It is, in short, a species of hypnotism by visual suggestion. Then why not make the most of it?” AU - Comments, "Spectator's" DA - May 7, 1910 KW - theater stage fame fame celebrity actors acting ref, news celebrity culture fame personality motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars audiences media effects motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures media effects, and audiences media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and acting acting, and facial expression motion pictures, and not facing camera acting, and not facing camera acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting ref, New York Dramatic Mirror motion pictures LB - 15540 PY - 1910 SP - 18 ST - The Motion Picture Field T2 - New York Dramatic Mirror TI - The Motion Picture Field ID - 3713 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article, one of a series, gives advice to actors. Don’t face the camera, avoid pantomime, and don’t talk to yourself on camera. “…The camera must be made to see, as with the eyes of spectators who are to be, all that take place, but that which the camera sees and records should appear truthful and natural and should not bear on its face the stamp of counterfeit. It is no doubt a difficult matter to arrange a scene so that it shall appear to be the real thing and yet permit the camera to record clearly all that occurs, and this is precisely where superior directing and acting comes in. As for facial expression, too much dependence is placed upon it by the average picture player. The face is only one small part of the body, and with a great majority of players when the face is turned toward the front it has abut as much real expression as a wooden Indian. Either this or it is distorted into a unnatural grimace that defeats the very purpose of the player. “… The chief purpose of the good player being to further the impression of reality, he should avoid rather than make use of pantomime, except where pantomime is legitimately called for….” AU - Comments, "Spectator's" DA - May 21, 1910 KW - theater stage fame fame celebrity actors acting ref, news celebrity culture fame personality motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars audiences media effects motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures media effects, and audiences media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and acting acting, and facial expression motion pictures, and not facing camera acting, and not facing camera acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting ref, New York Dramatic Mirror motion pictures LB - 15550 PY - 1910 SP - 19 ST - The Motion Picture Field T2 - New York Dramatic Mirror TI - The Motion Picture Field ID - 3714 ER - TY - NEWS AB - These are excepts from a Federal Trade Commission report that revealed that movie studios, music producers, and video game makers marketed graphically violent entertainment to very young children. Such studios as MGM/United Artists, Columbia TriStar, Disney, frequently targeted children, some as young as 10, for violent, adult-oriented movies, music, and electronic video games, the FTC discovered. They used advertising, comic books, and cartoon programs to reach children. Both President Bill Clinton and Vice President Al Gore threatened to support strong regulatory legislation unless such advertising stopped. AU - Commission, Federal Trade DA - Sept. 12, 2000 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation Federal Trade Commission (FTC) CARA advertising, and public relations Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings propaganda public relations motion pictures media effects media violence violence FTC censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and children children, and media children, and violence motion pictures, and violence advertising advertising, and motion pictures advertising, and children advertising, and movie violence media effects FTC, and motion pictures motion pictures, and FTC Valenti, Jack, and violence Valenti, Jack, and children Valenti, Jack, and advertising video games video games, and children children, and video games rating system (U. S.), and controversies video games rating system (U. S.), and children children, and music rating system (U. S.) violence, and motion pictures violence, and video games violence, and children violence, and music LB - 27090 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 2000 SE - A SP - 24 ST - Excepts from the Violence Report T2 - New York Times TI - Excepts from the Violence Report ID - 1266 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This articles discusses Jack Valenti and his relationships with Lyndon B. Johnson and Ronald Reagan. Valenti was highly critical of Robert Caro's biography of Johnson. AU - Conconi, Chuck DA - March 30, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA politics motion pictures Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and politics Valenti, Jack, and Ronald Reagan Valenti, Jack, and Lyndon Johnson motion pictures, and politics politics, and Jack Valenti Caro, Robert, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and history Valenti, Jack, and Robert Caro LB - 26850 PY - 1990 SE - B SP - 3 ST - Personalities T2 - Washington Post TI - Personalities ID - 1247 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that "after a brief -- but heralded -- pause during the ascendancy of both the Reagan era and AIDS" in the exploitation of explicit sex, the movie "industry went right back to the business of merchandising sex. In 1992, it raced to make up for lost time" with such movies as Basic Instinct, The Lover, Damage, and Body of Evidence. AU - Connors, Joanna DA - Jan. 24, 1993 KW - classification self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality CARA sexuality sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) motion pictures Hollywood law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification motion pictures and popular culture sex, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sex NC-17 Hollywood, and sex sex, and Hollywood rating system (U. S.), and sex adult films motion pictures, and adult films motion pictures, and eroticism Basic Instinct (1992) The Lover (1992) Damage (1992) Body of Evidence (1993) LB - 23900 PY - 1993 SE - H SP - 1H ST - Real Erotica More than Skin Deep; Many Hollywood Movies Fail to Flesh Out Spiritual, Truly Human Side of Sex T2 - The Plain Dealer [Cleveland] TI - Real Erotica More than Skin Deep; Many Hollywood Movies Fail to Flesh Out Spiritual, Truly Human Side of Sex ID - 1050 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with the public television program "The Open Mind," hosted by Richard D. Heffner, who was also then head of the motion picture industry's Classification and Rating Administration. "The Open Mind" interviewed leading intellectuals and political leaders. AU - Corry, John DA - April 26, 1987 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner CARA CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and background Heffner, Richard Open Mind, and Richard Heffner +television television, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and television Heffner, Richard, and Open Mind LB - 20870 PY - 1987 SE - 2 ST - 'Open Mind' Speaks of Ideas T2 - New York Times TI - 'Open Mind' Speaks of Ideas ID - 888 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the state of movie censorship in Hollywood following the MPAA's decision on October 3, 1961, to relax its restrictions under the Production Code and permit treatment of homosexuality in films. AU - Crowther, Bosley DA - Oct. 29, 1961 KW - censorship self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality , news motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings Johnston, Eric, and Production Code sexuality motion pictures, and sex Production Code, and sex Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality homosexuality, and motion pictures censorship, and homosexuality Production Code, and homosexuality LB - 35400 PY - 1961 SP - X1 ST - Delicate Subjects: A Sober Consideration of the Use of Sensitive Material in Films T2 - New York Times TI - Delicate Subjects: A Sober Consideration of the Use of Sensitive Material in Films ID - 3179 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the 1956 revision of the motion picture Production Code which relaxed restrictions on treating drug addiction, abortion, prostitution, and kidnapping. Crowther says that the streamlined Code made it "a body of instructions to producers rather than laws." He notes that the appeals process is still flawed what with only executives from the nine studios that were MPAA members. These people passed judgment on their competitors product. Crowther looked forward to the day when the entire Code would be eliminated. AU - Crowther, Bosley DA - Dec. 16, 1956 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Production Code, and Appeals Board LB - 35450 PY - 1956 SP - X3 ST - Changing the Script: Welcome Revisions Made in Production Code T2 - New York Times TI - Changing the Script: Welcome Revisions Made in Production Code ID - 3184 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In November, 1955, the New York Times reported that United Artist would release the movie, The Man with the Golden Arm, with or without the PCA’s seal. It was the first time that a major studio had announced its intention to exhibit a controversial film before submitting it to the PCA. The studio did submit the film to the PCA but the PCA refused to approve it. Johnston and the MPAA’s Appeals Board upheld this decision on December 6, 1955, but the studio heads were divided. Only five voted to uphold the appeal while four other abstained. The following day, Arthur Krim announced that United Artist would withdraw from the MPAA in protest. This episode contributed to Johnston's decision to revise the Production Code in 1956. The revised Code permitted treatments of narcotics use in movies. AU - Crowther, Bosley DA - Dec. 11, 1955 KW - Sinatra, Frank self-regulation motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) Legion of Decency , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of Legion of Decency, effectiveness motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and drugs motion pictures, and drugs censorship and ratings Production Code (1956) Krim, Arthur Preminger, Otto Production Code, and United Artists Man with the Golden Arm Catholic Church values LB - 35660 PY - 1955 SP - 149 ST - Drugging the Code: Film Company Heads Put Clamp on Change T2 - New York Times TI - Drugging the Code: Film Company Heads Put Clamp on Change ID - 3205 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The movie that first caused the motion picture industry Production Code’s barricades against nudity to give way was a black-and-white film called The Pawnbroker (1965). The movie was filmed on location in Harlem and starred Rod Steiger who played a Holocaust survivor. Shurlock initially rejected the film because it had two scenes showing fully exposed women’s breasts, but because of the important theme, he thought the Appeals Board should decide if the movie deserved special treatment. Although the film got the PCA seal on appeal, the MPAA tried to uphold its nudity ban by making this picture an “exception.” AU - Crowther, Bosley DA - March 9, 1965 KW - self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality , news sexuality censorship and ratings values women motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and history of sex nudity motion pictures, and nudity censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and exploitation circuit pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography sexuality Production Code, and nudity nudity, and Production Code Pawnbroker (1965) Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) pornography censorship LB - 35820 PY - 1965 SP - 30 ST - New Decision Due on Movie Nudity: Industry Panel Weighs Case of 'The Pawnbroker' T2 - New York Times TI - New Decision Due on Movie Nudity: Industry Panel Weighs Case of 'The Pawnbroker' ID - 3219 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Crowther criticizes the decision by U.S. Ambassdor to Italy, Clare Booth Luce, not to attend the Venice Film Festival if the movie Blackboard Jungle is shown. This decision smacks of government censorship, Crowther argues, something not practiced except in wartime. Crowther says this decision will only increase foreign curiosity about the movie and make it more likely that more people will see the film. Crowther, though, also questions the process by which American films are chosen to play in foreign film festivals. AU - Crowther, Bosley DA - Sept. 4, 1955 KW - self-regulation , news Production Code (1956) Blackboard Jungle censorship and ratings motion pictures, and reform freedom capitalism democracy motion pictures, and freedom motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and democracy Johnston, Eric motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and foreign markets Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 36020 PY - 1955 SP - X1 ST - Festival Frustration: Removal of 'Blackboard Jungle' at Venice Raises Grave Questions T2 - New York Times TI - Festival Frustration: Removal of 'Blackboard Jungle' at Venice Raises Grave Questions ID - 3238 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the fuss over the French film Lady Chatterley's Lover (1957), which New York State censors tried to ban and a ban which the U. S. Supreme Court later overturned. Crowther says the love scenes in this film are "strangely tepic" for a French film and cannot "hold a candle to the ones" in the British film, Room at the Top, which was a smash hit when it played in the United States. AU - Crowther, Bosley DA - July 19, 1959 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) motion pictures, and foreign films Production Code, and foreign films Lady Chatterley's Lover Room at the Top motion pictures, and state censorship children LB - 36270 PY - 1959 SP - X1 ST - Season of Madness: Strange Things Happen in Local Film Realm T2 - New York Times TI - Season of Madness: Strange Things Happen in Local Film Realm ID - 3260 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Crowther writes about eight foreign-made films, the notable being Brigitte Bardot's And God Created Woman. The movie was “so frankly and fragrantly carnal,” and but one of several European-made films that had recently opened in America, that it suggested that sex was “obsessing foreign minds,” said Crowther. AU - Crowther, Bosley DA - Nov. 3, 1957 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) motion pictures, and foreign films Production Code, and foreign films And God Created Woman Bardot, Brigitte sexuality children LB - 36280 PY - 1957 SP - 137 ST - Probing Foreign Films: Large Crop of New Ones Runs to Sex Themes and Low-Grade Comedy T2 - New York Times TI - Probing Foreign Films: Large Crop of New Ones Runs to Sex Themes and Low-Grade Comedy ID - 3261 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses Never on Sunday (1960), the Greek film comedy by blacklisted writer-director Jules Dassin. Written and directed by Dassin, the movie was about an American tourist (played by Dassin) in Greece who attempts, unsuccessfully, to reform a prostitute (played by Melina Mercouri). The movie was made for about $150,000 and made about $5 million in the United States alone. When Dassin’s film played in Atlanta, censors tried to ban it for being obscene, but ban was overturned when the Fulton County Superior Court held the city’s censorship law to be unconstitutional. By that time, the film had played in more than 2,000 theaters in 175 American cities AU - Crowther, Bosley DA - Oct. 23, 1960 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) motion pictures, and foreign films Production Code, and foreign films law motion pictures, and local censorship Never on Sunday (1960) motion pictures, and blacklist children blacklisting LB - 36310 PY - 1960 SP - X1 ST - Ingenious Paradox: 'Never on Sunday' Puts a Wry Idea on Screen T2 - New York Times TI - Ingenious Paradox: 'Never on Sunday' Puts a Wry Idea on Screen ID - 3264 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses several films including Never on Sunday (1960), the Greek comedy by blacklisted writer-director Jules Dassin. Written and directed by Dassin, the movie was about an American tourist (played by Dassin) in Greece who attempts, unsuccessfully, to reform a prostitute (played by Melina Mercouri). The movie was made for about $150,000 and made about $5 million in the United States alone. Although not discussed in this article, when Dassin’s film played in Atlanta, censors tried to ban it for being obscene, but ban was overturned when the Fulton County Superior Court held the city’s censorship law to be unconstitutional. By that time, the film had played in more than 2,000 theaters in 175 American cities AU - Crowther, Bosley DA - Oct. 1, 1961 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) motion pictures, and foreign films Production Code, and foreign films law motion pictures, and local censorship Never on Sunday (1960) motion pictures, and blacklist blacklisting children LB - 36320 PY - 1961 SP - X1 ST - The Little Picture: Arguments for Sense Over Physical Size T2 - New York Times TI - The Little Picture: Arguments for Sense Over Physical Size ID - 3265 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Making films abroad sometimes offered movie makers freedom to deal with topics in ways that might not have been possible in the United States. Cecil B. DeMille shot much of his epic film, The Ten Commandments, in Egypt where new movie making technologies such as 70mm film, CinemaScope, and VistaVision allowed him to emphasize the area’s spectacular settings. DeMille took inspiration from classical painters and paid much attention to the use of color in the film. In Egypt, DeMille found it possible to create, according to historian Peter Lev, “a level of sexual display scanty costumes and suggestive scenes which would have otherwise encountered censorship problems in the United States and many other countries,” concludes one film historian. There were other matters with which religious purists might have quarreled. DeMille’s movie dealt with thirty years of Moses’s life not chronicled in the Bible. And in it “emphasis on freedom and the blending of religious and political discourses,” it reflected contemporary American Cold War values. When Eric Johnston, president of the MPAA, negotiated a film exchange with the USSR in 1958, the Soviets declined to take this movie as part of the package. Here, Crowther says that DeMille "has plainly made Moses a hero by all the standards of modern-day success. This hero is played by Charlton Heston with muscular arrogance." AU - Crowther, Bosley DA - Nov. 11, 1956 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union Eisenhower administration , news motion pictures USSR non-USA motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and foreign policy Eisenhower, Dwight D. presidents and new media Eisenhower, Dwight D., and motion pictures MPAA Motion Picture Export Association Ten Commandments religion values motion pictures, and religion motion pictures, and values DeMille, Cecil motion pictures, and American-interest films hybrid films values LB - 36340 PY - 1956 SP - 141 ST - Lesson for Today: Expanded Bible Story in De Mille's New Film T2 - New York Times TI - Lesson for Today: Expanded Bible Story in De Mille's New Film ID - 3267 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses several motion pictures, including To Catch a Thief (1955), starring Cary Grant and Grace Kelly, and their use of such technology as CinemaScope,VistaVision, and color. To Catch a Thief, by Alfred Hitchcock, was filmed on the French Riviera. Crowther says the picture gives Cannes "a spaciousness and beauty that makes you feel now and then that it is real." Of the love story between the Grant and Kelly characters, it is made more believeable by "the romantic look made more vivid by color and CinemaScope." AU - Crowther, Bosley DA - Aug. 21, 1955 KW - Hitchcock, Alfred , news motion pictures color CinemaScope motion pictures, and technology cameras motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and widescreen Hitchcock, Alfred, and color To Catch a Thief motion pictures, and American interest films hybrid films VistaVision LB - 36360 PY - 1955 SP - 97 ST - On Places and Faces: New Films Offer a Variety of Views of Geography and History T2 - New York Times TI - On Places and Faces: New Films Offer a Variety of Views of Geography and History ID - 3269 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In this review of Alfred Hitchcock's film To Catch a Thief, Crowther discusses the use of such technology as VistaVision and color. The film was one of the so-called "runaway" or American-interest films of the 1950s, film in France along the French Riviera. Crowther says that "Hitchcok has used that famous coast to form a pictorial backdrop that fairly yanks yours eyes out of your head. Almost at the start, he gives you an automobile chase along roads that wind throug cliff-hanging seaside villages." However, the camera man had "a bad time with slow dissolves and fades. He has not mastered VistaVision. It has almost mastered him." AU - Crowther, Bosley DA - Aug. 5, 1955 KW - Hitchcock, Alfred , news motion pictures color CinemaScope motion pictures, and technology cameras motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and widescreen Hitchcock, Alfred, and color To Catch a Thief motion pictures, and American interest films hybrid films VistaVision LB - 36370 PY - 1955 SP - 14 ST - Screen: Cat Man Out 'To Catch a Thief' T2 - New York Times TI - Screen: Cat Man Out 'To Catch a Thief' ID - 3270 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This piece begins: "Something unsavory is happening in the motion-picture realm that demands the exercise of utmost vigilance and responsibility on the part of those who are truly interested in the future of films. This is the tendency of producers, made evident in any number of recent films, to go for licentious stories and/or inject extreme and gross sex details in their works." He goes on to say: "Such pictures as 'Suddenly, Last Summer,' 'From the Terrace,' 'Strangers When We Meet,' and even 'Elmer Gantry,' to mention only a few, have betrayed a concentrated predilection on the part of major producers with the abnormal and crass aspects of sex." AU - Crowther, Bosley DA - Sept. 25, 1960 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Suddenly, Last Summer (1960) motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and American-interest film sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures LB - 36390 PY - 1960 SP - X1 ST - Dishing the Dirt: A Blast at Mercenary Sordidness in Films T2 - New York Times TI - Dishing the Dirt: A Blast at Mercenary Sordidness in Films ID - 3272 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Filmed in Hong Kong and England, The World of Suzie Wong was a movie about a prostitute (played by Nancy Kwan) and part of the story was set inside a brothel, despite the Code’s explicit restrictions against showing such establishments. The advertising referred to Kwan’s character as a “yum-yum girl,” and Crowther in his review says that Kwan played her “so blithely and innocently" that even women in the audience should like her. AU - Crowther, Bosley DA - Nov. 11, 1960 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and prostitution Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code World of Suzie Wong motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and American-interest film Legion of Decency values Production Code, and prostitution sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures LB - 36480 PY - 1960 SP - 36 ST - The Screen: ‘World of Suzie Wong’ T2 - New York Times TI - The Screen: ‘World of Suzie Wong’ ID - 3281 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that Jack Valenti's selection as the new MPAA president was like a "bolt out of the blue." Valenti is described as "an exceptionally eager and vigorous" leader who "is known to be a human dynamo a tangle of nerves and muscles who likes to get things done." He is quoted as saying "I don't ever remember seeing a bad movie." AU - Crowther, Bosley DA - May 1, 1966 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA self-regulation Johnson, Lyndon CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) presidents, and new media NATO CARA Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA Valenti, Jack Johnson administration Valenti, Jack, and LBJ Johnson, Lyndon, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and background motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and Jack Valenti MPAA, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and MPAA Production Code, and decline of Production Code, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and Production Code ,news Nizer, Louis MPAA, and Louis Nizer Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 36710 PY - 1966 SP - 125 ST - New Czar on the Job T2 - New York Times TI - New Czar on the Job ID - 3304 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that "close to half of the movies released in the United States every year are not even submitted for approval of the Production Code." Most people don't know about the Code or care, Crowther writes. Audiences around the U. S. and especially in New York, do "not give two hoots as to whether a picture has passed the Production Code." AU - Crowther, Bosley DA - April 9, 1967 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality CARA , news abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion Production Code Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey, and abortion motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and PCA +television television, and motion pictures television, and abortion motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and sex television, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, foreign motion pictures, and foreign censorship and ratings Production Code, 1966 Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey classification motion pictures, and classification MPAA, and classification NATO audiences censorship and ratings National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) LB - 36840 PY - 1967 SP - 97 ST - What's the Dingbat For? T2 - New York Times TI - What's the Dingbat For? ID - 3316 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Crowther talks about the fact that film has become so sophisticated, "aimed at such a wide range of intellects and tastes," (14) that the MPAA should abandon its efforts to dictate which movies it feels are morally pure for specific audiences. The new MPAA president, Jack Valenti, Crowther says, "has a great chance to reevaluate and revolutionize its [Hollywood's] thinking about moral responsibility." (14) AU - Crowther, Bosley DA - Aug. 28, 1966 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation sexuality sexuality MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality CARA , news abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion Production Code Production Code, and abortion motion pictures, and PCA television television, and motion pictures television, and abortion motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and sex television, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, foreign motion pictures, and foreign censorship and ratings Production Code, 1966 Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey classification motion pictures, and classification MPAA, and classification NATO audiences censorship and ratings Nizer, Louis Valenti, Jack National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) LB - 36920 PY - 1966 SP - 1, 14 ST - A New Responsibility for Films T2 - New York Times TI - A New Responsibility for Films ID - 3324 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article surveys the ways in which motion pictures and television programs have portrayed Jesus. It came as a controversy arose over the movie The Last Temptation of Christ (1988). Dart notes that religious critics denounced movies during the 1970s -- The Passover Plot (1976), Franco Zefferelli's television mini-series, Jesus of Nazareth (1977), and Monty Python's Life of Brian (1979). The article discusses Nikos Kazantzakis' (1883-1957) novel, The Last Temptation of Christ. AU - Dart, John DA - July 30, 1988 KW - values motion pictures Hollywood values +motion pictures and popular culture +television television and religion religion, and television motion pictures, and religion religion, and motion pictures Hollywood, and religion Jesus, and Hollywood images critics values religion LB - 24290 PY - 1988 SE - 1 SP - 1 ST - Age Old Problem: Portrayals of Christ Tempt Controversy T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Age Old Problem: Portrayals of Christ Tempt Controversy ID - 1076 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about religious leaders such as Daniel Berrigan, Robert E. A. Lee (a former movie review for Lutheran magazine), and others who saw little or knowing that was morally offensive in the film The Last Temptation of Christ (1988). AU - Dart, John DA - July 14, 1988 KW - values Christianity Protestants values motion pictures Hollywood values religion Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion Last Temptation of Christ (1988) boycotts, and Last Temptation motion pictures, and boycotts Catholics, and Last Temptation Protestants, and Last Temptation of Christ motion pictures, and anti-religion critics values LB - 24320 PY - 1988 SE - 6 (Calendar) SP - 1 ST - Some Clerics See No Evil in "Temptation" T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Some Clerics See No Evil in "Temptation" ID - 1079 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In reaction to Universal Pictures' controversial movie The Last Temptation of Christ (1988), fundamentalists and other religious critics urged a boycott of the video release of the popular Universal movie E. T. (1982). AU - Dart, John DA - Aug. 27, 1988 KW - corporations corporations values Christianity Protestants values motion pictures Hollywood values religion Catholic Church boycotts Scorsese, Martin +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion Last Temptation of Christ (1988) boycotts, and Last Temptation motion pictures, and boycotts Catholics, and Last Temptation Protestants, and Last Temptation of Christ motion pictures, and anti-religion boycotts, and E.T. critics values critics Universal Pictures LB - 24350 PY - 1988 SE - 2 (Metro) SP - 6 ST - "Last Temptation" Views Still Coming In; Boycott of "E.T." Among Religious Reactions to Controversial Movie T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - "Last Temptation" Views Still Coming In; Boycott of "E.T." Among Religious Reactions to Controversial Movie ID - 1081 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about evangelist Bill Bright's offer to Lew Wasserman of Universal Pictures to buy all copies of the movie The Last Temptation of Christ (1988). AU - Dart, John DA - July 16, 1988 KW - values Christianity Wasserman, Lew Protestants values motion pictures Hollywood values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion Last Temptation of Christ (1988) boycotts, and Last Temptation motion pictures, and boycotts Catholics, and Last Temptation Protestants, and Last Temptation of Christ motion pictures, and anti-religion Bright, Bill, and Last Temptation censorship, and Last Temptation Wasserman, Lew, and Bill Bright Bright, Bill LB - 24370 PY - 1988 SE - 2 (Metro) SP - 3 ST - Evangelist Offers to Buy All Copies of Christ Movie T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Evangelist Offers to Buy All Copies of Christ Movie ID - 1083 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about a new edition of Nikos Kazantzakis's 1960 novel The Last Temptation of Christ. The novel was the basis for the 1988 film by Martin Scorcese. AU - Dart, John DA - Aug. 19, 1988 KW - corporations corporations advertising, and public relations Universal Pictures propaganda public relations propaganda advertising novels motion pictures boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture boycotts, and Last Temptation Last Temptation of Christ (1988) public relations Universal Pictures, and advertising Universal Pictures, and public relations public relations, and Last Temptation advertising advertising, and Last Temptation Universal Pictures, and Touchstone Books Kazantzakis, Nikos novels, and motion pictures religion values LB - 24470 PY - 1988 SE - 6 (Calendar) SP - 6 ST - 'Temptation, with a New Cover, Due at Bookstores, Publisher Says T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - 'Temptation, with a New Cover, Due at Bookstores, Publisher Says ID - 1087 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that the Catholic bishops' Department of Communication in New York had rated Martin Scorcese's movie The Last Temptation of Christ (1988) "morally offensive." This rating "couched in relatively mild criticism," went to 53,000,000 Catholics. AU - Dart, John DA - Aug. 10, 1988 KW - corporations corporations values Christianity Universal Pictures Protestants values motion pictures Hollywood values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion Last Temptation of Christ (1988) boycotts, and Last Temptation motion pictures, and boycotts Catholics, and Last Temptation Protestants, and Last Temptation of Christ motion pictures, and anti-religion boycotts, and Universal Universal Pictures, and boycotts censorship, and Last Temptation critics values LB - 24530 PY - 1988 SE - 2 (Metro) SP - 3 ST - Church Declares 'Last Temptation' Morally Offensive T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Church Declares 'Last Temptation' Morally Offensive ID - 1093 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Los Angeles Times religion writer John Dart says that "despite the vociferous religious opposition to The Last Temptation of Christ, the film that was released Friday, many churches may use the occasion to examine anew and proclaim their beliefs about Jesus -- especially the doctrine that he was truly tempted yet sinless." The article goes on to discuss possible misrepresentations of the movie's final scenes. AU - Dart, John DA - Aug. 13, 1988 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) motion pictures, and religion Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation corporations motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality corporations CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) advertising, and public relations universities censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda advertising values sexuality motion pictures First Amendment freedom values religion law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA CARA boycotts motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and religion religion religion, and motion pictures movies, and religion nudity motion pictures, and nudity motion pictures, and nudity CARA, and religion CARA, and nudity Kazantzakis, Nikos Schrader, Paul Cocks, Jay Universal Pictures Wasserman, Lew universities, and religion motion pictures, and boycotts CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies Wall, James Robertson, Pat Dobson, James First Amendment, and motion pictures motion pictures, and First Amendment public relations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and public relations public relations Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and religion Valenti, Jack, and First Amendment First Amendment, and Jack Valenti Heffner, Richard, and religion censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and boycotts boycotts, and motion pictures Bright, Bill Campus Crusade for Christ Scorsese, Martin Blockbuster Video Valenti, Jack, and censorship nudity, and religion religion, and nudity Dafoe, Willem Hershey, Barbara Bowie, David Southern Baptist Christian Life Commission critics values Heffner, Richard LB - 28550 PY - 1988 SE - 2 (Metro) SP - 6 ST - 'Temptation' May Lead to Examination and Renewal of Faith T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - 'Temptation' May Lead to Examination and Renewal of Faith ID - 1392 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that Los Angeles Archbishop Roger M. Mahony says that the Roman Catholic Church is likely to declare Martin Scorcese's movie The Last Temptation of Christ (1988) to be "morally offensive." AU - Dart, John DA - July 20, 1988 KW - corporations corporations values Christianity Universal Pictures Protestants values motion pictures Hollywood values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion Last Temptation of Christ (1988) boycotts, and Last Temptation motion pictures, and boycotts Catholics, and Last Temptation Protestants, and Last Temptation of Christ motion pictures, and anti-religion boycotts, and Universal Universal Pictures, and boycotts censorship, and Last Temptation critics values Mahony, Roger LB - 28590 PY - 1988 SE - 2 (Metro) SP - 3 ST - Church Likely to Condemn 'Temptation,' Mahony Says T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Church Likely to Condemn 'Temptation,' Mahony Says ID - 1396 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that despite peaceful protests and efforts to boycott the movie The Last Temptation of Christ (1988) (or perhaps because of them), the movie played to generally large in the cities where it opened. AU - Dart, John AU - Chandler, Russell DA - Aug. 13, 1988 KW - corporations corporations values Christianity advertising, and public relations Universal Pictures propaganda advertising Protestants values motion pictures Hollywood values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion Last Temptation of Christ (1988) boycotts, and Last Temptation motion pictures, and boycotts Catholics, and Last Temptation Protestants, and Last Temptation of Christ motion pictures, and anti-religion boycotts, and Universal Universal Pictures, and boycotts censorship, and Last Temptation Bright, Bill public relations, and Last Temptation public relations Last Temptation, and marketing strategies Last Temptation, and public relations LB - 24500 PY - 1988 SE - 1 SP - 1ff ST - Full Theaters, Protests Greet "Temptation" T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Full Theaters, Protests Greet "Temptation" ID - 1090 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about using mass-produced color still photographs to publicize movies and their stars that appear in Technicolor films. It says that "Perhaps a dozen newspapers throughout the country are equipped to reproduce colored photographs in their daily editions, but a great many more use colored rotogravure on Sunday. There are also innumerable fan, fiction and photographic magazines, and a few dealing with the stage and motion pictures as graphic arts, which no doubt will welcome the revolution" that the photographers who make these stills are bringing about. AU - Daugherty, Frank DA - Sept. 19, 1937 KW - rotogravure journalism celebrity photography ref, news modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media photography, and rotogravure process rotogravure process rotogravure process, and photography rotogravure process, and newspapers newspapers, and rotogravure process journalism, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and journalism photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers photography, and advertising advertising, and photography photography, and high speed newspapers, and presses duplicating technologies color color, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and color color, and newspapers newspapers, and color newspapers, and color photos motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures celebrity culture celebrity culture, and color photos celebrity culture, and newspapers newspapers, and celebrity culture color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color color color, and movie stars Technicolor Technicolor, and newspapers newspapers, and Technicolor movies magazines, and photography magazines photography, and magazines magazines, and photography color, and fan magazines fan magazines, and color photos advertising fan magazines history motion pictures LB - 41020 PY - 1937 SP - 179 ST - Chromos in Hollywood T2 - New York Times TI - Chromos in Hollywood ID - 4201 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In addition to Reagan's comments about keeping classes open on California campuses, Governor Reagan asked the state legislator for a "drive against pornogrpahy and narcotics." AU - Davies, Lawrence E. DA - Jan. 8, 1969 KW - Reagan, Ronald pornography sexuality Reagan, Ronald, and pornogrphy Reagan, Ronald, and student activists Reagan, Ronald, and drug abuse LB - 29260 PY - 1969 SP - 36 ST - Reagan Promises to Rid Campuses of 'Anarchists' T2 - New York Times TI - Reagan Promises to Rid Campuses of 'Anarchists' ID - 2696 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article recounts the career of the noted illustrator, Valeian Gribayedoff. Gribayedoff was born in Russia, educated in England, and worked in the United States as an illustrator until the late 1890s. He died in Paris. He also took the only photographs as the re-trial of Captain Alfred Dreyfus. This article says that Gribayedoff was "the originator of newspaper illustration in New York." He worked in New York for several years. Among the subjects of his drawing were Charles A. Dana and William Jennings Bryan. Gribayedoff's work appeared mainly in weekly and monthly magazines and his work was especially prominent in Leslie's Weekly. AU - Dead, Gribayedoff AU - Illustrator, Noted DA - Feb. 17, 1908 KW - wood engraving journalism journalism celebrity celebrity culture magazines, and photography ref, secondary news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving critics critics, and pictorial journalism newspapers, and outline illustrations illustrations, and newspapers newspapers, and artists art, and newspapers photography, and art photography, and American Press Association celebrity culture celebrity culture, and origins celebrity culture, and newspapers newspapers, and celebrity culture women photography, and women newspapers, and women sexuality sexuality, and newspaper illustrations home and new media home, and newspaper illustrations advertising and public relations advertising, and newspaper illustrations journalism, and artists critics critics, and newspaper pictures ref, news ref, NYT Gribayedoff, Valerian Gribayedoff, Valerian, and newspaper illustration Gribayedoff, Valerian, and obituary Gribayedoff, Valerian, and illustration advertising art home illustrations magazines photography LB - 42210 PY - 1908 SP - 7 T2 - New York Times ID - 4320 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about the U. S. Supreme Court clearing the way for enforcment of the Child Protection and Obscenity Enforcement Act of 1988. The law required people who produced explicit sex films, book, magazines, and videotapes to maintain records of all actors including their names and nicknames. Such groups as the American Library Association, the Right to Read Foundation, and the American Booksellers Association said the record keeping provisions of this law violated the First Amendment. AU - Deibel, Mary DA - June 27, 1995 KW - presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality values obscenity Meese Commission First Amendment freedom censorship and ratings children censorship and ratings censorship pornography law, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and pornography pornography, and Reagan judges obscenity, and pornography Meese, Edwin, and pornography Child Protection and Obscenity Enforcement Act (1988) pornography, judicial setbacks American Library Association First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment law Reagan, Ronald children, and media LB - 27570 PY - 1995 SE - A SP - A21 ST - Court Supports Laws to Prevent Porn Using Kids T2 - Denver Rocky Mountain News TI - Court Supports Laws to Prevent Porn Using Kids ID - 1311 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article gives background to the public relations firms of Hill & Knowlton and Gray & Co. Opponents of the Meese Commission, which had been created during the Reagan administration to study pornography, used Gray & Co. to discredit the Commission's Report and recommendations. Part of the strategy involved portraying the Commission members as moral vigilantes and enemies of the First Amendment. AU - Dougherty, Philip H. DA - June 4, 1986 KW - corporations corporations corporations advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising sexuality news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers Hill & Knowlton First Amendment freedom Meese Commission Meese Commission, and critics Gray & Company public relations pornography pornography, and public relations public relations, and pornography Meese Commission, and public relations Meese Commission, and Gray & Company First Amendment, and public relations public relations, and First Amendment Gray & Company, and Meese Commission Americans for Constitutional Freedom magazines magazines, and public relations Hill & Knowlton, and Gray & Company Gray, Robert Keith critics LB - 23920 PY - 1986 SE - D SP - 1D ST - Hill & Knowlton to Buy Gray, the Lobbyists T2 - New York Times TI - Hill & Knowlton to Buy Gray, the Lobbyists ID - 1052 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article gives background on Richard Mosk, who replaced Richard D. Heffner as head of the motion picture industry's Classification and Rating Administration. The articles also deals with critics of the rating system such as Samuel Goldwyn, Jr., and Phillip Noyce. Noyce was upset that the rating board wanted him to cut three minutes from his movie Sliver (1993), starring Sharon Stone. AU - Dutka, Elaine DA - June 29, 1994 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) motion pictures critics law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture CARA CARA, and Richard Mosk Mosk, Richard Valenti, Jack, and Richard Mosk Mosk, Richard, and Jack Valenti Mosk, Richard, and CARA rating system (U. S.), and critics critics, and movie rating system (U. S.) Sliver (1993) LB - 27700 PY - 1994 SE - F (Calendar) SP - 1F ST - Film Ratings Board Picks Mosk as Its Leader.... T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Film Ratings Board Picks Mosk as Its Leader.... ID - 1324 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses marketing strategy for The Last Temptation of Christ (1988), modeled on such earlier films as Die Hard (1988) and A Fish Called Wanda (1988). AU - Easton, Nina J. C1 - 1 DA - Aug. 16, 1988 KW - advertising and public relations propaganda public relations propaganda advertising motion pictures marketing +motion pictures and popular culture public relations motion pictures, and public relations motion pictures, and marketing strategies public relations, and motion pictures Willis, Bruce marketing strategies, and Die Hard marketing strategies, and Last Temptation marketing strategies, and Fish Called Wanda advertising, and motion pictures advertising LB - 24440 PY - 1988 SE - 6 (Calendar) ST - Slow Release Strategy Pays Big Dividends T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Slow Release Strategy Pays Big Dividends ID - 1084 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with the marketing strategy used by Universal in promoting its film The Last Temptation of Christ (1988). The article reports that Universal Pictures, which made the movie, took out full-page newspaper ads to refute critics. Campus Crusade for Christ and Bill Bright, who had led the attack on film are discussed. AU - Easton, Nina J. DA - July 22, 1988 KW - corporations advertising and public relations Universal Pictures propaganda public relations propaganda advertising values motion pictures marketing Last Temptation of Christ (1988) boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture public relations motion pictures, and public relations motion pictures, and marketing strategies public relations, and motion pictures marketing strategies, and Last Temptation Universal Pictures, and public relations public relations, and Last Temptation Last Temptation, and public relations boycotts, and Last Temptation Bright, Bill Campus Crusade for Christ critics religion advertising advertising, and motion pictures values LB - 24490 PY - 1988 SE - 2 (Metro) SP - 1 ST - Studio Fires Back in Defense of "Temptation" T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Studio Fires Back in Defense of "Temptation" ID - 1089 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This articles notes that despite the protests against the movie The Last Temptation of Christ (1988), or perhaps because of them, the film opened to mostly sold-out theaters. AU - Easton, Nina J. DA - Aug. 15, 1988 KW - corporations corporations values Christianity advertising, and public relations Universal Pictures propaganda advertising Protestants values motion pictures Hollywood values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion Last Temptation of Christ (1988) boycotts, and Last Temptation motion pictures, and boycotts Catholics, and Last Temptation Protestants, and Last Temptation of Christ motion pictures, and anti-religion boycotts, and Universal Universal Pictures, and boycotts censorship, and Last Temptation Bright, Bill public relations public relations, and Last Temptation Last Temptation, and public relations Last Temptation, and marketing strategies LB - 24540 PY - 1988 SE - 6 (Calendar) SP - 1 ST - "Last Temptation" Draws Mostly Sold-Out Houses T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - "Last Temptation" Draws Mostly Sold-Out Houses ID - 1094 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article, perhaps part of the pre-film publicity buildup for the movie Basic Instinct (1992), is about a disagreement between Joe Eszterhas and Paul Verhoeven. Screenwriter Eszterhas criticized Verhoeven for wanting to make this movie into a "sexually explicit thriller." AU - Easton, Nana J. DA - Aug. 23, 1990 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality homosexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality women, and new media advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising press motion pictures media effects media violence lesbianism gays women feminism law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and lesbianism public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Basic Instinct (1992) motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures lesbianism, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising Douglas, Michael motion pictures, and bad press coverage press, and poor movie coverage Verhoeven, Paul Eszterhas, Joe Stone, Sharon feminists feminists, and motion pictures gays, and motion pictures Jay Leno Show Basic Instinct (1992) LB - 25410 PY - 1990 SE - F (Calendar) SP - 1F ST - Eszterhas vs. Verhoeven T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Eszterhas vs. Verhoeven ID - 1137 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Film critic Roger Ebert ontributed to the buzz surrounding the movie Basic Instinct (1992) with a tongue-in-cheek piece from the Cannes Film Festival in May saying that he had seen the 45 seconds cut from the Michael Douglas- Sharon Stone love scene. AU - Ebert, Roger DA - May 8, 1992 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality homosexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality women, and new media advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising press motion pictures media effects media violence lesbianism gays women feminism Ebert, Roger law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and lesbianism public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Basic Instinct (1992) motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures lesbianism, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising Douglas, Michael motion pictures, and bad press coverage press, and poor movie coverage Verhoeven, Paul Eszterhas, Joe Stone, Sharon feminists feminists, and motion pictures gays, and motion pictures Jay Leno Show Basic Instinct (1992) Ebert, Roger, and Basic Instinct (1992) LB - 25460 PY - 1992 SE - 2 SP - 33 ST - Satisfying the Most Basic of Instincts: Curiosity T2 - Chicago Sun-Times TI - Satisfying the Most Basic of Instincts: Curiosity ID - 1142 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In a letter to the editor, a writer says that “I agree with the movie censors that ‘a three foot kiss is long enough.’” AU - editor], A. L. M. [letter to DA - Oct. 11, 1914 KW - children Chicago, IL censorship photography ref, news motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures quotations motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures ref, CDT advertising LB - 13740 PY - 1914 SE - G SP - 7 ST - The Voice of the Movie Fans T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - The Voice of the Movie Fans ID - 3533 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with how pornography has become a major business. During 1999, 711 million hard-core sex movies were rented, according to Adult Video News, this article reports. Corporate America took advantage of this gold mine by providing pay-per-view adult entertainment over satellite and cable television providers. General Motors, EchoStar, AT & T, Marriott International, Hilton, Time Warner, LedgeNet Entertainment or the News Corporation were among the corporations offering such services. General Motors’ subsidiary DirecTV had 8.7 million subscribers in 2000 who paid almost $200 million a year for adult movies provided by satellite. EchoStar Communications Corporation, one of the country’s major satellite providers, made more money from sex films than did all of Playboy’s cable, Internet, and magazine interests combined. The country’s largest communication corporation, AT&T, provided adult films over a broadband cable service known as the Hot Network. AT&T also owned a company that marketed such entertainment to almost a million hotel rooms. Marriott hotels provided adult films even in such conservative states as Utah. AU - Egan, Timothy DA - Oct. 23, 2000 KW - computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) corporations, multinational corporations magnetic recording satellites, and communication photography video sexuality new media multinational corporations motion pictures Internet satellites magnetic tape General Motors Corp. law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture new media, and home home, and new media pornography pornography, and corporations pornography, and home pornography, and new media pornography, and cable TV +television television, and cable television, and pornography pornography, and television pornography, and satellites satellites, and space communication pornography, and hotels capitalism, and pornography pornography, and capitalism pornography, and multinational corporation multinational corporations, and pornographny cable, and pornography satellites, and pornography new media, and pornography VCRs video, and pornography pornography, and VCRs pornography, and video +computers and the Internet Internet, and pornography videotape videotape, and pornography pornography, and videotape pornography, and the Internet AT & T, and pornography General Motors, and pornography Mariott, and pornography pornography, and AT &T pornography, and General Motors pornography, and Mariott +television cable television, and pornography pornography, and cable television +books, periodicals, newspapers magazines, and pornography pornography, and magazines +aeronautics and space communication pornography, and satellites satellites, and pornography +photography and visual communication photography, and pornography pornography, and photography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship AT&T cable capitalism materials +aeronautics and space communication magazines LB - 27640 PY - 2000 SE - A SP - A20 ST - Technology Sent Wall Street into Market for Pornography T2 - New York Times TI - Technology Sent Wall Street into Market for Pornography ID - 1318 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In the address which came just a few weeks after the United States launched its first man-made satellite, President Eisenhower talks about the advantages of space exploration. Satellites will bring better weather forecasting, rockets will no doubt take pictures of the back side of the moon. "There may well be important military applications for space vehicles which we cannot now foresee, and developments in space technology which open up quite novel possibilities," the president said. "Indeed, the scientific opportunities are so numerous and so inviting that scientists from many countries will certainly want to participate," he predicted. Eisenhower also said that "the cost of transporting men and material through space will be extremely high, but the cost and difficulty of sending information through space will be comparatively low." The president noted that "at present all trans-oceanic communication is by cable (which is costly to install) or by shortwave radio (which is easily disrupted by solar storms). Television cannot practically be beamed more than a few hundred miles because the wavelengths needed to carry it will not bend around the earth and will not bounce off the region of the atmosphere known as the ionosphere. To solve this knotty problem, satellites may be the thing, for they can serve as high-flying radio relay stations. Several suitably-equipped and properly-spaced satellites would be able to receive TV signals from any point on the glove and to relay them directly -- or perhaps via a second satellite -- to any other point. Powered with solar batteries, these relay stations in space should be able to keep working for many years." Eisenhower also saw the reconnaissance advantages of satellites. AU - Eisenhower, Dwight D. DA - March 27, 1958 KW - R & D aeronautics and space communication presidents and new media satellites Sputnik research and development military communication nationalism and communication Eisenhower, Dwight D. Eisenhower administration Eisenhower, Dwight, and satellites Eisenhower administratioin, and satellites remote sensing satellites, and remote sensing surveillance satellites, and surveillance surveillance, and satellites television radio war Cold War satellites, and radio satellites, and television satellites, and Cold War satellites, and weather radio, and satellites television, and satellites Cold War, and satellites satellites, and warfare military communication, and satellites satellites, and reconnaissance photography photography, and satellites satellites, and photography privacy privacy, and satellites satellites, and privacy rocketry nationalism LB - 36940 PY - 1958 SP - 14 ST - Text of President's Statement and Science Aides' 'Introduction to Outer Space' T2 - New York Times TI - Text of President's Statement and Science Aides' 'Introduction to Outer Space' ID - 783 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In this farewell address, President Eisenhower warned about the rise of a military-industrial complex. "In the council of Government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced exists and will persist," the out-going president said. "We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We take nothing for granted. Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together." AU - Eisenhower, Dwight D. DA - Jan. 18, 1961 KW - R & D Eisenhower, Dwight D. Eisenhower administration military-industrial complex nationalism and communication research and development military communication presidents and new media nationalism LB - 36960 PY - 1961 SP - 22 ST - Text of Eisenhower's Farewell Address T2 - New York Times TI - Text of Eisenhower's Farewell Address ID - 1229 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about Richard Mosk, the new chair of the motion picture industry's Classification and Rating Administration. He replaced Richard D. Heffner, who retired at the end of June, 1994. Mosk indicated that he did not see a need to make major changes in the system. “Anything can be improved, but I don’t foresee any revolutionary changes,” he explained. “It’s not my style. I’m not a rabble-rouser.” Responding to CARA’s critics, he indicated that the would not reveal board members’ names and that he believed that film makers and the public already received sufficient information about why ratings were given. “If it ain’t broke, don’t break it,” Mosk said. AU - Eller, Claudia DA - Aug. 4, 1994 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture CARA CARA, and Richard Mosk Mosk, Richard Valenti, Jack, and Richard Mosk Mosk, Richard, and Jack Valenti Mosk, Richard, and CARA LB - 27690 PY - 1994 SE - F (Calendar) SP - 1F ST - Ratings 'Ain't Broke,' Board Chair Says.... T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Ratings 'Ain't Broke,' Board Chair Says.... ID - 1323 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Eszterhas, who had recently been diagnosed with cancer, here describes himself as having been a militant smoker and confesses that in working on the script for the movie Basic Instinct (1992), starring Michael Douglas and Sharon Stone, he had given Stone dialogue designed to encourage viewers to smoke. AU - Eszterhas, Joe DA - Aug. 9, 2002 KW - substance abuse motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture media effects motion pictures, and smoking substance abuse, and smoking substance abuse, and tobacco Basic Instinct (1992), and smoking media effects, and smoking in movies Basic Instinct (1992) drug abuse LB - 26270 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 2002 SE - A SP - A17 ST - Hollywood's Responsibility for Smoking Deaths T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood's Responsibility for Smoking Deaths ID - 1216 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article indicates that increasing numbers of people are preferring to rent DVDs rather than video cassettes, and that rentals of video cassettes may decline even more compared to this challenger. AU - Fabrikant, Geraldine DA - April 16, 2001 KW - entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) entertainment, home magnetic recording video rentals motion pictures home entertainment materials materials videotape VCRs magnetic tape home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies video rentals, and DVDs VCRs, and DVDs DVDs DVDs, and video rentals digital media LB - 26240 PY - 2001 SE - C (Business Day) SP - C1, C5 ST - Atack of the Disruptive Disc; Sales of DVD's Are Challenging the Business of Renting Movies T2 - New York Times TI - Atack of the Disruptive Disc; Sales of DVD's Are Challenging the Business of Renting Movies ID - 1215 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article explains that in 1987, two major American film companies, Paramount and Universal, began distributing movies in more than 20,000 theaters in China, the first time U.S. studios had been able to market films in that country since the Communist takeover in 1949 AU - Fabrikant, Geraldine DA - Sept. 28, 1987 KW - audiences nationalism Asia motion pictures nationalism and communication capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and China non-USA motion pictures, and nationalism motion pictures, and China China theaters theaters, China LB - 33090 PY - 1987 SE - D SP - 8 ST - Box Office Abroad Now More Valuable T2 - New York Times TI - Box Office Abroad Now More Valuable ID - 2946 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Author Stephen Farber wrote in this article that “the unqualified enthusiasm for ... grisly films raises nagging questions about the skewed values of today’s critics.” AU - Farber, Stephen DA - March 17, 1991 KW - motion pictures media effects media violence motion pictures and popular culture violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and movie reviewers violence, and motion pictures movies viewers, and violence Farber, Stephen audiences audiences, and violence LB - 25030 PY - 1991 SE - Calendar SP - 5 ST - Movies: Why Do Critics Love These Repellent Movies? Point: Moviegoers Looking for Guidance Are Becoming Alienated by Reviewers Penchant for Grotesque Violence T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Movies: Why Do Critics Love These Repellent Movies? Point: Moviegoers Looking for Guidance Are Becoming Alienated by Reviewers Penchant for Grotesque Violence ID - 1104 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article indicates that Universal will test the rating system with its movie Henry and June (1990). This film was the first to received an NC-17 after the movie industry adopted this new rating category. AU - Farber, Stephen DA - Sept. 4, 1990 KW - music Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation corporations sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality corporations corporations homosexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters MCA Universal Pictures theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) motion pictures Music Corporation of America (MCA) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture Wasserman, Lew CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 NC-17 rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 movie, Henry and June motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex lesbianism motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and homosexuality motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies Wasserman, Lew, and NC-17 Universal Pictures, and NC-17 Miller, Henry Kaufman, Philip MCA, and NC-17 MCA, and Cineplex Odeon theater chain theater owners, and NC-17 NC-17, and theater owners Pollock, Tom, and Universal Universal Pictures, and Tom Pollock Pollock, Tom, and NC-17 Kaufman, Philip, and Henry and June Heffner, Richard, and NC-17 Heffner, Richard, and Henry and June Heffner, Richard, and rating system (U. S.) NC-17 NC-17, and origins LB - 25350 PY - 1990 SE - C SP - 14C ST - A Major Studio Plans to Test the Rating System T2 - New York Times TI - A Major Studio Plans to Test the Rating System ID - 1131 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is an interview with Sir Leon Bagrit, a British expert on automation. He argued that only those countries that adapted quickly to automation would survive industrial competition. Britain, he feared, had lagged behind, having fewer computers per capita than the United States or Western Europe. He distinguished between the mechanization of the Industrial Revolution that forced people into “subhuman work,” and automation, which helped mankind realize its full potential. Automation represented “the greatest change in the whole history of humankind.” It was a process that would change life so dramatically that within a few decades the pre-1960 world would “as rural as England before the Industrial Revolution.” (Farnsworth paraphrasing Bagrit) See also Sir Leon Bagrit's The Age of Automation (1965). AU - Farnsworth, Clyde H. DA - March 17, 1965 KW - computers preservation communication revolution history, and new media communication revolution, and second industrial revolution non-USA history history Great Britain +computers and the Internet +artificial intelligence and biotechnology computers, personal automation computers, and automation second industrial revolution history, break with Great Britain Great Britain, and computers Great Britain, and automation Bagrit, Leon computers labor labor, and automation communication revolution LB - 7800 N1 - See also: office PY - 1965 SP - 66 ST - Britain’s Automation Pioneer Computes Future T2 - New York Times TI - Britain’s Automation Pioneer Computes Future ID - 2149 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that in 1985, the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) ran what some called a small “state department” with representatives in sixty nations. Hollywood movies played in more than 100 countries, and MPAA president Jack Valenti called them “America’s secret weapon the supreme visual force in the world, dominating screens in theaters and in living rooms.” AU - Farnsworth, Clyde H. DA - Dec. 18, 1985 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA audiences nationalism motion pictures nationalism and communication theaters motion pictures, abroad motion pictures, and U.S. foreign policy Valenti, Jack Reagan, Ronald, and motion pictures presidents and new media Reagan administration Reagan, Ronald LB - 33020 PY - 1985 SE - B SP - B12 ST - Jack Valenti's State Department T2 - New York Times TI - Jack Valenti's State Department ID - 2941 ER - TY - NEWS AB - As the motion pictures industry's rating system came under attack from movie makers in 1990 -- many calling for a new rating category for non-pornographic "adult" films -- novelist and screen writer Jesse Hill Ford called for abandoning the ratings altogether. The studios easily outwitted the rating board, he concluded. By charging censorship they gained much free publicity for films that few people would ever see, or want to see. It was time to depend on responsible media, churches, and word-of-mouth to inform parents, Ford said. AU - Ford, Jesse Hill DA - May 2, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner motion pictures, and morality Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Valenti, Jack, and critics Heffner, Richard LB - 25100 PY - 1990 SE - A SP - 10A ST - Abolish Film Ratings; Trust the Moviegoers T2 - USA Today TI - Abolish Film Ratings; Trust the Moviegoers ID - 1110 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with Jack Valenti's thinking about the need for changing the motion picture rating system. Valenti had consistently opposed revisions but now realized that compromise would be needed. The industry soon adopted the NC-17 rating category. The only previous revision to the ratings had been in 1984, the PG-13, in reaction to the release of Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. AU - Fox, David J. C1 - 1F DA - Aug. 10, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture rating system (U. S.), and controversies CARA, and rating controversies PG-13 NC-17 CARA, and NC-17 CARA, and PG-13 Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and PG-13 Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 CARA, and sex CARA, and adult films motion pictures, and sex sex, and motion pictures sex, and NC-17 motion pictures, and adult films, CARA LB - 22130 PY - 1990 SE - F (Calendar) ST - Jack Valenti Says Change Possible for Film Ratings T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Jack Valenti Says Change Possible for Film Ratings ID - 946 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The motion picture industry's rating system faced legal challenges and also attacks from movie makers who were unhappy with the system and wanted a new rating category to indicate non-pornographic adult films. AU - Fox, David J. DA - July 21, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner motion pictures, and morality Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Valenti, Jack, and critics Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 Valenti, Jack, and legal challenges theater owners, and rating system (U. S.) theater owners, and NC-17 MPAA, and NC-17 Heffner, Richard LB - 25250 PY - 1990 SE - F (Calendar) SP - 1F ST - Rating System Faces Challenges on Two Fronts T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Rating System Faces Challenges on Two Fronts ID - 1121 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about Jack Valenti's decision to talk with movie makers who were critical of the motion picture industry's rating system. Before this time, Valenti had argued that no change was needed in the system. Now Valenti recognized the need to compromise and within a few weeks, the industry adopted a new rating category, NC-17. AU - Fox, David J. DA - July 26, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner motion pictures, and morality Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Valenti, Jack, and critics Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 Valenti, Jack, and legal challenges theater owners, and rating system (U. S.) theater owners, and NC-17 MPAA, and NC-17 Coppola, Francis Ford Lee, Spike Reiner, Rob Pollack, Sydney Wang, Wayne Lipsky, Mark MPAA, and independent producers CARA, and independent producers NC-17 NC-17, and origins Heffner, Richard LB - 25310 PY - 1990 SE - F (Calendar) SP - 7F ST - Valenti Agrees to Talk to Critics of Movie Ratings T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Valenti Agrees to Talk to Critics of Movie Ratings ID - 1127 ER - TY - NEWS AB - With the adoption of the NC-17 in 1990 by the motion picture industry came progress on providing the public information about why ratings had been given, a step that Jack Valenti had resisted. Henceforth, R-rated movies would carry short explanations about why they had been restricted. Two years later (July, 1992), the industry began offering explanatory statements for the PG and PG-13. It was all part of a trend, said NATO’s president William F. Kartozian, “to make ourselves more user-friendly.” AU - Fox, David J. DA - July 29, 1992 KW - music Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation corporations sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality corporations corporations homosexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters MCA Universal Pictures theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) R-rating PG-13 motion pictures Music Corporation of America (MCA) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture Wasserman, Lew CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 NC-17 rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 movie, Henry and June motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex lesbianism motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and homosexuality motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies Wasserman, Lew, and NC-17 Universal Pictures, and NC-17 Miller, Henry Kaufman, Philip MCA, and NC-17 MCA, and Cineplex Odeon theater chain theater owners, and NC-17 NC-17, and theater owners Pollock, Tom, and Universal Universal Pictures, and Tom Pollock Pollock, Tom, and NC-17 Kaufman, Philip, and Henry and June Heffner, Richard, and NC-17 Heffner, Richard, and Henry and June Heffner, Richard, and rating system (U. S.) NC-17 NC-17, and origins rating system (U. S.) system, and explanations R-rating, and explantions Valenti, Jack, and rating explanations Heffner, Richard, and rating explanations PG-13, and rating explanations Kartozian, William CARA, and rating explanations LB - 25390 PY - 1992 SE - F (Calendar) SP - 1F ST - Ratings to Give Parents More Data T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Ratings to Give Parents More Data ID - 1135 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article examines the confusion that some film makers and exhibitors had over why certain ratings were given to motion pictures. It discusses Madonna's NC-17 movie Body of Evidence (1993). AU - Fox, David J. DA - Jan. 18, 1993 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations sexuality motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex sex, and motion pictures nudity, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 nudity CARA, and nudity motion pictures, and nudity language motion pictures, and language language, and motion pictures Madonna Dafoe, Willem NC-17, and critics Deutsch, Stephen advertising LB - 25540 PY - 1993 SE - F (Calendar) SP - 1F ST - R Vs. NC-17 -- What's the Difference?: Filmmakers, Exhibitors Are Bewildered by Inconsistent Ratings T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - R Vs. NC-17 -- What's the Difference?: Filmmakers, Exhibitors Are Bewildered by Inconsistent Ratings ID - 1150 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on Blockbuster's decision not to rent NC-17 videos. Later Blockbuster rented them on a case-by-case basis. Blockbuster then had about 1,600 outlets. AU - Fox, David J. DA - Jan. 14, 1991 KW - entertainment Classification and Rating Administration classification video cassette recorders (VCRs) self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality entertainment, home Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Blockbuster Video magnetic recording sexuality video rentals video sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) motion pictures media effects media violence lesbianism home entertainment videotape magnetic tape law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA home home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures lesbianism, and motion pictures CARA, and rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation VCRs Blockbuster Video, and NC-17 NC-17, and Blockbuster video stores NC-17, and video home entertainment revolution video, and home home, and video LB - 27500 PY - 1991 SE - F (Calendar Section) SP - 1 ST - Blockbuster Video Rates NC-17 Films Unsuitable for All T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Blockbuster Video Rates NC-17 Films Unsuitable for All ID - 1305 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with the NC-17 rating given to Ken Russell's movie Whore (1991). Richard Heffner, head of the Classification and Rating Administration, discusses the reasons for the rating. AU - Fox, David J. DA - Sept. 9, 1991 KW - prostitution classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality CARA sexuality advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising motion pictures media effects media violence law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Whore (1991) motion pictures, and sex sex, and motion pictures lCARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 violence, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and prostitution prostitution, and motion pictures Heffner, Richard, and Whore Heffner, Richard advertising LB - 28470 PY - 1991 SE - F SP - 2F ST - Movie on Prostitution Still Gets an NC-17 Rating T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Movie on Prostitution Still Gets an NC-17 Rating ID - 1384 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the film exchange worked about between the United States and USSR in 1958. Eric Johnston negotiated with Nikita Khrushchev. It names the U.S. films that the Soviet agreed to take and the Soviet movies the U.S. agreed to show. AU - Frankel, Max DA - Oct. 10, 1958 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union Khrushchev, Nikita Eisenhower administration , news motion pictures USSR non-USA motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and foreign policy Eisenhower, Dwight D. presidents and new media Eisenhower, Dwight D., and motion pictures Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and USSR MPAA Motion Picture Export Association Khruschchev, Nikita, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Nikita Khruschchev LB - 36050 PY - 1958 SP - 36 ST - U. S., Soviet Agree to Film Exchange: 10 Top American Movies Sold Include 'Marty,' 'Oklahoma!' -- Johnston Takes Seven T2 - New York Times TI - U. S., Soviet Agree to Film Exchange: 10 Top American Movies Sold Include 'Marty,' 'Oklahoma!' -- Johnston Takes Seven ID - 3241 ER - TY - NEWS AB - There is information in this article about how Al Goldstein used cable television to build a lucrative business in pornography. Pornographers found new opportunities on cable. Goldstein, who in 1968 had started a magazine called Screw, exploited “leased public access” television in Manhattan to begin “Midnight Blue.” This cable program, which started in 1975, featured interviews with porn stars, topless women, and ads for escort and telephone sex services. AU - Friedman, David DA - Sept. 4, 1990 KW - sexuality news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers law pornography +television television, and pornography pornography, and television magazines pornography, and magazines magazines, and pornography cable TV, and pornography pornography, and cable TV pornography, and Al Goldstein Goldstein, Al law, and cable pornography cable LB - 27140 PY - 1990 SE - 2 SP - 8 ST - The Fat Cat of Porn; Al Goldstein Claims He's Misunderstood: 'I've created this character the Fred Flintstone of Flesh, and that's all the know.' T2 - Newsday TI - The Fat Cat of Porn; Al Goldstein Claims He's Misunderstood: 'I've created this character the Fred Flintstone of Flesh, and that's all the know.' ID - 1271 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article offers a description of a movie studio. "The outside of a movie studio looks like a class A baseball park, and the inside looks like a remnant sale of a Kansas cyclone." The article notes the importance of the movie star in the film business but says "Stars are so named because they are sometimes very distant, and are usually shown through a powerful glass." It notes the attraction of acting as a profession. "Next to seeing his name in print, the average mortal is bugs to get himself into a moving picture." The article says that censorship is important to the movie industry's publicity. "The Board of Censors has been unjustly criticised in connection with the moving picture business, but it is really a most important adjunct of the publicity department, as it indicates by its disapproval the pictures that the public will flock to see." The article says that "Los Angeles has been called the heart of the moving picture industry, but it is more than that -- it is the whole giblets." AU - G., S. M. DA - April 23, 1916 KW - Los Angeles fame fame celebrity censorship actors acting motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars ref, news advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and public relations motion pictures, and press agents motion pictures, and stars (origins) censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business quotations ref, LAT advertising LB - 15830 PY - 1916 SE - VI SP - 2 ST - Why Is a Movie Studio? T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Why Is a Movie Studio? ID - 3739 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about the re-rating of Sam Peckinpah's 1969 film The Wild Bunch. Some historians considered that film to have been significant in raising the level of violence in movies. The Wild Bunch had originally been rated R in 1969 after Peckinpah reportedly cut six minutes to avoid being given an X. Warner Bros. planned a twentieth-fifth anniversary restored version of The Wild Bunch that would be shown in theaters in 1994 and was timed to coincide with the release of a new laser-disc version. The question of re-rating the new version came shortly before Richard D. Heffner retired from the Classification and Rating Administration. Heffner suspected that Warner Bros. intended to use the deleted violent scenes, and, given that the rating board was now more sensitive to violence than it had been in 1969, it seemed likely that CARA would give the new version an NC-17. The matter stewed until after Heffner retired. Under Heffner’s successor, Richard Mosk, CARA initially rated the new edition of The Wild Bunch NC-17, but studio executives pressed Valenti who pushed for a more lenient rating. CARA, after being assured that the new director’s cut would be the same as the original film, re-issued the R. AU - Galbraith, Jane DA - March 21, 1993 KW - telephotography Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) photography censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) media effects media violence Hollywood law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and crime motion pictures, and crime motion pictures, and special effects motion pictures, and special effects motion pictures, and violence violence, and special effects special effects special effects, and violence Hollywood, and new technology cameras +photography and visual communication cameras, and telephoto lenses telephoto lenses special effects, and squibs Peckinpah, Sam, rating system (U. S.), and controversies CARA, and re-rating controversies Mosk, Richard CARA, and Richard Mosk Peckinpah, Sam LB - 25560 PY - 1993 SE - Show SP - 2 ST - Taming The Wild Bunch with NC-17 Rating T2 - Chicago Sun-Times TI - Taming The Wild Bunch with NC-17 Rating ID - 1152 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Richard Mosk replaced Richard D. Heffner as head of the motion picture industry's Classification and Rating Administration in July, 1994. He was a 55-year-old Los Angeles attorney and son of a California Supreme Court Justice who specialized in litigation arbitration law. He had been a member of the Warren Commission that investigated John F. Kennedy’s assassination, was on the Iran-U. S. Claims Tribunal following the hostage crisis during the Jimmy Carter administration, and was on the Christopher Commission that investigated the Los Angeles police department after the beating of Rodney G. King. This article quotes MPAA president Jack Valenti as he announced Mosk's appointment: “He has a lawyerly mind, is skillful in mediation, gracious and courteous,” said Valenti. “That’s important when dealing with some of these hysterical people in our business.” As a parent, Mosk said, the rating system had worked for him and he considered preferable to government controls. AU - Galbraith, Jane DA - July 21, 1994 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture CARA CARA, and Richard Mosk Mosk, Richard Valenti, Jack, and Richard Mosk Mosk, Richard, and Jack Valenti Mosk, Richard, and CARA LB - 27680 PY - 1994 SE - Part II SP - B02 ST - His Job: G, PG, PG-13, R and NC-17 T2 - Newsday TI - His Job: G, PG, PG-13, R and NC-17 ID - 1322 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article was part of the coverage of the sex scandal involving Father Bruce Ritter of Covenant House. During 1985-86, Ritter had been a member of the Meese Commission that had made recommendations about prosecuting pornography. AU - Gambardello, Joseph A. DA - March 30, 1990 (City Home Edition) KW - sexuality pornography Meese Commission Ritter, Bruce Covenant House, and Bruce Ritter Ritter, Bruce, and pornography pornography, and Bruce Ritter Meese Commission, and Bruce Ritter LB - 26930 PY - 1990 SE - News SP - 8 ST - Ministry Barred for Ritter T2 - Newsday TI - Ministry Barred for Ritter ID - 1251 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In this letter to the editor of the New York Times, W. H. Gilbo, who claims to be "the pioneer of photogravure" and "experienced ... in the specialty of light and shade in monochrome reproductions" in the United States, seeks to clarify misconceptions about the process. He is impress by the newer rotogravure process. "The delicacy of modeling in the light and middle tints of most of them is truly admirable, while the range of details in the darks, (in the Gethsemane, for instance), their transparency and richness, surpass anything yet done, to my knowledge, by any photo-mechanical process in one printing, excepting photogravure; infinitely superior to the usual rotary press productions which are presented under the falsely assumed name of photogravures. (emphasis added) "The Times's rotogravure process is truly a wonderful advance in newspaper publishing, a surprising step into the realm of real art, and of extended educational value." AU - Gilbo, W. H. DA - April 16, 1914 KW - rotogravure journalism magazines, and photography magazines photography ref, news modernity modernity, and photography photography, and modernity new way of seeing history and new media photography, and rotogravure process rotogravure process rotogravure process, and photography rotogravure process, and newspapers newspapers, and rotogravure process journalism, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and journalism photography and visual communication news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones advertising and public relations newspapers, and advertising advertising, and newspapers photography, and advertising advertising, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography, and high speed newspapers, and presses duplicating technologies color color, and rotogravure process rotogravure process, and color color, and newspapers newspapers, and color rotogravure process (origins) duplicating technologies, and color color, and duplicating technologies rotogravure process vs. photogravure process photogravure process vs. rotogravure process photography, and photogravure process photogravure process, and newspapers ref, NYT advertising history LB - 37270 PY - 1914 SP - 8 ST - The Rotogravure Process: Comments on the Recent Art Supplements of The Times [letter to editor] T2 - New York Times TI - The Rotogravure Process: Comments on the Recent Art Supplements of The Times [letter to editor] ID - 3826 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article looked at the different ways obscenity laws were applied in the United States. The piece came in the aftermath of the Miller v. California (1973) U. S. Supreme Court decision and after such hard-core pornographic movies as Deep Throat (1972) had appeared in mainstream theaters. Theater owners were especially interested in this issue. A clipping of this article is in Folder 4, Box 6, Mss 1446, Records of the National Association of Theater Owners, Special Collections and Manuscript, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT. AU - Goldstein, Tom DA - Feb. 10, 1977 KW - Miller v. California values sexuality pornography values obscenity values community +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and Deep Throat obscenity, and law obscenity, and Deep Throat Miller case community standards, and pornography pornography, and community standards censorship and ratings law LB - 20380 PY - 1977 ST - Obscenity Law: Standards Vary T2 - New York Times TI - Obscenity Law: Standards Vary ID - 854 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Movie producer Goldwyn argued that American films could be "the best propaganda for the American way of life because they have no propaganda motive." (8) Goldwyn included in this statement even films that tried to expose poverty and projudice in American life such as Grapes of Wrath, Crossfire, and Gentleman's Agreement. AU - Goldwyn, Samuel DA - Aug. 31, 1947 KW - Truman administration Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union self-regulation nationalism MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism Cold War war Johnston, Eric capitalism motion pictures, and communism Truman, Harry presidents and new media motion pictures, and Harry Truman Truman, Harry, and motion pictures military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and U.S. foreign policy MPAA, and foreign policy MPAA, and Truman administration MPAA, and Cold War USSR motion pictures, and USSR propaganda democracy motion pictures, and democracy media effects motion pictures, and media effects capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism LB - 34970 PY - 1947 SE - SM SP - 8, 30 ST - World Challenge to Hollywood T2 - New York Times TI - World Challenge to Hollywood ID - 3126 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that Chicago had cut the budget for its censorship board. The censorship board had been in existence since 1907 and was the first municipal censorship board created in response to motion pictures. A clipping of this article is in the Cook County Police Censorship Records, Illinois Regional Archives Depository (IRAD), Ronald William Library, Northeastern Illinois Univerity, Chicago, IL AU - Goodavage, Maria DA - Jan. 20, 1984 KW - primary sources law censorship and ratings censorship primary sources, local censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and Chicago censorship archives censorship, local archives primary sources, Illinois primary sources, Chicago LB - 18360 PY - 1984 ST - City film censor board snipped from budget T2 - Chicago Tribune TI - City film censor board snipped from budget ID - 738 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article was part of the coverage of the sex scandal involving Father Bruce Ritter of Covenant House, and a former member of the Meese Commission on pornography in 1985-86. Although Ritter denied wrongdoing, private investigators hired by Covenant House confirmed his misconduct. In the wake of the scandal, Ritter resigned as head of Covenant House and his order instructed him to “daily living” within his the Franciscan community. Covenant House turned to the public relations firm of Hill & Knowlton to rebuild its image. AU - Goodell, Jeffrey DA - Sept. 9, 1990 KW - corporations corporations advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising Hill & Knowlton public relations public relations, and pornography pornography, and public relations Ritter, Bruce Covenant House, and Bruce Ritter Ritter, Bruce, and pornography pornography LB - 26920 PY - 1990 SE - 6 (Magazine Desk) SP - 44 ST - What Hill & Knowlton Can Do for You (And What It Couldn't Do for Itself) T2 - New York Times TI - What Hill & Knowlton Can Do for You (And What It Couldn't Do for Itself) ID - 1250 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In July, 1986, Richard D. Heffner, head of the motion picture industry’s Classification and Ratings Administration, chaired a conference on “Liberty -- the Next 100 Years,” sponsored by Rutgers University and New York University. The conference brought together prominent leaders and intellectuals to debate First Amendment issues. One debate centered around the question, “can free speech become too costly?” Here the discussion turned to pornography. An ACLU representative argued against prior restraint on speech and against restrictions on sexually explicit materials while a writer for the National Review urged community action rather than seeking legal remedies to fight the thriving sex shops then in mid-town Manhattan. Some civil libertarians applauded Tipper Gore because her plan for labeling rock music albums relied on pressure from the community rather than legal penalties to obtain results. Catharine MacKinnon’s call for more punitive measures in the effort to control pornography, however, met with a generally negative response. The conference also debated the question, “when considering personal liberty, where does one draw the line between private interests and public well being?” Panelists maintained that a proper understanding of “liberty” would lead to a “sense of community” in the United States, one that would respect minority opposition. Yet another discussion asked if the doctrine of original intent sufficiently safeguarded liberties? Panelists maintained that a proper understanding of “liberty” would lead to a “sense of community” in the United States, one that would respect minority opposition. Yet another discussion asked if the doctrine of original intent sufficiently safeguarded liberties? Charles Fried, the Solicitor General of the United States, and columnist Midge Decter argued that the Constitution should be “interpreted rather than invented,” and that judges should follow the original intention of the Constitution’s framers, not attempt to create new law. Others felt this position was inadequate for the times. Floyd Abrams, who specialized in First Amendment issues, said that the Constitution had been created before the invention of modern communications and historian James MacGregor Burns observed that the Constitution was “not a sacred document” but “a charter of government that was made by man” and could be “changed by man.” AU - Goodman, Walter DA - July 6, 1986 KW - sexuality freedom pornography First Amendment First Amendment, and pornography Heffner, Richard Heffner, Richard, and First Amendment Liberty--the Next 100 Years Conference Gore, Tipper MacKinnon, Catharine ACLU Heffner, Richard, and ACLU Burns, James MacGregor Wiesel, Elie Heffner, Richard, and Elie Wiesel law LB - 24190 PY - 1986 SE - A SP - 18A ST - Liberty Weekend/The People: Liberty Coferees Debate Judges' Role T2 - New York Times TI - Liberty Weekend/The People: Liberty Coferees Debate Judges' Role ID - 1066 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In July, 1986, Richard D. Heffner, head of the motion picture industry’s Classification and Ratings Administration, chaired a conference on “Liberty -- the Next 100 Years,” sponsored by Rutgers University and New York University. The conference brought together prominent leaders and intellectuals to debate First Amendment issues. One debate centered around the question, “can free speech become too costly?” Here the discussion turned to pornography. An ACLU representative argued against prior restraint on speech and against restrictions on sexually explicit materials while a writer for the National Review urged community action rather than seeking legal remedies to fight the thriving sex shops then in mid-town Manhattan. Some civil libertarians applauded Tipper Gore because her plan for labeling rock music albums relied on pressure from the community rather than legal penalties to obtain results. Catharine MacKinnon’s call for more punitive measures in the effort to control pornography, however, met with a generally negative response. The conference also debated the question, “when considering personal liberty, where does one draw the line between private interests and public well being?” Panelists maintained that a proper understanding of “liberty” would lead to a “sense of community” in the United States, one that would respect minority opposition. Yet another discussion asked if the doctrine of original intent sufficiently safeguarded liberties?” AU - Goodman, Walter DA - July 7, 1986 KW - sexuality freedom pornography First Amendment First Amendment, and pornography Heffner, Richard Heffner, Richard, and First Amendment Liberty--the Next 100 Years Conference Gore, Tipper MacKinnon, Catharine ACLU Heffner, Richard, and ACLU Burns, James MacGregor Wiesel, Elie Heffner, Richard, and Elie Wiesel law LB - 24200 PY - 1986 SE - B SP - 4B ST - Liberty Panel Ponders Wherefores of Freedom T2 - New York Times TI - Liberty Panel Ponders Wherefores of Freedom ID - 1067 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This piece deals an anti-pornography alliance that had formed between feminists and conservatives who backed the Reagan administration. The National Organization of Women, which stopped short of calling for a complete ban on pornography, nevertheless said that pornography violated the civil rights of children and women and contributed strongly to sex discrimination. AU - Goodman, Walter DA - July 3, 1984 KW - women, and new media sexuality women feminism law censorship and ratings censorship newspapers, pornography pornography, and women women, and pornography pornography, and NOW NOW, and pornography feminism, and pornography pornography, and feminism censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship, NOW newspapers news NOW pornography news and journalism LB - 26740 PY - 1984 SE - A SP - 8A ST - Battle on Pornography Spurred by New Tactics T2 - New York Times TI - Battle on Pornography Spurred by New Tactics ID - 1236 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The press coverage Surgeon General's Report on television violence in 1972 was confusing. The initial summary of the Report in this New York Times article, which led with the headline “TV Violence Held Unharmful to Youth,” misrepresented the studies. Several of the studies in the Surgeon General's Report indicated that what children learned from television could be good or bad, and that the effects of this learning could be strongly influenced by parents. The studies showed that even though parents were uneasy about what their children learned from TV, they often failed to provide supervision for even the youngest child. The thrust of this research conducted in experimental settings confirmed that “more overt aggressive behavior follows exposure to violent content than to nonviolent content or no content.” AU - Gould, Jay DA - Jan. 11, 1972 KW - Surgeon General motion pictures media effects media violence media effects +motion pictures and popular culture Surgeon General's Report (1972) violence violence, and Surgeon General's Report (1972) media effects, and violence media effects, and Surgeon General's Report (1972) +television television, and violence television, and Surgeon General's Report (1972) television, and media effects media effects, and television LB - 21960 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1972 SP - 1, 75 ST - TV Violence Held Unharmful to Youth T2 - New York Times TI - TV Violence Held Unharmful to Youth ID - 938 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with the lawsuit challenging the motion picture industry's X rating given to the movie Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! (1990). AU - Granville, Kari DA - June 22, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) religion values morality freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality CARA, and William Kunstler Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Ramos, Charles E. Heffner, Richard LB - 25080 PY - 1990 SE - F (Calendar) SP - 10F ST - Judge Asked to Overturn Film Rating System: Lawsuit: He Takes the Request under Advisement. He'll also Rule Whether "Tie Me Up!" Was Rated Fairly T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Judge Asked to Overturn Film Rating System: Lawsuit: He Takes the Request under Advisement. He'll also Rule Whether "Tie Me Up!" Was Rated Fairly ID - 1108 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with critics who argued that the motion picture industry's rating system was confusing for movie makers and the public. According to the author, "the ratings have become the tail that wags the dog." AU - Gray, Timothy M. DA - Jan. 23, 1994 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising NC-17, and critics NC-17, and Damage Malle, Louis, critics LB - 25530 PY - 1994 SE - Show SP - 1 ST - The Movie Ratings Code: Grade It C for Confusing T2 - Chicago Sun-Times TI - The Movie Ratings Code: Grade It C for Confusing ID - 1149 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about the re-rating of Sam Peckinpah's 1969 film The Wild Bunch. Some historians considered that film to have been significant in raising the level of violence in movies. The Wild Bunch had originally been rated R in 1969 after Peckinpah reportedly cut six minutes to avoid being given an X. Warner Bros. planned a twentieth-fifth anniversary restored version of The Wild Bunch that would be shown in theaters in 1994 and was timed to coincide with the release of a new laser-disc version. The question of re-rating the new version came shortly before Richard D. Heffner retired from the Classification and Rating Administration. Heffner suspected that Warner Bros. intended to use the deleted violent scenes, and, given that the rating board was now more sensitive to violence than it had been in 1969, it seemed likely that CARA would give the new version an NC-17. The matter stewed until after Heffner retired. Under Heffner’s successor, Richard Mosk, CARA initially rated the new edition of The Wild Bunch NC-17, but studio executives pressed Valenti who pushed for a more lenient rating. CARA, after being assured that the new director’s cut would be the same as the original film, re-issued the R. AU - Greene, Jay DA - Oct. 2, 1994 KW - telephotography Classification and Rating Administration classification video cassette recorders (VCRs) self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) magnetic recording photography video censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) media effects media violence Hollywood magnetic tape law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and crime motion pictures, and crime motion pictures, and special effects motion pictures, and special effects motion pictures, and violence violence, and special effects special effects special effects, and violence Hollywood, and new technology cameras +photography and visual communication cameras, and telephoto lenses telephoto lenses special effects, and squibs Peckinpah, Sam, rating system (U. S.), and controversies CARA, and re-rating controversies Mosk, Richard CARA, and Richard Mosk +television television, and motion pictures video, and Wild Bunch videotape VCRs Peckinpah, Sam LB - 25570 PY - 1994 SE - Show SP - 2 ST - Censors Ambush Wild Bunch T2 - Chicago Sun-Times TI - Censors Ambush Wild Bunch ID - 1153 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This piece deals with the public television program, "The Open Mind," hosted by Richard D. Heffner. The program had started in 1956, and was devoted to interviewing leading intellectuals and political leaders on the issues of the day. Heffner, a professor at Rutgers University, was also then head of the motion picture industry's Classification and Rating Administration. A clipping of this article is in the Richard D. Heffner's Personal Papers, Private Collection, New York, NY. AU - Greenfield, Jeff DA - April 24, 1978 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner CARA CARA, and Richard Heffner Valenti, Jack Heffner, Richard, and CARA censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and background Heffner, Richard, and Jack Valenti Heffner, Richard Open Mind, and Richard Heffner +television television, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and television Heffner, Richard, and Open Mind LB - 19840 PY - 1978 ST - 'The Open Mind': A Talk Show With Real Talk T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - 'The Open Mind': A Talk Show With Real Talk ID - 816 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The article notes that although the V-chip was required by law to be installed in new television sets, few parents used it and the entertainment industry did little to promote it. The V-chip was designed to allow parents to block violent or other kinds of entertainment that thought to be inappropriate for their children. It appeared to have little impact on the way consumers watched television. “We’re very supportive of it, but there’s very little real media information about it,” said the president of the National P.T.A in late 1999. “There’s a huge percentage of the population that’s unaware that it’s even available, and unless a family’s in the market for a new TV, it’s not on their radar.” By July, 2001, about 40 percent of American families had at least one TV set with a V-chip but one survey suggested that even though parents remained worried about the levels of violence and sex on television, only about seven percent of them used this technology. More than a fifth of set owners did not even know they had the chip. AU - Greenman, Catherine DA - Nov. 4, 1999 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Federal Communications Commission (FCC) entertainment, home Clinton, William Jefferson CARA V-chip, and television violence television, and parents telecommunications presidents, and new media censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) PTA motion pictures home entertainment government regulation Clinton Administration law regulation law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification Gore, Al home, and new media home home +television +motion pictures and popular culture Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.), and TV (1997) V-chip television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and V-chip home entertainment revolution home entertainment, and V-chip television, and PTA PTA, and television television, and critics rating system (U. S.), and critics hearings new media Collings, Tim V-chip, and Tim Collings Telecommunications Act (1996) regulation, and television Valenti, Jack, and television television, and Jack Valenti Clinton, Bill Clinton, Bill, and TV rating system (U. S.) Clinton administration, and TV rating system (U. S.) Gore, Al, and TV rating system (U. S.) McCain, John, and TV rating system (U. S.) Lieberman, Joseph, and TV rating system (U. S.) FCC FCC, and TV rating system (U. S.) Markey, Ed, and V-chip V-chip, and public reception violence LB - 26040 PY - 1999 SE - D SP - D1, D8 ST - The V-Chip Arrives With a Thud: Program-Blocking Device Is in TV’s, but Few Consumers Are Aware of It T2 - New York Times TI - The V-Chip Arrives With a Thud: Program-Blocking Device Is in TV’s, but Few Consumers Are Aware of It ID - 1195 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article explains that Hollywood films dominated most European theaters in 1985. AU - Grenier, Richard DA - Sept. 22, 1985 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA nationalism motion pictures nationalism and communication capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and Europe non-USA motion pictures, and nationalism motion pictures, and Europe Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and foreign markets LB - 33080 PY - 1985 SE - 2 SP - 27 ST - When It Comes to Movies, the World Looks to America T2 - New York Times TI - When It Comes to Movies, the World Looks to America ID - 2945 ER - TY - NEWS AB - D. W. Griffith says that “I think it is generally agreed that the motion picture is at least on a par with the spoken and written word as a mode of expression.” He denounces the “witch burners, who burn through the censorship of the motion pictures today.” He says that “The greatest field which the motion picture has is the treating of historic subjects; as a great man has said of a certain motion picture: ‘It is like teaching history by lightning.’” AU - Griffith, David Wark DA - May 26, 1915 KW - history censorship words vs. images metaphors Griffith, D. W. history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures images vs. words war motion pictures, and war war, and motion pictures quotations ref, news motion pictures, and printing press motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings Griffith, D. W., and censorship censorship, and D. W. Griffith images vs. words motion pictures, and new art form quotations motion pictures, and teaching history by lightning Griffith, D. W., and teaching history by lightning ref, CDT quotations, and teaching history with lightning Griffith, D. W., and Birth of a Nation motion pictures, as lightning flash LB - 6440 PY - 1915 SP - 14 ST - The Motion Picture and Witch Burners T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - The Motion Picture and Witch Burners ID - 3441 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that the NC-17 rating has been given to five films during the last four months. They are Damage (1992), The Lover (1992), Body of Evidence (1993), Bad Lieutenant (1992), and The Wide Sargasso Sea (1993). The article asks question about the criteria used in rating these movies and how useful such rating are to the public. AU - Grimes, William DA - Nov. 30, 1992 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality homosexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality women, and new media advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising press motion pictures media effects media violence lesbianism gays women feminism law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and lesbianism public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Basic Instinct (1992) motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures lesbianism, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising Douglas, Michael motion pictures, and bad press coverage press, and poor movie coverage Verhoeven, Paul Eszterhas, Joe Stone, Sharon feminists feminists, and motion pictures gays, and motion pictures Jay Leno Show Basic Instinct (1992) NC-17, and critics, Damage LB - 25450 PY - 1992 SE - C SP - 11C ST - Reviewing the NC-17 Film Rating: Clear Guide or an X by a New Name? T2 - New York Times TI - Reviewing the NC-17 Film Rating: Clear Guide or an X by a New Name? ID - 1141 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The article deals with the Catholic Church's position on violence and sexuality in television programs. AU - Haberman, Clyde DA - May 17, 1989 KW - motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality values Christianity sexuality sexuality sex motion pictures media effects media violence violence media effects censorship and ratings children law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church Catholic Church motion pictures and popular culture censorship, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and motion pictures Catholic Church, and censorship violence, and Catholic Church violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence media effects, and Catholic Church Catholic Church, and media effects children, and motion pictures children, and Catholic Church television television, and Catholic Church television, and sex sex, and television violence, and television television, and violence television, and soap operas Catholic Church, and soap operas soap operas, and sex sex, and soap operas soap operas, and Catholic Church children, and media LB - 27410 PY - 1989 SE - A SP - A3 ST - Vatican Condemns Kung Fu Films and Sex on TV T2 - New York Times TI - Vatican Condemns Kung Fu Films and Sex on TV ID - 1296 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This brief piece deals with the conflict between Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, and movie directors who were critical of the industry rating system. Valenti up to this time had resisted changing the rating system but now had come to realize that some compromise was probably needed. The industry adopted a new rating category, NC-17, a few weeks later. AU - Hall, Carla DA - Aug. 10, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner motion pictures, and morality Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Valenti, Jack, and critics Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 Valenti, Jack, and legal challenges theater owners, and rating system (U. S.) theater owners, and NC-17 MPAA, and NC-17 Coppola, Francis Ford Lee, Spike Reiner, Rob Pollack, Sydney Wang, Wayne Lipsky, Mark MPAA, and independent producers CARA, and independent producers Silverlight Entertainment Life Is Cheap... rating system (U. S.), and A rating advertising advertising, and A-rate films theater owners theater owners, and A-rated films Heffner, Richard LB - 25280 PY - 1990 SE - C SP - 2C ST - Occasional T2 - Washington Post TI - Occasional ID - 1124 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with the meeting between Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, and movie directors who were critical of the industry rating system. Valenti up to this time had resisted changing the rating system but now had come to realize that some compromise was probably needed. The industry adopted a new rating category, NC-17, a few weeks later. AU - Hall, Carla DA - Aug. 10, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner motion pictures, and morality Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Valenti, Jack, and critics Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 Valenti, Jack, and legal challenges theater owners, and rating system (U. S.) theater owners, and NC-17 MPAA, and NC-17 Coppola, Francis Ford Lee, Spike Reiner, Rob Pollack, Sydney Wang, Wayne Lipsky, Mark MPAA, and independent producers NC-17 NC-17, and origins Heffner, Richard LB - 25340 PY - 1990 SE - C SP - 2C ST - Directors, MPAA Chief Meet on Film Ratings T2 - Washington Post TI - Directors, MPAA Chief Meet on Film Ratings ID - 1130 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with political pressures exerted on the television industry to adopt a rating system for its programs. AU - Hall, Jane DA - July 17, 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Federal Communications Commission (FCC) entertainment, home Clinton, William Jefferson CARA V-chip, and television violence television, and parents telecommunications presidents, and new media censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) PTA motion pictures home entertainment government regulation Clinton Administration law regulation law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification Gore, Al home, and new media home home +television +motion pictures and popular culture Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.), and TV (1997) V-chip television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and V-chip home entertainment revolution home entertainment, and V-chip television, and PTA PTA, and television television, and critics rating system (U. S.), and critics hearings new media Collings, Tim V-chip, and Tim Collings Telecommunications Act (1996) regulation, and television Valenti, Jack, and television television, and Jack Valenti Clinton, Bill Clinton, Bill, and TV rating system (U. S.) Clinton administration, and TV rating system (U. S.) Gore, Al, and TV rating system (U. S.) McCain, John, and TV rating system (U. S.) Lieberman, Joseph, and TV rating system (U. S.) FCC FCC, and TV rating system (U. S.) Markey, Ed, and V-chip LB - 25980 PY - 1997 SE - A SP - 17A ST - FCC Chairman Backs Bill on TV Content T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - FCC Chairman Backs Bill on TV Content ID - 1189 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with political pressures exerted on the television industry to adopt a rating system for its programs. The U. S. Senate held hearings on this issue in late February, 1997. AU - Hall, Jane DA - Feb. 28, 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Federal Communications Commission (FCC) entertainment, home Clinton, William Jefferson CARA V-chip, and television violence television, and parents telecommunications presidents, and new media censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) PTA motion pictures home entertainment government regulation Clinton Administration law regulation law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification Gore, Al home, and new media home home +television +motion pictures and popular culture Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.), and TV (1997) V-chip television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and V-chip home entertainment revolution home entertainment, and V-chip television, and PTA PTA, and television television, and critics rating system (U. S.), and critics hearings new media Collings, Tim V-chip, and Tim Collings Telecommunications Act (1996) regulation, and television Valenti, Jack, and television television, and Jack Valenti Clinton, Bill Clinton, Bill, and TV rating system (U. S.) Clinton administration, and TV rating system (U. S.) Gore, Al, and TV rating system (U. S.) McCain, John, and TV rating system (U. S.) Lieberman, Joseph, and TV rating system (U. S.) FCC FCC, and TV rating system (U. S.) Markey, Ed, and V-chip LB - 25990 PY - 1997 SE - A SP - 4A ST - Senators Push Content-Based TV Ratings... T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Senators Push Content-Based TV Ratings... ID - 1190 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with political pressures exerted the Clinton administration and by others in Congress on the television industry to adopt a rating system for its programs. By July, 1997, much of the industry, with a few holdouts, had agreed in principle to a new system. AU - Hall, Jane DA - July 10, 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Federal Communications Commission (FCC) entertainment, home Clinton, William Jefferson CARA V-chip, and television violence television, and parents telecommunications presidents, and new media censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) PTA motion pictures home entertainment government regulation Clinton Administration law regulation law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification Gore, Al home, and new media home home +television +motion pictures and popular culture Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.), and TV (1997) V-chip television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and V-chip home entertainment revolution home entertainment, and V-chip television, and PTA PTA, and television television, and critics rating system (U. S.), and critics hearings new media Collings, Tim V-chip, and Tim Collings Telecommunications Act (1996) regulation, and television Valenti, Jack, and television television, and Jack Valenti Clinton, Bill Clinton, Bill, and TV rating system (U. S.) Clinton administration, and TV rating system (U. S.) Gore, Al, and TV rating system (U. S.) McCain, John, and TV rating system (U. S.) Lieberman, Joseph, and TV rating system (U. S.) FCC FCC, and TV rating system (U. S.) Markey, Ed, and V-chip LB - 26020 PY - 1997 SE - A SP - 1A ST - TV Industry Reportedly Oks New Ratings T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - TV Industry Reportedly Oks New Ratings ID - 1193 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Efforts to add speech and color to motion pictures moved forward during the early decades of cinema but as late as 1929 they had hardly achieved perfection according to this reviewer for the New York Times. After watching Warner Bros.’s On With the Show (1929), which used Technicolor and Vitaphone sound, he found that the “dialogue, so jarring on one’s nerves, sometimes comes from cherry-red lips on faces in which the lily and the rose seem to be struggling for supremacy.” AU - Hall, Mordaunt DA - May 29, 1929 KW - ref, news ref, NYT motion pictures color sound technology motion pictures, and color motion pictures, and sound technology color, and motion pictures sound technology, and motion pictures phonograph, and motion pictures motion pictures, and phonograph sound technology, and phonograph phonograph color, and Warner Bros. color, and On With the Show (1929) Technicolor color, and Technicolor sound technology, and Vitaphone Warner Bros., and Technicolor Warner Bros., and Vitaphone Warner Bros. LB - 42010 PY - 1929 SP - 38 ST - The Screen: Dialogue and Color T2 - New York Times TI - The Screen: Dialogue and Color ID - 4299 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In this movie review, Mardaunt Hall comments on the film's use of color. Cecil B. De Mille’s movie about the life of Jesus, The King of Kings (1927), opens in color with the living quarters of Mary Magdelene. The use of color (Technicolor) here probably was meant to emphasize the sensuous lifestyle of Mary Magdelene (lust, pride, etc.). The film then moves to black and white in depicting Jesus’s life. The Resurrection scene at the end, however, is again in color. In reviewing this film for the New York Times, Hall wrote: “This story opens in a startling and strange way. Instead of gazing upon something gentle, such as Christ delivering the Sermon on the Mount of Olives, one sees in prismatic colors the gilded abode of Mary Magdalene. On leaving this episode, Mr. DeMille takes the spectators to Jesus of Nazareth and soon afterward Christ is seen raising Lazarus from the tomb. A memorable sequence is that in which the boy Mark is made to walk.” Hall opened his review by writing: “So reverential is the spirit of Cecil B. DeMille’s ambitious pictorial transcription of the life of Jesus of Nazareth, the Man, that during its initial screening at the Gaiety Theatre last Monday evening, hardly a whispered word was uttered among the audience. This production is entitled, “The King of Kings,” and it is, in fact the most impressive of all motion pictures….” (all quotations, 29) AU - Hall, Mordaunt DA - April 20, 1927 KW - ref, NYT motion pictures color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color DeMille, Cecil motion pictures, and King of Kings (1927) color, and King of Kings (1927) color, and technicolor motion pictures, and technicolor technicolor color, and degeneracy color, and immorality values values, and color color, and values LB - 42670 PY - 1927 SP - 29 ST - The Screen: Jesus of Nazareth T2 - New York Times TI - The Screen: Jesus of Nazareth ID - 4366 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The article reports that "religious leaders representing 25 churches announced ... that they will urge their congregations to boycott" Martin Scorcese movie The Last Temptation of Christ (1988). AU - Hamilton, Denise DA - Oct. 20, 1988 KW - corporations values Christianity Universal Pictures Protestants values motion pictures Hollywood values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church boycotts critics +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion Last Temptation of Christ (1988) boycotts, and Last Temptation motion pictures, and boycotts Catholics, and Last Temptation Protestants, and Last Temptation of Christ motion pictures, and anti-religion boycotts, and Universal Universal Pictures, and boycotts censorship, and Last Temptation LB - 28580 PY - 1988 SE - 9 (Ventura County) SP - 1 ST - Church Leaders to Urge Boycott of 'Temptation' T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Church Leaders to Urge Boycott of 'Temptation' ID - 1395 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article examines the ways in which studios are attempting to encrypt digital movies to protect them from piracy. AU - Harmon, Amy C1 - A1, A21 DA - Jan. 5, 2003 KW - independent moving making projection preservation motion pictures history, and new media digital cinema digital cinema law censorship and ratings censorship history +motion pictures and popular culture digital media motion pictures, and digital indepedent moviemaking, and digital new media motion pictures, and new media new media, and motion pictures history, break with history, and digital movies censorship, and digital movies projection, digital digital projection digital movies digital movies, and encryption DVDs DVDs, and pirarcy digital movies, and piracy DVDs, and encryption digitization history LB - 28060 PY - 2003 SE - A ST - Studios Using Digital Armor To Fight Piracy T2 - New York Times TI - Studios Using Digital Armor To Fight Piracy ID - 1355 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article involves the controversy rating lyrics in rock music. For the Reagan administration, this issue was apiece with its war on substance abuse and pornography. AU - Harrington, Richard DA - Sept. 20, 1985 KW - rock n' roll government hearings presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality government substance abuse rock music lyrics drug abuse pornography Reagan administration, and rock music lyrics Reagan administration, and pornography Reagan administration, and drug abuse drug use, and Senate hearing (1985) Senate hearing, and Hollywood (1985) critics values hearings LB - 24170 PY - 1985 SE - B SP - 1B ST - The Capitol Hill Rock War: Emotions Run High as Musicians Confront Parents' Groups at Hearing T2 - Washington Post TI - The Capitol Hill Rock War: Emotions Run High as Musicians Confront Parents' Groups at Hearing ID - 1064 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with the controversy over rating rock music lyrics and the Reagan administration's effort to eliminate substance abuse and pornography in mass entertainment. AU - Harrington, Richard DA - Oct. 16, 1985 KW - rock n' roll government hearings presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality government substance abuse rock music lyrics drug abuse pornography Reagan administration, and rock music lyrics Reagan administration, and pornography Reagan administration, and drug abuse drug use, and Senate hearing (1985) Senate hearing, and Hollywood (1985) values critics hearings LB - 24180 PY - 1985 SE - B SP - 7B ST - Is It Cleaner in the Country? T2 - Washington Post TI - Is It Cleaner in the Country? ID - 1065 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Jack Valenti opposes a new rating subcategory that would warn parents that a movie depicted drug use. The article indicates that the movie industry Classification and Rating Administration "will doubtless approve" new guidelines that guarantee that films showing drug use will be rated no less than PG-13. AU - Hedlund, Kristen DA - Oct. 25, 1985 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA U. S.Congress self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) values NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA motion pictures Congress, U. S. law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and drug use classification, and drug use Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) Valenti, Jack CARA, and drug abuse CARA, and substance abuse Valenti, Jack, and drug use Valenti, Jack, and opposes SA rating MPAA, and drug abuse rating system (U. S.), and drug abuse Congress, U. S., and Hollywood Congress, U. S., and drug abuse values government LB - 3470 PY - 1985 SP - 8 ST - Valenti Opposes Plan for Drug Use Rating for Films T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Valenti Opposes Plan for Drug Use Rating for Films ID - 435 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Heffner was concerned about the impact of such new media as cable television and video cassettes which brought restricted or even X-rated entertainment directly into homes, thus bypassing the box office and making the movie industry's rating system much less effective. He worried that unlike movie maker exhibited restraint that they might create a climate in which the majority would impose censorship on the rest of society. Heffner did not like the New York Times' title for this piece. He preferred "'Narrowcasting' and the Threat to Freedom." The material in this article later appeared in Heffner's address in London, March 22, 1982, entitled "Freedom and Responsibility in Mass Communication," copy in Papers of Richard D. Heffner, Private Collection, New York, N.Y. AU - Heffner, Richard D. DA - Aug. 17, 1980 KW - entertainment Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation entertainment, home Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) +television censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) primary sources new media religion values morality home entertainment freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA home, and new media home archives primary sources, Richard Heffner primary sources, New York addresses, Richard Heffner +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and cable TV Heffner, Richard, and home entertainment Heffner, Richard, and VCRs Heffner, Richard, and satellite TV new media, and home classification, and new technology CARA, and new technology rating system (U. S.), and new technology home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and Richard Heffner censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and Tocqueville Heffner, Richard, and John Milton Heffner, Richard, and Thomas Jefferson narrowcasting television, and narrowcasting morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality Heffner, Richard, and editorial First Amendment First Amendment, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and First Amendment critics Heffner, Richard addresses LB - 20150 PY - 1980 SE - 2 (Arts and Leisure) SP - 29 ST - 'Narrowcasting' and the Threat to Morals T2 - New York Times TI - 'Narrowcasting' and the Threat to Morals ID - 838 ER - TY - NEWS AB - An Op-Ed article by Heffner, who was chairman of citizens committee appointed to advise New York State judiciary on current experiments in using TV cameras in courts. Heffner opposed the presence of cameras in courts. AU - Heffner, Richard D. DA - March 24, 1989 KW - +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and background Heffner, Richard Open Mind, and Richard Heffner +television television, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and television Heffner, Richard, and educational TV Heffner, Richard, and editorial Heffner, Richard, and TV in courts Heffner, Richard, and Open Mind critics LB - 20800 PY - 1989 SE - 1 SP - 10 ST - TV Cameras Don't Belong in the Courts T2 - Wall Street Journal TI - TV Cameras Don't Belong in the Courts ID - 881 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Heffner, who chaired the movie industry's Classification and Rating Administration from 1974 unti 1994, here defends the system and says that the sole purpose of the ratings is to give parents a clear idea of the nature of films so that they could then determine if the movies were appropriate for their children. AU - Heffner, Richard D. DA - July 2, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) religion values morality freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality CARA, and William Kunstler Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating Cruising, and rating system (U. S.) CARA, and Cruising critics Heffner, Richard CARA Cruising LB - 20850 PY - 1990 ST - Guidance to Parents, Not Profits, Governs Movie Rating System T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Guidance to Parents, Not Profits, Governs Movie Rating System ID - 886 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Heffner, who chaired the movie industry's Classification and Rating Administration from 1974 until 1994, doubted that the ratings would work for home entertainment. The rating system depended on the box office to help keep underage children from restricted entertainment. “I don’t think ratings, given the fact that it’s not theatrical exhibition movies anymore, but it is television movies and cable movies and home video games – all of this stuff pouring into our homes – I don’t think the concept of ratings, which was so appropriate for theatrical exhibition movies, is going to work,” he said. A clilppling of this piece is in Richard D. Heffner's Personal Papers, Private Collection, New York, N.Y. AU - Heffner, Richard D. DA - May 1, 1994 KW - entertainment Classification and Rating Administration classification video cassette recorders (VCRs) self-regulation entertainment, home Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) magnetic recording television, and V-chip violence censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) religion values morality home entertainment magnetic tape freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship home +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality +television television, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and television Heffner, Richard, and TV rating system (U. S.) V-chip Heffner, Richard, and V-chip home entertainment revolution Heffner, Richard, and home entertainment revolution Heffner, Richard, and editorial VCRs Heffner, Richard, and VCRs critics home, and new media Heffner, Richard CARA LB - 20880 PY - 1994 SE - 4 SP - 17 ST - Here Come the Video Censors [Editorial] T2 - New York Times TI - Here Come the Video Censors [Editorial] ID - 889 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Heffner, who chaired the Classification and Rating Administration from 1974 to 1994, here discusses the power of cinema to influence the way we see the news and interpret history. He speculated that such visual media which so easily blended fact and fiction ("faction," he called it) might well define the national agenda in years to come. He was writing during the controversial over the interpretation of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in Oliver Stone's movie JFK (1991). AU - Heffner, Richard D. DA - Feb. 19, 1992 KW - history Classification and Rating Administration classification video cassette recorders (VCRs) self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) magnetic recording censorship and ratings preservation religion values morality history, and new media magnetic tape freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality Heffner, Richard, and editorial VCRs Heffner, Richard, and Oliver Stone Heffner, Richard, and movie history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and history motion pictures, and Oliver Stone, critics history Heffner, Richard CARA LB - 20890 PY - 1992 SP - B11 ST - Last Gasp of the Gutenbergs [Editorial] T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Last Gasp of the Gutenbergs [Editorial] ID - 890 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Heffner, who chaired the movie industry's Classification and Rating Administration from 1974 and 1994, and Champlin, a film critic for the Los Angeles Times, discuss the motion picture rating system in the context of efforts to create a similar system for television as well as efforts to get people to use the V-chip to screen out unwanted entertainment. AU - Heffner, Richard D. AU - Champlin, Charles DA - Dec. 16, 1996 KW - entertainment Classification and Rating Administration classification video cassette recorders (VCRs) self-regulation entertainment, home Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) magnetic recording television, and V-chip violence censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) religion values morality home entertainment magnetic tape freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship home +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality +television television, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and television Heffner, Richard, and TV rating system (U. S.) V-chip Heffner, Richard, and V-chip home entertainment revolution Heffner, Richard, and home entertainment revolution Heffner, Richard, and editorial VCRs Heffner, Richard, and VCRs home, and new media Heffner, Richard Champlin, Charles CARA LB - 20860 PY - 1996 ST - The Case of the Missing Rating [Editorial] T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - The Case of the Missing Rating [Editorial] ID - 887 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Heffner, who chaired the movie industry's Classification and Rating Administration from 1974 and 1994, and Champlin, a film critic for the Los Angeles Times, discuss the motion picture rating system in the context of efforts to create a similar system for television. AU - Heffner, Richard D. AU - Champlin, Charles DA - Dec. 19, 1996 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and CARA motion pictures, and Richard Heffner CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard Heffner, Richard, and rating system classification, and Richard Heffner +television television, and rating system (U. S.) Heffner, Richard, and classification Heffner, Richard, and television Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and editorial Heffner, Richard, and TV rating system (U. S.) Heffner, Richard CARA LB - 20900 PY - 1996 SE - A SP - 28 ST - A Television Rating System Won't Hurt Anyone [Editorial] T2 - New York Times TI - A Television Rating System Won't Hurt Anyone [Editorial] ID - 891 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Hugh Hefner, who founded Playboy, argues that pornography has no harmful effects on society. He notes that during the late 1960s, the University of Chicago had conducted a "Playboy Foundation-funded society of 7,000 psychologists, psychiatrists and similar social scientists across the country to learn whether, in their opinion, hard-core pornography caused anti-social behavior. The overwhelming majority (93 percent) replied that they did not believe that any such casual connection existed." Hefner claimed, "that essential insight -- that explicit sexual images do not cause harm -- has been supported by every objective study in the intervening years." Hefner quotes from Meese Commission member Park Dietz as saying that "I believe that Playboy centerfolds are among the healthiest images in America," and President Reagan's Surgeon General, C. Everett Koop, as saying that there was "no evidence that exposure to sexual material leads to sex crimes." AU - Hefner, Hugh M. DA - March 13, 1993 KW - photography social science research sexuality sexuality news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers pornography magazines +photography and visual communication photography, and pornography pornography, and photography pornography, and magazines Playboy media effects pornography, and defenders media effects, and pornography social science research, and pornography Koop, C. Everett, and pornography Dietz, Park, and pornography Koop, C. Everett LB - 28410 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1993 SP - 18 ST - Who Says Pornography Harms Society?; There Are Indications It Has No Effect at All T2 - Chicago Sun-Times TI - Who Says Pornography Harms Society?; There Are Indications It Has No Effect at All ID - 601 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article covers criticism of the U. S. government's strategy of launching multi-cases, each in different states, to harass pornographers out of business. "'The heart of this strategy,' a former Utah U.S. attorney said in a letter to [Edwin] Meese, 'calls for multiple prosecutions (either simultaneous and successive) at all levels of government in many locations.'" In a case involving the Adam & Eve company, the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver called the government's indictment "the tainted fruit of a prosecutorial attempt to curtail ... future First Amendment protected speech....'" AU - Hentoff, Nat DA - July 25, 1992 KW - presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality values obscenity law censorship and ratings Meese Commission pornography pornography, and Meese Commission pornography, and opponents pornography, and legal obscenity, and pornography pornography, and obscenity obscenity, and legal Reagan administration, and pornography pornography, and Reagan administration censorship censorship, and Reagan administration Reagan administration, and censorship Meese Commission, and critics, law, and pornography LB - 23860 PY - 1992 SE - A SP - A21 ST - The Justice Department's Tainted Fruit: Harassing Those Engaged in Lawful Activity Is Not a Proper Function of Government T2 - Washington Post TI - The Justice Department's Tainted Fruit: Harassing Those Engaged in Lawful Activity Is Not a Proper Function of Government ID - 1047 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Richard Heffner, who chaired a committee to evaluate camera use in court rooms in New York State, said the survey revealed that there was no "circus atmosphere" and said initial concerns about TV cameras have proved unwarranted. He said he doubted if most people know how new technology had made cameras unobtrusive. The number of cameras, lights, and cable needed had been minimized. Heffner wondered, though, if camera coverage had enhanced the public understanding of how courts operated. At this time, Heffner moderated a television program in New York, "The Open Mind," and also chaired the movie industry's Classification and Rating Administration. AU - Hevesi, Dennis DA - Sept. 22, 1988 KW - +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and background Heffner, Richard Open Mind, and Richard Heffner +television television, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and television Heffner, Richard, and Open Mind Heffner, Richard, and educational TV Heffner, Richard, and TV in courts LB - 20810 PY - 1988 SE - B SP - 5 ST - Rate Put at 88 Percent In Court Survey On Camera Use T2 - New York Times TI - Rate Put at 88 Percent In Court Survey On Camera Use ID - 882 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes the growing criticism of "the increasingly gamey content of films" and of the Production Code. The Code's operation is voluntary, althugh military bases and many lay and religious groups won't show films without the PCA seal. Geoffrey Shurlock is quotes as saying: "Our criteria are whether the treatment of a topic (a) conforms with established morality and (b) whether it is in good taste." AU - Hill, Gladwin DA - Dec. 11, 1960 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism LB - 35910 PY - 1960 SP - X11 ST - Hollywood Rules: Being an Analysis of the Criticized Motion Picture Production Code T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood Rules: Being an Analysis of the Criticized Motion Picture Production Code ID - 3228 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the change tastes of the American movie public and suggests that the Catholic Church's criticism of morality in the movies may not longer carry the weight it once did. Among the films discussed are The World of Suzie Wong (1961), a movie made in Hong Kong and England, about a prostitute. The articles says: "The public's standard of tastefulness is dynamic and changing: viz., the booking into the Radio City Music Hall, the nation's No. 1 'family' theatre, of 'The World of Suzie Wong.'" AU - Hill, Gladwin DA - Dec. 1, 1960 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and prostitution Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code World of Suzie Wong motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and American-interest film Legion of Decency values Production Code, and prostitution sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures LB - 36430 PY - 1960 SP - 40 ST - Hollywood Airs View of Criticism: Film Makers Though Not Defiant, Counter Bishops' Attack on Moral Tone T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood Airs View of Criticism: Film Makers Though Not Defiant, Counter Bishops' Attack on Moral Tone ID - 3276 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This is a two-page send up of mostly of pictures with captions. One discusses C. Huributt Growl, “assistant sub editor” on the “Tri-monthly Review,” who is going to talk about “What’s Wrong with the Motion Picture Industry.” “He is full of withering phrases like ‘Degradation Through Sex Appeal,’ ‘Low Tone of Morality,’ and ‘Sterility of Purpose.’ Everything’s wrong with the movies, according to C. Huributt. Perhaps C. H.’s latest returned scenario has something to do with it.” AU - Hill, W. E. DA - April 2, 1922 KW - immorality children Chicago, IL censorship photography ref, news motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures quotations nudity nudity, and the stage theaters theaters, and 5-cent values, and theater values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values theater, and values values immorality, and theater immorality, and motion pictures motion pictures,and immorality religion religion, and motion pictures religion, and theater theater, and religion motion pictures, and religion quotations motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures ref, CDT advertising theater LB - 13760 PY - 1922 SE - B SP - 12 ST - What’s Wrong with the Movies? T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - What’s Wrong with the Movies? ID - 3535 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This review of the movie The Cook, the Thief, His Wife and Her Lover (1990) in the Washington Post called the picture “a metaphor so grand, so lavishly comprehensive, that it can stand as a final, definitive assessment of the state of Western civilization.” Hinson said the X rating given to The Cook made British director Peter Greenaway and Miramax Films seem heroic. AU - Hinson, Hal DA - April 7, 1990 KW - motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and reviews Hinson, Hal, and The Cook... LB - 25020 PY - 1990 SE - C SP - 1C ST - Bestial Brew: 'The Cook,' Serving Up Squalor T2 - Washington Post TI - Bestial Brew: 'The Cook,' Serving Up Squalor ID - 1103 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The Motion Picture Association of America and National Association of Theater Owners announced on September 26 that the X category would be dropped in favor of the NC-17 rating (no children under 17 allowed). The expectation – or at least the hope – was that the new rating would remove the stigma of pornography from serious adult pictures. Valenti was not so certain. “I expect criticism to continue,” he speculated. “I do know, however, that what I’m doing is in the long-range best interests of an enduring and useful ratings system.” Universal's picture Henry and June (1990) became the first film to carry the NC-17 rating. AU - Hinson, Hal DA - Sept. 27, 1990 KW - music Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation corporations motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality corporations corporations homosexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters MCA Universal Pictures theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) motion pictures Music Corporation of America (MCA) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture Wasserman, Lew CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 NC-17 rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 movie, Henry and June motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex lesbianism motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and homosexuality motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies Wasserman, Lew, and NC-17 Universal Pictures, and NC-17 Miller, Henry Kaufman, Philip MCA, and NC-17 MCA, and Cineplex Odeon theater chain theater owners, and NC-17 NC-17, and theater owners Pollock, Tom, and Universal Universal Pictures, and Tom Pollock Pollock, Tom, and NC-17 Kaufman, Philip, and Henry and June Heffner, Richard, and NC-17 Heffner, Richard, and Henry and June Heffner, Richard, and rating system (U. S.) NC-17 NC-17, and origins LB - 25380 PY - 1990 SE - A SP - 1A ST - Film Industry Revises Rating System; Controversial X Movie Category Abandoned to Avoid "Stigma" T2 - Washington Post TI - Film Industry Revises Rating System; Controversial X Movie Category Abandoned to Avoid "Stigma" ID - 1134 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Following the meeting between President Ronald Reagan and leaders of Morality in Meida, more than 100 Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox bishops wrote letters asking for a federal monitor to oversee the enforcement of obscenity laws and to curb what was then a $6 billion pornography industry. The article quotes Reagan saying that his administration had "identified the worst hazardous-waste sites in American -- we have to do the same with the worst sources of pornography." The article also quotes Rev. Morton Hill, the national president of Morality in Media. AU - Hoffman, David DA - March 29, 1983 KW - conservatives Reagan, Ronald presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality sexuality nudity motion pictures religion values morality mass media media effects crime values religion law censorship and ratings censorship pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and crime crime, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship Reagan administration, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and nudity nudity, and Ronald Reagan Reagan, Ronald, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and secular humanism Reagan, Ronald, and liberalism pornography, and evangelicals evangelicals, and pornography religion, and pornography pornography, and religion Reagan, Ronald, and religion Morality in Media critics Hill, Morton, and Morality in Media LB - 22480 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1983 SE - A SP - 5A ST - Reagan Hears Pleas to Battle Pornography T2 - Washington Post TI - Reagan Hears Pleas to Battle Pornography ID - 976 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses efforts by the movie industry to combat piracy of movies over the Internet. Analysts estimated that 500,000 copies of movies are swapped each day. Lawsuits against violators is one strategy being used. AU - Holson, Laura M. DA - Sept. 25, 2003 KW - entertainment computers projection entertainment, home law +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, and digital movies +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality Hollywood, and digital movies digital movies, and Hollywood +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and piracy copyright, and motion pictures copyright piracy, and motion pictures law, and piracy law, and copyright law, and motion pictures digital media digital cinema home entertainment Hollywood motion pictures home photography piracy 35mm computers LB - 28650 PY - 2003 SE - A, C SP - A1, C6 ST - Studios Moving To Block Piracy of Films Online T2 - New York Times TI - Studios Moving To Block Piracy of Films Online ID - 2650 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with rating violence in such then recently released movies as the remake of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, and Quetin Tarantino's Kill Bill: Vol. 1. Nick Browne, a professor of critical studies at the University of California, is quoted saying "It's bad language and graphic nudity" rather than violence that gets the R and NC-17 ratings. Jack Valenti plays down the violence in Kill Bill. "I think even an impressionable child would go in and say they've seen worse on Wile E. Coyote," Valenti says. AU - Holson, Laura M. DA - Oct. 21, 2003 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA self-regulation rating system (U.S.) CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) children violence +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures media effects, and movie violence rating controversies Tarantino, Quentin, and violence Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003) Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (2003) censorship and ratings +television violence, and television television, and violence Valenti, Jack violence, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and violence media effects CARA CARA, and rating controversies motion pictures children, and media LB - 28740 PY - 2003 SE - B (TheArts) SP - B1, B5 ST - Studios Are Killing (Bloodily but Carefully) for an R Rating T2 - New York Times TI - Studios Are Killing (Bloodily but Carefully) for an R Rating ID - 2653 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that "First Amendment specialists have accused the Justice Department of deliberately abusing obscenity laws to drive mail-order companies out of business for distributing adult films and publications that were never determined to be obscene." These specialists called the Justice Department's National Obscenity Enforcement Unit's strategy "censorship by intimidation." AU - Howe, Robert F. DA - March 26, 1990 KW - American Library Association presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality values obscenity law censorship and ratings Meese Commission pornography pornography, and Meese Commission pornography, and opponents pornography, and legal obscenity, and pornography pornography, and obscenity obscenity, and legal Reagan administration, and pornography pornography, and Reagan administration censorship censorship, and Reagan administration Reagan administration, and censorship National Obscenity Enforcement Unit pornography, and American Library Association American Library Association, and obscenity American Library Association, and pornography LB - 23840 PY - 1990 SE - A SP - 4A ST - U.S. Accused of "Censorship by Intimidation" in Pornography Cases T2 - Washington Post TI - U.S. Accused of "Censorship by Intimidation" in Pornography Cases ID - 1045 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The author of this article on Edward Muybridge writes: “One who now sees moving picture reproductions, vivid scenes of real life that seem an open window through which the man in the theater in his home city may view the manner of living of humanity on the other side of the globe, may witness news events often more completely than if he had been at the places depicted, has much to thank, it seeks, to the argument in California in 1872 and the judge who found something big in his method of decision.” AU - Howland, John A. DA - July 9, 1911 KW - future photography ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space metaphors home and new media motion pictures, and home theater home entertainment seeing at a distance television television, and early ideas future and science fiction motion pictures, as open window Muybridge, Edward photography and visual communication photography, and Edward Muybridge ref, CDT home LB - 930 PY - 1911 SE - E SP - 1 ST - He Made the First Motion Picture to Win a Wager, By Setting Twenty-Four Cameras in a Row T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - He Made the First Motion Picture to Win a Wager, By Setting Twenty-Four Cameras in a Row ID - 3388 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the increasingly large role that Hollywood films are having on network television. In 1965, the Motion Picture Association of America said that it grossed about $350 million from TV sales worldwide. Studios were then regularly making several versions of the same film -- one for American theaters, a sexier version for sale abroard, and "a toned-down, covered-up television version." The article notes that such films as Otto Preminger's Advise and Consent aired with its homosexual subplot largely intact; Hitchcock's Psycho was scheduled to aired with the shower scene shortened but not eliminated; and that other movies dealing with illicit sex, suicide, impotence, and nudity were under consideration. AU - Hudson, Peggy DA - Dec. 4, 1966 KW - censorship self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality , news motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings sexuality motion pictures, and sex Production Code, and sex Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality homosexuality, and motion pictures censorship, and homosexuality Production Code, and homosexuality Preminger, Otto Production Code, and Otto Preminger Preminger, Otto, and Production Code television motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures television, and Production Code television, and censorship Production Code Production Code (TV) LB - 36690 PY - 1966 SP - X13 ST - Boudoir Battle Shifts from Wide to Home Screen T2 - New York Times TI - Boudoir Battle Shifts from Wide to Home Screen ID - 3302 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that fundamentalists are angry about the home-video release of Martin Scorcese' movie The Last Temptation of Christ (1988). AU - Hunt, Dennis DA - June 2, 1989 KW - entertainment video cassette recorders (VCRs) corporations corporations entertainment, home values Christianity magnetic recording advertising, and public relations Universal Pictures propaganda advertising Protestants values motion pictures home entertainment Hollywood VCRs magnetic tape values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church boycotts home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion Last Temptation of Christ (1988) boycotts, and Last Temptation motion pictures, and boycotts Catholics, and Last Temptation Protestants, and Last Temptation of Christ motion pictures, and anti-religion boycotts, and Universal Universal Pictures, and boycotts censorship, and Last Temptation Bright, Bill public relations public relations, and Last Temptation Last Temptation, and public relations Last Temptation, and marketing strategies boycotts, and video Last Temptation, and video boycott home, and VCRs VCRs, and religion VCRs, and Last Temptation of Christ (1988) LB - 24520 PY - 1989 SE - 6 (Calendar) SP - 13 ST - "Temptation" Video to Rekindle Fundamentalist Ire? T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - "Temptation" Video to Rekindle Fundamentalist Ire? ID - 1092 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article regards the effort by religious leaders, many angry over Universal Pictures' movie The Last Temptation of Christ (1988), to boycott the video rental of Universal's popular film E.T. (1982). AU - Hunt, Dennis DA - Sept. 16, 1988 KW - corporations corporations values Christianity advertising, and public relations Universal Pictures propaganda advertising Protestants values motion pictures Hollywood values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion Last Temptation of Christ (1988) boycotts, and Last Temptation motion pictures, and boycotts Catholics, and Last Temptation Protestants, and Last Temptation of Christ motion pictures, and anti-religion boycotts, and Universal Pictures Universal Pictures, and boycotts censorship, and Last Temptation Bright, Bill public relations public relations, and Last Temptation Last Temptation, and public relations Last Temptation, and marketing strategies boycotts, and video Last Temptation, and video boycott boycotts, and E.T. video LB - 24580 PY - 1988 SE - 6 (Calendar) SP - 4 ST - Fundamentalists Urge "E.T." Video Boycott; Pre-Order Set Record T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Fundamentalists Urge "E.T." Video Boycott; Pre-Order Set Record ID - 1098 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article involves the home video release of the Russ Meyer movie Beyond the Valley of the Dolls (1969), which had been X rated when it first appeared in movie theaters. AU - Hunt, Dennis DA - May 21, 1993 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation homosexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) motion pictures media effects media violence lesbianism substance abuse drug abuse law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture X-rated films NC-17 rating system (U. S.), and controversies CARA, and rating controversies Heffner, Richard, and rating controversies Ebert, Roger homosexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality motion pictures, and homosexuality drug use, and motion pictures motion pictures, and drug use lesbianism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and lesbianism drug use, and motion pictures motion pictures, and drug use violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and violence Meyer, Russ Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and Roger Ebert CARA, and re-rating films CARA, and video releases rating system (U. S.), and video releases Heffner, Richard LB - 25150 PY - 1993 SE - F (Calendar) SP - 24F ST - Home Tech/Video: New Releases from the "Valley" of Clunkers T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Home Tech/Video: New Releases from the "Valley" of Clunkers ID - 1115 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Christie Hefner, the president of Playboy Enterprise, attacks the Meese Commission for inaccuracies and dubious conclusion at the Video Software Dealers' Convention in Las Vagas. AU - Hunt, Dennis DA - Aug. 29, 1986 KW - sexuality sexuality sexuality pornography Meese Commission Meese Commission, and blacklists Playboy Penthouse Meese Commission, and boycotts Meese Commission, and Playboy LB - 28440 PY - 1986 SE - 6 (Calendar) SP - 21 ST - Video Log: Christie Hefner Attacks Meese Report at Convention T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Video Log: Christie Hefner Attacks Meese Report at Convention ID - 1381 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that Ken Russell's movie Whore (1991), rated NC-17 for theaters, is available in four different versions on video cassette. AU - Hunt, Dennis DA - Jan. 31, 1992 KW - prostitution entertainment classification video cassette recorders (VCRs) self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality entertainment, home CARA magnetic recording sexuality advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising values motion pictures media effects media violence home entertainment magnetic tape law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Whore (1991) motion pictures, and sex sex, and motion pictures lCARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 violence, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and prostitution prostitution, and motion pictures VCRs VCRs, and values values, and VCRs home, and VCRs VCRs, and Whore (1991) values advertising LB - 28480 PY - 1992 SE - F SP - 25F ST - Home Tech/Video: Ken Russell's Movie Available in Four Versions T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Home Tech/Video: Ken Russell's Movie Available in Four Versions ID - 1385 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that the 4,000 Christian evangelicals that attended the National Religious Broadcasters 41st annual meeting in Washington, D.C., discovered that the program focused strongly on politics. President Ronald Reagan addressed the group and condemned the American Civil Liberties Union, child pornography, infanticide, abortion, and substance abuse. AU - Hyer, Marjorie DA - Feb. 4, 1984 KW - conservatives values Christianity Reagan, Ronald presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality sexuality nudity motion pictures mass media media effects crime values religion law censorship and ratings censorship Catholic Church pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and crime crime, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship Reagan administration, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and nudity nudity, and Ronald Reagan Reagan, Ronald, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and secular humanism Reagan, Ronald, and liberalism pornography, and evangelicals evangelicals, and pornography religion, and pornography pornography, and religion Reagan, Ronald, and religion Catholics, and pornography pornography, and Catholics critics values +television +radio television, and values radio, and values LB - 22500 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1984 SE - B SP - 6B ST - Evangelical Broadcasters Define Role in Politics T2 - Washington Post TI - Evangelical Broadcasters Define Role in Politics ID - 978 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals a special award created by the Entertainment Industries Council. It will be given to Nancy Reagan for her crusade against drug use. Lew Wasserman chaired the award committee. Jack Valenti was one of the co-chairs for the events honoring Mrs. Reagan. This award came at a time when the White House was exerting pressure on the motion picture industry to take part in the Reagan administration's war on drugs. AU - Jacobs, Jody C1 - 4 DA - Aug. 15, 1985 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack presidents, and new media Reagan administration motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Reagan, Nancy Reagan, Nancy, and war on drug Reagan, Nancy, and Hollywood Valenti, Jack, and Nancy Reagan Wasserman, Lew, and Nancy Reagan LB - 24100 PY - 1985 SE - 5 (View) ST - A Special Award for Nancy Reagan T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - A Special Award for Nancy Reagan ID - 1059 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Jacobs predicts here that "The next few years will see a revolution in the technique of the screen as great as that effected by the arrival of sound." Jacobs discusses the ideas of stage and color designer Robert Edmond Jones. Jacobs compares the use of color on stage and in the movies to its use in painting. "On the screen or stage, color is used to build a dramatic effect. In painting, color is used to build light, line, space, distance, design and other plastic forms. Color on the screen can no more be compared to color in painting than a tube of paint can be compared to either. For the moment the paint leaves the tube for canvas, its color becomes part and parcel of something else -- a new entity called painting. Likewise color in the film. The moment color is photographed and mounted to other color images it ceases to be just color and takes on the quality of drama, comedy, romance or fantasy. The understanding of the role of color in films necessitates a new conception of the color film by its technicians." Jacobs lists several people, scenic designers, who know how to use color and who will be recruited by color moviemakers: "Robert Edmond Jones, Lee Simonson, Norman Bel Geddes, Cleon Throckmorton, Mordacal Gorelick, Albert Johnson, Howard Bey, Anton Refrugier and William Koenig." Jacobs draws comparison between color and music. "The relationship of color values and tones so composed as to supplement the portrayal of the actors is no slight problem. While the photographic relationship of one shot to another in the black and white film may be compared to monotone and easily solved, in color there is a full palette to consider and tone takes on the complexities of a symphony, with all its contrapuntal subtleties. One false color scene can ruin an entire sequence...." Color will be used to arouse emotions instead of subdue them. "...Every scene and sequence will call for its own color arrangements and harmonies. By such a principle, color sequences will be mounted so that color become a vital force in helping to arouse the emotions of the spectator, instead of distracting or stultifying him..... No spectator, whose emotions have been stirred by color, will ever be satisfied again by its pale echo, black and white." Jacobs says that newsreels may use color film to great emotional effect. The "problem for the newsreels will not be to dramatize color but simply to record it. This does not mean, however, that color is unsuited for the newsreels. A parade with all its garishness, a fire with all its melodrama, a landscape with all its lyricism, a social upheaval with all its brutality, will be made infinitely more real or documentary because of color. The vitality of the contemporary scene will be captured in all of its external phases." The problem with making color films in 1935 was the great expense involved. "At present it costs eight time more to produce a film in color than in black and white," Jacobs reported. AU - Jacobs, Lewis DA - March 17, 1935 KW - Kalmus, Herbert Jones, Robert Edmond censorship motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Natalie Kalmus, and critic of Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color ref, news color, and primitives color, and cinematographers color, and novelty color, and Robert Edmond Jones Jones, Robert Edmond, and color quotations quotations, and color on screen color, and music color, and Nature color, and emotions ref, NYT ref, newspaper quotations, and color movies more exciting color, and Robert Edmond Jones newsreels, and color film motion pictures, and color newsreels motion pictures, and cost of color movies color, and cost of color movies color, and color movies 8 times as expensive news and journalism LB - 42920 PY - 1935 SE - X SP - 4 ST - Color and the Cinema T2 - New York Times TI - Color and the Cinema ID - 4375 ER - TY - NEWS AB - After the Meese Commission issued its Final Report (1986), Cardinal Roger M. Mahony appointed Santa Barbara businessman Dennis Jarrard to lead the Archdiocese of Los Angeles' Commission on Obscenity and Pornography that spearheaded anti-pornography efforts. The Commission's recommendations included passage of stronger obscenity laws. Jarrard and the Commission adopted multiple strategies in their campaign against pornography. As part of an interfaith coalition, the Commission became involved in a boycott against Clorox Corporation and Burger King to force them “to spend their advertising dollars to support traditional family values on TV.” It also recommended civil action to revoke a zoning permit for a bondage-and- discipline parlor in North Hollywood, a tactic that had been used successfully in other parts of the country to close porn theaters and ban nude dancing. The Los Angeles City Council’s Planning and Land Use Committee rejected the recommendation, however. In early 1991, Jarrard called for a new code based on the Ten Commandments. Modern entertainment’s encouragement of promiscuity bore responsibility for the rampant spread of venereal disease and for the plague of AIDS. The mainstream film industry had degraded women with profanity and nudity. The new code would update the Hays-Breen formula, making it similar to the version of the Production Code that had been revised in 1956. Its management would be independent of the entertainment industry, and it would end “discrimination against the people who believe in time-tested Judeo-Christian values of human dignity and human rights.” AU - Jarrard, Dennis DA - Feb. 16, 1991 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA values Christianity advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations values sexuality motion pictures religion values morality Mahony, Roger Hollywood Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture morality, and motion pictures values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and values Catholic Church, and motion pictures Catholic Church, and new production code (1992) Mahony, Roger Mahony, Roger, and production code (1992) (1992) Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and new production code (1992) Mahony, Roger, and pornography pornography, and Roger M. Mahony Hollywood, and Roger M. Mahony Archdoicese, Los Angeles pornography pornography, and Archdiocese of L.A. Jarrard, Dennis Morality in Media Citizens for Decency through Law (CDL) National Religious Alliance Against Pornography primary sources boycotts, and pornography advertising, and pornography pornography, and advertising boycott Jarrard, Dennis, and Roger Mahony Mahony, Roger, and Dennis Jarrard advertising LB - 25620 PY - 1991 SE - F (Calendar) SP - 12F ST - Clean Entertainment T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Clean Entertainment ID - 1158 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Dennis Jarrard, who had been a member of the Archdioceses of Los Angeles' Commission of Obscenity and Pornography and an advocate of forcing Hollywood and the television industry to accept a new moral production code, here attacks Cardinal Roger M. Mahony for backing way from his call for a new code. AU - Jarrard, Dennis DA - Oct. 9, 1992 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA values Christianity advertising, and public relations Wasserman, Lew propaganda public relations values sexuality motion pictures religion values morality Mahony, Roger Hollywood Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture morality, and motion pictures values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and values Catholic Church, and motion pictures Catholic Church, and new production code (1992) Mahony, Roger Mahony, Roger, and production code (1992) (1992) Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and new production code (1992) Mahony, Roger, and pornography pornography, and Roger M. Mahony Hollywood, and Roger M. Mahony Archdoicese, Los Angeles pornography pornography, and Archdiocese of L.A. Jarrard, Dennis Morality in Media Citizens for Decency through Law (CDL) National Religious Alliance Against Pornography primary sources boycotts, and pornography advertising, and pornography pornography, and advertising boycott Jarrard, Dennis, and Roger Mahony Mahony, Roger, and Dennis Jarrard Wasserman, Lew, and Roger Mahony Valenti, Jack, and Roger Mahony Mahony, Roger, and Jack Valenti Mahony, Roger, and Lew Wasserman advertising LB - 25660 PY - 1992 SE - B (Metro) SP - 7B ST - Cardinal Lets Hollywood Off the Hook T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Cardinal Lets Hollywood Off the Hook ID - 1160 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Pope John Paul II, in an address to entertainment industry leaders, said that "you represent one of the most important American influences on the world of today. ... Humanity is profoundly influenced by what you do. ... It is a fact that your smallest decisions can have global impact." AU - John Paul II, Pope DA - Sept. 16, 1987 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA values Christianity Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack values archives primary sources motion pictures Hollywood values religion Catholic Church non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +television Pope John Paul II, and motion pictures Pope John Paul II Pope John Paul II, and television television, and Pope John Paul II motion pictures, and Pope John Paul II Valenti, Jack, and Pope John Paul II Wasserman, Lew, and Pope John Paul II Hollywood, and Catholic Church Hollywood, and religion Catholic Church, and Hollywood addresses primary sources primary sources, Pope John Paul II values critics values, and virtual reality virtual reality LB - 24250 PY - 1987 SE - A SP - 24A ST - Address to Communication Industry Executives, Los Angeles, Sept. 15, 1987 (excerpts) T2 - New York Times TI - Address to Communication Industry Executives, Los Angeles, Sept. 15, 1987 (excerpts) ID - 1072 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that “The Kinemacolor Theater gave an extra matinee at 10 a.m. yesterday, for the benefit of the children from several public schools of the city. The new process of color photography, as applied to moving pictures has produced some astonishingly realistic results, and the school official knowing of the instructive, as well as the educational, values that can be derived from these pictures, made arrangements by which they could view an entertainment made up especially for them. “Scenic pictures from various parts of the world, showing the different industries, customs, etc. In all their wealth of natural colors, interpreted with subjects of a lighter character to please the children, were the programme for the morning.” AU - Johnson, Julian DA - April 19, 1912 KW - children photography ref, news motion pictures color color, and photography photography, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures photography and visual communication education education, and color photography children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children children, and color photography ref, LAT children LB - 15170 PY - 1912 SE - II SP - 5 ST - Chevalier de Pixley Departs T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Chevalier de Pixley Departs ID - 3673 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article offers a concise account of how digital media have changed, and may well continue to change, the way we write and read books. The author argues that digitization "may well end up undermining some of the core attributes that we have associated with book reading for more than 500 years." (R1) Noting that Google had now scanned about 10 million titles, the author speculates that "2009 may well prove to be the most significant year in the evolution of the book since Gutenberg hammered out his original Bible." (R3) Not only will how we write books and read them change, but how we find them will be transformed also. "Before we can get too far in this new world, we need to have a technological standard for organizing digital books." (R3) The currently used URL, which was adopted during the early 1990s, may not be adequate to this task. AU - Johnson, Steven DA - April 20, 2009 KW - reading Google computers digital media books, periodicals, newspapers information storage history and new media democracy computers and the Internet democracy, and digital media digital media, and democracy digital media, and information storage Google, and digital books information storage, and digital media non-USA non-USA, and digital media Europe, and digital media Europe Europe, and information storage books, and digital media digital media, and books books, and reading digital media, and reading reading, and digital media books, and computers computers, and books Google, and E-books E-books books, and E-books books computers history LB - 33210 PY - 2009 SE - R SP - 1, 3 ST - How the E-Book Will Change the Way We Read and Write T2 - Wall Street Journal TI - How the E-Book Will Change the Way We Read and Write ID - 76 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Eric Johnston, who replaced Will Hays as president of the Motion Picture Association of America in 1945, emphasized expanding markets for American films and weakening foreign quotas placed on U.S. movies. A copy of this article is in Folder 7, Box 6, MS 118, Eric A. Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA. AU - Johnston, Eric DA - Dec. 15, 1946 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA capitalism non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and critics Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and critics motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad motion pictures, and Great Britain Johnston, Eric, and U. S. films abroad Great Britain, and U. S. films MPAA, and Great Britain capitalism, and motion pictures Great Britain LB - 16820 PY - 1946 ST - Finds Trade Barriers Impinge Screen Freedom: Eric Johnston Replies to Sir Alexander Korda's Charges Against Hollywood T2 - New York Times TI - Finds Trade Barriers Impinge Screen Freedom: Eric Johnston Replies to Sir Alexander Korda's Charges Against Hollywood ID - 630 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses Richard D. Heffner, then chair of the movie industry's Classification and Rating Administration (CARA). Heffner wanted to rate violence more severely than had been done in the past. Under his leadership, CARA had given an X to Shigehiro Ozawa’s Street Fighter (1974), a martial arts movie from New Line Cinema that featured a graphic castration scene. This article also deals with Heffner background before coming to Hollywood. AU - Jonas, Gerald DA - May 11, 1975 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) X-rated films censorship and ratings rating system (U. S.) media effects violence media violence law censorship and rating system (U. S.) censorship classification non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner CARA CARA, and Richard Heffner Valenti, Jack Heffner, Richard, and CARA censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and background Heffner, Richard, and Jack Valenti Heffner, Richard violence X-rating, and violence violence, and X-rating CARA, and violence violence, and CARA violence, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and violence rating system (U. S.), and independent producers foreign films LB - 19960 PY - 1975 SE - 2 SP - 1, 13 ST - The Man Who Gave an 'X' Rating to Violence T2 - New York Times TI - The Man Who Gave an 'X' Rating to Violence ID - 822 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Robert Edmond Jones was a well-known scene designer on Broadway who worked as art director on the movie Becky Sharp (1935), one of the earlier films to use the Technicolor process. Here he mentions early tests in 1933 that used the Techinolor process and how the process was much superior to black-and-white films and the two-color process of coloring movies. "My interest was caught and held," he said. "Something living had been brought into the world that was not there before." He goes on to say that "A new dimension has definitely been added to the screen." By 1935, therefore, Jones says that "The camera will record and reproduce faithfully whatever is put before it. What are we to put before it? Here is the opportunity and the challenge to colorists." Jones notes that color films are much more powerful that black-and-white films. "The point is this: Color on the screen is not only more natural than black-and-white, it is more stimulating, more exciting, more dramatic. Color, properly selected and composed, can immeasurably enhance the dramatic value of the screen story. Here is the dynamic force that lies behind this extraordinary new invention. The promise that color holds out to the producers of motion pictures is that their films (in the proper hands) may become not only more beautiful but incomparably more powerful than every before. There is really no limit to the potentialities of color on the screen. But color is of value only when it is handled by colorists. Black-and-white thinking is of no use here. Where are we to find the artists who will explore this new dramatic medium? Only time can answer," he writes. Jones said that "There is a quality of music in the new color films, hard to define, easy to feel. Watching the 'rushes' in the projection room, it has often seemed to me that we were reaching out half-consciously toward some new form of opera, unwritten as yet, toward some drama of the future that will combine color and music, to touch our imaginations in a new and thrilling way. Why should we not become conscious of beautiful color just as we are now conscious of great music? The awareness of color, like the awareness of sound, is in all of us. Shakespeare, with Barrymore, is exciting on the color screen. Why should be not forward to 'Pelleas' or the 'Goetterdaemerung'?" Jones says technical improvements may be a ways off in the future. "But as we see the actors of the screen cast aside their veils of gray shadow and emerge one by one into this bright new world of color, it is impossible not to feel that we are standing on the threshold of a thrilling adventure into a new form of dramatic art." AU - Jones, Robert Edmond DA - May 19, 1935 KW - Kalmus, Herbert Jones, Robert Edmond censorship motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Natalie Kalmus, and critic of Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color ref, news color, and primitives color, and cinematographers color, and novelty color, and Robert Edmond Jones Jones, Robert Edmond, and color quotations quotations, and color on screen color, and music color, and Nature color, and emotions ref, NYT ref, newspaper quotations, and color movies more exciting LB - 40980 PY - 1935 SE - X SP - 3 ST - The Crisis of Color T2 - New York Times TI - The Crisis of Color ID - 4197 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Jones criticizes Hollywood's use of color saying that "Hollywood has not yet begun to think in terms of color. The color pictures now being made in the studios are not color pictures at all, in any real sense, but colored pictures." In Jones opinion, "black-and-white thinking" still dominated movie making. Color films in 1938 were successful, Jones said, for two reasons. First color gratified "our desire of novelty -- anything for a new sensation in the movies!...." Second, it appealed "to our sense of recognition. We take pleasure in seeing on the screen the actual tones of the flesh." See movies stars such as Marlene Dietrich and Fredric March was "one step nearer to seeing them in person." But color was not exercising "its true function" and the reason for this failure was artistc rather than technical. Jones compares color in movies to the use of sound. Sounds of everyday life were reproduced but there was not an effort to organize or compose them, nor was the audience expected to forget that music in the film was there. The goal of film makers, according to Jones, was to make audience forget about color on the screen. Jones said that color did "not belong to the categories of color in Nature or in painting" and it did "not obey the rules of black-and-white picture-making." Why? "A new element is added," he said. "The color moves!" Herein lay "the key to all discussions of color in motion pictures. We are dealing, not wit color that is motionless, static, but with color that moves and changes before the eyes. Color on the screen interests us, not by its harmony but by its progression from harmony to harmony. This movement, this progression of color on the screen is in itself an utterly new visual experience, full of wonder. The color flows from sequence to sequence like a kind of visual music and affects our emotions precisely like music affects them." Color appealed strongly to the emotions. "The emotional quality of music is inherent in all moving color. When producers have grasped this idea they will have taken the first step toward the creation of true color films. We are sensitive to moving color as we are to music. The color in a film is like a musical accompaniment to the story, appeal to our eyes instead of to our ears." Yet in almost every color film the use of color "is fundamentally false and wrong" and audience sense this fact just as they can hear discord in poorly played music. Jones speaks to the critics of color who says "Down with color!" or of say "Take the color out of color! Get color out of the way at any cost! Accordingly, just as color was about to become a dramatic agent of real value to the screen, Hollywood took hold of it, subdued it, 'rarefied' it (a new catchword of the studios), thwarted it, stunted it, and is now trying to ignore it." Jones thought the use of color on screen was "a new form of art" or "the art form of tomorrow," although it as yet had no name. Might it be called "visual opera?" he asked. Jones discussion of the use of color might be contrasted with someone like Natalie Kalmus whom studios hired to advise them on the use of color in films. Kalmus thought color should correspond to the harmonies of Nature. Robert Edmond Jones was a well-known scene designer on Broadway who worked as art director on the movie Becky Sharp (1935), one of the earlier films to use the Technicolor process. The subtitle of this article reads: "Scenic Designer Says Hollywood Errs in Trying to Play Down Color." AU - Jones, Robert Edmond DA - Feb. 27, 1938 KW - Kalmus, Herbert Jones, Robert Edmond censorship censorship motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Technicolor, and Natalie Kalmus Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color censorship, and Natalie Kalmus ref, news color, and primitives color, and cinematographers color, and novelty color, and Robert Edmond Jones Jones, Robert Edmond, and color quotations quotations, and color on screen color, and music color, and Nature color, as visual opera color, and emotions ref, NYT ref, newspaper LB - 41010 PY - 1938 SP - 152 ST - The Problem of Color T2 - New York Times TI - The Problem of Color ID - 4200 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article examines censorship of the Internet in such countries as China and Saudi Arabia. AU - Kahn, Joseph DA - Dec. 4, 2002 KW - computers Asia Saudi Arabia sexuality pornography Internet law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA +computers and the Internet censorship, and Internet Internet, and censorship China China, and Internet Saudi Arabia, and Internet Internet, and China Internet, and Saudi Arabia pornography, and Internet pornography, and censorship pornography, and China pornography, and Saudi Arabia Internet, and pornography censorship, and pornography China, and pornography Saudi Arabia, and pornography filters, and Internet censorship, and Internet filters LB - 27960 PY - 2002 SE - A SP - A15 ST - China Has World's Tightest Internet Censorship, Study Finds T2 - New York Times TI - China Has World's Tightest Internet Censorship, Study Finds ID - 1348 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Surveys indicated that Americans were more worried about violence in mass media than they were with sex or profanity, and that such concerns were also common such industrialized nations as the United Kingdom, Spain, Canada, France, Italy, and Germany. Yet the American movie rating system was perceived as being out of step with these sentiments, and more lenient toward violent entertainment than was its counterpart rating agencies in other countries. AU - Kahn, Joseph P. DA - Jan. 2, 1994 KW - classification video cassette recorders (VCRs) self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality CARA magnetic recording sexuality sexuality sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) popular culture motion pictures media effects media violence media videotape magnetic tape censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +television media effects television, and popular culture violence violence, and motion pictures violence, and television violence, and popular culture motion pictures, and sex television, and sex popular culture, and sex sex, and popular culture sex, and motion pictures sex, and television censorship, and videos videos, and censorship television, and teenagers children, and media media, and children rating system (U. S.), and violence rating system (U. S.), and sex television, and rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) censorship, and videos videos, and censorship VCRs LB - 27390 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1994 SP - 1 ST - Censorship Reshaped by Violence T2 - Boston Globe TI - Censorship Reshaped by Violence ID - 1294 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This lengthy obituary of Lew Wasserman details the life of one of the most powerful men in Hollywood. AU - Kandell, Jonathan DA - June 4, 2002 KW - music Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation corporations Johnson, Lyndon corporations corporations CARA MCA Valenti, Jack presidents, and new media censorship and ratings motion pictures Johnson administration Hollywood law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack, and Lew Wasserman Music Corporation of America (MCA) rating system (U. S.), and Lew Wasserman Johnson, Lyndon, and Lew Wasserman Wasserman, Lew, and Lyndon Johnson Universal Pictures Universal Pictures, and Lew Wasserman MCA, and Lew Wasserman Hollywood, and politics LB - 21190 PY - 2002 SE - A SP - 1A, 19A ST - Lew Wasserman, 89, Is Dead, Last of the Hollywood Moguls T2 - New York Times TI - Lew Wasserman, 89, Is Dead, Last of the Hollywood Moguls ID - 920 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This obituary of Eric A. Johnston praises the man who was president of the Motion Picture Association of America from 1945 until his death in 1963. AU - Kane, Sherwin DA - Aug. 9, 1963 KW - motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and critics Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and obituary LB - 16840 PY - 1963 ST - A Man Well Liked [Editorial tribute to Eric Johnston] T2 - Motion Picture Daily TI - A Man Well Liked [Editorial tribute to Eric Johnston] ID - 632 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article covers Judge Charles E. Ramos' ruling the Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! case which upheld the movie industry's X rating but was highly critical of the rating system, and Jack Valenti criticism of Ramos' ruling. AU - Kasindorf, Martin DA - July 21, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner motion pictures, and morality Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Valenti, Jack, and critics Almodovar, Pedro Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! Kunstler, William Miramax Films Ramos, Charles E. Heffner, Richard LB - 25230 PY - 1990 SP - 6 ST - Judge's "X" Ruling Rated an "F" T2 - Newsday TI - Judge's "X" Ruling Rated an "F" ID - 1119 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes the recent challenges to the movie industry's X rating in such films as Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! (1990) and Life Is Cheap ... But Toilet Paper Is Expensive (1990). The producer of the latter movies plans to release it with a self-imposed "A" rating. The article notes that no independent producers were invited to a recent meeting with Jack Valenti where changing in the rating system were discussed. AU - Kasindorf, Martin DA - Aug. 9, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner motion pictures, and morality Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Valenti, Jack, and critics Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 Valenti, Jack, and legal challenges theater owners, and rating system (U. S.) theater owners, and NC-17 MPAA, and NC-17 Coppola, Francis Ford Lee, Spike Reiner, Rob Pollack, Sydney Wang, Wayne Lipsky, Mark MPAA, and independent producers CARA, and independent producers NC-17 NC-17, and origins Heffner, Richard LB - 25300 PY - 1990 SE - Nassau and Suffolk Edition SP - 7 ST - Future of X-Rating Debated T2 - Newsday TI - Future of X-Rating Debated ID - 1126 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article profile Richard D. Heffner, who headed the movie industry's Classification and Rating Administration from 1974 until his retirement in June, 1994. AU - Kaufman, Michael T. DA - June 8, 1994 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner CARA CARA, and Richard Heffner Valenti, Jack Heffner, Richard, and CARA censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and background Heffner, Richard, and Jack Valenti Heffner, Richard LB - 19820 PY - 1994 SE - B (Metro) SP - 3 ST - PG Man Hangs Up That Hat T2 - New York Times TI - PG Man Hangs Up That Hat ID - 814 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on U. S. Attorney General Edwin Meese's plans for combatting pornography. He announced the opening of a Center for Obscenity Prosecution that would act as a national "resource bank" for prosecuting child pornography and obscenity. A task force of federal attorneys would lead this offensive. AU - Kelley, Daryl DA - Feb. 11, 1987 KW - sexuality censorship and ratings children Meese Commission pornography pornography, and Meese Commission pornography, and opponents pornography, and legal child pornography pornography, and Center for Obscenity Prosecution children, and media LB - 22750 PY - 1987 SE - 1 SP - 1 ST - Meese Outlines New War on Pornography T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Meese Outlines New War on Pornography ID - 1000 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes criticism of Hollywood's portrayals of substance abuse by President George H. W. Bush and drug czar William Bennett, and indicates that the movie industry plans to take a more active role in the war on drugs. AU - Kelley, Jack DA - June 23, 1989 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Bush, George H. W. Valenti, Jack presidents, and new media Bush, George H. W. administration Hollywood Bush, George H. W. Hollywood, and substance abuse Bush administration (1989), and substance abuse Bennett, William, and Hollywood Valenti, Jack, and war on drugs Valenti, Jack, and George Bush (1989) motion pictures LB - 24230 PY - 1989 SP - 1A ST - Hollywood Plans Starring Role in Drug War T2 - USA Today TI - Hollywood Plans Starring Role in Drug War ID - 1070 ER - TY - NEWS AU - Kelly, Kitty DA - Jan. 13, 1915 KW - theater stage history ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures war motion pictures, and war war, and motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures Griffith, D. W. ref, CDT LB - 1110 PY - 1915 SP - 14 ST - Flickerings from Film Land: Griffith Warns ‘Legit’ to Wake Up or Else Die T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Flickerings from Film Land: Griffith Warns ‘Legit’ to Wake Up or Else Die ID - 3406 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Posters are important but should not be “a junkyard of sensationalism.” W. Stephen Bush is quoted as saying “That the lurid poster is an unmixed evil goes without saying and needs no demonstration.” AU - Kelly, Kitty DA - April 22, 1916 KW - children censorship photography advertising and public relations ref, news motion pictures advertising advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures violence, and advertising advertising, and violence posters, and motion pictures motion pictures, and posters censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings censorship, and movie posters children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures theaters, and movie advertising theaters, and posters posters, and theaters advertising, and movie theaters ref, CDT posters LB - 1150 PY - 1916 SP - 16 ST - A Few Words About Yellow Postering T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - A Few Words About Yellow Postering ID - 3410 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Commenting on Birth of a Nation: “The picture is an interpretation of history in human terms, and to audiences it carries distinctly a feeling of past, rather than present. True, the bias is southern, but biases untrammeled have been always the cherished possessions of free minded American folk; we like to argue one way or the other, for it is American doctrine that argument is good for the soul.” AU - Kelly, Ktty DA - May 27, 1915 KW - history words vs. images photography ref, news presidents and new media photography and visual communication motion pictures Wilson, Woodrow Wilson, Woodrow, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Woodrow Wilson Griffith, D. W. history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures images vs. words war motion pictures, and war war, and motion pictures quotations motion pictures, history written with lightning Wilson, Woodrow, and Birth of a Nation ref, CDT LB - 6480 PY - 1915 SP - 12 ST - Flickerings from Filmland; Another Plea for ‘Birth of a Nation’ T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Flickerings from Filmland; Another Plea for ‘Birth of a Nation’ ID - 3445 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article, which is a review of the film The Birth of the Star Spangled Banner, argues that “Entrance into the field of history… is synonymous with passing through the gate of truth.” The author goes on to say: “To moving pictures is given the unique mission of revivifying history as can no other medium, but along with this special privilege goes a super-special responsibility. In the realm of fiction, faking and twisting is allowable if the public will stand for it. Entrance into the field of history, however, is synonymous with passing through the gate of truth. The company which aims to convey a historic episode must remember that it is going among the ways of authorities and that a perversion of fact for dramatic effect or for productive ease is an indulgence that will boomerang back on the reputation of the film as a just punishment for the circulation of false impressions.” AU - Kelly, Kitty DA - Aug. 28, 1914 KW - nationalism history ref, news motion pictures nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical truth ref, CDT LB - 13500 PY - 1914 SP - 8 ST - Photoplay Stories and News T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Photoplay Stories and News ID - 3509 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Kelly gives specific examples of films that were either censored or banned in Chicago. Other Kitty Kelly articles sometimes provide similar examples. AU - Kelly, Kitty DA - Dec. 15, 1914 KW - Chicago, IL censorship censorship ref, news censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings censorship, and crime motion pictures, and crime motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures ref, CDT LB - 14040 PY - 1914 SP - 14 ST - Flickerings from Filmland T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Flickerings from Filmland ID - 3562 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that DVDs now make up 65 percent of pornography movie sales. Many of the DVDs have become interactive with minimal appearances by male stars. In the future, such businesses as Digital Playgound are working with companies specializing in hologram technology to create three-dimensional pornographic figures that seems to come into one's viewing room. AU - Kennedy, Dana DA - Aug. 17, 2003 KW - holography sexuality children +motion pictures and popular culture digitization DVDs pornography sexuality virtual reality 3-D motion pictures, and DVDs motion pictures, and digital media motion pictures, and interactive holograms motion pictures, and holograms digital media motion pictures children, and media LB - 28710 PY - 2003 SE - 2 SP - 7 ST - The Fantasy of Interactive Porn Becomes a Reality T2 - New York Times TI - The Fantasy of Interactive Porn Becomes a Reality ID - 2647 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The actor John Bunny had previously performed on the live stage but movies allowed him to reach a global audience. It "was not until he appeared on the screen that John Bunny reached his own public -- that is, the world." Movies, according to the author, give actors the same chance at achieving immortality as the writer, artists, sculpture. “For the grace of the motion-picture camera, John Bunny’s art endures.” In an earlier time, “the actor’s art perishes with him; when he dies, the memory of his expressive face and graceful form goes into the oblivion that keeps the echoes of his golden voice. “Well, we have changed all that,” this article says. “The number of people who lose their cares under the spell of John Bunny’s magic today is greater than it was a year ago. The motion pictures have made the actor’s chances for immortality equal with those of his fellows in the other arts.” This article suggests that the voice in acting is overrated and the author is not particularly enthusiatic to see the phonograph used in combination with moving pictures. “For that would destroy the greatest value of motion-picture acting, the silent but complete expression of thought. The motion picture is the renascence of pantomime.” The subtitle of this piece reads: “Art of Silent Comedy, After a Lapse of Centuries, Appears in Moving Pictures of Famous Actor Who Died Last Week.” AU - Kilmer, Joyce DA - May 2, 1915 KW - history fame celebrity ref, news ref, NYT actors acting photography ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality Bunny, John audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences media effects media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects motion pictures, and pantomime LB - 41900 PY - 1915 SE - SM SP - 15 ST - Pantomime Revived by John Bunny T2 - New York Times TI - Pantomime Revived by John Bunny ID - 4289 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This articles discusses the use of doubles in filming moving pictures. AU - Kingsley, Grace DA - Sept. 11, 1914 KW - sensationalism actors acting ref, news motion pictures motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures cameras cameras, and sensationalism sensationalism, and cameras special effects, and motion pictures special effects motion pictures, and special effects motion pictures, and stars ref, LAT LB - 1230 PY - 1914 SE - III SP - 1 ST - Selma Paley Has Double T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Selma Paley Has Double ID - 3418 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "Biggest Thrill Factory in the World; Universal’s New Picture Ranch; Zoo Where Animal Actors Stay." AU - Kingsley, Grace DA - Aug. 23, 1914 KW - Los Angeles acting actors ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business motion pictures, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and motion pictures theaters theaters, and motion pictures motion pictures audiences audiences, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and audiences advertising and public relations motion pictures, and advertising advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and actors actors, and status of ref, LAT advertising LB - 16030 PY - 1914 SE - III SP - 1, 3 ST - Where Movies Are Hatched T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Where Movies Are Hatched ID - 3423 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about "movie stars" (a term that was becoming more common in the press) and about Los Angeles as a center for movie making. AU - Kingsley, Grace DA - Jan. 1, 1916 KW - Los Angeles fame celebrity actors acting photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars motion pictures, and Los Angeles Los Angeles, and motion pictures actors, and status of motion pictures, and stars (origins) ref, LAT LB - 15370 PY - 1916 SE - III SP - 71 ST - Movie Stars Who Scintillate in Los Angeles. Actors’ Mecca T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Movie Stars Who Scintillate in Los Angeles. Actors’ Mecca ID - 3696 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that money from home video made up about 58 percent of Hollywood's total income in 2002. the sale of DVD was the largest, most profitable, and rapidly growing part of home video. The sale and rentals of DVDs seem strongly oriented toward action movies and a male audience at this point in time. AU - Kirkpatrick, David D. DA - Aug. 17, 2003 KW - sexuality children +motion pictures and popular culture digitization DVDs pornography sexuality virtual reality 3-D motion pictures, and DVDs motion pictures, and digital media +television television, and DVDs DVDs, and television violence DVDs, and violence violence, and DVDs digital media motion pictures children, and media LB - 28750 PY - 2003 SP - 1, 15 ST - Action-Hungry DVD Fans Sway Hollywood T2 - New York Times TI - Action-Hungry DVD Fans Sway Hollywood ID - 2654 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that a "complete revolution in the theatrical idea ... has taken place within the last few years." Moving pictures have become popular, in large part because they are much cheaper than the stage. And merely showing scenery or mundane action from real life is not long adequate in the movies. Also the nature of acting has changed. "For the theatrical idea on the stage meaning by that the unconscious mental condition which prevails throughout an average audience at an average play -- is of something much closer to nature and reality. Good scenery and good acting are not enough if the artifice of the situations is not skillfully concealed." The acting style that "rarely allows ... the effects of shading possible by occasional resort to ordinary conversation tones of speech," of a style that is "always impassioned, more or less oratorical and florid" is now "distinctly not modern." The modern actor seeks to give audiences a "semblance of reality." AU - Klauber, Adolph DA - Nov. 19, 1911 KW - theater stage fame fame celebrity actors acting ref, news celebrity culture fame personality motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars audiences media effects motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures media effects, and audiences media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and acting acting, and facial expression motion pictures, and not facing camera acting, and not facing camera acting, and realism motion pictures, and realism in acting cameras acting, and cameras cameras, and film acting quotations audiences audiences, and acting quotations quotations, and acting ref, NYT motion pictures LB - 37570 PY - 1911 SE - X SP - 2 ST - Melodrama and Emotion T2 - New York Times TI - Melodrama and Emotion ID - 3856 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Roger Ebert says Russ Meyer's Beyond the Valley of the Dolls (1970) was made for about $900,000 and grossed $40-$50 million. The article says it was the first exploitation film made at a major studio (presumably 20th Century Fox). AU - Klawans, Stuart DA - Nov. 17, 2002 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation homosexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) motion pictures media effects media violence lesbianism substance abuse drug abuse law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture X-rated films NC-17 rating system (U. S.), and controversies CARA, and rating controversies Heffner, Richard, and rating controversies Ebert, Roger homosexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality motion pictures, and homosexuality drug use, and motion pictures motion pictures, and drug use lesbianism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and lesbianism drug use, and motion pictures motion pictures, and drug use violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and violence Meyer, Russ Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and Roger Ebert CARA, and re-rating films CARA, and video releases rating system (U. S.), and video releases Twentieth Century-Fox Beyond the Valley of the Dolls Heffner, Richard LB - 27440 PY - 2002 SE - 2 (Arts and Leisure) SP - 13 ST - It's One Long Dirty Joke But Hey, Man, It's a Classic T2 - New York Times TI - It's One Long Dirty Joke But Hey, Man, It's a Classic ID - 1299 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on plans by the movie industry to give stricter ratings for films depicting substance abuse. AU - Kleiman, Dena C1 - 18C DA - April 9, 1986 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) PG-13 motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and drug use Valenti, Jack, and drug use rating system (U.S.), and drug abuse CARA, and drug use Heffner, Richard, and drug use PG-13, and drug use Heffner, Richard LB - 24140 PY - 1986 SE - C ST - Films to Get Stricter Ratings T2 - New York Times TI - Films to Get Stricter Ratings ID - 1061 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses new video games and difficulties with rating these games. By 2002, video games had become an $18 billion business worldwide. AU - Klinkenborg, Verlyn DA - Dec. 16, 2002 KW - computers self-regulation sexuality sex censorship and ratings media effects media violence entertainment digital media digitization computers and the Internet video games video games, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and video games Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) Interactive Digital Software Association, U.S., and video games virtual reality digital communication, and video games video games, and virtual reality video games, and digital communication violence violence, and video games video games, and violence sex, and video games video games, and sex rating system (U. S.) censorship and rating system (U. S.) www.media-awareness.ca LB - 28000 PY - 2002 SE - A SP - A30 ST - Living Under the Virtual Volcano of Video Games This Holiday Season T2 - New York Times TI - Living Under the Virtual Volcano of Video Games This Holiday Season ID - 1352 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that “Illustrated Song Machines Popular.” AU - Kolad, Karl DA - Jan. 28, 1906 KW - Chicago, IL censorship censorship censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures sound recording sound recording, and phonograph censorship and ratings censorship, and movie theaters censorship, and phonograph parlors Chicago, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Chicago ref, CDT LB - 14430 PY - 1906 SE - E SP - 1 ST - Glean Fortune in Pennies That Are Dropped in Slots T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Glean Fortune in Pennies That Are Dropped in Slots ID - 3600 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This articles discusses a New York Times poll taken July 23-25, 1995, on "Sex and Violence in Popular Culture." AU - Kolbert, Elizabeth DA - Aug. 20, 1995 KW - classification self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality CARA sexuality television, and V-chip sexuality sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) popular culture motion pictures media effects media violence media censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship +motion pictures and popular culture +television media effects television, and popular culture violence violence, and motion pictures violence, and television violence, and popular culture motion pictures, and sex television, and sex popular culture, and sex sex, and popular culture sex, and motion pictures sex, and television V-chip violence, and V-chip censorship, and V-chip V-chip, and censorship television, and teenagers children, and media media, and children rating system (U. S.), and violence rating system (U. S.), and sex television, and rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) LB - 27380 N1 -; media effects See also: media convergence See also: mass media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1995 SE - 2 (Arts and Leisure) SP - 1 ST - Americans Despair of Popular Culture T2 - New York Times TI - Americans Despair of Popular Culture ID - 1293 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that in recent years about half the adult movie theaters have closed, cable television subscription are declining as are sales of Playboy magazine, and Playgirl magazine has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The decline in the sex business is attributed to legal and political pressures exerted by the Ronald Reagan administration and to health concerns such as AIDS. AU - Kristof, Nicholas D. DA - Oct. 5, 1986 KW - motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality sexuality sex presidents, and new media Reagan administration sexuality sexuality Playboy sexuality sexuality Penthouse motion pictures boycotts pornography Reagan administration, and pornography pornography, and business of boycotts, and pornography pornography, and boycotts sex, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sex Playboy, and boycotts Penthouse, and boycotts Playgirl LB - 23870 PY - 1986 SE - 3 (Financial) SP - 1 ST - X-Rated Industry in a Slump T2 - New York Times TI - X-Rated Industry in a Slump ID - 1048 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the marketing for the video game "Mortal Kombat" and efforts to get its NC-17 rating changed. The game's maker, Acclaim Entertainment, expects to sell 4.5 million copies. The game will be used with home entertainment systems. AU - Kronke, David DA - Sept. 10, 1993 KW - R & D entertainment classification self-regulation entertainment, home CARA censorship and ratings research and development war media effects media violence violence +military communication law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification home, and new media home video games home home entertainment home, and video games violence, and video games video games, and violence video games, and home rating system (U. S.), and video games video games, and rating system (U. S.) video games, and Mortal Kombat Mortal Kombat military, and video games LB - 28340 PY - 1993 SE - F SP - 1F ST - When a Big Arcade Game (and Its Violence) Go Home T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - When a Big Arcade Game (and Its Violence) Go Home ID - 1373 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article portrays Meese Commission members as having arrived at conclusion about pornography that were not supported by evidence. It questions the objectivity of the Commission's Final Report (1986) and notes that the membership on the Commission was "heavily weighted toward law enforcement." It notes that liberal members of the Commission -- e.g., Ellen Levine and Judith Becker -- were in the minority. The article quotes research Edward Donnerstein saying that "My research is very badly misused by people." AU - Kurtz, Howard C1 - 4A DA - Oct. 15, 1985 KW - social science research sexuality law censorship and ratings censorship pornography Meese Commission Meese Commission, and critics social science research, and Meese Commission Meese Commission, and social science research censorship, and Meese Commission Meese Commission, and censorship Donnerstein, Edward Koop, C. Everett public relations, and Meese Commission Meese Commission, and public relations ACLU Joseph, Burton, and pornography Donnerstein, Edward Joseph, Burton media effects public relations LB - 22620 PY - 1985 SE - A ST - Pornography's Panel's Objectivity Disputed; Critics Call Meese Commission Overzealous T2 - Washington Post TI - Pornography's Panel's Objectivity Disputed; Critics Call Meese Commission Overzealous ID - 989 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with two Orange County, California, religious leaders (Roman Catholic Bishop Norman F. McFarland and Rev. Robert Schuller) who called for a boycott of Martin Scorcese's film The Last Temptation of Christ (1988). The article also reports that McFarland and Los Angeles Archbishop Roger Mahony have disassociated themselves with anti-Semitic opposition to this movie. AU - Landsbaum, Mark DA - Aug 10, 1988 KW - values Christianity Wasserman, Lew Protestants values motion pictures Hollywood values religion Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion Last Temptation of Christ (1988) boycotts, and Last Temptation motion pictures, and boycotts Catholics, and Last Temptation Protestants, and Last Temptation of Christ motion pictures, and anti-religion critics Schuller, Robert, and Last Temptation of Christ (1988) motion pictures, and anti-Semitism Wasserman, Lew, and anti-Semitism anti-Semitism, and Last Temptation of Christ (1988) Mahony, Roger, and anti-Semitism anti-Semitism Mahony, Roger LB - 24310 PY - 1988 SE - 2 (Metro) SP - 1 ST - Bishop, Schuller Join Voices Urging "Temptation" Boycott T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Bishop, Schuller Join Voices Urging "Temptation" Boycott ID - 1078 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with Maine Senator Margaret Chase Smith's attack on violence in movies, television, and TV advertising. Smith managed to get the U.S. Senate to hold hearings in 1968 on classifying motion picture entertainment. A copy of this article is in the Margaret Chase Smith Papers, Margaret Chase Smith Library, The Northwood Institute, Skowhegan, ME. AU - Larrabee, Don DA - June 23, 1968 KW - classification self-regulation government hearings CARA advertising, and public relations censorship and ratings propaganda public relations media effects media violence government law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification violence Smith, Margaret Chase +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification hearings +television television, and violence violence, and television advertising advertising, and TV violence violence, and TV advertising LB - 17490 PY - 1968 SE - D SP - D-7 ST - Violence in Movies: Sen. Smith's Crusade T2 - "MST" TI - Violence in Movies: Sen. Smith's Crusade ID - 670 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This articles notes that several low-budget movies were recently shot on 16mm film and unlike in the past when 16mm was used, these movies had a high quality look The movie mentioned included My Dinner with Andre (1981), She's Gotta Have It (1986), My Beautiful Laundrette (1985), and Mother Teresa (1987). The article discusses recent improvement in 16mm technology such as Eastman Kodak's advanced emulsion process. AU - Lewis, Peter H. DA - Feb. 11, 1987 KW - corporations corporations motion pictures cinema motion pictures celluloid film 35mm 16mm +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and new technology 35mm film 16mm film motion pictures, and 35mm motion pictures, and 16mm film processing Eastman Kodak special effects special effects, and horror 16mm film, and horror movies 16mm film, and low-budget movies LB - 21940 PY - 1987 SE - D SP - 6 ST - Business Technology: Advances in Film; Low-Budget Movies Get a High Gloss T2 - New York Times TI - Business Technology: Advances in Film; Low-Budget Movies Get a High Gloss ID - 936 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article follows a report the previous day in USA Today that since September 11, 2001, the NSA has collected the phone calls and email messages of millions of Americans. The records keep the phone numbers of the caller and recipient and the time of day. President George W. Bush defended the action as necessary for national security, as did General Michael V. Hayden, whom Bush had nominated to be head of the CIA. Hayden has been head of NSA when the surveillance policy was put in place. Many members of Congress criticized this policy as an undue invasion of privacy. AU - Lichtblau, Eric AU - Shane, Scott DA - May 12, 2006 KW - presidents and new media computers telephones computers and the Internet Internet surveillance NSA National Security Agency (NSA) privacy privacy, and surveillance NSA, and domestic surveillance Bush, George W. Bush, George W. administration president and new media nationalism and communication military communication corporations AT&T Verizon BellSouth AT&T, and surveillance Verizon, and surveillance BellSouth, and surveillance surveillance, and AT&T military-industrial complex CIA Hayden, Michael Central Intelligence Agency national security nationalism LB - 36950 PY - 2006 SP - A1, A23 ST - Bush Is Pressed Over New Report on Surveillance T2 - New York Times TI - Bush Is Pressed Over New Report on Surveillance ID - 922 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The Child Pornography Prevention Act of 1996 attempted to speak to the problems posed by digital communication and the Internet. It held that even soft-core pornography involving children was damaging and could have long-lasting harmful effects on the young. Yet what of computer-generated images depicting sex with children in which no real children were involved? The technical quality of digital simulations advanced rapidly. Congress banned simulated child pornography, on grounds that even these depictions could have such harmful consequences as enticing children into real pornographic situations and feeding the sexual proclivities of pedophiles. AU - Liptak, Adam DA - Jan. 28, 2001 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography projection sexuality motion pictures home entertainment digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema digitization computers censorship and ratings children 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movie +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality pornography child pronography, and digital movies virtual reality, and child pornography child pornography children, and media LB - 26100 PY - 2001 SE - 4 (Week In Review) SP - 3 ST - When Is a Fake Too Real? It's Virtually Uncertain T2 - New York Times TI - When Is a Fake Too Real? It's Virtually Uncertain ID - 1201 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Jack Valenti is quoted as saying that the "growing and dangerous intrusion of this new technology" (the VCR) threatened the movie industry's "economic vitality and future security." The VCR was "to the American film producer and the American public as the Boston Strangler is to the woman alone." AU - Liptak, Adam DA - Sept. 2, 2000 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) video cassette recorders (VCRs) MPAA motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and video piracy Valenti, Jack, quoted Valenti, Jack, and video piracy MPAA, and video piracy VCRs VCRs, and Jack Valenti law law, and new media Valenti, Jack, and VCRs Valenti, Jack, and new technology MPAA Valenti, Jack LB - 20130 PY - 2000 SE - B SP - 9 ST - Is Litigation the Best Way to Tame New Technology? T2 - New York Times TI - Is Litigation the Best Way to Tame New Technology? ID - 2686 ER - TY - NEWS AB - At the U. S. House of Representative Postal Operations subcommittee hearings in 1960, the movie Suddenly, Last Summer (1960) came up for criticism. This article notes that “the American film industry, which credits 53 per cent of its gross annual rentals to foreign market accounts, uttered no criticism of foreign films. Mr. [Eric] Johnston did say that the Hollywood code services and seal were available to all films. Some foreign-made films carry the seal. “This led to a discussion of ‘Suddenly Last Summer,’ which committee members said had stimulated a lot of complaint. The picture was made abroad but was cleared under the Hollywood Production Code after several lines were deleted. “Mr. Johnston said he saw the picture three times. “You can read homosexuality into it, or you could read incest, if you wish, if you mind goes along those channels. But I don’t think there is anything like that in the picture.’” The Production Code Administration also was concerned about cannibalism. At these hearings, Johnston also came out against classification of movies (i.e., classifying films by their appropriateness for different age groups). AU - Loftus, Joseph A. DA - Feb. 3, 1960 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Suddenly, Last Summer (1960) motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and American-interest film LB - 35880 PY - 1960 SP - 28 ST - 'Policing' of Films Called Adequate: Industry Code Preferable to Legal Censorship, Johnston Tells House Group T2 - New York Times TI - 'Policing' of Films Called Adequate: Industry Code Preferable to Legal Censorship, Johnston Tells House Group ID - 3225 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This work discuss Russ Meyer, who became well-known during the 1960s for making nude films for the "pant and drool crowd". This piece discusses his early career as a World War II photographer and later as a photographer for Playboy magazine. A copy of this piece is in the Margaret Chase Smith Papers, Margaret Chase Smith Library, The Northwood Institute, Showhegan, ME. AU - Lovelady, Steven M. DA - April 24, 1968 KW - government hearings sexuality pornography government Smith, Margaret Chase Meyer, Russ +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography pornography, and motion pictures pornography, and Russ Meyer Smith, Margaret Chase, and pornography hearings LB - 17460 PY - 1968 ST - Top 'Nudie' Film-Maker, Russ Meyer, Scrambles To Outshock Big Studios T2 - Wall Street Journal TI - Top 'Nudie' Film-Maker, Russ Meyer, Scrambles To Outshock Big Studios ID - 667 ER - TY - NEWS AB - At the end of the twentieth century, only a handful of movie theaters were set up to handle digital projection. Because digital technology continued to change at a rapid pace, large chains were reluctant to invest in high-priced digital equipment fearing that in the absence of firm guidelines, they would be forced to spend even more for expensive upgrades in the future. AU - Lyman, Rick DA - Nov. 19, 1999 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography projection motion pictures home entertainment materials digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema digitization computers 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movies digital movies, and Time Code +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality materials LB - 26080 PY - 1999 SE - A, C SP - A1, C5 ST - New Digital Cameras Poised To Jolt World of Filmmaking T2 - New York Times TI - New Digital Cameras Poised To Jolt World of Filmmaking ID - 1199 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the possible changing landscape of power and economics in movie making brough by digital cinema. Movie producing appeared to be entering a “largely unknown period when the economics of film making and the very foundations of the power structures that have governed the business for almost a century are more fluid than at any time in its history,” commented one observer. “The idea of a movie studio is changing as we watch,” said Rodger Raderman, an executive who founded a company that distributed digital movies through the Internet. “What is a studio? If you think of it as a place where movies are developed, produced, marketed and distributed, then we are very close to having a technology where one person can do that all by himself. Each person can be his own studio.” AU - Lyman, Rick DA - Dec. 20, 1999 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography projection motion pictures home entertainment Hollywood digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema digitization computers 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movie +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality Hollywood, and digital movies digital movies, and Hollywood LB - 26120 PY - 1999 SE - C (Business and Financial) SP - C41 ST - Film's Digital Potential Has Hollywood on Edge T2 - New York Times TI - Film's Digital Potential Has Hollywood on Edge ID - 1203 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses digital cinema. Digital technology vastly improved special effects. Digital cameras made it easier to take advantage of scenes in the real world. Shooting could be done relatively inconspicuously and a fictional story could be set against a nonfictional backdrop more easily than with film cameras. During the 1990s, it became common to combine the images from digital cameras with computer-generated digital effects to let “directors capture any vision.” If in traditional film, images had been “frozen on celluloid,” digital cinema allowed movie makers to change the context of scenes, insert new camera movements, enhance performers’ acting, “transfer the location from Red Square to Times Square, speed up time, slow it down and generally do whatever schedule and budget allow to get the desired images up there on the screen.” Digital cinema freed special effects creators from the loss of time and the expense of having to work from raw film then to video tape, and back to film. AU - Lyman, Rick DA - March 1, 2001 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography projection motion pictures home entertainment Hollywood digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema digitization computers 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movie +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality Hollywood, and digital movies digital movies, and Hollywood LB - 26160 PY - 2001 SE - B (The Living Arts) SP - B1, B10 ST - A Monument to the Filmless Future T2 - New York Times TI - A Monument to the Filmless Future ID - 1207 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Consumers spent more money on DVDs in 2001 than they did for VHS cassettes, although cassette rentals still surpassed DVDs. The price of DVD players dropped substantially as Chinese manufacturers began to compete with Japanese companies. Manufacturing a DVD could be done for less than half the cost of making a videocassette. Picture quality was superior, and consumers were more likely to purchase DVDs than cassettes. An added advantage of DVDs was that they could be played on computers and video game systems, not simply on television. Yet copying programs on cassettes remained easier and cheaper than on the newer technology. How the DVD might influence amateur and low-budget movie making remained to be seen. AU - Lyman, Rick DA - Aug. 26, 2002 KW - entertainment computers video cassette recorders (VCRs) entertainment, home magnetic recording Asia motion pictures information technology home entertainment materials materials magnetic tape computers non-USA home home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture home entertainment revolution DVDs VCRs VCRs, and DVDs DVDs, and VCRs motion pictures, and piracy home, and information technology information technology, and DVDs +television television, and DVDs television, and VCRs Japan, and DVDs China, and DVDs Japan China home, and DVDs home, and VCRs +computers and the Internet computers, and DVDs computers, and home entertainment home, and computers digital media LB - 26380 PY - 2002 SE - A SP - A1, A13 ST - Revolt in the Den: DVD Has the VCR Headed to the Attic T2 - New York Times TI - Revolt in the Den: DVD Has the VCR Headed to the Attic ID - 1221 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Digital movies can be manipulated, this article reports, and a market emerged for sanitized versions of pictures on DVD. Censors gave actress Kate Winslet a digital corset to wear in some of her nude scenes in Titanic (1997), and they toned down the gruesome recreations of combat during the D-Day assault at Normandy during World War II in Saving Private Ryan (1998). Companies in Utah and Colorado offered not only edited rentals but provided software that could be downloaded to home computers, laptops and DVD players that could be connected to television sets allowing customers to watch more than 30 versions of some movies. Other companies provided filters for TVs and DVD players. Movie makers complained this censorship and violated federal law that forbade changing a creative work and then reselling it with the original title and the artist’s name.Clean-Flicks, a company based in Utah, had a chain of rental shops that offered more than 100 sanitized movies in 2002. It argued that once a work of art had been purchased, the buyer was free to alter it and that the company was merely providing a service for club members or for those who had already bought a copy of a movie. MovieMask offered software that allowed consumers to watched multiple versions of a movie, although the picture had to be tagged first by MovieMask editors. Such companies as ClearPlay and Family Shield Technologies provided screening filters. AU - Lyman, Rick DA - Sept. 20, 2002 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography projection motion pictures home entertainment Hollywood digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema digitization computers law censorship and ratings censorship 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movie +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality Hollywood, and digital movies digital movies, and Hollywood DVDs censorship, and digital technology DVDs, and censorship censorship, and DVDs digital technology, and censorship censorship, and filters motion pictures, and filters censorship, and filters law, and digital filters LB - 27150 PY - 2002 SE - B (The Arts) SP - B1, B5 ST - Hollywood Balks at High-Tech Sanitizers: Some Video Customers Want Tamer Films, and Entrepreneurs Rush to Comply T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood Balks at High-Tech Sanitizers: Some Video Customers Want Tamer Films, and Entrepreneurs Rush to Comply ID - 1272 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with Hollywood's response to a Federal Trade Commission report that reveals that the entertainment industry had marketed R-rated movies to children. Jack Valenti and others discuss new initiatives to repair this public relations problem. AU - Lyman, Rick DA - Sept. 24, 2000 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation Federal Trade Commission (FTC) CARA advertising, and public relations Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings propaganda public relations motion pictures media effects media violence violence FTC censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and children children, and media children, and violence motion pictures, and violence advertising advertising, and motion pictures advertising, and children advertising, and movie violence media effects FTC, and motion pictures motion pictures, and FTC Valenti, Jack, and violence Valenti, Jack, and children Valenti, Jack, and advertising video games video games, and children children, and video games rating system (U. S.), and controversies video games rating system (U. S.), and children children, and music rating system (U. S.) violence, and motion pictures violence, and video games violence, and children violence, and music LB - 28500 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 2000 SP - A26 ST - Hollywood Writing Its Script for Senate Hearings Sequel T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood Writing Its Script for Senate Hearings Sequel ID - 1387 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that the Roman Catholic Legion of Decency had given the movie The Man with the Golden Arm a "B" rating. It was the first time that the Legion had not condemn a movie that had failed to win a Production Code Administration seal. AU - Lyon, Herb DA - Dec. 29, 1955 KW - Sinatra, Frank self-regulation motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) Legion of Decency , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of Legion of Decency, effectiveness motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and drugs motion pictures, and drugs censorship and ratings Production Code (1956) Krim, Arthur Preminger, Otto Production Code, and United Artists Man with the Golden Arm Catholic Church values LB - 35630 PY - 1955 SP - A2 ST - Tower Ticker T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Tower Ticker ID - 3202 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Even though the motion picture industry's Production Code was considerably weakened by 1961, the lack of a Production Code Administration seal of approval still had consequences. Many theater owners, military bases, and television stations would still not show movies that did not have PCA approval. A copy of this piece is in the PCA file for The Man with the Golden Arm, Margaret Herrick Library, Beverly Hills, CA. AU - MacArthur, Harry DA - Aug. 6, 1961 KW - self-regulation Production Code motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Legion of Decency values religion law +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code, and decline of Legion of Decency, effectiveness motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and drugs motion pictures, and drug use Christianity Catholic Church LB - 16630 PY - 1961 ST - Production Code Has New Weapon T2 - The Sunday Star TI - Production Code Has New Weapon ID - 612 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In this article, the author argues that motion pictures are a new art form worthy of serious attention. He starts by quoting the “obtuse” Walter Prichard Eaton (from the Boston Transcript, March 31, 1915) who said movies return us to an era of sign language: “‘The assumption that we can go back to what amounts to sign language at this stage of civilization is one of the most touchingly naive examples of motion-picture makers’ credulity.’ (Eaton quoted) MacMahon says that “no one seems to have sense the fact that the new art is symbolistic.” The technique of motion pictures is closer to music than to live theater. Moving pictures “constant shifting of scenes … is best characterized as ‘art by lightning flash.’ In the movie, “A series of pictures has to be swiftly moving. The picturemaker has to use the rapier of suggestion rather than the bludgeon of logic. The environment often counts for more than the act. The fiction of the ‘removed fourth wall’ of the staged drama is gone forever, and the position of the motion-picture spectator is that of one who looks out of doors from an open window upon the whole of Life spread as on a panorama, seeing swiftly, understanding swiftly, because the eye is so much swifter and more understanding than the ear.” MacMahon admired D. W. Griffith’s Birth of a Nation (1915), and commented on its use of the flash back, close ups, and simultaneous action. MacMahon quotes an extensive excerpt from E. E. Slosson, who apparently reviewed Birth of a Nation in the New York Independent. While Slosson was a “bitter opponent” of the social message in Griffith’s film, he noted that even though the film lack sound and color, it possessed major advantages technically over the live stage including its use of the out-of-doors, facial expressions, and intense action scenes. AU - MacMahon, Henry DA - June 6, 1915 KW - stage history words vs. images photography ref, news presidents and new media photography and visual communication motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures images vs. words war motion pictures, and war war, and motion pictures quotations motion pictures, as lightning flash metaphors ref, NYT Birth of a Nation Griffith, D. W. Slosson, E. E., and Birth of a Nation stage and theater motion pictures, and stage Griffith, D. W., and close-ups Griffith, D. W., and history actors, and close-ups actors, and facial expression acting, and facial expression acting actors Slosson, Edwin LB - 6430 PY - 1915 SE - X SP - 8 ST - The Art of the Movies T2 - New York Times TI - The Art of the Movies ID - 3440 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The author is the screenwriter who adapted Ian Fleming's novel Goldfinger into a movie. He discusses how he embellished the story and the James Bond character for the mass audiences who enjoyed "sick jokes." He also quotes Alfred Hitchcock about why not to worry about using logic in films: Hitchcock once told him: "Dear boy, don't be dull. I'm not interested in logic, but in effects. If an audience ever thinks about logic, it's on their way home from the theater and by that time they have already paid for their tickets." The "bumps" the title refers to is Hitchcock's theory that every movie need 13 scenes which shock the audience. AU - Maibaum, Richard DA - Dec. 13, 1964 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality Hitchcock, Alfred motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language motion pictures, and James Bond Bond movies Hitchcock, Alfred LB - 36530 PY - 1964 SP - X9 ST - James Bond's 39 Bumps T2 - New York Times TI - James Bond's 39 Bumps ID - 3286 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article provides an interesting commentary on one of the early movie "stars." John Bunny’s physical appearance limited his roles as a stage actor but it helped to make him a star in the movies. The article contains a paragraph on how Bunny projected his personality in real life: “Mr. Bunny’s appearance on the floor of the exposition was no more than a fleeting incident of the evening but to me it was the most interesting of all. It emphasized so perfectly the projection of personality by way of a screen. This man who had made these people laugh by posing as the subject of innumerable picture shows was just as much a hero in the flesh to them as John Drew could possibly be to his following of theatergoers. And he was their friend as well. They felt as close a personal interest in him, I dare say, as the average matinee girl can feel in the hero of her dreams. They appeared as proud and as happy to walk beside him as we used to be to lead the bloodhound in this ‘Uncle Tom’ parade and that was considerable display of pride and happiness.” This article also talks about the extent of movie attendance and its economic impact. It reports: “According to the fairly modest bulletin of the Exhibitors’ association, 15,000,000 persons a day patronize the ‘movies’ of this country, and $300,000,000 represents last year’s receipts. Eighty million dollars are invested in moving picture enterprises and 200,000 persons are employed. The entire industry has grown from nothing, in 1893, when motion pictures were first shown at the World’s fair in Chicago, to its present proportions.” AU - Mantle, Burns DA - July 13, 1913 KW - history fame celebrity actors acting photography ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality Bunny, John audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences media effects media effects, and motion pictures motion pictures, and media effects capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism ref, CDT actors, and fame LB - 6350 PY - 1913 SE - B SP - 3 ST - John Bunny the Hit of the ‘Movie’ Expo T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - John Bunny the Hit of the ‘Movie’ Expo ID - 3432 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Mantle predicts after seeing Technicolor's first feature-length film, Becky Sharp, that within five years black and white films will be as rare as silent movies. He also says that improvements in makeup will be the next step in color movies. He notes that the star of the movie, Miriam Hopkins, looked "as though she had had her face enameled the same day she was having her hair done." AU - Mantle, Burns DA - June 23, 1935 KW - Kalmus, Herbert Jones, Robert Edmond censorship motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Natalie Kalmus, and critic of Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color ref, news color, and primitives color, and cinematographers color, and novelty color, and Robert Edmond Jones Jones, Robert Edmond, and color quotations quotations, and color on screen color, and music color, and Nature color, and emotions ref, CDT ref, newspaper quotations, and color movies create moods actors acting actors, and magnifying personality acting, and magnifying personality color, and magnifying personality acting, and eyes color, and eyes color, and personality motion pictures, and magnifying personality color, and lighting lighting motion pictures, and lighting Kalmus, Natalie, and Robert Edmond Jones Jones, Robert Edmond, and Natalie Kalmus color, and close-ups acting, and close-ups actors, and close-ups LB - 42900 PY - 1935 SE - D SP - 3 ST - Stage Critic Hails Technicolor Film as Landmark in Theater T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Stage Critic Hails Technicolor Film as Landmark in Theater ID - 4373 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The Los Angeles County’s Commission on Obscenity and Pornography was disbanded in February, 2001 by the Board of Supervisors. Efforts to eliminate the Commission had been underway since 1995. By 2001, the Commission had little or no budget and often found it difficult to even get a quorum of members. AU - Manzano, Roberto J. DA - Feb. 21, 2001 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA values Christianity advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations values sexuality motion pictures religion values morality Mahony, Roger Hollywood Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture morality, and motion pictures values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and values Catholic Church, and motion pictures Catholic Church, and new production code (1992) Mahony, Roger Mahony, Roger, and production code (1992) (1992) Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and new production code (1992) Mahony, Roger, and pornography pornography, and Roger M. Mahony Hollywood, and Roger M. Mahony Archdoicese, Los Angeles pornography pornography, and Archdiocese of L.A. Jarrard, Dennis Morality in Media Citizens for Decency through Law (CDL) National Religious Alliance Against Pornography primary sources boycotts, and pornography advertising, and pornography pornography, and advertising boycott Jarrard, Dennis, and Roger Mahony Mahony, Roger, and Dennis Jarrard advertising LB - 25700 PY - 2001 SE - B (Metro) SP - 5B ST - Spervisors Disband Pornography Panel T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Spervisors Disband Pornography Panel ID - 1164 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This account of Pope John Paul II's address to entertainment leaders at Universal Studios in Hollywood quotes the Pope telling his audience that "working constantly with images, you face the temptation of seeing them as reality. Seeking to satisfy the dreams of millions, you can become lost in a world of fantasy." AU - Maraniss, David AU - Jenkins, Loren DA - Sept. 16, 1987 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA values Christianity Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack values motion pictures Hollywood values religion Catholic Church non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +television Pope John Paul II, and motion pictures Pope John Paul II Pope John Paul II, and television television, and Pope John Paul II motion pictures, and Pope John Paul II Valenti, Jack, and Pope John Paul II Wasserman, Lew, and Pope John Paul II Hollywood, and Catholic Church Hollywood, and religion Catholic Church, and Hollywood values values, and virtual reality critics virtual reality LB - 24270 PY - 1987 SE - A SP - 8A ST - Pope Asks Entertainers, Media to Be Forces for "Great Good" T2 - Washington Post TI - Pope Asks Entertainers, Media to Be Forces for "Great Good" ID - 1074 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses "the implications of ultrafast computer networks composed of optical fibers that stretch around the globe." (E8) It goes on to says that "Although a new computing era is clearly dawning, it does not have a consensus label as was the case with each of the previous eras: main-frame, mini and personal computing. "So far, the new epoch of computing has been described as grid computing, on-demand as grid computing, utility computing, and planetary computer and Web 2.0. "Although the titles are different, they are all efforts to describe an age that will be a fundamental break from earlier computing generations." (E8) AU - Markoff, John DA - Oct. 5, 2005 KW - computers corporations corporations global communication computers and the Internet supercomputers fiber optics optical fibers networks camputers, and networks networks, and computers Microsoft Corporation Google Yahoo digital media digitization Japan Japan, and Internet Japan, and fiber optics HDTV television remote sensing globalization non-USA corporations LB - 33740 PY - 2005 SE - E (Circuits) SP - E1, E8 ST - The Time Is Now: Bust Up the Box! T2 - New York Times TI - The Time Is Now: Bust Up the Box! ID - 3012 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Studios saw advantages to digital movie projection. It rivaled the quality of high definition television. Traditional motion pictures required threading celluloid through a mechanical projector. Digital movies eliminated this step and with it, the projection flaws associated with wear and tear on prints and old or poorly operated equipment AU - Marriott, Michel DA - May 27, 1999 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography projection motion pictures home entertainment materials digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema digitization computers 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movie +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality materials LB - 26070 PY - 1999 SE - D SP - D7 ST - Digital Projectors Use Flashes of Light to Paint a Movie T2 - New York Times TI - Digital Projectors Use Flashes of Light to Paint a Movie ID - 1198 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Where previously only large studios could afford to make and distribute motion pictures and television programs, inexpensive digital cameras and computer editing software now allowed a person to do these things for only a few thousand dollars. The new technology gave greater freedom to independent movie makers. AU - Marriott, Michel DA - Jan. 7, 1999 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography projection motion pictures home entertainment digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema digitization computers 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movies digital movies, and Titanic digital movies, and A Bug's Life +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality LB - 26090 PY - 1999 SE - E (Circuits) SP - E1, E5 ST - If Only DeMille Had Owned a Desktop; New Low-Cost Camera and Software Put Filmmaking Within Reach of Digital Auteurs T2 - New York Times TI - If Only DeMille Had Owned a Desktop; New Low-Cost Camera and Software Put Filmmaking Within Reach of Digital Auteurs ID - 1200 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that leading crusader against white slavery and social reformer appointed by Theodore Roosevelt, James B. Reynolds, has some positive things to say about the movies: “‘On the whole you have a good word to say for the moving-picture shows, then?’ “‘Yes, I have. They entertain without suggestiveness. Sometimes the stories of the pictures glorify the criminal, but not more than certain newspapers. And many of the film shows nowadays are distinctly educational. But no one can say a good word for the saloon or certain other influences, and the alchemy of the great city changes some good influences into bad ones.” The subtitle of this article reads: "Assistant District Attorney James B. Reynolds, Who Has Made a Study of This Question and Led in the Suppression of the ‘White Slave’ Traffic, Discusses the Odds Against People in a Big City." AU - Marshall, Edward DA - Jan. 21, 1912 KW - reform children censorship ref, news motion pictures education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children reformers, and motion pictures motion pictures, and reformers censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and reformers censorship,and reformers motion pictures, and crime motion pictures, and white slavery ref, NYT LB - 14110 PY - 1912 SE - SM SP - 6 ST - New York’s Remorseless Conspiracy Against Youth T2 - New York Times TI - New York’s Remorseless Conspiracy Against Youth ID - 3568 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Commenting on Universal's movie Henry and June (1990), the first film to received the NC-17 rating, Maslin says that the "new NC-17 rating has already been recognized as little ore than a new way to spell X." AU - Maslin, Janet DA - Oct. 21, 1990 KW - music Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation corporations sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality corporations corporations homosexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters MCA Universal Pictures theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) motion pictures Music Corporation of America (MCA) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture Wasserman, Lew CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 NC-17 rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 movie, Henry and June motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex lesbianism motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and homosexuality motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies Wasserman, Lew, and NC-17 Universal Pictures, and NC-17 Miller, Henry Kaufman, Philip MCA, and NC-17 MCA, and Cineplex Odeon theater chain theater owners, and NC-17 NC-17, and theater owners Pollock, Tom, and Universal Universal Pictures, and Tom Pollock Pollock, Tom, and NC-17 Kaufman, Philip, and Henry and June Heffner, Richard, and NC-17 Heffner, Richard, and Henry and June Heffner, Richard, and rating system (U. S.) NC-17 NC-17, and origins LB - 25360 PY - 1990 SE - 2 (Arts and Leisure) SP - 1 ST - Is NC-17 an X in a Clean Raincoat? T2 - New York Times TI - Is NC-17 an X in a Clean Raincoat? ID - 1132 ER - TY - NEWS AB - P. J. Masterson, who was Chief of the Tribune's Mechancal Department writes that "the perfecting press of the present -- with its capacity of 12,000, thirty-two pages, newspapers per hour -- is a marvel, but is no longer looked upon as a miracle. It is extremely cumbersome and complicated. Its cost is enormous, and its rate of speed is not equal to the necessities of the newspaper situation. A change is imminent, but whether it will be radical or not is hard to tell." Following this article is another by "Mr. De La Pointe" on "Newspaper Illustration." La Pointe was in the Tribune's Pictorial Department. AU - Masterson, P. J. DA - April 27, 1890 KW - wood engraving journalism journalism magazines, and photography magazines photography news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving electricity electricity, and journalism journalism, and electricity electricity, and newspapers newspapers, and electricity illustrations, and newspapers newspapers, and illustrations newspapers, and electric engraving electric engraving newspapers, and printing speed (1890) ref, CDT illustrations LB - 16430 PY - 1890 SP - 36 ST - The Newspaper Printing-Press T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - The Newspaper Printing-Press ID - 3796 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article explains the many advantages to digital cinema but also notes that a large obstacle to the adoption of this new technology is who will pay for the cost of upgrading theaters. AU - Mathews, Anna Wilde DA - March 28, 2002 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography projection motion pictures Lucas, George home entertainment Hollywood digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema digitization computers 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movie +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality Hollywood, and digital movies digital movies, and Hollywood digital movies, and George Lucas Lucas, George, and digital movies digital movies, and Star Wars -- Phantom Menace digital movies, and Toy Story 2 digital movies, and The Perfect Storm digital movies, and Bounce digital movies, and Shrek digital movies, and Final Fantasy digital movies, and Jurassic Park III digital movies, and Planet of the Apes LB - 26150 PY - 2002 SE - B (Marketplace) SP - B1, B3 ST - Cinema's Digital Divide: Who Will Pay for Next Wave of Theater Technology? 'Star Wars' Forces the Issue T2 - Wall Street Journal TI - Cinema's Digital Divide: Who Will Pay for Next Wave of Theater Technology? 'Star Wars' Forces the Issue ID - 1206 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that language for a new adults-only rating (NC-17) had been approved in August when Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, had met with movie directors. However, when Valenti presented the agreement to exhibitors, they objected. Mathews explains why the movie industry did not copyright the X rating-- lawyers believed that "a closed system would invite restraint of trade suits." AU - Mathews, Jack DA - Sept. 15, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation corporations corporations Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) motion pictures critics law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture NC-17 CARA, and NC-17 Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 Universal Pictures Universal Pictures, and NC-17 Wasserman, Lew Wasserman, Lew, and NC-17 censorship censorship, and NC-17 rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and controversies Henry and June (1990) movie, Henry and June motion pictures, and NC-17 critics, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), why X not copyrighted CARA LB - 21530 PY - 1990 SE - F SP - 1F ST - Oct. 3 Marks the Spot for Movie Showdown T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Oct. 3 Marks the Spot for Movie Showdown ID - 927 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Proiment American movie directors sign a petition to Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, to add a new rating category to indicate adult-oriented, non-pornographic films. AU - Mathews, Jack DA - July 5, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner motion pictures, and morality Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Valenti, Jack, and critics Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 Valenti, Jack, and legal challenges theater owners, and rating system (U. S.) theater owners, and NC-17 MPAA, and NC-17 Coppola, Francis Ford Lee, Spike Reiner, Rob Pollack, Sydney Wang, Wayne Lipsky, Mark MPAA, and independent producers CARA, and independent producers NC-17 NC-17, and origins Heffner, Richard LB - 25260 PY - 1990 SE - F (Calendar) SP - 7F ST - Top Directors Join New Drive to Overhaul X T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Top Directors Join New Drive to Overhaul X ID - 1122 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses Peter Greenaway's movie Pospero's Books (1991) and notes that the NC-17 rating is still poison at the box office, and that studio contracts still routinely require movie makers to produce no less than an R-rated picture. AU - Mathews, Jack DA - Sept. 22, 1991 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations motion pictures critics law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising NC-17, and critics NC-17, and Prospero's Books critics, and movie rating system (U. S.) LB - 25520 PY - 1991 SE - Calendar SP - 19 ST - NC-17: A Commentary on Controversies Past and Future T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - NC-17: A Commentary on Controversies Past and Future ID - 1148 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that the NC-17 movie rating still carried many of the disadvantages of the X rating -- many theaters would not book the films and many newspapers and television stations would not accept advertising for them. During the first half of the 1990s, a studio that made an NC-17 picture could generally anticipate to show it in only about 300 to 500 theaters, which meant that to make a profit, the film would usually have to be made for $3 million or less. AU - Mathews, Jack DA - Sept. 22, 1991 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising press motion pictures media effects media violence lesbianism law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and lesbianism public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Basic Instinct motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures lesbianism, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising Douglas, Michael motion pictures, and bad press coverage press, and poor movie coverage NC-17, and critics LB - 27490 PY - 1991 SE - (Calendar Section) SP - 19 ST - Movies: Off-Centerpiece: NC-17: A Commentary on Controversies Past and Future T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Movies: Off-Centerpiece: NC-17: A Commentary on Controversies Past and Future ID - 1304 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Here film critic Jack Mathews makes a recommendation for improving the motion picture industry's rating system, one rejected by Jack Valenti. Mathews suggests having the appeals board made up of parents. "Showing the movie simultaneously to viewers in the West, Southwest, East and North, in both rural and urban areas, could be done easily with satellite TV conferences, and their decisions would certainly be more relevant than the partisan political decisions now being made," Mathews wrote. AU - Mathews, Jack DA - May 8, 1994 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and revisions rating system (U. S.), and parents +motion pictures and popular culture critics Mathews, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) revision parents, and rating system (U. S.) classification, and motion pictures classification, and parents classification, and revision CARA LB - 28360 PY - 1994 SP - 4 ST - Fanfare; On the Movies: The Politics of PG, PG-13, R and NC-17 T2 - Newsday TI - Fanfare; On the Movies: The Politics of PG, PG-13, R and NC-17 ID - 1375 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Unable to find a large press to publish its work, the Meese Commission eventually turned to Rutledge Hill, a small press in Nashville, which published about 40,000 copies of the Final Report in an abridged version in 1986. Some Christian bookstores would not stock the work because of its graphic descriptions of movies and lengthy quotations from pornographic literature. Rutledge Hill distributed the work in a wrapper with a warning label that said it contained “extremely explicit content” that most people would find “offensive.” AU - McDowell, Edwin DA - Oct. 21, 1986 KW - corporations corporations advertising, and public relations presidents, and new media Reagan administration propaganda advertising sexuality Playboy sexuality sexuality Penthouse Meese Commission Gray & Company law censorship and ratings censorship pornography public relations public relations, and Meese Commission Meese Commission, and public relations Meese Commission, and First Amendment censorship, and public relation public relations, and censorship public relations, and First Amendment Meese Commission, and critics Reagan administration, and pornography pornography, and public relations Playboy, and public relations Penthouse, and public relations ACLU, and public relation Gray & Company, and Gray, Robert Keith ACLU LB - 27020 PY - 1986 SE - C SP - C13 ST - Some Say Meese Report Rates an 'X' T2 - New York Times TI - Some Say Meese Report Rates an 'X' ID - 1260 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the U. S. Justice Department's National Obscenity Enforcement Unit to bring simultaneous or successive indictments against those who distributed sexually explicit materials -- movies, books, magazines. Usually these indictments occurred in conservative jurisdictions. The article also deals with the conservative Arizona-based Citizens for Decency Through Law. AU - McGee, Jim DA - Jan. 11, 1993 KW - Clinton, William Jefferson presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality values obscenity Clinton Administration law censorship and ratings Meese Commission pornography pornography, and Meese Commission pornography, and opponents pornography, and legal obscenity, and pornography pornography, and obscenity obscenity, and legal Reagan administration, and pornography pornography, and Reagan administration censorship censorship, and Reagan administration Reagan administration, and censorship Ward, Brent Clinton administration, and pornography pornography, and Clinton administration Clinton, Bill, and pornography pornography, and Bill Clinton Clinton, Bill LB - 23850 PY - 1993 SE - A SP - 1A ST - U. S. Crusade Against Pornography Tests the Limits of Fairness T2 - Washington Post TI - U. S. Crusade Against Pornography Tests the Limits of Fairness ID - 1046 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the Clinton administrations reconsideration of the anti-pornographic tactics employed by the Reagan-Bush Justice Department. The U. S. Justice Department's National Obscenity Enforcement Unit brought simultaneous or successive indictments against those who distributed sexually explicit materials -- movies, books, magazines. Usually these indictments occurred in conservative jurisdictions. AU - McGee, Jim DA - Nov. 24, 1993 KW - Clinton, William Jefferson presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality values obscenity Clinton Administration law censorship and ratings Meese Commission pornography pornography, and Meese Commission pornography, and opponents pornography, and legal obscenity, and pornography pornography, and obscenity obscenity, and legal Reagan administration, and pornography pornography, and Reagan administration censorship censorship, and Reagan administration Reagan administration, and censorship Ward, Brent Clinton administration, and pornography pornography, and Clinton administration Clinton, Bill, and pornography pornography, and Bill Clinton pornography, and judicial setbacks Clinton, Bill LB - 27630 PY - 1993 SE - A SP - A1 ST - U. S. Reviews Reagan-Bush Obscenity Tactic; Justice Department May End Multiple Prosecutions of Pornographers T2 - Washington Post TI - U. S. Reviews Reagan-Bush Obscenity Tactic; Justice Department May End Multiple Prosecutions of Pornographers ID - 1317 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "Moving Pictures Under Water." AU - Mechanician DA - Aug. 3, 1913 KW - motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space ref, news cameras cameras, and movement cameras, and portability motion pictures, and movement ref, CDT LB - 640 PY - 1913 SE - B SP - 8 ST - Some Ways Genius Is Utilizing the Land, Sea and Air T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Some Ways Genius Is Utilizing the Land, Sea and Air ID - 3359 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This articles reports that Rutledge Hill Press in Nashville, TN, will publish the Meese Commission's Final Report after religious publishers and most major New York publishing houses turned the report down. It notes that the federal govenment had earlier printed 1,500 copies of the Final Report. AU - Mehren, Elizabeth DA - Aug. 15, 1986 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising public relations sexuality Meese Commission public relations, and Meese Commission Meese Commission, and public relations pornography pornography, and Meese Commission Meese Commission, and pornography LB - 28450 PY - 1986 SE - 5 (View) SP - 1 ST - A Tiny Firm Will Publish Meese Commission Report T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - A Tiny Firm Will Publish Meese Commission Report ID - 1382 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In the aftermath of the Meese Commission's Final Report (1986), opponents of the Commission launched a public relations campaign using Gray & Company. It portrayed the members of the Meese Commission as "moral vigilantes" and self-appointed censors. This article makes these points, although it is perhaps impossible to know if such articles were part of the public relations campaign. AU - Merzer, Martin DA - Oct. 5, 1986 KW - corporations advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising public relations Gray & Company law censorship and ratings public relations, and censorship censorship, and public relations censorship Gray & Company, and public relations corporations LB - 27110 PY - 1986 ST - Self-Appointed Censors on Crusade T2 - Houston Chronicle TI - Self-Appointed Censors on Crusade ID - 1268 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article covers the disagreements over devising a rating system for television programs. Such a play was eventually adopted in 1997. AU - Mifflin, Lawrie DA - Dec. 2, 1996 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings entertainment, home Clinton, William Jefferson CARA V-chip, and television violence television, and parents telecommunications presidents, and new media censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) PTA motion pictures home entertainment government Clinton Administration law regulation law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification Gore, Al home, and new media home home +television +motion pictures and popular culture Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.), and TV (1997) V-chip television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and V-chip home entertainment revolution home entertainment, and V-chip television, and PTA PTA, and television television, and critics rating system (U. S.), and critics hearings new media Collings, Tim V-chip, and Tim Collings Telecommunications Act (1996) regulation, and television Valenti, Jack, and television television, and Jack Valenti Clinton Administration, and TV rating system (U. S.) Clinton, Bill, and TV rating system (U. S.) Gore, Al, and TV rating system (U. S.) McCain, John, and TV rating system (U. S.) Clinton, Bill LB - 25930 PY - 1996 SE - A SP - A1, A12 ST - Industry Leaders Unveil Technique for Ratings of TV; Critics Are Unmollified; Some Popular Programs Might Be Labeled ‘Over 14,’ but Defining News is Issue T2 - New York Times TI - Industry Leaders Unveil Technique for Ratings of TV; Critics Are Unmollified; Some Popular Programs Might Be Labeled ‘Over 14,’ but Defining News is Issue ID - 1184 ER - TY - NEWS AB - As political pressure mounted to force the television industry to adopt a rating system for programs, Jack Valenti at first resisted content categories. The Canadians had tried this approach, he said, but abandoned it because it was too complicated. It would likely encountered even greater problems in the United States where panels would have a massive volume of TV programming to classify each day, far beyond anything CARA had faced. “The minute you get into V-2 or V-3 or V-4 or S-2 or L-4, when you have 300 or 400 people assigning these labels, it’s going to be difficult to find consistency,” he said. TV Guide, newspapers, and others who printed television schedules would find it difficult to accommodate extended ratings in their grid. Viewers would find an expanded system too complex and would make programming remote controls too difficult. AU - Mifflin, Lawrie DA - Dec. 13, 1996 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Federal Communications Commission (FCC) entertainment, home Clinton, William Jefferson CARA V-chip, and television violence television, and parents telecommunications presidents, and new media censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) PTA motion pictures home entertainment government regulation Clinton Administration law regulation law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification Gore, Al home, and new media home home +television +motion pictures and popular culture Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.), and TV (1997) V-chip television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and V-chip home entertainment revolution home entertainment, and V-chip television, and PTA PTA, and television television, and critics rating system (U. S.), and critics hearings new media Collings, Tim V-chip, and Tim Collings Telecommunications Act (1996) regulation, and television Valenti, Jack, and television television, and Jack Valenti FCC Clinton Administration, and TV rating system (U. S.) Gore, Al, and TV rating system (U. S.) McCain, John, and TV rating system (U.S.) Clinton, Bill Clinton, Bill, and TV rating system (U. S.) Lieberman, Joseph, and TV rating system (U. S.) Markey, Ed, and V-chip LB - 25950 PY - 1996 SE - A SP - A1 ST - TV Industry Vows Fight to Protect New Ratings Plan T2 - New York Times TI - TV Industry Vows Fight to Protect New Ratings Plan ID - 1186 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article provides background to events leading up to the adoption in 1997 of a rating system for television programs. AU - Mifflin, Lawrie DA - July 10, 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Federal Communications Commission (FCC) entertainment, home Clinton, William Jefferson CARA V-chip, and television violence television, and parents telecommunications presidents, and new media censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) PTA motion pictures home entertainment government regulation Clinton Administration law regulation law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification Gore, Al home, and new media home home +television +motion pictures and popular culture Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.), and TV (1997) V-chip television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and V-chip home entertainment revolution home entertainment, and V-chip television, and PTA PTA, and television television, and critics rating system (U. S.), and critics hearings new media Collings, Tim V-chip, and Tim Collings Telecommunications Act (1996) regulation, and television Valenti, Jack, and television television, and Jack Valenti Clinton, Bill Clinton, Bill, and TV rating system (U. S.) Clinton administration, and TV rating system (U. S.) Gore, Al, and TV rating system (U. S.) McCain, John, and TV rating system (U. S.) Lieberman, Joseph, and TV rating system (U. S.) FCC FCC, and TV rating system (U. S.) Markey, Ed, and V-chip LB - 26030 PY - 1997 SE - A SP - A12 ST - Groups Strike Agreement To Add TV Rating Specifics T2 - New York Times TI - Groups Strike Agreement To Add TV Rating Specifics ID - 1194 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Film critic Elvis Mitchell here discusses how the DVD has changed the way people experience movies. In addition to the movie, the viewer has access to much extra material on the directors, actors, and other matters relating to the picture. AU - Mitchell, Elvis DA - Aug. 17, 2003 KW - holography sexuality +motion pictures and popular culture digitization DVDs pornography sexuality virtual reality 3-D motion pictures, and DVDs motion pictures, and digital media motion pictures, and interactive holograms motion pictures, and holograms +television television, and DVDs DVDs, and television digital media digital cinema motion pictures LB - 28730 PY - 2003 SE - 2 (Arts & Leisure) SP - 1, 15 ST - Everyone's a Film Geek Now T2 - New York Times TI - Everyone's a Film Geek Now ID - 2649 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This lengthy article discusses the legal challenge to the movie industry's X rating given to Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! (1990), and interviews several directors and producers including Alan Parker, William Friedkin, Clint Eastwood, Robert Radnitz, and Wes Craven, who were highly critical of Richard Heffner and the Classification and Rating Administration. AU - Mitchell, Sean DA - June 21, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings rating system (U. S.) motion pictures morality religion values freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner morality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and morality CARA, and William Kunstler Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Ramos, Charles E. Valenti, Jack Craven, Wes Radnitz, Robert Friedkin, William Parker, Alan Eastwood, Clint Heffner, Richard LB - 20840 PY - 1990 SE - F (Calendar) SP - F1, F6-F8 ST - The X Rating Gets Its Day in Court T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - The X Rating Gets Its Day in Court ID - 885 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This work cover the U.S. Senate hearing on labeling lyrics in rock music. AU - Molotsky, Irvin DA - Sept. 20, 1985 KW - rock n' roll government hearings presidents, and new media Reagan administration sexuality government substance abuse rock music lyrics drug abuse pornography Reagan administration, and rock music lyrics Reagan administration, and pornography Reagan administration, and drug abuse drug use, and Senate hearing (1985) Senate hearing, and Hollywood (1985) hearings values LB - 24160 PY - 1985 SE - C SP - 8C ST - Hearing on Rock Lyrics T2 - New York Times TI - Hearing on Rock Lyrics ID - 1063 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article profiles Tim Collings who invented the V-chip. When placed in television sets, the V-chip allowed parents or others to block objectionable programming. AU - Monaghan, Peter DA - Nov. 21, 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings entertainment, home CARA V-chip, and television violence television, and parents telecommunications censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) PTA motion pictures home entertainment government law regulation law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification home, and new media home home +television +motion pictures and popular culture Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.), and TV (1997) V-chip television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and V-chip home entertainment revolution home entertainment, and V-chip television, and PTA PTA, and television television, and critics rating system (U. S.), and critics hearings new media Collings, Tim V-chip, and Tim Collings Telecommunications Act (1996) regulation, and television Valenti, Jack, and television television, and Jack Valenti LB - 25960 PY - 1997 SE - A SP - A9 ST - Controlling TV Access: The Scientist Behind the V-Chip T2 - Chronicle of Higher Education TI - Controlling TV Access: The Scientist Behind the V-Chip ID - 1187 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The author, who was president of the Anthropological Society of Rome, breaks this article into several brief sections: "Her Pictorial Characteristics"; "Three Beauty Eras"; "Fifteenth Century Standard"; "Eyes Make Slave of Men"; "Taste for Small Mouths"; and "Ideals of Today." With regard to the eyes, Montegazza writes: "The eyes were considered the most powerful attraction alluring man more readily than any other feature, making him a slave to love. The eyes 'should be as dark as a ripe olive, gleaming like two black coals,' dark color alone did not suffice; the eyes must be 'neither timid nor restless, but fearless and brilliant, rivaling the stars of the most limpid and scintillant sky.'...." [my emphasis] AU - Montegazza, Paola DA - Nov. 9, 1902 KW - photography facial expressions ref, news women photography and visual communication photography, and women women, and photography photography, and beauty photography, and facial expressions facial expressions, and photography photography, and eyes quotations, and photographing the face quotations ref, CDT LB - 41500 PY - 1902 SP - 63 ST - How Man's Ideals of Feminine Beauty Change T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - How Man's Ideals of Feminine Beauty Change ID - 4249 ER - TY - NEWS AB - “Civil war, revolutionary, and ‘bad Indian’ pictures are in high favor among the photoplay producers just now," Morgan writes. The public seems to enjoy the "horrors of war." The theme of western films, and movies about the Civil War and other episodes from American history is developed in more detail in Richard Abel's book Americanizing the Movies and 'Movie-Mad' Audiences, 1910-1914 (2006). AU - Morgan, Gene DA - Nov. 19, 1911 KW - nationalism history history motion pictures, and Americanism motion pictures nationalism motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, foreign France Pathé France, and motion pictures motion pictures, and France nationalism and communication motion pictures, and Americanization motion pictures, and westerns history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Civil War motion pictures, and American Revolution ref, news Abel, Richard materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation war war, and motion pictures motion pictures, and war ref, CDT LB - 6510 PY - 1911 SE - B SP - 5 ST - Moving Pictures and Makers T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Moving Pictures and Makers ID - 3448 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article explains that the Eastman Kodak Company plans to retire its Super 8 Kodachrome film in December, 2007, despite protests from many film makers who still use it. The technology, developed in 1965, was a favorite of such avant-garde movie makers as Jonas Mekas and Kenneth Anger during the 1960s. John F. Kennedy's assassination was captured by Abraham Zapruder on a Super 8 camera. Despite the fact that Kodachrome had a complex and expensive developing process (one that Kodak has processed on a money-losing basis in recent years), movie makers liked it during the 1960s because of it ability to produce "striking, unique colors" and because of its "unparalleled archival virtues." (B7) AU - Morgan, Spencer DA - May 31, 2005 KW - Mekas, Jonas motion pictures color 8mm motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures 8mm, and color color, and 8mm motion pictures, and 8mm film motion pictures, and Super 8 Super 8, and Kodachrome color, and Kodachrome color, and Super 8 8mm, and Super 8 motion pictures, and avant garde avant garde, and Super 8 Zapruder, Abraham, and Super 8 8mm, and Abraham Zapurder Mekas, Jonas, and Kodachrome Mekas, Jonas, and color Super 8 Anger, Kenneth, and color Super 8 art Super 8 cameras avant garde Zapruder, Abraham LB - 32870 PY - 2005 SE - B SP - B1, B7 ST - 'Kodak, Don't Take My Kodachrome' T2 - New York Times TI - 'Kodak, Don't Take My Kodachrome' ID - 2924 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article comments on the growing excitment and predictions over making color movies in 1937. For some, it says, "Color is mysterious, an innovation that in itself contains the magic elements that spell box office. Or so say some." (5) "Color is an abracadbra, something all powerful like the monster that jumed out of Aladdin's lamp." (5) [my emphasis] Other people agree that "Color is important," and that "Color is box office when linked with good story values and money names. But color is not hocus pocus and it is nothing that a magicianm pulls out of a hat. It's still more or less in the experimental stage, though beginning to emerge as witness the two most recent successful color ventures, 'A Star Is Born' (UA) and the still unreleased 'Walter Wanger's Vogues of 1936'." (5) The article notes that several studios have color movies in production. (19) It also notes that improved makeup have improved the way women look in color films. (19) But it says that "Simple calculation reveals that even Technicolor, with its incomparable equipment in machinery and technical brains could not process as many as 20 features a year, a drop in the bucket when placed against the 400 to 500 annual industry production of features." (19) Among the obstacles to making color films are the increased need and cost for lighting and the greater expense involved in using color film. "Color set normally has to have three times the lighting power required for a black-and-white, to obtain the same degree of illumination. That is because color reproduction of necessity reduced the area through which light reaches sensitized film. There are still persons in the biz who recall the tortures undergone by Paul Whiteman and his band in recording the 'Rhapsody in Blue' number of Universal's 'King of Jazz.' Mechanical equipment has advanced since those days of 1930 -- a century ago in this biz -- and set lighting has cooled off a great deal." (19) As for the cost of color film, the author says that "Still another, and probably the heaviest individual item, is raw film. Ordinary black-and-white raw stock usually costs around eight cents a foot for negative and rush prints. Technicolor raw film runs from 30 to 34c a foot, and including the necessary trebling of footage for three-color negatives, hikes the cost." (19) Despite these drawbacks, Walter Wanger predicted "'By the beginning of 1939 all important motion pictures will be produced in color and a black-and-white feature will be as archaic as a silent.'" (Wanger quoted, 19) AU - Morrison, Denis DA - June 2, 1937 KW - censorship motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color ref, news color, and cinematographers color, and novelty lighting lighting, and color color, and lighting color, and film cost quotations quotations, and color quotations, and color movies color, and Aladdin color, and Walter Wanger color, and Dunning Process color, and high cost of film Technicolor, and three-color process LB - 41060 PY - 1937 SP - 5, 19 ST - Color at the Crossroads: Tint Craze Takes Hold in H'wood T2 - Variety TI - Color at the Crossroads: Tint Craze Takes Hold in H'wood ID - 4205 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article quotes Natalie Kalmus of Technicolor saying that Ginger Rogers' new movie personality in Lady in the Dark (1944) is the result of Techincolor. Kalmus said: "'The judicious application of technicolor, plus makeup, has created the new Ginger Rogers personality,' says Natalie. 'Look at her in "Lady in the Dark" and you'll perceive what I mean. Ginger's first color picture, mind you. A fine actress and a normal sort of pretty girl with a vivacious personality all of a sudden becomes a great beauty. "'There no mystery. The secret is technicolor.'" (Natalie Kalmus quoted, 11) [my emphasis] AU - Muir, Florabel DA - Sept. 24, 1944 KW - Kalmus, Herbert censorship censorship motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Technicolor, and Natalie Kalmus Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color censorship, and Natalie Kalmus ref, secondary color, and primitives color, and cinematographers color, and novelty color, and music Kalmus, Natalie, and color music women women, and color beauty, and color color, and beauty color, and beautiful women ref, news color, and Ginger Rogers celebrity culture, and personality personality personality, and color personality, and Technicolor color, and personality Technicolor, and personality quotations quotations, and beauty and color celebrity LB - 41050 PY - 1944 SE - E SP - 1, 11 ST - Ginger Gets Glamor! T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Ginger Gets Glamor! ID - 4204 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Those involved with digital movie making saw a transformation of historic proportions. Film editor Walter Murch compared it to the change in painting that occurred during the fifteenth century when oil on canvas superseded an older technique of using pigments on fresco. Traditional movie making was “so heterogeneous, with so many technologies woven together in a complex and expensive fabric, that it is almost by definition impossible for a single person to control,” said Murch. “By contrast, digital techniques naturally tend to integrate with each other because of their mathematical commonality; thus they come under easier control by a single person.” AU - Murch, Walter DA - May 2, 1999 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography projection motion pictures home entertainment Hollywood materials materials digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema digitization computers 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movie +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality Hollywood, and digital movies digital movies, and Hollywood digital cinema of the mind LB - 26170 PY - 1999 SE - Arts and Leisure SP - 1, 35 ST - The Future: A Digital Cinema of the Mind? Could Be T2 - New York Times TI - The Future: A Digital Cinema of the Mind? Could Be ID - 1208 ER - TY - NEWS AB - One of the most talked-about scenes in the controversial movies Basic Instinct (1992), starring Sharon Stone and Michael Douglas, involved Stone uncrossing and crossing her legs in front of police during an interrogation. Stone reportedly expressed surprise that the camera would zoom in for a revealing shot. Paul Verhoeven, the movie's director, set the record straight in an interview in the Miami Herald. “Now wait just a moment!” he said. “She says she didn’t know?! She knew I was going to do that. Absolutely! She gave me her panties as a present before I shot the scene! She’s just upset because it is more clear and less dark than she thought.” AU - Murphy, Ryan DA - March 22, 1992 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality homosexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality women, and new media advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising press motion pictures media effects media violence lesbianism gays women feminism law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and lesbianism public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Basic Instinct motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures lesbianism, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising Douglas, Michael motion pictures, and bad press coverage press, and poor movie coverage Verhoeven, Paul Eszterhas, Joe Stone, Sharon feminists feminists, and motion pictures gays, and motion pictures Jay Leno Show LB - 25430 PY - 1992 SE - I SP - 1I, 5I ST - Director: Don't Take Instinct the Wrong Way T2 - Miami Herald TI - Director: Don't Take Instinct the Wrong Way ID - 1139 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In June, 1957, Eric Johnston announced that he would double the size of the Appeals Board, that heard challenged to the Production Code Administration, by appointing an equal number of members who were producers and exhibitors who were not MPAA members. John Ford and William Goetz were among the new appointees. In November, 1959, the new Appeals Board overturned its first PCA decision. The appeal involved a movie, Happy Anniversary (UA, 1959), that starred David Niven Mitzi Gaynor, and treated pre-marital sex. United Artist had made it clear beforehand that it would release the picture with or without the PCA’s approval. Shurlock denied the seal because he felt the film violated the Code’s provisions on the sanctity of marriage. The Appeals Board overruled Shurlock and agreed to a compromise that added “morally compensating” dialogue. Niven is heard to say that the pre-marital liaison was “wrong.” AU - Nason, Richard DA - Nov. 10, 1959 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and pre-marital sex Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Production Code, and Appeals Board Happy Anniversary LB - 35790 PY - 1959 ST - Movie's Dubbed Line Reveals Remorse About Waywardness T2 - New York Times TI - Movie's Dubbed Line Reveals Remorse About Waywardness ID - 3115 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article suggests that Geoffrey Shurlock and the PCA had denied a PCA seal to the movie Suddenly, Last Summer because of "cannibalism among other forms of degeneracy." AU - Nason, Richard DA - Nov. 5 1959 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Suddenly, Last Summer (1960) motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and American-interest film Happy Anniversary LB - 35920 PY - 1959 SP - 44 ST - Movie in Trouble with Code Group: 'Suddenly Last Summer' Reportedly TurnedDown by Production Unit T2 - New York Times TI - Movie in Trouble with Code Group: 'Suddenly Last Summer' Reportedly TurnedDown by Production Unit ID - 3229 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In June, 1957, Eric Johnston announced that he would double the size of the Appeals Board, that heard challenged to the Production Code Administration, by appointing an equal number of members who were producers and exhibitors who were not MPAA members. John Ford and William Goetz were among the new appointees. In November, 1959, the new Appeals Board overturned its first PCA decision. The appeal involved a movie, Happy Anniversary (UA, 1959), that starred David Niven Mitzi Gaynor, and treated pre-marital sex. United Artist had made it clear beforehand that it would release the picture with or without the PCA’s approval. Shurlock denied the seal because he felt the film violated the Code’s provisions on the sanctity of marriage. The Appeals Board overruled Shurlock and agreed to a compromise that added “morally compensating” dialogue. Niven is heard to say that the pre-marital liaison was “wrong.” This article says that because Niven was in Brazil, the added dialogue was dubbed in by another actor, not by Niven. AU - Nason, Richard DA - Nov. 7, 1959 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and pre-marital sex Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Production Code, and Appeals Board Happy Anniversary LB - 36330 PY - 1959 SP - 27 ST - Johnston Backs Film Code Group: Says Review Board Did Not Reverse West Coast Unit on 'Happy Anniversary' T2 - New York Times TI - Johnston Backs Film Code Group: Says Review Board Did Not Reverse West Coast Unit on 'Happy Anniversary' ID - 3266 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article concerns efforts to have the television industry adopt a rating system for its programs. AU - News, Bloomberg Business C1 - 13 DA - March 1, 1996 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings entertainment, home Clinton, William Jefferson CARA V-chip, and television violence television, and parents telecommunications presidents, and new media censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) PTA motion pictures home entertainment government Clinton Administration law regulation law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification home, and new media home home +television +motion pictures and popular culture Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.), and TV (1997) V-chip television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and V-chip home entertainment revolution home entertainment, and V-chip television, and PTA PTA, and television television, and critics rating system (U. S.), and critics hearings new media Collings, Tim V-chip, and Tim Collings Telecommunications Act (1996) regulation, and television Valenti, Jack, and television television, and Jack Valenti Clinton, Bill Clinton, Bill, and TV rating system (U. S.) Clinton administration, and TV rating system (U. S.) LB - 25970 PY - 1996 SE - News ST - Broadcasters Give Clinton Ratings Plan TV Rating System T2 - Omaha World-Herald TI - Broadcasters Give Clinton Ratings Plan TV Rating System ID - 1188 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with Blockbuster's decision not to rent Woody Allen's Shadows and Fog (1992) and another Orion release Article 99 (1992) because Orion had made a deal to set its movie Dances With Wolves (1990) only to McDonald's restaurants and not to other video rental stores, including Blockbuster. AU - Nichols, Peter M. DA - Dec. 3, 1992 KW - entertainment Classification and Rating Administration classification video cassette recorders (VCRs) self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality entertainment, home Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Blockbuster Video magnetic recording sexuality video rentals video sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) motion pictures media effects media violence lesbianism home entertainment materials materials videotape magnetic tape law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA home home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures lesbianism, and motion pictures CARA, and rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation VCRs Blockbuster Video, and NC-17 NC-17, and Blockbuster video stores NC-17, and video home entertainment revolution video, and home home, and video LB - 27510 PY - 1992 SE - C SP - C20 ST - Home Video T2 - New York Times TI - Home Video ID - 1306 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Philip Nobile reported on a sex scandal involving Father Bruce Ritter of Covenant House. Ritter had been a member of the Meese Commission that study pornography and made recommendations to combat it in 1985-1986. The scandal eventually led Ritter to resign from Covenant House. AU - Nobile, Philip DA - Jan. 30, 1990 KW - sexuality pornography Meese Commission Ritter, Bruce Covenant House, and Bruce Ritter Ritter, Bruce, and pornography pornography, and Bruce Ritter Meese Commission, and Bruce Ritter LB - 26960 PY - 1990 SE - Vol. 35, No. 5 SP - 25 ST - Body and Soul T2 - Village Voice TI - Body and Soul ID - 1254 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article by the Rev. W. B. Norton notes a call for moving picture censorship from Ernest V. Dhayler of Seattle who “declared there was ‘a rapid increase of crime and criminals among the youth,’ and attributed much of it to the picture shows which ‘give suggestions of lust and license and combine in producing schools of crime.’” The subtitle of this article reads: "House of Deputies Urges that People Return to Simpler and Purer Lives." AU - Norton, W. B. DA - Oct. 22, 1916 KW - children censorship photography ref, news motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures ref, CDT advertising LB - 13730 PY - 1916 SE - A SP - 5 ST - Many Reforms Are Demanded by Churchmen T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Many Reforms Are Demanded by Churchmen ID - 3532 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Nugent takes a skeptical view of the impact of color on motion pictures. Specifically, he questions the ideas of Robert Edmond Jones who argued that color would revolutionize film. Jones thought color would change movies not less than the coming of sound. He believed the black-and-white thinking was inadequate in making color films. Nugent points out that black-and-white pictures, with its subtle shadings, has also been a powerful force on theater screens. Of Jones's ideas, Nugent wrote: "But to permit this theory and it implications to develop into the anticipated creation of 'visual opera,' 'color music drama,' or whatever, strikes me as giving color an importance out of all proportion to its service to the screen." AU - Nugent, Frank S. DA - March 6, 1938 KW - censorship ref, NYT Jones, Robert Edmond motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color color, and cinematographers color, and novelty color, and Robert Edmond Jones Jones, Robert Edmond, and color color, and music color, as visual opera color, and emotions color, and new way of seeing motion picture, and Becky Sharp motion pictures, and La Cacuracha color, and La Cacuracha color, and Becky Sharp critics critics, and color movies LB - 42850 PY - 1938 SP - 153 ST - Slightly Off Color T2 - New York Times TI - Slightly Off Color ID - 4213 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that President Wm. Howard Taft has made arrangements with Chicago film producing company to film the work of government service “in a semi-official capacity.” AU - Observer, Reel DA - Nov. 26, 1911 KW - Taft, William Howard administration nationalism history history ref, news motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures materials materials, and historical preservation historical preservation historical preservation, and materials historical preservation, and motion pictures motion pictures, and historical preservation presidents and new media Taft, William Howard Taft, William Howard, and new media Taft, William Howard, and motion pictures Taft, William Howard, and historical preservation historical preservation, and William Howard Taft motion pictures, and William Howard Taft nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures propaganda motion pictures, and propaganda propaganda, and motion pictures ref, CDT LB - 13320 PY - 1911 SE - B SP - 7 ST - In the Moving Picture World T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - In the Moving Picture World ID - 3492 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the retun of "The Open Mind," a television program started in 1956 and hosted by Richard D. Heffner. The program interviewed leading intellectuals and political leaders. AU - O'Connor, John J. DA - Dec. 15, 1973 KW - values education community democracy +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures +television Heffner, Richard television, and education Heffner, Richard, and television Heffner, Richard, and TV and education television, and values values, and television Heffner, Richard, and values democracy, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and democracy Heffner, Richard, and Open Mind Open Mind, and Richard Heffner democracy and media democracy, and television education, and television values LB - 20210 PY - 1973 SP - 62 ST - TV: Returning 'Open Mind' Looks at Presidency T2 - New York Times TI - TV: Returning 'Open Mind' Looks at Presidency ID - 842 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article begins: "Archbishop Roger M. Mahony, condemning pornography as an 'attack upon human dignity,' urged consumers Saturday to stop patronizing video stores that sell or rent X-rated movies." The article explains that this recommendation is an expansion of the archbishop's attack on pornography from the previous year when he urged Catholics to picket 7-Eleven stores and other establishments that carried Playboy and Penthouse magazines. AU - O'Shaughnessey, Lynn DA - July 12, 1987 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) values Christianity magnetic recording video rentals sexuality pornography motion pictures videotape magnetic tape Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture pornography, and opponents Catholics, and pornography pornography, and boycotts pornography, and Catholics VCRs pornography, and VCRs video stores video stores, and boycotts video stores, and pornography pornography, and video stores Mahony, Roger boycotts, and video stores boycotts, and pornography Mahony, Roger, and boycotts LB - 22670 PY - 1987 SE - 1 SP - 1 ST - Boycott Aimed at Stores with X-Rated Films T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Boycott Aimed at Stores with X-Rated Films ID - 994 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses state laws pending require rating labels on recordings. It also notes that government approval until recently had been required for every song, book, film, or play in such countries as East Germany and South Korea. AU - Pareles, Jon DA - Feb. 11, 1990 KW - classification self-regulation CARA censorship and ratings rating system (U. S.), and controversies +sound recording music law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification non-USA +sound recording sound recording, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and controversies, and music music lyrics, and state laws South Korea, and music lyrics music, and South Korea music, and East Germany Germany, and music censorship Germany South Korea LB - 28510 PY - 1990 SE - 2 (Arts and Leisure) SP - 30 ST - Legislating the Imagination T2 - New York Times TI - Legislating the Imagination ID - 1388 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article talks about the Catholic Church's attitude toward movies, which by the late 1960s was considerable more liberal than it had been during the 1930s and 1940s. A clipping of this article is in the Committee on Commerce Papers, Sen 90A-E6, RG 46, Box 63, National Archives I, Washington, D. C. AU - Penn, Stanley DA - March 22, 1968 KW - self-regulation Production Code sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) sexuality pornography sexuality values religion non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures nudity motion pictures, and nudity Production Code, and nudity foreign films Production Code, and foreign films motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex Production Code, and foreign films pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography motion pictures, and Catholic Church Production Code, and Catholic Church LB - 18650 PY - 1968 ST - Big U. S. Film Makers Become More Daring, Bid to Cash in on Market Held by Imports T2 - Wall Street Journal TI - Big U. S. Film Makers Become More Daring, Bid to Cash in on Market Held by Imports ID - 750 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In 1987 and 1988, Valenti negotiated an agreement with USSR film minister Alexander Kamshalov that gave American movies “unprecedented” access to the Soviet market. AU - Pond, Steve DA - Oct. 7, 1988 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA Soviet Union nationalism motion pictures nationalism and communication capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and USSR non-USA motion pictures, and nationalism motion pictures, and USSR USSR Valenti, Jack MPAA MPAA, and USSR Valenti, Jack, and USSR LB - 33110 PY - 1988 ST - Thaw in the Russian Market T2 - Washington Post TI - Thaw in the Russian Market ID - 2948 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article, written by Charles W. Price who was the Editor of the Electrical Review, discusses how electricity is transforming communications, transportation and other aspects of modern life. The subtitle reads: "Great Strides in the Electrification of Railroads -- New Uses for Electricity -- Some New Inventions." This article was published as the New York Times was modernizing its building with electricity from the Edison Central Station Service. AU - Price, Charles W. DA - Jan. 3, 1904 KW - motors journalism ref, news news and journalism electricity telephones telegraph timekeeping newspapers, and electricity electricity, and newspapers electricity, and telegraph electricity, and telephones electricity, and timekeeping telegraph, and electricity telephones, and electricity journalism, and electricity electricity, and journalism Edison, Thomas electricity, and motors motors, and electricity electricity, and lighting lighting, and electricity vacuum tubes railroads electricity, and railroads railroads, and electricity electricity, and modernity modernity modernity, and electricity mercury vapor electric light lighting, and Cooper Hewitt lighting, and mercury vapor motion pictures, and lighting motion pictures, and Cooper Hewitt lighting Hewitt, Peter Cooper lighting ref, NYT motion pictures time and timekeeping LB - 15930 PY - 1904 SE - AFR SP - 33 ST - Electrical Science Makes Many Advances T2 - New York Times TI - Electrical Science Makes Many Advances ID - 3749 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The well-known newspaper editor, Arthur Brisbane, speaking before the Motion Picture Board of Trade at the Hotel Astor, admitted that he was one of the few people who had never seen Mary Pickford, Charlie Chaplin, or Theda Bara. Brisbane said that “There will be no censorship without the consent of a majority of the people of the United States.” He viewed movies, he said, primarily as entertainment and a form of business. “The moving picture, so far as it is merely a melodrama, a story, a joke, or a comedy, is only a money-making proposition, and whether it is censored or not I don’t in the least care. The good will take care of itself and the bad will not be missed.” Brisbane believed the movies then appealed to a low common denominator. “‘At present all that the moving picture amounts to is as an amusement, and its success is based upon the stupidity and lack of intellectual development of the human race. The success of the moving picture is due to this, gentlemen: We are a race of animals. We have been standing on our hind legs 500,000 years. We have been using the written word, as a race, for a comparatively short time. To educate men and to get them to make their own moving pictures in their minds is extremely difficult. It takes a high order of intelligence to take a sufficient number of lines and pictures and manufacture them into a mental film. But we have used our eyes for at least 20,000,000 years on this planet, and with the moving picture you get all your impressions by the use of your own eye.’” Brisbane did predict that moving pictures would place an important role in education in the future and that they would be used in every school. He suggested that films could be used to show different types of corruption. At this dinner, advertising leader Herbert S. Houston spoke against censorship. The subtitle for this articles reads: "Brisbane Tells Board of Trade Craze for the Films Proves Race Is Immature; Sees Future for Pictures; And Asserts Men Who Make Them May Become Great Molders of Public Opinion." AU - Primitive, Says Movies Show Man Is DA - March 13, 1916 KW - journalism history words vs. images history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures motion pictures news and journalism motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers newspapers, and motion pictures images vs. words critics quotations motion pictures, and quotations education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity quotations ref, NYT ref, news quotations, and movies appeal to primitive critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and critics Brisbane, Arthur, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Arthur Brisbane audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences censorship and ratings censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship, and Arthur Brisbane Houston, Herbert Houston, Herbert, and movie censorship Brisbane, Arthur, and movie censorship censorship LB - 41810 PY - 1916 SP - 7 T2 - New York Times ID - 4279 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that U. S. ambassador to Italy, Clare Booth Luce, refused to attend the Venice Film Festival because it was scheduled to show MGM's film about juvenile delinquency, "Blackboard Jungle." Luce reportedly felt it showed the U. S. in a bad light. The Festival dropped the film from its program and producer Dore Schary accused Luce of censorship. AU - Pryor, Thomas M. DA - Aug. 27, 1955 KW - nationalism censorship and ratings nationalism and communication motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and juvenile delinquency Luce, Clare Booth, and motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign policy Schary, Dore motion pictures, and censorship Luce, Clare Booth LB - 34930 PY - 1955 SP - 9 ST - U. S. Film Dropped at Fete in Venice T2 - New York Times TI - U. S. Film Dropped at Fete in Venice ID - 3135 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The agreement of cooperation between Hollywood and the defense department that gave Pentagon official great influence over the content of movies, also gave some producers of movie entertainment an incentive to film abroad where they could use military equipment and hire soldiers for much less than they paid professional actors in Hollywood. The Screen Actors Guild complained about this practice and the Secretary of Defense agreed to investigate according to this article. AU - Pryor, Thomas M. DA - Oct. 19, 1958 KW - nationalism military communication censorship and ratings motion pictures nationalism and communication military, and motion pictures motion pictures, and military , news motion pictures motion pictures, and foreign policy motion pictures, and foreign markets LB - 35020 PY - 1958 SP - X7 ST - Hollywood Check: Industry Use of Military Personnel, Facilities Invesitgated -- Addenda T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood Check: Industry Use of Military Personnel, Facilities Invesitgated -- Addenda ID - 3142 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the controversy over censoring movies in the aftermath of the 1956 revision of the industry's Production Code. It notes that WGN=TV in Chicago had recently canceled showing the movie Martin Luther, alledgedly aftter the Catholic Church exerted pressure. Warner Bros.'s film Baby Doll, also condemned by the Church is discussed. The article notes the influence of the 1952 Supreme Court ruling on the film The Miracle which gave movies protection under the First and Fourteenth Amendments. AU - Pryor, Thomas M. DA - Dec. 23, 1956 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment LB - 35300 PY - 1956 SP - 84 ST - How to Police the Movies Is Under Debate Again: Industry's Own Code Generally Accepted As Protection Against Outside Pressure T2 - New York Times TI - How to Police the Movies Is Under Debate Again: Industry's Own Code Generally Accepted As Protection Against Outside Pressure ID - 3169 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article indicates that many people in Hollywood reacted favorably to the revision of the motion picture Production Code in 1956. The interpretation of the Code has become more liberal during the past two years, the article notes. Some, though, such as members pof the Writers Guild of America, opposed any type of censorship. AU - Pryor, Thomas M. DA - Dec. 16, 1956 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and miscegnation LB - 35470 PY - 1956 SP - X7 ST - Hollywood Trials: Industry Reacts Favorably to Revised Code But Is Unsettled by Tax Plan T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood Trials: Industry Reacts Favorably to Revised Code But Is Unsettled by Tax Plan ID - 3186 ER - TY - NEWS AB - After the revision of the motion picture industry's Production Code in 1956, criticism remained that the appeals process was dominated by executives from the nine member studios of the MPAA and its president Eric Johnston. This article reports that Johnston doubled the size of the Appeals Board by adding exhibitors and producers who were not MPAA members. This article indicates that William Goetz accepted Johnston's invitation to join the Appeals Board. AU - Pryor, Thomas M. DA - Aug. 9, 1957 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Production Code, and Appeals Board Ford, John Goetz, William LB - 35540 PY - 1957 SP - 11 ST - Wanted to Rent: God's Little Acre: Unit Combs South for Site to Film Caldwell Novel -- Goetz on Review Board T2 - New York Times TI - Wanted to Rent: God's Little Acre: Unit Combs South for Site to Film Caldwell Novel -- Goetz on Review Board ID - 3193 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article covers the controversy surrounding production of Otto Preminger's movie The Man with the Golden Arm (UA, 1956), which dealt with drug addiction, a topic forbidden by the movie industry's Production Code. Arthur Krim, head of United Artists, said the movie had "immense potential for public service." United Artist had committed itself to distributing the film with our without the PCA's approval. AU - Pryor, Thomas M. DA - Nov. 13, 1955 KW - self-regulation motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) Legion of Decency , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of Legion of Decency, effectiveness motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and drugs motion pictures, and drugs censorship and ratings Production Code (1956) Krim, Arthur Preminger, Otto Catholic Church values LB - 35570 PY - 1955 SP - X5 ST - Hollywood Furor: 'Man With Golden Arm' Looms as Test of Morals Code Ruling on Drugs T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood Furor: 'Man With Golden Arm' Looms as Test of Morals Code Ruling on Drugs ID - 3196 ER - TY - NEWS AB - More than 300 “runaway” films appeared between 1949 and 1957. In 1958 and 1959, at least another forty pictures were made abroad. England and the European continent were the most favored locales but several movies were also produced in other parts of the world. This article discusses specific film projects then scheduled for production. AU - Pryor, Thomas M. DA - June 1, 1958 KW -, news motion pictures motion pictures, and American-interest films motion pictures, and labor labor motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings LB - 35840 PY - 1958 SP - X5 ST - Hollywood Treks: At Least Forty Features Are Slated To Be Filmed in Foreign Locales T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood Treks: At Least Forty Features Are Slated To Be Filmed in Foreign Locales ID - 3221 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that since October, 1952, about 400 American-made films played in that country and they occupied up to sixty percent of the movie entertainment shown in major cities, compared to only about five percent or less for Soviet films. AU - Pryor, Thomas M. DA - Oct. 11, 1957 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union Eisenhower administration , news motion pictures USSR non-USA motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and foreign policy Eisenhower, Dwight D. presidents and new media Eisenhower, Dwight D., and motion pictures Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Yugoslavia MPAA Motion Picture Export Association Yugoslavia motion pictures, and Yugoslavia Yugoslavia, and U.S. films LB - 36100 PY - 1957 SP - 22 ST - Yugoslavs Eager for U.S. Movies: 60% of Features in Zagreb and Belgrade Comes from Hollywood, Report Shows T2 - New York Times TI - Yugoslavs Eager for U.S. Movies: 60% of Features in Zagreb and Belgrade Comes from Hollywood, Report Shows ID - 3246 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the way in which the movie Showgirls (1995) was marketed and how it used its NC-17 rating for publicity. AU - Puig, Claudia DA - Sept. 16, 1995 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising motion pictures media effects media violence lesbianism law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and lesbianism public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Showgirls motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures lesbianism, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 Eszterhas, Joe Verhoeven, Paul advertising LB - 27190 PY - 1995 SE - F (Calendar) SP - 1F ST - Showgirls and NC-17: Grin and Bare It.... T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Showgirls and NC-17: Grin and Bare It.... ID - 1276 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This articles discusses how Showgirls (MGM/UA, 1995), the first NC-17 movie put out by a major studio since Universal's Henry and June (1990), may help other NC-17 movies at the box office. AU - Puig, Claudia DA - Oct. 10, 1995 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising motion pictures media effects media violence lesbianism law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and lesbianism public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Showgirls motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures lesbianism, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 Eszterhas, Joe Verhoeven, Paul advertising LB - 27200 PY - 1995 SE - F (Calendar) SP - 1F ST - Showgirls May Help Give NC-17 Releases a Leg Up.... T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Showgirls May Help Give NC-17 Releases a Leg Up.... ID - 1277 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Producer Robert Radnitz called for the elimination of the motion picture industry's rating system. Earlier, he had disagreed with Richard D. Heffner of the industry's Classification and Rating Administration over the rating for A Hero Ain’t Nothin’ but a Sandwich (1978), about a black teenager’s struggle with drugs in the ghetto (the film eventually received a PG). AU - Radnitz, Robert DA - July 23, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner motion pictures, and morality Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Valenti, Jack, and critics Radnitz, Robert Heffner, Richard LB - 25110 PY - 1990 SE - F (Calendar) SP - 5F ST - Counterpunch: It's Time to Eliminate the Present Movie Rating System T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Counterpunch: It's Time to Eliminate the Present Movie Rating System ID - 1111 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The article notes that a year after the motion picture industry adopted the NC-17 ratings, American movie still "lack a genuine core of eroticism." AU - Rainer, Peter DA - Dec. 15, 1991 KW - classification self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality CARA censorship and ratings motion pictures critics law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and eroticism rating system (U. S.), and eroticism critics, and movie rating system (U. S.) LB - 28460 PY - 1991 SE - Calendar SP - 8 ST - Film Comment: Was It Really the Last Tango?; A Year After the NC-17 Rating .... American Filmmakers Have Yet to Examine Sex as a Real Experience T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Film Comment: Was It Really the Last Tango?; A Year After the NC-17 Rating .... American Filmmakers Have Yet to Examine Sex as a Real Experience ID - 1383 ER - TY - NEWS AB - President Ronald Reagan says contemporary movies contain too much nudity and profanity. He recalls his 1952 movie with Doris Day, The Winning Team, noting that you never say him and Day in the bed at the same time. AU - Raines, Howell DA - Jan. 28, 1982 KW - conservatives Reagan, Ronald presidents, and new media Reagan administration values archives sexuality sexuality nudity motion pictures mass media media effects crime law censorship and ratings censorship pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and crime crime, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship Reagan administration, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and nudity nudity, and Ronald Reagan Reagan, Ronald, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and secular humanism Reagan, Ronald, and liberalism values critics LB - 22460 PY - 1982 SE - B SP - 8B ST - Reagan Calls New Movies Too Risque T2 - New York Times TI - Reagan Calls New Movies Too Risque ID - 974 ER - TY - NEWS AB - These are excerpts of President Ronald Reagan speech to the 42d annual meeting of the National Association of Evangelical in Columbus, Ohio, where attacked pornography and secular humanism, and said he wanted to raise the general level of national morality. Reagan described the 1970s as a time of rampant drug abuse, sexual promiscuity and abortion. "In recent years, we must admit, America did seem to lose her religious and moral bearings," the President said. AU - Reagan, Ronald DA - March 7, 1984 KW - conservatives Reagan, Ronald presidents, and new media Reagan administration values archives sexuality sexuality nudity motion pictures mass media media effects crime law censorship and ratings censorship pornography media effects +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and pornography Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects reports primary sources mass media, and pornography pornography, and opponents pornography, and crime crime, and pornography pornography, and conservatives conservatives, and pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship Reagan administration, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and nudity nudity, and Ronald Reagan Reagan, Ronald, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and secular humanism Reagan, Ronald, and liberalism Reagan, Ronald, and spiritual awakening addresses primary sources critics values LB - 22470 N1 - See also: media See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 1984 SE - A SP - 20A ST - Excepts from President's Address T2 - New York Times TI - Excepts from President's Address ID - 975 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "Advances of Civilization Shown by the Cinematograph …." AU - Redman, Jeanne DA - July 18, 1915 KW - science history photography photography and visual communication quotations photography, instantaneous modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity ref, news new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel ref, news education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and science science, and motion pictures ref, LAT LB - 550 PY - 1915 SE - II SP - 2 ST - Miracle of Science Tell World’s Wondrous Speed T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Miracle of Science Tell World’s Wondrous Speed ID - 3350 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about the efforts on the part of anti-pornography proponents to have stores stop carrying adult magazines which included Playboy and Penthouse. Thirty Drug says it will join a growing list of chain stores that do not sell such publications. AU - Richter, Paul DA - May 2, 1986 KW - motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality sexuality advertising, and public relations sex presidents, and new media Reagan administration propaganda public relations sexuality Playboy sexuality sexuality Penthouse boycotts pornography Reagan administration, and pornography pornography, and business of boycotts, and pornography pornography, and boycotts sex, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sex Playboy, and boycotts Penthouse, and boycotts boycotts, and pornography pornography, and advertising advertising, and pornography advertising Meese Commission Meese Commission, and boycotts boycotts, and Thrifty Drug pornography, and opponents motion pictures, and sex motion pictures LB - 23890 PY - 1986 SE - 4 (Business) SP - 1 ST - Thrifty Drug to Quit Selling Adult Magazines: Publishers Say U. S. Panel May Have Sparked Recent Decisions by Retailers T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Thrifty Drug to Quit Selling Adult Magazines: Publishers Say U. S. Panel May Have Sparked Recent Decisions by Retailers ID - 1049 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The authors of this piece were leaders in the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California (Ripston, the executive director, and Parachini, director of public affairs). They call the movie industry's Classification and Rating System under Richard D. Heffner's leadership a "Star Chamber." Heffner had recently retired and replaced by Richard Mosk. AU - Ripston, Ramona AU - Parachini, Allan DA - July 18, 1994 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) censorship and ratings rating system (U. S.) motion pictures critics law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture CARA NC-17 rating system (U. S.), and controversies CARA, and critics rating system (U. S.), and critics ACLU ACLU, and movie rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and ACLU CARA, and ACLU ACLU, and CARA ACLU, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and ACLU critics, and movie rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and critics Heffner, Richard LB - 27720 PY - 1994 SE - F (Calendar) SP - 3F ST - Counterpunch: MPAA's Big Chance to Change T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Counterpunch: MPAA's Big Chance to Change ID - 1326 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about the movie industry's new "No Children" rating category, NC-17, and also added explanations as to why R rating were given. AU - Rohter, Larry DA - Sept. 27, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Valenti, Jack theater owners censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner motion pictures, and morality Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Valenti, Jack, and critics Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 Valenti, Jack, and legal challenges theater owners, and rating system (U. S.) theater owners, and NC-17 MPAA, and NC-17 Coppola, Francis Ford Lee, Spike Reiner, Rob Pollack, Sydney Wang, Wayne Lipsky, Mark MPAA, and independent producers CARA, and independent producers NC-17 NC-17, and origins Heffner, Richard LB - 25290 PY - 1990 SE - A SP - 1A ST - A "No Children" Category To Replace the "X" Rating T2 - New York Times TI - A "No Children" Category To Replace the "X" Rating ID - 1125 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports on a Federal Trade Commission (FTC) report that revealed that such studios as MGM/United Artists, Columbia TriStar, Disney, frequently targeted children, some as young as 10, for violent, adult-oriented movies, music, and electronic video games, the FTC discovered. They used advertising, comic books, and cartoon programs to reach children. Both President Bill Clinton and Vice President Al Gore threatened to support strong regulatory legislation unless such advertising stopped. AU - Rosenbaum, David E. DA - June 27, 2001 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA corporations underground cinema self-regulation corporations corporations corporations corporations Federal Trade Commission (FTC) CARA advertising, and public relations Valenti, Jack underground media underground films censorship and ratings propaganda public relations motion pictures media effects media violence violence FTC Disney censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and children children, and media children, and violence motion pictures, and violence advertising advertising, and motion pictures advertising, and children advertising, and movie violence media effects FTC, and motion pictures motion pictures, and FTC Valenti, Jack, and violence Valenti, Jack, and children Valenti, Jack, and advertising video games video games, and children children, and video games rating system (U. S.), and controversies video games rating system (U. S.), and children children, and music rating system (U. S.) violence, and motion pictures violence, and video games violence, and children violence, and music Disney, and violence Disney, and children MGM, and children MGM, and violence United Artists, and violence United Artists, and children Columbia TriStar, and children Columbia TriStar, and violence MGM United Artists LB - 27400 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 2001 SE - E SP - 1E ST - Protecting Children, Tempting Pandora T2 - New York Times TI - Protecting Children, Tempting Pandora ID - 1295 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that despite the fact that the television adopted a new rating system for programs, the public seems largely uninterested. AU - Rosenberg, Howard C1 - 6 DA - Dec. 21, 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings entertainment, home CARA V-chip, and television violence television, and parents telecommunications censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) PTA motion pictures home entertainment government law regulation law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification home, and new media home home +television +motion pictures and popular culture Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.), and TV (1997) V-chip television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and V-chip home entertainment revolution home entertainment, and V-chip television, and PTA PTA, and television television, and critics rating system (U. S.), and critics hearings new media Collings, Tim V-chip, and Tim Collings Telecommunications Act (1996) regulation, and television Valenti, Jack, and television television, and Jack Valenti LB - 25940 PY - 1997 SE - Calendar ST - Year in Review 1997; TV’s New Ratings; L for Lack of Interest.... T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Year in Review 1997; TV’s New Ratings; L for Lack of Interest.... ID - 1185 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This account of Pope John Paul II's address to entertainment leaders at Universal Studios in Hollywood quotes the Pope telling his audience that "working constantly with images, you face the temptation of seeing them as reality. Seeking to satisfy the dreams of millions, you can become lost in a world of fantasy." AU - Rosenstiel, Thomas B. and Stephen Braun DA - Sept. 16, 1987 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA values Christianity Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack values motion pictures Hollywood values religion Catholic Church non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +television Pope John Paul II, and motion pictures Pope John Paul II Pope John Paul II, and television television, and Pope John Paul II motion pictures, and Pope John Paul II Valenti, Jack, and Pope John Paul II Wasserman, Lew, and Pope John Paul II Hollywood, and Catholic Church Hollywood, and religion Catholic Church, and Hollywood values values, and virtual reality critics virtual reality LB - 28310 PY - 1987 SP - 1 ST - Entertainment: Media Leaders' Power Cited T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Entertainment: Media Leaders' Power Cited ID - 1334 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This lengthy obituary gives as decent overview of Bergman's films and career. Among the interesting insights is a quotation from an essay Bergman wrote in 1965: Film, he said, is "a language that literally is spoken from soul to soul in expressions that, almost sensuously, escape the restrictive control of the intellect." AU - Rothstein, Mervyn DA - July 31, 2007 KW - censorship ref, news motion pictures sexuality values motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values Bergman, Ingmar obituaries obituaries, and Ingmar Bergman quotations quotations, and film quotations, and censorship censorship and ratings censorship, and Ingmar Bergman Bergman, Ingmar, and censorship censorship ref, NYT LB - 38430 PY - 2007 SE - A SP - 1, 20 ST - Ingmar Bergman, Master Filmmaker, Dies at 89 T2 - New York Times TI - Ingmar Bergman, Master Filmmaker, Dies at 89 ID - 3942 ER - TY - NEWS AB - By 1996, twice as much money was spent on video games as on motion pictures. In the United States, video game revenue totaled $10 billion, and worldwide, more than $18 billion. Increasingly, video games became more realistic and, like motion pictures, they exploited violence and sex. Some researchers speculated that the effects of long-term use of violent video games was similar to those effects produced by viewing violent movies and TV programs. This article reports on recent trends (as of 2002) in video games. AU - Rowan, David DA - Oct. 22, 2002 KW - media effects video games video games, and sex video games, and violence media effects, and video games LB - 27450 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 2002 SE - Features SP - 16 ST - Games Are Getting Dirtier T2 - The Times (London) TI - Games Are Getting Dirtier ID - 1300 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about the V-chip, required by law to be installed in new television sets. It lets viewers block objectionable programs. Yet few parents appeared to be using this technology. AU - Rutenberg, Jim DA - July 25, 2001 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Federal Communications Commission (FCC) entertainment, home Clinton, William Jefferson CARA V-chip, and television violence television, and parents telecommunications presidents, and new media censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) PTA motion pictures home entertainment government regulation Clinton Administration law regulation law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification Gore, Al home, and new media home home +television +motion pictures and popular culture Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.), and TV (1997) V-chip television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and V-chip home entertainment revolution home entertainment, and V-chip television, and PTA PTA, and television television, and critics rating system (U. S.), and critics hearings new media Collings, Tim V-chip, and Tim Collings Telecommunications Act (1996) regulation, and television Valenti, Jack, and television television, and Jack Valenti Clinton, Bill Clinton, Bill, and TV rating system (U. S.) Clinton administration, and TV rating system (U. S.) Gore, Al, and TV rating system (U. S.) McCain, John, and TV rating system (U. S.) Lieberman, Joseph, and TV rating system (U. S.) FCC FCC, and TV rating system (U. S.) Markey, Ed, and V-chip V-chip, and public reception LB - 26060 PY - 2001 SE - B SP - B1, B7 ST - Few Parents Use the V-Chip, a Survey Shows T2 - New York Times TI - Few Parents Use the V-Chip, a Survey Shows ID - 1197 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the advantages of digital movie making and the work of such people as George Lucas. Star Wars: Episode I -- The Phantom Menace was shot digitally. AU - Sabin, Rob DA - Sept. 5, 1999 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography projection motion pictures home entertainment Hollywood materials materials digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema digitization computers 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movie +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality Hollywood, and digital movies digital movies, and Hollywood digital movies, Star Wars: Episode I -- The Phantom Menace Lucas, George Lucas, George, and digital movies LB - 26140 PY - 1999 SE - (Arts and Leisure) SP - 12, 16 ST - Taking Film Out of Films T2 - New York Times TI - Taking Film Out of Films ID - 1205 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This lengthy article discusses the momentum building to digital cinema and the abandonment of film. The article discusses digital projection and a test involving Disney's Miramax film Bounce that involved cooperation with Boeing's Space and Communication Group. AU - Sabin, Rob DA - Nov. 26, 2000 KW - audiences special effects, digital corporations corporations Boeing Corporation motion pictures and popular culture digitization digital cinema Lucas, George special effects, and digitization cameras, and digital cinema motion pictures, and digitization digitization, and motion pictures Boeing and digital cinema digital cinema, and Boeing Texas Instruments Co., and digital cinema digital projection theaters theaters, and digital projection cameras digital media motion pictures special effects LB - 29520 PY - 2000 SE - 2 (Arts and Leisure) SP - 1, 22 ST - The Movies' Digital Future Is in Sight and It Works T2 - New York Times TI - The Movies' Digital Future Is in Sight and It Works ID - 2730 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article profiles Richard D. Heffner, on the occasion of his new book A Conversational History of Modern America (2003). This book compiles many of the interview Heffner did on "The Open Mind," and include such people as Martin Luther King, Donald Rumsfeld, Rudolph Giuliani, Bill Moyers, Dan Rather, Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., and others. AU - Salamon, Julie C1 - 8 DA - Nov. 5, 2003 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner CARA CARA, and Richard Heffner Valenti, Jack Heffner, Richard, and CARA censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and background Heffner, Richard, and Jack Valenti Heffner, Richard censorship and ratings censorship LB - 28790 PY - 2003 SE - B ST - The Famous and the Witty In a Half Century of Chats T2 - New York Times TI - The Famous and the Witty In a Half Century of Chats ID - 2656 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article profiles director Brian De Palma whose moves having included Dressed to Kill (1980), Blow Out (1981), Body Double (1984), Bonfire of the Vanities (1990), and Femme Fatale (2002). Many of his movies were controversial because of their violence. In this article, he is quoted as saying that “what you see represented in the media and books written about show business is false – and you get so sick of this public relations machine surrounding it – you want someone to say the truth about something.” AU - Salmon, Julie DA - June 16, 2002 KW - advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising motion pictures media effects media violence +motion pictures and popular culture public relations motion pictures, and public relations De Palma, Brian violence De Palma, Brian, and violence LB - 22110 PY - 2002 SE - 2 (Arts and Leisure) SP - 28 ST - Looking Back at the Bonfires, Personal and Professional T2 - New York Times TI - Looking Back at the Bonfires, Personal and Professional ID - 944 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article argues that moving pictures have become an important influence in contemporary life. “The cinematograph is the world’s modern marvel.” Very few people know what “an important role the moving picture machine plays in the aggressive, progressive, and exciting life of today. While in its incipient stage, it was but looked upon as an interesting toy, without any particularly remarkable qualities, it is regarded today as an almost indispensable adjunct in any great occasion of public or semi-public interest.” The article comments on the importance of moving pictures to the economy of Chicago. “No fewer than 10,000 Chicagoans of both sexes are directly dependent on the moving picture industry for their livelihood. The majority of these is employed by the minor places of amusement. Added to this small army of regular workers comes a large number of people who are only called upon for temporary employment. It is estimated that in this city there are more than 500 small theaters where the chief attraction is the constantly changing films.” AU - Sandberg, Fred W. DA - June 18, 1911 KW - Chicago, IL ref, news motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space cinematograph theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and business motion pictures, and Chicago Chicago, and motion pictures ref, CDT LB - 920 PY - 1911 SE - E SP - 3 ST - Motion Picture of Speed Madness New Cinematograph Marvels T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Motion Picture of Speed Madness New Cinematograph Marvels ID - 3387 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about President Ronald Reagan's nomination of Arlington prosecutor Henry E. Hudson to become U. S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia. Hudson later that year became the chair of the Meese Commission which made recommendations about combatting pornography. AU - Scannell, Nancy DA - March 29, 1986 KW - presidents, and new media Reagan administration sexuality Hudson, Henry Meese Commission Reagan administration, and pornography pornography, and Reagan administration pornography pornography, and legal LB - 22610 PY - 1986 SE - B SP - 1B ST - Arlington's Prosecutor Tapped for U. S. Attorney T2 - Washington Post TI - Arlington's Prosecutor Tapped for U. S. Attorney ID - 988 ER - TY - NEWS AB - To subtitle to this letter to the editor says that moving pictures "Have Harmful Effect on Eyes and Nerves of Audience." AU - Scheinkman, B. DA - Feb. 13, 1914 KW - reform children censorship ref, news motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and crime audiences audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences motion pictures, and reformers reformers, and motion pictures critics critics, and reformers reformers, and critics law motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures motion pictures, and eyes ref, NYT education LB - 14720 PY - 1914 SP - 8 ST - Fast Motion Pictures [letter to editor] T2 - New York Times TI - Fast Motion Pictures [letter to editor] ID - 3627 ER - TY - NEWS AB - New York governor Mario Cuomo says that selecting federal judges on the basis of ideology -- e.g., opposition to abortion and pornography -- poses "a grave danger" that could erode public confidence in the judicial system. AU - Schmalz, Jeffrey DA - Aug. 12, 1986 KW - Reagan, Ronald presidents, and new media Reagan administration sexuality pornography motion pictures First Amendment freedom Reagan Ronald, and secular humanism Reagan, Ronald, and liberalism Reagan administration, and court appointees Reagan, Ronald, and court appointees pornography, and legal pornography, and court appointees , +motion pictures and popular culture First Amendment, and court appointees First Amendment, and Ronald Reagan Cuomo, Mario law Reagan, Ronald LB - 22540 PY - 1986 SE - A SP - 1 ST - Cuomo Sees Peril in Picking Judges on Ideology Basis T2 - New York Times TI - Cuomo Sees Peril in Picking Judges on Ideology Basis ID - 982 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that vandals caused $5,000 worth of damage at Hollywood's Cineplex Odeon Showcase Theater to protest the theater chain's showing of Martin Scorcese's movie The Last Temptation of Christ (1988). AU - Schrader, Esther DA - Sept. 6, 1988 KW - values motion pictures Hollywood values religion boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture religion religion, and Hollywood Hollywood, and religion motion pictures, and religion Last Temptation of Christ (1988) boycotts, and Last Temptation motion pictures, and boycotts LB - 28570 PY - 1988 SP - 20 ST - Vandals Invade Theater in 'Temptation' Film Protest T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Vandals Invade Theater in 'Temptation' Film Protest ID - 1394 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that several studios are planning to making movies in which homosexuality is a significant theme. At the time, the movie Production Code forbade this topic. The movies included The Children's Hour (United Artist), Advise and Consent (Columbia), and The Devil's Advocate (Warner Bros.). The studio are exploiting the theme for publicity. The MPAA revised its position on homosexuality a few weeks later. AU - Schumach, Murray DA - Aug. 21, 1961 KW - censorship self-regulation sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality homosexuality news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) children children and media First Amendment sexuality homosexuality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality censorship, and homosexuality Production Code, and homosexuality LB - 35310 PY - 1961 SP - 18 ST - Films Challenge Censorship Code: Studios Seek Publicity for Movies on Homosexuality T2 - New York Times TI - Films Challenge Censorship Code: Studios Seek Publicity for Movies on Homosexuality ID - 3170 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that on October 3, 1961, the MPAA handed down a ruling that relaxed its restriction on dealing with homosexuality in films. Un the 1930 Production Code, homosexuality had come under the heading "sex perversion." That term was dropped and film makers were allowed to deal with "sex aberration" provided it was "treated with care, discretion and restraint." AU - Schumach, Murray DA - Oct. 23, 1961 KW - censorship self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality , news motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings Johnston, Eric, and Production Code sexuality motion pictures, and sex Production Code, and sex Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality homosexuality, and motion pictures censorship, and homosexuality Production Code, and homosexuality LB - 35380 PY - 1961 ST - Film Code Change Vexes Producers: Recent Easing of Rule on Sex Perversion Confusing T2 - New York Times TI - Film Code Change Vexes Producers: Recent Easing of Rule on Sex Perversion Confusing ID - 3177 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses movie censorship in the aftermath of an October 3, 1961 decision by the MPAA to relax its rules and permit treatment of homosexuality in movies. Schumach notes that some in Hollywood wonder if the Production Code does not put movie makers at a disadvantage with other media such as TV when it comes to artistic creativity. AU - Schumach, Murray DA - Oct. 29, 1961 KW - censorship self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality , news motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings Johnston, Eric, and Production Code sexuality motion pictures, and sex Production Code, and sex Johnston, Eric motion pictures, and homosexuality homosexuality homosexuality, and motion pictures censorship, and homosexuality Production Code, and homosexuality television LB - 35390 PY - 1961 SP - X7 ST - Adult Hollywood: Moral Responsibilities of Industry Increase as Censorship Relaxes T2 - New York Times TI - Adult Hollywood: Moral Responsibilities of Industry Increase as Censorship Relaxes ID - 3178 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Geoffrey Shurlock, who was head of the MPAA's Production Code Administration, maintained that there was a healthy trend in movies and that recent films submitted to the PCA had had less sex and violence. Shurlock is quoted as saying that "the emphasis is definitely on picture-themes suitable for mass audience consumption." The article also notes that religious and civic groups have been pushing for a voluntary classification system that classifies films according to their appropriateness to age. AU - Schumach, Murray DA - Jan. 16, 1963 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism LB - 35410 PY - 1963 SP - 4 ST - Film Censor Sees a Healthy Trend: Shurlock Says Movies Are Now More Wholesome T2 - New York Times TI - Film Censor Sees a Healthy Trend: Shurlock Says Movies Are Now More Wholesome ID - 3180 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that Otto Preminger re-applied for a Production Code Administration seal for two movies, The Moon Is Blue and The Man with the Golden Arm, that had been turned down earlier during the 1950s. Both movies played in theaters without the seal. The decision by the PCA in 1961, however, made it more likely that television would play these films since TV often would not show films that had not been first passed by the PCA. AU - Schumach, Murray DA - July 31, 1961 KW - Sinatra, Frank self-regulation Production Code (TV) sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Moon Is Blue Man with the Golden Arm television, and Production Code Production Code, and television LB - 35460 PY - 1961 SP - 14 ST - Censors Reverse Old Ban on Films: 'Man With Golden' and 'Moon Is Blue' Passed T2 - New York Times TI - Censors Reverse Old Ban on Films: 'Man With Golden' and 'Moon Is Blue' Passed ID - 3185 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that revenue from sales of American films abroad is about $285 million, or about $20 million larger than domestic revenue ($265 million). It also notes that during the previous year, the movie industry received about $155 million from television. "We are no longer a feature motion -picture industry," MPAA president Eric Johnston said "We are a television and movie industry." AU - Schumach, Murray DA - Sept. 16, 1962 KW - self-regulation , news motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings Johnston, Eric, and Production Code motion pictures, hybrid motion pictures, and American-interest films television television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and foreign markets Johnston, Eric, and foreign markets Johnston, Eric LB - 35480 PY - 1962 SP - 139 ST - Hollywood Facts: Eric Johnston Analyzes Economics of Film Industry Realistically T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood Facts: Eric Johnston Analyzes Economics of Film Industry Realistically ID - 3187 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the importance of television to the motion picture industry. It covers the growth of movies theaters since 1955, despite the increase in televisions in the U. S. There were more drive-ins and theaters in shopping malls. Television now brings in about $155 million a year to the movie industry. Also, "since 1957 American telefilm exports have risen from $15,000,000 to $58,000,000." AU - Schumach, Murray DA - Sept. 11, 1962 KW - self-regulation motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings Johnston, Eric, and Production Code motion pictures, hybrid motion pictures, and American-interest films television television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and foreign markets Johnston, Eric, and foreign markets television films, and foreign markets Johnston, Eric LB - 35530 PY - 1962 SP - 26 ST - Johnston Assays Fate of U. S. Film: Euorpean Unity Called a Key to Survival in Crisis T2 - New York Times TI - Johnston Assays Fate of U. S. Film: Euorpean Unity Called a Key to Survival in Crisis ID - 3192 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article deals with Geoffrey Shurlock, then head of the MPAA's Production Code Administration. Shumach calls Shurlock "probably the most imporant nongovernmental censor in the world." (36) Shurlock encouraged movie makers to explore new ideas, and toyed with scrapping the Production Code, or at least turning over enforcement to the producers. [ Where a writer such as Tennessee Williams sometimes gave his predecessor on the PCA, Joseph Breen ,pause, Shurlock considered Williams’ work to be “extremely moral” and was less inclined interfere. “Taste,” he insisted, “must be considered as well as morality” in judging films. “It is not so much the subject of a picture that is important as the manner in which it is treated.” He did not think that movies undermined public morality; they only reflected it. (38) AU - Schumach, Murray DA - Feb. 12, 1961 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism Production Code, and Tennessee Williams Williams, Tennessee LB - 35800 PY - 1961 SP - SM 15, 36, 38 ST - The Censor As Movie Director: His Influence May Grow as a Result of Rising Protests Against Hollywood's 'Adult' Films T2 - New York Times TI - The Censor As Movie Director: His Influence May Grow as a Result of Rising Protests Against Hollywood's 'Adult' Films ID - 3217 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that Hollywood labor unions claimed that 35 to 50 percent of feature films made by American producers are filmed in other countries. AU - Schumach, Murray DA - Oct. 4, 1959 KW -, news motion pictures motion pictures, and American-interest films motion pictures, and labor labor motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings LB - 35860 PY - 1959 SP - X7 ST - Hollywood Stand: Case for Shooting in Spain Upheld by 'Solomon and Sheba' Producer T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood Stand: Case for Shooting in Spain Upheld by 'Solomon and Sheba' Producer ID - 3223 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Director Jean Renoir, a leader of France’s “New Wave” cinema, said that while technically American films were superior, “the French are less afraid of artistic truth than the Americans.” He attributed this difference to the fact that until recently, the United States had been “very puritanical.” AU - Schumach, Murray DA - Oct. 9, 1960 KW - self-regulation , news motion pictures motion pictures, and France France Renoir, Jean motion pictures, and New Wave non-USA Production Code Production Code, and decline of censorship and ratings LB - 35870 PY - 1960 SP - X7 ST - Hollywood Judge: Jean Renoir Offers Candid Opinions on French, American Moviemaking T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood Judge: Jean Renoir Offers Candid Opinions on French, American Moviemaking ID - 3224 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Murray Schumach wrote in early 1962: “During 1961, the statistics show, the top Hollywood companies released eighty-five movies in this country that were made abroad, either by American independent companies or by foreigners. The comparable figure for 1959 was fifty-five. “Though the report contained figures for 1960, they were of limited validity because strikes by actors and writers in that year hampered production. “All told, the foreign-made movies approved by the Production Code Administration rose from seventy-three in 1959 to 112 in 1961. Of these movies made abroad, fifty-eight were made by American companies and the rest by foreign producers.” This report, prepared by Geoffrey Shurlock for Eric Johnston, president of the MPAA, “showed an over-all increase in United States movie production from 223 films in 1959 to 254 in 1961. But this does not indicate how many of the films listed as made in the United States were made abroad in part.” AU - Schumach, Murray DA - Jan. 9, 1962 KW - self-regulation , news motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings Johnston, Eric, and Production Code motion pictures, hybrid motion pictures, and American-interest films television television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and foreign markets Johnston, Eric, and foreign markets motion pictures, and foreign films Production Code, and foreign films censorship and ratings labor Johnston, Eric LB - 35940 PY - 1962 SP - 22 ST - Role of Studios Showing Change: Statistics Indicate Switch to Deals on Foreign Films T2 - New York Times TI - Role of Studios Showing Change: Statistics Indicate Switch to Deals on Foreign Films ID - 3231 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Schumach wrote in Nov., 1961: “John L. Dales, executive secretary of the Screen Actors Guild, said that of 467 movies released in the United States in 1946, a total of 378 was [sic] made in this country. Last year, of 387 movies shown, only 154 were made in the United States, he said. “In television, 1,280 film episodes in the American market since 1951 were made abroad, he reported. Many of these, he said, should have been made in the United States.” AU - Schumach, Murray DA - Nov. 3, 1961 KW - self-regulation , news motion pictures sexuality Production Code censorship and ratings Johnston, Eric, and Production Code motion pictures, hybrid motion pictures, and American-interest films television television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and foreign markets Johnston, Eric, and foreign markets motion pictures, and foreign films Production Code, and foreign films censorship and ratings labor television, and foreign productions Johnston, Eric LB - 35950 PY - 1961 SP - 29 ST - U. S. Sets Hearing on Film Imports: Congress to Study Overseas Production by Americans T2 - New York Times TI - U. S. Sets Hearing on Film Imports: Congress to Study Overseas Production by Americans ID - 3232 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The article notes that Jules Dassin is now receiving a much warmer reception from Hollywood people than before. Among his films was Never On Sunday, which played successfully in the United States and in several other countries. AU - Schumach, Murray DA - Oct 16, 1960 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) motion pictures, and foreign films Production Code, and foreign films law motion pictures, and local censorship Never on Sunday (1960) motion pictures, and blacklist children blacklisting LB - 36300 PY - 1960 SP - X9 ST - Hollywood Turns: Changing Intellectual Climate Noted by Blacklisted Director Dassin T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood Turns: Changing Intellectual Climate Noted by Blacklisted Director Dassin ID - 3263 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the Rev. James Dobson's deathrow interview with serial killer Ted Bundy. Bundy said that pornography had been a cause of his crimes. Dobson, a long-time foe of pornography, had been a member of the Meese Commission in 1985-86. Dennis Jarrard of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles' Commission on Obscenity and Pornography, called the Bundy interview "a consciousness-raising event." AU - Scott, Janny and John Dart DA - Jan. 30, 1989 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA values Christianity values sexuality motion pictures religion values morality Hollywood Catholic Church +motion pictures and popular culture morality, and motion pictures values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and values Catholic Church, and motion pictures Catholic Church, and new production code (1992) Mahony, Roger Mahony, Roger, and production code (1992) (1992) Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and new production code (1992) Mahony, Roger, and pornography pornography, and Roger M. Mahony Hollywood, and Roger M. Mahony Archdoicese, Los Angeles pornography pornography, and Archdiocese of L.A. Jarrard, Dennis Morality in Media Citizens for Decency through Law (CDL) National Religious Alliance Against Pornography Dobson, James. Dobson, James, and Ted Bundy Bundy, Ted, and pornography Donnerstein, Edward Donnerstein, Edward, and Ted Bundy LB - 25650 PY - 1989 SE - 1 SP - 1 ST - Bundy's Tape Fuels Dispute on Porn, Antisocial Behavior T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Bundy's Tape Fuels Dispute on Porn, Antisocial Behavior ID - 1159 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Color photography in films will finally do justice to girls with black and brown hair. It will probably give young women less reason to think they need heavy make-up to look glamorous. "Personality and individuality -- the most valuable thing in the field of entertainment -- can be shown with a portrait-like quality in color films." Shaffer says that the "color camera shows up the natural beauty of eyes." Quoting Rouben Mamoulian, who directed the first full-length Technicolor feature film Becky Sharp: "Eyes, too, have suffered from standardization in black and white films. A blue eye, a gray eye, of whatever shade, registers light in the camera. In color cameras one has the glorious shading of the eyes to light up the face, as in life. Interest and expression are enhanced. "Depth is produced by color, producing the illusion of the third dimension, a great help to reality,' says Mamoulian. This article says that the "color camera tends to iron lines out of the face and produce a more youthful effect." Cool white light is preferable in filming color films to incandescent lights that cast a yellow glare on color film. This article notes that Robert Edmond Jones and Natalie Kalmus worked together in creating the color on Becky Sharp. It says that Jones emphasized the potential for creating moods by using different colors on sets and in costumes. AU - Shaffer, Rosalind C1 - 12 DA - March 3, 1935 KW - Kalmus, Herbert Jones, Robert Edmond censorship motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor Kalmus, Herbert, and Technicolor cameras, and Technicolor cameras Technicolor, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and Technicolor color, and sexuality sexuality, and color Kalmus, Natalie Natalie Kalmus, and critic of Technicolor, and color advisory service color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color ref, news color, and primitives color, and cinematographers color, and novelty color, and Robert Edmond Jones Jones, Robert Edmond, and color quotations quotations, and color on screen color, and music color, and Nature color, and emotions ref, CDT ref, newspaper quotations, and color movies create moods actors acting actors, and magnifying personality acting, and magnifying personality color, and magnifying personality acting, and eyes color, and eyes color, and personality motion pictures, and magnifying personality color, and lighting lighting motion pictures, and lighting Kalmus, Natalie, and Robert Edmond Jones Jones, Robert Edmond, and Natalie Kalmus color, and close-ups acting, and close-ups actors, and close-ups LB - 42880 PY - 1935 SE - E ST - Color Films Seal Doom of Bleached Blondes in Hollywood T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - Color Films Seal Doom of Bleached Blondes in Hollywood ID - 4371 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Shannon, a historian, wrote about “the death of time,” and why so many young people then seemed to consider history "irrelevant." "With the coming of industrialism," he wrote, "life became geared to the artificial pace of technology." As technology has accelerated the pace of living, people become more impatient. Television had replaced books and the radio as society "dominant cultural force" and it is often denounced for its violence. But Shannon argued that "television's most subtle debilitating influence is that it makes audiences passive and accustoms them to expect instant gratifications." TV does not require the investment of mental energy that good books and newspapers do. "To reject the past is to deprive today of its meaning tomorrow," Shannon says. AU - Shannon, William V. DA - July 8, 1971 KW - advertising, and public relations time and timekeeping time propaganda public relations preservation present mindedness history, and new media history history +television television, and history history, break with advertising, and history history, and advertising time presentism history, and presentism history, as linear history, and mass media advertising LB - 19490 PY - 1971 SP - 35 ST - The Death of Time T2 - New York Times TI - The Death of Time ID - 784 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The subtitle of this article reads: "Lure of ‘the Movies’ Makes Thieves of Many." AU - Sheldon, Lurana DA - Feb. 16, 1913 KW - children censorship ref, news motion pictures theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings motion pictures, and violence violence motion pictures, and crime censorship, and violence censorship, and violence motion pictures, and class children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children motion pictures, and crime ref, NYT LB - 14840 PY - 1913 SP - 30 ST - Juvenile Delinquents [letter to editor} T2 - New York Times TI - Juvenile Delinquents [letter to editor} ID - 3639 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Writer Robert Sherwood profiles Will H. Hays, then president of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America. A clipping of this article is in the Will H. Hays Papers, Indiana State Library, Indianapolis, IN. AU - Sherwood, Robert DA - [Oct. 6, 1929?] KW - self-regulation Production Code values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) motion pictures values religion +motion pictures and popular culture Hays, Will H. Hays, Will H., and religious critics Production Code, and origins motion pictures, and critics motion pictures, and religious critics LB - 26500 PY - 1906 ST - Will Hays Unhappy Czar of Much-Buffeted Films T2 - Kalamazoo Gazette (Michigan) TI - Will Hays Unhappy Czar of Much-Buffeted Films ID - 1228 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is about a Federal Trade Commission report that revealed that movie studios, music producers, and video game makers marketed graphically violent entertainment to very young children. Such studios as MGM/United Artists, Columbia TriStar, Disney, frequently targeted children, some as young as 10, for violent, adult-oriented movies, music, and electronic video games, the FTC discovered. They used advertising, comic books, and cartoon programs to reach children. Both President Bill Clinton and Vice President Al Gore threatened to support strong regulatory legislation unless such advertising stopped. AU - Shiver, Jr., Jube DA - Sept. 11, 2000 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation Federal Trade Commission (FTC) CARA advertising, and public relations Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings propaganda public relations motion pictures media effects media violence violence FTC censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and children children, and media children, and violence motion pictures, and violence advertising advertising, and motion pictures advertising, and children advertising, and movie violence media effects FTC, and motion pictures motion pictures, and FTC Valenti, Jack, and violence Valenti, Jack, and children Valenti, Jack, and advertising video games video games, and children children, and video games rating system (U. S.), and controversies video games rating system (U. S.), and children children, and music rating system (U. S.) violence, and motion pictures violence, and video games violence, and children violence, and music LB - 27070 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PY - 2000 SE - A SP - 1 ST - Hollywood Sells Kids on Violence, FTC Says; Report: Inquiry Finds Film, Music and Video Industries Actively Market Adult-Themed Material to Children T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Hollywood Sells Kids on Violence, FTC Says; Report: Inquiry Finds Film, Music and Video Industries Actively Market Adult-Themed Material to Children ID - 1264 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes the heated debates engendered by the Meese Commission. It does that the Commission talked about differnt levels of pornography and it observes that the Commission's emphasis on child pornography has been overlooked in the furor surrounding the Commission. The article notes a controversy over the Meese Commission’s plans to list some 10,000 stores in the United States that had been identified as selling pornographic magazines. It says that more than 8,000 drug and convenience stores had decided to take Playboy, Penthouse, and other materials off their shelves. The Curtis Circulation Company, then the largest distributor of magazines in the United States, announced that Wal-Mart would even pull rock-and-roll magazines from its 800 stores. AU - Sitomer, Curtis J. DA - July 8, 1986 KW - morality sexuality sexuality sexuality First Amendment freedom boycotts pornography Penthouse First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment Penthouse, and First Amendment First Amendment, and Penthouse Moral Majority pornography, and opponents boycotts, and pornography boycotts, and Penthouse Playboy Playboy, and First Amendment boycotts, and Playboy Meese Commission Meese Commission, and critics ACLU, and Meese Commission ACLU law LB - 23810 PY - 1986 SP - 3 ST - Battle Lines Are Drawn Over US Pornography Study T2 - Christian Science Monitor TI - Battle Lines Are Drawn Over US Pornography Study ID - 1043 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This articles concerns the effort by Atlanta censors to ban the Greek film, Never on Sunday (1960), by director Jules Dassin, for being obscene. The Superior Court overturned the ban. The subtitle of this article reads: "Superior Court Forbids the City to Ban 'Never on Sunday' as Obscene -- Calls Statute a Violation of Free Speech." By this time, Never on Sunday had played in more than 2,000 theaters in 175 American cities and no other cities had called the film obscene. AU - Sitton, Claude DA - May 4, 1961 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) motion pictures, and foreign films Production Code, and foreign films law motion pictures, and local censorship Never on Sunday (1960) motion pictures, and blacklist children blacklisting LB - 36290 PY - 1961 SP - 41 ST - Film Censorship Law in Atlanta Held Unconstitutional by State T2 - New York Times TI - Film Censorship Law in Atlanta Held Unconstitutional by State ID - 3262 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article explains "a new publishing system developed by AT&T" that "promises to add permanence to information put on the Internet, assuring protection against censorshp, for example, and the unauthorized deletion of material by hackers. "The system is called Publius, after the pen name adopted by the authors of the Federalist Papers. It dices up messages, encrypts the pieces and spreads them across many computer servers. The pieces, called keys, are designed so that even a small number of them can be assembled into a complete message." AU - Sorid, Daniel DA - July 27, 2000 KW - computers corporations corporations history and new media preservation Internet law censorship and ratings censorship censorship, and Internet +computers and the Internet AT&T Internet, and censorship preservation, and Internet preservation, and digital media preservation, and AT&T preservation, and Publius history LB - 2680 PY - 2000 SE - D SP - D10 ST - Divided Data Can Elude the Censor T2 - New York Times TI - Divided Data Can Elude the Censor ID - 356 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes Motion Picture Association of America president Jack Valenti's negative reaction to histories that are critical of his one-time boss, President Lyndon B. Johnson. AU - Sperling, Godfrey DA - March 4, 2002 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) history MPAA preservation politics history, and new media Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and politics Valenti, Jack, and Ronald Reagan Valenti, Jack, and Lyndon Johnson motion pictures, and politics politics, and Jack Valenti Caro, Robert, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and history Valenti, Jack, and Robert Caro history, and motion pictures history, and Jack Valenti history motion pictures LB - 26860 PY - 2002 SP - 9 ST - Remembering LBJ, the Masterful Schemer T2 - Christian Science Monitor TI - Remembering LBJ, the Masterful Schemer ID - 1248 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Eric Johnston, president of the MPAA, says that communication is critical in winning the underdeveloped world, the "central battlefield in the global struggle today." American films are also the best way to defeat bigotry. AU - Spiegel, Irving DA - Jan. 22, 1960 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union self-regulation nationalism MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) Eisenhower administration motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism Cold War war Johnston, Eric capitalism motion pictures, and communism Eisenhower, Dwight D. presidents and new media motion pictures, and Dwight Eisenhower Eisenhower, Dwight D., and motion pictures military communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and U.S. foreign policy MPAA, and foreign policy MPAA, and Truman administration MPAA, and Cold War USSR motion pictures, and USSR propaganda democracy motion pictures, and democracy media effects motion pictures, and media effects capitalism capitalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and capitalism motion pictures, and bigotry Johnston, Eric, and bigotry LB - 35990 PY - 1960 SP - 16 ST - Films Seen Aiding Democratic Idea: Eric Johnston Tells A. J. C. Meeting That Movies Can Convey Goals of U. S. T2 - New York Times TI - Films Seen Aiding Democratic Idea: Eric Johnston Tells A. J. C. Meeting That Movies Can Convey Goals of U. S. ID - 3236 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This is an account of Pope John Paul II's address to entertainment leaders at Universal Studios in Hollywood. He talked about the moral influence in motion pictures, music, and other forms of entertainment. This account quotes Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, as saying that the primary motive for movie makers would always be money. "You have to make movies that people want to see, or soon you'll be out of the movie business," Valenti said. AU - Stafford, Charles DA - Sept. 16, 1987 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA values Christianity Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack values motion pictures Hollywood values religion Catholic Church non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +television Pope John Paul II, and motion pictures Pope John Paul II Pope John Paul II, and television television, and Pope John Paul II motion pictures, and Pope John Paul II Valenti, Jack, and Pope John Paul II Wasserman, Lew, and Pope John Paul II Hollywood, and Catholic Church Hollywood, and religion Catholic Church, and Hollywood values critics values, and virtual reality virtual reality LB - 24280 PY - 1987 SE - A SP - 1A ST - Pope Reminds the Media to Bear Good, Evil in Mind T2 - St. Petersburg Times TI - Pope Reminds the Media to Bear Good, Evil in Mind ID - 1075 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that Cardinal Roger M. Mahony of Los Angeles has backed away from his earlier suggestion for a new moral code for movies and television programs. "Because I reject censorship, I do not propose a (production) code to govern what filmmakers may create, nor do I wish to dictate what intelligent viewers may see," Mahony is reported to have said. AU - Stammer, Larry B. AU - Fox, David J. DA - Oct. 1, 1992 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA values Christianity advertising, and public relations propaganda public relations values archives sexuality motion pictures religion values morality Mahony, Roger Hollywood Catholic Church boycotts +motion pictures and popular culture morality, and motion pictures values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and values Catholic Church, and motion pictures Catholic Church, and new production code (1992) Mahony, Roger Mahony, Roger, and production code (1992) (1992) Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and new production code (1992) Mahony, Roger, and pornography pornography, and Roger M. Mahony Hollywood, and Roger M. Mahony Archdoicese, Los Angeles pornography pornography, and Archdiocese of L.A. Jarrard, Dennis Morality in Media Citizens for Decency through Law (CDL) National Religious Alliance Against Pornography primary sources boycotts, and pornography advertising, and pornography pornography, and advertising boycott Jarrard, Dennis, and Roger Mahony Mahony, Roger, and Dennis Jarrard critics advertising LB - 25690 PY - 1992 SE - 1 SP - 1 ST - Mahony Urges "Human Values" in Films, TV T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Mahony Urges "Human Values" in Films, TV ID - 1163 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Writing about contemporary movies and in particular the film Tony Rome, this author says: “They arrive at your neighborhood movie houses in glorious Technicolor, and are consumed by the children with the afternoon popcorn. They are the films whose usual protagonist or ‘hero’ is completely amoral, who either inflicts pain and degradation upon people or stands aside detached and watches while it is inflicted…. Besides, how can they tell any more what is real or unreal, or what is right and what is wrong? Their parents endorse it all by their silence.” The author goes on to quote Margaret Mead about how “a maimed generation” of children are being created. Stang wrote: “Dr Margaret Mead feels we are rearing ‘a maimed generation.’ ‘We are giving them prescriptions for murder, rape, and every imaginable form of cruelty,’ she says. ‘The people in these pictures have the outward appearance of their parents, relatives and teachers. They dress the same, drive the same cars and the people on the screen seem to have the approval of the community. How can the children distinguish? They are being maimed in their ability to empathize sympathetically, or face reality in themselves and others.’” AU - Stang, Joanne DA - Dec. 3, 1967 KW - self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality motion pictures color violence Mead, Margaret, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Margaret Mead children children and media media effects children, and motion pictures motion pictures, and children color color, and violence violence, and color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality critics motion pictures, and critics Production Code, and decline of Mead, Margaret Production Code Production Code (motion pictures) LB - 35900 PY - 1967 SP - 187 ST - Do Any Road Lead Away from 'Rome'? T2 - New York Times TI - Do Any Road Lead Away from 'Rome'? ID - 3227 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Professor Frederick Starr says that “The moving picture is not a makeshift, but the highest type of entertainment in the history of the world. It stands for a better Americanism because it is attracting millions of the masses to an uplifting, drawing them an improving as well as an amusing feature of city life.” AU - Starr, Frederick DA - Feb. 7, 1909 KW - nationalism motion pictures, and Americanization ref, news motion pictures nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures Americanism motion pictures, and Americanism Americanism, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel motion pictures, and new art form ref, CDT LB - 13520 PY - 1909 SE - F SP - 5 ST - The World Before Your Eyes T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - The World Before Your Eyes ID - 3511 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article begins by mentioning Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward and its account of home entertainment in the year 2000, and then moves to efforts to project motion through pictures and the work of Alexander Black, who was then literary editor of the Brooklyn Times. Four or five years earlier Black attempted to create "nothing less than the complete illustration of a story to be presented with the stereopticon, while the story itself is being read by the author or another. In a lecture entitled 'Ourselves as Others See Us,' delivered in a number of cities during the year 1889 and later, Mr. Black experimented with pictures from life to illustrate fictitious narrative. A brief narrative of the career of a tramp was illustrated with views of the tramp standing up asleep, to avoid the suspicion of a policeman at the Battery in New York, the same tramp being hustled into a prison van, and again, actually in jail, all taken from real life." The article then discusses Black's picture play "Miss Jerry" which required about 250 negatives. It used professional actors and its performance ran about one hour and twenty minutes. The article covers the technical difficulties. Black estimated to use the kinetograph would cost perhaps $400,000 excluding the costs of presentation. Although "Miss Jerry" would be presented in black-and-white pictures, Black speculated that it would be possible to use color pictures although "Present methods of coloring are not sufficiently naturalistic to be desirably used." (quotation from Stedman, paraphrasing Black) The last paragraph gives a brief biography of Black and his earlier works. AU - Stedman, Arthur DA - Aug. 26, 1894 KW - stereopticons future art photography ref, news motion pictures presidents and new media photography and visual communication president, and motion pictures Black, Alexander picture plays motion pictures, and picture plays motion pictures, and new art form photography, and picture plays stereopticons, and picture plays art, and photography photography, and art home and new media future and science fiction photography, and color color, and photography color actors acting ref, LAT home LB - 36990 PY - 1894 SP - 14 ST - Black's New Picture Play T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Black's New Picture Play ID - 3800 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the major changes that digital projection can bring to the movies -- higher quality pictures, cheaper distribution, etc. It notes that the cost of upgrading theaters is a major obstacle to this technology. AU - Sterngold, James DA - Feb. 22, 1999 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography projection motion pictures home entertainment Hollywood materials materials digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema digitization computers 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movie +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality Hollywood, and digital movies digital movies, and Hollywood LB - 26130 PY - 1999 SE - C (Business Day) SP - C1, C2 ST - A Preview of Coming Attractions; Digital Projectors Could Bring Drastic Changes to Movie Industry T2 - New York Times TI - A Preview of Coming Attractions; Digital Projectors Could Bring Drastic Changes to Movie Industry ID - 1204 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Sulzberger reports that in 1953, the U. S. State Department warned the Production Code Administration that films too often portrayed Americans favoring violence over reason when it came to settling disputes. He writes here that the main impression of Americans “conveyed to the foreign mind” by the movies was “thoughtlessness and brutality.” It was said that the Soviet Union exhibited such American films as The Grapes of Wrath (193?) to show the devastation of American life. Yet as Sulzberger notes, most U. S. embassies around the world reported the typical audience reaction was “In America even the tramps have cars.” AU - Sulzberger, C. L. DA - April 13, 1955 KW - self-regulation nationalism sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence motion pictures, and foreign policy nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism LB - 34910 PY - 1955 SP - 28 ST - Foreign Affairs: America Seen Through a Glass, Darkly T2 - New York Times TI - Foreign Affairs: America Seen Through a Glass, Darkly ID - 3133 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This is an account of Pope John Paul II's address to entertainment leaders at Universal Studios in Hollywood. He talked about the moral influence in motion pictures, music, and other forms of entertainment. AU - Suro, Roberto DA - Sept. 16, 1987 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA values Christianity Wasserman, Lew Valenti, Jack values motion pictures Hollywood values religion Catholic Church non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +television Pope John Paul II, and motion pictures Pope John Paul II Pope John Paul II, and television television, and Pope John Paul II motion pictures, and Pope John Paul II Valenti, Jack, and Pope John Paul II Wasserman, Lew, and Pope John Paul II Hollywood, and Catholic Church Hollywood, and religion Catholic Church, and Hollywood values values, and virtual reality critics virtual reality LB - 28320 PY - 1987 SP - A24 ST - The Papal Visit; Pope Preaches Sanctity of Truth in a City of Illusions T2 - New York Times TI - The Papal Visit; Pope Preaches Sanctity of Truth in a City of Illusions ID - 1371 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article is one of several that appeared shortly after Richard Mosk replaced Richard Heffner has chair of the Classification and Rating System that were critical of the way movies were classified. AU - Svetkey, Benjamin DA - Nov. 25, 1994 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation CARA Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.), and controversies motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and critics rating system (U. S.), and controversies, and racism rating system (U. S.), and controversies, and sexism rating system (U. S.), and controversies, and favoritism rating system (U. S.), and controversies, and elitism rating system (U. S.), and controversies, and philistinism rating system (U. S.), and controversies, and puritanism rating system (U. S.), and controversies, Richard Heffner rating system (U. S.), and controversies, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) LB - 27370 PY - 1994 SP - 28 ST - Sex, Violence and Movie Ratings: Why the System Doesn't Work T2 - Entertainment Weekly TI - Sex, Violence and Movie Ratings: Why the System Doesn't Work ID - 1292 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the making of the digital movie, Star Wars-- Attack of the Clones (2002). AU - Taub, Eric A. DA - May 23, 2002 KW - entertainment computers entertainment, home photography projection motion pictures Lucas, George home entertainment Hollywood materials materials digital media digital cinema digital movies digital cinema digitization computers 35mm home, and new media home +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, digital movie +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality Hollywood, and digital movies digital movies, and Hollywood digital movies, and Star Wars -- Attack of the Clones digital movies, and George Lucas Lucas, George, and digital movies LB - 26180 PY - 2002 SE - E (Circuits) SP - E8 ST - Shooting 'Star Wars,' Bit by Bit T2 - New York Times TI - Shooting 'Star Wars,' Bit by Bit ID - 1209 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article criticizes the Meese Commission for drawing conclusions about the harmful effects of pornography that go well beyond the evidence. It notes critics of the Commission who say that the panel's evidence was heavily skewed toward the violent and degrading, and that little effort was made to hear testimony from those who enjoyed pornography and were not harmed by it. The article reports that the Commission members "didn't even agree on what pornography is." AU - Tavris, Carol DA - July 7, 1986 KW - sexuality news and journalism news and journalism pornography Meese Commission Meese Commission, and critics pornography, defined Meese Commission, and inaccurate press pornography, and crime journalism, and pornography journalism LB - 23930 PY - 1986 SE - 2 (Metro Section) SP - 5 ST - The Illogic of Linking Porn and Rape: Meese Commission Overlooks Proper Reasoning in Findings T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - The Illogic of Linking Porn and Rape: Meese Commission Overlooks Proper Reasoning in Findings ID - 1053 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Critics attempted to discredit the Meese Commission by portraying it as a group of “self-appointed censors and moral vigilantes.” Playboy and Penthouse joined with the ACLU, the American Booksellers, the Association of American Publishers, and the Association of University Presses and announced in July, 1986, that they had hired one of Washington’s most influential lobbying firms, Gray & Company, to assist them. The group formed an association known as Americans for Constitutional Freedom (ACF). Part of Gray & Company’s plan was to convince President Ronald Reagan, Attorney General Edwin Meese, and leaders in both political parties that the Commission's work was “so flawed, so controversial, so contested and so biased that they should shy away from publicly endorsing the document.” (Indeed, Meese did try to distance himself from the Commission’s Final Report.) The other goal was to convince the American public, as this article explains, that the Commission's “self-appointed censors" had "a wider agenda on their minds,” and that their efforts were not simply be confined to boycotting magazines. AU - Thiel, Paul DA - July 28, 1986 KW - corporations corporations corporations advertising, and public relations propaganda advertising sexuality news and journalism +books, periodicals, newspapers Hill & Knowlton First Amendment freedom Meese Commission Meese Commission, and critics Gray & Company public relations pornography pornography, and public relations public relations, and pornography Meese Commission, and public relations Meese Commission, and Gray & Company First Amendment, and public relations public relations, and First Amendment Gray & Company, and Meese Commission Americans for Constitutional Freedom magazines magazines, and public relations Hill & Knowlton, and Gray & Company Gray, Robert Keith LB - 23910 PY - 1986 SE - Washington Business SP - 5 ST - Gray & Co. Hired to Rebut Meese Panel T2 - Washington Post TI - Gray & Co. Hired to Rebut Meese Panel ID - 1051 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that the Meese Commission's conclusion that "there is a direct link between violence-oriented pornography and rape ... is the very antithesis of most previous authoritative finding in Britian, Canada and the United States. But the article notes not mention studies to support this assertion. It says that parts of the Commission's report "read like the fervid rantings of a Southern fundamentalist preacher." In February, 1986, well before the Meese Commission released its findings on pornography, the Commission's Executive Director Alan Sears wrote a letter – without informing Commission members – to twenty-six companies that sold such magazines as Playboy and Penthouse stating that the Commission had heard testimony that their enterprise was “involved in the sale or distribution of pornography.” The twenty-six firms included 7-Eleven, Rite-Aid, Thrifty, and Dart. AU - Thomas, Christopher DA - July 14, 1986 KW - morality presidents, and new media Reagan administration sexuality sexuality sexuality news and journalism First Amendment freedom news and journalism boycotts pornography Penthouse First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment Penthouse, and First Amendment First Amendment, and Penthouse Moral Majority pornography, and opponents boycotts, and pornography boycotts, and Penthouse Playboy Playboy, and First Amendment boycotts, and Playboy NFD Reagan administration, and pornography journalism, and pornography journalism, and inaccurate reporting journalism law LB - 23800 N1 - Issue 62508. PY - 1986 ST - Spectrum: The White House versus Penthouse T2 - The Times (London) TI - Spectrum: The White House versus Penthouse ID - 1042 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article lists and briefly describes nine 16mm films, some in color, that are of high quality. Some of the topics included a World Health Organization animated film on health care, documentaries on the Suez crisis and Helen Keller, and a film on the Oregon Trail. AU - Thompson, Howard DA - Oct. 7, 1956 KW - libraries nationalism motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and 16mm film 16mm magnetic tape recording magnetic tape recording, video values, and society democracy, and media education, and 16mm film religion, and 16mm film 16mm film, and education 16mm film, and religion nationalism and communication government, and 16mm film public libraries, and 16mm film 16mm film, and public libraries 16mm film, as paperback books television television, and 16mm film history, and new media history, and 16mm film values, and 16mm film sound recording sound recording, and magnetic tape World War II, and 16mm film 16mm film, and World War II 16mm film, and museums media effects, and 16mm films Film Council of America democracy education film government history magnetic recording media effects religion values World War II 16mm film magnetic tape war LB - 36410 PY - 1956 SP - 131 ST - Newcomers to 16 MM. Film Field T2 - New York Times TI - Newcomers to 16 MM. Film Field ID - 3274 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This British-made film opened in the United States in May, 1965, and starred actress Kim Novak as a "hard-breathing, fully-endowed ... cooperative lass." The movies was something of a female-version of Tom Jones, another British film that starred Albert Finney in 1963. AU - Thompson, Howard DA - May 27, 1965 KW - self-regulation motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality motion pictures censorship and ratings Production Code Great Britain motion pictures, and Great Britain foreign films Production Code, and foreign films foreign films, and Production Code sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality foreign films, and sexuality Production Code, breakdown of non-USA LB - 36520 PY - 1965 SP - 28 ST - 'Adventures of Moll Flanders' Arrives on Capitol Screen T2 - New York Times TI - 'Adventures of Moll Flanders' Arrives on Capitol Screen ID - 3285 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that a federal judge "struck down key provisions of the 1988 Child Protection and Obscenity Enforcement Act, ruling that the record-keeping requirements of a law designed to thwart sellers of child pornography violated the First Amendment rights of film producers, photographers and writers." This law had required anyone who produced "books, magazines, films or videotapes that depict explicit sexual scenes, irrespective of the ages of the actors, ... to keep records of the names of the performers depicted and their ages and nicknames. The record-keeping requirements also applied to anyone who copied the book, film or videotape for distribution later on, even if it was years after the original work had been created." AU - Thompson, Tracy DA - May 17, 1989 KW - presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality values obscenity Meese Commission First Amendment freedom censorship and ratings children censorship and ratings censorship pornography law, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and pornography pornography, and Reagan judges obscenity, and pornography Meese, Edwin, and pornography Child Protection and Obscenity Enforcement Act (1988) pornography, judicial setbacks First Amendment, and pornography pornography, and First Amendment law Reagan, Ronald children, and media LB - 27540 PY - 1989 SE - A SP - A19 ST - Part of Child Pornography Law Struck Down T2 - Washington Post TI - Part of Child Pornography Law Struck Down ID - 442 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This review of the biblical epic Solomon and Sheba (1959), says that it is "long and lavish, and includes all the old stanbys which help to mix sex with sanctity -- Gina Lollobrigida in her bath and a ridiculous wild orgy." AU - Tinee, Mae DA - Dec. 31, 1959 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Soviet Union motion pictures USSR non-USA motion pictures, and foreign markets motion pictures, and foreign policy Johnston, Eric MPAA Solomon and Sheba religion values motion pictures, and religion motion pictures, and values DeMille, Cecil motion pictures, and American-interest films hybrid films values motion pictures, and religion censorship and ratings LB - 36440 PY - 1959 SP - N8 ST - 'Solomon' -- Old Style Bible Epic T2 - Chicago Daily Tribune TI - 'Solomon' -- Old Style Bible Epic ID - 3277 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Eric Johnston, president of the MPAA, said that parents who called for government censorship of movies were advocating turning over to the state "the most significant job of parenthood." It was the duty of parents for them to help their children to judge motion pictures. Johnston opposed government censorship and also voluntary classification of films according to the pictures' appropriateness for different age groups. AU - Tolchin, Martin DA - March 22, 1960 KW - self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality values Catholic Church Christianity , news motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures Production Code Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and Production Code motion pictures, and PCA motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and language motion pictures, and language Production Code, and language censorship and ratings children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures Production Code (1956) violence Production Code, and violence Production Code, and substance abuse children children and media television First Amendment motion pictures, and classification classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and homosexuality Catholics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Catholics Shurlock, Geoffrey Shurlock, Geoffrey, and PCA Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and Production Code freedom capitalism motion pictures, and capitalism LB - 35430 PY - 1960 SP - 33 ST - Censoring Mass Media Called a Job for Parents T2 - New York Times TI - Censoring Mass Media Called a Job for Parents ID - 3182 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Actor Sir Herbert Tree on difference between live stage and movies and now the latter projects personality: “Besides, I am an eclectic person. In art I am a socialist. I want whatever gift of art I have to belong to the multitude. And is not posterity a multitude? “The actor hitherto has lived but for his generation. The cinema has given him the enfranchisement of posterity. This is once a spur and a warning to ambition. We can no longer live on our reputations, but, on the other hand, we can speak to millions where before we could reach only thousands. This is an inestimable privilege that I would be the last to belittle…. “We may like to read the speech of an orator, but we like also to hear and to see the orator himself. Humanity is incorrigible in its desire for the actual physical presence before it of its heroes. The newspaper has not yet nor ever will take the place of oratory, and the cinema, much as it has to give that cannot be given otherwise, is not a humanly sufficient substitute for the man and his voice. It is something else. “The drama and the photoplay, therefore, are not opposed. They are twin sisters, just as are painting and sculpture, and they are differentiated chiefly by the fact that they drama is built with words, the photoplay virtually without them.” On film and recreating history he says: “…By the painstaking research of the student and the constructive imagination of the artists we can reproduce with remarkable accuracy upon the screen many of the crucial events of history, thus revivifying them for the eager eyes of the children that are to come. This is an undertaking as stimulating as it is worthy, and is occupying more and more of the attention of big-minded producers. “It is but a step from this type of picture to the historical drama, but it is a step from recording to creative art. True, the narrative of record may be the inspired work of an artist, but the true drama woven on a solid framework of history is likely to have a power of impression far deeper and therefore to be of incalculable value in education.” AU - Tree, Herbert DA - Jan. 30, 1916 KW - theater stage history fame fame celebrity actors acting actors acting ref, news motion pictures theater and stage motion pictures, and stage stage, and motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, silent motion pictures, and oratory fame celebrity culture motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and celebrity motion pictures, and stage actors celebrity, and motion pictures fame, and motion pictures status of actors actors, and status of personality motion pictures, and personality personality, and motion pictures ref,NYT LB - 1070 PY - 1916 SE - X SP - 8 ST - The Worthy Cinema T2 - New York Times TI - The Worthy Cinema ID - 3402 ER - TY - NEWS AB - In this article, Herbert Tree discusses his impressions of America, including its fascination with moving pictures. D. W. Griffith is mentioned. AU - Tree, Herbert Beerbohm DA - Sept. 8, 1916 KW - nationalism history motion pictures, and Americanism motion pictures nationalism motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, foreign nationalism and communication motion pictures, and Americanization motion pictures, and westerns history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures ref, news motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad quotations non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Great Britain modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel motion pictures, and U.S. abroad Griffith, D. W. ref, Times London LB - 13660 PY - 1916 SP - 11 ST - Impressions of America: ‘Not Bad for a Young Country’ T2 - The Times [London] TI - Impressions of America: ‘Not Bad for a Young Country’ ID - 3525 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, argues that the industry does not need a new rating for adult-oriented non-pornographic films. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - May 6, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) NC-17 law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 motion pictures, and morality Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Valenti, Jack, and X-rating rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Valenti, Jack, and critics Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 NC-17, and Valenti's opposition LB - 25130 PY - 1990 SE - B SP - 7B ST - Art, Smut and Movie Ratings: We Don't Need a New Category between R and X T2 - Washington Post TI - Art, Smut and Movie Ratings: We Don't Need a New Category between R and X ID - 1113 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Jack Valenti defends the movie industry's rating system, saying that 74 percent of the nation's parents approve of it, and that the system keeps motion pictures free of government interference or any other obstacle that might hinder the creativity of movie makers. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - July 26, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) NC-17 law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 motion pictures, and morality Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Valenti, Jack, and X-rating rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Valenti, Jack, and critics Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 NC-17, and Valenti's opposition LB - 25330 PY - 1990 SE - News ST - Movie Rating System Is Working Fine [Guest Column] T2 - USA Today TI - Movie Rating System Is Working Fine [Guest Column] ID - 1129 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Critics called for more detailed information about why ratings were given to motion pictures, and they also wanted a rating system for television programs. Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, argues that the present system works fine and that its success has be a result, in part, of its simplicity. Adding additional information would make the system too cumbersome. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - Jan. 8, 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment classification MPAA self-regulation government hearings Federal Communications Commission (FCC) entertainment, home Clinton, William Jefferson CARA V-chip, and television violence television, and parents telecommunications presidents, and new media censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) PTA motion pictures home entertainment government regulation Clinton Administration law regulation law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification Gore, Al home, and new media home home +television +motion pictures and popular culture Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and TV rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.), and TV (1997) V-chip television, and rating system (U. S.) television, and V-chip home entertainment revolution home entertainment, and V-chip television, and PTA PTA, and television television, and critics rating system (U. S.), and critics hearings new media Collings, Tim V-chip, and Tim Collings Telecommunications Act (1996) regulation, and television Valenti, Jack, and television television, and Jack Valenti Clinton, Bill Clinton, Bill, and TV rating system (U. S.) Clinton administration, and TV rating system (U. S.) Gore, Al, and TV rating system (U. S.) McCain, John, and TV rating system (U. S.) Lieberman, Joseph, and TV rating system (U. S.) FCC FCC, and TV rating system (U. S.) Markey, Ed, and V-chip LB - 26000 PY - 1997 SE - A SP - 11A ST - Critics Maul TV Rating System, Ignore Its Virtues of Simplicity T2 - The Capital Times (Madison, WI) TI - Critics Maul TV Rating System, Ignore Its Virtues of Simplicity ID - 1191 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Jack Valenti, presdient of the Motion Picture Association of America, admired President Ronald Reagan’s gift for storytelling, and thought that Reagan had redefined the politicians role. No longer was it “enough to know. Now one must present one’s self interestingly.” AU - Valenti, Jack DA - Jan. 19, 1989 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA politics Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and politics Valenti, Jack, and Ronald Reagan Valenti, Jack, and Lyndon Johnson motion pictures, and politics politics, and Jack Valenti motion pictures LB - 26840 PY - 1989 SE - Part 2 (Op-Ed) SP - 7 ST - In Today's Politics, a Seasoned Ham Brings Home the Bacon T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - In Today's Politics, a Seasoned Ham Brings Home the Bacon ID - 1246 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Under the television rating system, networks and distributors rated their own shows. The magnitude of the job was daunting, to be sure. Jack Valenti estimated that each day there was about 2,000 hours of programming to be classified – the equivalent of 1,000 motion pictures (compared to two or three movies per day at CARA). A Monitoring Board oversaw rating appeals in an effort to ensure that the TV Parental Guidelines were applied fairly and consistently. The TV Parental Guidelines Monitoring Board was tilted heavily in favor of the television industry’s interests. The Board had 24 members, a half dozen each from the TV and cable industries, six representing those of produced the programs, and “five non-industry members from the advocacy community” who were chosen by the chair. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - Feb. 26, 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation CARA television, and V-chip violence telecommunications censorship and ratings rating system (U. S.) motion pictures motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +television Valenti, Jack television, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and television rating system (U. S.), and Jack Valenti +motion pictures and popular culture V-chip Telecommunications Act (1996) Telecommunications Act (1996), and V-chip rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and V-chip television, and V-chip V-chip, and television V-chip, and motion pictures motion pictures, and V-chip TV Parental Guidelines TV Parental Guidelines Monitoring Board LB - 27280 PY - 1997 SE - B SP - 11B ST - TV Ratings Are Easy, Efficient T2 - Plain Dealer [Cleveland] TI - TV Ratings Are Easy, Efficient ID - 1283 ER - TY - NEWS AB - As several movie makers attacked the rating system -- some calling for its demise -- Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, defended it. Valenti argued that movie makers, distributors, and the trade papers used the rating system as a “marketing punching bag, trashing it to gain free publicity,” and predicted that without the ratings, state and local censors would move in to fill the vacuum. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - Nov. 20, 1994 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation CARA censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +television Valenti, Jack +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and television rating system (U. S.), and Jack Valenti +motion pictures and popular culture rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and critics rating system (U. S.), and motion pictures The Wild Bunch, and rating system (U. S.) The Wild Bunch, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and The Wild Bunch LB - 27290 PY - 1994 SP - 2 ST - The Nation: Why Assault after Assault Can't Kill Rating System T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - The Nation: Why Assault after Assault Can't Kill Rating System ID - 1284 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, responds to critics of the movie rating system. Critics wanted more detailed information given on why ratings were issued. Valenti says the rating system worked because of its simplicity and that to add more information would make it too cumbersome. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - Jan. 3, 1997 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation CARA television, and V-chip violence telecommunications censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +television Valenti, Jack television, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and television rating system (U. S.), and Jack Valenti +motion pictures and popular culture V-chip Telecommunications Act (1996) Telecommunications Act (1996), and V-chip rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and V-chip television, and V-chip V-chip, and television V-chip, and motion pictures motion pictures, and V-chip TV Parental Guidelines TV Parental Guidelines Monitoring Board LB - 27300 PY - 1997 SE - B SP - 9B ST - The Television Ratings System Is Simple and User-Friendly; TV: More Complex Categories Would Have Discouraged Parents from Using the Guidelines and Newspapers T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - The Television Ratings System Is Simple and User-Friendly; TV: More Complex Categories Would Have Discouraged Parents from Using the Guidelines and Newspapers ID - 1285 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, responds to critics of the movie rating system. Critics wanted more detailed information given on why ratings were issued. Valenti says the rating system worked because of its simplicity and that to add more information would make it too cumbersome. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - Dec. 20, 1996 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation CARA television, and V-chip violence telecommunications censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +television Valenti, Jack television, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and television rating system (U. S.), and Jack Valenti +motion pictures and popular culture V-chip Telecommunications Act (1996) Telecommunications Act (1996), and V-chip rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and V-chip television, and V-chip V-chip, and television V-chip, and motion pictures motion pictures, and V-chip TV Parental Guidelines TV Parental Guidelines Monitoring Board LB - 27310 PY - 1996 SE - A SP - 22A ST - The Simpler the Better T2 - USA Today TI - The Simpler the Better ID - 1286 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, here considers the role of movies stars in American politics. Valenti was astute politically and cultivated close relationships with political leaders. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - Sept. 6, 1996 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation CARA censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) politics motion pictures media effects media violence Hollywood law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +television Valenti, Jack +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and television rating system (U. S.), and Jack Valenti +motion pictures and popular culture rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and critics rating system (U. S.), and motion pictures violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence Valenti, Jack, and violence violence, and Jack Valenti Hollywood, and politics Hollywood, and Bob Dole Hollywood, and Bill Clinton Hollywood, and 1996 campaign politics, and Hollywood LB - 27320 PY - 1996 SP - 9 ST - It's Lights, Camera, Politics; The Two Parties Have Merged with Hollywood to Give Audiences (Voters) the Most Favorable Take on Their Stars T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - It's Lights, Camera, Politics; The Two Parties Have Merged with Hollywood to Give Audiences (Voters) the Most Favorable Take on Their Stars ID - 1287 ER - TY - NEWS AB - During the 1996 presidential campaign, Republican nominee, Senator Robert Dole, criticized Hollywood for producing violent and sexually permissive entertainment. Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association, defended the movie industry and said that its contributions should not be judged by the work of a few, no more than all politicians should be judged by the few who break the law. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - June 6, 1995 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation CARA censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) politics motion pictures media effects media violence Hollywood law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +television Valenti, Jack +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and television rating system (U. S.), and Jack Valenti +motion pictures and popular culture rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and critics rating system (U. S.), and motion pictures violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence Valenti, Jack, and violence violence, and Jack Valenti Hollywood, and politics Hollywood, and Bob Dole Hollywood, and 1996 campaign politics, and Hollywood Valenti, Jack, and Bob Dole LB - 27330 PY - 1995 SE - B SP - 7B ST - Perspective on Violence in Films: An Open Letter to Bob Dole Indicting the Industry for the Excesses of a Few Is Like Indicting All Public Servants for the Few Who Break the Public Trust T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Perspective on Violence in Films: An Open Letter to Bob Dole Indicting the Industry for the Excesses of a Few Is Like Indicting All Public Servants for the Few Who Break the Public Trust ID - 1288 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, discusses criticism of the movie industry's rating system. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - April 2, 1995 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation CARA censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) politics motion pictures media effects media violence Hollywood law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +television Valenti, Jack +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and television rating system (U. S.), and Jack Valenti +motion pictures and popular culture rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and critics rating system (U. S.), and motion pictures violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence Valenti, Jack, and violence violence, and Jack Valenti Hollywood, and politics Hollywood, and Bob Dole Hollywood, and Bill Clinton Hollywood, and 1996 campaign politics, and Hollywood campaign finance reform, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and campaign finance reform LB - 27340 PY - 1995 SP - 1 ST - Wishful Thinking? T2 - Columbian [Vancouver, British Columbia] TI - Wishful Thinking? ID - 1289 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The author was then director of the New York Film Festival at Lincoln Center. He notes that in film, the "final taboo" was showing actual sexual intercourse, and that conquering of this taboo was "an undeniable goal in film art today." (20) AU - Vogel, Amos DA - Sept. 15, 1968 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) sexuality sexuality MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality CARA , news abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion Production Code Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey, and abortion motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and PCA television television, and motion pictures television, and abortion motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and sex television, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, foreign motion pictures, and foreign censorship and ratings Production Code, 1966 Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey classification motion pictures, and classification MPAA, and classification NATO audiences censorship and ratings Valenti, Jack sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and violence violence LB - 36890 PY - 1968 SP - D19-D20 ST - The Censor Always Loses T2 - New York Times TI - The Censor Always Loses ID - 3321 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article begins: "Cardinal Roger M. Mahony said Saturday that 'perhaps the time is ripe' for a new moral code to govern the content of motion pictures and television programs, but he stopped short of calling for mandatory compliance by the entertainment industry." Mahony is quoted also as saying that graphic movie images has helped bring a "breakdown of our social fabric." This article also discusses Ted Baehr, who was chair of the Christian Film and Television Commission, based in Atlanta. In another edition of the Los Angeles Times on this date, this article in entitled "Mahony Urges Restrictive Code on Films, TV." It quotes Mahony telling an audience at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel that "regrettably, the distinction between outright pornography and many of today's films and television productions has become blurred." AU - Wallace, Amy C1 - 1 DA - Feb. 2, 1992 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA values Christianity television, and values values sexuality pornography motion pictures religion values morality Hollywood Catholic Church +motion pictures and popular culture morality, and motion pictures values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and values Catholic Church, and motion pictures Catholic Church, and new production code (1992) Mahony, Roger Mahony, Roger, and production code (1992) (1992) Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and new production code (1992) Mahony, Roger, and pornography pornography, and Roger M. Mahony Hollywood, and Roger M. Mahony Archdoicese, Los Angeles +television television, and new production code (1992) critics values, and television values, and motion pictures LB - 25600 PY - 1992 SE - A ST - Mahony Urges Film Industry to Accept Code T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Mahony Urges Film Industry to Accept Code ID - 1156 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article reports that Dan Glickman, a former Democratic congressman from Kansas and Secretary of Agriculture under President Clinton, will replace Jack Valenti as president of the Motion Picture Association of America. Glickman was at the time of this article head of the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. The article notes that one of Glickman's challenges will be redefining the MPAA in an age when many movie studios are owned by larger corporations such as General Electric, Viacom, and Time Warner. Other candidates considered for this job were Victoria Clarke, a spokesperson for the Pentagon under the George W. Bush administration; Pat Mitchell, president of the Public Broadcasting Service; and Alan D. Bersin, a school superintendent in San Diego. AU - Waxman, Sharon DA - July 2, 2004 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) motion pictures censorship and ratings censorship Valenti, Jack MPAA Valenti, Jack, and MPAA MPAA, and Jack Valenti Glickman, Dan MPAA, and Dan Glickman CARA, and Dan Glickman CARA LB - 30470 PY - 2004 SE - C SP - C1, C3 ST - An Old Washington Hand To Succeed Valenti in Hollywood T2 - New York Times TI - An Old Washington Hand To Succeed Valenti in Hollywood ID - 2802 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that producer-director Joseph Strick had sued the Motion Picture Association of America and Paramount Pictures challenging the X rating given to his adaptation of Henry Miller's Tropic of Cancer. Strick argued that the rating violated Sherman antitrust laws. The motion picture rating system had been in effect since November, 1968. The rating system was not challenged in court again until 1990 when Maljack Production and Miramax Films filed suits challenging the X rating given to their films Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer, and Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!, respectively. AU - Weiler, A. H. DA - March 10, 1970 KW - self-regulation rating system (U.S.) classification and ratings +motion pictures and popular culture court cases X-rating, and court cases law rating controversies, and X-rating Strick, Joseph Tropic of Cancer, and X-rating CARA motion pictures classification X-rated films LB - 28910 PY - 1970 SP - 51 ST - Producer with 'X' Sues Over Rating: Strick of 'Tropic of Cancer' Seeks to Ban Classification T2 - New York Times TI - Producer with 'X' Sues Over Rating: Strick of 'Tropic of Cancer' Seeks to Ban Classification ID - 2640 ER - TY - NEWS AB - President Ronald Reagan predicts that by the end of his second term he will have appointed 45 percent of all federal judges and that they will have a long-lasting influence on judicial decision involving pornography, abortion, and crime. Reagan's remarks were transmitted live by satellite from the White House to the 104th annual meeting of the Knights of Columbus (who met in Chicago), the world's largest Catholic lay organization. AU - Weinraub, Bernard DA - Aug. 6, 1986 KW - presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality pornography motion pictures First Amendment freedom law Reagan Ronald, and secular humanism Reagan, Ronald, and liberalism Reagan administration, and court appointees Reagan, Ronald, and court appointees pornography, and legal pornography, and court appointees , +motion pictures and popular culture First Amendment, and court appointees First Amendment, and Ronald Reagan critics values law, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and Catholics pornography, and Catholics Reagan, Ronald LB - 22530 PY - 1986 SE - A SP - 13A ST - Reagan Predicts Impact of Judicial Appointees T2 - New York Times TI - Reagan Predicts Impact of Judicial Appointees ID - 981 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The Ronald Reagan administration linked rock music lyrics to other social ills that included substance abuse, pornography, and more broadly, the President said, mass media that corrupted children with a “glorification of drugs, violence and perversity.” It was all part of “a failed and exhausted liberal ideology,” that erected barriers to keep God away from children but had “trouble locking up drug pushers, thieves and murderers.” AU - Weinraub, Bernard DA - Oct. 10, 1985 KW - rock n' roll government hearings presidents, and new media Reagan administration sexuality government substance abuse rock music lyrics drug abuse pornography Reagan administration, and rock music lyrics Reagan administration, and pornography Reagan administration, and drug abuse drug use, and Senate hearing (1985) Senate hearing, and Hollywood (1985) hearings values LB - 23940 PY - 1985 SE - C SP - 17C ST - Rock Lyrics Irk Reagan T2 - New York Times TI - Rock Lyrics Irk Reagan ID - 1054 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the rating controversy over the Michael Douglas-Sharon Stone movie Basic Instinct (1992). It details how terrible an NC-17 rating would be for Carolco Corporation and Douglas, who had invested heavily in the production. The marketing strategy exploited the rating controversy. "Rarely has a film, especially one that so few people have seen stirred such instense discussion, rumor and uneasiness and rung so many alarms," Weinraub writes. AU - Weinraub, Bernard DA - Jan. 30, 1992 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality homosexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality women, and new media advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising press motion pictures media effects media violence lesbianism gays women feminism law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and lesbianism public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Basic Instinct (1992) motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures lesbianism, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising Douglas, Michael motion pictures, and bad press coverage press, and poor movie coverage Verhoeven, Paul Eszterhas, Joe Stone, Sharon feminists feminists, and motion pictures gays, and motion pictures Jay Leno Show Basic Instinct (1992) LB - 25420 PY - 1992 SE - C SP - 1 ST - Violent Melodrama of a Sizzling Movie Brings Rating Battle T2 - New York Times TI - Violent Melodrama of a Sizzling Movie Brings Rating Battle ID - 1138 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses Jack Valenti's efforts to stop movie piracy -- he estimated that the movie industry lost $3.5 billion each year on illegally copied motion pictures. He says that from 400,000 to 600,000 movies are illegally downloaded or uploaded on the Internet daily. One controversial strategy to stop piracy was to stop sending advance copies on VHS or DVDs of movies to those who vote for the Academy Awards. Independent film makers protested that this puts them at a disadvantage to the large studios. A compromise was reached in which encoded video cassettes will be sent out -- they can be tracked if copied. This article says that Valenti is thinking about stepping down as head of the MPAA in 2004. AU - Weinraub, Bernard DA - Oct. 27, 2003 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment computers MPAA projection entertainment, home law +motion pictures and popular culture cameras cameras, and digital movies motion pictures, and digital new media home entertainment revolution home entertainment revolution, and digital movies +photography and visual communication photography, and digital movies digital technology digial movies, how they work 35mm film 35mm film, and digital movies digital movies, and 35mm film projectors, digital projectors, and digital movies +computers and the Internet computers, and digital movies digital movies, and computers virtual reality virtual reality, and digital movies digital movies, and virtual reality Hollywood, and digital movies digital movies, and Hollywood +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and piracy copyright, and motion pictures copyright piracy, and motion pictures law, and piracy law, and copyright law, and motion pictures Valenti, Jack, and piracy piracy, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack digital media digital cinema home entertainment Hollywood motion pictures home photography piracy 35mm computers LB - 28760 PY - 2003 SE - B (The Arts) SP - B1, B6 ST - The Man Who Unites the Moguls, Looking Ahead T2 - New York Times TI - The Man Who Unites the Moguls, Looking Ahead ID - 2655 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that about 47 seconds were cut from the movie Basic Instinct (1992) to get an R rating, and that the film was released in about 1,000 to 1,200 theaters nationwide. Gays protested the movie because of its stereotypes. AU - Welkos, Robert W. DA - Feb. 11, 1992 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality homosexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality women, and new media advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising press motion pictures media effects media violence lesbianism gays women feminism law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and lesbianism public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Basic Instinct (1992) motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures lesbianism, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising Douglas, Michael motion pictures, and bad press coverage press, and poor movie coverage Verhoeven, Paul Eszterhas, Joe Stone, Sharon feminists feminists, and motion pictures gays, and motion pictures Jay Leno Show Basic Instinct (1992) LB - 25470 PY - 1992 SE - F (Calendar) SP - 1F ST - Director Trims "Basic Instinct" to Get R Rating T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Director Trims "Basic Instinct" to Get R Rating ID - 1143 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that Cardinal Roger M. Mahony of Los Angeles will propose a new moral code for movies and television programs. "In an age of rape, date-rape, sexual harassment, child molestation, sex addiction, serial killings, AIDS and venereal disease epidemics, Hollywood simply must stop glorifying evil," the cardinal said. AU - Welkos, Robert W. DA - Jan 29, 1992 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA values Christianity values sexuality pornography motion pictures religion values morality Hollywood Catholic Church +motion pictures and popular culture morality, and motion pictures values values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values motion pictures, and values Catholic Church, and motion pictures Catholic Church, and new production code (1992) Mahony, Roger Mahony, Roger, and production code (1992) (1992) Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and new production code (1992) Mahony, Roger, and pornography pornography, and Roger M. Mahony Hollywood, and Roger M. Mahony Archdoicese, Los Angeles +television television, and new production code (1992) critics LB - 25590 PY - 1992 SE - B (Metro) SP - 1B ST - Mahony to Propose New Code for Films, TV T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Mahony to Propose New Code for Films, TV ID - 1155 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Wertham, a well-known critic of violence in popular culture, says that "more and more youths get the idea that violence is not only acceptable but enjoyable." He goes on to say that "it seems barbaric to let children go freely to any movies that are produced." Also: "It is misleading to link the representation of unsadistic sex with the display of brutal violence as if they were comparable." AU - Wertham, Frederic DA - June 30, 1968 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification self-regulation MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) CARA , news abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion Production Code Production Code, and violence motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and PCA television television, and motion pictures television, and abortion motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and violence television, and violence censorship and ratings Production Code, 1966 Production Code, and violence Shurlock, Geoffrey classification motion pictures, and classification MPAA, and classification violence Kennedy, John F. presidents and new media Kennedy, John F., and motion pictures children and media media effects media effects, and violence children LB - 36870 PY - 1968 SP - D13 ST - Are the Movies Teaching Us To Be Violent? T2 - New York Times TI - Are the Movies Teaching Us To Be Violent? ID - 3319 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article notes that President Ronald Reagan had appointed 320 judges to lower courts, approximately forty percent of the federal bench, but that a close look at the records of these appointees "shows they have often ignored conservative causes, rejected the Republican platform, and repudiated the religious right." AU - Whitman, David DA - Aug. 9, 1987 KW - presidents, and new media Reagan administration values sexuality values obscenity Meese Commission law censorship and ratings censorship pornography law, and pornography Reagan, Ronald, and pornography pornography, and Reagan judges obscenity, and pornography Meese, Edwin, and pornography Reagan, Ronald LB - 27530 PY - 1987 SE - C SP - C1 ST - Are Reagan's New Judges Really Closet Moderates? T2 - Washington Post TI - Are Reagan's New Judges Really Closet Moderates? ID - 1308 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article discusses the movie Bad Lieutenant (1992) and notes that despite its NC-17 ratings it "contains virtually no on-screen carnage." AU - Willman, Chris DA - Jan. 3, 1993 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations sexuality motion pictures media effects media violence substance abuse drug abuse critics law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex sex, and motion pictures nudity, and motion pictures CARA, and rating controversies rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 nudity CARA, and nudity motion pictures, and nudity language motion pictures, and language language, and motion pictures motion pictures, and drugs drug use, and motion pictures CARA, and drug use violence violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and violence CARA, and violence NC-17, and critics critics, and movie rating system (U. S.) advertising LB - 25550 PY - 1993 ST - Off-Centerpiece: Abel Ferrara: Lights! Camera! Anguish! T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Off-Centerpiece: Abel Ferrara: Lights! Camera! Anguish! ID - 1151 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The article notes that an independent theater owner in Cleveland had stoped using the Motion Picture Association of America's rating symbols. This was a few weeks before the movie industry adopted the NC-17 rating. AU - Wilson, John M. DA - Aug. 5, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA audiences self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theaters National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner motion pictures, and morality Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Valenti, Jack, and critics Valenti, Jack, and NC-17 Valenti, Jack, and legal challenges theater owners, and rating system (U. S.) theater owners, and NC-17 MPAA, and NC-17 Coppola, Francis Ford Lee, Spike Reiner, Rob Pollack, Sydney Wang, Wayne Lipsky, Mark MPAA, and independent producers CARA, and independent producers Silverlight Entertainment Life Is Cheap... rating system (U. S.), and A rating advertising advertising, and A-rate films theater owners theater owners, and rating theater owners, and own rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and theater owners Heffner, Richard LB - 25320 PY - 1990 SE - Calendar SP - 23 ST - Outtakes: Ahead of His Time? T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Outtakes: Ahead of His Time? ID - 1128 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that the revised 1966 Production Code gave movies about the same amount of freedom as then enjoy by the theater and almost as much as that accorded to books. Still, most feature films in the U. S. were not even submitted to the Production Code Administration. In 1967, 350 feature-length films were shown -- the Production Code applied 160 of them while 190 of those pictures were foreign films. AU - Windeler, Robert DA - Sept. 21, 1968 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification MPAA self-regulation National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) sexuality sexuality MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) motion pictures, and sexuality CARA , news abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion Production Code Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey, and abortion motion pictures, and abortion motion pictures, and PCA +television television, and motion pictures television, and abortion motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and sex television, and sex motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, foreign motion pictures, and foreign censorship and ratings Production Code, 1966 Production Code, and abortion Shurlock, Geoffrey classification motion pictures, and classification MPAA, and classification NATO audiences censorship and ratings Valenti, Jack sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality motion pictures, and violence violence LB - 36830 PY - 1968 SP - 27 ST - Hollywood Is Preparing a Broad Film Classification System T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood Is Preparing a Broad Film Classification System ID - 3315 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article says that leading Hollywood writers and actors are conducing a campaign to limit violence in popular entertainment such as movies and TV programs. Shortly before his assassination, President John F. Kennedy had scheduled a meeting with Hollywood directors to see what could be done about reigning in the violence in American movies shown abroad. AU - Windeler, Robert DA - June 17, 1968 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) classification self-regulation MPAA motion pictures, and Production Code Administration (PCA) CARA , news abortion motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures motion pictures, and abortion Production Code Production Code, and violence motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and PCA television television, and motion pictures television, and abortion motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and violence television, and violence censorship and ratings Production Code, 1966 Production Code, and violence Shurlock, Geoffrey classification motion pictures, and classification MPAA, and classification violence Kennedy, John F. presidents and new media Kennedy, John F., and motion pictures LB - 36860 PY - 1968 SP - 44 ST - Hollywood Writers and Actors Lead Fight on Movie Violence T2 - New York Times TI - Hollywood Writers and Actors Lead Fight on Movie Violence ID - 3318 ER - TY - NEWS AB - "I'm out of work. The dreary day wears on. No one has need of me -- from place to place I go. 'Tis 4 o'clock -- too late to further seek. 'Home' looms up gloomily, a vision bleak. I'll squander precious cents upon a picture show -- Go to the 'Movies' Darkness, warmth, music -- rest for weary bones! As on a wizard's mat, I fly from snow and sleet Back to my native isle of Sicily. Within an ancient town -- I know its every street -- A thrilling tale unfolds of love and jealousy. Oh, silver-leaved olive groves rimming a violet sea! I'm wandering entranced beneath a cloudless sky. Here at the 'Movies'! Time hurries by unnoticed, till at length Care's weight rolls down again upon my troubled heart. But for a blessed space I had forgot. My poverty, my debts, my lonely lot, For I had lived old joys again by magic art -- Watching the 'Movies.'" AU - Wolff, E. H. DA - March 4, 1914 KW - words vs. images motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and magic motion pictures, and special effects cinema of attractions images vs. words cameras motion pictures, and new art form motion pictures, and psychology motion pictures, and magic motion pictures. and poem motion pictures, as magic carpet quotations, and moves as magic art motion pictures, and magic art ref, news ref, NYT quotations LB - 41880 PY - 1914 SP - 10 ST - Watching the 'Movies' T2 - New York Times TI - Watching the 'Movies' ID - 4287 ER - TY - NEWS AU - Wood, Sir Henry Frueman (?) DA - Jan. 30, 1897 KW - photography ref, news photography and visual communication photography, and color color, and photography color non-USA Great Britain Great Britain, and color movies motion pictures, and Great Britain non-USA, and color movies motion pictures, and non-USA ref, Times London LB - 15240 PY - 1897 SP - 6 ST - Photography in Natural Colours T2 - The Times [London] TI - Photography in Natural Colours ID - 3680 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Woolfenden writes that "Color is not less a miracle than was sound; and something of the same awe with which the sound magicians were regarded hangs like an aura today over Hollywood's new magicians of color. But because the coming of color to the screen has been more gradual and painstaking a process, and less an instantaneous revolution that was the coming of sound, the same wild kowtowing to the color designers has been less in evidence. "Color itself, rather than the color designer or the color technician, is god, and color itself will be the star of the forthcoming pictures." (16) The author notes that each color camera costs about $15,000 to manufacture, and is the result of 40 years of experimentation. Technicolor started in 1914. During the "terrific color boom of 1919-30, 77,000,000 feet of color film were crammed through the Technicolor laboratories. That boom faded and Technicolor went into the red -- on the books. It stayed there." (16) It cost about $135,000 extra to make Becky Sharp (1935) in color than black-and-white. The Trail of the Lonesome Pine which is scheduled to be released will run about 8,000 feet. The photographic costs in black-and-white would have been about $40,000 -- in color it will be $125,000, and $85,000 difference. (16) Woolfenden describes the Technicolor process: "Technicolor is not completely a photographic process. The light enters through a regular camera lens. It strikes a prism which divides it into three parts. One of these parts strikes a red gelatin permitting the passage of only red light. Another part is sent again a blue gelatin. The light that is sent through each gelatin is recorded on a negative. These negatives are not actually colored. They appear as regular black and white negatives except that each photographs only its own 16/17 color. The intensity of light, and the depth of the color, is, however, captured." (16-17) The articles continues explaining how the Technicolor process works. The article quotes Robert Edmond Jones who said that "'When color movies ... it flows like music. It is subject to the laws of music. It has its harmonies, its counterpoints, its underlying laws of composition which we can discover only through experiment....'" As for how audiences react to color, Woolfenden quotes Jones who said: "'...Audiences have a definite reaction to color though it may be subconscious. Color has never been popularly accepted unless the color was good. When underlying laws of composition are violated, people know something is wrong, though they may not know why. The public has a color sense. And when color is not good, it's usually pretty awful. (17) "'You can't compose a symphony in five minutes. A black-and-white picture is like a one-finger melody. A color picture is like an orchestra of color.'" (17) The article continues to quote Jones who refutes (p. 26) critics who argued that the color in Becky Sharp was too vivid. "'Those criticism,' replied Jones, 'are made on the assumption that there is a "norm" for everything, including color. There isn't....'" (26) Jones argued that color would transform fashion. "'The world-wide effect of Hollywood fashion is already known,'" Jones said. Color would magnify this influence. (26) Woolfenden concludes that color has yet to bring the revolution to cinema that sound did because at the time of this article (1936), it was "estimated that there are only three first-cameramen in this country who fully understand the intricacies of the new color camera equipment. Approximately twenty second-cameramen have worked on color at one time or another." (26) To address this shortage of trained cameramen, Technicolor was about to open a "school" for cinematographers on this process. (26) AU - Woolfenden, John R. DA - Jan. 5, 1936 KW - magic censorship ref, LAT Jones, Robert Edmond motion pictures motion pictures, and Technicolor color color, and motion pictures color, and Technicolor Technicolor color, and emotions motion pictures, and color values values, and color color, and values color, and nature censorship and ratings color, and censorship censorship, and color color, and cinematographers color, and novelty color, and Robert Edmond Jones Jones, Robert Edmond, and color color, and music color, as visual opera color, and emotions color, and new way of seeing motion picture, and Becky Sharp motion pictures, and La Cacuracha color, and La Cacuracha color, and Becky Sharp critics critics, and color movies color, and magic magic, and color cameras cameras, and color movies Technicolor, and how it works media effects media effects, and color movies audiences, and color movies color, and media effects color, and subconscious audiences LB - 42860 PY - 1936 SE - H SP - 16-17, 26 ST - Color -- The Bogey Man of Hollywood! T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Color -- The Bogey Man of Hollywood! ID - 4283 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article by Willard Huntington Wright (aka S. S. Van Dine) is full of quotations regarding the low morals and quality of movies. Wright was an art critics and also a mystery writer; he also wrote for such fan magazines as Photoplay during the 1920s. Wright says movies have grown but “developed” very little. “Niagara of indecency.” Movies attack marriage and hurt children. “Today the most innocent youngsters are constantly being familiarized with brothels, ‘cribs,’ parlor houses, call rooms, procurers, traffickers, white slavers…. Immorality is being commercialized with a vengeance .” “Morality originally meant ‘custom,’ and it has retained to a great extent this connection today.” Thus, “immorality… means a breaking of these laws of ‘custom’….” Some movies are “vulgar.” Film “dwells on the vicious side of life and thus gives on a distorted vision of the whole.” He says of movies that the “under side of life is revealed with painstaking care.” Movies “create a brazenly accurate picture with abundant atmosphere.” “pornographic vulgarity.” They are “inoculating the system with a loathsome disease.” Social uplift films are bedfellows with immorality so too are “boudoir romances.” “hussies.” “kept women.” He argues that in movies the “breaking of accepted moral laws is made attractive” this despite the endings that supposedly punish the wrong doers. In films one is “face to face with inherent dishonesty.” Morality “consists in fundamental truth.” “All those influences which tend to turn the human mind, and especially the immature human mind, away from the recognized normal, wholesome, decent and anti-materialistic things in life are on the face of them, immoral from the world’s viewpoint.” AU - Wright, Willard Huntington DA - July 7, 1918 KW - immorality children censorship words vs. images actors acting actors acting photography ref, news motion pictures sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality sexuality, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography advertising, and sexuality sexuality, and advertising modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity new way of seeing censorship censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship censorship and ratings theaters motion pictures, and theaters theaters, and motion pictures children and media motion pictures, and children children, and motion pictures media effects children, and media effects media effects, and children advertising and public relations advertising, and motion pictures motion pictures, and advertising sensationalism motion pictures, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures advertising, and sensationalism sensationalism, and motion pictures quotations nudity nudity, and the stage theaters theaters, and 5-cent values, and theater values, and motion pictures motion pictures, and values theater, and values values immorality, and theater immorality, and motion pictures motion pictures,and immorality religion religion, and motion pictures religion, and theater theater, and religion motion pictures, and religion quotations actors, and status of women women, and motion pictures motion pictures, and women critics critics, and motion pictures motion pictures, and critics images vs. words pornography, and motion pictures motion pictures, and pornography ref, LAT advertising pornography theater LB - 13820 PY - 1918 SE - III SP - 25 ST - Why the Spurious Producer, and Why the Lascivious Spectacle? T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Why the Spurious Producer, and Why the Lascivious Spectacle? ID - 3534 ER - TY - NEWS AB - Critics of the Meese Commission, which the Ronald Reagan administration established to study pornography and to make recommendations on how to combat it, charged that the Commission's members made assumptions about pornography's harmful effects that went well beyond the evidence. The critics maintained that the Commission's had a broad agenda for censorship. Yardley writes that even Attorney General Edwin Meese, "whose enthusiasm for civil liberties has always been kept under control, seems to have been aken aback by the commission's conclusions and recommendations, which range from the preposterous to the unconstitutional." AU - Yardley, Jonathan DA - July 14, 1986 KW - presidents, and new media Reagan administration sexuality pornography Meese Commission Meese Commission, and critics pornography, and crime pornography, and social science research Reagan administration, and pornography pornography, and critics critics LB - 23770 PY - 1986 SE - C (Style) SP - 2C ST - The Porn Commission's Hidden Agenda T2 - Washington Post TI - The Porn Commission's Hidden Agenda ID - 1039 ER - TY - NEWS AB - The article notes that two law suits had been filed challenging the X rating for Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! (1990) and Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer (1990). It also mentions two other movies forthcoming that were likely to challenge the ratings: Martin Scorsese's Goodfellas (1990), and David Lynch's Wild at Heart (1990). AU - Yarrow, Andrew L. DA - May 24, 1990 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) Valenti, Jack censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) freedom law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship CARA CARA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and Richard Heffner classification, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and classification CARA, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and critics Heffner, Richard, and censorship rating system (U. S.), and NC-17 censorship, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and censorship Heffner, Richard, and freedom freedom, and Richard Heffner motion pictures, and morality Valenti, Jack, and rating system (U. S.) system X-rated films CARA, and X-rating Heffner, Richard, and X-rating rating system (U. S.), and legal challenges CARA, and rating controversies CARA, and legal challenges Valenti, Jack, and critics Almodovar, Pedro Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! Kunstler, William Miramax Films Ramos, Charles E. Heffner, Richard LB - 25120 PY - 1990 ST - Almodovar Film's X Rating Is Challenged in Lawsuit T2 - New York Times TI - Almodovar Film's X Rating Is Challenged in Lawsuit ID - 1112 ER - TY - NEWS AB - This article by the director of Flesh Gordon 2 (1993) attacks the rating system and the policy of the Los Angeles Times not to carry advertising for NC-17 rated movies in some cases. Ziehm says that "the NC-17 is being treated as a replacement for the X rating, thereby not accomplishing anything." AU - Ziehm, Howard DA - May 20, 1991 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation sexuality sexuality motion pictures, and sexuality Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) sexuality advertising, and public relations advertising, and motion pictures sex censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) propaganda public relations propaganda advertising motion pictures media effects media violence lesbianism law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification CARA +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and violence motion pictures, and lesbianism public relations public relations, and motion pictures public relations, and Basic Instinct motion pictures, and sex motion pictures, and lesbianism motion pictures, and violence violence violence, and motion pictures sex, and motion pictures lesbianism, and motion pictures CARA, and rating system (U. S.), and controversies NC-17 NC-17, and exploitation advertising, and NC-17 advertising NC-17, and critics NC-17, and Flesh Gordon II (1993) LB - 27480 PY - 1991 SE - F (Calendar Section) SP - 3F ST - Counterpunch: The NC-17 Movie Rating Gets an X from Director T2 - Los Angeles Times TI - Counterpunch: The NC-17 Movie Rating Gets an X from Director ID - 1303 ER - TY - RPRT AB - This survey deals with the public's response to motion pictures. It was a period when television was beginning to make inroads on Hollywood's audiences, especially those people interested in family entertainment. A copy of this survey is in Folder 10, Box 9, Mss 1446, Records of the National Association of Theater Owners (NATO) , Special Collections and Manuscripts, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT. CY - Princeton, N. J. DA - Dec., 1957 J2 - The Public Appraises Movies: A Survey for Motion Picture Association of America, Inc. KW - archives primary sources audiences +television +motion pictures and popular culture reports +motion pictures primary sources motion pictures, and attendance motion pictures, and television television, and movie attendance television, and motion pictures audiences, and motion pictures motion pictures, and audiences motion pictures, and postwar decline primary sources, NATO primary sources, Utah LB - 18050 PB - Opinion Research Corporation PY - 1957 UR - Folder 10, Box 9, Mss 1446, Records of the National Association of Theater Owners (NATO) , Special Collections and Manuscripts, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT. ID - 714 ER - TY - RPRT AB - These annual reports provide information about the motion picture industry's Classification and Rating Administration, including how many movies received G's, PG's, PG-13's, R's, X's, and NC-17's. These reports can be found in the Papers of Richard D. Heffner, Private Collection, New York, N. Y. AU - Administration, Classification and Rating J2 - Annual Reports (1969-1999) KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps censorship and ratings law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship reports reports, CARA CARA, Annual Reports +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and classification motion pictures, and X-rating motion pictures, and censorship motion pictures, and CARA motion pictures, and Richard Heffner Heffner, Richard, and CARA Heffner, Richard, and Annual Reports censorship, and CARA, statistics statistics, and movie rating system (U. S.) Heffner, Richard CARA statistics LB - 19740 ID - 806 ER - TY - RPRT AB - By the late 1960s, American studios made only about five percent of the 3,500 films produced each year worldwide. Television, this report notes, had reached saturation levels in several countries. AU - America, Motion Picture Association of CY - [New York?] DA - June, 1968 J2 - A Year in Review KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration MPAA audiences reports, MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations Valenti, Jack theaters References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps propaganda advertising public relations archives NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA non-USA reports +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures public relations, and MPAA public relations, and motion pictures motion pictures, and public relations MPAA, and public relations reports MPAA, and Annual reports MPAA, and Jack Valenti Valenti, Jack, and MPAA +television television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television motion pictures, and foreign films foreign films television, and foreign films television, and abroad television abroad, and U.S. films primary sources reports primary sources, reports primary sources, MPAA motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad foreign films theaters, and abroad statistics reference works LB - 16520 PB - Motion Picture Association of America PY - 1968 ID - 604 ER - TY - RPRT AB - This MPPDA/MPAA publication went to schools, libraries, churches, exhibitors, and newspapers. It issued age-appropriate ratings for motion pictures between the 1930s and 1960s. AU - America, Motion Picture Association of DA - (1933-1968) J2 - The Green Sheet KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA reports, MPAA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) MPAA NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPPDA motion pictures motion pictures and popular culture classification motion pictures, and age classification motion pictures, and classification MPAA MPAA, and age classification Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) censorship and ratings LB - 21360 ID - 926 ER - TY - RPRT AB - The U. S. Congress funded the Surgeon General’s Scientific Advisory Committee on Television and Social Behavior, and, in 1972, the investment yielded a five-volume examination of TV’s effects on social learning, adolescent aggressiveness, and daily life. Several of the studies in this report indicated that what children learned from television could be good or bad, and that the effects of this learning could be strongly influenced by parents. The studies showed that even though parents were uneasy about what their children learned from TV, they often failed to provide supervision for even the youngest child. In this, the fifth volume, it is reported that the thrust of research conducted in experimental settings confirmed that “more overt aggressive behavior follows exposure to violent content than to nonviolent content or no content.” AU - Comstock, George A., Eli A. Rubinstein, and John P. Murray (eds.) CY - Rockville, MD DA - [1972] J2 - Television and Social Behavior: Reports and Papers. Volume V: Television's Effects: Further Explorations: A Technical Report to the Surgeon General's Scientific Advisory Committee on Television and Social Behavior KW - television, and media effects Surgeon General social science research media effects media violence media effects censorship and ratings children +television violence television, and violence violence, and television violence, and social science research social science research, and violence children, and media +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures Surgeon General's Report (1972) television, and Surgeon General's Report (1972) violence children, and TV violence media effects, and television LB - 20040 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality NV - 5 PB - National Institute of Mental Health RP - See also: violence See also: sexuality T2 - Television and Social Behavior: Reports and Papers ID - 828 ER - TY - RPRT AB - The U. S. Congress funded the Surgeon General’s Scientific Advisory Committee on Television and Social Behavior, and, in 1972, the investment yielded a five-volume examination of TV’s effects on social learning, adolescent aggressiveness, and daily life. Several of the studies in this report indicated that what children learned from television could be good or bad, and that the effects of this learning could be strongly influenced by parents. The studies showed that even though parents were uneasy about what their children learned from TV, they often failed to provide supervision for even the youngest child. This is the fourth volume, and it examines how people use television and the role of television in daily life. AU - Comstock, George A., Eli A. Rubinstein , John P. Murray (eds.) CY - Rockville, MD DA - [1972?] J2 - Television and Social Behavior: Reports and Papers. Volume IV: Television in Day-to-Day Life: Patterns of Use: A Technical Report to the Surgeon General's Scientific Advisory Committee on Television and Social Behavior KW - television, and media effects Surgeon General social science research media effects media violence media effects censorship and ratings children +television violence television, and violence violence, and television violence, and social science research social science research, and violence children, and media +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures Surgeon General's Report (1972) television, and Surgeon General's Report (1972) violence children, and TV violence media effects, and television LB - 21950 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality NV - 4 PB - National Institute of Mental Health RP - See also: violence See also: sexuality T2 - Television and Social Behavior: Reports and Papers ID - 937 ER - TY - RPRT A2 - Comstock, George A. A2 - Rubinstein, Eli A. A2 - eds., John P. Murray AB - This essay in the fourth volume of the 1972 Surgeon General's Report on television violence gives an overview of the research on televised violence. AU - Greenberg, Bradley S. CY - Rockville, MD DA - [1972] J2 - Television and Social Behavior: Reports and Papers. Volume IV: Television in Day-to-Day Life: Patterns of Use: A Technical Report to the Surgeon General's Scientific Advisory Committee on Television and Social Behavior KW - television, and media effects Surgeon General social science research media effects media violence media effects censorship and ratings children +television violence television, and violence violence, and television violence, and social science research social science research, and violence children, and media +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures Surgeon General's Report (1972) television, and Surgeon General's Report (1972) violence children, and TV violence media effects, and television media effects, and TV violence (synthesis) LB - 20060 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality NV - 5 PB - National Institute of Mental Health RP - See also: violence See also: sexuality SP - 1-21 ST - Televised Violence: Further Explorations (Overview) T2 - Television and Social Behavior: Reports and Papers TI - Televised Violence: Further Explorations (Overview) ID - 830 ER - TY - RPRT AB - Eric A. Johnston, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, discusses the role of U. S. films around the world including the Soviet Union. A copy of this material is in Folder 7, Box 6, MS 118, Eric A. Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA. AU - Johnston, Eric CY - New York DA - May, 1958 J2 - What They Say About Us: The Impact of U. S. Motion Pictures Abroad KW - USSR Soviet Union archives primary sources primary sources Cold War war non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad motion pictures, and Soviet Union Soviet Union, and U. S. films Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and U.S. films abroad Johnston, Eric, and Soviet Union motion pictures, and anticommunism Johnston, Eric, and anticommunism motion pictures, and foreign policy Cold War, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Cold War reports primary sources, reports military communication LB - 16790 PB - Motion Picture Association of America PY - 1958 ID - 627 ER - TY - RPRT AB - Eric A. Johnston, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, discusses the role of U. S. films around the world including the Soviet Union. A copy of this material is in Folder 7, Box 6, MS 118, Eric A. Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA AU - Johnston, Eric CY - New York DA - June, 1958 J2 - A Supplement to What They Say About Us: The Impact of U. S. Motion Picture Abroad KW - USSR Soviet Union Cold War war non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad motion pictures, and Soviet Union Soviet Union, and U. S. films Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and U.S. films abroad Johnston, Eric, and Soviet Union motion pictures, and anticommunism Johnston, Eric, and anticommunism motion pictures, and foreign policy Cold War, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Cold War military communication LB - 16800 PB - Motion Picture Association of America PY - 1958 ID - 628 ER - TY - RPRT AB - Eric A. Johnston, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, discusses the role of U. S. films around the world including the Soviet Union. A copy of this material is in Folder 8, Box 6, MS 118, Eric A. Johnston Papers, Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane, WA. AU - Johnston, Eric CY - New York DA - April, 1961 J2 - What They Say About Us: The Impact of U. S. Motion Pictures Abroad KW - USSR Soviet Union archives primary sources Cold War war non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and U.S. films abroad motion pictures, and Soviet Union Soviet Union, and U. S. films Johnston, Eric Johnston, Eric, and U.S. films abroad Johnston, Eric, and Soviet Union motion pictures, and anticommunism Johnston, Eric, and anticommunism motion pictures, and foreign policy Cold War, and motion pictures motion pictures, and Cold War reports primary sources, reports primary sources military communication LB - 16880 PB - Motion Picture Association of America PY - 1961 ID - 636 ER - TY - RPRT AB - The author summarizes the 17-page report, which contains page and half bibliography, as follows: "The administration has increased funding for research and development by 89% since 1981. However, thee increases have been targeted to emphasize basic research, as opposed to applied research; defense R&D, as opposed to civilian R&D; and physical sciences, in preference to behavioral/social/and life sciences. These decisions are justified by the Administration's philosophy, which stresses economic recovery, use of the private sector, enhancing military strength, decreasing the Federal role in favor of the States, and enhancing U. S. technological competitiveness. Current issues of controversy and policy deal with: the long-term future of the Nation's approach to engineering research; national and local capabilities to produce graduate level scientists and technically litrate generalities; Federal support programs for universities, including methods to distribute funding for researhc and facilities, 'centers', and development of productive university-industry relationships that do not jeopardize the freedom of scientific inquiry; development of an economic climate to induce long-range industrial research support; 'centralization' of Federal research and technology support and development efforts; Federal funding cuts for behavioral and social science research; and the impact of national security controls on scientific information." (p. [1]) AU - Knezo, Genevieve J. CY - Washington, D. C. DA - [1988] J2 - Science and Technology Policy and Funding: Reagan Administration (Updated October 28, 1988): CRS Issue Brief KW - R & D nationalism presidents and new media military communication nationalism and communication Reagan, Ronald Reagan administration, and technology research and development Reagan administration, and R&D nationalism, and universities military-industrial-university complex research and development, and universities military-industrial complex Reagan administration LB - 33720 PB - Congressional Research Service, Library of Congress ID - 3010 ER - TY - RPRT AB - This report was put together under a contract with the Department of Justice, Canada, and was attached to Burton Joseph's testimony before the Meese Commission, July 24-25, 1985, in Chicago. Joseph was Playboy's counsel. The report stated flatly that “no systematic research evidence available” suggested a causal relationship between morality and pornography in Canada. Nor did research show that there was a link between explicit materials and such crimes as rape or that viewing such materials harmed the average adult. This survey found “considerable evidence of conceptually cloudy thinking related to virtually every aspect of the work on the impact of pornography.” A copy of this piece is in Folder 22, Box 70, Records of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography, RG 60 (Justice Dept. Records), National Archives and Records Administration (NARA II), College Park, MD. AU - McKay, H. B. AU - Dolff, D. J. CY - Folder 22, Box 70, Records of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography, RG 60 (Justice Dept. Records), NARA II, College Park, MD DA - 1984 KW - syntheses (of research) syntheses sexuality pornography pornography, and supporters pornography, and effects syntheses, and pornography research pornography, and synthesis of research bibliographies, and pornography research pornography, and bibliographies (effects) Joseph, Burton Playboy +bibliographies violence LB - 22840 PY - 1984 ST - The Impact of Pornography: A Decade of Literature TI - The Impact of Pornography: A Decade of Literature ID - 1009 ER - TY - RPRT AB - This report was put together under a contract with the Department of Justice, Canada, and was attached to Burton Joseph's testimony before the Meese Commission, July 24-25, 1985, in Chicago. Joseph was Playboy's counsel. This report summarizes more than 40 articles that appeared between 1970 and 1985, including work by Donnerstein, Malamuth, and Zillman, and was apparently submitted with the Canadian survey by H. B. McKay and D. J. Dolff, but it appears to offer a less clear-cut message about the effects of pornography. AU - Morris, Madeline (prepared by) CY - Folder 22, Box 70, Records of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography, RG 60 (Justice Dept. Records), National Archives and Records Administration (NARA II), College Park, MD KW - syntheses (of research) syntheses sexuality sexuality pornography pornography, and supporters pornography, and effects syntheses, and pornography research pornography, and synthesis of research +bibliographies bibliographies, and pornography research pornography, and bibliographies (effects) Joseph, Burton Playboy LB - 22850 ST - Contemporary Research between 1970 through 1985 Relating to Exposure to Explicit Sexual Material and Aggression or Anti-Social Consequences [Report, 1985] TI - Contemporary Research between 1970 through 1985 Relating to Exposure to Explicit Sexual Material and Aggression or Anti-Social Consequences [Report, 1985] ID - 1010 ER - TY - RPRT AB - When Jack Valenti became president of the Motion Picture Association of America in 1966, he made an effort to revise the industry Production Code. He sought to bring the Code into “harmony with the mores, the culture, the moral sense, and the expectation of ... society.” A primary goal was “to encourage artistic expression by expanding creative freedom.” AU - Motion Picture Association of America, Inc. CY - New York DA - [1966] J2 - The Motion Picture Code of Self-Regulation KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) MPAA self-regulation reports, MPAA Valenti, Jack values censorship and ratings Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code (motion pictures) archives values religion primary sources +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures Production Code (1966) motion pictures, and Production Code (1966) Valenti, Jack, and Production Code (motion pictures) Production Code, and Jack Valenti values, and Production Code (motion pictures) values Production Code LB - 18340 PB - MPAA ST - Declaration of Principles of the Code of Self-Regulation of the Motion Picture Association TI - Declaration of Principles of the Code of Self-Regulation of the Motion Picture Association ID - 737 ER - TY - RPRT AB - This study synthesizes ten years of research since the appearance in 1972 of the Surgeon General's Advisory Committee on Television and Behavior's Report. It notes that during the decade more than 2,500 titles on television and its influences on behavior appeared. With regard to television's relation to violence, "the evidence accumulated in the 1970s seems overwhelming that televised violence and aggression are positively correlated in children." For those who argue that TV violence provides a catharsis, this work concludes that "since practically all of the evidence points to an increase in aggressive behavior, rather than a decrease, the theory is contradicted by the data." AU - Pearl, David AU - Bouthilet, Lorraine AU - (eds.), Joyce Lazar CY - Rockville, MD DA - 1982 (2 volumes) J2 - Television and Behavior: Ten Years of Scientific Progress and Implications for the Eighties. Volume I: Summary Report KW - television, and media effects syntheses (of research) Surgeon General social science research media effects media violence media effects censorship and ratings children +television violence television, and violence violence, and television violence, and social science research social science research, and violence children, and media +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and television television, and motion pictures Surgeon General's Report (1972) television, and Surgeon General's Report (1972) violence children, and TV violence media effects, and television media effects, and TV violence (synthesis) syntheses National Institute of Mental Health, and violence violence, and National Institute of Mental Health media effects, and violence violence, and media effects reports social science research, and TV violence Surgeon General's Report (1972) television, and social science television, and violence violence, and television media effects, and television children, and media children, and TV violence social science research, synthesis (violence) National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) NIMH LB - 21980 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality NV - 1 PB - National Insitute of Mental Health PY - 1982 RP - See also: violence See also: sexuality ID - 940 ER - TY - RPRT AB - This multi-volume Report, begun in 1967 under the Lyndon Johnson administration, found that there were few or no harmful effects from pornography and recommended removing restrictions for adult consumers. Report, published in 1970, issued several significant, if controversial, findings. It concluded that long-term exposure (15 days or more) to erotic materials usually resulted in satiation characterized by a marked decline in sexual arousal and interest in such stimuli. One long-term result of loosening legal controls, therefore, would be to reduce interest in pornography. The 1970 Report said that exposure to pornography seemed to have little or any effect on established attitudes toward sexual morality or sexuality, and in young people it “had no impact upon moral character over and above that of a generally deviant background.” It concluded that being exposed to explicit sexual material played no “significant role” in causing “delinquent or criminal behavior among youth or adults.” The Report was attacked by the Richard Nixon administration and by conservatives. The Meese Commission, which was established during the second Ronald Reagan administration, argued that the 1970 Report had studied pornography before it had been spread by cable and satellite television, and by video cassette recorders and dial-a-porn telephone services. The Meese Commission said that since 1970, pornography had become much more violent and pervasive. AU - Pornography, Commission on Obscenity and CY - Washington, D. C. DA - Sept., 1970 J2 - The Report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography KW - eroticism Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) social science research values sexuality values media effects law censorship and ratings censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and foreign censorship, and foreign obscenity media effects, and pornography pornography, and media effects eroticism, and media effects media effects, and eroticism pornography, and supporters LB - 19250 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - U. S. Government Printing Office PY - 1970 RP - See also: violence See also: sexuality ID - 763 ER - TY - RPRT AB - This is the first volume in the Report by the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. This multi-volume Report, begun in 1967 under the Lyndon Johnson administration, found that there were few or no harmful effects from pornography and recommended removing restrictions for adult consumers. Report, published in 1970, issued several significant, if controversial, findings. It concluded that long-term exposure (15 days or more) to erotic materials usually resulted in satiation characterized by a marked decline in sexual arousal and interest in such stimuli. One long-term result of loosening legal controls, therefore, would be to reduce interest in pornography. The 1970 Report said that exposure to pornography seemed to have little or any effect on established attitudes toward sexual morality or sexuality, and in young people it “had no impact upon moral character over and above that of a generally deviant background.” It concluded that being exposed to explicit sexual material played no “significant role” in causing “delinquent or criminal behavior among youth or adults.” The Report was attacked by the Richard Nixon administration and by conservatives. The Meese Commission, which was established during the second Ronald Reagan administration, argued that the 1970 Report had studied pornography before it had been spread by cable and satellite television, and by video cassette recorders and dial-a-porn telephone services. The Meese Commission said that since 1970, pornography had become much more violent and pervasive. AU - Pornography, Commission on Obscenity and CY - Washington, D. C. DA - [1971] J2 - Technical Report of The Commission on Obscenity and Pornography: Volume I: Preliminary Studies KW - Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) social science research values sexuality values law censorship and ratings censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and foreign censorship, and foreign obscenity media effects LB - 19260 NV - 1 PB - U. S. Government Printing Office ID - 764 ER - TY - RPRT AB - This is the second volume in the Report by the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography, and it focuses on legal issues involving pornography. This multi-volume Report, begun in 1967 under the Lyndon Johnson administration, found that there were few or no harmful effects from pornography and recommended removing restrictions for adult consumers. Report, published in 1970, issued several significant, if controversial, findings. It concluded that long-term exposure (15 days or more) to erotic materials usually resulted in satiation characterized by a marked decline in sexual arousal and interest in such stimuli. One long-term result of loosening legal controls, therefore, would be to reduce interest in pornography. The 1970 Report said that exposure to pornography seemed to have little or any effect on established attitudes toward sexual morality or sexuality, and in young people it “had no impact upon moral character over and above that of a generally deviant background.” It concluded that being exposed to explicit sexual material played no “significant role” in causing “delinquent or criminal behavior among youth or adults.” The Report was attacked by the Richard Nixon administration and by conservatives. The Meese Commission, which was established during the second Ronald Reagan administration, argued that the 1970 Report had studied pornography before it had been spread by cable and satellite television, and by video cassette recorders and dial-a-porn telephone services. The Meese Commission said that since 1970, pornography had become much more violent and pervasive. AU - Pornography, Commission on Obscenity and CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1971 J2 - Technical Report of The Commission on Obscenity and Pornography: Volume II: Legal Analysis KW - Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) social science research values sexuality values law censorship and ratings censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and foreign censorship, and foreign obscenity obscenity, and law pornography, and law law, and obscenity law, and pornography media effects LB - 19270 NV - 2 PB - U. S. Government Printing Office PY - 1971 ID - 765 ER - TY - RPRT AB - This is the third volume in the Report by the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography, and it focuses on the market for pornography that had come into existence by the late 1960s. This multi-volume Report, begun in 1967 under the Lyndon Johnson administration, found that there were few or no harmful effects from pornography and recommended removing restrictions for adult consumers. Report, published in 1970, issued several significant, if controversial, findings. It concluded that long-term exposure (15 days or more) to erotic materials usually resulted in satiation characterized by a marked decline in sexual arousal and interest in such stimuli. One long-term result of loosening legal controls, therefore, would be to reduce interest in pornography. The 1970 Report said that exposure to pornography seemed to have little or any effect on established attitudes toward sexual morality or sexuality, and in young people it “had no impact upon moral character over and above that of a generally deviant background.” It concluded that being exposed to explicit sexual material played no “significant role” in causing “delinquent or criminal behavior among youth or adults.” The Report was attacked by the Richard Nixon administration and by conservatives. The Meese Commission, which was established during the second Ronald Reagan administration, argued that the 1970 Report had studied pornography before it had been spread by cable and satellite television, and by video cassette recorders and dial-a-porn telephone services. The Meese Commission said that since 1970, pornography had become much more violent and pervasive. AU - Pornography, Commission on Obscenity and CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1971 J2 - Technical Report of The Commission on Obscenity and Pornography: Volume III: The Marketplace: The Industry KW - Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) social science research values sexuality values law censorship and ratings censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and foreign censorship, and foreign obscenity media effects LB - 19280 NV - 3 PB - U. S. Government Printing Office PY - 1971 ID - 766 ER - TY - RPRT AB - This National Survey on pornography is the sixth volume in the Report by the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. This multi-volume Report, begun in 1967 under the Lyndon Johnson administration, found that there were few or no harmful effects from pornography and recommended removing restrictions for adult consumers. Report, published in 1970, issued several significant, if controversial, findings. It concluded that long-term exposure (15 days or more) to erotic materials usually resulted in satiation characterized by a marked decline in sexual arousal and interest in such stimuli. One long-term result of loosening legal controls, therefore, would be to reduce interest in pornography. The 1970 Report said that exposure to pornography seemed to have little or any effect on established attitudes toward sexual morality or sexuality, and in young people it “had no impact upon moral character over and above that of a generally deviant background.” It concluded that being exposed to explicit sexual material played no “significant role” in causing “delinquent or criminal behavior among youth or adults.” The Report was attacked by the Richard Nixon administration and by conservatives. The Meese Commission, which was established during the second Ronald Reagan administration, argued that the 1970 Report had studied pornography before it had been spread by cable and satellite television, and by video cassette recorders and dial-a-porn telephone services. The Meese Commission said that since 1970, pornography had become much more violent and pervasive. AU - Pornography, Commission on Obscenity and CY - Washington, D. C. DA - [1971] J2 - Technical Report of The Commission on Obscenity and Pornography: Volume VI: National Survey KW - Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) social science research values sexuality values law censorship and ratings censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and foreign censorship, and foreign obscenity media effects LB - 19290 NV - 6 PB - U. S. Government Printing Office ID - 767 ER - TY - RPRT AB - This is the seventh volume in the Report by the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography and focuses on the relationship between erotica and anti-social behavior. This multi-volume Report, begun in 1967 under the Lyndon Johnson administration, found that there were few or no harmful effects from pornography and recommended removing restrictions for adult consumers. Report, published in 1970, issued several significant, if controversial, findings. It concluded that long-term exposure (15 days or more) to erotic materials usually resulted in satiation characterized by a marked decline in sexual arousal and interest in such stimuli. One long-term result of loosening legal controls, therefore, would be to reduce interest in pornography. The 1970 Report said that exposure to pornography seemed to have little or any effect on established attitudes toward sexual morality or sexuality, and in young people it “had no impact upon moral character over and above that of a generally deviant background.” It concluded that being exposed to explicit sexual material played no “significant role” in causing “delinquent or criminal behavior among youth or adults.” The Report was attacked by the Richard Nixon administration and by conservatives. The Meese Commission, which was established during the second Ronald Reagan administration, argued that the 1970 Report had studied pornography before it had been spread by cable and satellite television, and by video cassette recorders and dial-a-porn telephone services. The Meese Commission said that since 1970, pornography had become much more violent and pervasive. AU - Pornography, Commission on Obscenity and CY - Washington, D. C. DA - [1971] J2 - Technical Report of The Commission on Obscenity and Pornography: Volume VII: Erotica and Antisocial Behavior KW - Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) social science research values sexuality values media effects law censorship and ratings censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and foreign censorship, and foreign obscenity pornography, and antisocial behavior media effects, and pornography pornography, and effects LB - 19300 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality NV - 7 PB - U. S. Government Printing Office RP - See also: violence See also: sexuality ID - 768 ER - TY - RPRT AB - This is the eighth volume in the Report by the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography and focuses what influence erotica might have on social behavior. This multi-volume Report, begun in 1967 under the Lyndon Johnson administration, found that there were few or no harmful effects from pornography and recommended removing restrictions for adult consumers. Report, published in 1970, issued several significant, if controversial, findings. It concluded that long-term exposure (15 days or more) to erotic materials usually resulted in satiation characterized by a marked decline in sexual arousal and interest in such stimuli. One long-term result of loosening legal controls, therefore, would be to reduce interest in pornography. The 1970 Report said that exposure to pornography seemed to have little or any effect on established attitudes toward sexual morality or sexuality, and in young people it “had no impact upon moral character over and above that of a generally deviant background.” It concluded that being exposed to explicit sexual material played no “significant role” in causing “delinquent or criminal behavior among youth or adults.” The Report was attacked by the Richard Nixon administration and by conservatives. The Meese Commission, which was established during the second Ronald Reagan administration, argued that the 1970 Report had studied pornography before it had been spread by cable and satellite television, and by video cassette recorders and dial-a-porn telephone services. The Meese Commission said that since 1970, pornography had become much more violent and pervasive. AU - Pornography, Commission on Obscenity and CY - Washington, D. C. DA - [1971] J2 - Technical Report of The Commission on Obscenity and Pornography: Volume VIII: Erotica and Social Behavior KW - Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) social science research values sexuality values media effects law censorship and ratings censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and foreign censorship, and foreign obscenity pornography, and behavior media effects, and pornography pornography, and effects LB - 19310 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality NV - 8 PB - U. S. Government Printing Office RP - See also: violence See also: sexuality ID - 769 ER - TY - RPRT AB - This is the ninth volume in the Report by the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography and focuses on who were the consumers of pornography and pornography's place in the community. This multi-volume Report, begun in 1967 under the Lyndon Johnson administration, found that there were few or no harmful effects from pornography and recommended removing restrictions for adult consumers. Report, published in 1970, issued several significant, if controversial, findings. It concluded that long-term exposure (15 days or more) to erotic materials usually resulted in satiation characterized by a marked decline in sexual arousal and interest in such stimuli. One long-term result of loosening legal controls, therefore, would be to reduce interest in pornography. The 1970 Report said that exposure to pornography seemed to have little or any effect on established attitudes toward sexual morality or sexuality, and in young people it “had no impact upon moral character over and above that of a generally deviant background.” It concluded that being exposed to explicit sexual material played no “significant role” in causing “delinquent or criminal behavior among youth or adults.” The Report was attacked by the Richard Nixon administration and by conservatives. The Meese Commission, which was established during the second Ronald Reagan administration, argued that the 1970 Report had studied pornography before it had been spread by cable and satellite television, and by video cassette recorders and dial-a-porn telephone services. The Meese Commission said that since 1970, pornography had become much more violent and pervasive. AU - Pornography, Commission on Obscenity and CY - Washington, D. C. DA - [1971] J2 - Technical Report of The Commission on Obscenity and Pornography: Volume IX: The Consumer and the Community KW - Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) social science research values sexuality values media effects values community law censorship and ratings censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography motion pictures motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and foreign censorship, and foreign obscenity pornography, and antisocial behavior media effects, and pornography pornography, and effects community standards, and pornography pornography, and community standards community, and pornography LB - 19320 NV - 9 PB - U. S. Government Printing Office ID - 770 ER - TY - RPRT AB - This is the fourth volume in the Report by the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography and focuses on empirical research that had been done about the market for pornography. This multi-volume Report, begun in 1967 under the Lyndon Johnson administration, found that there were few or no harmful effects from pornography and recommended removing restrictions for adult consumers. Report, published in 1970, issued several significant, if controversial, findings. It concluded that long-term exposure (15 days or more) to erotic materials usually resulted in satiation characterized by a marked decline in sexual arousal and interest in such stimuli. One long-term result of loosening legal controls, therefore, would be to reduce interest in pornography. The 1970 Report said that exposure to pornography seemed to have little or any effect on established attitudes toward sexual morality or sexuality, and in young people it “had no impact upon moral character over and above that of a generally deviant background.” It concluded that being exposed to explicit sexual material played no “significant role” in causing “delinquent or criminal behavior among youth or adults.” The Report was attacked by the Richard Nixon administration and by conservatives. The Meese Commission, which was established during the second Ronald Reagan administration, argued that the 1970 Report had studied pornography before it had been spread by cable and satellite television, and by video cassette recorders and dial-a-porn telephone services. The Meese Commission said that since 1970, pornography had become much more violent and pervasive. AU - Pornography, Commission on Obscenity and CY - Washington, D. C. DA - 1970 J2 - Technical Report of The Commission on Obscenity and Pornography: Volume IV: The Marketplace: Empirical Studies KW - Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) social science research values sexuality values media effects values community law censorship and ratings censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and foreign censorship, and foreign obscenity pornography, and antisocial behavior media effects, and pornography pornography, and effects community standards, and pornography pornography, and community standards pornography, and marketplace LB - 19330 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality NV - 4 PB - U. S. Government Printing Office PY - 1970 RP - See also: violence See also: sexuality ID - 771 ER - TY - RPRT AB - This is the fifth volume in the Report by the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography and focuses on society's mechanism for controlling erotica. This multi-volume Report, begun in 1967 under the Lyndon Johnson administration, found that there were few or no harmful effects from pornography and recommended removing restrictions for adult consumers. Report, published in 1970, issued several significant, if controversial, findings. It concluded that long-term exposure (15 days or more) to erotic materials usually resulted in satiation characterized by a marked decline in sexual arousal and interest in such stimuli. One long-term result of loosening legal controls, therefore, would be to reduce interest in pornography. The 1970 Report said that exposure to pornography seemed to have little or any effect on established attitudes toward sexual morality or sexuality, and in young people it “had no impact upon moral character over and above that of a generally deviant background.” It concluded that being exposed to explicit sexual material played no “significant role” in causing “delinquent or criminal behavior among youth or adults.” The Report was attacked by the Richard Nixon administration and by conservatives. The Meese Commission, which was established during the second Ronald Reagan administration, argued that the 1970 Report had studied pornography before it had been spread by cable and satellite television, and by video cassette recorders and dial-a-porn telephone services. The Meese Commission said that since 1970, pornography had become much more violent and pervasive. AU - Pornography, Commission on Obscenity and CY - Washington, D. C. DA - [1971] J2 - Technical Report of The Commission on Obscenity and Pornography: Volume V: Societal Control Mechanisms KW - Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (1970) social science research social control values sexuality values media effects values community law censorship and ratings censorship pornography censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship motion pictures, and pornography +motion pictures +motion pictures and popular culture Commission on Obscenity and Pornography pornography, and social science social science research, and pornography pornography, and government pornography, and Johnson administration pornography, and Nixon administration obscenity, and pornography censorship, and obscenity obscenity, and censorship pornography, and foreign censorship, and foreign obscenity pornography, and antisocial behavior media effects, and pornography pornography, and effects community standards, and pornography pornography, and community standards pornography, and social control social control, and pornography law, and pornography pornography, and law LB - 19340 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality PB - U. S. Government Printing Office RP - See also: violence See also: sexuality ID - 772 ER - TY - RPRT AB - These statistics put out by the Motion Picture Association of America show how many United States households had basic cable television over a period of years. This was Slide 37 of 44. AU - Research, MPAA Worldwide Market DA - 2001 J2 - 2001 US Economic Review KW - reference works Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment Classification and Rating Administration MPAA entertainment, home CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric motion pictures home entertainment home websites television home entertainment revolution television, and cable cable cable, and television MPAA MPAA, and home entertainment MPAA, and cable new media, and motion pictures motion pictures, and new media MPAA, and new media new media, and MPAA reports cable, basic websites statistics home, and new media LB - 22630 PY - 2001 ST - US Basic Cable Households TI - US Basic Cable Households ID - 990 ER - TY - RPRT AB - Slide 40 of 44. These statistics put out by the Motion Picture Association of America show how many United States households had satellite television over a period of years. AU - Research, MPAA Worldwide Market DA - 2001 J2 - 2001 US Economic Review KW - reference works Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment Classification and Rating Administration MPAA entertainment, home CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric motion pictures home entertainment home websites +television home entertainment revolution television, and satellites +satellites satellites, and television MPAA MPAA, and home entertainment MPAA, and satellites new media, and motion pictures motion pictures, and new media MPAA, and new media new media, and MPAA reports websites statistics home, and new media +aeronautics and space communication LB - 22640 PY - 2001 ST - Satellite Households TI - Satellite Households UR - http://www.mpaa.org/useconomicreview/ ID - 991 ER - TY - RPRT AB - Slide 39 of 44. These statistics put out by the Motion Picture Association of America show how many United States households had pay cable television over a period of years. AU - Research, MPAA Worldwide Market DA - 2001 J2 - 2001 US Economic Review KW - reference works Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment Classification and Rating Administration MPAA entertainment, home CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps new media NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric motion pictures home entertainment home websites +television home entertainment revolution television, and cable cable cable, and television MPAA MPAA, and home entertainment MPAA, and pay cable new media, and motion pictures motion pictures, and new media MPAA, and new media new media, and MPAA reports cable, pay websites statistics home, and new media LB - 22660 PY - 2001 ST - US Pay Cable Households TI - US Pay Cable Households UR - http://www.mpaa.org/useconomicreview/ ID - 993 ER - TY - RPRT AB - The American Civil Liberties Union condemned the motion picture industry's rating system, calling it an effort to “homogenize the content” of media and “a private combination of power” that limited “the marketplace of ideas in film.” AD - Document 88-14A, in Richard D. Heffner, "Pre-Oral History Memo for 1988," Box 4, Richard D. Heffner Papers, Columbia Oral History Collection, Butler Library, Columbia University, New York, NY AU - Union, American Civil Liberties DA - [1988] J2 - Rating Systems Sponsored by the Communications Industries, Policy #18 KW - Classification and Rating Administration CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) motion pictures and popular culture ACLU censorship and ratings ACLU, and censorship CARA, and ACLU ACLU, and CARA censorship, and ACLU censorship, and CARA CARA, and censorship Heffner, Richard Heffner, Richard, and ACLU CARA motion pictures censorship LB - 29300 ID - 2699 ER - TY - RPRT AB - In this report, Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, discusses the extent of movie piracy worldwide and notes that increasingly such illegal activity was using videotape. Video piracy seemed especially egregious in areas where there was a certain level of wealth, poor local TV service, and few other recreational opportunities. It was common in the Middle East, South Africa, areas in the South China Sea region and in the Caribbean, Colombia and Venezuela. American and European hotels, Italian television stations, and Malaysian coffee houses openly showed pirated videotaped films. To make matters worse, local authorities abroad were often reluctant to act against the culprits and generally regarded video piracy as a “necessary evil," Valenti told studio executives. AU - Valenti, Jack DA - Folder: "Motion Picture Association of America: Rating Sheets," Motion Picture and Television Reading Room, Library of Congress, Washington, D. C. J2 - Report on the Worldwide Operation of Our Film Piracy Program [Aug. 30, 1979] KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration piracy MPAA CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) magnetic recording National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) video piracy archives NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA videotape magnetic tape non-USA reports reports, MPAA primary sources primary sources, Washington, D.C. primary sources, Library of Congress +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures motion pictures, and video piracy video piracy, and MPAA MPAA, and video piracy Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack, and video piracy Valenti, Jack, and MPAA reports, Jack Valenti motion pictures, and U. S. films abroad copyright LB - 20120 ID - 836 ER - TY - THES AB - Abstract from UMI ProQuest Digital Dissertations: "Policy analysts and economists have frequently criticized the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for delaying the commercial launch of cellular communications in the United States. This study looks at the evolution of the wireless industry in the U.S. from the end of World War II to the commercial launch of cellular service in 1983. It focuses on three arenas -- technology, politics and the market. It argues that competitive forces unleashed by the federal government in 1946 shaped the path and pace of innovation and conditioned the coevolution of four core economic and political institutions: AT&T, Motorola, the association of Radio Common Carriers, and the FCC. AU - Abrahamson, Eric John DA - 2003 KW - corporations corporations Federal Communications Commission (FCC) theses telephones telephones, cellular AT&T FCC telephones,and FCC FCC, and telephones wireless communication telephones, wireless communication telephones, mobile telephones, regulation regulation LB - 33530 PB - Johns Hopkins University PY - 2003 ST - Hear Me Now: Competition, Regulation, and the Pace of Innovation in Mobile Telephony in the United States, 1945-1984 TI - Hear Me Now: Competition, Regulation, and the Pace of Innovation in Mobile Telephony in the United States, 1945-1984 ID - 2992 ER - TY - THES AB - Battema writes that his doctoral thesis “explores the political, cultural, economic, and industrial uses to which U. S. broadcast television networks put the Olympic Games from 1960 through 1988. From 1956, when the Melbourne Games bypassed network distribution through syndication, the major broadcast networks have used ownership of exclusive Olympic rights to build and to shape viewing audiences, to attract advertising dollars, and to fulfill or to satisfy governmental initiatives, policies, and doctrines. During the period examined, the networks used the Olympics to experiment with and refine narrative techniques and technological innovations, to establish and maintain corporate identities, and to assert their legitimacy and responsibility as stewards of the public airwaves by contradicting critics who alleged that the television industry was unwilling to provide ‘quality’ programming. As the networks’ dominance began to wane with the expansion of cable and satellite television, the Olympics became an even more highly-valued television property that helped the broadcast networks retain their prominence within the industry. “Drawing on television industry sources and Olympics archives as well as popular sports journalism, this dissertation addresses critical gaps within the fields of television studies, media history, and sports studies.” This doctoral thesis was completed in the Department of Communication Arts at the University of Wisconsin. AU - Battema, Douglas L. CY - Madison DA - 2003 KW - +television theses Ph.D. thesis television, and sports cable cable television, and sports television, and satellites satellite television, and sports +aeronautics and space communication advertising advertising and public relations advertising, and TVsports television, and advertising satellites LB - 28640 PB - University of Wisconsin, Madison PY - 2003 ST - Going for the Gold: A History of the Olympic Games and U. S. Television, 1956-1988 TI - Going for the Gold: A History of the Olympic Games and U. S. Television, 1956-1988 ID - 833 ER - TY - THES AB - Abstract from UMI ProQuest Digital Dissertations: "Grace Murray Hopper (1906 - 1991) was a mathematician, teacher, naval officer, programmer, inventor, leader, and computer visionary. She lived a life worthy of reflection, and her story serves as a vehicle to address a variety of themes in the history of programming and computing. The following is an archive-based account that documents Hopper's career in computer programming from 1944 to 1960. Hopper was a pivotal figure in the early years of computing; therefore, an understanding of her achievements shed light on the evolution of programming techniques, computer language innovation, and the interrelationship between computer hardware and software. Second, the account tracks the development of the community of people who came to refer to themselves as programmers and identifies Hopper's role within that community. Finally, Hopper's case helps to analyze how notions of gender shaped women's opportunities within the nascent computer field. The study explains why certain women such as Hopper were able to rise to preeminent positions within computing in the face of growing post-war antipathy in America towards women in the workplace. Hopper's story should garner interest from a wide audience, including historians of science and technology, military historians, computer scientists, and women studies scholars." AU - Beyer, Kurt William DA - 2002 KW - computers theses computers and the Internet women computers, and women women, and computers computers LB - 33520 PB - University of California, Berkeley PY - 2002 ST - Grace Hopper and the Early History of Computer Programming, 1944-1960 TI - Grace Hopper and the Early History of Computer Programming, 1944-1960 ID - 2991 ER - TY - THES AB - This doctoral thesis examines the activities of three grassroots feminist organizations, Women Against Violence Against Women (WAVAW), Women Against Violence in Pornography and Media (WAVPM), and Women Against Pornography (WAP). The groups had disparate goals. WAVAW was essential opposed to violence more than to pornography. WAP targeted pornography and exhibited pro-censorship tendencies that alarmed feminist who were advocates of free speech and who were pro-sex. By 1986, the feminist anti-pornography movement had lost much of its political clout. This work also has a discussion of changes sexual attitudes during the 1960s and 1970s, as well as the role that new media technologies (e.g., cable and video recording) played in these changes. AU - Bronstein, Carolyn CY - Madison, WI DA - 2001 KW - women, and new media theses sexuality new media media effects media violence violence First Amendment women feminism freedom law censorship and ratings censorship pornography women feminists women, and pornography feminists, and pornography pornography, and feminists pornography, and women Dworkin, Andrea MacKinnon, Catharine WAVPM Women Against Pornography (WAV) WAVAW pornography, and opponents censorship, and pornography pornography, and censorship First Amendment, and pornography First Amendment, and feminists feminists, and First Amendment women, and violence violence, and women feminists, and violence violence, and feminists Brownmiller, Susan new media, and pornography pornography, and new media theses theses, Ph.D. LB - 22550 PB - doctoral thesis, University of Wisconsin PY - 2001 ST - Porn Tours: The Rise and Fall of the American Feminist Anti-Pornography Movement TI - Porn Tours: The Rise and Fall of the American Feminist Anti-Pornography Movement ID - 983 ER - TY - THES AB - A 569-page Ph. D. thesis. See DAI-A 51/02, p. 330, Aug. 1990. AU - Carbonara, Corey Patrick DA - 1989 KW - theses +television theses, Ph. D. television, and new technology LB - 10140 PB - University of Texas, Austin PY - 1989 SP - 569 pp. ST - A Historical Perspective of Management, Technology, and Innovation in the American Television Industry TI - A Historical Perspective of Management, Technology, and Innovation in the American Television Industry ID - 2379 ER - TY - THES AB - Abstract for this doctoral dissertation is from UMI ProQuest Digital Dissertations: "This dissertation is an environmental history of American cartography. It focuses on a family of applied field scientists who mapped the natural and economic landscapes of their diverse and rapidly developing nation. The geographical knowledge they produced had a dual character. It both facilitated the on-going development of the American landmass, and was itself a concrete development of field scientists' work within particular places, environments, and regions. From 1890 to 1950, a distinctive historical-geographical frontier for this kind of knowledge opened up which the cohort of mappers learned to exploit. The knowledge they created still informs our pictures of American resources, limits, and diversity. The dissertation makes three related historiographical contributions. First, it draws attention to an important kind of fieldwork. Mapping's constitutive practices (traversing, measuring, bounding, classifying) have their own distinctive histories that have gone largely ignored. These practices were in fact career strategies with their own virtues and pitfalls that grew apparent over time and in different places. Second, the dissertation fills a gap in the social history of cartography. Most histories of American cartography focus on the famous expeditions of the nineteenth century, not on the twentieth century's explosion in scientific and commercial maps. Similarly, most focus on maps' aesthetics, not on the environmental and institutional conditions of their production and use. Treating maps as technologies, as specialized social tools with origins in specific physical places, illuminates these neglected themes. Finally, the dissertation makes a contribution to our notions of public works, applied science, and development in general. Numerous spatial transformations unfolded upon American landscapes in this period; road networks, suburbs, airports, and planned regional developments were only a few. Intensive, detailed maps were a crucial component of this historical-geographical package. Indeed, land-use mapping itself evolved as a distinctive form of land use suited to environmental conditions in the post-frontier republic. The knowledge embodied in such maps, while always contingent upon local practices and places, actually played a basic role in the nation's physical and economic development." AU - Checkovich, Alex DA - 2004 KW - visual communication theses visual culture cartography visual culture, and maps geography, and cartography geography maps references, statistics, timelines, maps LB - 33410 PB - University of Pennsylvania PY - 2004 ST - Mapping the American Way: Geographical Knowledge and the Development f the United States, 1890-1950 TI - Mapping the American Way: Geographical Knowledge and the Development f the United States, 1890-1950 ID - 2980 ER - TY - THES AB - Although the history of photography in Taiwan began during the nineteenth century, studies on history and theory of photography in Taiwan are still tenuous. This master thesis seeks to be a history of photography in Taiwan during the Japanese colonization, and attempts to understand how photography (hsiejan-shiashin) developed within political, economic, and social perspectives. The study starts with locally published photographic albums as analytical subjects, and then focuses particularly on the work by the Taiwanese photographers. The author finds that during the Japanese colonial period, photographers tended to belong to higher social classes. Many characteristics of contemporary Taiwanese photography have roots in the colonial period, such as collection of photographs by the ruling class and the nature of amateurism. One interesting finding of this study is that the emergence of salon photography during the Japanese colonial period was due to the escapism from the government’s surveillance. Because Japanese photographers residing in Taiwan were sent back to Japan after the second World War, academic or practical photographic techniques during the Japanese colonization gradually disappear. Photography shifted drastically as more photographers arrived from Mainland China, thus creating differences in techniques and aesthetics between the two periods. -- Amy Chu AU - Chen, Jiunn-Shyong CY - Taipei, Taiwan DA - 1995 KW - nationalism imperialism photography cultural imperialism non-USA Chu, Amy Masters thesis theses +photography and visual communication Taiwan Taiwan, and photography photography, and Taiwan Japan Japan, and Taiwan photography, and Japan (in Taiwan) Japan, and photography +nationalism and communication nationalism, and photography cultural imperialism, and Japan photography, and China (in Taiwan) LB - 640 PB - Master's Thesis, Catholic Fu-Jen University (Fu-Jen ta hsue) PY - 1995 ST - The Development of Photography under the Government of Japan in Formosa (Jihchu shichi de Taiwan hsiejan fachang) TI - The Development of Photography under the Government of Japan in Formosa (Jihchu shichi de Taiwan hsiejan fachang) ID - 152 ER - TY - THES AB - In the beginning, photography and motion picture aimed to record slices of real life. However, as they were developed into the realm of art, the subjects inevitably departed from reality and gradually became incorporated with verbal language. And motion pictures, through editing processes, offered different imagery worlds. This master thesis studies the development of photography and motion pictures. Based on the emergence of different aesthetic theories and ontology, this research searches for the conversation on the concept of “reality” and explores the relationship between these media in terms of theories, technological innovations, and practices. Within the interaction between the two media, this study also attempts to find the conceptual and empirical reciprocity, and then returns to Hastrup’s skepticism of the “truthfulness” of imageries. --Amy Chu AU - Chiu, Chi-Lin CY - Taipei, Taiwan DA - 1997 KW - photography motion pictures non-USA Chu, Amy Masters thesis theses Taiwan +photography and visual communication photography, and reality (Taiwan) +motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures, and Taiwan LB - 630 PB - Master's Thesis, Catholic Fu-Jen University (Fu-Jen ta hsue) PY - 1997 ST - Photography and Cinema: The Concept of "Reality" and Its Discursive Transformation (Sheying yu Tianyin: Jangshi gainian de luanshu yangbian) TI - Photography and Cinema: The Concept of "Reality" and Its Discursive Transformation (Sheying yu Tianyin: Jangshi gainian de luanshu yangbian) ID - 151 ER - TY - THES AB - This two-volume doctoral thesis offer a detailed study of Warner Bros.'s efforts to promote patriotism and military preparedness during the 1930s up to the attack on Pearl Harbor. The work is based on exhaustive research in the Warner Bros. Historical Archives at the University of Southern California. It provides a gold mine of information on the studio's political activities. AU - Colgan, Christine CY - Los Angeles, CA DA - 1985 KW - nationalism motion pictures motion pictures, and Warner Bros. military communication nationalism and communication motion pictures, and military motion pictures, and nationalism motion pictures, and patriotism Warner Bros., and government theses Warner Bros. LB - 33060 PB - University of Southern California PY - 1985 SP - 2 volumes ST - Warner Bros.' Crusade Against the Third Reich: A Study of Anti-Nazi Activism and Film Production, 1933-1941 TI - Warner Bros.' Crusade Against the Third Reich: A Study of Anti-Nazi Activism and Film Production, 1933-1941 ID - 2943 ER - TY - THES AB - This Abstract from UMI ProQuest Digital Dissertations: "This dissertation pursues recent themes from the historiography of early modern science in early North American history to explore the ways in which North Americans sought enlightenment through electrical experiment between roughly 1745 and 1810. Including, but moving beyond the figure of Benjamin Franklin, it examines interactions between electricity and the human body in the construction of natural philosophy, the presentation of electrical knowledge through public demonstrations, the development of the lightning rod, political discourse during the era of the American Revolution, and a variety of programmes for manipulating electricity as a resource for medical therapy. It describes a North American Enlightenment made through material-cultural practice, and the interaction of bodies and artificial machines, as described by a variety of eighteenth-century discourses: technical (principally natural philosophy, physiology and therapeutics), social (from polite self-improvement to revolutionary republicanism and the humanitarian dissemination of useful knowledge), and religious (from physico-theology to Providentialism and Protestant millenarianism). The dissertation thus addresses not only the question of how North Americans understood the relationship between electricity and the body, but also why they believed this relationship to be important. In addition, it elucidates the ways in which electrical knowledge and practice functioned across the ostensibly distinct realms of science, medicine and technology, by attending to the reciprocities between heterogeneous fields and practices and their common dependence on philosophical apparatus (scientific instruments)." AU - Delbourgo, James DA - 2003 KW - theses electricity electricty, and enlightenment Franklin, Benjamin, and electricity electricity, and medicine Franklin, Benjamin LB - 33560 PB - Columbia University PY - 2003 ST - Electricity, Experiment, and Enlightenment in Eighteenth-Century North America TI - Electricity, Experiment, and Enlightenment in Eighteenth-Century North America ID - 2995 ER - TY - THES AB - Abstract for the Ph. D. thesis from UMI ProQuest Digital Dissertations: " This dissertation traces the history of children's programming during the first two decades of commercial television broadcasting. Children's programming serves as a lens through which to see interactions between industry, critics and audience as they grappled over television's proper approach to children. It complicates our understanding of the television industry by showing how broadcasters and marketers struggled to make children's audiences commercially viable. It also examines the complex responses to the medium among a public growing increasingly uneasy about children's use of television even as it became more entrenched in everyday American life. The history of children's television illuminates the changing nature of American childhood, too. Whereas Victorian ideals once constructed children as removed from the pressures of the market, by the late 20th century most Americans considered market participation to be a natural part of childhood. Television accelerated this transformation. The medium gave marketers unprecedented ability to teach children the manners and mores of consumer culture, awakening in them previously unfelt needs and coaching them in specifying their desires. Television taught businesspeople to cultivate children as a market segment. Likewise, the industry's critics went through a learning process as they discovered means for understanding and attempting to counteract what they perceived as television's dangers. The analysis proceeds chronologically. Early chapters discuss the rationale behind 'loss leader' children's programs such as Howdy Doody, Kukla, Fran and Ollie, Ding Dong School and Captain Kangaroo in television's infancy. They also examine high hopes parents, educators, government officials and others concerned with children's issues placed on television. Later chapters explain how children's programming became profitable, especially with the rise of low-budget cartoons, and examine how children's advocates struggled to come to terms with the ubiquitous medium. The final chapters give extended attention to the creation of Sesame Street. Arguably the world's most important children's program, Sesame Street holds special interest because its creators believed advertising techniques had become the most effective means to educate children. Just as toy companies used television to sell toys, Sesame Street used it to 'sell' knowledge." AU - Downing, J. Spencer DA - 2003 KW - children theses children values television television, and children children, and television media effects media effects, and children children, and media effects capitalism capitalism, and television capitalism, and children advertising and public relations advertising, and children children, and TV advertising advertising capitalism children, and media LB - 33470 PB - University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill PY - 2003 ST - What TV Taught: Children's Television and Consumer Culture from Howdy Doody to Sesame Street TI - What TV Taught: Children's Television and Consumer Culture from Howdy Doody to Sesame Street ID - 2986 ER - TY - THES AB - Abstract for this Ph. D. thesis is from UMP ProQuest Digital Dissertations: "What does it mean to describe a video art installation as interactive? This dissertation provides a historical account of several interactive video art installations exhibited in American museums and galleries in the United States from 1969 to the present. Video art is placed within two trajectories -- the post World War II American avant-garde on the one hand, and new media and information technology on the other. Chapter 1 situates video's emergence during a period of mixed reactions to new technologies, as the increased presence of computers contributed to fears that machines would soon replace their human counterparts. During this period of oppositions to the Vietnam War, video activists saw the portable camera, with its capacity for immediate transmission and feedback as a tool for talking back to the 'establishment' by challenging the one-way transmission of broadcast television. This chapter examines video activists' attempts to provide alternative broadcasting in relation to Frankfurt School media critiques. Chapter 2 positions video in the context of other art movements of the late 1960s, such as minimalism and conceptual art, performance and body art and avant-garde film, all of which focused on the interpretive contributions of the viewer. It considers the disparate approaches to video exemplified by artists such as Bruce Nauman, Vito Acconci, Joan Jonas, Dan Graham, Peter Campus and Martha Rosler. Video is identified as a new avant-garde at a time when critics initiated a fundamental reconsideration of the very existence of a post-World War II American avant-garde. Chapter 3 focuses on the work of Bill Viola and Gary Hill. Viola's and Hill's work is explored in relation to the debates surrounding postmodernism and Fredric Jameson's claim video is postmodernism's most distinctive new medium. By the mid-1980s, interactivity no longer implied an effort to create an egalitarian exchange with the viewer but rather referred to the creation of immersive spaces that the viewer temporarily inhabits. This shift called for a greater level of passivity from the viewers, as the challenge of soliciting the viewer's equal participation, remains unresolved." AU - Falkenberg, Merrill Brooke DA - 2002 KW - interactivity art theses video art cameras cameras, potable videotape magnetic recording art, and video interactive media video magnetic tape LB - 33440 PB - Stanford University PY - 2002 ST - Circuits of Exchange: The Myth of Interactivity in Video Art TI - Circuits of Exchange: The Myth of Interactivity in Video Art ID - 2983 ER - TY - THES AB - Abstract from UMP ProQuests Digital Dissertations: "This dissertation revises the traditional 'great man' history of frequency modulation (FM) radio. For half a century, FM has been assumed to be solely the revolutionary brainchild of the 'lone wolf' genius, Edwin Howard Armstrong, who invented 'wideband' FM radio in 1933. In fact, the development of FM was more an evolutionary than revolutionary process. The concept of frequency modulation radio dates to 1902, and soon after that year, thousands of wireless operators incorporated frequency modulation radiotelegraphy into their normal practice. Interest in FM radiotelephony first took root two decades later, when some engineers hoped to alleviate several technical problems spawned by the broadcasting boom of the early 1920s. Little of their work proved fruitful, however, partly because FM research was dispersed among several laboratories. In 1928, however, an organizational shift in the U.S. radio manufacturing industry caused FM research efforts to be consolidated into the Radio Corporation of America (RCA). Armstrong, who enjoyed a close relationship with RCA, learned about that work and used the knowledge to accelerate the development of wideband FM. This study illuminates the social-technical dynamic of FM specifically, and technological development in general, by examining the roles of three communities: (1)RCA engineers, whose successes and failures with FM informed Armstrong's choices, (2)amateur radio culture, which helped educate the generation of men who developed FM radio after 1920, and (3) 'FM pioneers' broadcasters whom Armstrong recruited to back and promote his system, after RCA declined to do so. FM pioneers also helped discover several advantages of Armstrong's system that had eluded him. It was FM pioneers also, and not Armstrong, who persuaded the FCC to establish the first commercial FM broadcast service in 1940. Thus, the inventor of wideband FM was no lone wolf inventor, but rather a first-among-equals “heterogeneous engineer” who invented and obtained acceptance for his version of an idea that had been evolving unsteadily for forty years." AU - Frost, Gary Lewis CY - Chapel Hill DA - 2004 KW - FM radio theses radio radio, FM frequency modulation (FM radio) Armstrong, Edwin RCA, and FM radio RCA LB - 33380 PB - University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill PY - 2004 ST - The Evolution of Frequency Modulation Radio, 1902-1940 TI - The Evolution of Frequency Modulation Radio, 1902-1940 ID - 2977 ER - TY - THES AB - Abstract for this Ph. D. thesis is from UMI ProQuest Digital Dissertations: "This study examines the relationship of art to science and technology in the United States in the decade and a half following the launch of Sputnik by the Soviet Union in 1957. During this period, from 1957 to approximately 1971, the art world witnessed a burst of activity connecting these fields, a development which has been largely overlooked in art historical accounts of the 1960s. The following survey explores four programs that established links between artists, engineers, and scientists: the NASA Art Program, established 1962; Experiments in Art and Technology, founded 1966; the Center for Advanced Visual Studies, created in 1967 at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; and 'Art and Technology,' an exhibition program carried out at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art between 1966 and 1971. This dissertation describes how a widespread interest on the part of artists in new technologies and scientific methods grew out of a broad desire to break down traditional categories of art making. However, it also asserts that this boom in projects connecting art, science, and technology cannot be fully understood apart from the political and social context of the Cold War. An important dimension of this historical situation was the Vietnam War, which became increasingly controversial in the late 1960s and early 1970s, eventually contributing to a dramatic decrease in interest in projects joining art, science, and technology, and negatively impacting the programs discussed here in the early 1970s. AU - Goodyear, Anne Collins DA - 2002 KW - visual communication technology National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) nationalism theses art visual culture art, and technology NASA nationalism and communication technology, and art technology and society LB - 33550 PB - University of Texas, Austin PY - 2002 ST - The Relationship of Art to Science and Technology in the United States, 1957-1971 TI - The Relationship of Art to Science and Technology in the United States, 1957-1971 ID - 2994 ER - TY - THES AB - Abstract for this doctoral dissertation from UMI ProQuest Digital Dissertations: "The consumer videocassette recorder (VCR) was first introduced in the United States as a timeshifting device for recording and playing back broadcast television, but within a decade this use was overshadowed by the wildly popular rental and sale of motion pictures on video. This dissertation charts the invention and establishment of this alternate technological frame, describing how a technology that was originally intended as a peripheral to broadcast television was reconstructed as a 'movie machine.' The argument has two main thrusts: first, that because the information being mediated by a communication technology is an integral part of its technological frame, this new understanding of the VCR required the production of new knowledge not just about the nature of the machine but also about the movies that it played; and second, that this new knowledge was mainly produced not by the manufacturers of movies and VCRs nor by their end-users, but rather by the mediators who occupied the space between them. As retailers, distributors, clerks and other mediators built a new consumption junction between Hollywood studios, hardware manufacturers and consumers, they quite literally built a new cultural institution, the 'video store,' that was a physical manifestation of their new technological frame for the VCR." AU - Greenberg, Joshua Mark CY - Ithaca, N. Y. DA - 2004 KW - video cassette recorders (VCRs) theses television motion pictures VCRs magnetic recording video stores Blockbuster Video Betamax motion pictures, and VCRs television, and VCRs videotape magnetic recording, and VCRs audiences motion pictures, and audiences audiences, and motion pictures audiences, and VCRs VCRs, and audiences video rentals magnetic tape LB - 33420 PB - Cornell University PY - 2004 ST - From Betamax to Blockbuster: Mediation in the Consumption Junction TI - From Betamax to Blockbuster: Mediation in the Consumption Junction ID - 2981 ER - TY - THES AB - This Ph. D. thesis, written largely from published sources, covers the work of the movie industry's Classification and Ratings Administration (CARA). It is critical of CARA and notes that ratings work as a form of censorship because some ratings mean that motion pictures will done much less business at the box office. AU - Hamilton, Dorothy DA - 1999 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) theses censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures theses, Ph. D. theses CARA, and motion pictures motion pictures, and CARA classification, and motion pictures motion pictures, and classification rating system (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and history of classification, and history of CARA LB - 20400 PB - doctoral thesis, University of Kansas PY - 1999 ST - Hollywood's Silent Partner: A History of the Motion Picture Assciation of America Movie Rating System TI - Hollywood's Silent Partner: A History of the Motion Picture Assciation of America Movie Rating System ID - 856 ER - TY - THES AB - This is an unpublished master thesis uses a socio-historical approach to examine newsreels and documentaries in Taiwan since 1945. These works reflect the interaction of politics, economics, and culture. This research regards newsreels and documentaries as forms of cultural production, or as modes representing social events that are influenced by politics, the economy, culture, and technology. The recording of news and films in Taiwan can be categorized into several periods: the newsreel (1945 -1971); TV news and TV news-magazine documentaries (1971 - 1984); TV documentaries and independent documentaries (1984~1995); and personal and school documentaries (1995 - ). -- Amy Chu AU - Han, Hsu-Erh CY - Taipei, Taiwan DA - 2000 KW - journalism documentaries news and journalism non-USA Chu, Amy Theses Masters thesis +television television, and Taiwan Taiwan Taiwan, and television news, and Taiwan television, and news (Taiwan) news, and television (Taiwan) documentaries, and television (Taiwan) television, and documentaries (Taiwan) newsreels news, and newsreels (Taiwan) news LB - 580 PB - Master's Thesis, National Chengchi University (Kuo li cheng chi ta hsue) PY - 2000 ST - The Production of Taiwanese Newsreel and Documentary: A Historical Analysis (1945-2000) (Taiwan hsinwen pian yu jilu pian chanchi chih lishih fenhsi) TI - The Production of Taiwanese Newsreel and Documentary: A Historical Analysis (1945-2000) (Taiwan hsinwen pian yu jilu pian chanchi chih lishih fenhsi) ID - 146 ER - TY - THES AU - Hanssen, Eirik Frisvold CY - Stockholm, Sweden DA - 2006 KW - Marked ref, thesis ref, thesis (Ph. D.) color color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color sound recording sound recording, and color sound recording, and motion pictures motion pictures, and sound recording color, and Sergei Eisenstein color, and Kinemacolor Kinemacolor color, and theory color, and Goethe sexuality sexuality, and color films color, and sexuality motion pictures LB - 41280 PB - Department of Cinema Studies, Stockholm University PY - 2006 ST - Early Discourses on Colour and Cinema: Origins, Functions, Meanings TI - Early Discourses on Colour and Cinema: Origins, Functions, Meanings ID - 4227 ER - TY - THES AB - This interesting thesis questions the democratic nature of the Internet and suggests that some website are favored over other by search engines. The author's background combines political science, computer science, and physics. AU - Hindman, Matthew Scott CY - Princeton, NJ DA - 2005 KW - computers theses computers and the Internet democracy democracy, and Internet Internet, and democracy Internet LB - 33460 PB - Princeton University PY - 2005 ST - Voice, Equality, and the Internet TI - Voice, Equality, and the Internet ID - 2985 ER - TY - THES AB - A Ph. D. thesis. Abstract from Digital Dissertation (UMI ProQuest): “The purpose of this study was to describe the contributions of Charles Francis Jenkins to the early development of television in the United States. Jenkins fostered this development through his work as a promoter for the advancement of television technology, as an inventor of early television devices, and as a pioneer in the area of television broadcasting. Jenkins played a key role in the development of the motion picture projector from 1893 to 1896. He postulated a crude television system in 1894, and he renewed his interest in television in 1913. In 1916, Jenkins founded the Society of Motion Picture Engineers which later, in 1950, became the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers (S.M.P.T.E.). The early meetings of this organization served as arenas for the exchange of ideas among scientists and engineers concerned with the problems of television as well as motion pictures. Today, the S.M.P.T.E. continues as a powerful force for the advancement and standardization of motion picture and television technology. Jenkins opened the Jenkins Laboratories in 1921 and concentrated on developing a television system. In 1923, he achieved the first demonstration of mechanical television in the United States. In 1925, he accomplished the first wireless transmission of a moving picture with a device he later developed into a complete television system. Jenkins received the first license for television broadcasting in 1927. His station, W3XK, went on the air with silhouette movies and became part of the Jenkins Television Corporation in 1928. This company manufactured cabinet and kit television receivers, started station W2XCR, and later experimented with sound movie transmissions. The Jenkins Television Corporation was absorbed by the DeForest Radio Company in 1930 and bought by the Radio Corporation of America in 1933. Jenkins died June 6, 1934. This study examines the life, inventions, prolific writings, and early activities of Charles Francis Jenkins, establishing this long neglected innovator as one of our most forceful and important television pioneers.” AU - Hollenback, David Arthur DA - 1983 KW - Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories television, and history of +television Ph. D. thesis Jenkins, Charles Francis television, and origins biography theses LB - 8890 PB - University of Michigan PY - 1983 ST - Contributions of Charles Francis Jenkins to the Early Development of Television in the United States TI - Contributions of Charles Francis Jenkins to the Early Development of Television in the United States ID - 2256 ER - TY - THES AB - This unpublished doctoral dissertation begins from a basic observation that contemporary techno-cultural realities involve a “narrative-crisis” and they are complex, ambivalent and cyberpunk. They will be examined by means of “a symptomatic reading”: each enunciation, text, discourse, and practice under examination will be interpreted as betraying its own ideological limitations and contradictions, responding to the overall techno-cultural, symbolic system in crisis. Such a reading posits “the technological Other” as an irreducible category with respect to the conceptions of subjectivity, spatiality, and temporality in cyberculture. The objective is to expose and then “work through” textually — as well as conceptually and ideologically — symptoms, assess how they may generate interpretive and strategic values for our deeper understanding of cyberculture, and formulate a more workable, rather than finalized, model for thinking. The thesis is divided into four chapters. Chapter one places cyberpunk, an essential part of cyberculture, in the contexts of science fiction and postmodernity. Chapter two offers a critical analysis of various “technological beings” such as cyberorgs, AIs, ALs, memory constructs and cybervoodoos imagined and imaged by cyberpunk and other contemporary technocultural discourses. Chapter Three examines various discourses and inventions related to “cyberspace” and “virtual reality,” and expands the discursive formations of both categories by means of relocating them in the Western tradition of “the drive to virtuality.” And the last chapter first takes issue with the “death-announcements” of cyberpunk and exposes their ideological symptoms. The next focus is placed upon a more general level: the relevance of “death” (or “end”) to the conception of “history,” especially under the “posthuman” condition. As a whole, this essay covers a wide spectrum of science-fictional, philosophical, technological, socio-cultural, and psychoanalytic discourses on body, mind, memory, consciousness, the unconscious, subjectivity, spatiality, reality, virtuality, life and death, evolution, and history. -- Amy Chu AU - Huang, Han-Yu CY - Taipei, Taiwan DA - 2001 KW - computers non-USA Chu, Amy Taiwan +computers and the Internet Ph.D. thesis theses postmodernism virtual reality Taiwan, and artificial intelligence LB - 620 PB - doctoral thesis, National Taiwan University (Kuoli Taiwan ta hsue) PY - 2001 ST - Working through the Unbearable Ambivalence: On the Technological Subject, Space and Time in Cyberpunk and Cyberculture (Chuanyue bukechenshou chih maoduan: Luan tiannao panke yu wanglu wenhua chih keji chuti, kongchien yu shichien) TI - Working through the Unbearable Ambivalence: On the Technological Subject, Space and Time in Cyberpunk and Cyberculture (Chuanyue bukechenshou chih maoduan: Luan tiannao panke yu wanglu wenhua chih keji chuti, kongchien yu shichien) ID - 150 ER - TY - THES AU - Jenkins, Reese DA - 1966 KW - photography theses, Ph.D. theses +photography and visual communication photography, and Ph.D. theses photography, and 19th century technology LB - 12710 PB - University of Wisconsin, Madison PY - 1966 ST - Some Interrelations of Science, Technology, and the Photographic Industry in the Nineteenth Century TI - Some Interrelations of Science, Technology, and the Photographic Industry in the Nineteenth Century ID - 2617 ER - TY - THES AB - The author of this doctoral thesis argues that there was a revolution in photography during the 1890s. In Chapter 6, “Photography and the Rise of the Mass Magazine,” he shows that such publications as Cosmopolitan, Munsey’s, and McClure’s became the leaders in publishing photography between 1893 and 1895. It was “the illustrations” in these magazines “as much as anything else, that set them apart from other periodicals.” (218) These publications became “the first truly mass circulation, illustrated magazines in this country.” (231) While there were illustrations in magazines such as Century, Harper’s Monthly, and Scribner’s, in 1892-1893, there were few photographs (202) and few halftones (204). Between 1893 and 1895, though, there was a substantial increase in the use of halftones. (230) Emphasizing pictures of people became important. Historical personalities were often the subjects of pictorial spreads. So, too, were images of pretty women. “‘Human Documents’ was the most prominent regular photographic feature in McClure’s appearing in almost every issue from 1893 through 1895.” (221) In 1895, McClure’s used pictures of Napoleon and especially Abraham Lincoln. These pictures, particularly the ones of Lincoln, McClure believed increased the magazine’s circulation. (224) Frank Munsey, however, “followed repeatedly a simple formula: girls, girls, girls.” (226) Between 1893 and 1895, Munsey’s artists “were remarkably single-minded in their choice of subject matter.” (228) Kahan offers an interesting quotation from Bernard Shaw who said that “The photographer is like the cod, which lays a million eggs in order that one may be hatched.” (Shaw quoted, 232) Chapter 7, “The ‘New Photography’ of the Nineties,” discusses several developments in the technology of photography that brought great changes. These included: 1) The shift away from using glass plates to flexible film. Here Kahan talks about the evolution of film beginning with George Eastman’s offering of “negative paper” in 1885.” (246; see ibid. 244-47) 2) The development of the film roll folder was also an important advance. (247) 3) Eastman introduced the “Kodak” camera in 1888. It weighed 25 ounces and had film in the camera for 100 prints, which could then be returned for development and new roll of film. (248) 4) New forms of lighting which included “flashlight powder.” (256-57) 5) In addition to the Kodak was the increase in number of “detective cameras,” small, portable cameras often disguised as something else. Alfred Steiglitz used a detective camera for much of his work. (271) Photographs from the smaller cameras came to be used more frequently in the press. The advent of smaller cameras had at least two advantages: A) Greater mobility; and B) they “prompted new ways of seeing and of capturing reality on film.” (272) By the 1880s, people “began using the word ‘instantaneous,’” which was “a synonym for ‘candid’.” (272) As more and more people took their own photographs, photos became commonplace and used more often in such magazines as Cosmopolitan, Munsey’s, and McClure’s. (273) Between 1880 and 1900, the number of people who claimed employment as a photographer rose threefold, from 9,990 in 1880; to 20,040, in 1890; to 27,029 in 1900. (259) (One estimate said that in 1891, there were about 40,000 people who got some income from photography, compared with only 10,000 in 1879. p. 259) During the 1890s, Kahan says in Chapter 8, “Photojournalism Underway,” there was considerable discussion about journalism and pictures, and about the relationship between photography and art. (283-98). During the 1890s, a “New Journalism” appeared which Evelyn March Phillipps characterized in Munsey’s in 1895 as “that easy personal style, that trick of bright colloquial language, that wealth of intimate and picturesque detail, and that determination to arrest, amuse, or startle, which has transformed our press during the last fifteen years.” (Phillipps quoted, p. 284) Kahan also notes that certainly by 1889, some were worried about cameras and the invasion of privacy, and that people were commenting of being photographed without their permission in embarrassing positions. (287) It was also common during the 1890s to “trick up” photographs of people to enliven “unimaginative studio portraits.” (288) The author provides several lengthy quotations from commentators about the relationship between photography and journalism during this decade, and the journalistic advantages that photography offered to the journalist. (288, 292) Kahan discusses the significance of Alexander Black’s “Miss Jerry,” a magic lantern slide show in 1895 that used a series of projected images on a screen to tell a story. Interesting here is that for Black the pictures were “primary, the text secondary.” (Black quoted, 297; see also 295) Kahan offers a good explanation of why newspapers were slower to use photographs than books or magazines. “Technical obstacles in the way of using photographs in normal newspaper runs were not overcome until 1897, when the printing of halftone plates at high press speeds on low grade paper became feasible.” (298) Magazines and weekly papers such as the Century and Graphic used a “stop cylinder, or a flat press” that produced a few hundred or maybe a few thousand copies per hour, and were capable to high quality illustrations. Daily newspapers used “a cylinder press, a rotary, a web machine, usually at the rate of 20,000 copies an hour, entirely by one operation.” Under these conditions, it was difficult to get the picture to print, or if it printed, the tones (blacks and grays) were often distorted. (299) Here Kahan draws on several sources including Joseph Pennell’s excellent account of the challenges of printing picture in newspaper in “Art and the Daily Paper,” Nineteenth Century, XLII (Oct. 1897), 653-62. Oddly, a few papers such as the Boston Transcript as late as 1906 did not use photographs believing that the public would be uninterested. (300) In 1897, Stephen H. Horgan developed a practical way for the New York Tribune to print halftones. (303) This work notes that during the 1890s, detective cameras were used increasingly for newspaper work. Sending photographs by a wirephoto machine (wireless telegraphy) “was something wished for, but not yet attained” at newspapers. (305) Kahan also discusses the Illustrated American, which started in 1890 but soon declined and eventually died in 1900. (305-10). This paper “was explicit in defining its pictures as journalism.” (306) This thesis was written under the direction of Harold "Bud" Nelson. The author also acknowledges the influence of Warren C. Price. AU - Kahan, Robert Sidney CY - Madison, WI DA - 1968 KW - wood engraving presses lighting journalism journalism fame celebrity ref, thesis (Ph.D.) ref, thesis magazines, and photography magazines photography news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality quotations newspapers, and photographs photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving presidents and new media McKinley, William McKinley, William, and photography Lincoln, Abraham Lincoln, Abraham, and newspaper illustrations Lincoln, Abraham, and new media photojournalism journalism, new (1890s) cameras cameras, detective cameras, Kodak film film, flexible photography, and flexible film photography, instantaneous Black, Alexander sexuality sexuality, and magazine photography women women, and photography photography, and sexuality photography, and women photography, and presses presses, and newspaper photography newspapers, and photography (origins) photography, and lighting photography, and flashlight powder lighting, and flashlight powder new way of seeing new way of seeing, and photography photography, and new way of seeing photography, and modernity modernity modernity, and photography photography, and Century photography, and McClure's photography, and Munsey's Riis, Jacob photography, and Jacob Riis images vs. words words vs. images cameras, and portability LB - 38450 PB - University of Wisconsin PY - 1968 ST - The Antecedents of American Photojournalism TI - The Antecedents of American Photojournalism ID - 3944 ER - TY - THES AB - This doctoral thesis puts forth a theory about the effect of the phonograph. "Sound recording has been understood first and foremost as a preservational tool. Yet it is also a catalyst -- one linked to profound changes in twentieth-century music and musical culture." The thesis examines recording's catalytic nature "upon three central musical activities: listening, performing, and composing." (2) The first third of Katz's thesis deals with the listener. Katz begins by giving an overview of the literature on recording and also on the phonograph in the United States from 1900 to 1930. He devotes sections to the phonograph in the home, in the school, and in the community. In this latter chapter he covers such themes as "foreign" recorded music, "race" recorded music, and "hillbilly" records. The middle third of the thesis deals with recording and performers. Here he discusses the impact of recording on violists and their use of vibrato. The final section of the dissertation looks at recording's influence on composers, both classical and jazz composers. AU - Katz, Mark CY - Ann Arbor DA - 1999 KW - technology computers theses nationalism music discs, compact sound recording digital media duplicating technologies radio radio, and sound recording phonograph advertising advertising, and phonograph phonograph, and advertising compact discs (CDs) digital media, and compact discs (CDs) sound recording, and music music, and technology music, and phonograph music, and compact discs (CDs) music, and digital media motion pictures motion pictures, and sound recording sound recording, and motion pictures audiences sound recording, and audiences audiences, and sound recording MP3 sound recording, and MP3 digital media, and MP3 technological determinism music, and Internet computers and the Internet values values, and digital sampling history and new media microphones sound recording, and microphones microphones, and sound recording music, and microphones microphones, and music thesis thesis, Ph. D. home and new media sound recording, and foreign music nationalism and communication nationalism, and foreign recordings sound recording, and jazz sound recording, and race race race, and sound recording home, and phonograph CDs history home advertising and public relations technology and society LB - 32900 PB - University of Michigan PY - 1999 ST - The Phonograph Effect: The Influence of Recording on Listener, Performer, Composer, 1900-1940 TI - The Phonograph Effect: The Influence of Recording on Listener, Performer, Composer, 1900-1940 ID - 2928 ER - TY - THES AB - Abstract for this Ph. D. thesis is from UMI ProQuest Digital Disserations: "One of the most important reasons for the success of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, a public-sector organization established in 1958, has been the historic ability of NASA's successive administrators, the agency's leaders, to sense the boundaries of their power and the political environment in which they have had to maneuver. This dissertation compares how NASA's leaders maneuvered the organization toward success during the 1960s and the 1990s. Using a known set of decision-making models and a comparative administrative chronology of the 1960s and 1990s, this dissertation demonstrates that the principal leaders in those two decades -- with their differences in leadership styles and methods -- functioned to achieve success in two organizational environments. NASA's service to the public has led to many manifest benefits for mankind. Lunar landings, Mars explorations, space shuttles, and space stations connote its strong technological prowess. This dissertation discusses expectations NASA has faced from the Congress, changing presidential administrations, and executive branch pressures, as well as more consensual political environments, with their unique challenges to a science-oriented agency. The dissertation describes the context in which NASA's leaders were challenged during two critical eras to care for the agency's organizational well-being, to know their bounds of power, and to act accordingly. The study examines the radically different approaches that NASA leadership used to carry out its missions in varying decision making environments. President Kennedy's lunar mandate clearly allowed for rational actor/classical decision making and the dominating leadership style of James Webb. In contrast the diverse set of political interests at work during the tenure of Dan Goldin forced NASA to the Bureaucratic Politics decision making model. AU - Kelley, John Daniel DA - 2002 KW - National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) theses aeronautics and space communication NASA LB - 33510 PB - University of Southern California PY - 2002 ST - An Organizational History of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration: A Critical Comparison of Administrative Decision Making in Two Pivotal Eras TI - An Organizational History of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration: A Critical Comparison of Administrative Decision Making in Two Pivotal Eras ID - 2990 ER - TY - THES AB - This doctoral disseration examines how three mainstream magazines covered the Vietnam War. The author, himself a former journalist, based his work on both archival research and interviews in addition to the many articles in Time, Newsweek, and U.S. News & World Report. Landers discusses the work of reporters and the technology they used in compiling and filing stories from Vietnam. AU - Landers, James C. CY - Madison, WI DA - 2000 KW - books, periodicals, newspapers war news and journalism magazines, and Vietnam War Vietnam War Vietnam War, and magazines theses Ph.D. thesis journalism, and new media photography, and Vietnam War cameras, and Vietnam War cameras journalism magazines photography Vietnam War LB - 28710 PB - University of Wisconsin, Madison PY - 2000 ST - The Weekly War: Coverage of Vietnam, 1965-1973, by Newsweek, Time, and U. S. News & World Report TI - The Weekly War: Coverage of Vietnam, 1965-1973, by Newsweek, Time, and U. S. News & World Report ID - 2533 ER - TY - THES AB - Abstract for this Ph. D. thesis from UMI ProQuest Digital Dissertations: "Over the course of two decades, the Federal Communication Commission (FCC) struggled to develop a regulatory framework for a new communications technology known as cable TV. Cable TV emerged in response to unmet consumer demands for clearer television reception and more viewing alternatives. By the late 1950s, conflicts between television broadcasters and cable systems arose because cable systems began 'importing' and retransmitting to their subscribers broadcast signals from distant television stations. Efforts by cable systems to increase program choices created competitive pressures for viewing audiences between local stations and the imported stations. Broadcasters also claimed that cable systems were engaging in 'unfair competition' because under then existing law cable systems could retransmit programming without incurring any copyright liability. Despite the complaints of broadcasters, the FCC at first declined to regulate cable TV. Between 1966 and 1972, however, on the grounds that the unrestricted development of cable would undermine the locally oriented over-the-air television system, the FCC instituted a complex series of regulations for cable systems designed to limit and direct their growth. By 1980, almost all of these rules had been either repealed by the FCC or overturned by the courts. The FCC had concluded that broadcasters did not require protection from cable to survive, prosper, and serve the public. No approach to regulatory behavior emphasizing a single vantage point is adequate for explaining why the FCC first regulated and then deregulated cable TV. A conceptual framework is developed to facilitate the analysis of FCC decision making from three different vantage points. Regulatory decisions can be understood to varying degrees as either (1) the product of agency goal directed behavior, (2) goal directed behavior constrained by organizational processes, or (3) goal directed behavior constrained by the preferences of external political institutions. Using both published and published government documents, a wide array of secondary sources, and interviews with key FCC officials, this study demonstrates that each vantage point makes a necessary contribution to explaining the development of the cable TV regulatory framework. Several modest generalizations are proposed concerning the conditions most likely associated with constrained versus unconstrained agency decision making. AU - Lessuk, Jonathan David DA - 2003 KW - Federal Communications Commission (FCC) theses censorship and ratings FCC television cable television television, cable television, and FCC FCC, and cable television cable regulation LB - 33500 PB - University of California, Los Angeles PY - 2003 ST - Explaining Regulatory Decision Making at the Federal Communications Commission: The Regulation and Deregulation of Cable Television TI - Explaining Regulatory Decision Making at the Federal Communications Commission: The Regulation and Deregulation of Cable Television ID - 2989 ER - TY - THES AB - Printing and publishing enterprises in ancient China made a profound influence on the preservation, accumulation and dissemination of Chinese culture, and the publication industry in Ming Dynasty played a vital role in bringing innovations to publishing technologies. This master thesis focuses on the areas of Soochow and Changchow; examines historical background and significance of the publishing industry there – the publishers, their publications and bookshops. The thesis details the various printing techniques, styles and innovations that were employed in publication during the Ming Dynasty. The content of publications was mostly aimed at preserving literary work from previous dynasties. From examining publishing in these two areas, this work concludes that publishing reflected increasing interactions between profit-oriented publishing houses and the masses. The variety of publication categories also revealed the changing structure of social class from the mid- to late- Ming Dynasty. --Amy Chu AU - Mai, Cheih-An CY - Taipei, Taiwan DA - 1995 KW - Asia print printing libraries archives non-USA Masters thesis theses Chu, Amy China printing, and China China, and printing (Ming Dynasty) +books, periodicals, newspapers books, and China China, and books printing, block China, and block printing +information storage information storage, and China China, and information storage libraries, and China China, and libraries books LB - 590 PB - Master's Thesis, National Taiwan University (Kuoli Taiwan ta hsue) PY - 1995 ST - Publishing business of Soochow and Changchow in the Ming (Mingdai Soo Chang dichu chuban shiyeh chih yenchiou) TI - Publishing business of Soochow and Changchow in the Ming (Mingdai Soo Chang dichu chuban shiyeh chih yenchiou) ID - 147 ER - TY - THES AU - Parente, Donald Edwin DA - 1974 KW - +television television, and sports Ph.D. thesis LB - 7230 PB - University of Michigan, Ann Arbor PY - 1974 ST - History of Television and Sports TI - History of Television and Sports ID - 2089 ER - TY - THES AB - Peterson quotes Charles Musser (Emergence of Cinema, p. 145): “As Charles Musser has stated, ‘it was undoubtedly scenes of foreign lands that provided the cinématographe with its chief attraction for American audiences.’” (p 4) Peterson connect early nonfiction films to modernity (p. 5) She says “While the genre was repeatedly touted as the next best thing to actual travel, I claim that travelogues were not merely a compensation for an inability to actually travel, but also an experience in their own right. I ultimately argue that travelogues encouraged a unique kind of film spectatorship, luring the film viewer into a state of poetic reverie.” (7) “Travelogue films produce unique configurations of space and time. I define travelogues as nonfiction films representing place as their primary subject. By place I mean both geographical location and the spatial dimension of material existence in the world….” (12) “Atemporality is the second major defining element of travelogue films, which steadfastly deny the historical specificity of their images. This atemporality distinguishes travelogues from another popular genre that emerged around 1910, the newsreel, which focused exclusively on timely subjects. Unlike newsreels, travelogues are not topical or of current events type interest….” (13) “Finally, motion is the third term central to my definition of travelogue films. All motion pictures are filled with motion, of course, but travel films take this movement as their very subject: most travelogues are filled with motion in every shot, such as a camera 13/14 pan or a camera moving through space on a moving vehicle, or image-movement such as a crowd of moving people or a shot of crashing waves. In addition, travel films also turn motion into a metaphor by showing scenes of ‘faraway’ places without requiring the journey that would be necessary to reach these places. It is somewhat ironic, after all, that films featuring images of singular places films that do not actually journey are known as travel films. The travelogue’s ‘window-on-the-world’ model presents different places while omitting the journey that would be required to get there, thus ‘travel’ becomes a metaphor not for journeying but for experiencing different locales. “The film Hawaii: The Paradise of the Pacific, for example, produced in 1916 by the American traveling film showman Lyman Howe, displays the travelogue’s characteristic spatial and temporal dimensions.” (13-14) “Film scholars such as Friedberg and Giuliana Bruno have begun to argue that a ‘mobilized gaze’ is central to cinematic representation…. The cinema quite literally presents motion because filmic images move. In addition, travelogue films turn mobility into a grand metaphor for experience in the modern world, for travelogue films provide the viewer with an instant travel adventure. The cinema’s new mobilized gaze brings something new to the experience of mobility: representations of movement begin to substitute for actual movement. It is clear that early travelogue films, even more than other early film genres, enacted this virtual mobility. Travelogue films exemplify a vicarious view of the world in which more and more experiences have become mediated, as technologies have begun to represent vision and experience in increasingly mechanized forms. Travelogues produced a new kind of tourist-spectator, a consumer of represented travel rather than an actual traveler.” (30) “…I want to suggest that this kind of nostalgia [referring to Tom Gunning’s discussing of Walter Benjamin in his 1997 article ‘From Kaleidoscope to the X-Ray’] is central to modernity’s understanding of itself, and that travelogue films, however unconsciously, also depict the world as filled with old modes of living that are dying out. This figuration of modernity as a narrative of loss is central to the modern, touristic gaze upon the world, 34/35 and it speaks to similar modern concerns with authenticity, in which there is always a more authentic experience around the corner, always an ‘old town’ to visit. “Travelogues were part of a network of representations of travel at the turn of the century in travel literature, photographs, postcards, and World’s Fairs. Part of this explosion of tourist imagery and paraphernalia at the beginning of the twentieth century was linked to the increase in actual tourism.” (pp. 34-35) Peterson notes that William Dean Howells talks about the “Kodak traveler” in his 1905 novel London Films. (42-43) “One of the most popular locations for early travelogue films, I discuss the west’s representational function as the land of scenic nationalism.” (p 46) Peterson entitles Chapter 4 to “The Nation’s Scenic Playground: Travelogues and the American West” (pp. 239-76). AU - Peterson, Jennifer Lynn DA - 1999 KW - nationalism history ref, thesis (Ph.D.) photography motion pictures history and new media motion pictures, and history history, and motion pictures modernity modernity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and modernity ref, news new way of seeing motion pictures, and space and time space and time motion pictures, and time motion pictures, and space motion pictures, and travel ref, thesis education motion pictures, and education education, and motion pictures color motion pictures, and color color, and motion pictures cameras cameras, portable cameras, and mobility motion pictures, and travelogues motion pictures, and westerns nationalism and communication motion pictures, and nationalism nationalism, and motion pictures photography and visual communication Howells, William Dean, and cameras cameras, and William Dean Howells travel, and motion pictures travel LB - 570 PB - 2 volumes, doctoral thesis, University of Chicago PY - 1999 ST - World Pictures: Travelogue Films and the Lure of the Exotic, 1890-1920 TI - World Pictures: Travelogue Films and the Lure of the Exotic, 1890-1920 ID - 3352 ER - TY - THES AB - This doctoral thesis uses the NBC Papers in the Wisconsin Historical Society to examine the work of Stockton Helffrich, was the chief censor at NBC-TV from 1948 until early 1960. Pondillo writes that Helffrich brought to his post “a set of progressive social and cultural beliefs forged, in part, by his association and participation in the New York Communist Party of the 1930s. By the early 1950s he had recanted his communist associations and, after a period of ‘rehabilitation’ by NBC-TV, was elevated to manager and eventually director of the Continuity Acceptance Department – American broadcasting’s first office of censorship.” Pondillo considers how Helffrich avoided persecution by Joseph McCarthy and the U. S. House Committee on Un-American Activities. He examines Helffrich’s censorship work relating to advertising, language, sex, violence, and race. The progressive nature of Helffrich’s endeavors “particularly in matters of truth in advertising, and mental illness and racial stereotyping, is really quite compelling given the tenor of the times.” AU - Pondillo, Robert J. CY - Madison, WI DA - 2003 KW - corporations corporations television censorship and ratings television, and censorship censorship, and television values values, and television Helffrich, Stockton NBC NBC, and censorship censorship, and NBC censorship LB - 28790 PB - University of Wisconsin, Madison PY - 2003 ST - Censorship in a 'Golden Age': America's First Network Censor -- NBC's Stockton Helfrich TI - Censorship in a 'Golden Age': America's First Network Censor -- NBC's Stockton Helfrich ID - 2628 ER - TY - THES AB - This doctoral thesis examines the work of Stocktn Helfrich, the first network television censor. Efforts regulate TV during the 1950s often tried to model themselves on the motion picture industry's Production Code and the Production Code that regulated radio. AU - Pondillo, Robert J. CY - Madison, WI DA - 2003 KW - theses corporations corporations values Christianity thesis thesis, Ph. D. Catholic Church, and culture Catholic Church television NBC censorship and ratings television, and censorship censorship, and Stockton Helfrich Helfrich, Stockton, and TV censorship television, and Production Code Catholic Church, and television television, and Catholics censorship, and television censorship, and NBC TV censorship LB - 32070 PB - University of Wisconsin PY - 2003 ST - Censorship in a 'Golden Age': Postwar Television and America's First Network Censor -- NBC's Stockton Helfrich TI - Censorship in a 'Golden Age': Postwar Television and America's First Network Censor -- NBC's Stockton Helfrich ID - 2890 ER - TY - THES AB - Abstract for this Ph. D. thesis is from UMI ProQuest Digital Dissertations: "This dissertation examines how American audiences shaped the early broadcasting industry, and how radio shaped American social imagination. In the 1920s and 1930s, American broadcasters relied on fan mail and creative hunches more than on emergent, and still dubious, ratings and surveys. In this period, listener response influenced radio technology, genres, and institutions. Listeners reinvented the new sound medium to help them perceive modern structures of power and authority governing their daily lives. Against elite proponents of radio uplift, popular audiences championed technologies that constructed the immediate aural experience of sports and music and immediate, intimate connections between performers and listeners. Against the rising national networks, urban ethnic workers and midwestern farmers for a time upheld local and regional stations in the 1920s. In Depression-era network radio, soap opera writers molded the genre in response to women listeners' letters. In turn, women extended their sense of entitlement, negotiated in correspondence with writers, from the radio industry to the larger society. This reciprocity between broadcasters and listeners began to break down around 1940. By then, major radio genres took shape, and broadcasters no longer accepted listeners' beliefs about entitlement and justice in media and society. In conflicts with producers of a true-crime show Gang Busters, workers, farmers, and Indians articulated a populist critique of the radio industry and economic and racial inequities of modern America. At the same juncture, academic ventures such as the Princeton Radio Research Project honed and validated statistical audience survey methods. Eager to deploy ratings and scientific marketing surveys, broadcasters no longer invited audiences to participate in the creation process, but only allowed them to express quantifiable 'likes' and 'dislikes' But scientific marketing never triumphed completely -- as television producers embraced ratings, audiences gained more control over local radio. Early interaction between broadcasters and listeners thus provides clues to recurring cycles of grassroots and corporate influence in broadcasting, the Internet, and other media." AU - Razlogova, Elena DA - 2004 KW - theses radio audiences women radio, and women women, and radio audiences, and radio radio, and audiences LB - 33490 PB - George Mason University PY - 2004 ST - The Voice of the Listener: Americans and the Radio Industry, 1920-1950 TI - The Voice of the Listener: Americans and the Radio Industry, 1920-1950 ID - 2988 ER - TY - THES AB - At a time when there was a good deal of experimentation with psychedelic colors and lighting during the 1960s, this 1967 Master of Science thesis in physical education comments on lighting dances. "In modern dance, movement is the medium for expression and communication. The dancer expresses his feelings and ideas through moving bodies in space. It follows that lighting is important, if for no other reason then [sic] for illuminating the dancers. It seems intuitively, however, that lighting can and should mean more than simply providing the physical energy for illumination. If feeling associations can be evoked by color, then color, used carefully, should enhance the desire feelings or ideas of a specific dance, and likewise color, used carelessly, may detract from the feelings or ideas of a specific dance. Accepting the hypothesis that feeling associations are a function of color, the results of this experiment can be employed by a choreographer in choosing the appropriate color of light to enhance the feelings or ideas that he wishes to convey." (20) The author cites Louis Horst, Modern Dance Forms (San Francisco: Impulse Publications, 1961), p. 3. AU - Reger, Joan A. CY - Madison, WI DA - 1967 KW - thesis, MS color lighting color, and lighting lighting, and color color, and dance color, and entertainment color, and mood ref, thesis ref, thesis (MS) theses LB - 38710 PB - University of Wisconsin PY - 1967 ST - Feeling States Evoked by Colored Lighting [Masters Thesis] TI - Feeling States Evoked by Colored Lighting [Masters Thesis] ID - 3970 ER - TY - THES AB - The abstract for this Ph. D. thesis is from UMI ProQuest Digital Dissertations: "This dissertation focuses on the history of American broadcasting and examines how radio assumed the strictly formatted, musically programmed structures that have defined its form and content for much of the last fifty years. It argues that post-network, post-television radio was structured by the interaction of new technologies of program production and distribution, changing economic models, shifts in the aesthetics of aural communication, and the development of segmented audiences, all of which had roots in earlier forms of radio broadcasting. Using an interdisciplinary approach that draws on methodologies of cultural history, social history of technology, and media studies, this dissertation examines the interrelationship of radio technologies, institutional practices, and the social context in which they operate. The first half of the project explores alternative means of program production and distribution in relationship to the institutional production of audiences. Chapter One examines the rhetorical construction and institutional basis for a national wired network system as well as an alternative network model, the regional chain. Chapter Two examines the technological, discursive, and institutional histories of sound-on-disc transcriptions as a means of distributing programs. Chapter Three charts the relationship between 'spot sales,' and the role of station representatives as 'audience intellectuals,' in mediating the interactions of local stations and national advertisers. The second half of the dissertation charts how the form and content of broadcasting developed in conjunction with technologies of sound reproduction, modes of listening, and audience appeals. Chapter Four examines how ideals of universal comprehension and the imagination influenced the technological and aesthetic development of network radio's production practices. Chapter Five examines the structuring role of the aural body in both 'universally appealing' network drama and 'focused appeal' block programming. Chapter Six explores radio's shift from a primary to secondary medium through changes in radio receiver technology, spaces of reception, and practices of listening." AU - Russo, Alexander Todd DA - 2004 KW - theses radio audiences radio, and audiences audiences, and radio advertising and public relations advertising, and radio radio, and advertising capitalism capitalism, and radio radio, and capitalism advertising LB - 33480 PB - Brown University PY - 2004 ST - Roots of Radio's Rebirth: Audiences, Aesthetics, Economics, and Technologies of American Broadcasting, 1926-1951 TI - Roots of Radio's Rebirth: Audiences, Aesthetics, Economics, and Technologies of American Broadcasting, 1926-1951 ID - 2987 ER - TY - THES AB - This Ph. D. thesis formed the foundation for Ryan's 1977 book A History of Motion Picture Technology. In this thesis, he discusses numerous coloring processes -- Kinemacolor, Kodacolor, Eastman color (and other Eastman processes, Technicolor, and many more. "It is the purpose of this study to compile and correlate the available technical information concerning the color motion picture processes developed in the United States. The emphasis of this study will be on the laboratory aspects of the processes studied." (2) AU - Ryan, Roderick Thomas CY - Los Angeles DA - 1966 KW - ref, thesis ref, thesis (Ph. D.) color motion pictures color, and motion pictures motion pictures, and color Technicolor Eastman Color Kinemacolor color, and Technicolor color, and Eastman Color color, and Kinemacolor LB - 41260 PB - University of Southern California PY - 1966 ST - A Study of the Technology of Color Motion Picture Processes Developed in the United States TI - A Study of the Technology of Color Motion Picture Processes Developed in the United States ID - 4225 ER - TY - THES AB - Abstract this doctoral dissertation from UMP ProQuests Digital Dissertations: "Between 1876 and 1900, large numbers of manufacturers began to advertise more widely in an effort to create national markets for their products. They commissioned lithographic firms to produce chromolithographed cards, booklets, calendars, and posters, which were then distributed to stores, stuffed into packages, or tacked up on bill-posting boards. The enormous increase in visual advertising in the late nineteenth century, then, must be understood in the context of the production, distribution, and consumption of chromolithography. While chromolithographic advertising may not have had the cultivating and democratizing influence on American society that reformers believed it could, it did blend in with other cultural forms, thus integrating the discourse of visual advertising into everyday life across class boundaries. Produced under a complex, irrational, and inefficient system by men and women from many walks of life, it was a crucial component in the development of consumer culture. Not only were individual brands developed largely through chromolithography, but also the very idea of the brand was made intelligible during the chromo era. Chromolithographic advertisements drew upon existing cultural forms and visual vernaculars to communicate an ideology of consumption by visually articulating consumption to whiteness and citizenship -- and elevating it to a position as the most significant realm of activity. With a large number of firms vying for advertising work, lithographers desperate to compete turned to independent artists with 'original ideas' in order to distinguish themselves and thus help them land contracts. As a result, watercolor and pastel artists from a range of social positions, both women and men, were brought into the process of visual-advertising design. The lithographic craftsmen who printed, and also sometimes designed, the advertisements identified as both consumers and workers, while expressing dismay that their trade had become little more than the 'humble handmaid' of advertisers." AU - Schmitz, Dawn M. CY - Pittsburgh DA - 2004 KW - visual communication theses color advertising and public relations color, and chromolithography advertising, and chromolithography chromolithography, and advertising chromolithography, and color capitalism capitalism, and advertising advertising, and capitalism chromolithography, and capitalism capitalism, and chromolithgraphy visual culture lithography advertising chromolithography LB - 33390 PB - University of Pittsburgh PY - 2004 ST - The Humble Handmaid of Commerce: Chromolitographic Advertising and the Development of Consumer Culture from 1967 to 2002 TI - The Humble Handmaid of Commerce: Chromolitographic Advertising and the Development of Consumer Culture from 1967 to 2002 ID - 2978 ER - TY - THES AB - Abstract for this doctoral dissertation is from UMI ProQuest Digital Dissertations: This thesis "explores identity, nationalism, and power on the Internet between 1969 and 2000 through a cultural analysis of Internet code and the creative processes behind it. The dissertation opens with an examination of a real-time Internet Blues jam that linked Japanese and American musicians between Tokyo and Mississippi in 1999. The technological, cultural, and linguistic uncertainties that characterized the Internet jam, combined with the inventive reactions of the musicians who participated, help to introduce the fundamental conceptual question of the dissertation: is code a cultural product and if so can the Internet be considered a distinctly 'American' technology? A comparative study of the Internet's origins in the United States and Japan finds that code is indeed a cultural entity but that it is a product not of one nation, but of many. A cultural critique of the Internet's domain name conventions explores the heavily-gendered creation of code and the institutional power that supports it. An ethnography of the Internet's managing organization, The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), investigates conflicts and identity formation within and among nations at a time when new Internet technologies have blurred humans' understanding of geographic boundaries. In the year 2000, an effort to prevent United States domination of ICANN produced unintended consequences: disputes about the definition of geographic regions and an eruption of anxiety, especially in China, that the Asian seat on the ICANN board would be dominated by Japan. These incidents indicate that the Internet simultaneously destabilizes identity and ossifies it. In this paradoxical situation, cultures and the people in them are forced to reconfigure the boundaries that circumscribe who they think they are. AU - Schoel, Gretchen Ferris DA - 2004 KW - computers nationalism Asia theses nationalism and communication computers and the Internet nationalism, and Internet Internet, and nationalism Japan China Japan, and Internet China, and Internet Internet, and Japan Internet, and China non-USA Internet LB - 33430 PB - College of William and Mary PY - 2004 ST - @America.jp: Identity, Nationalism, and Power on the Internet, 1969-2000 TI - @America.jp: Identity, Nationalism, and Power on the Internet, 1969-2000 ID - 2982 ER - TY - THES AB - This doctoral thesis, written under the direction of Edwin Emery, is somewhat redundant but has considerable information about the use of photographs by eleven New York City newspapers from 1890 to 1937. The New York Graphic was the first U. S. paper to publish a halftone photograph in 1880. In 1891, Albert Pulitzer's New York Morning Journal published the first halftone photograph to appear in a mass circulation daily paper, "a previously unacknowledged halftone photograph of the New York governor. It was on a separate small page of high quality paper which was inserted into each copy of the paper." (366) In 1897, Stephen Horgan and the New York Tribune published the first halftone photograph in the regular pages of a daily paper with mass circulation. (5) By 1890, photographic technology was both improved and useable, the author says. (60) For example, he discusses the importance of the Kodak camera and roll film, the use of the magnesium flash, and the manufacture by Zeiss of the first anastigmatic lens. (64-65) He covers the Frederick Eugene Ives and the development of photoengraving (66-67) and the work of Stephen Horgan. Schuneman says that "Technologically the foundation had been laid by 1890 or 1891 for an almost unlimited use of photographs by the newspaper." (75) The author does not offer a satisfactory explanation for why it was only in 1897 that the New York Tribune began using halftones on regular newspaper stock (here Joseph Pennel's article, "Art and the Daily Paper" (Oct. 1897) is helpful on explaining the problems of printing photographs on high-speed rotary newspaper presses. In 1890, hand art, not halftone photographs, accounted for nearly all newspaper illustrations. The author says that in 1890, Sunday papers were by then well-illustrated but not with photographs. "Hand art accounted for 100 per cent of the illustration in the weekday and Sunday publication; no supplements or rotogravure sections were published." (97) That began to change rapidly after Horgan's work at the Tribune in 1897. Horgan had first tried to convince J. G. Bennett, Jr. of the New York Herald to apply "halftone screens to the curved stereotype plates," but Bennett thought the process was impractical. (201) After being fired by the Herald, Horgan took his ideas to the New York Morning Journal. "The photograph reproduced quite well" in January, 1897, and "ten days later, on Saturday, Jan. 31, 1897, the newspaper published a story on tenement conditions, including both hand art and photographic illustrations. A section of photographs in the Sunday, February 1, 1987, edition was printed on a glossy surface paper and the reproduction was excellent." (202) By 1900, about 40 percent of the pictures in weekday and Sunday papers were halftones photographs, and about 60 percent were hand art. (97) By 1910, "three dramatic and significant trends could be observed. First, of the 903 pictures which appeared in the weekday and Sunday editions, only 12 per cent were hand 97/98 art and 88 per cent -- almost 9 in 10 -- were halftone photographs. Second, magazine, book review, and feature supplements of the Sunday papers also showed an interesting distinction. Of the 300 pictures examined in those publications, 53 per cent were hand art and only 47 per cent were halftone photographs. Better than half of the pictures in the magazine, book review, and feature supplements of the Sunday papers were still accomplished by hand. This can be explained by the relatively dominant content in magazine and feature supplements of fictional as opposed to factual articles. It was apparently desirable to illustrated those pieces with hand art, not photographs which were 'staged' or 're-enacted.' Third, the rotogravure section published in 1910 included 60 pictures. Of those pictures 95 per cent were halftone photographs and 5 per cent were hand art. The rotogravure feature sections were clearly from their start intended for the photograph." (97-98) Where about 39-40 percent of newspaper pictures in 1900 were halftone photographs, by 1910, 78 percent of the newspaper pictures were halftones. (98-100) Several things occurred during the first decade of the 20th century relating to news photography. "During the period 1901-1910 developments in the use of the news photograph included (a) expanded attention to the use of the camera in reporting spot news events, (b) appearance of the first sequence of pictures in the newspaper, (c) recognition of the value of the candid, unposed photograph in print, (d) the panorama, and (e) appearance of purposely faked photographs." (231) Except for the decade between 1910 and 1920, when the number of pages of paper increased faster than the number of photographs, the overall trend from 1890 to 1930 was vastly increased number of pictures. In fact, by 1930 there were roughly ten times as many pictures in the weekday and Sunday newspapers had been available in 1890. (102; see also 369-70) Pictures of people accounted for the biggest category of newspaper photos. "In the evaluation of how the newspaper utilized various content categories of pictures it was found that single column or smaller portraits of individuals accounted for the most substantial portion of the content of newspaper 157/158 pictures. Forty-one percent of the pictures published in all newspaper examined for the 50 year period were single column portraits. Tabloids published above that average." (157-58) Between 1890 and 1900 the percentage of single-column portraits dropped and the use of multiple-column portraits increased. However, after 1900 multiple-column portraits decreased as paper returned to using single-column pictures. This trend continued until 1930 (159). Pictures of "crime and sex offenses accounted for only a small part of the picture content of all publications: 3.7 per cent." (158) Women made up "11.4 percent of the picture content of all newspapers" and sport "7.1 per cent" (158). General news and features accounted for about 25.7 per cent of the pictures. (158) Schuneman notes that photographs were used to promote the theater and actors. writes that the New York Times Sunday paper of Jan. 22, 1905, announced "a new pictorial section" which ran four pages. The last pages of this section consisted of "photographic scenes from current New York stage productions." (199) Schuneman offers interesting information on photography and the assassination of President William McKinley in Buffalo, NY, in September, 1901. "At the moment he was shot one photographer in the audience was 'rolling' an Edison Kinetoscope motion picture camera. He panned the camera to where McKinley had stood moments before the shooting, thus recording the first sequence of spot news photos found in the newspapers." (234) The New York World published this sequence. (236) This technique was later used some years later in covering sports "showing second-by-second developments of important plays in sporting contests." (237) The New York Herald also used a still camera to publish a photo of McKinley's assassin, Leon Czolgosz. (237) Later, shortly before the funeral train left Buffalo for Washington, the Tribune published a half dozen "candid" pictures of dignitaries. These newspaper photographs, "candid, unposed, 237/239 honest photographs of people -- unaware of the camera -- as they appeared in an important news events," (237, 239) represented another important developments in news photography. Other innovations during this episode included taking indoor pictures using flashlight photography (239) and the "folding panoramic camera" that D. H Houston had introduced in 1901. (244) "Two other very unusual pictures also appeared in the coverage of the McKinley funeral. A collage involving hand art and photographs appeared on a double page spread of the World. It was another example of the picturing of the long lines of funeral mourners which had been done in 1845 by Bennett's Herald in its coverage of the [Andrew] Jackson funeral.... The second picture of note was a halftone photograph made from high in the Capitol dome looking down upon the funeral services in the rotunda. The search for 244/248 imaginative visual images had begun by 1901." (244, 248) The author believes that the decade between 1920 and 1930 saw the "most significant changes in the use of photographs" in the New York daily press. (285) It was an era of tabloid sensationalism. "The important development of the 1920's of photo syndicates which provided a constant flow of visual material for use by the media" is discussed as are the "improvements in photographic technology" which involved "mainly the introduction of small, professional cameras." (285) Also, "the creation of methods and facilities for the almost instantaneous transmission of photographs over great distances occurred in the 1920's. Those facilities were of great import to the future of visual journalism." (288) The author writes about the use of rotogravure, which by 1920 was "an important ingredient of many of New York's Sunday newspapers. The Times was utilizing its Wide World photo service as well as the commercial producers Underwood and Underwood. Most of the Times photographs were save for rotogravure. About a 10-day delay between an event and its appearance in the rotogravure section was common for the Times. The World's rotogravure section lagged about three weeks." (288) AU - Schuneman, Raymond Smith CY - Minneapolis DA - 1966 KW - wood engraving wireless communication wireless rotogravure rotogravure process presses presidents and new media journalism journalism Ives, Frederic fame celebrity ref, thesis (Ph.D.) ref, thesis magazines, and photography magazines photography news and journalism photography, and journalism journalism, and photography photography, and newspapers newspapers, and photography magazines, and photography photography, and magazines motion pictures, and journalism journalism, and motion pictures motion pictures, and newspapers motion pictures motion pictures, and celebrity culture celebrity culture celebrity, and motion pictures personality personality, and motion pictures motion pictures, and personality fame, and motion pictures motion pictures, and fame motion pictures, and stars photography and visual communication photography, and celebrity culture celebrity, and photography photography, and fame fame, and photography personality, and photography photography, and personality quotations newspapers, and photographs photography and visual communication photography, and half tones half tones half tones, and newspapers newspapers, and half tones wood engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and wood engraving photo engraving photo engraving, and newspapers newspapers, and photo engraving lighting, and flashlight powder lighting, and magnesium flash newspapers, and Frederic Ives photo engraving lighting, and arc lighting photography, and arc lighting photography, and flash gun lighting, and flash gun cameras, reflex cameras, reflecting (origins) newspapers, and reflex cameras (origins) lighting, and flash bulbs photography, and flash bulbs newspapers, and speed gun lighting, and speed gun cameras, and speed gun cameras, and range finder cameras, and 35mm 35mm cameras newspapers, and trains newspapers, and planes transportation newspapers, and transportation transportation, and newspaper photographs photography, and telegraph telegraph telegraph, and photography wireless, and photography photography, and wireless newspapers, and Wirephoto sexuality magazines, and sexuality sexuality, and magazines photography, and sexuality sexuality, and photography photography, and New York Times photography, and New York Tribune photography, and New York Journal photography, and New York World photography, and New York Sun photography, and New York Herald photography, and presses presses, and newspaper photography newspapers, and photography (origins) photography, and Century photography, and Daily Graphic (NY) photojournalism, and origins journalism, and photojournalism newspapers, and photojournalism president and new media McKinley, William McKinley, William, and photography photography, and McKinley assassination war Spanish-American War war, and photography Spanish American War, and photography photography, and war photography, and Spanish American War newspapers, and roll film photography, and roll film photojournalism, and roll film cameras, and roll film newspapers, and cameras cameras, and newspapers cameras, and lens half tones, and intaglio process Ives, Frederic, and photo engraving Horgan, Stephen half tones, and Stephen Horgan Sunday newspapers newspapers, and Sunday newspapers rotogravure, and photography rotogravure, and newspapers newspapers, and rotogravure photography, and rotogravure Associated Press, and newspaper pictures Associated Press, and wire service photographs photography, and panorama privacy privacy, and photography photography, and privacy motion pictures, and McKinley assassination newspapers, and spot news photos photography, and spot news photos photography, and sports reporting motion pictures, and sports reporting journalism, and tabloids photography, and tabloids tabloids, and photography cameras, portable newspapers, and portable cameras 35mm Associated Press cameras lighting photojournalism LB - 39240 PB - University of Minnesota PY - 1966 ST - The Photograph in Print: An Examination of New York Daily Newspapers, 1890-1937 [doctoral thesis] TI - The Photograph in Print: An Examination of New York Daily Newspapers, 1890-1937 [doctoral thesis] ID - 4023 ER - TY - THES AB - The text of this five-chapter doctoral thesis runs 113 pages (the endnotes follow). The first four chapter deal with privacy in the 19th century. Chapter 5, "'Different Institutions': Privacy in the Twentieth Century," starts by noting that privacy concerns began to emerge 1876 with the invention of the microphone and then with the demonstration of the dictograph in 1889. "Thereafter, eavesdroppers no longer needed to come within earshot of a conversation to intercept it. Further inventions of instruments to transmit the human voice invisibly and miniaturization of all these electric and electronic instruments made the physical dimension of privacy shrink to unimportance in this century." (the 20th century) (102) Seipp goes on to discuss wireless and telephone surveillance. He devotes space, also, to the Olmstead v. United States ruling by the U. S. Supreme Court in 1928. The author quotes Louis Brandeis in 1928 writing that "Ways may some day be developed by which the Government, without removing papers from secret drawers, can reproduce them in court, and by which it will be enabled to expose to a jury the most intimate occurrences of the home...." (Brandeis quoted, 110) This work devotes only a page and a half to post-World War II developments. Nizer, who was member of the New York bar, later worked for the Motion Picture Association of America. AU - Seipp, David J. CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1981 KW - ref, secondary motion pictures law privacy motion pictures, and privacy privacy, and motion pictures law, and privacy law, and motion pictures photography and visual communication photography, and privacy privacy, and photography privacy, and microphones privacy, and dictograph privacy, and newsreels privacy, and Olmstead case Olmstead v. U.S. quotations quotations, and privacy quotations, and Louis Brandeis home and new media home, and privacy privacy, and home court cases court cases, and privacy privacy, and court cases ref, thesis ref, thesis (Ph.D.) home photography LB - 38510 PB - Harvard University, Program on Information Resources Policy PY - 1981 ST - The Right to Privacy in American History [doctoral thesis] TI - The Right to Privacy in American History [doctoral thesis] ID - 3950 ER - TY - THES AB - From the Abstract for this doctoral disseration from UMP ProQuest Digital Dissertations: "As American culture has been dominated by television for the past fifty years, any examination of that culture requires an understanding of how television programming is regulated and censored. This dissertation, therefore, reviews this history from 1947 to the present, and then examines the histories of four television programs that sparked controversy at four American television networks. By looking at the controversies surrounding The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, The Richard Pryor Show, TV Nation, and Politically Incorrect with Bill Maher, history shows that the tactics used by the four networks was similar. While the content of these shows varied, each network followed a similar pattern: use such programming to get ratings and critical approval, appear to foster a diversity of viewpoints, and then censor the most objectionable material. The networks were then free to profit from a controversial program, but once ratings fell, networks are reluctant to stick by these sources of controversy. On a case-by-case basis, the incidents of censorship, sponsor intimidation, and network tampering each program experienced appear as isolated incidents. Collectively, however, these examples form a broader look at how American broadcast programming is manipulated to reach the lowest common denominator. However, this denominator is not determined by the American public, but by advertisers and network executives who censor in the name protecting the public, the government, corporations, or themselves from scrutiny, all the while maintaining their revenues lest they air anything that anyone may find offensive." AU - Silverman, David S. CY - Columbia DA - 2004 KW - theses television censorship and ratings television, and censorship censorship, and television values values, and television television, and values freedom censorship LB - 33400 PB - University of Missouri PY - 2004 ST - You Can't Air That: An Examination of Controversial American Television Programming and Censorship from 1967 to 2002 TI - You Can't Air That: An Examination of Controversial American Television Programming and Censorship from 1967 to 2002 ID - 2979 ER - TY - THES AB - Abstract from UMI ProQuest Digital Dissertations: "This study is about how Americans from the East who went to California overland for the gold rush in 1849 - 1851 obtained and used information. I focus on the process of information assessment in the gold rush and show how the sources and markers of credibility changed with location, time, and the experience of the goldrushers. I begin with the information sources available to goldrushers from December 1848 through June 1849. Chapter one is an introduction explaining my approach and methodology. Chapter two is about information available through newspapers, and chapter three is about guidebooks and maps. My narrative continues by following a sample of gold rush companies to California. Chapter four takes the companies to the trailheads, and chapter five along the trail to California. As the emigrants traveled farther into unknown territory, their trust in printed material, mainly guidebooks and maps, declined, and the credibility of handwritten, oral, and unverified information increased. Sources of credibility changed from official information to local expertise. Chapter six focuses on the informational and communications problems of the goldrushers after they reached California. I describe how express companies quickly filled a communications gap left by the inadequacies of the Post Office in California in 1849 - 1851. These descriptions show that the private endeavors, along with the Post Office, formed an unplanned network of communications and information dispersal. Chapter seven describes and analyses the content and influence of communications from California and the implications of these informational flows on the gold rush of 1850. In an 'Epilog and Conclusion,' I discuss the aftermath of the communications and information problems of the gold rush, particularly as they affected future migrations to California and the development of the American communications infrastructure. Finally, I review the analytical conclusions of the study within the context of other scholarly literature concerning communications and information dispersal." AU - Stillson, Richard T. DA - 2003 KW - post office theses newspapers books, periodicals, newspapers telegraph postal service maps infrastructure pony express news news and journalism LB - 33540 PB - Johns Hopkins University PY - 2003 ST - Golden Words: Communications and Information Dispersal in the California Godl Rush TI - Golden Words: Communications and Information Dispersal in the California Godl Rush ID - 2993 ER - TY - THES AB - Political economists believe that the development of technologies cannot be isolated from their social, economic, and political environments, so the status quo of any technology comes from a long process of interactions between technology, economic situations, and the political environment. Based on the perspective of political economy, this unpublished Master’s thesis examines the history of the Internet in the United States and Taiwan. It investigates how economic and political conditions shaped the development of the Internet. This study found that the economic and political environment did play important roles in shaping the Internet in both nations. Furthermore, this study also discovered that the development of the Internet of the U.S. and that of Taiwan were less similar than different due to the large differences existing between the political and economic environments of these two countries. --Amy Chu AU - Su, Hou-Chang CY - Hsin-Chu, Taiwan DA - 1999 KW - computers nationalism Internet computers non-USA Chu, Amy Masters thesis theses Taiwan +computers and the Internet Internet, and Taiwan Taiwan, and Internet computers, and Taiwan Taiwan, and computers political economy, and Taiwan +nationalism and communication nationalism, and Internet political economy LB - 610 PB - Master's Thesis, National Jiaotung University (Kuoli Jiaotung ta hsue) PY - 1999 ST - An Examination of the Internet History from the Perspective of Political Economy: The Experience of The U.S. and Taiwan (Wangji wanglu lishi de chengchin fenhsi: Meikuo yu Taiwan jingyan) TI - An Examination of the Internet History from the Perspective of Political Economy: The Experience of The U.S. and Taiwan (Wangji wanglu lishi de chengchin fenhsi: Meikuo yu Taiwan jingyan) ID - 149 ER - TY - THES AB - From the Abstract for this Ph. D. thesis from UMI ProQuest Digital Dissertations: "Television violence and its effects on children have been a longstanding concern of policymakers. From the early 1950s through the present day, various congressional committees and subcommittees have periodically held hearings on the issue of television violence and its impact on children. Despite all its attention to the issue, Congress took little action to address the perceived problems, other than to pressure the industry to voluntarily reduce the amount of violence on television. This was so until the mid-1980s, when Senator Paul Simon was eventually able to see enacted into law the first piece of legislation addressing television violence: a three-year antitrust exemption to allow the industry to work collectively to reduce television violence. The antitrust exemption, however, failed to produce significant improvement in the levels of violence on television, leading Congress to return to the issue on a number of occasions throughout the 1990s. In 1996, the V-chip requirement was enacted into law. Nevertheless, Congress continued to revisit the issue, most recently with a focus on the marketing of violent entertainment to children. From the earliest congressional investigations into television violence, Congress has regularly called on social scientists to present findings on the effects of television violence on children. In fact, social scientists appear in nearly every round of hearings held on the issue. Social scientific effects research has been used by parties to these policy debates to argue both that television violence does and does not have negative effects on children exposed to it. This dissertation examines the uses to which social scientific effects research has been put in the policy debates on television violence, focusing on congressional hearings held leading up to the passage of the 1990 industry antitrust exemption, the enactment of the V-chip requirement and its associated ratings system, and in response to the Federal Trade Commission's 2000 report that found that entertainment companies routinely marketed violent entertainment to children. In doing so, it analyzes how social scientific effects research has been presented in these hearings and how various parties to the debate -- including policymakers and industry --have used social scientific effects research." AU - Timmer, Joel Thomas DA - 2002 KW - children theses television media effects children violence social science research violence, and social science research V-chip Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Simon, Paul, and TV violence children, and media effects media effects, and violence media effects, and television television, and media effects violence, and social science research self-regulation children, and media LB - 33450 PB - Indiana University, Bloomington PY - 2002 ST - The Uses of Social Science in Policy Debates on Television Violence TI - The Uses of Social Science in Policy Debates on Television Violence ID - 2984 ER - TY - THES AB - This undergraduate thesis written in 1912 for the Bachelor of Science at MIT in the Department of Biology and Public Health, reveals Leonard Troland's early interest in studying visual sensation and also color. The work, which runs about 485 pages, and carries the rather unweildy subtitle: "An Attempt to Reconstruct current Hypotheses of the Neural Mechanism Underlying Visual Senation by the Use of Modern Physical, Chemical and Biological Conceptions." AU - Troland, Leonard Thompson CY - Cambridge, MA DA - 1912 KW - ref, thesis ref, thesis (B.S.) Troland, Leonard color Troland, Leonard, and color color, and Leonard Troland Troland, Leonard, and visual sensation color, and media effects media effects media effects, and color LB - 40240 PB - MIT PY - 1912 ST - Studies in the Theory of Visual Response TI - Studies in the Theory of Visual Response ID - 4122 ER - TY - THES AB - In Ancient China, Sung Dynasty is regarded as the “golden period” and a period when block printing was in a fully developed stage. Printing in the Hangzhou area had developed a solid foundation during the Five Dynasties (907-959 A.D.), and when it reached Sung Dynasty (Northern and Southern), block printing became the most pervasive technique for publication. Many local government-subsidized and private printing and book shops started to emerge, and they reached a high level of production in terms of both number and quality. This master thesis concentrates at Hangzhou area during the Sung Dynasty and adopts historical and analytical approaches to examine such sources as chronicles of the imperial court and local courts, private literary collections, printing indexes, and various secondary sources. This research investigates the publication enterprises, and such factors as historical background and origins. It also looks at the characteristics and content of publications during this period, and their historical significance. -- Amy Chu AU - Tsai, Hui-Ju CY - Taipei, Taiwan DA - 1998 KW - Asia print printing non-USA Chu, Amy China +books, periodicals, newspapers printing, China China, and printing printing, and Sung Dynasty (China) Masters thesis theses printing, block China, and block printing LB - 600 PB - Master's Thesis, National Taiwan University (Kuoli Taiwan ta hsue) PY - 1998 ST - A Study on Books and Printing at Hangzhou in Sung China (960-1279) (Sungdai Hangzhou dichu tushu chuban shiyeh yenchiou) TI - A Study on Books and Printing at Hangzhou in Sung China (960-1279) (Sungdai Hangzhou dichu tushu chuban shiyeh yenchiou) ID - 148 ER - TY - THES AB - This doctoral thesis, done in the Department of English Language and Literature at the University of Chicago, examines the way in which American commercial films structured discourses about new communication technologies. The images of new media found in motion pictures are often a combination of “utopian projections and fearful expectations.” (4) Framing the ways in which the public views media is important because, the author writes, media “are pliant entities whose modes of usage depend on social discourses concerned to make sense of or exploit media, rather than on intrinsic properties of technology.” (5) This work has four chapters. The first is entitled “Film and the Electrified Public: Unruly Fantasies of Early Cinema.” The three chapters that follow deal with cinema’s portrayal of radio, television, and computer networks. The author maintains that “one ... trait that all three of these rival media share, especially in their controversial developmental stages, is a sense that they will harbor new and transformative modes of interaction.” (6) Each chapter attempts to recover the “forgotten future” of each medium covered. (7) With regard to computer and digital technology, for example, a strong theme in American movies is that they are perpetrators of “a social crisis.” (7) The chapter on computers discusses such films as Lawnmower Man (1992), Johnny Mnemonic (1995), Hackers (1995), Virtuosity (1995), The Net (1995), and Strange Days (1995). Readers may wish that the author had incorporated more films into the earlier chapters. AU - Young, Paul CY - Chicago DA - 1998 KW - computers theses motion pictures computers +motion pictures and popular culture virtual reality Ph.D. thesis Theses, Ph.D. +electricity +radio +television digital media digitization motion pictures, and digital media digital media, and motion pictures motion pictures, and digitization radio, and motion pictures motion pictures, and radio television, and motion pictures motion pictures, and television motion pictures, silent electricity, and motion pictures motion pictures, and electricity +computers and the Internet computers, and motion pictures motion pictures, and computers LB - 240 PB - University of Chicago PY - 1998 ST - Virtual Fantasies, Public Realities: American Cinema and the Rival Media, 1895-1995 TI - Virtual Fantasies, Public Realities: American Cinema and the Rival Media, 1895-1995 ID - 113 ER - TY - THES AB - This doctoral thesis provides an excellent history of color movies during the silent era. Yumibe covers the period from the 1890s mainly through the first decade of the twentieth century, although he does provide some discussion of the years after 1910. Early films were at first colored by hand and then mid-way through the first decade of the twentieth century stenciling and tinting were used as movies became longer and for sophisticated. AU - Yumibe, Joshua CY - Chicago DA - 2007 KW - Jews Marked ref, thesis ref, thesis (Ph.D.) color motion pictures motion pictures, silent color, and silent films motion pictures, and color color, motion pictures color, and dyes color, and lithography lithography, and color chromolithography color, and stencil films color, and tinting color, and theory color, and research on color, and Goethe color, and Immanuel Kant color, and sexuality sexuality sexuality, and color films color, and spiritual uplift color, and senses color, and Charles Reynaud advertising and public relations color, and advertising advertising, and color color, and advertising silent films color, and Charles Francis Jenkins color, and Lloyd Jones Jones, Lloyd, and color Jenkins, Charles Francis, and color advertising Jenkins, Charles Francis lithography LB - 41080 PB - University of Chicago PY - 2007 ST - Moving Color: An Aesthetic History of Applied Color Technologies in Silent Cinema [doctoral thesis] TI - Moving Color: An Aesthetic History of Applied Color Technologies in Silent Cinema [doctoral thesis] ID - 4207 ER - TY - THES AB - This dissertation focuses on cross-cultural differences in the use of the Internet using a quantitative research methodology. The researcher found, contrary to hypothesis, that differences in use from country to country were not significant at the country level of analysis. The research did find some differences at the individual level of analysis including that censorship was a greater concern in Germany and Anglo countries. The author concludes that cultural differences remain and that the virtual world is not homogenous. --Mark Tremayne AU - Zalka, Lori M. DA - 1999 KW - computers nationalism identity law law censorship and ratings non-USA regulation +computers and the Internet Tremayne, Mark community, and Internet global communication +nationalism and communication Germany censorship, and Internet regulation, and Internet identity, and Internet censorship community Ph. D. Thesis theses LB - 9170 PB - Doctoral Thesis, Florida International University PY - 1999 ST - Globalization of the Internet: Convergence or a Multicultural Community? TI - Globalization of the Internet: Convergence or a Multicultural Community? ID - 2284 ER - TY - UNPB AB - Cantor, one of the leading researchers on the effects of violence and fear in mass entertainment, discusses the influence of horror movies, especially on children. She delivered this paper at the International Communication Association meeting, 2003. The essay was then in press at Politics Today. AU - Cantor, Joanne KW - media research fear syntheses Poltergeist motion pictures meta-analyses media effects violence (see also: media violence) violence media effects violence media violence media effects censorship and ratings children +television television, and violence violence, and television social science research social science research, and violence violence, and social science research violence, and pornography pornography, and violence media effects media effects, and TV violence media violence, meta-analyses social science research, and literature review social science research, and meta-analysis violence, and children children, and media children, and media violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and motion pictures children, and fear fear, and media effects media effects, and fear social science research, and fear fear, and social science research fear, and Poltergeist fear, and Jaws Poltergeist, and children Jaws (the movie), and children fear, and children motion pictures, and fear television, and fear fear, and television fear, and motion pictures pornography LB - 28170 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality ProCite field[22]: ST - "I'll Never Have a Clown in My House!" -- Frightening Movies and Enduring Emotional Memory TI - "I'll Never Have a Clown in My House!" -- Frightening Movies and Enduring Emotional Memory ID - 1366 ER - TY - UNPB AB - The first three chapters of this 1,300 unpublished "History of Communication" were published in Innis's Empire and Communiation (1950). There have been at least three efforts since Innis's death in 1952 to publish the entire work but without success. The manuscript is much like a first draft and need substantial editing. The work discusses new technologies. For example, Innis devotes much space to the invention of paper and what its spread meant to civilization. The work comes up to the early twentieth century and the manuscript with related notes in the University of Toronto Archives give a good indication of the breadth of Innis's reading. This material is located in Accession No. B72-0003/ Boxes 015, 016, 017, 018, Harold A. Innis Papers, University of Toronto Archives, Toronto, Ont., Canada. AU - Innis, Harold A. DA - [1952] KW - nationalism time and timekeeping time print primary sources archives primary sources preservation materials cultural imperialism history, and new media materials news and journalism non-USA history geography general studies +nationalism and communication time space (spatial) imperialism Innis, Harold cultural imperialism Egypt Rome Babylonia printing presses printing press paper parchment Greece McLuhan, Marshall history, break with history, and printing history, and newspapers newspapers, and history printing printing, and history newspapers primary sources archives primary sources, Canada primary sources, Toronto, CA primary sources, Harold Innis history materials news LB - 19410 ST - A History of Communication [unpublished manuscript] TI - A History of Communication [unpublished manuscript] ID - 778 ER - TY - UNPB AU - Schiller, Dan KW - computers imperialism non-USA values +computers and the Internet capitalism digital media capitalism, and digital media global communication political economy values, and digital media networks capitalism, and Internet cultural imperialism consumerism culture digitization LB - 8010 ST - The Enchanted Network: How Digital Capitalism Is Remaking the World TI - The Enchanted Network: How Digital Capitalism Is Remaking the World ID - 2170 ER - TY - WEB AB - This news release says that in less than five months, Boeing Digital Cinema, part of the Boeing Company's Boeing Integrated Defense System, has given 10,000 screenings of digital cinema and continues to give 100 per day. Among the movies transmitted by Boeing Digital Cinema were Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones (Fox/Lucasfilm); Spy Kids II (Miramax); Signs (Buena Vista Pictures Distribution); and Banger Sisters (Fox). The article notes that digital delivery could save Hollywood perhaps $1.5 billion per year. DA - Oct. 31, 2002 KW - R & D corporations corporations Boeing Corporation motion pictures research and development war Hollywood digital media digitization war websites +motion pictures and popular culture digital cinema +military communication +nationalism and communication digital cinema, and Boeing nationalism Hollywood, and military military, and Hollywood Hollywood, and digital movies Boeing Digital Cinema digital cinema, Boeing Digital Cinema LB - 3360 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 N1 - See filed under "Digital Cinema -- Hollywood - Military" PY - 2002 ST - Boeing Digital Cinema Surpasses 10,000 Screenings, Demonstrates Live Streaming Capability TI - Boeing Digital Cinema Surpasses 10,000 Screenings, Demonstrates Live Streaming Capability UR - http://www.boeing.com/news/releases/2002/q4/nr_021031t.html ID - 424 ER - TY - WEB AB - This article, which appeared in QVIS News, notes that QuVIS, headquartered in Topeka, KS, "enabled the transfer, storage and play back for the digital premier of Miramax Films' Bounce, the first major motion picture to be delivered via satellite." The article notes areas of cooperation and mutual benefit between Hollywood and the military. 1) Developing standards for digital transmission. 2) Helping Hollywood with distribution standards. 3) Helping the modern military deal with "many sources of imagery as a result of the proliferation of small and low cost sensors." One might note, too, that the military looks to Hollywood for innovation in image simulation. AD - http://www.quvis.com/news/pressreleases/102301_military.htm DA - Jan. 23, 2001 KW - R & D QuVIS nationalism motion pictures research and development war satellites Hollywood digital media digitization war websites motion pictures and popular culture digital cinema military communication nationalism and communication digital cinema, and QuVIS military, and digital cinema nationalism, and digital cinema Hollywood, and military military, and Hollywood Hollywood, and digital movies QuVIS, and digital cinema military, and sensors sensors +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and digital cinema digital cinema, and satellites Bounce, and digital transmission LB - 3370 M1 - Jan. 4, 2003 (3:57 p.m.) N1 - See filed under "Digital Cinema -- Hollywood - Military" PY - 2001 ST - QuVis Introduces Compression Technology to Southern California Military Community TI - QuVis Introduces Compression Technology to Southern California Military Community ID - 425 ER - TY - WEB AB - This article appeared in QVIS News and promotes the advantages of digital cinema. It notes that QuVIS will be demonstrating its new digital cinema recorder/server/player and Quality Priority Encoding compression technology at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Jan. 11-12, 2001, at Gaithersburg, MD. DA - Jan. 9, 2001 KW - R & D QuVIS nationalism motion pictures research and development war satellites Hollywood digital media digitization war websites +motion pictures and popular culture digital cinema +military communication +nationalism and communication digital cinema, and QuVIS military, and digital cinema nationalism, and digital cinema Hollywood, and military military, and Hollywood Hollywood, and digital movies QuVIS, and digital cinema military, and sensors sensors digital standards digital standards, and Hollywood Hollywood, and digital standards military, and digital standards digital standards, and Hollywood +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and digital cinema digital cinema, and satellites LB - 3380 M1 - Jan. 4, 2003 (4:00 p.m.) N1 - See filed under "Digital Cinema -- Hollywood - Military" PY - 2001 ST - QuVIS Raises the Curtain on Digital Cinema Technology at NIST TI - QuVIS Raises the Curtain on Digital Cinema Technology at NIST UR - http://www.quvis.com/news/pressreleases/010901_NIST.htm ID - 426 ER - TY - WEB AB - This article, which appeared in QVIS News, discusses the first digital transmission by satellite of a major motion picture. Miramax Films' movie Bounce was sent from Los Angeles to AMC Theatre in New York. In this endeavor, the article says that QuVIS joined with Miramax, Walt Disney Corporation, Boeing, Texas Instruments, EnergyDigital, and Williams Communication. AD - http://www.quvis.com/news/pressreleases/111400_bounce.htm DA - Nov. 14, 2000 KW - R & D QuVIS QuVIS corporations corporations Boeing Corporation Texas Instruments Company motion pictures research and development war satellites Hollywood digital media digitization war websites motion pictures and popular culture digital cinema military communication nationalism and communication digital cinema, and Boeing QuVIS nationalism Hollywood, and military military, and Hollywood Hollywood, and digital movies QuVIS military, and sensors sensors digital standards digital standards, and Hollywood Hollywood, and digital standards military, and digital standards digital standards, and Hollywood aeronautics and space communication satellites digital cinema, and Boeing satellites Bounce, and digital transmission Disney, Walt digital cinema, and Boeing Walt Disney digital cinema, and Boeing Texas Instruments Company digital cinema, and Boeing LB - 3390 M1 - Jan. 4, 2003 (4:00 p.m.) PY - 2000 ST - QuVIS Server Used in First-Ever Major Motion Picture Satellite Delivery and Digital Cinema Screening TI - QuVIS Server Used in First-Ever Major Motion Picture Satellite Delivery and Digital Cinema Screening ID - 427 ER - TY - WEB AB - This Boeing news release, in Spaceflight Now, says that Boeing Digital Cinema is able to give same day delivery of digital media by way of satellite. This service was to be demonstrated at Bally's and Paris hotels in Las Vagas, March 5-8, 2001, at the ShoWest 2001 Convention. Boeing Digital Cinema is a service of Boeing Satellite Systems, Inc. of the Boeing Company. DA - March 6, 2001 KW - R & D corporations corporations Boeing Corporation motion pictures research and development war satellites Hollywood digital media digitization war websites +motion pictures and popular culture digital cinema +military communication +nationalism and communication digital cinema, and Boeing nationalism Hollywood, and military military, and Hollywood Hollywood, and digital movies Boeing Digital Cinema digital cinema, Boeing Digital Cinema +aeronautics and space communication satellites digital cinema, and Boeing satellites LB - 3410 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 N1 - See filed under "Digital Cinema -- Hollywood-Military" PY - 2001 ST - Boeing's Digital Cinema Ready for Viewing TI - Boeing's Digital Cinema Ready for Viewing UR - http://spaceflightnow.com/news/n0103/06cinema ID - 429 ER - TY - WEB AB - This website give information about Boeing Integrated Defense Systems (IDS), based in St. Louis, including company officers. Among other activities, IDS is involved in digital cinema DA - Jan. 4, 2003 KW - R & D corporations corporations Boeing Corporation motion pictures research and development war satellites Hollywood digital media digitization war websites +motion pictures and popular culture digital cinema +military communication +nationalism and communication digital cinema, and Boeing nationalism Hollywood, and military military, and Hollywood Hollywood, and digital movies Boeing Digital Cinema digital cinema, Boeing Digital Cinema +aeronautics and space communication satellites digital cinema, and Boeing satellites Boeing Integrated Defense Systmes LB - 3420 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 N1 - See filed under "Digital Cinema-- Hollywood-Military" PY - 2003 ST - Boeing Integrated Defense Systems TI - Boeing Integrated Defense Systems UR - http://www.boeing.com/ids/ids-back/index.html ID - 430 ER - TY - WEB AB - This news release pertains to compression technology and digital communication, and the benefits they provide to "military simulation and display applications." QuVIS also provides digital cinema server equipment to commercial movie theaters in the United States. DA - Jan. 15, 2002 KW - R & D QuVIS nationalism simulations motion pictures research and development war satellites Hollywood digital media digitization war websites +motion pictures and popular culture digital cinema +military communication +nationalism and communication digital cinema, and QuVIS military, and digital cinema nationalism, and digital cinema Hollywood, and military military, and Hollywood Hollywood, and digital movies QuVIS, and digital cinema military, and sensors sensors +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and digital cinema digital cinema, and satellites Bounce, and digital transmission military, and simulations simulations, and military Hollywood, and simulations simulations, and Hollywood LB - 3430 M1 - Jan. 4, 2003 (3:59 p.m.) N1 - See filed under "Digital Cinema -- Hollywood - Miltary" PY - 2002 ST - QuVIS Introduces QuBit ST 2.1 and QuClips Express to Military Community TI - QuVIS Introduces QuBit ST 2.1 and QuClips Express to Military Community UR - http://www.quvis.com/news/pressreleases/011402_AFCEA.htm ID - 431 ER - TY - WEB AB - This article appears in GCN: Government Computer News, vol. 20, no. 2. It notes that "Hollywood needs Washington to help set standards to make digital cinema as interoperable as 35-mm film. And Washington needs Hollywood to develop motion imagery for military and other applications." The article notes that "digital technology holds promise for the rapid collection, distribution and management of moving images for military and intelligence applications." DA - Jan. 22, 2001 KW - R & D nationalism simulations motion pictures research and development war satellites Hollywood digital media digitization war websites +motion pictures and popular culture digital cinema +military communication +nationalism and communication military, and digital cinema nationalism, and digital cinema Hollywood, and military military, and Hollywood Hollywood, and digital movies military, and sensors sensors +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and digital cinema digital cinema, and satellites military, and simulations simulations, and military Hollywood, and simulations simulations, and Hollywood National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) NIST, and digital cinema digital cinema, and NIST nationalism, and NIST NIST LB - 3440 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 N1 - See filed under "Digital Cinema -- Hollywood - Military" PY - 2001 ST - East, West Take Cue on Digital Cinema Standards TI - East, West Take Cue on Digital Cinema Standards UR - http://www.gcn.com/vol20_no2/news/3567-1.html ID - 432 ER - TY - WEB AB - This article in QVIS News reports that eleven North American theaters saw Star Wars: Episode II -- Attack of the Clones (20th Century Fox, 2002) in digital format. The movie, directed by George Lucas, was the first action major motion picture shot entirely digitally with no film. The article discusses Lucasfilm Skywalker Ranch and Industrial Light & Magic. DA - May 10, 2002 KW - R & D QuVIS nationalism motion pictures research and development war Lucas, George satellites Hollywood digital media digitization war websites +motion pictures and popular culture digital cinema +military communication +nationalism and communication digital cinema, and QuVIS military, and digital cinema nationalism, and digital cinema Hollywood, and military military, and Hollywood Hollywood, and digital movies QuVIS, and digital cinema military, and sensors sensors digital standards digital standards, and Hollywood Hollywood, and digital standards military, and digital standards digital standards, and Hollywood +aeronautics and space communication satellites, and digital cinema digital cinema, and satellites Star Wars...Clones, and digital cinema Star Wars ... Clones, and satellite transmission Lucasfilm, and digital cinema digital cinema, and Lucasfilm Lucas, George, and digital cinema Industrial Light & Magic, and digital cinema LB - 3450 M1 - July 18, 2003 N1 - See filed under "Digital Cinema -- Hollywood - Military" PY - 2002 ST - QuVIS Brings Star Wars Into the New Millennium of Digital Cinema TI - QuVIS Brings Star Wars Into the New Millennium of Digital Cinema UR - http://www.quvis.com/news/pressreleases/051002_starwars.htm ID - 433 ER - TY - WEB AB - The British Board of Film Classification is the agency responsible for rating (and previously censoring) motion pictures in Great Britian. KW - classification CARA magnetic recording censorship and ratings rating systems (non-USA) rating systems (non-USA) motion pictures media effects videotape magnetic tape law censorship and rating system (GB) rating system (GB) censorship classification censorship non-USA +motion pictures and popular culture Great Britain British Board of Film Classification rating systems, and Great Britain Great Britain, and rating systems censorship, and Great Britain Great Britain, and censorship rating systems, and harmful effects media effects, and Great Britain videos, and Great Britain Great Britain, and videos rating systems, and videos (GB) videos, and British rating system websites LB - 27750 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 N1 - See also: violence; sexuality ST - British Board of Film Classification TI - British Board of Film Classification UR - http://www.bbfc.co.uk ID - 1329 ER - TY - WEB AB - The Canadian Rating and Classification System is the primary agency rating motion pictures, television programs, video grames, and other entertainment in Canada. KW - computers classification video cassette recorders (VCRs) self-regulation CARA magnetic recording censorship and ratings rating systems (non-USA) motion pictures media effects satellites videotape video games magnetic tape computers law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship non-USA Canada motion pictures television rating systems, and Canada Canada, and rating systems censorship, and Canada Canada, and censorship rating systems, and harmful effects media effects, and Canada videos, and Canada Canada, and videos rating systems, and videos (Canada) videos, and Canadian rating system video games, and Canadian rating system rating systems, and video games computers and the Internet computers, and Canadian rating system television, and Canadian rating system cable, and Canada cable, and Canadian rating system satellites, and Canadian rating system motion pictures, and rating systems (Canada) Canada, and motion pictures Canada, and television Canada, and video games Canada, and computer rating system websites cable VCRs LB - 27760 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 N1 - See also: violence; sexuality ST - Canadian Rating and Classification Systems: Film Classification in Canada TI - Canadian Rating and Classification Systems: Film Classification in Canada UR - http://www.media-awareness.ca/english/resources/ratings_classification_systems/film_classification/canada_film_classification.cfm ID - 1330 ER - TY - WEB AB - This is the official website of Austrialia's Office of Film and Literature Classification. The Australians approached movie rating differently from the United States. Whereas the Classification and Ratings Administration in the United States generally avoided discussing the quality of films its rated, the Australians gave more weight to such considerations and were inclined, too, to turn to experts for advice. KW - computers classification CARA magnetic recording censorship and ratings rating systems (non-USA) motion pictures media effects satellites videotape video games magnetic tape computers law censorship and rating system (Australia) rating system (Australia) censorship classification censorship non-USA Australia +motion pictures and popular culture +television rating systems, and Australia Australia, and rating systems censorship, and Australia Australia, and censorship rating systems, and harmful effects media effects, and Australia videos, and Australia Australia, and videos rating systems, and videos (Australia) videos, and Australia rating system video games, and Australian rating system rating systems, and video games +computers and the Internet computers, and Australian rating system television, and Australian rating system cable, and Australia cable, and Australian rating system satellites, and Australian rating system motion pictures, and rating systems (Australia) Australia, and motion pictures Australia, and television Australia, and video games Australia, and computer rating system websites +aeronautics and space communication cable LB - 27770 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality ST - Office of Film and Literature Classification (Australia) TI - Office of Film and Literature Classification (Australia) UR - http://www.oflc.gov.au ID - 1331 ER - TY - WEB AB - This is the official website of New Zealand's Office of Film and Literature Classification. The Australians approached movie rating differently from the United States. Whereas the Classification and Ratings Administration in the United States generally avoided discussing the quality of films its rated, the Australians gave more weight to such considerations and were inclined, too, to turn to experts for advice. KW - computers classification self-regulation CARA magnetic recording censorship and ratings rating systems (non-USA) motion pictures media effects satellites videotape video games magnetic tape computers law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship non-USA New Zealand +motion pictures and popular culture +television rating systems, and New Zealand New Zealand, and rating systems censorship, and New Zealand New Zealand, and censorship rating systems, and harmful effects media effects, and New Zealand videos, and New Zealand New Zealand, and videos rating systems, and videos (New Zealand) videos, and New Zealand rating system video games, and New Zealand rating system rating systems, and video games +computers and the Internet computers, and New Zealand rating system television, and New Zealand rating system cable, and New Zealand cable, and New Zealand rating system satellites, and New Zealand rating system motion pictures, and rating systems (New Zealand) New Zealand, and motion pictures New Zealand, and television New Zealand, and video games New Zealand, and computer rating system +aeronautics and space communication cable LB - 27780 N1 - See also: violence See also: sexuality ST - Office of Film and Literature Classification (New Zealand) TI - Office of Film and Literature Classification (New Zealand) UR - http://www.censorship.govt.nz/censorship.html ID - 1332 ER - TY - WEB AB - This site provides the television industry's explanation of its rating system and the V-chip. KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) television, and V-chip violence censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.) NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric motion pictures law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification V-chip +motion pictures and popular culture +television TV Parental Guidelines television, and rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and television FTC National Cable Television Association MPAA MPAA, and television TV rating system (U. S.) websites violence LB - 27810 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 ST - The TV Parental Guidelines: About TV Ratings and V-Chip TI - The TV Parental Guidelines: About TV Ratings and V-Chip UR - http://www.tvguidelines.org/ ID - 1335 ER - TY - WEB AB - Movie critic Stanley Kauffmann writing for the New Republic called Oliver Stone's Natural Born Killers (1994) a “paradigm ... of the ills and the imbalances in American life.” AD - New Republic Online DA - July 12, 1999 KW - +motion pictures and popular culture critics Natural Born Killers (1994) Stone, Oliver violence motion pictures, and violence violence, and Oliver Stone violence, and motion pictures motion pictures, and reviews motion pictures LB - 29310 PY - 1999 ST - Stanley Kauffmann on Film TI - Stanley Kauffmann on Film UR - http://www.tnr.com/archives/0799/071299/kauffmann071299.html ID - 2700 ER - TY - WEB AB - This is the official website of New Zealand's Office of Film and Literature Classification. New Zealand (and the Australians) approached movie rating differently from the United States. Whereas the Classification and Ratings Administration in the United States generally avoided discussing the quality of films its rated, in New Zealand and Australia, raters gave more weight to such considerations and were inclined, too, to turn to experts for advice. KW - New Zealand non-USA censorship and ratings rating systems, and New Zealand New Zealand, and censorship New Zealand, and ratings censorship, and New Zealand video games, and rating New Zealand, and video games +motion pictures and popular culture New Zealand, and motion pictures motion pictures, and New Zealand websites motion pictures video games censorship LB - 29340 M1 - May 20, 2010 ST - Office of Film and Literature Classification (New Zealand) TI - Office of Film and Literature Classification (New Zealand) UR - http://www.censorship.govt.nz/censorship.html (accessed May 20, 2010) ID - 2701 ER - TY - WEB AB - The Canadian Rating and Classification System is the primary agency rating motion pictures, television programs, video grames, and other entertainment in Canada KW - computers classification video cassette recorders (VCRs) self-regulation CARA magnetic recording censorship and ratings rating systems (non-USA) motion pictures media effects satellites videotape video games magnetic tape computers law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification censorship non-USA Canada motion pictures television rating systems, and Canada Canada, and rating systems censorship, and Canada Canada, and censorship rating systems, and harmful effects media effects, and Canada videos, and Canada Canada, and videos rating systems, and videos (Canada) videos, and Canadian rating system video games, and Canadian rating system rating systems, and video games computers and the Internet computers, and Canadian rating system television, and Canadian rating system cable, and Canada cable, and Canadian rating system satellites, and Canadian rating system motion pictures, and rating systems (Canada) Canada, and motion pictures Canada, and television Canada, and video games Canada, and computer rating system websites cable VCRs LB - 34540 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 ST - Ratings and Classification Systems: Canadian Rating System for Home Videos TI - Ratings and Classification Systems: Canadian Rating System for Home Videos UR - http://www.media-awareness.ca/english/resources/ratings_classification_systems/video_ratings/can_home_video_ratings.cfm ID - 2721 ER - TY - WEB AB - This website for the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) provides a biographical sketch of Dan Glickman (through 2000), who replaced Jack Valenti as Head of the Motion Picture Association of American (MPAA) in 2004. It notes that before becoming Secretary of Agriculture under President Clinton, Glickman had been a congressman from Kansas and served on the House Agriculture Committee. There he helped to author four pieces of farm legislation. Glickman was also considered one of Congress's leading experts on aviation policy and wrote legislation establishing product liability protection for the manufacturers of small aircraft. DA - Oct., 2000 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) motion pictures censorship and ratings censorship MPAA Glickman, Dan MPAA, and Dan Glickman CARA, and Dan Glickman CARA LB - 30490 M1 - July 5, 2004 PY - 2000 ST - Biographical Sketch: Dan Glickman, Secretary of Agriculture TI - Biographical Sketch: Dan Glickman, Secretary of Agriculture UR - http://www.usda.gov/agencies/gallery/glickman.htm ID - 2805 ER - TY - WEB AB - This website for Great Talent Network, Inc., Celebrity Speakers Bureau, give biographical background on Dan Glickman, who replaced Jack Valenti as head of the President of the Motion Picture Association of America on September 1, 2004. It notes that Glickman's suggested speaking topics include: "Humor in American Politics"; "World Hunger and America's Foreign Policy"; and "Public Health Challenges of Bioterrorism." The biography gives details about Glickman's education and early career. DA - [2004?] KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) motion pictures censorship and ratings censorship MPAA Glickman, Dan MPAA, and Dan Glickman CARA, and Dan Glickman CARA LB - 30510 M1 - July 5, 2004 ST - Dan Glickman, Former U. S. Secretary of Agriculture TI - Dan Glickman, Former U. S. Secretary of Agriculture UR - http://www.greatertalent.com/bios/glickman.shtml ID - 2807 ER - TY - WEB AB - This website at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University gives a profile of Dan Glickman, who succeeded Jack Valenti as president of the Motion Picture Association of America on September 1, 2004. It also lists several of expertise on which Glickman and other faculty in the Kennedy School welcomed questions. Civic Engagement, Communications, Democracy, Politics, and the Presidency are among the topics. DA - [2004?] KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) motion pictures censorship and ratings censorship MPAA Glickman, Dan MPAA, and Dan Glickman CARA, and Dan Glickman CARA LB - 30520 M1 - July 5, 2004 ST - [Profile: Dan Glickman] TI - [Profile: Dan Glickman] UR - http://ksgfaculty.harvard.edu/Dan_Glickman ID - 2808 ER - TY - WEB AB - This website for Harvard University's Institute of Politics give a biographical sketch of Dan Glickman, who succeeded Jack Valenti as president of the Motion Picture Association of America on September 1, 2004. DA - 2004 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) motion pictures censorship and ratings censorship MPAA Glickman, Dan MPAA, and Dan Glickman CARA, and Dan Glickman CARA LB - 30530 M1 - July 5, 2004 PY - 2004 ST - Who We Are TI - Who We Are UR - http://www.iop.harvard.edu/who/director.html ID - 2809 ER - TY - WEB AB - The Mission statement for the Mercurians reads: "The Mercurians began meeting in 1986 for the purpose of generating networks between people who share work and interests in the history of communication technologies, defining the field broadly. Our activities include publishing a semi-annual newsletter, Antenna, meeting annually at Society for the History of Technology (SHOT) conferences, organizing paper sessions for SHOT meetings, and pursuing contacts between meetings. Antenna serves both as a clearing house for readers and an informal forum for their ideas. We welcome contributions, including notices and queries about Mercurians' projects as well as short essays on their work. Antenna includes book reviews and other materials about conferences, museums, publications, archives, funding, and other pertinent materials." The Mercurians are a branch of SHOT, Society for the History of Technology. "Antenna" is the Society's newsletter. KW - computers post office nationalism Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Aeronautics and Space Communication Artificial Intelligence and Biotechnology Bibliographies Books, Periodicals, Newspapers Computers and the Internet Duplicating Technologies Electricity General Studies Government Information Storage Military Communication Motion Pictures Nationalism and Communication Photography and Visual Communication Postal Service Radio Sound Recording Telegraph Telephones Television Time and Timekeeping Advertising and Public Relations Capitalism Censorship and Ratings Children and Media Color Critics Democracy Digital Media Education Freedom Future and Science Fiction History and New Media Home and New Media Labor Law Materials Media Effects News and Journalism Non-USA Office Presidents and New Media References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps Religion Sexuality Values Violence War Websites Women advertising children future history home photography LB - 34520 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 ST - The Mercurians: Society for the History of Communication Technologies TI - The Mercurians: Society for the History of Communication Technologies UR - http://www.mercurians.org/ ID - 3090 ER - TY - WEB AB - Echo's Research Center "Catalogues, annotates, and reviews more than 5,000 sites on the history of science, technology, and industry. Search or browse by key word, topic, time period, or content." Its Collecting Center contains a "directory of websites that emphasize the online collection of historical materials. Browse by topic, visit the projects, or read our Practical Guide to collecting history online." Its Tools Centers offers free tools to find, create, and manage digital materials, or search and contribute to a collaborative directory of any and all tools applicable to the practice of digital history." Its Resource Center provides "information about ... free workshops and consultancies for historians of science, technology, and industry, plus links to Digital History, our full guide to producing online history." KW - computers post office nationalism Biography, Autobiography, Oral Histories Biography, Autobiography, Memoirs, Oral Histories Aeronautics and Space Communication Artificial Intelligence and Biotechnology Bibliographies Books, Periodicals, Newspapers Computers and the Internet Duplicating Technologies Electricity General Studies Government Information Storage Military Communication Motion Pictures Nationalism and Communication Photography and Visual Communication Postal Service Radio Sound Recording Telegraph Telephones Television Time and Timekeeping Advertising and Public Relations Capitalism Censorship and Ratings Children and Media Color Critics Democracy Digital Media Education Freedom Future and Science Fiction History and New Media Home and New Media Labor Law Materials Media Effects News and Journalism Non-USA Office Presidents and New Media References, Statistics, Timelines, Maps Religion Sexuality Values Violence War Websites Women archives archives, and new media advertising children future history home photography LB - 34530 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 ST - Echo: Exploring & Collecting History Online -- Science, Technology, and Industry TI - Echo: Exploring & Collecting History Online -- Science, Technology, and Industry UR - http://echo.gmu.edu/index.php ID - 3091 ER - TY - WEB AB - Reacting to pressure from Congress, the U.S. Interactive Digital Software Association, the major trade association in the field, created the Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) in 1994. The ESRB provided ratings and content descriptions. The maker of each game a submitted tape and questionnaire to a rating board made up of “three independent, trained raters” of varied backgrounds who had “no ties to the interactive entertainment industry.” According to the ESRB's website, "The ESRB rating system helps parents and other consumers choose the games that are right for their families. ESRB ratings have two parts: rating symbols that suggest what age group the game is best for, and content descriptors that indicate elements in a game that may have triggered a particular rating and/or may be of interest or concern." KW - computers self-regulation sexuality sex censorship and ratings media effects media violence entertainment digital media digitization computers and the Internet video games video games, and rating system (U.S.) rating system (U. S.), and video games Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) Interactive Digital Software Association, U.S., and video games virtual reality digital communication, and video games video games, and virtual reality video games, and digital communication violence violence, and video games video games, and violence sex, and video games video games, and sex websites rating system (U. S.) media literacy advertising and public relations advertising, and ratings rating systems, and advertising advertising LB - 34550 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 ST - Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) TI - Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) UR - http://www.esrb.org/ ID - 3092 ER - TY - WEB AB - This transcript gives the 26 counts on which Samuel Roth was indicted for distributing obscenity and it also lists the publication and other materials he was charged with mailing. The Petition for Certiorara was filed November 16, 1956 and the Certiorari was granted January 14, 1957. Among the publication Roth mailed were a monthly magazine, Good Times: A Review of the World of Pleasure; American Aphrodite: A Quarterly for the Fancy Free, which Roth edited; and such other items as "Stereoptice Nude Show," "Wallet Nudes," and "2 Undrapped Stars." This case, together with the Alberts v. California case decided the same year, changed the Supreme Court's interpretation of obscenity, one that earlier had been defined by the Hicklin case. Henceforth, it became much hard for prosecutors to convict people for obscenity. Samuel Roth earlier convictions for obscenity for mailing Wild Passion, Wanton by Night, and Sexual Content of Men and Women. On one occasion he had gone to jail in Philadelphia for selling copies of James Joyce's Ulysses. Well-known for distributing such material, he had earlier convictions for obscenity. His appeal came at the same time as that of David Alberts, convicted in California for selling obscene literature. While the U. S. Supreme Court upheld the convictions of Roth and Alberts, and stated that obscenity was not protected by the First Amendment, it nevertheless changed fundamentally the way in which it dealt with obscenity cases. What became known as the Roth test became the foundation of American obscenity law. Obscenity would be “whether to the average person, applying contemporary community standards, the dominant theme of the material taken as a whole appeals to the prurient interest.” In delivering the opinion in Roth, Justice William J. Brennan, Jr. said that “all ideas having even the slightest redeeming social importance... have the full protection” of the First Amendment, unless “they encroach upon the limited area of more important interests.” Justice Douglas, who joined by Hugo L. Black in dissenting in both Roth and Alberts, went farther. He argued that the First Amendment protected literary treatment of sex even if it offended “the common conscience of the community.” DA - Jan. 14, 1957 KW - U. S. Supreme Court law censorship and ratings freedom court cases law, and motion pictures motion pictures, and legal +motion pictures and popular culture +motion pictures censorship, and motion pictures motion pictures, and censorship Supreme Court (U. S.), and motion pictures motion pictures and Supreme Court (U. S.) court cases , court cases Production Code, and decline of motion pictures, and freedom court cases, and harmful Roth case (1957) court cases, and Roth obscenity, and Supreme Court (U. S.) Supreme Court (U. S.), and Roth v. U.S. (1957 motion pictures, and obscenity obscenity, and motion pictures obscenity, and Roth case (1957) Alberts case law freedom censorship and ratings Roth v. U. S. (1957) obscenity Supreme Court (U. S.) censorship LB - 36580 M1 - Feb. 8, 2006 PY - 1957 ST - Transcript of Record, Samuel Roth, Petitioner v. United States of America, Supreme Court of the United States, October Term, 1956, No. 582 TI - Transcript of Record, Samuel Roth, Petitioner v. United States of America, Supreme Court of the United States, October Term, 1956, No. 582 UR - http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/curiae/html/354-476/001.htm (accessed May 20, 2010) ID - 3291 ER - TY - WEB AB - This joint statement by the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and others points to the potentially damaging social and psychological effects of violence on television and other mass media. AU - American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, et al. DA - July 26, 2000 KW - children sound recording music motion pictures media effects media violence violence media effects censorship and ratings children motion pictures and popular culture television video games music, and violence social science research media effects, and violence violence, and social science research American Medical Association, and violence American Academy of Pediatrics, and violence American Psychological Association, and violence American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, and violence violence, and AMA violence, and APA violence, and AAP violence, and AACAP websites children, and media violence violence, and children media effects, and children children, and media effects children, and social science research social science research, and children websites American Academy of Pediatrics American Psychological Association American Medical Association children, and media LB - 28190 M1 - Feb. 2, 2003 PY - 2000 ST - Joint Statement on the Impact of Entertainment Violence on Children -- Congressional Public Health Summit (July 26, 2000) TI - Joint Statement on the Impact of Entertainment Violence on Children -- Congressional Public Health Summit (July 26, 2000) UR - http://www.aacap.org/press_releases/2000/0726.htm ID - 1368 ER - TY - WEB AB - The Federal Communications Website explains the V-chip and the television rating system. It discusses the TV Parental Guildelines and the TV Parental Guidelines Monitoring Board. AU - Commission, Federal Communications DA - April 3, 2002 KW - classification self-regulation Federal Communications Commission (FCC) CARA television, and V-chip violence telecommunications censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) motion pictures regulation law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture +television V-chip FCC FCC, and V-chip V-chip, and FCC Telecommunications Act (1996) Telecommunications Act (1996), and V-chip rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and V-chip television, and V-chip V-chip, and television V-chip, and motion pictures motion pictures, and V-chip V-chip, history of TV Parental Guidelines TV Parental Guidelines Monitoring Board websites violence LB - 27250 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 PY - 2002 ST - V-Chip: Viewing Television Responsibly TI - V-Chip: Viewing Television Responsibly UR - http://www.fcc.gov/vchip/ ID - 1280 ER - TY - WEB AB - This explanation of the V-chip, and how it works is on the website of the Federal Communications Commission. Congress mandated that new television sets must have the V-chip which allowed parents to block violent or other types of entertainment they felt to be inappropriate for their children. For the V-chip to work, of course, depended on the television industry adopting a rating system to which the V-chip could be calibrated. AU - Commission, Federal Communications DA - April 25, 2002 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Federal Communications Commission (FCC) CARA Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) television, and V-chip violence telecommunications censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric motion pictures regulation law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture +television V-chip FCC FCC, and V-chip V-chip, and FCC Telecommunications Act (1996) Telecommunications Act (1996), and V-chip rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and V-chip television, and V-chip V-chip, and television V-chip, and motion pictures motion pictures, and V-chip V-chip, history of TV Parental Guidelines TV Parental Guidelines Monitoring Board websites V-chip +motion pictures and popular culture +television TV Parental Guidelines television, and rating system (U. S.) motion pictures, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and television FTC National Cable Television Association MPAA MPAA, and television TV rating system (U. S.) websites violence LB - 27260 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 PY - 2002 ST - The V-Chip: Putting Restrictions on What Your Children Watch TI - The V-Chip: Putting Restrictions on What Your Children Watch UR - http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/consumerfacts/vchip.html ID - 1281 ER - TY - WEB AB - A Federal Trade Commission report that revealed that movie studios, music producers, and video game makers marketed graphically violent entertainment to very young children. Such studios as MGM/United Artists, Columbia TriStar, Disney, frequently targeted children, some as young as 10, for violent, adult-oriented movies, music, and electronic video games, the FTC discovered. They used advertising, comic books, and cartoon programs to reach children. Both President Bill Clinton and Vice President Al Gore threatened to support strong regulatory legislation unless such advertising stopped. These findings were presented to Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet, Committee on Energy and Commerce, United States House of Representatives, Washington, D. C. AU - Commission, Federal Trade DA - July 20, 2001 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations censorship and ratings propaganda public relations NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA motion pictures media effects media violence violence Hollywood censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification children, and media violence, and media +motion pictures and popular culture +television advertising, and children advertising, and violence advertising, and Hollywood Hollywood, and advertising Hollywood, and children Hollywood, and violence FTC FTC, and violence FTC, and children violence, and FTC children, and FTC rating system (U. S.), and controversies MPAA, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and children children, and MPAA rating system (U. S.) websites advertising LB - 27420 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 PY - 2001 ST - Marketing Violent Entertainment to Children: Self-Regulation and Industry Practices in the Motion Picture, Music Recording, and Electronic Game Industries TI - Marketing Violent Entertainment to Children: Self-Regulation and Industry Practices in the Motion Picture, Music Recording, and Electronic Game Industries UR - http://www.ftc.gov/os/2001/07/violencetest.htm ID - 1297 ER - TY - WEB AB - This Federal Trade Commission report revealed that movie studios, music producers, and video game makers marketed graphically violent entertainment to very young children. Such studios as MGM/United Artists, Columbia TriStar, Disney, frequently targeted children, some as young as 10, for violent, adult-oriented movies, music, and electronic video games, the FTC discovered. They used advertising, comic books, and cartoon programs to reach children. Both President Bill Clinton and Vice President Al Gore threatened to support strong regulatory legislation unless such advertising stopped. AU - Commission, Federal Trade DA - Sept. 11, 2000 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Classification and Rating Administration classification MPAA self-regulation Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) advertising, and public relations censorship and ratings propaganda public relations NATO CARA Heffner, Richard Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA motion pictures media effects media violence violence Hollywood censorship and rating system (U.S.) children law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification children, and media violence, and media +motion pictures and popular culture +television advertising, and children advertising, and violence advertising, and Hollywood Hollywood, and advertising Hollywood, and children Hollywood, and violence FTC FTC, and violence FTC, and children violence, and FTC children, and FTC rating system (U. S.), and controversies MPAA, and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and children children, and MPAA rating system (U. S.) websites advertising LB - 27430 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 N1 - ProCite field[18]: Washington, D. C. ProCite field[19]: Federal Trade Commission PY - 2000 ST - Marketing Violent Entertainment to Children: Self-Regulation and Industry Practices in the Motion Picture, Music Recording, and Electronic Game Industries: A Report of the Federal Trade Commission TI - Marketing Violent Entertainment to Children: Self-Regulation and Industry Practices in the Motion Picture, Music Recording, and Electronic Game Industries: A Report of the Federal Trade Commission UR - http://www.ftc.gov/opa/2000/09/youthviol.htm ID - 1298 ER - TY - WEB AB - Movie critic Roger Ebert gave The Cook a favorable review but warned that it was “not an easy film to sit through.” It was about an avaricious, sadistic husband named Spica (played by Michael Gambon) who, on most nights, could be found in a swank restaurant. Early on Spica in the film forces the cook to eat excrement and then urinates on him. When Spica’s beautiful but frustrated and long-suffering wife, Georgina (played by Helen Mirren), begins an affair with a man named Michael (played by Alan Howard), whom she sees in the restaurant, Spica takes revenge by having his henchmen cram an entire book down the lover’s throat, one page at a time. The movie featured not only coprophagy, but cannibalism and male and female nudity as well. At least four members of the Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) favored giving the picture an R, although Richard Heffner, the head of CARA, thought the picture was “clearly X” and that most parents would consider it inappropriate for children. Ebert criticized the “timid souls” at CARA who had failed to give The Cook an R rating, AU - Ebert, Roger DA - 1990 KW - motion pictures media effects media violence violence Ebert, Roger +motion pictures and popular culture websites motion pictures, and reviewss Ebert, Roger, and The Cook... Ebert, Roger, and violence violence, and Roger Ebert motion pictures, and reviews websites LB - 25010 PY - 1990 ST - Review, The Cook, the Thief, His Wife and Her Lover TI - Review, The Cook, the Thief, His Wife and Her Lover UR - http://www.suntimes.com/ebert/ebert_reviews/1990/01/thecook.html ID - 1102 ER - TY - WEB AB - Film critic Roger Ebert acknowledged that many viewers found Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer (1990) “too violent and disgusting to be endured,” but praised the picture because it dealt “honestly with its subject matter.” AU - Ebert, Roger DA - Sept. 14, 1990 KW - motion pictures Ebert, Roger +motion pictures and popular culture websites motion pictures, and reviewss Ebert, Roger, and Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer motion pictures, and reviews LB - 25050 PY - 1990 ST - Review, Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer TI - Review, Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer UR - http://www.suntimes.com/ebert/ebert_reviews/1990/09/566963.html ID - 1106 ER - TY - WEB AB - Film critics Roger Ebert gave this Oliver Stone film his highest rating. Others criticized the movie for its graphic violence. AU - Ebert, Roger DA - Aug. 26, 1994 KW - motion pictures media effects media violence violence Ebert, Roger +motion pictures and popular culture websites motion pictures, and reviewss Ebert, Roger, and Natural Born Killers Ebert, Roger, and violence violence, and Roger Ebert motion pictures, and reviews LB - 26390 PY - 1994 ST - Review, Natural Born Killers TI - Review, Natural Born Killers UR - http://www.suntimes.com/ebert/ebert_reviews/1994/08/937174.html ID - 1222 ER - TY - WEB AB - Ebert gives a lukewarm review of this movie. He says the "story has been told before, and better, in movies like William Wyler's The Collector (1965). AU - Ebert, Roger DA - May 25, 1990 KW - motion pictures media effects media violence violence Ebert, Roger +motion pictures and popular culture websites motion pictures, and reviewss Ebert, Roger, and Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!. Ebert, Roger, and violence violence, and Roger Ebert motion pictures, and reviews websites LB - 28520 M1 - Sept. 16, 2001 PY - 1990 ST - Review: Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! TI - Review: Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! UR - http://www.suntimes.com/evert/ebert_reviews/1990/05 ID - 1389 ER - TY - WEB AB - This website explains the TV Parental Guidelines used in rating television programs, the V-chips (which allows viewers to block objectionable programming), and the TV Guidelines Monitoring Board, which tries to insure consistency in the ratings. AU - Guidelines, TV Parental DA - Nov. 7, 2002 KW - classification self-regulation Federal Communications Commission (FCC) CARA television, and V-chip violence telecommunications censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) motion pictures regulation law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture +television V-chip FCC FCC, and V-chip V-chip, and FCC Telecommunications Act (1996) Telecommunications Act (1996), and V-chip rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.), and V-chip television, and V-chip V-chip, and television V-chip, and motion pictures motion pictures, and V-chip V-chip, history of TV Parental Guidelines TV Parental Guidelines Monitoring Board websites children children, and media media effects LB - 27270 PY - 2002 ST - The TV Parental Guidelines: Frequently Asked Questions TI - The TV Parental Guidelines: Frequently Asked Questions UR - http://www.tvguidelines.org ID - 1282 ER - TY - WEB AB - In this review, Stanley Kauffmann writing for the New Republic called Oliver Stone's movie Natural Born Killers (1994) a “paradigm ... of the ills and the imbalances in American life.”From New Republic Online. AU - Kauffmann, Stanley DA - June 24, 1999 KW - motion pictures media effects media violence violence +motion pictures and popular culture websites motion pictures, and reviewss Kauffmann, Stanley, and Natural Born Killers Kauffmann, Stanley, and violence violence, and Stanley Kauffmann motion pictures, and reviews websites LB - 26400 M1 - July 12, 1999 PY - 1999 ST - Review, Natural Born Killers TI - Review, Natural Born Killers UR - http://www.tnr.com/archive/0799/071299/kauffmann071299.html ID - 1223 ER - TY - WEB AB - This website is devoted to parents and teachers, offer "resources and support for everyone interested in media and information literacy for young people." Pages are devoted to news, research, media issues, educational games, and more. AU - Network, Media Awareness KW - computers sexuality sex censorship and ratings media effects media violence entertainment digital media digitization +computers and the Internet video games video games, and rating system (Canada) rating system (Canada), and video games Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) Interactive Digital Software Association, U.S., and video games virtual reality digital communication, and video games video games, and virtual reality video games, and digital communication violence violence, and video games video games, and violence sex, and video games video games, and sex websites rating system (Canada) censorship and rating system (Canada) media literacy Canada non-USA education Canada, and education education, and Canada children children, and media censorship LB - 27990 M1 - May 10, 2010 ST - Media and Internet Education Resources TI - Media and Internet Education Resources UR - http://www.media-awareness.ca/ (accessed May 10, 2010) ID - 1351 ER - TY - WEB AB - The National Federation of Decency (later known as the American Family Association), founded by the Rev. Don Wildmon in 1977, promoted family values, the “Biblical ethic of decency,” and warned about the influence of television, movies, and other mass media. AU - Porteous, Skipp DA - Nov./Dec. 1989 KW - sexuality websites pornography pornography, and critics Wildmon, Don pornography, and American Family Association pornography, and Don Wildmon Keating, Jr., Charles Citizens for Decency through Law (CDL) pornography, and CDL critics websites LB - 26760 PY - 1989 ST - "What's in a Name?," Freedom Writer TI - "What's in a Name?," Freedom Writer UR - http://www.ifas.org/fw/8911/index.html ID - 1238 ER - TY - WEB AB - This study used the 200 most popular motion picture rentals and 1,000 of the most popular songs from 1996 and 1997. It was sponsored by the Office of National Drug Control Policy, Department of Health and Human Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. This study has a four-page annotated bibliography on research dealing with "Substance Use in Popular Movies and Music." AD - MediaCampaign, Office of National Drug Control Policy, Department of Health and Human Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration AU - Roberts, Donald F. AU - Henriksen, Lisa AU - Christenson, Peter G. DA - April 1999 KW - Classification and Rating Administration classification self-regulation Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) video rentals censorship and ratings rating system (U.S.) sound recording music motion pictures videotape law censorship and rating system (U. S.) rating system (U. S.) censorship classification +motion pictures and popular culture CARA, and substance abuse rating system (U. S.), and substance abuse CARA, and drug use rating system (U. S.), and substance abuse motion pictures, and substance abuse motion pictures, and drug use motion pictures, and alcohol use motion pictures, and tobacco use music, and drug use music, and substance abuse music, and alcohol use music, and tobacco use video rentals, and substance abuse bibliographies bibliographies, annotated bibliographies, annotated, and substance use in movies and music motion pictures, and substance abuse (bibliographies) music, and substance abuse (bibliographies) websites media literacy children children, and media media effects CARA magnetic tape magnetic recording LB - 25760 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 PY - 1999 ST - Substance Use in Popular Movies and Music TI - Substance Use in Popular Movies and Music UR - http://www.mediacampaign.org/publications/movies/movie_toc.html ID - 941 ER - TY - WEB AB - Sterling is interested in the way new technologies come into our culture and also often fail to take root and become obsolete or dead media. "Our culture is experiencing a profound radiation of new species of media. The centralized, dinosaurian one-to-many media that roared and trampled through the 20th century are poorly adapted to the postmodern technological environment. The new media environment is aswarm with lumbering toothy digital mammals. It's all lynxes here, and gophers there, plus big fat venomous webcrawlers, appearing in Pleistocene profusion." In addition to this manifesto, this web site contains a fascinating list of once new technologies, but long discarded and forgotten. This is part of the "The DEAD MEDIA Project: A Modest Proposal and a Public Appeal." AU - Sterling, Bruce KW - obsolete technology new media websites Dead Media Society new media, and obsolete obsolete media LB - 1760 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 ST - The Dead Media Manifesto TI - The Dead Media Manifesto UR - http://www.alamut.com/subj/artiface/deadMedia/dM_Manifesto.html ID - 264 ER - TY - WEB AB - This website explains that "The Dead Media Project consists of a database of field Notes written and researched by members of the Project's mailing list. The Dead Media List consists of occasional email to that stout band of souls who have declared some willingness to engage in this recherche field of study. For more information on the purpose of the project, please read Bruce Sterling's Dead Media Manifesto. For more information on the mailing list, including how to join, please read the 'Frequently asked questions'" section of this website. See also: http://www.chriswaltrip.com/sterling/dedmed.html AU - Sterling, Bruce KW - obsolete technology new media websites Dead Media Society new media, and obsolete technology obsolete media LB - 34560 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 ST - Dead Media Project TI - Dead Media Project UR - http://www.deadmedia.org/ ID - 3093 ER - TY - WEB AB - Netfuture is an e-mail publication that examines the negative, often unintended, consequences of technology. It carries articles and book reviews that explore "the ripple effects of technology, like how people's lives have changed as tasks are automated and how communities have fared since the dawn of the automobile." Peter J. Denning, a professor of computer science at George Mason University, called Netfuture "a largely undiscovered national treasure." (quoted in New York Times, Nov. 25, 1999, p. D7) Stephen L. Talbot began publishing Netfuture in 1995, and does a good deal of the reviewing and writing for this newsletter. He is a former technical writer and computer software programmer. This is a publication of The Nature Institute (http://natureinstitute.org/). AD - http://www.netfuture.org/ AU - Talbot, Stephen L. DA - 1995- KW - technology computers email community democracy information technology general studies websites +computers and the Internet electronic mail automobiles technology and society democracy and media Luddism information technology, and critics of technology, and social influence of critics electronic media transportation LB - 2590 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 PY - 1995 ST - NetFuture: Technology and Human Responsibility TI - NetFuture: Technology and Human Responsibility ID - 1652 ER - TY - WEB AB - Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, discusses the state of the motion picture industry in an age of computers and Internet piracy. The title may also have the following subtitle: "Address to His Friends and Colleagues at ShoWest, Las Vagas, Nevada, March 6, 2001." AU - Valenti, Jack DA - March 6, 2001 KW - Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entertainment computers MPAA entertainment, home National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) archives NATO Valenti, Jack Johnston, Eric MPAA home entertainment home primary sources primary sources, Jack Valenti addresses, Jack Valenti motion pictures and popular culture motion pictures MPAA, and Jack Valenti computers and the Internet motion pictures, and Internet piracy motion pictures, and piracy Valenti, Jack, and Internet piracy television home entertainment revolution Valenti, Jack, and home entertainment revolution websites Valenti, Jack home, and new media video games children children, and new media addresses children, and media LB - 20920 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 PY - 2001 ST - Traveling That Sweet Road that Leads to Success: A Compass Course Heading TI - Traveling That Sweet Road that Leads to Success: A Compass Course Heading UR - http://www.mpaa.org/jack/2001/2001_03_06b.htm ID - 893 ER - TY - WEB AB - Wildmon, a long-time opponent of pornography, attacks abortion and permissivness in such mass media as movies and the Internet. AU - Wildmon, Don DA - Dec. 11, 2000 KW - computers photography sexuality pornography motion pictures Wildmon, Don pornography, and opponents pornography, and abortion abortion, and pornography +motion pictures and popular culture television computers and the Internet +photography and visual communication motion pictures, and abortion abortion, and motion pictures critics websites abortion LB - 27670 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 PY - 2000 ST - That's What Christians Do Now TI - That's What Christians Do Now UR - http://www.alliance4lifemin.org/categorized_articles/culture/what_christians_do_now/what_christians_do_now.htm ID - 1321 ER - TY - WEB AB - This article has interviews with producer Rich McCallum, engineer Fred Meyers, and post-production supervisor Mike Blanchard, each talking about digital cinema and the making George Lucas's Star Wars: Episode II, the most complex digital movie made up to that time. McCallum concludes by saying that "digital technology really gets down to one simple fact. A writers can write anything he wants to now. A director is only limited by his imagination. A producer can't say 'no' anymore, because now there is a way to solve each production challenge and to do it in a cost-efficient , fiscally responsible way." This article originally appeared in Digital Cinema Magazine (2001) with the title, "Digital Lucasfilm." AU - Zahn, Bob and Brian McKernan DA - Nov. 12, 2002 KW - special effects, digital websites motion pictures, and popular culture digitization digital cinema Lucas, George special effects, and digitization cameras, and digital cinema motion pictures, and digitization digitization, and motion pictures cameras digital media motion pictures special effects LB - 29530 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 PY - 2002 ST - Report from the Ranch: Star Wars Episode II TI - Report from the Ranch: Star Wars Episode II UR - http://216.130.185.100/artman/publisher/printer_58.shtiml ID - 2731 ER - TY - WEB AB - This website attempts to keep track of efforts to censor the Internet worldwide. It is informative, for examples, on the use of filters and firewalls in such countries as mainland China and Saudi Arabia. AU - Zittrain, Jonathan AU - Edelman, Benjamin DA - Dec. 3, 2002 KW - computers Asia Saudi Arabia sexuality pornography Internet law censorship and ratings censorship non-USA +computers and the Internet censorship, and Internet Internet, and censorship China China, and Internet Saudi Arabia, and Internet Internet, and China Internet, and Saudi Arabia pornography, and Internet pornography, and censorship pornography, and China pornography, and Saudi Arabia Internet, and pornography censorship, and pornography China, and pornography Saudi Arabia, and pornography websites LB - 27970 M1 - Nov. 7, 2005 PY - 2002 ST - Documentation of Internet Filtering Worldwide TI - Documentation of Internet Filtering Worldwide UR - http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/filtering ID - 1349 ER -